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Proceedings and Reports 1 964 Pre-Primary Convention California Labor COPE San Francisco, April 8, 1964 CALIFORNIA LABOR COUNCIL ON POLITICAL EDUCATION Thos. L. Pitts, Secretary-Treasurer 810 David Hewes Building 995 Market Street, San Francisco 3 C411 m1l1
Transcript

Proceedings and Reports

1964 Pre-Primary Convention

California Labor COPE

San Francisco, April 8, 1964

CALIFORNIA LABOR COUNCILON POLITICAL EDUCATION

Thos. L. Pitts, Secretary-Treasurer

810 David Hewes Building995 Market Street, San Francisco 3

C411m1l1

Officers of theCalifornia Labor Councilon Political Eduication

THOS. L. P!TTSExecutive Secretary-Treasurer

ALBIN J. GRUHNPresident

GENERAL VICE PRESIDENTManuel Dias

VICE PRESIDENTS-Geographical

District No. 1 District No. 8Max J. Osslo Thomas A. Small

District No. 2M. R. Callahan

District No. 3William SidellPat SomersetW. J. BassettJ. J. ChristianJames L. SmithWebb Green

District No. 9Arthur F. DoughertyNewell J. Carman

District No. 10Robert S. AshPaul L. Jones

District No. 11Howard Reed

District No. 4 District No. 12Robert J. O'Hare Stanley Lathen

District No. 5Wilbur Fillippini

District No. 6H. D. Lackey

District No. 7C. A. Green

District No. 13Harry Finks

District No. 14Harry Hansen

District No. 15Hugh Allen

VICE PrESIDENTS-At Large

Charles J. SmithDeWitt StoneEdward T. ShedlockHerbert WilsonJerome Posner

E. A. KingE. P. O'MalleyFred D. FletcherG. J. Conway

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Officers of California Labor COPE-.----------------------------.-.inside cover

Proceedings of the 1964 Pre-Primary Convention-3-13

Roll of Delegates - 14-19

Membership Report - 20-40

Report of Secretary-Treasurer- 41-55

Auditors' Report - 56-73

Index -,,, 75

PROCEEDINGSof the

1964 Pre-Primary Conventionof the

California Labor Council on Political Education

Wednesday, April 8, 1964California Hall

625 Polk Street, San Francisco

The 1964 Pre-Primary Convention ofthe California Labor Council on PoliticalEducaltion was called to order at 10:17a.m. at California Hall, 625 Polk Street atTurk, San Francisco, California, by AlbinJ. Gkruhn, President.

President Gruhn led the delegates inthe pledge of allegitance to the flag.

InvocationPresident Gruhn presented the Rever-

end Andrew Juvinall, Pastor of the Ham-ilton Methodist Church, San Francisco,and Chairman, Commission on the Churchand Economic Life of the Northern Cali-fornia-Nevada Council of iChurches, whodelivered the following invocation:"O God, our Father, we invoke thy

blessing upon this Convention assembledfor a lofty purpose. We pray that theAmerican labor movement may continueto be a mighty force for justice in our na-tion and in our world. Guide with wisdomthose who make decisions this day andin subsequent democratic parleys, to theend that our naition may be ruled by menof courage and vision who act in the bestinterest of all the people.

"In the name of the Carpenter ofNazareth, we pray. Amen."

WELCOME TO DELEGATESAND VISITORS

Albin J. Gruhn, PresidentPresident Gruhn then addressed the

convention:"Delegates, in welcoming you to this

1964 Pre-Primary Convention of the Cali-fornia Labor Council on Political Educa-tion, I am sure that you are fully awareof what the retal stakes are in this cruci;alelection year. The extremists of the radi-cal right and radical left are cireling likevultures ready to move in and fill the

vacuum caused by 'indifference and con-fusion in the political life of the locol,state and national communities. The fun-damental purpose of the Califonia LaborCouncil on Political Education is to pre-vent this from happening by encouragingthe workers, without regard to race,creed, color, national origin or ancestry,to register, to vote, and to exercise theirfull rights and responsibilities of citizen-ship. This organization has fulfilled andwill continue to fulfill thuis fundamentalpurpose. In our so doing you must everkeep in mind our basic nonpartisan politi-cal policy of 'Electin:g our friends anddefeating our enemies' irrespective ofparty affiliation, in the tradition of thelate Samuel Gompers.

"In relating political education to theend results of the legislative process, or-ganized labor has always been in the fore-front in sponsoring and workin:g for meas-ures ithiat have made our great countrya better place in which to work and live.We are not satisfied with the status quo.We want our government on the local,state and nation;al levels to move forwardvigorously in meeting the unmet needs oftoday and the challenges of today andthe future. These are adequately spelledout in the legislative program of the Na-tional AFL-,CIO. They are ,also given tDyou in detail in the California LaborFederation's "1963 Sacramento Story" andin the report of Secretary-Treasurer Pittsto this Convention. I urge you to readthem if you have not done so.

"In conclusion I wish to report that ithas been my privilege to h-ave had ,theopportunity to participate in a numberof local COPE workshops conducted byour Assistant Director of COPE, FredSmith. I w-as pleased to see the interestdisplayed by our affiliates at the locallevel, in this program to develop strongand effective grass-roots COPE organiza-tions. Much yet needs to be done in this

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area, particularly in the mnatter of obtain-ing 100 percent affiliation of local unions.This also holds true on the state level.With your cooperation and help I am surethat we can accomplish this objecive, sothat labor's destiny as an effective andcontinuing voice in the interest of thelittle people will be assured."

ADDRESS

The Honorable John F. ShelleyMayor of San Francisco

President Gruhn then introduced theHonorable John F. Shelley, Mayor of SanFrancisco, who addressed the delegates."Yes, I stood at this very platform be-

fore and used to have tlis gavel in myhand. It is a pleasure to have an oppor-tunity to come here today in a differentcapacity and welcome you to ithe City ofSan Francisco."You know, on New Year's Day a very

famous columnist here in San Franciscohad an article in which he was prophesy-ing what various people, personalities andcharacters in town might say or do duringthe year 1964. On towards the bottom ofit he said, 'Sometime during 1964 JackShelley will say, "Why didn't I stay inCongress?"'"A couple of times in the last couple of

months, with some of the problems withwhich I have been confronted (they don'tseem to be lessening, but increasing), Ithought to myself, 'Why didn't I stay onthat bakery wagon?'

"But you don't go backwards. You moveahead, you meet -the issues and you meetthe problems. And in my welcoming youhere today, with the wish and the hopeand the prayer that you will do 'a job onbehalf of your membership, that you willconsider well the positions you take inendorsing candidates and the positions onissues, which I know you will do, severalthoughts have gone through my mind;and they tie right to the idea that youdon't stand still, nor do you go back-wards.

New Problems Confront Us

"We are living in a time of greatchange-g-reat change in this country, inthis City, in this State, and great changethroughout the world. None of us canlook at what we did yesterday or howwe did it and say 'That applies today.' Weare confronted with new problems, and,as your President said, pressures fromnewly developed rightist groups that areas strong as some of the old pressures,

from some of the extreme-left groups,that many of us went through over theyears. New tactics, old techniques pol-ished up, but all of them boil down toan attempt to capture the minds and theim-agination of men and mold them intodifferent pathways."Down through the years the labor

movement has achieved its position be-cause of the policy it followed of tryingnot to get hold of the minds of men butguide them into fields of action and ac-tivity which would be of benefit for thegeneral community and for soiety ingeneral. There is nothing more neededtoday than a reaffirmation of that policyin dealing with some of these new prob-lems; and at the same time that we, eachof us individually and all of us collective-ly, who h,ave these basic philosophlies reaf-firm our belief in these ideas, we haveto recognize the changes with which weare surrounded and with which we areconfronted. We must recognize, too, thfatthere are people in this country whoselot has not been 'as good as ours. We mustdo this to subscribe and live up to andpray day by day for that basic tenet ofthe labor movement: that we do not dis-criminate against anybody because oftheir race, their religion, 'their color ortheir ethnical background.

All Americans Must Share in Progress"We are living in an era almost of rev-

olution in the demands of some people toachieve the desires that they have had intheir hearts and minds for years but havebeen blocked from for, oh, some say ahundred years, let's say 300 or 350 yearssince they first came to this country."We cannot survive as a nation, nor can

any single segment of it, whether it be acity, 'a state, the labor movement or abusiness group survive, if it is going tosay, 'We are better than you or you oryou.' When we do, we are completelyrepudiating that which has made ourcountry great and which has made thelabor movement strong.

We Must Truly Work ForEndorsed Candidates

"As you give consideration to the can-didiates whom you will endorse to thepositions on the issues, may I say in allfriendliness, and as one who has had theprivilege and the pleasure of workingwith you through the years, don't let itstop with thi's meeting. A great deal oforganization work and education workamongst your own members is needed toput it into effect. The opposition works

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by trying to confue people, by trying todistort the issues, and the only place towhich -the members of the trade-unionmovement and the working people in gen-eral can look or come to have the con-fusion cleared up is through the trade-union organizations and through COPEand the officers of COPE and the localunons holding meetings, educating themembers, not that 'Well, we have en-dorsed (so-and-so)' or 'We are againstt1his measure or for that measure', butexpliaining why. And this is so important.

We Must Defeat Initiative toRepeal Rumford Act

"One of the most important measuresbefore the people of California in thecoming elections will be the initiative torepeal the Rumford Housing Act. Andthis is a misnomer. It is not an initiativejust to repeal. Because it goes furtherand it writes inito the Constitution ofCalifornia that which has never beenthere. It writes in a basis of vicious hateand division and spoils. And I know thatthese exist in all walks of life."You might say, 'Well, this isn't par-

ticularly my problem'. Believe me, it isyour problem just as it is the problemof the Negro, the Mexican-American orany group which has had discriminationpracticed against it. And it is going to bea fight-a real fight; and I know, and Iknow your officers know too, that thegreatest contribution towards defeatingthis initiative and keeping the Rumfordlaw on the books will rest with the labormovement and the religious movementof this State, which will operate on acombination program of the applicationof sound Christian principles and 'the de-fense of democratic rights. Because if thiskind of a constitutional amendment canbe written in on a basis of hatred be-cause of color or race, then the founda-tion is laid for another attempt to writein constitutional amendments against theorganization of workers and their chianceto improve their lot.

"I could not help but take this oppor-tunity to make those few remarks to you.

"In conclusion, I want to say, 'Welcometo San Francisco'. We had a little diffi-culty in the last couple of days arrangingthis nice weather for you, because this isthe time we usually have the fog in themorning and the afternoon, but we goton the 'hot line' and they said, 'Tell theboys to come to town. Everything will beall right.' And I had dinner with theChief of Police last night, and he said,'Tell your friends and old associates and

colleagues ow, J-ack, we will treatthem gently, we will treat them hos-pitably, but I would appreciate it if wedidn't have to treat them at all.'

"I told him that I knew the best-be-haved and the most orderly conventionsthat ever came to San Francisco were thelabor conventions, and I also know thatthe waitresses, waiters, bar boys and bar-tenders tell me that the best-tipping con-ventions are the labor conventions. Theyare better than the bankers, businessmen and everybody else. So everybodywas glad to see you come to San Fran-cisco.

"I sincerely hope that you will have asuccessful Convention, that your deliber-ations will be deliberate, that your con-clusions will be sound, that the positionsyou take and the candidates you endorsewill reflect progress and will reflect im-provement for your members and for theworking people of this State."Good luck! Godspeed!"

Report of Committee on CredentialsAfter announcements, President Gruhn

called on Wayne Hull, Chairman of theCommittee on Credentials. Chairman Hullmade a motion that delegates whosenames were on the printed preliminarylist be seated in convention.The motion was seconded and carried.Chairman Hull then read some changes

atnd additions to the list and moved thatthe supplementary report be accepted andthe additional delegates be seated.Motion was seconded and carried.(Completed roll of delegates may be

found on pages 14-19.)The chairman then thanked hiis commit-

tee and the COPE staff.(See pages 6-7 for list of committee

members.)At this time, A. T. Gabriel rose to state

that his union, Miscellaneous CulinaryEmployees No. 110 of San Francisco hadnot been listed, but they wished to be onrecord as having received their creden-tials and as being seated at the conven-tion. President Gruhn requested that hecheck with the Credentials Comrmiittee.

AnnouncementsSecretary-Treasurer Thos. L. Pitts was

then recognized and made several miseel-ianeous announcements.

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COMMITTEES FOR THE CONVENTION

Secretary Pitts then stated tlht the fol-lowing committees for the Convention hadbeen appointed:

Committee on CredentialsWayne J. Hull, Chairman, Building &

Construction Trades Council, Long Beach.Andy Ahern, Garment Cutters No. 45,

San Francisco.Hugh Caudel, Motion Picture Proj. No.

560, Richmond.G. J. Conway, Steelworkers No. 3941.

Huntington Park.James W. Cross, Commercial Telegra-

phers No. 34, San Francisco.Claude Cox, Clothing Workers No. 55-D,

Los Angeles.M. B. Dillashaw, Cement Masons No.

594, Hayward.Jerry Dowd, Operating Engineers No. 3.

San Francisco.C. J. Hyans, Bill Posters No. 32, Los An-

geles.Elizabeth Kelic'y, Waitresses No. 48, Sail

Francisco.John F. Kelley, Web Pressmen No. 4,

San Francisco.Edwin F. Mi':helsen, Butchers No. 516,

San Mateo.Phyllis Mitchlil, Office Employees No.

3, San FranciscoAnithony Scardaci, Furnitur'e Workers

No. 262, San Francisco.Charles W. Walker, Electrical Workc rs

No. 11, Los Angeles.

Committee on Rules andOrder of Business

Max Osslo, Chairman, Butchers UnioilNo. 229, San Ditgo.Harry Bloch, Los Angeles County

COPE, Los Ant,cles.William V. Ellis, Locomotive Firemxen

& Enginemien No. 312, Dunsmuii.Fred D. Flet.cher, San Francisco-Oak-

land Newspapef Guild No. 52, San Fran-cisco.George J. Fk.herty, Hollywood AFL

Film Council, Hollywood.Charles J. Foebn, Central Labor Couni-

cil, San Mateo.Ralph P. Gross, Miscellaneous Employ-

ees No. 393, Sacramento.Joihn L. Hogg, Building & Construction

Trades Council, South San Francisco.

Henry Hansen, Central Labor Councilof San Joaquin County, Stockton.Alvin L. Holt, State Assn. Barbers &

Beauticians, Los Angeles.Fred L. Martin, Automotive Machinists

No. 1305, San F2ancisco.Terrence O'Sullivan, Construction &

General Laborers No. 261, San Francisco.Russell Swanson, Operating Engineers

No. 3, San Francisco.Herbert Wilson, Rubber Workers No.

44, Los Angeles.Committee on Resolutions

Thomas A. Small, Chairman, Bartender s& Culinary Work-ers No. 340, San Mateo.

J. J. Christia'i, L. A. Building & Con-struction Trades Council, Los Angeles.Russell Crowell, Central Labor Council,

Oakland.Harry Finks, Central Labor Council,

Sacr-amento.Armon Henderson, District Council of

Carpenters, San Diego.Jay R. Johnson, Construction & Gen-

eral Laborers No. 304, Oakland.Kenneth D. Larson, L.A. County Fire

Fighters No. 1014, Los Angeles.E. P. O'Malley, Oil, Chemical & Atom;ic

Workers No. 128, Wilmington.W. T. O'Rear, Committee on Political

Education, Fresno.William E. Pollard, Dining Car Em-

ployees No. 582, Los Angeles.Howard Reed, Contra Costa County

Building & Construction Trades Council,Martinez.Edward T. Shedlock, Utility Workers

No. 132, Los Angeles.Williiam Sidell, District Council of Car-

penters, Los Angeles.DeWitt Stone, Auto Workers No. 509,

Long Beach.James J. Twombley, California State

Conference Operating Engineers, SanFrancisco.

Committee on ConstitutionWilbur Fillippini, Chairman, S h e e t

Metal Workers No. 273, Santa Barbara.Leonard Cahill, District Council Lum-

ber & Sawmill Workers, Eureka.M. R. Callah;an, State Council of Culi-

nary Workers, Long Beach.Bryan Deavers, Sitate Building & Con-

struction Trades Council, San Francisco.

6

George E. Jenkins, Hod Carriers &Common Laborers No. 690, Monterey.George D. Kelty, Oil, Chemical and

Atomic Workers No. 5, Mertinez.Leonard Levy, Clothing Workers No.

55-D, Los Angeles.Stanley Lathen, Labor League for Pouit-

ical Education of Solano County, Vallejo.James F. Murphy, Bartenders No. 52,

Oakland.Sam Otto, Ladies Garment Workers No.

96, Los Angeles.Ralph R. Richardson, Central Labor

Council, San Diego.Kenneth D. Severit, Federated Fire

Fighters of California, San Diego.Isidor Stenzor, Ladies Garment Work-

ers No. 55, Los Angeles.William P. Sutherland, State Theatrical

Federation, San Francisco.Larry Vail, California State Council of

Retail Clerks, San Francisco.

Committees ApprovedOn motion of Secretary Pitts, duly sec-

onded, the convention approved thesecommittee appointments.

Rules and Order of BusinessPresident Gruhn then called on Max

Osslo, Chairman of the Committee onRules and Order of Business, who pre-sented the following report:

RULES AND ORDER OF BUSINESSof the 1964 Pre-Primary Election

Convention

1. Robert's Rules of Order. The conven-tion shall be governed by Robert's Rulesof order on all matters not provided bythe Constitution or specified in theserules.

2. Rules-Adoption of Standing Rules.The adoption of the standing rules shallrequire an affirmative vote of a majorityof the duly qualified delegates to the con-vention. present and voting. When onceadopted, such standing rules shall re-main in effect, unless suspended oramended as provided in these rules.

3. Amendment of Standing Rules. Nostanding rule of the convention shall beamended except by an affirmative vote ofa majority of the duly qualified delegatesto the convention, present and voting. Nosuch amendment shall be considered un-til it shall have been referred to and re-ported by the Committee on Rules.

4. Convening the Convention. The con-vention shall convene at 10:00 a.m.

5. Resolutions Defined. Whenever theword "resolution" is used in these rules,it shall include conttutional amend-ments.

6. Committee Reports. All committeesshall report on all resolutions submittedto them. Whenever there is a majorityand minority division on any committee,both the majority and minority shall beentitled to report to the convention. Thediscussion and vote of concurrence ornon-concurrence shall be first on theminority report.

7. Committee Quorum. A majority ofany committee shall constitute a quorumfor the transaction of business. At least amajority of all members present andvoting shall be required to adopt a recom-mendation on a resolution.

8. Passage of Resolutions and Commit-tee Reports by Convention.

(a) A majority of the delegates presentand voting shall be required to act on acommittee report or a resolution, excepta constitutional amendment, which shallrequire a two-thirds vote of the delegatespresent and voting.

(b) No motion or resolution shall befinally acted upon until an opportunityto speak has been given the delegate mak-ing or introducing same, if he so desires.

9. Roll Call Vote. At the request ofseventy-five (75) delegates present andvoting, any motion shall be voted on byroll call per capita vote of the delegates.When a roll call has been ordered noadjournment shall take place until theresult has been announced.

10. Precedence of Motions During De-bat'e. When a question is under debate orbefore the convention. no motions shallhe received but the following, which shalltake precedence in the order named:First-To adjourn;Second-To recess to a time certain;Third-For the previous question;Fourth-To set as a special order of

business;Fifth-To postpone to a stated time;Sixth-To postpone indefinitely;Seventh-To refer to, or re-refer to

committee;Eighth-To divide or amend;Ninth-To lay on the table.11. Motions in Writing. Upon request

of the Chairman, a motion shall be re-duced to writing and shall be read to the

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convention by the Chairman before thesame is acted upon.

12. Contents of Motions. No motion,whether oral or written, shall be adopteduntil the same shall be seconded and dis-tinctly stated to the convention by theChairman.

13. Motion to Reconsider. A motion toreconsider shall not be entertained unlessmade by a delegate who voted with theprevailing side; such motion shall re-quire a two-thirds vote to carry.

14. Motion to Table. A motion to lay onthe table shall be put without debate.

15. Recognition and Decorum of Dele-gates.

(a) Delegates when arising to speakshall respectfully address the Chair andannounce their full name and the iden-tity of the organization which they repre-sent.

(b) In the event two or more delegatesarise to speak at the same time, the Chairshall decide which delegate is entitled tothe floor.

(c) No delegate shall interrupt anyother delegate who is speaking, exceptfor the purpose of raising a point of orderor appealing from a ruling of the Chair.

(d) Any delegate may appeal from adecision of the Chairman, without wait-ing for recognition by the Chairman, eventhough another delegate has the floor.No appeal is in order when another ispending, or when other business hasbeen transacted by the convention priorto the appeal being taken.

(e) Any delegate who is called to or-der while speaking shall, at the requestof the Chair, be seated while the point oforder is decided, after which, if in order,the delegate shall be permitted to pro-ceed. The same shall apply while an ap-peal from the Chair is being decided.

(f) No delegate shall speak more thanonce on the same subject until all whodesire to speak shall have had an oppor-tunity to do so; nor more than twice onthe same subject without permission bya majority vote of the delegates presentand voting; nor longer than five minutesat a time without permission by a major-ity vote of the delegates present and vot-ing.

(g) Any delegate may rise to explain amatter personal to himself, and shallforthwith be recognized by the Chairman,but shall not discuss a question in suchexplanation. Such matters of personalprivilege yield only to a motion to recessor adjournment.

16. Voting Not to be Interrupted. When

once begun, voting shall not be inter-rupted. No delegate shall be allowed tochange his vote, or have his vote recordedafter the vote is announced.

17. Attendance of Delegates. Each dele-gate shall report to the Sergeant-at-Armsat the beginning of the session and shallsign the card presented to him; except, ifunavoidably absent, he shall have theprivilege of reporting to the Secretary.

Adoption of Rules andOrder of Business

Chairman Osslo moved the adoption ofthis committee report, and after second-ing the motion was adopted. On ChairmanOsslo's motion, duly seconded and car-ried, the committee was dismissed withthanks. (See pages 6-7 for list of commit-tee members.)

REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVECOUNCIL AND ENDORSEMENTS

BY THE CONVENTIONThos. L. Pitts, Secretary-TreasurerPresident Gruhn then called upon Sec-

retary Pitts, who presented the followingreport on endorsement recommendationsof the Executive Council:"The Executive Council of the Califor-

nia Labor Council on Political Education,together with the duly appointed Advis-ory Committee, met in the Del WebbTowneHouse, Tuesday, April 7, 1964, tointerview candidates for the office of U.S.Senate in the primary elections of June 2.

"Following the interview period, theAdvisory Committee made its recommen-dations to the Executive Council."The Executive Council then met in

separate session and made the followingrecommendations to the convention."

Alan Cranston Endorsed forDemocratic Primary

"In the Democratic Primary, the Ex-ecutive Council recommends Alan Cran-ston."

Secretary Pitts then moved the adop-tion of this recommendation. Motion wasseconded.

In discussion of the motion the follow-ing members spoke in support of theCouncil's recommendation: William Mc-Cabe, Bartenders No. 41, San Francisco;and C. R. Bartalini, Bay Counties Dis-trict Council of Carpenters, San Fran-cisco.The following members opposed the

8

Council's recommendation: Peter Rem-mel, Photo Engravers No. 32, Los An-geles; A. T. Gabriel, Miscellaneous Em-ployees No. 110, San Francisco; PhilipO'Rourke, American Radio Assn., SanFrancisco; Anthony Cannata, Steelwork-ers No. 1440, Pittsburg; James H. Sim-mons, Electrical Workers No. 11, LosAngeles.The motion to approve the Executive

Council's recommendation to endorseAlan Cranston in the Democratic Primarywas passed.

Fred Hall Endorsed forRepublican Primary

Secretary Pitts continued:"In the Republican Primary, the Execu-

tive Council recommends Fred Hall."On motion of the Secretary, duly sec-

onded, this recommendation was adopted.

Endorsements for House ofRepresentatives

Secretary Pitts then explained the pro-cedure that would be followed in order toexpedite the business of the Convention."We now have arrived at the area of

recommendations for the various congres-sional seats for our State, totaling 38. Wewill give you by district number the rec-ommendation of the Executive Council,proceeding on to the entire 38 districts. Ifthere is one with which someone mightdisagree or on which someone might havean additional thought that he or shewould like to express, then we wouldask of you that you raise your objectionat that time; and I shall set it aside andproceed on through the balance of the38 districts; and then after we have takencare of those where there is no problem,we shall return to those by their numeri-cal order that have been set aside."There being no comment or objection,

the Secretary read the following recom-mendations from the Executive Councilon the congressional districts:District

No. 1. OpenNo. 2. Harold T. (Bizz) Johnson in

No.No.No.No.No.No.

the Democratic primary; noendorsement in the Republicanprimary.

3. John E. Moss (D)4. Robert L. Leggett (D)5. Philip Burton (D)6. Open7. Jeffery Cohelan (D)8. George P. Miller (D)

No. 9. W. Donlon Edwards (D)No. 10. E. Day Carman (D)No. 11. W. Mark Sullivan (D)No. 12. Sanford Bolz (D)No. 13. George E. Taylor (D)No. 14. The recommendation is: No

endorsement.No. 15. John J. McFall (D)No. 16. B. F. Sisk, (D)No. 17. Cecil R. King (D)No. 18. Harlan HagenNo. 19. Chet Holifield (D)No. 20. C. Bernard Kaufman (D)No. 21. Augustus F. (Gus) Hawkins

(D)No. 22. James C. Corman (D)No. 23. Richard English (D)No. 24. Milton Gelber (D)No. 25. Ronald Brooks Cameron (D)No. 26. James Roosevelt (D)No. 27. Tom Bane (D)No. 28. Gerald H. Gottlieb (D)No. 29. George E. Brown, Jr. (D)No. 30. Edward R. Roybal (D)No. 31. Charles H. Wilson (D)No. 32. The reco-mmendation is: Open.No. 33. The recommendation is: Open.No. 34. Richard T. Hanna in the Dem-

ocratic primary; no endorse-ment in the Republican.

No. 35. Open in the Democratic; no en-dorsement in the Republican.

No. 36. OpenNo. 37. Lionel Van Deerlin (D)No. 38. John V. Tunney (D)On Secretary Pitts' motion, duly sec-

onded, the Convention adopted the rec-ommendations for the 38 congressionaldistricts.

Endorsements for State Senate

Secretary Pitts then proceeded to readrecommendations for the State Senate.District

No. 1. Stanley Arnold (D)No. 3. OpenNo. 5. Edwin J. Regan in the Demo-

cratic primary; no endorse-ment in the Republican.

No. 7. Paul J. Lunardi (D)No. 9. John C. Begovich (D)No. 11. Samuel R. Geddes (D)No. 13. OpenNo. 15. Luther E. Gibson (D)No. 17. George Miller, Jr. (D)No. 19. Albert S. Rodda (D)No. 21. OpenNo. 23. OpenNo. 25. Fred S. Farr (D)No. 27. Robert D. Williams (D)No. 29. OpenNo. 31. Alvin C. Weingand (D)

9

No. 33. Newton K. Chase (D)No. 35. OpenNo. 37. OpenNo. 39. Aaron W. Quick (D)Upon request, the recommendations for

District No. 13 and 23 were temporarilyset aside.

Secretary Pitts then moved that withthe exceptions of Districts 13 and 23 therecommendations for State Senate beadopted. Motion was seconded and passed.

Secretary Pitts then made a motion,which was duly seconded, to adopt therecommendation of "Open" for DistrictNo. 13.

Jackie Walsh (Waitresses No. 48, SanFrancisco) then asked for clarification ofthe "Open" endorsement, as to whethera specific endorsement might be madelater.

Secretary Pitts explained that thiswould be possible.The motion to adopt the "Open" rec-

ommendation for District 13 was passed.Secretary Pitts then offered a motion,

duly seconded, that the "Open" recom-mendation for District 23 be adopted.Herman M. Cornell (Carpenters &

Joiners No. 771, Watsonville) spoke inopposition to the motion.The motion was passed.

No Noon RecessPresident Gruhn then announced that

if there were no objection, since theconvention business had been proceedingrapidly, the recess for lunch would beomitted and the meeting would go righton.

Endorsements for State AssemblySecretary Pitts next read the recom-

mendations for the State Assembly, asfollows:District

No. 1. OpenNo. 2. Pauline L. Davis in the Demo-

cratic primary; no endorsementin the Republican.

No. 3. No endorsementNo. 4. No endorsementNo. 5. Pearce Young (D)No. 6. Howard R. Smith in the Demo-

cratic primary; Eugene A.Chappie in the Republican.

No. 7. OpenNo. 8. Edward E. Gaines (D)No. 9. Edwin L. Z'berg (D)No. 10. Jerome R. Waldie (D)

No. 11. John T. Knox (D)No. 12. OpenNo. 13. OpenNo. 14. OpenNo. 15. Nicholas C. Petris (D)No. 16. OpenNo. 17. William Byron Rumford (D)No. 18. Edward M. Gaffney (D)No. 19. Charles W. Meyers (D)No. 20. OpenNo. 21. OpenNo. 22. OpenNo. 23. John Francis Foran (D)No. 24. Alfred E. Alquist (D)No. 25. William F. Stanton (D)No. 26. OpenNo. 27. Leo J. Ryan (D)No. 28. Jack T. Casey (D)No. 29. John C. Williamson (D)No. 30. OpenNo. 31. OpenNo. 32. George N. Zenovich (D)No. 33. Charles B. Garrigus (D)No. 34. Alan G. Pattee in the Republi-

can primary; Irby E. Bourria-gue in the Democratic.

No. 35. Myron H. Frew (D)No. 36. Winfield A. Shoemaker (D)No. 37. Burt M. Henson (D)No. 38. No endorsementNo. 39. Willard E. Hastings (D)No. 40. Edward E. Elliott (D)No. 41. No endorsementNo. 42. J. Howard (Cap) Hardy (D)No. 43. Samuel J. Rifkin (D)No. 44. Joseph M. Kennick (D)No. 45. Alfred H. Song (D)No. 46. No endorsementNo. 47. Michael M. Stolzberg (D)No. 48. George E. Danielson (D)No. 49. Robert A. Chrisman (D)No. 50. Philip L. Soto (D)No. 51. Dionicio Morales (D)No. 52. No endorsementNo. 53. Mervyn M. Dymally (D)No. 54. Jack R. Clinton (R)No. 55. David A. Scott, Sr. (D)No. 56. Charles Warren (D)No. 57. Theodore R. Ellsworth (D)No. 58. Harvey Johnson (D)No. 59. Anthony C. Beilenson (D)No. 60. OpenNo. 61. Lester A. McMillan (D)No. 62. Tom Waite (D)No. 63. Herbert S. Yates (D)No. 64. W. A. "Del" Stelck (D)No. 65. No endorsementNo. 66. Joe A. Gonsalves (D)No. 67. Clayton A. Dills (D)No. 68. Vincent Thomas (D)No. 69. OpenNo. 70. John R. Dean (D)No. 71. OpenNo. 72. John P. Quimby (D)

10

No. 73. OpenNo. 74. Donald L. Chapman (D)No. 75. OpenNo. 76. OpenNo. 77. John Dail (D)No. 78. OpenNo. 79. OpenNo. 80. OpenUpon request the recommendations for

Districts 13, 14, 41, 55, 63, 65, and 70were temporarily set aside.

Secretary Pitts moved that with the ex-ceptions of Districts 13, 14, 41, 55, 63, 65.and 70, the recommendations for StateAssembly be adopted. Motion was sec-onded and passed.

Secretary Pitts then moved the adop-tion of the "Open" recommendation forDistrict No. 13. Motion was seconded.Richard K. Groulx (Alameda Co. COPE,Oakland) and Gunnar Benonys (Carpen-ters & Joiners No. 36, Oakland) spoke insupport of the recommendation. John A.Monte, Jr. (Barbers No. 134, Oakland)spoke in opposition. The motion passed.

Secretary Pitts next moved the adop-tion of the recommendation for DistrictNo. 14, and motion was seconded. RobertS. Ash (Alameda Co. Central LaborCouncil, Oakland) supported the motion.Antonio Polvorosa (Steelworkers No.4468, Oakland) opposed the motion. Themotion passed.The Secretary then moved the adoption

of the "No Endorsement" recommenda-tion for District No. 41. Motion was sec-onded. Luther E. Odom (Barbers No. 761,Glendale) spoke in opposition. The mo-tion passed.

Secretary Pitts then moved that theCouncil's recommendation of David A.Scott, Sr. (D) for District No. 55 beadopted. Motion was seconded. Lee Wil-liams (Auto Workers No. 216, South Gate)spoke in support, and Mervyn Dymally(Teachers No. 1021, Los Angeles) spokein opposition to the recommendation. Themotion passed.Next the Secretary moved the adoption

of the recommendation of Herbert S.Yates (D) for District No. 63. Motion wasseconded. Marvin Brody (Auto WorkersNo. 923, Pico Rivera) supported, andAlvin L. Holt (Barbers & BeauticiansState Assn., Los Angeles) opposed therecommendation. The motion passed.

(Voting on endorsements was brieflyinterrupted at this point in order to hearthe final report of Credentials Commit-tee, as presented below, after completionof endorsement procedure.)

Secretary Pitts moved adoption of theCouncil's recommendation of "No En-dorsement" for District No. 65. Motionwas seconded. The following spoke insupport of the motion: Bud Simonson(Packing House Workers, District No. 4,Los Angeles), Paul Schrade (Auto Work-ers No. 887, Los Angeles), and Donald P.Haggerty (Film Technicians No. 683, Hol-lywood).The following delegates spoke inopposition. Edith Glenn (Hotel-RestaurantEmployees No. 531, Pasadena) and HarryBloch (Clothing Workers No. 278, LosAngeles). The motion passed.

Secretary Pitts moved the adoption ofthe Executive Council's recommendationof John R. Dean (D) for District No.70. Motion was seconded. Chris T. Port-way (Orange County COPE, Santa Ana)and Kenneth D. Larson (Fire FightersNo. 1014, Los Angeles) spoke in supportof the recommendation, and Thomas W.Mathew (Bldg. & Construction TradesCouncil of Orange County, Santa Ana)spoke in opposition. The motion passed.On motion of SSecretary Pitts, duly

seconded, the convention adopted therecommendation as a whole.

Committee on CredentialsChairman Wayne J. Hull of the Com-

mittee on Credentials presented his com-mittee's final report, making a total of683 delegates. On his motion, duly sec-onded, the report as a whole was adoptedby the convention.

Committee on ResolutionsChairman Thomas A. Small of the Com-

mittee on Resolutions read the followingresolution:

"Resolution No. 1"Study of Constitution

"Presented by the Executive Council ofCalifornia Labor COPE

"Whereas, The Constitution of Califor-nia Labor COPE was adopted in SanFrancisco on December 9, 1958; and

"Whereas, It has remained substan-tially unmodified with the exception ofsimple conformity amendments adoptedby the 1960 Pre-General Election Con-vention regarding officers and the com-position of the Executive Council; and

"Whereas, On the other hand therehave been numerous changes in the elec-tion laws of the State of California, in-cluding the repeal of 'cross-filing' in pri-mary elections, which have raised ques-tions in regard to the adequacy of our

11

COPE procedures in the endorsement ofcandidates; and

"Whereas, It is desirable to reviewthese procedures and other constitutionalprovisions in the light of the aforemen-tioned and other changes; therefore be it

"Resolved, That this 1964 Pre-PrimaryConvention of the California Labor Coun-cil on Political Education, meeting in theCity and County of San Francisco, directthe Executive Council to study the Cali-fornia Labor COPE constitution and re-port its recommendations for any modi-fications to the next Convention for ap-propriate consideration.

"Referred to Committee on Resolu-tions."Chairman Small reported that the com-

mittee recommended concurrence, and hemoved the adoption of the committee'sreport. After seconding, the motionpassed.Chairman Smali then thanked his Com-

mittee.President Gruhn then discharged the

committee with thanks.

Committee on ConstitutionChairman Wilbur Fillippini of the Com-

mittee on Constitution reported there hadbeen no resolutions requiring constitu-tional consideration. On his motion, dulyseconded, the report was accepted andthe committee discharged.

Authorization forSupplementary Actions

Secretary Pitts then p r e s e n t e d theusual concluding motions:

"In keeping with earlier remarks inthis convention, I have some motionswhich we commonly term 'wrap-up' mo-tions to be presented to you at this time."The first one is that I would move

that wherever and whenever an office isleft open, on the action of this conven-tion, the Secretary-Treasurer, subject tothe approval of the Executive Council,shall be given full power to act and makeendorsements, after consultation with thelocal COPE, if any, where they exist."The motion was seconded and passed.Secretary Pitts requested and was

granted permission to make some briefremarks before his next motion.

"In some cases the local COPE usedlanguage which was ambiguous and mightbe interpreted to mean either that 'No

endorsement' at all be made or simplythat the district be left 'Open.'

"I would move accordingly that wherethis convention has acted on the recom-mendations of the Executive Council insuch few cases, the Secretary-Treasurerbe authorized to clarify with the localCOPE that the intent of the language wasproperly interpreted and, if not, to makeappropriate changes subject to the ap-proval of the Executive Council."The motion was duly seconded and

carried.Secretary Pitts then presented the last

motion:"I move that the Executive Council be

authorized to withdraw the endorsementof any candidate should his actions bedetrimental to the labor movement."The motion was duly seconded and

passed.

Secretary Pitts' Closing RemarksPresident Gruhn then called on the

Secretary, who made the foliowing con-cluding remarks:

"I have not talked to you but just fora few moments after the opening of thisconvention, and I am not going to delayyou with any long speech at this presenttime."Much could be said about what has

transpired in our great State of Califor-nia since we last met in a Pre-GeneralElection Convention. I think that wecould go into lots of details about whathas happened to us politically downthrough 1963 and what we expect willhappen to us in 1964 and 1965. Much ofwhat has happened to us in 1963 and willhappen to us in 1965 and, of course, forsome of the years ahead, depended uponand depends upon every bit of activitythat is put out by our local organizationsthroughout the entire state."We have worked pretty diligently at

trying to put together and build a moreactive Labor Council on Political Educa-tion and contribute as much as we pos-sibly can to the building of local COPEsin the areas where sometimes this pro-gram has been rather sadly neglected.We have met with a good measure ofsuccess; and a measure of good coopera-tion is responsible for it.

"In the local areas the Assistant Di-rector, Fred Smith, has traveled fromtime to time and from place to place. Wehave worked out good programs-pro-grams with people who are interested,who are dedicated to the job of trying to

12

serve the political area and work in thatarena, in which we must work in order topreserve that which we have gained- onthe economic front as far as the labormovement is concerned. And for that weare grateful.

"I think, too, that we can probablyaccept a little pat on the back throughoutthe entire State, in all of the local COPEareas, for this job that has been done. Ithas not been easy, because the officersin those areas have numerous duties.They are generally loaded down, over-burdened with work. The bulk of thiswork has had to be done in the morerural areas, not so much in the heavilyindustrialized areas of the State. But wethink it is going to pay dividends ulti-mately to the people who have contrib-uted their time and efforts, and it willpay great dividends to the members ofour organizations throughout the State.

"I want simply 'to say 'Thanks' to youfor all that you have done in supportingthe recommendations of the ExecutiveCouncil, because they did give a great

amount of time and deliberated very care-fully on the recommendations that werebefore them from the local COPE or-ganizations throughout this State.

"I say 'Thanks' to you for having con-ducted yourselves in such a splendid,orderly fashion in a convention of thistype where sometimes emotions run alittle bit high. I think your decisions havebeen intelligent, I think that we willprofit by them, and we will speed our-selves down a road in this year of 1964that will lead to better and greater op-portunities to serve the working man andwoman in the State of California in thefashion that they should be served by thepoliticians of our State and our land."Thank you for this opportunity and I

am happy to have seen you all here inthe City of San Francisco."

AdjournmentOn Secretary Pitts' motion, duly sec-

onded and passed, the convention wasadjourned sine die at 1:27 p.m.

13

ROLL OF DELEGATESThis comprises the completed roll of delegates to the 1964 pre-primary convention of the Cali-

fornia Labor Council on Political Education.

ALHAMBRAElectrical Utility Wkrs.

No. 47 (500)Geo. A. Mulkey, 500

ARCATALumber & Sawmill Wkrs.

No. 2808 (555)Cullen Barnett, 555

BAKERSFIELDBldg. Q& Constr. Trades

Council (2)H. D. Lackey, 1

Butchers No. 193 (450)Charles A. Hohlbein, 225Harold W. Hodson, 225

Central Labor Council (2)Lowell E. Fowler, 1

Fire Fighters No. 1301 (136)Paul J. Jones, 136

Kern County COPE (2)Paul J. Jones, 1

BELLAuto Wkrs. No. 230 (1618)

Charlotte A. Getzfrid, 1618Steelworkers No. 2018 (3820)John A. Despol, 3820

Steelworkers No. 3941 (60)G. J. Conway, 60

BERKELEYPainters No. 40 (326)Gene Slater, 326

BREALoco. Firemen & Enginemen

No. 979 (16)Lynn Fruit. 8Perry 0. Beck, 8

BURNEYWoodworkers No. 269 (153)Wall Gwin, 153

CHICOCarpenters No. 2043 (255)H. W. Piercy, 255

CITRUS HEIGHTSLocomotive Firemen &

Enginemen No. 58 (24)J. P. Sabin. 12J. A. Eggers, 12

COSTA MESAFire Fighters No. 1465 (11)Kenneth D. Larson, 11

DALY CITYMunicipal Employees No. 919

(67)FPrank Davison, 67

North County School Dist.Empls. No. 377 (40)

John Merida, 20Frank Gillis, 20

DAVENPORTCement, Lime & Gypsum

Wkrs. No. 46 (200)George L. Harrison, 200

DUNSMUIIRLocomotive Firemen &

Enginemen No. 312 (77)William V. Ellis, 77

EL MONTEGlass Bottle Blowers No. 39

(155)Michael Buczynski, 78William DeLotto, 77

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 946 (51)H. A. Bliss, 26C. D. Springer, 25

Painters No. 254 (567)Walt Zagajeski, 567

EL SEGUNDOAir Transport No. 502 (400)Herbert L. Atkins, 400

Oil, Chemical & Atomic Wkrs.No. 547 (1076)

Gail Nelson, 269George M. Froom, Jr., 269Charles Dobbins, 269Bennett Smith, 269

EMERYVILLEOil, Chemical & Atomic Wkrs.

No. 589 (384)Steve Ripko, 192John T. Driscoll, 192

EUREKAButchers No. 445 (192)Edwin F. Michelsen, 192

Fire Fighters No. 652 (39)Kenneth Cringle, 20Loid Bellus, 19

Hod Carriers & CommonLaborers No. 181 (371)

Albin J. Gruhn, 371Humboldt & Del Norte Cos.

COPE (2)Geo. 0. Faville, 1

Humboldt Co. Central LaborCouncil (2)

Albin J. Gruhn, 1Harry W. Hansen. 1

Lumber & Sawmill Wkrs.No. 2592 (639)

John S. Wolfinbarger, 639Lumber & Sawmill Wkrs.

Redwood Dist. Council (2)Leonard Cahill, 1

Machinists No. 540 (167)Harry W. Hansen, 167

FREMONTAuto Wkrs. No. 1364 (2511)Edward Malone, 2511

FRESNOBakers No. 43 (438)William O'Rear. 438

Committee on PoliticalEducation (2)

Bill O'Rear 1Fire Fighters No. 753 (234)Jay Woody, 234

Loco. Firemen & EnginemenNo. 566 (23)

William V. Ellis, 23M.P. Machine Operators

No. 599 (31)Jerome G. Viele, 31

Painters No. 294 (320)0. DeSoto. 160Pete Steinhauer, 160

Retail Food. Drug & LiquorClerks No. 1288 (1000)

George Kisling, 1000

GARDENAFire Fighters No. 1413 (30)

J. D. Hancock, 15R. L. Glasier. 15

GLENDALEPainters No. 713 (572)Willard L. Sward, 572

Plumbers No. 761 (891)Luther E. Odom, 446Arnie Rodio, 445

HAYWARDCommunications Wkrs. No.

9412 (456)E. J. Cruice, 228J. B. Booe, 228

Culinary Wkrs. & BartendersNo. 823 (2543)

Joseph Medeiros, 509Leroy V. Woods, 509Robert Otteson, 509Dan M. Silva, 508Wesley Drake, 508

Glass Bottle Blowers No. 53(262)

Joseph A. Scalise, 131Charles R. Work, 131

Painters No. 1178 (297)Richard H. Fitzgerald, 297

HOLLYWOODAFL Film Council (2)George J. Flaherty, 1

Auto Wkrs. No. 179 (1824)Clyde E. Bullock, 1824

Carpenters & Joiners No. 1052(1422)

George Zack, 1422Film Technicians No. 683

(2495)Ernest H. Abell, 416Donald P. Haggerty, 416John 0. Richmond, 416Wm. Boal, 416Albert Jones, 416Jack E. Rector, 415

M.P. Costumers No. 705 (150)William K. Howard, 75Ted Ellsworth, 75

M.P. Crafts Service No. 727(162)

Albert K. Erickson, 162M.P. Set Painters No. 729 (265)Ralph W. Peckham, 265

M.P. Sound TechniciansNo. 695 (300)

Thomas A. Carman, 300M.P. Studio Cinetechnicians

No. 789 (528)Paul E. O'Bryant. 528

M.P. Studio ProjectionistsNo. 165 (298)

Leo S. Moore, 298Nat'l. Broadcast Empls.

No. 53 (797)Ken Moon, 797

Painters No. 5 (654)N. C. Neall, 654

Property Craftsmen No. 44(2000)

Bruce J. Colville. 2000Screen Actors Guild, Inc. (2083)Pat Somerset, 2083

Studio Electricians No. 40 (175)Vincent J. Murphy, 88James W. Dunlap, 87

HUNTINGTON PARKButchers No. 563 (2522)Arthur Eaton, 841J. J. Rodriguez, 841Glen Weidenhamer. 840

Furniture Wkrs. No. 1010 (655)Wayne Gumm, 328Louis Gilbert, 327

Glass Bottle BlowersNo. 137 (1215)

Cloise McCarley, 608John Kitzke, 607

Packinghouse Wkrs. No. 78-C(19)

Frank Sylva, 10Gib Baldt, 9

LIVERMOREFire Fighters No. 1477 (6)Vincent M. Riddle, 6

LONG BEACHAuto VWkrs. No. 148 (5946)Ernest R. West, 5946

Bartenders No. 686 (1048)Tommy Pitts. 1048

Bldg. & Const. Trades Council(2)

Wayne J. Hull, 1Chemicals Wkrs. No. 1 (188)Paul F. Petersen, 188

Communications Wkrs. No.9571 (880)

George E. Buck, 880

14

Culinar Alliance No. 681(4g% Stevens, Jr., 4861JamesT.SeesJr,41

Culinary Wkrs. Jt. Ex. Ed. (2)James Hamilton, 1

Culinary, Wkrs. & BartendersState Council (2)

Frankie Behan, 1M. R. Callahan, 1

Fire Fighters No. 372 (355)Dale Lowell, 178L. Blusser, 177

Lathers No. 172 (181)C. B. Gariss. 181

Oil, Chemical & Atomic Wkrs.No. 128 (5058)

E. C. Vaughan, 843Al Chandler, 843Bill Braughton, 843E. P. O'Malley, 843Tom Burkholder, 843Robert M. Brown 843

Painters No. 256 (676)Wayne 3. Hull, 679

LOS ANGELESAdvertising & Public Relations

Empls. No. 518 (34)Chas. H. Lang 17RatDhJ N8ercier, 17Autq`Wkr6. No. 887 (16088)Al Haener, 2682Paul Schrade, 2682Richard Cartwright, 2681Jack Hurst, 2681E. J. Franklin, 2681H. L. Lacayo, 2681

Barbers & Beauticians StateAwn. (2)

Anthony Agrillo, 1Alvin L. Holt. 1

Bartenders No. 284 (1820)Norman Stadig, 1820

Bill Posters No. 82 (118)0. W. Sullivan 59C. J. Hyans, 6§

Boilermakers No. 92 (666)Donald L. McGrew, 666

Bldg. & Const. Trades Council(2)

J. J. Christian, 1Cabinet Makers & Millmen

No. 721 (2606)James Flores, 522Anthony J. Bogdanowicz, 521Richard Garrison, 521Shirley Harris, 521William Sidell, 521

Carpet, Linoleum & Soft TileNo. 1247 (2280)

Dexter Hemeon, 1140Romaine Hixson, 1140

Carpenters Dist. Councilof L.A. Co. (2)

Gordon A. McCulloch, 1Cement Masons No. 627 (1100)Elmo Duran, 1100

Chemical Wkrs. No. 11 (447)Salvador G. Lopez, 447

Cleaners, Dyers, Pressers &Allied Trades No. 268 (400)

Jerome Posner, 400Cloak Makers No. 58 (529)Meyer R. Silverstein, 529

Clothing Wkrs. No. 55d (500)Leonard Lev 250Claude Cox, 250

Clothing Wkrs. No. 81 (150)Jerome Posner, 150

Clothing Wkrs. No. 278 (1300)Harry Bloch, 1300

ClothingWkrs. So. Calif.Jt. Zd. (2)

Jerome Posner, 1Communications Wkrs. No. 9590

(1091)E. A. King, 1091

Cooks No. 468 (1666)Paul E. Greenwood. 833Augustine A. Garcia, 833

Dining Car Employees No. 582(218)

Inman L. Cobb. 109William E. Pollard, 109

Electrical Wkrs. No. 11 (5000)Webb Green 1000Charles W. Walker, 1000Harold G. Schmiederer 1000James H. Simmons, 10(60Mrs. Jeannette M. Simmons

1000Electrical Wkrs. State Assn. (2)Charles W. Walker, 1George Mulkey, 1

Fire Fighters No. 748 (916)William V. Wheatley, 458William C. Shonborn, 458

Fire Fighters No. 1014 (1209)Kenneth D. Larson, 605James 0. Page, 604

Hod Carriers No. 300 (1666)Thomas Bibbs, 334Leon Daniels, 333Augustine Ruiz, 333Bucky Micell, 333Ernesto Guzman, 333

Laborers So. Calif. Dist.Council (2)

E. L. Congo, 1Ladies Garment & Access.

Wkrs. No. 482 (200)Max B. Wolf, 200

Ladies Garment Wkrs. No. 84(300)

Meyer R. Silverstein, 300Ladies Garment Wkrs. No. 55

(983)Isidor Stenzor. 983

Ladies Garment Wkrs. No. 96(200)

Samuel Otto, 200Ladies Garment Wkrs. No. 97

(227)Meyer R. Silverstein, 227

Los Angeles Co. COPE (2)Harry Bloch, 1Thelma Thomas, 1

Los Angeles Co. Federationof Labor (2)

Irvin P. Mazzei, 1Herbert C. Evetts, 1

Mailers No. 9 (389)W. J. Bassett, 389

Miscellaneous RestaurantEmpls. No. 440 (2802)

Harvey Lundschen, 1401Merlin Woods, 1401

M.P. ProjectionistsNo. 150 (586)

Arthur C. McLaughlin, 586Operating Engineers, No. 12

(6389)J. H. Seymour, 3196Wm. A. Cobb. Jr., 3194

Packinghouse Wkrs. Dist.Ne 4 (2)

Bud Simonson, 1Painters Dist. Council No. 36

(2)Walt Zagajeski, 1

Photo Engravers No. 32 (602)Peter J. Remmel, 602

Rubber Wkrs. No. 43 (650)Herbert H. Wilson 650

Rubber Wkrs. No. 44 (932)T. T. Chambers. 466H. H. Wilson. 466

Rubber Wkrs. No. 181 (1380)J. W. McCubbin. 1380

Rubber Wkrs. No. 141 (278)Truman Chambers, 278

Sign, Scene, Pictorial PalitersNo. 831 (166)

Charles Weidlein, 166Sportswear & Cotton Garment

Wkrs. No. 266 (500)John Ulene, 500

Street, Elec. Rwy. & MCENo. 1277 (1000)

Gayle L. Collins. 1000Studio Grips No. 80 (354)Richard C. King, 354

Teachers No. 1021 (105)Mervyn Dymally, 105

Tile Layers No. 18 (520)John N. Cody. 260M. J. Fitzgerald, 260

Utility WVkrs. No. 132 (1738)Edward Hall, 869Edward T. Shedlock, 869

Waiters No. 17 (2500)Edmund Anthony, 2500

Whsle. Wine & Liouorsalesmen No. 151 (86)

Syl Kesner, 86

MARTINEZConst. Laborers No. 324 (1000)John A. Cespuglio, 834Sal Minerva, 383Lofton Fowler, 333

Contra Costa Bldg. & Const.Trades Council (2)

Howard Reed. 1Contra Costa Co. Central

Labor Council (2)Hugh Caudel, 1

Electrical Wkrs. No. 802 (728)C. L. Brady, 364Geo. Adams Jr., 364

Oil, Chemical & Atomic Wkrs.No. 5 (2166)

Geo. D. Kelty 2166Painters No. 74i (150)Herbert A. Affolter, 75Henry H. Harr, 75

MAYWOODAuto Wkrs. No. 509 (4987)DeWitt Stone, 1646Weir Russell. 1646Spencer Wiley, 1646

Auto Wkrm No. 808 (1840)Donna L. Michaelson, 835Lloyd Taylor, 335James F. Bruno, 335Victor C. Gonzales, 335

Glass Bottle Blowers No. 145(137)

Wyatt R. Lazenby, 187Locomotive Firemen &

Enginemen No. 668 (87)L. Fruit, 37

Steelworkers No. 1981 (1487)Thomas Consiglio, 1487

Steelworkers No. 2058 (477)G. J. Conway, 477

McCLOUDWoodworkers No. 8-64 (877)Lee Miller, 877

MILPITASAuto Wkrs. No. 560 (1901)Arthur G. Plog, 634George Sylva, 634J. R. Domingues, 638

MODESTOBldg. & Const. Trades

Council (2)Bert Castle, 1

Central Labor Council ofStanislaus Co. (2)

Frank Russo. 1David C. McCain, 1

Electrical Wkrs. No. 684 (355)J. E. Hudson, 178Charles R. Langenberg, 177

Fire Fighters No. 1289 (37)Jay Woody, S7

Hod Carriers, Bldg. & Const.Laborers No. 1130 (598)

Frank J. Russo. 297James R. Milford, 296

Plasterers & Cement MasonsNo. 429 (57)

C. Al Green, 29David C. McCain, 28

MONTEREYBldg. & Const. Trades Council

of Monterey Co. (2)Harry Foster, 1Russel S. Hansen, 1

Carpenters & JoinersNo. 1323 (578)

Russel S. Hansen, 289Leo Thiltgen, 289

Central Labor Councilof Monterey Peninsula (2)

Delia E. Paine, 1Florence Viall, 1

15

Hod Carriers & Common Lab.No. 690 (400)

Geo. E. Jenkins, 200Kenneth B. Holt, 200

Hotel, Rest. & BartendersNo. 483 (1312)

Lillie B. Arnold, 1312Locomotive Firemen &

Enginemen No. 97 (55)Lynn 0. Fruit, 28Perry 0. Beck, 27

NAPAHod Carriers & Gen. Laborers

No. 371 (325)Jessie 0. Payne. 325

NEEDLESLocomotive Firemen &

Enginemen No. 327 (44)J. L. Evans. 44

NEWARKFire Fighters No. 1483 (2)Vincent M. Riddle, 2

OAKLANDAllied Printing Trades Council

(2)John M. Fitzgerald. 1

Alameda Co. School Empl.No. 257 (277)

William H. Peters. 139Harold Benner. 138

Automotive Machinists No.Calif. Council (2)

Fred L. Martin, 1Auto & Ship Painters No. 1176

(400)Leslie K. Moore. 400

Auto Wkrs. No. 76 (918)Manuel Dias. 918

Barbers No. 134 (458)I. 0. Chamorre, 229John A. Monte, Jr. 229

Bartenders No. 52 (f60)Steven J. Revilak, 315James F. Murphy, 315Joseph J. Canale, 315John F. Quinn. 315

Bldg. & Const. TradesCouncil (2)

J. L. Childers. 1Carpenters & Joiners No. 36

(1824)Alfred Thoman, 608Gunnar Benonys, 608Oscar Anderson, 608

Cement Masons No. 594 (433)Bruce Dillashaw, 433

Central Labor Council (2)Robert S. Ash, 1Russell Crowell, 1

Cleaning & Dye House Wkrs.No. 3009 (1186)

Mae Coleman. 297Harry Hutchinson, 297Queen Parks, 296Lucille Woods, 296

Communications Wkrs. No.9490 (832)

Donald L. James. 278E. A. Fowler, Jr., 277Felix M. DeAnda, 277

Construction & GeneralLaborers No. 304 (3000)

Jay Johnson, 430Paul L. Jones, 430Howard Bostwick. 428Lester A. Smith, 428Anthony C. Schiano, 428C. C. Clark, 428Emmett P. Jones. 428

Cooks No. 228 (2000)Jack Faber. 400Harry Goodrich, 400H. J. Badger, 400Pat Sander, 400Lou Borges, 400

Council for Political Education,Alameda Co. (2)

Richard K. Groulx, 1Ernest C. Perry, 1

Culinary Wkrs. No. 31 (3568)Edrie E. Wright 595F"ran Childers. 5i5Elmo D. Rua, 595Betty Borikas, 595Jody Kerrigan, 594Alma M. Phillips 594

Dining Car Cooks & WaitersNo. 456 (325)

T. W. Anderson, 163B. P. Hicks. 162

Electrical Wkrs. No. 595 (1250)Chester A. Baker, 625Verner R. Beck, 625

Electrical Wkrs. No. 1245 (1001)Ronald T. Weakley, 334M. A. Walters, 334Lawrence Foss. 333

Fire Fighters No. 55 (688)Albert E. Albertoni, 230Richard E. Cadigan, 229Vincent M. Riddle, 229

Glass Bottle Blowers No. 141(600)

Elaine Alamelda, 300Clara Pearson, 300

Lathers No. 88 (150)W. Ward, 150

Locomotive Firemen &Enginemen No. 820 (18)

A. L. Lentz, 18Machinists No. 284 (1333)Edward J. Logue, 667Thomas M. Hunter, 666

Millmen's No. 550 (800)Clyde L. Johnson, 800

9th Congressional Dist. COPE(2)

Salvador Tavares, 1Norman E. Amundson, 1

Painters No. 127 (518)Sam Caponio, 518

Painters Dist. Council No. 16(2)

Ben Rasnick, 1Retail Food Clerks No. 870

(1200)Elizabeth H. Mackin, 300Mina G. Dorrance, 300William W. Devine, 300Paul C. Crockett, 300

Roofers No. 81 (250)Louis H. Thomas, 250

Rubber Wkrs. No. 64 (212)E. Porreca, 106H. Trask, Jr.. 106

Sheet Metal Wkrs. No. 216(500)

Robert M. Cooper. 250Ben Finkelstein, 250

Shipyard & Marine ShopLaborers No. 886 (550)

Charles A. Bailey, 275Harry Lumsden, 275

Sleeping Car Porters (250)J. E. Brown, 125C. Crenshaw, 125

Steelworkers No. 1798Ed. Raggio. 248Edgar L. Stuart, 247

Steelworkers No. 3702 (2)Ray P. Haeckel, 2

Steelworkers No. 4468 (412)Antonio Polvorosa, 412

Theatrical Stage Empls.No. 107 (34)

John F. Craig 34Typographical No. 36 (636)Arthur Triggs, 318Richard H. Harris. 318

OXNARDCommunications Wkrs. No.

9575 (338)Kenneth B. Mathes, 169Mary E. Roedl, 169

PALO ALTOCarpenters & Joiners

No. 668 (1187)James E. Powers, 594Henry Kolbaba 593

Typographical Wkrs. No. 521(136)

Paul Leach, 136

PASADENAFire Fighters No. 809 (157)Kenneth D. Larson, 157

Hotel-Restaurant Empls.No. 531 (2477)

Hilton Porter, 1239Edith Glenn. 1238

Meat Cutters No. 439 (1800)Walter Karas, 600Hugh Albright, 600Herbert Evetts, 600

Painters No. 92 (414)Wayne Hull, 414

PETALIJMABartenders & Culinary Wkrs.

No. 271 (290)Earl P. Byars, 145Theo. H. Graser, 145

PICO RIVERAAuto Wkrs. No. 923 (1820)Thomas J. Stephens, 607Vincent Ferragamo, 607Marvin Brody, 606

PITTSBURGBartenders & Culinary Wkrs.

No. 822 (794)Chuck Alleman, 397Vincent Licari. 397

Steelworkers No. 1440 (2202)Anthony Cannata, 734John Cannata, 734Ray Patrick, 734

Steelworkers No. 4534 (53)Joseph Angelo. 27A. B. Allison, 26

PLEASANT HILLFire Fighters, Contra Costa

Co No. 1230 (190)Don ;kinner, 95Richard Carrigan, 95

POMONAGlass Bottle Blowvers

No. 34 (233)Carl Legler, 233

PORTOLALocomotive Firemen &

Enginemen No. 795 (22)A. L. Lentz, 22

REDDINGButchers No. 352 (355)Ralph L. Bussard 178George V. Rivard, 177

Culinary Wkrs. No. 470 (1006)Clarice Rabe 1006

Five County 6ommittee onPolitical Education (2)

Rod Ash, 1

REDWOOD CITYCement Mill Wkrs. No. 760

(145)C. F. Boynton, 73A. R. Valenzuela, 72

RICHMONDBartenders & Culinary Wkrsm

No. 595 (2096)John M. Kropa, 350James E. Calvarese, 350Katherine S. Ginsburg, 349Ann Tuttle, 349Walter Holder, 349Jean Jensen 349

Contra Costa (OPE (2)Cliff Chaney, 1I. B. Timmerman, 1

Locomotive Firemen &Enginemen No. 756 (25)

R. L. Scott, 13E. W. Lindsey, 12

M.P. Projectionists No. 560 (19)Hugh Caudel 10Chas. Glum, b

Public Empls. of Contra CostaCo. No. 302 (41)

Thomas Hardwick, 41

16

RIVMSIDECentral Labor Council'2Burnell W. Phillips

Hod Carriers & Gen. LaborersNo. 1184 (1351)

James L. Smith, 1351

SACAMNTOBldg. & Constr. Trades Council

R. A. Caples, 1Calif. Federation of Teachers

(2)Marshall Axelrod, 1William Plosser, 1

Central Labor Council (2)Harryr Finks, 1

Fire Fighters No. 522 (258)J. W. O'Sullivan, 129D. P. Sandretto, 129

Miscellaneous EmployeesNo. 393 (1118)

Ralph P. Gross 569E,. F. Reissig 6M9

M.P. Machine (5peratorsNo. 252 (47)

L. E. McMillin 24T. J. Farll :3

Sheet Metal Wkrs. No. 162 (100)R. A. Caples, 100

State Empls. No. 411 (83)Mrs. Effie Solomon, 42William E. Collins, 41

Waiters & Waitresses No. 561(1232)

Harry Finks, 122

SALINASCarpenters & Joiners No. 925

(200)Herbert Nelson, 200

Central Labor Council (2)Herbert Nelson, 1

COPE 12th CongressionalDist. (2)

Harry Foster, 1Monterey County COPE (2)Pat Arnold, 1

Packinghouse Wkrs.No. 78A (1062)

William EL Maples, 266Bessie Sandry, 266Frank Menezes, 265Irene Johnston, 265

SAN BERNARDINOCentral Labor Council (2)N. Earl Wilson. 1

Culinary Wkrs. & BartendersNo. 535 (1900)

Vada Perrigo, 1900Electrical Wkrs. No. 447 (550)Jack Carney, 550

Fire Flighters No. 891 (122)J. M. Webb, 61J. T. Terry, 61

Hod Carriers & LaborersNo. 783 (834)

Ray M. Wilson, 417Elmer J. Doran, 417

Locomotive Firemen &Enginemen No. 314 (39)

J. L. Evans. 39

SAN BRUNOTransport Wkrs. No. 505 (200)Ray Wilson, 100Herbert L. Atkins, 100

SAN DIEGOAuto Wkrs. No. 506 (998)Robt. L. Spears, 998

Butchers No. 229 (1854)Max J. Osslo, 927Arthur Meyer, 927

Carpenters Dist. Council (2)Arrnon L. Henderson, 1

Carpenters No. 1296 (1171)Armon L. Henderson, 1171

Central Labor Council (2)R. R. Richardson, 1Robert L. Spears, 1

Clothing Wkrs. No. 288 (300)Claudce Cox, 300

Culina9y Alliance & HotelService Empla. No. 40X(2888)

Dudley Wright, 578M. C. BraT,678Edward Clouette 578Joseph LiMandA 577Loretta Proctor 677

Federated Fire Fighters ofCalifornia (2)

Kenneth D. Severit, 1Fire Fighters No. 145 (464)W. H. Gibb, 232A. D. Isom, 232

Fire Fighters San DiegoArea Fed. (66)

William H. Gibb, 33A. D. Isom 33

M.P. Projectionista No. 297(125)

Ernest J. Miller 125Waiters & Bartenders No. 500

(1072)Gus Mureo, 536Tommy Versus, 536

SAN FRANCISCOA.F.T.R.A. (343)Arthur A. Brown, 343

Allied Printing Trades Conf. (2)Herman Mansuy, 1C. N. Jetmore, 1

American Radio Assn.AFL-CIO (250)

Richard Best, 125Philip O'Rourke, 125

Automotive Machinists No. 1305(3629)

Fred L. Martin, 3629Barbers & Beauticians No. 148

(786)M. C. Isaksen, 786

Bartenders No. 41 (3194)Arthur Dougherty, 533Joseph Buckley, 533William McCabe, 532George Corey, 532Joe Garcia, 532William Walsh. 532

Bookbinders No. 31-125 (450)Wm. S. Hogan, 225Albert W. Mattson, 225

Bldg. & Const. TradesCouncil (2)

Daniel F. Del Carlo, 1John L. Hogg, 1

Building & Const. TradesState Council (2)

Bryan P. Deavers, 1Building Service Employees

No. 87 (1200)George Hardy, 300Herman Eimers, 300James Cheney, 300Ellis Cheney. 300

Butchers No. 115 (3500)George Mesure, 500Richard Brugge. 500Thomas Anderson, 500Alfred Lombardi. 500Ernest Couly, 500Clifford Dietrich, 500Anselmo Agosti, 500

Butchers, Western Federation(2)

Edwin F. Michelsen, 1Calif. Theatrical Federation (2)Pat Somerset, 1Wm. P. Sutherland, 1

Carpenters Bay Cos. Dist.Council (2)

C. R. Bartalini, 1Carpenters State Council (2)Anthony L. Ramos, 1C. R. Bartalini, 1

Central Labor Council (2)George W. Johns, 1John F. Crowley, 1

City & County Empls. No. 400(200)

J. E. Jeffery, 100Edward Parnell, 100

City & County EmployeesNo. 747 (100)

Harry Ruby, 50Thomas J. Burns, 50

Cloakmakers No. 8 (300)San Green, 800

Clothing Wkr Jt. Board (2)Sam Krips, 1Mark Becker, 1

Clothing Wlk. No. 42, (500)Sam Krips, 250Anne Draper, 250

Commercial TelegraphersNo. 34 (950)

James W. Cross 950Communications Wkr& Dist.

No. 9 (2)W. A. Baker, 1Marie A. Bruce, 1

Communications Wkr. No.9470 (122)

Marvin Brannon, 61L. D. Franklin, 61

Communications Wkrs. No.9410 (92)

Jack Friday, 46Seymour H. Singer, 46

Const. & Gen. LaborersNo. 261 (2405)

Ed Steele, 401George Ellis, 401James Smith, 401Terrence O'Sullivan, 401Henry Freeman, 401Maurice Barry. 400

Cooks No. 44 (3000)Agnes Barnhill 600Earl Payne, 606James Bracisco, 600Wm. Kilpatrick, 600Gene Gerardo, 600

Coppersmiths No. 438 (54)Robert E. Mogel, 54

Culinary Wkrs., BartendersJt. Ex. Bd. (2)

Joseph Belardi, 1Dressmakers No. 101 (300)Cornelius Wall 150Myrtle M. Banis, 150

Electrical Wkrs. No. 6 (1000)William M. Reedy, 334Franz E. Glen, 333Gerald Pickle, 333

Elevator Constructors No. 8(150)

Leon A. Pascal, 75Thomas E. Fitzgerald, 75

Fire Fighters No. 798 (1632)Robert F. Callahan, 327Martin Madden, 327Frank Minahan, 326Jerry Mahoney, 326E.d DWunn, 326

Furniture Wkrs. No. 262 (937)Fred Stefan, 313Anthony Scardaci, 812Joseph Poni, 312

Ga:nent Cutters No. 45 (59)Andy Ahern, 59

Glasiers & Glassworkers No.718 (281)

Myrl Geminani, 281Hotel & Club Service Wkrs.

No. 283 (3010)Bertha Metro, 602Glenn Chaplin, 602Elizabeth Shaw, 602Robert Wigton, 602Leo Ware, 602

Insurance Wkrs. No. 78 (88)John E. Bamberger, 44Coley Stokes, 44

Laborers No. Calif. Dist.Council (2)

Jay Johnson, 1Chas. Robinson, 1

Ladies Garment CuttersNo. 213 (100)

Larry Mirgon, 100Loco. Firemen & Enginemen

No. 139 (28)William V. Ellis, 28

Locomotive Firemen &Enginemen (Gen-GrievanceComm.) Council (2)

R. W. Guy, 1D. B. McGriff, 1

17

Locomotive Firemen &Xnginemen Cali. Legis.Bd. (2)

William V. Ellis, 1Miscellaneous Culinary Empls.

No. 110 (2213)A. T. Gabriel, 443Sam Kutnick, 443Susan Barker, 443Cornelia Johnson 442Dave Petrovich, 442

M.P. Machine OperatorsNo. 162 (161)

E. H. Ponn, 81Duff Murphy, 80

Musicians No. 6 (687)Paul Rosen, 229Ralph Baker, 229Peter Butti, 229

Nat'l Maritime Unions, Calif.(520)

David Smith, 520Newspaper Guild No. 52 (1637)Fred D. Fletcher, 410Kirk Smith, 409Rex Adkins, 409Elinor Redner, 409

Office Empls. No. 3 (600)Phyllis Mitchell, 600

Operatinn Engineers No. 3

Bill Raney, 438LL. Laux. 438Ernest Nelson, 438H. T. Petersen, 438Ed. DuBos, 438Russell Swanson, 437Art Pennebaker, 437Jerry Dowd, 437A. 3. Hope, 437Walter Talbot, 437

Operating Engineers Calif.Conference (2)

James J. Twombley, 1A. G. Boardman. 1

Operating Stat'y Engrs. No. 39F. J. Van der Lieth, 360Carl Kriletich, 359John Hobson, 359Bernard Speckman, 359

Paint & Brush Makers No.1071 (895)

Russell Meyer, 395Pile Drivers No. 34 (500)Charles Clancy, 250Carl Anderson, 250

Professional Embalmers No.9049 (104)

Richard E. Venters, 52John F. Crowley, 52

Retail Clerks State Council (2)Larry Vail, 1

Retail Dept. Store Empls.No. 1100 (3634)

Leona Graves, 404Herman Griffin, 404Jane Remmers. 404Avis Hart, 404Walter Johnson, 404James Callaghan. 404Richard Williams 404Pat Kelley 403Lynn Childs, 403

Retail Shoe & Textile SalesmenNo. 410 (88)

William Silverstein, 83Roofers No. 40 (390)Ed. L. Davenport, 195T. R. Moore, 195

Sheet Metal Wkrs., Tri-StateCouncil of Calif. Aris. &Nevada (2)

Robert E. Mogel, 1Sign, Scene & Pictorial Painters

No. 510 (220)Thomas Carter, 110R. H. Wendelt, 110

Stereotypers & ElectrotypersNo. 29 (290)

Frank J. Sloan, 145R. Raymond Jeffress, 145

Teachers No. 61 (187)Dan D. Jackson, 187

Teachers No. 1119 (79)S. Greenfield 40L. Harmon, b9

Theatrical Janitors No. 9 (186)Leland Elmers, 68Alfred Kelly, 67

Theatrical Stage Empls. No. 16(76)

Edward C. Powell, 88William J. Freeman, 37

Theatrical WardrobeAttendants No. 784 (37)

Wm. P. Sutherland, 37Typograehical No. 21 (1173)Harold Rice, 294Allan Myers, 293Russ Powell, 293Arthur Stagliano, 293

Waiters & Dairy LunchmenNo. 30 (3625)

Thee Gruhacich, 1813Joe. Piccini, 1812

Waitresses No. 48 (4499)Jackie Walsh, 643Odella Snyder, 643Elizabeth Kelley, 643Joyce McCabe, 643Beryle Sheffield, 643Bertha Merwin, 642Dorothy Brady, 642

Watchmakers No. 101 (100)George F. Allen, 50Warren K. Billings, 50

Web Pressmen No. 4 (316)John F. Kelly, 316

Western Conf. of SpecialtyUnions (2)

Don McCaughan 1Window Cleaners No. 44 (200)Tony Borsella, 100

SAN JOSEBldg. & Constr. Trades CouncilRoger M. Brennan, 1

Butchers No. 506 (2080)Fred L. Feci, 694Ernest L. Courtright, 693Walter R. Howes, 693

Cement Laborers No. 270 (1500)Harry F. Whitehouse, 750Robert H. Medina, 750

Central Labor Council ofSanta Clara Co. (2)

Emerson Street, 1Fire Fighters No. 873 (279)Ralph Bernardo. 140Gabriel Fernandez, 139

Hotel, Restaurant & HotelService Empls. No. 180(4116)

Louis Bosco, 4116Lathers No. 144 (136)Geo. W. Puthuff, 68Wm. F. Muhilly, Sr., 67

Lathers State Council (2)C. B. Gariss, 1Wm. Ward, 1

Painters Dist. Council No. 33(2)

Chas. R. Downey, 1Painters No. 507 (985)Harvey W. McGee, 985

Retail Clerks No. 428 (2000)James P. McLoughlin, 1000Victor J. Lazzaro, 1000

SAN LORENZOFire Fighters No. 1428 (12)John Bigelow, 6Harold Burger, 6

SAN LUIS OBISPOElectrical Wkrs. No. 639 (101)Charles W. Walker, 101

SAN MATEOAir Transport Empls. No. 1781

(100)Sam Menta, 50Paul F. Rockwood, 50

Bartenders & Culinary Wkrs.No. 340 (3411)

W. J. Anselmo, 427John D. Barei, 427E. J. Molinari, 427W. 0. Royalty, 426T. A. Small, 426T. L. Smith, 426I. A. Valentine, 426G. A. Smith, 426

Butchers No. 516 (961)Edwin F. Michelson, 981

Carpenters & Joiners No. 162(11)

Earl W. Honerlah, 1125Central Labor Council (2)Edwin Michelsen, 1

Communications Wkrs.No. 9430 (413)Edward R. Liaty, 207Dan B. McLeod, 206

Construction & GeneralLaborers No. 389 (1268)

Chas. Benton, 317Phillip Thorpe, 317Floyd Elliott, 317Glen Hopper, 317

Electrical Wkrs. No. 617 (100)Charles Foehn, 50Ernest Hills, 50

Plumbers & SteamfittersNo. 467 (500)

Sam Abruscato, 250Irving Hupp, 250

Theatrical Stage & MotionPicture Operators No. 409(48)

Frank Picchi, 24Michael Zubatch, 24

SAN PEDROBartenders No. 591 (366)Andrew Hemnes, 306

Painters & Decorators No.949 (150)

Walt Zagajeski, 150Seine & Line Fishermen (800)John Calise, 150Nick Pecoraro, 150

Shipyard Laborers No. 802(333)

Elmer B. LowerY, 167William R. McClainf 166

SAN BAFAELCentral Labor Council (2)James Smith, 1Charles Weers, 1

Plasterers & Cement MasonsNo. 355 (110)

Bryan P. Deavers, 110

SANTA ANABldg. & Const. Trades Council

of Orange Co. (2)Thomas W. Mathew, 1

Central Labor Council (2)Peter J. Remmel 1

Hod Carriers No. 6&2 (2503)David Hernandez, 835Paul Guzman, 834Richard A. Morones, 834

Orange County COPE (2)Chris T. Portway, 1

SANTA BARBARABldg. & Const. Trades Council

(2)W. L. Fillippini, 1

Central Labor Council (2)N. J. Leuck, 1

Communications Wkrs. No.9576 (378)

John Benson, 189Donald Wells, 189

Const. & Gen'l. LaborersNo. 591 (652)

S. C. Aparicio, 218Nick Orsua, 217Librado Uribe, 217

Culinary Alliance & BartendersNo. 498 (2127)

Al Whorley, 1064Zola Benson, 1063

Electrical Wkrs. No. 413 (426)Norville J. Leuck, 425

Meat Cutters No. 556 (535)Warren M. Underwood, 268Russell E. Jehnke, 267

Painters Dist. Council No. 52(2)

Leo A. Williams, No.1Plumbers & Steamfitters

No. 114 (140)A. J. Hansen, 140

18

Santa Barbara County Tri-Council COPE (2)

Carl L. Hehnke, 1Sal Aparicio, 1

Sheet MIetal \Vki':. No. 273 (251)Carl L. Hel inke, 126W. L. Fillippilni, 123

SANTA CLARALoconioti% Firemtien &

Enlinemwn 'No. 91 (113)C. 0. \ aid (n. 57R. E. Ceeconi, 56

Ro ,fets State C(uoicil (2)Thlos. Ft. Moore, 1

SANTA CRUZC ntral (L((ucil t2)

Geo. L. Harrison, 1H. SI. Cornell, 1

Culinay \Wkrs. No. 742 (81)1'. C. Van (le Ptltte. 81

SANTA M1ONICACaipenteI:S & Joinl I'S

No. 1400 11(119)ElliIm3 B)irkeii's, 510Al Ieatilna, l09

Painter, No. 821 (323)Walt Zagajeski, 323

SANTA ROSAButcher.s No. 3t6-1 (623)CharIcs Patl. 312Petrina Rot '.- 31 1

Fire Fig-lter' INo 1401L (28)Antlhon-vy Woriniian, 1-9Clharle.s Stark, 19

Ilod Carriers & ComlemonlLalborers No. 139 (383)

Al Deor:ey 19:3Wairca Anderi-son, 192

Retail Clerk.' No. 1532' (100)George L. Deck, 50Jerome J. Lewis, 50

SOn)oia Co. COPE (2)Tiina Rogers, 1Charles Paul, 1

SAUGASGlass Bottle Blowers No. 69

(210)Williamii Oppenheimer, 210

SHERMAN ORKSH.tel Mlotel, Restaurant

Emnpls. & BartendersNo. 694 (3423)

Ira L. Osborn, 428William-l R. Robertson, 428Robert Axelrod, 428Hy miani Rappaport, 428Everett Ivy, 428Colleeni Lo-an. 428Clydle N. Hanikinis, 428Louies Sch-miiiuck, 427

SOUTH GATEAuito Wkrs. No. 216 (3115)

Jamiies Duncan, 1558Lee Williams. 1557

Rtibber Wkrs. No. 100 (1339)J. A. Lewis, 670Franik Gild, 669

STOCKTONCentral Labor CouIncil of San

Joa(lquin (2)Henry Hansen, 1

hl'ectlrical Wkrs. No. 591 (100)lfaroldl: Dow, 100

Fie Flighter.' iNo. 1229 (155)Robert L. RFtenne'r. 1a5

Fi'o Fighters, San JoaquinCo.,, No. 1243 (38)

RFobei t L. Reanler, 38Labori League fori Political

Educ(ation of San Joaquin& Calax-eras Cos. (2)

Rober-t Reom in'. 11,o)(-o. Fiu''on' & Enginem-ein

N(o. 7914 (14)A. I. Lentz, 14

J P. Pio jectioinists No. 428 (27)1hOw)y Bills' 27

1)apl)eiSalk'r.s No. 320 (150)I,s olnari 3AK1cGo e, 150

Tematrical Stiag>e BiIupis.NO. 90 (18)

J. Don Layson, 18

SUNNYVALEBl.irbe'rs No. 498 (59)

J. L. Happoid, 59

TRACYLocomotive Firenicn &

Eng i110enmn No. 808 (116)Ted F. MIackjust, 58Charles Sary. 58

TUSTINRoibber W\Vkrs. No. 510 (179)Truman Chiambebrs, 179

VALLEJOBEd(1. & Constr. Trades

C()uncil (2)Janie' It. Pollard, 1Joseph Valdez. 1

Carpenters & Joinier1s No. 180(773)

WNTilliami Lesie, 773Central Labor Council (2)(le G. Twedt, 1

Culinary Wkrs. & BartendersNo. 560 (787)

Ole G. Twedt, 263Elizabeth Billings, 262Purser D. Woniack, 262

Fire Fighters No. 1186 (68)Ilarold J. Tavalero, 34Louis Cunningham, 34

Ilod Carriers & LaboiersNo. 326 (565)

Clarence WV. Moss, 565LaboI League for Political

Education of Solano Co. (2)Stanley Latlhen, 1-Williamn Leslie, 1

Plasterers & Cement MasonsNo. 631 (49)

Joseph Valdez. 49Retail Store EImipls. No. 373

(333)Stanley Lathen, 167Jack Sparlini, 166

Shipwrigihts. Joiniers & BoatBldrs. No. 1068 (125)

Jamnes IH. Sullivan, 63Ray F. Kelsey, 62

Ty pographical No. 389 (90)Airtlhui R. Flick, 45James Wi. Black, 45

VAN NUYSAuto Wkrs. No. 645 (3413)

A. Ilaenei-, 3413Paiinters No. 1595 (600)James S. Lee, 300Wm. C. Stetliemoi, 300

VENTURAilo(1 Cairiers & Comiimon

Laborers No. 583 (637)Bennie Arellano, 213Janies V. Flores, 212Viimcenit C. IFuiz, 212

Ventura Counity COPE (2)Ronald Beniner, 1

VISTAFire Fighters No. 1429 (20)

Willianm H. Gibb, 10A. D. Isomn, 10

W%ALNUT CREEKSteelworker: No. 5450 (21)Herbert Fiinley, 11Willianm Stui-ipf, 10

WATSONVILLECarpenter s & Joiners No. 771

(224)Herimian M. Cornell, 224

WILM1INGTONButchers No. 551 (2946)Oliver W. Holmes. 2946

19

CALIFORNIA LABOR COUNCIL ON POLITICAL EDUCATIONMEMBERSHIP REPORT-NEW AFFILIATIONS2/1/62 through 1/31/64

Name of Local No.Electrical Workers ................................. 19699th Congressional District COPESteamfitters ............ ..................... 342Carpenters ........... ...................... 386Hod Carriers & General Laborers .............. 73Painters ................................. 40Teachers ......... ........................ 1352Lumber & Sawmill Workers ........................ 2658Lumber & Sawmill Workers ........................ 3019Petaluma Fire Fighters Assn....................... 1415Gardena Fire Fighters Assn....................... 1413Sheet Metal Workers ................................. 162Communication Workers District #9.12th Congressional District COPE.Plasterers & Cement Masons ...................... 355Electrical Workers ............................ ..... 302Electrical Workers ............................ ..... 332Retail Shoe & Textile Salesmen .................. 410Lathers ......... ........................ 460Hod Carriers & General Laborers .............. 371Teachers .... ............................. 1384Steelworkers ................................ 1927Lumber & Sawmill Workers ........................ 2608Calif. State Hospital Employees .................. 174

AirTransport Employees .............................. 1781Retail Grocery Clerks ................................ 648

FireFighters Association .............................. 1428Ship Painters ............ .................... 961Ontario Fire Fighters Assn......................... 1430Spring Valley Fire Fighters........................ 1434Vista Fire Fighters Assn ............................... 1429Glaziers & Glassworkers ................................ 718Hayward Federation of Teachers ................ 1423Retail Clerks ................................ 1119Studio Grips ........... ..................... 80Lathers ........ ........................ 156Barbers & Beauticians ................................ 148Retail Dept. Store Employees ...................... 1100Butchers ........ ........................ 508Housing Authority ....................... ......... 143Los Angeles State Employees ...................... 1406Fire Fighters ............ .................... 1439Typographical Workers ................................ 21

-Machinists ................................ 284Iron Workers ............ .................... 155Hod Carriers & Common Laborers .............. 139Teachers ......... ....................... 1440San Diego Teachers Federation .................. 1407Riverside County Federation Teachers .... 1414Woodworkers.------------------------------- 3-86Cemetery Workers & Green Attendants.... 265Painters ........ ........................ 1146Teachers.------------------------------- 1301Musicians ......... ....................... 6Fire Fighters ............ .................... 1466Napa County COPE ........................................

City DateRedwood City ......... 2/13/62Oakland ..... .... 2/15/62Oakland ..... .... 2/19/62San Andreas ......... 3/ 6/62Stockton ..... .... 3/ 8/62Berkeley ..... .... 3/13/62San Francisco ......... 3/16/62Porterville ......... 3/20/62Eureka ......... 3/21/62Petaluma......... 3/27/62Gardena ......... 3/27/62Sacramento ......... 3/28/62San Francisco ......... 3/29/62Salinas .... ..... 4/ 5/62San Rafael ......... 4/ 9/62Martinez ..... .... 4/16/62San -Jose .................. 4/16/62San Francisco ......... 5/ 9/62Ventura ..... .... 5/14/62Napa .... ..... 5/16/62Long Beach ......... 5/24/62Vernon ..... .... 5/25/62Redding ......... 5/28/62Napa .... ..... 6/11/62San Mateo ......... 6/15/62San Francisco ......... 6/18/62Ashland ..... .... 7/ 2/62San Francisco ......... 7/13/62Ontario ..... .... 7/27/62Spring Valley ......... 7/27/62Vista .... ..... 7/27/62San Francisco ......... 7/30/62Hayward ..... .... 8/ 7/62San Rafael ......... 8/ 7/62Los Angeles ......... 8/ 8/62Chico ....... 8/27/62San Francisco ......... 9/ 9/62San Francisco ......... 9/12/62San Francisco ......... 9/21/62Los Angeles ......... 9/22/62Los Angeles ......... 9/25/62Sacramento ......... 9/29/62San Francisco ......... 10/ 2/62Oakland ......... 10/ 4/62Fresno ......... 10/ 5/62Santa Rosa ......... 10/15/62San Leandro ......... 10/16/62San Diego ......... 10/17/62Riverside ......... 1/16/63Foresthill ......... 2/11/63Colma .... ..... 2/25/63Redwood City ......... 2/19/63Gardena .... ..... 3/ 4/63San Francisco ......... 3/12/63Madera .... ..... 4/ 1/63Napa ......... 4/ 1/63

20

Unionof State Employees ........................... 411Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ............ 314Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ............ 566Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ............ 327Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ............ 663Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ............ 731Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen .----------- 756Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen .----------- 794Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ............ 795Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ------------ 820Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ............ 946Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ------------ 979Retail Clerks .........-.. .........- .... 373Public Empls. of Contra Costa County- 302Fire Fighters - 1465Carpenters -------- 35Molders & Allied Workers - .. 164Brick & Clay Workers - 528Culinary Workers -.--.-----...-- 742Coronado Fire Fighters -.-- ..-- ..1475Fire Fighters Assn - ...1477Monte Vista Fire Fighters - 1473Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen- 97Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen .. 176Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen- 143Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen . 58Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen- 239Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen .-.. 260Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen-. 672Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen 817Production Workers -------------------------..3184San Fernando Valley Teachers- 1441Merced Fire Fighters --------------------- 1479Newark Fire Fighters - 1483West Sacramento Fire Fighters-. 14824th Congressional District COPEUnited Auto Workers--------------------------- 1364Packinghouse Workers--------------------------- 78CFire Fighters Assn- - . 1490Teachers 1472

REINSTATEMENTS Feb. 1, 1962Local No.National Broadcast Employees- 54Lumber & Sawmill Workers- 2903Plasterers & Cement Masons- 631Communications Workers -.. 9590Bill Posters - .-----------------------.--...32Carpenters -.---------------------........---------386Screen Actors Guild .-Teachers-------------------- 771Communications Workers . 9490United Cement. Lime & Gypsum-48United Auto Workers--------------------.---.-..645Communications Workers . 9407I. U. Electrical Workers - 850Ladies Garment & Undergarment Workers 496Lathers ---------------- 527Steelworkers -.---------------------.--..4954Hod Carriers & Com. Laborers- 585Retail. Whsle & Dept. Store Emp - 112Studio Electricians - . 40Communications Workers - 9490Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen . 58

Sacramento ............ 4/ 9/63San Bernardino .......... 4/15/63Fresno ...... ...... 4/15/63Needles ............ 4/15/63Maywood ............ 4/15/63Bakersfield ............ 4/15/63Richmond ............ 4/15/63Stockton ............ 4/15/63Portola ............ 4/15/63San Jose ............ 4/15/63Los Angeles 4/15/63Compton ............ 4/15/63Vallejo ....... ..... 5/ 2/63Richmond ............ 5/23/63Costa Mesa ............ 5/31/63San Rafael ------------ 6/11/63San Francisco ------------ 7/ 3/63Stockton ------------ 7/11/63Santa Cruz .........-.. 7/26/63Coronado ....... .. 7/30/63Livermore .................... 7/30/63Montclair ...... ... 7/30/63Burbank ...... ... 9/ 5/63Bakersfield ......... 9/ 5/63Oakland --------- 9/ 5/63Roseville --------- 9/ 5/63Eureka 9/ 5/63Bryte .... ..... 9/ 5/63San Luis Obispo .... 9/ 5/63San Francisco ......... 9/ 5/63Fresno ----------10/ 1/63Northridge .-........10/23/63Merced -............ 10/28/63Newark 10/28/63West Sacramento 10/28/63Vallejo 11/ 5/63Fremont ....- .... 11/22/63Huntington Park 12/ 3/63Lake Arrowhead ...... 12/30/63Visalia ....... ..... 1/15/64

through Jan. 31, 1964City Date

La Mesa ........ .... 2/ 5/62Reno, Nevada -.-.-.2/ 9/62Vallejo ....... ..... 2/13/62Los Anmeles ............... 2/15/62Los Angeles ------- 3/ 6/62San Andreas -------- 3/ 6/62Hollvwood 4/24/62Oakland -------- 5/ 3/62Oakland -.--------.--5/ 9/62Riverside ----- 5/9 /62Van Nuys ------ 5/98/'62Merced --------------------------.5/ 1 /62Los Angeles --------- 7/pn/62Los Angeles 7/2R/f62Vista --------- 7/91 /62Fontana-.------------7/24/62Ventura ----------10/ 9/62Los Angeles ---------10-/10/62Hollvwood ------------.-.... 10/99 '/62San Francisco --------- 10/2R /'62Roseville --------- 11/ 6/62

21

Municipal Employees ................................. 54Butchers ......... ........................ 120Lathers ......... ........................ 300Butchers .......... ........................ 352Carpenters & Joiners ................................. 25

I.U.Electrical Workers ................................ 850District Council of Plasterers & Cement...Typographical.-------------------------------- 519Teachers ........................... 1440Teachers .------------------- 827Steelworkers .---------------------------2058Insurance Workers .. ........... 73Central Labor Council Butte County ......Butchers .---------- 508Papermakers.---------------------------------------349Communications Workers ........................... 9575United Assn. Steamfitters.------------------- 250Plasterers & Cement Masons ...................... 429Teachers .------------------------- 1352Printing Pressmen ........................... 155Steelworkers .------------ 5188Lumber & Sawmill Workers .-.....---2608San Diego Teachers Federation ................... 1407Rubber Workers .------------------------ 621Steelworkers .----------------------------------------------------5188

Carpenters .----- 35Rubber Workers .................... ......44Communications Workers . . 9579Clothing Workers .----------- 55DPainters .............. 1178** See exonerations list

Eureka .......... 11/13/62Oakland .......... 12/13/62Bakersfield .......... 1/23/63Redding .......... 1/24/63Los Angeles .......... 1/25/63Los Angeles .......... 2/27/63San Francisco .......... 4/ 8/63Visalia ...../..... 4 9/63San Leandro .......... 4/15/63Vallejo .......... 4/23/63Maywood .......... 4/30/63San Francisco .--------- 5/17/63Oroville ...... .... 6/10/63San Francisco .......... 6/26/63Los Angeles .......... 7/ 8/63Oxnard .......... 7/29/63Los Angeles ......... 7/19/63Modesto ..... .... 7/ 9/63San Francisco ......... 8/14/63Pasadena ......... 8/12/63Rivera .... ..... 8/21/63Redding ......... 10/10/63San Diego ......... 10/25/63Sun Valley ......... 10/28/63Rivera .-------- 11/ 7/63San Rafael ......... 11/12/63Los Angeles ......... 11/13/63**Covina .-----------------..-11/13/63**Los Angeles. 11/15/63Hayward.1/ 9/63

AFFILIATES SUSPENDED 2/1/62 through 1/31/64Local No.Steelworkers .......................... 1441Calif. State Assn. Letter Carriers ................Glaziers & Glassworkers ............................ 1621Ladies Garment Workers .96CLumber & Sawmill Workers ........................ 2903Utility Workers.170Steelworkers Union .-----------------------..........---3677Woodworkers Union . 365Communications Workers.......................... 9407Meat & Provision Drivers.......................... 626

Steelworkers .-----------------------------------------....-----4954Rubber Workers .------------------ 433Plumbers & Steamfitters 364Hod Carriers .89Lathers 527Sign & Pictorial Artists.---------------------..........-484Communications Workers............................ 9581

Lathers .-----------------------------------------------156Scenic Artists .------------------------------------------816

Steelworkers 5038Dry Dock, Marine Waysmen, Stage

Riggers & Helpers 3116Retail, Whlsle. & Dept. Store Employees.... 112Const. & Genl. Laborers ......... 185Communications Workers...---------------------.. 9431Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen .. 58Carpenters & Joiners . 25Office Employees .29Plasterers & Cement Finishers 379Carpenters & Joiners.---------------------- 1235

City DateAlameda .---------- 4/ 6/62Los Angeles ........... 5/ 5/62San Jose ........... 5/ 5/62Los Angeles .---------- 6/ 5/62Reno, Nevada ........... 6/ 5/62Bakersfield ........... 7/ 6/62Fontana ............ 7/ 6/62Woodleaf ........... 7/ 6/62Merced ........... 9/ 5/62Los Angeles ............. 9/ 5/62Fontana ........... 10/ 9/62Gardena .---------- 10/ 9/62San Bernardino ........10/ 9/62San Diego.-------------10/ 9/62Vista .---------- 11/ 9/62San Jose .---------- 11/ 9/62Santa Maria ........... 11/ 9/62Chico ..... ...... 1/ 9/63Hollywood ...........1....I/ 9/63Long Beach ........... 1/ 9/63

Oakland ........... 1/Los Angeles ........... 3/Sacramento .---------- 3/Nevada City.---------- 4/Roseville ........ ... 4/Los Angeles ........... 5/Oakland ....... .... 5/Santa Cruz ........... 5/Modesto ...... ..... 6/

9/635/635/634/634/639/639/639/636/63

22

Communications Workers ......................... 9505Lathers ......................... 300Steelworkers ....... .................. 4383Construction & General Laborers .............. 1464National Broadcast Employees .................... 55Ship Painters ....... .................. 961COPE 12th Congressional District ..........Teachers ......................... .. . 827United Cement, Lime & Gypsum ................ 59I. U. Electrical Workers .853Communications Workers ..... ........ 9571Rubber Workers .640

Alhambra ........... 8/ 9/63Bakersfield ........... 8/ 9/63No. Sacramento .......... 8/ 9/63San Luis Obispo ........ 8/ 9/63Sacramento ........... 9/12/63San Francisco ........... 10/ 1/63Salinas ........... 11/ 1/63Vallejo ........... 11/ 1/63Long Beach ........... 12/ 1/63San Leandro ........... 12/ 1/63Long Beach ............ 1/ 8/64Long Beach ........... / 8/64

AFFILIATES WITHDRAWN 2/1/62 through 1/31/64Chemical Workers ............ .............. 23Marine Engineers.------------------------- 79Barbers .......................... 363Carpenters & Joiners .......................... 483Typographical Workers .......................... 909

Woodworkers .......................... 365Communications Workers .......................... 9506Pulp, Sulphite & Paper Mill Wkrs ............ 713Millmen's ...... .................... 42Carpenters ....... ................... 1149Typographical ........ .................. 394Electrical Workers ............ .............. 1969Electrical Workers ............ .............. 526Painters .......................... 434Hod Carriers & Common Laborers ............ 507M. P. Screen Cartoonists .......................... 839Electrical Workers ............ .............. 180Furniture Workers ............ .............. 3141I. U. Electrical Workers .......................... 1505Barbers .......................... 252Sheet Metal Workers ................ .......... 355Hod Carriers & Common Laborers .............. 73Lumber & Sawmill Workers ........................ 3019Coopers .......................... 65Communications Workers .......................... 9418

Pittsburg ...... .... 3/30/82Wilmington .......... 4/ 1/62Lompoc ...... .... 4/27/62San Francisco .......... 5/10/62Ventura ....../....V11/62Woodleaf .......... 7/11/62South Gate .......... 7/27/62Antioch ...... .... 8/13/62San Francisco .......... 9/ 6/62Oakland ...... .... 9/ 7/62Santa Barbara .......... 10/ 6/62Redwood City .......... 11/ 9/62Watsonvlle .......... 11/28/62Los Angeles .......... 12/10/62Long Beach .......... 1/14/63Hollywood .......... 1/21/63Vallejo .......... 1/24/63San Francisco .......... 2/ 5/63Anaheim ...... .... 2/ 8/63San Jose ....... ... 2/26/63Oakland ...... .... 3/ 8/63Stockton ....... ... 5/ 2/63Eureka.......... 8/21/63San Francisco .......... 10/21/63Modesto .......... 12/27/63

AFFILIATES DISBANDED 2/1/62 through 1/31/64I.U. Electrical .......................... 1506Steelworkers ........ .................. 4155Rubber Workers ................................... 433

Barbers Employers Guild.............................. 9Women's Union Label League. . 36Steelworkers .- 1986Steelworkers ......................................... ..... 4233Lumber & Sawmill Workers ..................... 2658Woodworkers ...... ............... 370Clay & Tile Products ..................................... 994

Oakland ..... .... 2/ 2/62Bloomington ......... 7/19/62Gardena ........................10/17/62San Francisco .11/ 8/62Los Angeles. 12/ 5/62Los Angeles. 4/25/63Riverside.4/25/63Porterville .4/29/63Susanville.6/26/63San Jose.7/ 2/63

AFFILIATES MERGED 2/1/62 through 1/31/64Beauticians ...................... 419A

Merged with .--------------------- 508AOil, Chemical & Atomic Wkrs ..................... 1-356

Merged with .. ...................... 2Office Employees ........ .............. 69

Merged with .. ...................... 29Building & Construction Trades Council.

Merged with.Fire Fighters ...... ................ 1136

Merged with ................................................ 1230

Petaluma................ 2/ 2/62Richmond (Not Affil.)Newman ................ 4/ 9/62Coalinga (Not Affil.)Fresno ................ 5/ 8/63Oakland.Visalia ................ 5/ 8/63Fresno.San Pablo ................ 5/31/63Contra Costa (Concord)

23

Textile Workers .... ............ 818Merged with .... ............ 915

Central Labor Council (So. Santa Cruz County)Merged with Santa Cruz Central Labor Council

Clothing Workers .--------------- 372.Merged with .... ............ 408

United Auto Workers .--------------- 333Merged with .--------------- 1364

United Auto Workers .--------------- 811Merged with .--------------------------------------..-.-509

United Auto Workers .--------------- 1031Merged with ................ 1364

United Auto Workers ...... .......... 333United Auto Workers .--------------- 1031

Merged with .... ............ 1364

Los Angeles.--------------- 6/ 7/63Los Angeles.Watsonville ................ 6/24/63Santa Cruz.Los Angeles ................ 6/28/63Los Angeles.Oakland ................ 8/ 8/63Fremont.Maywood ................ 9/13/63Maywood.Oakland ................ 10/30/63Fremont.Oakland ................ 11/22/63Oakland ........................Fremont .....................

AFFILIATES EXONERATED 2/1/62 through 1/31/64NameNational Broadcast Empls...................Chemical Workers ................................Rubber Workers ......................................

Communications Workers ....................Communications Workers....................Communications Workers...................Communications Workers...-.........Communications Workers.....

No.5559844

95749571957595769579

City Exonerated fromSacramento ..Sept., 1962 to April 28, 1963Torrance.-------- Oct., 1963 to Nov., 1963Los Angeles ......... Aug., 1963 to Jan., 1964Santa Monica ......... Sept., 1963Long Beach .-------- Sept., 1963Oxnard ......... Sept., 1963S. Barbara .-------- Sept., 1963Covina ......... Sept., 1963

REPORT ON PER CAPITA PAID MEMBERSHIPAND ESTIMATED MEMBERSHIP PER LOCALS

AS OF JANUARY 31, 1964

City and Local

AlhambraElectrical Utility Workers ..........................

AnaheimBarbers Union ....................................................Rubber Workers .................................................

AntiochPaper Makers ......................................................Paper Makers .......................................................Pulp, Sulph;ite & Paper Mill Workers ............Rubber Workers .................................................

ArcataLumber & Sawmill Workers .............................Plywood & Veneer Workers ...........................

AzusaChemical Workers .......................................

BakersfieldBarbers .............Bricklayers .............................................................Butchers ........................................Carpenters ..........................................................

Communications Workers .................................Electrical Workers ...............................................

Hotel & Restaurant Employees .......................Oil, Chemical & Atomic Workers................Operative Plasterers .....................................Plumbers & Steamfitters .............................Theatrical & Stage Employees ..........................Transport Workers .............................................Typographical Workers ...................................

Per CapitaLocal PaidNo. Membership

47

766657

500

12147

33060624960

50132100164

28082789

484542

112

3173

193743941642855019

1914602153005439

34

1196045076639842510008751951542083110

24

EstimatedMembership

500

12147

50132100164

484542

34

11960

45076639842510008751951542083110

City and Local

BarstowTheatrical Stage & Motion Picture Opera,tors

BellI.U.Electrical Workers ..................................I.U.Electrical Workers ....................................

Steelworkers ..........

Steelworkers ..........................................................United Auto Workers .........................................

BellflowerRubber Workers ..................................................

Bell GardensRubber Workers ..................................................

BerkeleyMeat Cutters & Butchers ....................................Painters ....................................................................Teachers ......United Auto Workers ........................................

BijonOarpenters ..............................................................

BreaRubber Workers ..................................................

BurbankPlasterers ................................................................

BurneyWoodworkers ..........................................................

CaminoWoodworkers ..........................................................

ChesterLumber & Sawmill Worker ..............................

ChicoCarpenters & Joiners ............................................Typographical Workers ......................................

City of IndustryRubber Workers ..................................................

ClarksburgSugarWorkers......................................................

ColmaCemetery Workers & Greens Attendants ........

ColtonSteelworkers ............................................................

Compton,Carpenters ..............................................................

CoronaCarpenters & Joiners .........................................GlassBottle Blowers ............................................Glass Bottle Blowers ...........................................

CovinaCommunication Workers ....................................

CrockettSugar Workers ......................................................

CupertinoUnited Cement, Lime & Gypsum Workers ....

Daly CityNorth County School Distriet Employees........Daly City Municipal Employees .......................Teachers ..................................................................

DavenportUnited Cement, Lime & Gypsum Workers ....

25

Per CapitaLocal PaidNo. Membership

730

1501150420183941230

476

417

52640

1078567

1789

490

739

269

286

3074

2043667

585

182

265

5647

1437

2048192254

9579

1

100

3779191481

46

25

23442

368858

1958

36

132

54

3398732

248

226

580

148

15

807

27540

96

40

195

86

971

17315030

496

1060

126

406028

200

EstimateMembership

25

23442

368858

1958

36

132

543398732

248

226

580

148

15

807

27540

96

40

195

86

971

17315030

496

1060

126

406028

200

City and Local

DowneyCommunication Workers .....................................

Rubber Workers ....................................................R-ubber Workers ....................................................

East San Gabriel ValleyBarbers Union ......................................................

El CajonCarpenters & Joiners ..........................................

El CentroTheatrical Stage Employees .............................

El CerritoOpera;tive Potters .................................................

El MonteChemical Workers ................................................

Gles6Bottle Blowers ...........................................Paiters ....................................................................

El SegundoOil, Chemical & Atomic Workers ....................Trnsport Workers .............................................

EmeryvilieOil, Chemical & Atomic Workers....................

EurekaBakers ......................................................................Bartenders --------------------------------------------------------------

Butchers ---.---------------------------------------------------------------Cooks & Waiters ..................................................Hod Carriers & Coinmon ILaborers ..................Hopitl & Institutional Workers....................

Laundry Workers ..................................................Lumber & Sawmill Workers..............................itnist ................................................................Municipal Employees ..........................................

Fire FightersFed.Naval F.F. Bay Area................................

FireFighters Assn..-.-------------------------------------------Fire Fig,hters Assn...............................................Fire Flighters Assn............................................---FireFighters of Berkeley...................................

Fire Fighters Assn...-.-----------------------------------------Sacto. Fire Fighters Assn.................................Fire Fighters of Contra Costa........................

Coronado Fire Fighters Assn.............................FireFighters Assn..-.-------------------------------------------

Fire Fighters..........................................................Fire Fighters .........................................................Calif. State Forestry FYF.....--------------------------------Professional Fire Fighters..............................Fresno County Fire Fighters Assn...............Gardena Fire Fighters Assn...-.-----------------------Fire Fighters Assn...............................................Fire Fighters Assn...............................................Fire Fighters Assn...............................................Fed. F.F. Long Beach VA Hospital ..................Fire Fighters ..........................................................Fire Fighters .......................................................Professional Fire Fighters................................

FireFighters Assn..-.-------------------------------------------Fire Filghters .........................................................FireFighters Asn-n..--------------------------------------------

Fire Fighters Assn...............................................Merced Fire Fighters Awn...............................

26

LocalNo.

9595171451

835

2398

656

165

7839

254

547502

589

195318445220181327156

259254054

F 1568914281301122777814121230147514656521274138875311801413149014771225F-583721167748

10141165146613961479

Per CapitaPaid

Membership

769167492

52

532

17

116

185155636

981400

369

371601253903596536

62915829

567715

1901689058205

828373218

24524339

24914

3554

1016126046121629

EstimatedMembership

769167492

52

532

17

116

185155636

981400

369

371601253903596536

62915829

567715

1901689058205

828373218

2452433924914

3554

1016126046121629

City and Local

Fire Fighters .......................................................Monte Vista Fire Fighters ................................

Fire Fighters Aswn..........................................Newark Fire Fighters Assn...........................Federal Fire Fighters ..................... ......

Fire Fighters Assn. of Oakland .................Fire Fighters Assn. ..........................

Palo Alto Fire Fighters Assn ............FireFighters Assn. .................... .

Petaluma Fire Fighters Assn. . ..Fed. F.F. Flight Test Center .. ........

Professional Fire Fighters .. ..........

FireFighters Assn .....................................

Fed. F.F. Greater Sacto. Area ... .........

Fire Fighters Assn. of Sacto. ...............Fire Fi,ghters Assn........................

Fire Fighters .......................Fire Fighters ..................San Diego Area Fed. F.F. ..... .........

Fire Fighters. ................................

Fire Fighters Assn. .............................

F.F. of Santa Clara ............... ..

Fire Fighters Assn ........................

Fire Fighters ....... ....................

Fire Fighters Assn. ......................

Fire Fighters Assn ..................................

Fire Fighters of Stockton ...........F.F. Ass,n. of San Joaquin County .. ..

Fire Fighters Assn. ....................... ........

Fire Fighters .........

Fire Fighters Assn. ....

F.F. of Santa Cruz County ............................W.Sacto. Fire Fighters ....................................

Fairfield;Communications Workers................

FontanaSteelworkers 'Union ..........................................Steelworkers Union.----------------------------............

ForesthillWoodworkers .............................................

FremontUnited Auto Workers ................. ......

FresnoBakers .........................................-------.------

Building Service Employees ..........................Butchers .................................................................Coolks, Pas-try Cooks & Assst.............................Culinary, Bartenders & Hotel Service WorkersElectrical Workers ............................................Hod Carriers & Ciommon Laborers ................Lathers ............................................

M.P.Machine Operators ................................Motor Coach Operators ....................................

Painters ... ... ......................

Plasterers & Cement Masons ..........................Plumbers & Steamfitters ...............................Production Union ..................................................Retail, Food, Drug & Liquor Clerks ................SheetMetal Workers ............................................

Stage Employees .................................................

27

LocalNo.

1289147313531483F-85

55143013198091415F-531354188F-5752214391270891F-3314587311711401121881014341229124311381186142912721482

9422

28695632

3-86

1364

431101262306210029483

599102729418824631841288252158

Per CapitaPaid

Membership3914201356734518

16515832013035

293153513288

4652945235214328156429767271220

139

333125

119

3985

47928650033580015060351325530017235519100017516

EstimatedMembership

3914201356734518

16515832013035

293153513288

4652945235214328156429767271220

139

333125

119

3985

47928650033580015060351325530017235519100017516

City and Local

Stereotypers & Electrotypers ............................Typographical Workers ......................................

FullertonFlatGlass Workers .............................................

Garden GroveRubber Workers ....................................................

GardenaSteelworkers .........................................................Teachers ..................................................................

GlendaleCarpenters & Joiners .........................................Painters ....................................................................Plumbers .................................................................Printing Pressmen ................................................Typographical Workers ......................................

HanfordCarpenters & Joiners ...........................................

HaywardBrewery Workers ................................................Communications Workers ...................................Culinary Workers & Bartenders .......................Hayward Federation of Teachers .....................Glass Bottle Blowers ............................................Painters .................................................................Steelworkers ............

HollywoodAffiliaited Property Craftsmen ........................Carpenters & Joiners ...........................................Film Technicians ..............................................Hollywood Painter ...........................................M. P. Cinetechnicians ....................................Motion Picture Costumers ..................................Motion Picture Sound Technicians ..............M.P. Studio Elec. Technicians .....................M.P. Crafts Service...........................................M.P. Set Painters ..............................................M.P. Studio First Aid Employees .....................M.P. Studio Projectionists ...............................Naitional Broadcast Employees ......................United Auto Workers ........................................Studio Electricians .........................................

Huntington ParkButchers ..................................................................Furniture Workers ..................................Glass Bottle Blowers .........................................Glass Bottle Blowers ........................................Packinghouse Workers ...................................Painters ...................................................................

InglewoodPainters ...................................................................

loneBrick & Clay Workers ......................................Brick & ?Clay Workers ......................................

JacksonLumber & Sawmill Workers ......................

LakewoodRubber Workers ...................................................

La MesaNational Broadcast Employees ..........................

LawndaleGla Bottle Blowers............................................

28

LocalNo.104144

187

393

22731301

563713761107871

1043

2939412823142353

11785004

441052683

57897056957287277297671655317940

563101011413778C95

1346

750844

2927

357

54

19

Per CapitaPaid

Membership20200

62

285

18730

12145438722655

123

109463

225733236584242

20001408250062455015030050015026576

2828591604200

28816052001240462533

755

3412

493

62

48

482

EstimaedMembership

20200

62

285

18730

12145438722655

123

109463

225733236584242

20001408250062455015030050015026576

2828591604200

28816052001240462533

755

3412

493

62

48

482

City and Local

LodiCarpenters .............................................................

LompocChemical Workers ..........................................

Long BeachBartenders ..............................................................Cement Finishers ..................................................

Chemical Workers.--------------------------------...Chemical Workers ..............Culinary Alliance .-------------------Lathers. ---

Musicians .---------------------------------Gil, Chemical & Atomic Workers ........... ...........

Painters. --

Plasterers & Cement Finishers .... ..

Printing Pressmen ................... ......

Retail Clerks .-------------------------------------------------.Stereotypers .---------Teachers ...... . ... -----Teachers .-----------------------------------------------------------------Typographical Workers ............................

United Auto Workers ............. ...... .......

United Auto Workers.-----------------------.Uitility Workers .-----------------Los Angeles

Advertising & Public Relations Employees....Asbestos Workers.............

Bakers .----------------------------------Bartenders ...... ................ .....

Bill Posters .........................

Boilermakers ..........................................................Bookbinders & Bindery Women ..............Cabinet Makers & Millmen ............Carpet, Linoleum & Soft Tile Workers........Cement Masons .............................................Chemical Workers .............................

Chemical Workers .........................................Cleaners, Dyers, Pressers & Allied Trades..Clothing Workers ............. ........................

Clothing Workers....................................Clothing Workers ................Clothing Workers ....... ...............

Oommercial Telegraphers .................Communications Workers .. .....

Oooks .................. ........ ... ... ............Dining Car Employees .................. .

Electrical Workers ... ... .......

Electrotypers ........................Food Processors, Packers & Warehousemen &

Clerical Employees .......Glass Bottle Blowers ..Hod Carriers & Common Laborers ...HodCarriers & Common Laborers..Hotel Service Employees ...............................Housing Authority-L.A....................................

IronWorkers Shopmen.....................................I.U. Electrical Workers ...................................I.U.Electrical Workers ......................................I.U.Electrical Workers ......................................I.U.Electrical Workers .....................................

I. U. Electrical Workers .............................

Per CapitaLocal Paid EstimatedNo. Membership Membership

1418 288 288

146 324 324

686791

1255681172353128256343285324161

12631384650148805246

5185

453284329263

721124762711

35026855D81

27840848

959046858211

137

54729300696765143509850854150315111514

1076270180333

5216209100

430973322365

450334538183

6697586498

313003001822100666125

27232425134040047

400500150

1300550125

107616662005000

55

100288166618466654662023792508344

1076270180333

5216209100

430973322365

450334538183

6697586498

313003001822100666125

27232425134040047

400500150

1300550125

107616662005000

55

100288166618466654662023792508344

29

City and Local

Jewelry Workers ...........................................LadiesGarment Workers ................................

Iadies Cloak Makers ..................................LadiesGarment Workers .-----------------------------------

Ladies Garment Workers-.......................Ladies Garment Workers .....................Ladies Garment Workers.Ladies Garment & Accessories Workers ....Ladies Garmcnt Workers ..---- .....Ladies Garment Workers.------------...............Ladies Garment Workers ......

Ladies Garment Workers.... .....................

Lathers.-----------------------

Lathers. -------------------------

Los Angeles City EmployeesL.A. County Probation Officers .................Los Angeles County Guards........................Los Angeles State Employees ......Lumber & Sawmill Workers ...................Machinists.----------------------------------Mailers. ........................................

Meat Cutters.......................

Metal Polishers ...........................................

Miscellaneous Restaurant Employees ...- ..Misc. Foremen & Public Works .- ....Molders & Foundry Workers.......................M. P. Projectionists .-------------------------....Musicians .--------------------------------------

Newspaper Guild .------------------------------......Operating Engineers ..---- ............Packinghouse Workers.--------------------..........Painters .--------------------------

Paper Handlers.---------------------------------......Paper Makers .....................................Photo Engravers ..--..-- .-- .......Printing Specialties & Paper Products UnionPublic Service Carpenters.-------------------.............Pulp, Sulphite & Paper Mill Workers .........Pulp, Sulphite & Paper Mill Workers .....Pulp, Sulphite & Paper Mill Workers .......Pulp, Sulphite & Paper Mill Workers ........Pulp, Sulphite & Paper Mill Workers .... -.Reinforced Iron Workers .-------------------..

Roofers.--------------------------------------

Rubber Workers .............................................Rubber Workers .------------------------------

RubberWorkers.-----------------------------RubberWorkers .--------------------------------------...

Rubber Workers ...............Rubber Workers.----------------------------------

RubberWorkers .-------------------------------------------...

Rubber Workers ............................

Rubber Workers .-----------------------

SheetMetal Workers .---------------------------------.-

Sign, Scene & Pictorial Painters ............Sportswear & Cotton Garment Workers ......Sprinkler Fitters .............................Stage Employees .................State, County & Municipal Employees .......Steelworkers.------

Steelworkers .----------------------------------------------........

30

LocalNo.235558849697

45148248349649751242

42-A11968579014062288M311

942167

440413374150476912

2001348

334932388

223126626830330755041636434413114133542843045865610883126670933

80015472172

Per CapitaPaid

Membership20090050030020020010020012510050010023078918

4507340

2756200400

2000100

2752148100584150014286666291300100121602100832006283

60010070010786501015136926911113029

226864

39301665003502758137150

EstimatedMembership

20090050030020020010020012510050010023078918

4507340

2756200400

2000100

2752148100584150014286666291300100121602100832006283

60010070010786501015136926911113029

226864

39301665003502758137150

City and Local LocalNo.

Steelworkers ........ .............................. 5504Stereotypers ....... ............................... 58Street, Electrical Railway & Motor Coach Em-

ployees ...................................... 1277

Studio Grips. ..................................... 80Teachers ...... ............................... 1021

Terrazzo Workers Helpers ................................ 117Textile Workers ............ .......................... 99Textile Workers ............ .......................... 915Textile Workers ............. ......................... 1291Theatrical Press Agents & Managers .............. 18032Tile Layer ........ .............................. 18United Auto Workers ...................................... 887

Utility Workers .... .................................. 132Waiters ...... ................................ 17Wholesale Wine & Liquor Salesmen ................ 151

MaderaConstruction & General Laborers .................... 920

MantecaCarpenters & Joiners ............... 1869

Sugar Workers.....---------------------------------- 177Martinez

Allied Hospital Employees.------------------------------- 251Constuction Laborers ...................................... 324

Electrical Workers.------------------------------------- 302Oil, Chemical & Atomic Workers .................... 5Painters ...................................... 741

Typographical ........... ........................... 597Marysville

Carpenters & Joiners ....................................... 1570Hod Carriers & General Laborers .................... 121

MaywoodGlass Bottle Blowers.------------------------------------- 145Steelworkers.------------------------------------- 1981

Steelworkers ...................................... 2058

UnitedAuto Workers.------------------------------------- 509United Auto Workers ...................................... 808

Menlo ParkUtility Workers ............. ..................... ... 160-C

MercedCarpenters & Joiners .------------------------------------- 1202Construction & General Laborers.--------------------- 995Plasterers & Cement Masons.--------------------------- 672Typographical ............ .......................... 865

MilpitasUnited Auto Wrorkers. ............................ 560

ModestoChemical Workers .------------------------------------- 190Electrical Workers .------------------------------------- 684

Hod Carriers, Building & Construction Wkrs. 1130Plasterers &Cement Masons ............................... 429

Plumbers & Steamfitters .................................... 437Theatrical Stage Employees & M. P. Machine

Operators ...................................... 564

Typographical Workers ...................................... 689Monterey

Oarpenters & Joiners .------------------------------------- 1323Fish'Cannery Workers of the PacificHod Carriers & Common Laborers .................. 690Hotel, Restaurant & Bartenders.----------------------- 483

31

Per CapitaPaid

Membership305300

10005001011501201303248500

175441693250098

100

150247

2331000760

247115080

469425

1322444367

40681134

83

2625034225

1861

14235580070

200

1950

5501833801005

Membership305300

10005001011501201303248500

175441693250098

100

150247

2331000760

247115080

469425

1322444367

40681134

83

2625034225

1861

14235580070

200

1950

5501833801005

Per CapitaCity and Local Local Paid Estimated

No. Membership MembershipMonterey Park

Steelworkers ...................................... 1502 612 612MeCloud

Woodworkers ...........................4........ 821 821Napa

Bartenders & Culinary Workers.--------------------- 753 489 489alif. State Hospital Employees ........................ 174 110 110Hod Carriers & General Laborers.------------------- 371 316 316Plasterers & Cement Masons ...................... .. 766 13 13

UnitedGarment Workers.----------------------------------- 197458 458Newark

Chemical Workers.------------------------------------- 62 165 165New York

National Maritime Unions-Oaliforia 500 500North Fork

Lumber & Sawmill Workers.----------------- ...........2762175 175Northridge

Teachers, San Fernando Valley ........................ 1441 56 56Norwalk

RubberWorkers.-------------------------------------- 158 97 97Oakland

Alameda County School Employees .----------------- 257 295 295Auto & Ship Painters.---------------------------------- 1176400 400Barbers .--------------------------134 500 500Bartenders.---------------------------------------------- 52 1250 1250Butchers ............... .... ............120750750Carpenters & Joiners .................................... 361825 1825

Carpenters & Joiners .................................... 1473586 586Carpet, Linoleum & Soft Tlle Workers ............ 1290 300 300Cement Masons .--------- 594 400 400Cleaning & Dye House Workers.---------- 3009 1053 1053

Commercial Telegraphers.----------------------------------- 208100 100Communications Workers ....................... .......... 9490 1227 1227Construction & General Laborers ........ - 304 3000 3000Cooks .--------------------- 228 2000 2000Culinary Workers.......................... 313525 3525Dining Car Cooks & Waiters................... .......... 456300 300Electrical Workers .--------------------------------........-----B 5951250 1250

Electrical Workers ........... 1245 1001 1001Floor Layers .................................... 1861 100 100Glass Bottle Blowers ................................... 2100 100Glass Bottle Blowers ...................... ........ 141 600 600Insurance Workers ................ 30 120 120

Lathers .................. 88 150 150Machinists ........................................ 2842000 2000

Millmen's Union. --------------------------- 550 800 800Motion Pioturc Operators.................................. 169103 103Painters ................................... 127 521 521Railway Carmen .------------ 735 78 78Retail Food Clerks......................................... 8701200 1200Roofers ........ ........................... 81 250 250Rubber Workers . ... 64 173 173Rubber Workers . ..... 78 98 98Sheet Metal Workers.----------------------------------- 216 500 500Shipyard & Marine Shop Laborers .................. 886 550 550Sleeping Car Porters . .250 250

Steamitters ......................................3 1000 1000Steelworkers .................................... 168 45 45

Steelworkes. 179 500 500Steelworkers.----------------------------------- 3702 4 4Steelworkers .................................... 4468 350 350

32

City and Local

Teachers .................................................................Theatrical Employees ..........................................Theaitrical Stage Employees ..............................Typographical Workers ......................................

UnitedAuto Workers ..........................................Omo Ranch

Lumber& Sawmill Workers ..............................Oro Grande

United Cement, Lime & Gypsum Workers.....Oroville

Bartenders & Culinary Workers ....................Butchers & Meat Cutters.------------------

OxnardCommunications Workers..................................

Steelworkers .-----------------------------------------------.....Palm Springs

Carpenters & Joiners .................................Lathers. ---------------------------------------

Palo AltoBarbers.....-..--..------..----Bindery Workers .--------------Carpenters & Joiners .-----Painters.

Typographical Workers ..................................Panorama

Communications Workers ..--...--.--....Pasadena

Carpenters & Joiners..................................Hotel, Restaurant Employees & Bartenders ...Lathers .------------------------------

Mea'tCutters.--------------------Painters.Plas-terers & Cement Finishers......................Printing Pressmen..-------------------------------------------

Typographical.---------------------------------------Patton

California State Hospital Employees ....Petaluma

Bartenders & Culinary Workers .Lathers ----------------------------- --------

Typographical Workers ...............................Pico Rivera

United Auto Workers ................................Pittsburg

Bartenders & Culinary Workers .-Glass Bottle Bloowers ......................................Paper Makers .-----------------------Plasterers & Cement Masons.- .............

Steelworkers .---------------------------------------------------------Steelworkers .------- ....--..--......-----....--....-....

PomonaBarbers .-----------------------Chemical Workers .......................................Glass Bottle Blowers .-------Pacific State Hospital .-------------

ReddingButchers. -

Culinary Workers ...........Lumber & Sawmill Workers......................M. P. Projectionists..Plasterers & Cement Masons ..-- .....

33

LocalNo.771B 821073676

2728

192

654460

95752029

1046454

91421

668388521

9503

76953181

43992

194155583

128

271268600

923

82216032982514404534

7025834

1515

352470

2608739805

Per CapitaPaid

Membership1838035657

1017

165

277

82850

33650

30152

11036

1200450150

750

10842533240180040731250125

160

5418

1874

820200178185

228861

18203219594

37610589001085

EstimatedMembership

18380356571017

165

277

82850

33650

30152

11036

1200450150

750

10842533240180040731250125

160

5418

1874

820200178185

228861

18203219594

37610589001085

City and Local

Redondo BeachCarpenters ............................................................

Redwood CityCement Mill Workers .........................................

Paintes ....................................................................United Auto Workers .....................................

ResedaCarpenters & Joiners ...........................................

RichmondBartenders & Culinary Workers .......................

Boilermakers ..........................................................

Communications Workers. ..............................

Motion Picture Projectionists ....................Painters ........

Public Employees of Contra Costa County.....Retail Clerks ..............................................

Steelworkers .........................................................

Typographical Workers .................................

RiveraPackinghouse Workers ..................................

Steelworkers .......................................

RiversideCarpenters .------------ ..................................... ..Riverside County Federation of Teachers......Electrical Workers

Hod Carriers & General Laborers ........ .........

Milimen & Lumber Workers .....................

Roofers .------------------ ----------------------------------------------..

United Cement, Lime & Gypsum Workers ....

SacramentoAmerican Federation State, Countty, Municipal&School Employees..................................

Bookbinders ------- ........ .-BrIcklayers.- - ----------

Carpet, Linoleum & Soft Tile Workers .......

Cooks ................................................................-

Miscellaneous Employees............................M.P.Machine Operators .................................

Muscians ........ .

Painters ...............................................................

Sheet Metal Workers ..................................

Stage Employees .-------------------

Stereotypers & Electrotypers .......................

Street, Electric Railway & Motor Coach Opera-to -.................................................................

Theatre Employees ...........................................

Typographical Workers ............. .... ....

Union of State Employees ......................

Waiters & Waitresses ...................................

Woodworkers ..................................................

SalinasCarpenters & Joiners ...............................

Hotel, Resaurant Employees & Bartenders....Packinghouse Workers..............................Andreas

Carpenters .----- ...----......... ......

San BernardinoCulinary Workers & Bartenders ........... .. .......

Electrical Workers ..........................................

Hod Carriers & Laborers ...............................

L thers ....................................................................

34

LocalNo.

1478

7601146109

844

595513

940156056030211794113738

675188

23514144401184195914648

258359

123768339325212

4871625086

256B 6646

411561338

92535578-A

386

535477783252

Per CapitaPaid

Membership

1340

140300214

1804

20994001192032810050010555

42725

871373141434100169348

2471302501937181073471503751003335

14050

4562001200

71

2002611383

201

2183550833155

EstimatedMembership

1340

140300214

1804

20994001192032810050010555

42725

871373141434100169348

2471302501937181073471503751003335

14050

4562001200

71

2002611383

201

2183550833155

City and Local

Office Employees ...............................................Plasterers & Cement Finishers .........................Printing Pressmen ................................................Steel-workers ...........................................................Theatrical Stage Employees ..............................

San BrunoPackinghouse Workers .......................................Transport Workers ................................................

San DiegoButchers ..............................................................Carpenters .............................................................Carpenters ..............................................................Clothing Workers .................................................Cul.inary Alliance & Hotel Service EmployeesElectrical Workers................................................Cannery Workers & Fisherman's Union ..........Floorlayer's ............................................................Furniture Workers ................................................M. P. Projectionists .............................................Office Employees .................................................Plasterers & Cement Finishers ........................Painters ..................................................................San Diego Teachers Federation .......................Stage Employees ....................................................Stereotypers ..........................................................Teachers .................................................................Typographical Workers .......................................United Auto Workers .........................................Waiters & Bartenders .........................................

LocalNo.8373138

4765614

263505

22912962020288402465

2074577297139346333

140712282

1278221506500

San FranciscoIoomotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 91Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 97Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 139Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 143Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 58Locomotive Firemen & En-ginemen ................ 239Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ..... .......... 260Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ..... .......... 312Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 314Locmotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 327Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 566Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ..... .......... 663Locomotive Firemen & Engineimen ................ 672Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 731Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 756Locomotive Fireimen & Enginemen ....... ........ 794Loomotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 795Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ....... ........ 808Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 817Locmotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 820Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ..... .......... 946Locomotive Firemen & Enginemen ................ 979A.F.T.R.A.- ...--.--......----.--................

American Radio Association.........................Asbestos ..................................... 16

Barbers& Beauticians ..................................... 148Bartenders.------------------------------------ 41Bill Posters & Billers.-------------------------.----..........- 44

Bookbinders .......... ................................................. 31-125

Building Service Employees. 87

Butchers 115

35

Per CapitaPaid

Membership50

3166016933

34200

18001344740300

2817550700473012494

827800282566

23140810031045

1853271741841439

7387111119689640856738581192651

14733343250117

11283245

7345012003500

EstimatedMembership

503166016933

34200

18001344740300

2817550700473012494

827800282566

23140810031045.

1853271741841439

7387111119689840856738581192651

14733

-343250117

1128'3245

73450

12003500

City and Local

B ttehers ...............................................................

City & County Employees .................................

city & County Employees .................................

Cloakmakers ............................................................

Cloihing Workers .................................................

Commercial Telegraphers .................................

Communications Workers ..................................

Construction & General Laborers ......................

Cooks .......................................................................

Coppersmiths ........................................................Dental Technicians of No. Calif........................Dressmakers .........................................................Electrical Workers ............................................Elevator Constructors ..........................................

Fire Fighters .........................................................

Furniture Workers ........................... ..........

Garment Cutters ................................................

Glaziers & Glasworkers .....................................

Hotel & Club Service Workers ........................

Insurance Workers ................................................

Iron Workers ....................................................LadiesGarment Cutters........................................

Automoive Machinists ......................................

Mailers.-----------------------------------

Masters, Mates & Pilots......................................Miscellaneous Employees ....................................

Molders & Allied Workers ................................

M.P.Machine Operators....................................Musicians ..... ..................... ........

National Broadcast Employees.........

Newspaper Guild .................................................

Office Employees .................................................Operating Engineers........................................Operatin;g (Stat'y) Engineers.. --------------------------

Paint&Brush Makers .......................................Pattern Makers Association .............................

Pile Drivers ............................................................Printing Pressmen.........................................Professional Embalmers.................................Retail Grocery Clerks .......................................

Retail Dept. Store Employees..........................Retail Shoe & Textile Salesmen.....................Roofers .................................................................Sausage Makers ...................................................

Sign, Scene & Pictorial Painters ................Sprinkler Fitters .............................................Steelworker Union ......

Stereotpers & Electrotypers...........................Teachers ................................................................Teachers ................................................................Teachers ...............................................................Theatrical Janitors .........................................Theatrioal Stage Employees ............................

Theatrical Wardrobe Attendants ...................Tile Helpers ..........................................................Transport Service Workers..............................

Typographical Workers ......................................

Waiters & Dairy Lunchmen's Union .............Waitre s ..............................................................Watchmakers Union ..........................................

36

LocalNo.508400747

84234

947026144

43899

10168

7982624571828373

3772131305

1889110164162

6515233

391071

3424

9049648110041040

20351048310692961

11191352

916

7847

905213048

101

Per CapitaPaid

Membership1231200100300500950100

2000300050663001000150

1628940473553085

60200100

358420025

21693201601500150

1640600

3500150034215050063093

21005307100390670220175700290398102901357537294

9176036024233100

EstimatedMembership

1231200100300500950100

2000300050663001000150

162894047355

308560200100

358420025

21693201601500150

1640600

3500150034215050063093

21005307100390670220175700290398102901357537294

9176036024233100

City and Local

Web Pressmen .....................................................Window Cleaners Union....................................

San JoseBartenders Union ..............................................Bookbinders ...................................................Bricklayers ...........................................................Brick & Clay Workers ...................................Butchers & Meat Cutters ...........................

Cement Laborers ...............................................Chemical Workers ...............................................Clothing Workers ...............................................Electrical Workers..............................................Hotel, Restaurant & Hotel Service EmployeesI. U. Electrical Workers ..................................Lathers ....... .................... ..........

M. P. Machine Operators ................................Musicians Protective Union ............................Newspaper Guild ..............................................Painsters .............................................................Retail Clerks Association .................................Roofers ...............................................................Sheet Metal Workers ........................................Steelworkers ........... ...........................

Theatrical Stage Employees .......................Utility Workers ...................................................

San LeandroTeachers ..............................................................

San Luis ObispoBarbers ...................................................................Electrical Workers ..........................................

Plumbers & Steamfitters..................................

San MateoAir Transport Employees, I.A.M ................Bartenders & Culinary Workers ......................Building Service Employees..........................Butehers ................................................................Carpenters & Joiners ........................................Cement Masons ................................................Communications Workers ..................................Construction & General Laborers ...............Electrical Workers .........................................Hod Carriers ......................................................Plumbers & Steamfitters ..................................Theatrical Stage & M.P. Operators ..................

San PedroBartenders ..........................................................Chefmical Workers ...............................................Hotel, Restaurant, Cafeteria &

Motel Employees ..................................Lumber & Sawmill Workers......................Marine & Shipbuilding Workers ...................Masters, Mates & Pilots ...............................Painters & Decorators .................................Pile Drivers, Bridge, Wh-arf &

Dock Builders .............................................Plasterers & Cement Masons...........................

Seine & Line Fishermen's Union .................Shipyard Laborers ................................................Steelworkers ..........................................................

LocalNo.444

577310

580506270294108332180

15071444311539850742895

3091835134259

1440

767639403

178134081516162583

943038961797

467409

59153

5121407

918

949

2375838

8025303

Per CapitaPaid Estimated

Membership Membership400 400200 200

79759

20065

1968150019750

90044601331452883

32012402000160435662482

13

33100100

5040005308001180

50400

141910010050049

32159

149650020080150

500325300333105

79759

20065

1968150019750

90044601331452883

32012402000160435662482

13

33100100

504000530800118050

4001419100'10050049

32159

149650020080150

500325300333105

37

City and Local

San RafaelBartenders & Culinary Workers ...................

Carpenters ..............................................................Communications Workers .................................

Hod aCarriers & General Laborers ................

Plasterers & Cement Masons ............................

Retail Clerks ..........................................................Theatrical Stage & M.P. Operators ..................

Santa AnaSugar Workers ..................................................Hod Carriers ..........................................................Painters .................................................................

Roo-er .................................................................Teatrical Employees ........................................

Typographical Workers ....................................

Santa BarbaraB3rbers .................................................................

Carpenters & Joiners ..........................................Communications Workers ..............................

Construedion & General Laborers .................

Culinary Alliance & Bartenders ......................

Electrical Workers ................................................Meat Cutters .........................................................Painters ..................................................................Plumbers & Steamfitters .................................Sheet Metal Workers ......................................

Santa CruzCarpenters & Joiners .........................................Construction & General Laborers ..................

Culinary Workers .........................................Pinters ..................................................................

Santa MariaBarbers.----------------------------------......Culinary Alliance & Bartenders .....................

Oil, Chemical & Atomic Workers ...................

Santa MonicaCarpenters & Joiners .........................................

Oommunications Workers ................................Culinary Workers ..............................................Meat Cutters ........................................................

Painters.................................................Typographical Workers .................. .........

Santa RosaButchers ............................................................Electrical Workers........................................Hod Carriers & Common Laborers ...............Retail Clerks .........................................................

Typographical Workes .....................................Saugus

Glass Bottle Blowers........................................Seal Beach

Chemical Workers ..........................................

SelmaCarpenters & Joiners .......................................

Sherman OaksHotel, Motel, Restaurant

Employee- & Bartenders ................South GateI.U. Electrical Workers.................................Rubber Workers .................................................Rubber Workers.................................................

LocalNo.

12635

94042913551119811

17565268636C504579

83210629576591498413556715114273

8292837421026

941703

1-534

14009574814587821875

3645511391532577

69

225

1004

694

1502100225

Per CapitaPaid Estimated

Membership Membership

1163 11631267 1267256 256900 900120 120902 90211 11

81229096914450100

6911363965662104450540279200266

60250310134

26109496

113683783380033334

71220048310056

220

21

150

3536

511389239

81229096914450100

6911363965662104450540279200266

60250310134

261094

96

113683783380033334

71220048310056

220

21

150

3536

511389239

38

City and Local

United Auto Workers .........................................Utility Workers ...................................................

SpreckelsSugar Workers ....................................................

StocktonBartenders .............................................................Brick & Clay Workers .......................................Brick & Clay Workers .......................................Carpenters & Joiners .........................................

Cement Finishers ..................................................Communications Workers ..................................County Employees ...............................................Culinary Workers Alliance ...............................Eleotrical Workers ...............................................Motion Picture Projectionists ............................Papermakers ............................................................Plasterers ...............................................................Plumbers & Steamfitters ...................................Theatrical Stage Employees ..............................

Typographical Workers .....................................United Auto 'Workers .........................................Utility Workers ....................................................

SunnyvaleBarbers . ...........................................

Sun ValleyRubber Workers ................................................

TaftUtility Workers ..................................................

Terminal IslandCannery Workers of the Pacific .....................

TorranceChemical Workers ................................................

Rubber Workers ....................................................Steelworkers ..........................................................

TracySugar Workers .....................................................

TustinRubber Workers ...................................................

TwainWoodworkers ........................................................

VallejoCarpenters & Joiners.........................................Culinary Workers & Bartenders.....................Hod Oarriers & Laborers....................................Operating Engineers.........................................Plasterers & Cement Masons...........................

Painters ...........Retail Clerks.........................................................Shipwrights, Joiners &

Boat Builders................................................Typographical Workers .....................................

Van NuysBarbers....................................................................Painters..................................................................United Auto Workers.........................................

VeniceRubber Workers..................................................

VenturaCarpenters & Joiners.........................................Lathers ---.-----------------------------------------------------------------

Hod Carriers & Laborers....................................

39

LocalNo.216283

180

47528874266814

94171835725914283202224929056

792160

498

621

289

598146

2586

181

510

398

180560326731631376373

1068389

8371595645

300

2463460585

Per CapitaPaid

Membership3204

62

248

4382010866650

400165

128910025150321651810513156

62

102

19

1500

806240

324

202

57

81579439525928185

1000

12590

177600

3614

69

75285

900

EstimatdMembership

320462

248

4382010866650

400165

128910025150321651810513156

62

102

19

1500

806240

324

202

57

81579439525928185

1000

12590

177600

3614

69

75285

900

City and Local

Oil Chemical & Atomic Wkrs.---Operating Engineers .----.Painters.

VernonGlass Bottle Blowers ...

aper akersSteelworkers .-- ....

Visaliaairbers ---.

Carpenters .- --

Communications ....--...Hocd Carriers & LaborersStage Employees & M.P. OperatorsTeachers ..-- -. -.Typographical Workers

Walnut CreekSteelwor-kers .. ..-..

Warm SprinigsBrick & Clay Work1ers

WatsonvilleBr-ick & Clay WorkersCarpenterls & Joiners -...-..Communications WorkersTheatrical Stage Employees

WhittierSteelwvorkersTr-ansport Workers

Wilni ingtonButchers ...Chemical WorkersShip Carpenters

WoodlandSug,ar Workers

LocalNo.120732955

2243361927

8561484940610606051472519

5450

663

9987719427611

4511518

55140

1335

179

Per CapitaPaid

Membership55233

399

15050171

16144286140188

29

17

69

1172414054

5442

3050296300

180

EstimatedMembership

55233

399

15050171

16144286140188

29

17

69

1172414054

5442

3050296300

180

4.0

REPORT OF SECRETARY-TREASURERTo the 1964 Pre-Primary Convention of

the California Labor Council on Polit-ical Education:

Greetings!The intervening months since the 1962

general election-the period covered bythis report-have been marked by nu-merous developments that challenge thelabor movement to more effective polit-ical action. Beyond question, the com-plexity of the many issues confrontingthe working man today in his never end-ing struggle to maintain his identity andachieve a measure of economic securityin our modern industrial society hasdemonstrated the interdependence ofeconomic and political action by organ-ized labor. Indeed, as indicated by theincreasing pervasiveness of job securityproblems as the pace of technology andautomation advances, we are compelledmore and more to assert the necessity ofgovernment responsibility in many areaswhere heretofore collective bargainingalone provided an effective vehicle forthe negotiation of workable solutions bylabor and management.

Collective bargaining has continued tomature, and its viability as one of themost effective democratic institutions inour free society is being demonstrateddaily with each new accord and ground-breaking advancement. The fact remains,however, that the socio-economic prob-lems of our modern industrial society arealso mounting daily, and many of themaffecting employment opportunities tran-scend the ability of collective bargainingunits to effectively cope with them byeconomic action independent of politicalaction.Each election year carries with it a new

sense of urgency. This election year is noexception, but the urgency lies in evolv-ing more practical methods of relatingour political activities to our economicand social objectives on a day-to-day basisin terms of performance by those whomwe help elect to office. If -there is a lessonto be learned from the period under re-view, it is the tenuous nature of the re-lationship between the successes scoredat the polls at the 1962 general electionand the legislative performance that fol-lowed. The assumption that there is anautomatic and direct carry-over from thepolitical arena to the legislative front iswithout foundation. While there are manyfactors influencing performance, it is

abundantly clear that a spirit of politicalactivity during election campaigns with-out the functioning of COPE organiza-tions on a year-round basis invites legis-lative irresponsibility. By the same token,fragmented political activity outside theCOPE structure compounds the problemand encourages legislators and otherpublic officials to frustrate the commongoals of the labor movement by ca-teringto separate groups, and playing off oneagainst the other.

In both respects-unity of action andcontinuity of action-the AFL-CIO move-ment in California is far from realizingits full potential in the political area. Tothe extent that the level of political or-ganizations laas behind the organizationof the trade union structure along eco-nomic lines, we are weakened in our ef-forts to induce a greater assumption ofresponsibility by government to achievefull employment goals and come to gripswith economic security problems of work-ers that transcend the capacity of col-lective bargaining.

In the face of these political realitiesthe major thrust of California LaborCOPE activities since the last generalelection has continued in the directionof strengthening the COPE structurethroughout the state. Through educa-tional conferences and intensive fieldactivities, priority has been given to thedevelopment of year-round political actionprograms at the local level, the achieve-ment of greater unity, and the effectivecoordination of registration and otherrelated campaign efforts.

1962 GENERAL ELECTIONThe 1962 general election campaign

marked one of the most intensive polit-ical efforts of the California labor move-ment since the defeat of the right-to-workinitiative in 1958. Richard M. Nixon's bidto bolster his sagging political stock na-tionally by entering the gubernatorialrace against Governor Edmund G. Brownposed an immediate threat to progressivegovernment and the welfare of workingpeople. The anti-labor forces spawned in1958 had never stopped working. Bol-stered by the emergence of the radicalright, they migrated toward the cam-paigns of their favorite candidates. Rich-ard Nixon's roster of campaign leadersread like a "who's who" of the "right-to-wreck" movement of four years earlier.

41

The Brown-Nixon gubernatorial battlegave impetus to a higher level of polit-ical interest and ac!tivity. With the finan-cial assistance of the national AFL-CIOCOPE, major registration and get-out-the-vote drives were launched throughlocal COPE organizations under closecoordination of the California LaborCOPE. Although such drives resembledmore a "crash" program than a culmina-tion of intensified year-round politicalactivity, they produced significant result,that made the successes scored by laborin the 1962 general election possible.

In addition to its deep involvement inthese "grass roots" activities, the stateCOPE distributed through cooperatinglocal organizations more than 1,100,000endorsement pamphlets carrying labor'srecommendations for statewide as well asdistrict offices. The pamphlets wereprinted and distributed in ten variationsfor major areas of the state to facilitatethe identification of district office en-dorsements by union members and theirfamilies. A special pamphlet was de-veloped in the gubernatorial race to drivehome the sharp contrast between therecord of Governor Brown's administra-tion and Richard Nixon's official recordof support of the special interests thathave financed and directed his turbulentpolitical life. Approximately 800,000 ofthese pamphlets were put in the handsof voters throughout the state by or-ganized labor. Special efforts were alsomade during the campaign through thestate COPE to develop usable materialsfor the labor press. A new employee witha press background was added to theprofessional staff of the state COPE forthis purpose, and he was continued on apermanent basis followina the campaign.This, in turn, was supplemented by aweekly cartoon service that produced thebest political cartoons of the entire state-wide general election campaign.

Gubernatorial and Statewide RacesGovernor Brown's re-election triumph

over Richard Nixon by a vote marginof approximately 300,000 astounded evenseasoned political observers, and indicatedclearly that California's citizens had re-jected retrenchment programs in favorof progressively-oriented state govern-ment. The extensive campaign efforts ofCOPE organizations clearly establishedthe right of AFL-CIO members to claima share of the credit for this victory,which constituted a clear-cut mandate forimaginative, forward looking programs

to cope wi;th the acute social and eco-nomic needs of our ever burgeoningpopulation. As indicated above, however,the fact that this mandate was not carriedto fruition to the extent that might havebeen anticipated by the election resultsin district legislation races as well as thestatewide contests, indicates the magni-tude of the political challenge before us.

In analyzing the gubernatorial vote wefind that Governor Edmund G. Brownchalked up his heaviest pluralities in theSan Francisco Bay Area and in the Coun-ties comprising the Sacramento and SanJoaquin Valley areas. These three re-gions provided the governor with 277,349or more than 87% of the 314,931 voteplurality by which he vanquished RichardM. Nixon.On a statewide basis, Governor Brown,

with 59.5% of the state's voters registeredas Democrats, polled 52.7% of the vote.The fact that some 78.5% of the state'sregistered voters trooped to the polls onNovember 6, an unusually high percent-age for an off-year election, heightenedthe finality of Nixon's defeat and demon-strated again that candidates backed prin-cipally by special interest forces havelittle hope of winning if voters are ade-quately informed and turn out in force.The Federation's analysis divided the

state's 58 counties into seven regionalgroups. These were the 7 Bay Area Coun-ties, the 10 Sacramento Valley Counties;the 8 San Joaquin Valley Counties; the8 Southern California Counties; the 15Mountain Counties; the 6 North CoastCounties; and the 4 Central Coast Coun-ties.On this basis, Governor Brown's plu-

rality was obtained as follows:Composite % Brown

Region Vote for Brown PluralityBay Area 56.4 179.355Sacramento 55.2 57,473San Joaquin 55.8 40,521Southern California 48.3 25.089Mountain 54.7 12,716Central Coast 48.9 -4 898North Coast 51.2 4122

Total 314,931

On a county by county basis, the elec-tion results indicated that a number ofRepublicans jumped party lines to votefor Brown. This was substantiated by thefact that in four Northern Californiacounties-San Francisco, Marin, Plumasand Sierra-the percentage of the totalvote that went to Governor Brown ex-ceeded the percentage of Democrats reg-istered in those counties.

In an additional 16 counties the vote

42

for Brown was within 3% of the percent-age of Democratic voters registered, in-dicating the probability of a considerableRepublican vote for Brown. These 16counties were: Alameda, San Mateo, San-ta Clara, Solano, Modoc, Trinity, Nevada,Placer, El Dorado, Santa Barbara, Sacra-mento, Eolo, Shasta, Siskiyou, San LuisObispo, and Napa. In Santa Barbara, how-ever, Democrats held only 49.1% of thevoters recistered and although 48% ofthat county's total vote went to GovernorBrown the county as a whole scored a2,471 vote plurality for Nixon.

Los An"eles County, encompassingsome 38% of the State's population with57.3f7' of its votei-s registered Democrats,delivei-ed 52.6% of its vote to GovernorBrown to give him a plurality there of115,409.San Francisco, with less than 5% of the

state's population and 62.8% of its votersreegistered as Democrats, threw 63% ofits vote to the Governor to give him aplurality of 70,450. Other counties thatrolled up pluralities of more than 10.000votes for- Governor Brown were:

County Brown PluralityAlameda 61,244Sacramento 43.601Contra Costa 20,476Solanio 12.210

Governor Brown carried 38 of thestate's 58 counties. Of the 20 countiesthat Nixon carried only two providedhim with a plurality in excess of 10,000votes. These were Orange and San DiegoCounties where Nixon scored pluralitiesof 52,063 and 44,937 respectively. Twelveof the remaining 18 counties carried byNixon fell into his column by less than1,000 votes.

In other statewide contests, handsome-ictoi-ies were scored by labor-endorsedcandidates with the re-election by widemar-ins of Lieutenant Governor GlennM. Anderson, Attorney General StanleyiMosk, State Conti-oller Alan Cranston,and State Treasurer Bert A. Betts. In twostatewide partisan offices, however, labor-endorsed challengers. Don Rose for Secre-tary of State and Richard Richards forU. S. Senator were defeated. In both ofthese races, the uphill struggle and dif-ficulty of trying to unseat a well en-trenchled incumbent were amply demon-strated. U. S. Senator Thomas H. Kuchelwon re-election by a vote margin ap-proaching 725,000, while incumbent See-i-etary of State Frank M. Jordan piled upa better than 850,000 vote margin.

It is also apparent in the results ofthese two races that the California elec-

torate does not vote a party ticket. Espe-(ially in the U.S. Senatorial contest,Thomas H. Kuehel's re-election to thishigh office demonstrates a deep-seated"independence" in California voting prac-tices. Indeed, Kuchel's re-election as aRepublican overcame the historic Cali-forinia tradition whereby the successfulU. S. Senat:orial candidates during guber-natorial election years have always beenof the same political party as the success-ful gubernatorial candidate.

The major disappointment among thestatewide constitutional offices was therejection of labor's endorsed candidate,Ralph Richardson, for the non-partisanpost of State Superintendent of PublicInstruction. Apart from the quality of thecandidates, and the overwhelming basicsupport for Richardson among schoolgroups as well as labor, political observershave analyNzed the victory of Max Raf-ferty as resulting from a combination offorces seekina change and those look-in - for simple solutions to complexeducational matters. Ralph Richardson,on the other hand, was unjustly associatedwith the "status quo".

District Election Results

In the state's 38 Congressional races(including eight new districts gained outof the decennial reapportionment andbeing filled for the first time), the Cali-fornia Labor COPE made endorsementsin 36 of the races. On the final tally,endorsed candidates romped to victoryin 25 (72 percent) of the 36 Congres-sional districts in which endorsements-;7re made. This included seven of theeilht new Congressional districts in Cali-fornia that boosted the State's congres-sional delegation from 30 to 38. On araitv basis, the election results altered

the complexion of California's representa-tion from 15 Democrats and 14 Repub-licans with one vacancy prior to the 1962-eneral election to 25 Democrats and 13Republicans following the election.Some of the principal highlights of the

successes scored by COPE-endorsed can-didates were:

-The election of Augustus F. (Gus)Hawkins in the 21st Congressionaldistrict in Los Angeles as California'sfirst Negro Congressman.

-Re-election of the late Clem Millerposthumously in the first Congres-sional district, but this was lateroverturned when the COPE-endorsed

candidate to replace Miller was de-feated in a January, 1963 specialelection (see below).

-The defeat of three John Birch So-ciety members, two of whom wereincumbents.

In the state legislature, COPE-endorsedcandidates scored equally impressive vic-tories. A substantial majority of the newlawmakers who were sent to Sacramento,as well as returning incumbents, wereelected with the endorsement of Cali-fornia Labor COPE on recommendationof local COPE organizations. For thestate legislature as a whole, with exactly100 legislative offices filled by the 1962general election balloting, COPE-endorsedcandidates were successful in more than76 percent of the races in which endorse-ments were made.In the State Senate, where half of the

40 member Upper House was elected, en-dorsed candidates were victorious in 78Dercent of the races in which endorse-ments were made. Filling the 20 seatsopen in the Senate were 14 Democratsand 6 Republicans. Of the 13 Democratswho were running for re-election, 11made it and two were defeated.COPE endorsements were made in 18

of the 20 Senate races; 14 actually madeit. Before the election. the Senate con-tained 29 Democrats, 9 Republicans andtwo vacancies. The distribution betweenparties was changed to 27 Democrats and13 Republicans.

In the State Assembly, where all 80seats were up for re-election, endorse-ments were made in 71 contests with a74 percent record of success. In actualnumbers, 52 endorsed candidates wereelected to the Lower House.The election outcome increased the

Democratic Party majority in the lowerhouse by 5 additional seats. The 1963general session convened in January with52 Democrats and 28 Republicans. Whenthe prior general session opened in 1961,the Democrats held 47 seats to 33 for theRepublicans. Just before the 1962 gen-eral election balloting, however, theDemocrats held 42 seats and the Repub-licans 32, with 6 vacancies.

Of 31 Democrats seeking re-election inthe general election, 28 won; and of 17Republicans seeking re-election, 16 won.In 32 of the lower house races, therefore,no incumbent was in the running andnew members were elected to the Assem-bly. California Labor COPE endorsed

candidates in 22 of the 32 no-incumbentraces and scored victories in 21 of them.

SPECIAL ELECTIONSFour special elections to fill vacancies

have been held in the interim period sincethe 1962 general election: three of themin Congressional districts and one in theupper house of the state legislature. Ineach of these special elections, CaliforniaLabor COPE made endorsements throughthe Executive Council, on recommenda-tions of local COPE organizations, andworked closely with the local labor move-ments involved in an effort to secure theelection of the endorsed candidates.Once again, the experience with special

election contests has demonstrated thegreat urgency of establishing year-roundCOPE programs at the local level. With-out such full time involvement in thepolitical field, it becomes very difficultto put together an effective campaign onthe basis required by special elections.In two of the three special elections in-volving Congressional districts, seats heldby endorsed candidates were lost to non-endorsed candidates who won the specialelections. In the single Senatorial districtspecial election, labor's endorsed candi-date barely squeaked through in a districtthat was held by a labor-backed incum-bent for a number of years.

First Congressional DistrictAs indicated above, based on a special

campaign effort, Representative ClemMiller was re-elected posthumously in the1st Congressional District at the 1962 gen-eral election despite his tragic death amonth earlier in a plane crash nearEureka. The lack of any legal means toreplace Miller's name on the ballot witha new candidate left no alternative butto press for Miller's re-election against hisRepublican challenger, Don A. Clausenof Crescent City. The success of this ef-fort led to a special election in the 1stCongressional District to replace Miller,which was held on January 22, 1963.

Based on the recommendations of the1st Congressional District COPE organiza-tion, the California COPE endorsed Wil-liam F. Grader (D), the late Represent-ative Clem Miller's field representative,against Miller's general election chal-lenger, Don A. Clausen (R), in a two wayrace which also included another Dem-ocrat named John C. Stewart. The latterDemocrat, however, was considered a

44

maverick and not a serious challengerwho would affect the outcome of thespecial election, except to the extent thatDemocratic votes might be drawn fromGrader.Both Grader, who generally embraced

Clem Miller's program as his own plat-form, and his Republican opponent wereinterviewed by the 1st District COPE Con-vention held in Eureka on December 15.On most issues, the convention delegatesfound the two candidates to be "polesapart". Subsequently they unanimouslyadvanced the recommendation for en-dorsement of Grader by the CaliforniaLabor COPE. President John F. Kennedyalso personally endorsed Grader's can-didacy in a letter to Grader which readin part:

"I can appreciate why Clem Millerrelied upon you so heavily. Because ofyour association with him, your broadexperience, your awareness of the prob-lems of the 1st District and your strongbelief in his continuing progress, youare uniquely qualified to carry forwardthe work so well started."The timing of the election, however,

followed the "purge" of registration rollsof those who failed to vote at the Novem-ber general election, thus cutting intothe slim majority of the party of theendorsed candidate in a marginal district.A special pamphlet urging Grader's elec-tion was developed by the California La-bor COPE and distributed within theDistrict through local labor organizations.A major effort was made to get-out-the-vote, but only l i m i t e d success wasachieved, and Grader was defeated.A tally of all 530 precincts in the Dis-

trict gave Clausen 79,111 votes to Grader's64,740-a plurality of 14,371 votes. JohnC. Stewart, the other Democrat, polledonly 1,631 votes. The District itself at thetime of *the election was composed of215,436 eligible voters with Democratsoutnumbering Republicans about 14,000.

It is recognized that in what is a mar-ginal district by California standards,even though a significant democratic ma-jority exists in the District, the incum-bent Congressman, as an incumbent, willbe very difficult to defeat.

23rd Congressional DistrictFollowing on the heels of the defeat in

the 1st Congressional District, anotherCongressional seat was lost in a June 11,1963, special election in the 23rd Con-gressional District of Los Angeles County,

comprising the 38th and 52nd state assem-bly districts, following the death in Marchof the labor-endorsed incumbent Repre-sentative Clyde Doyle. The special elec-tion was won by Del M. Clawson, Repub-lican Mayor of the City of Compton, whoran unsuccessfully against the late Rep.Doyle in the 1962 general election.

On recommendation of the Los An-geles County COPE, the California LaborCOPE endorsed Carley V. Porter (D), aveteran legislator with 13 years servicein the Assembly. In addition to his prin-cipal Republican opponent, Del M. Claw-son, Porter ran against six other can-didates, including four other Democratsand two more Republicans. Some 184,963residents were registered and eligibleto vote in the November 1962 generalelection but some 55,194 - nearly 30percent-failed to go to the polls. As aresult of 'the January 1963 purge, there-fore, the total registration in the Districtwas reduced to 139,194, consisting princi-pally of 88,981 Democrats and 47,232 Re-publicans. Subsequent registration activi-ties and the normal pickup in registra-tion boosted the voter eligibility rolls bythe date of the special election to some92,000 Democrats and 50,000 Republicans.The California Labor COPE provided

direct assistance in the special electioncampaign concentrating on informingvoters about the special election withmajor emphasis on turning out the vote.On the fateful day, despite the heavy

Democratic majority in the District, theDistrict's 252 precincts gave Clawson,who had been defeated by Doyle by a.2-1margin at the general election in 1962,some 32,086 votes to Carley Porter's 21,-951. The six other candidates in the 8-way,high-man-in contest polled only a total of7,097 votes. Of the 136,034 registeredvoters in the District, only 32.4 percentwent to the polls. On a party basis, 66percent of the district's registered vo-terscast their ballots for the Republicancandidate, but only 23.8 percent voted forthe Democratic Party's candidate.Del Clawson's victory, added to the

election of Don A. Clausen in the 1stCongressional District in January, cut theDemocrat's margin in the California Con-gressional delegation to 23-15, as com-pared with 25-13 after the November 1962election.

5th Congressional DistrictA third Congressional special election

was held in the the 5th District of San

45

Francisco on February 18, 1964, and re-sulted in the election, with labor's en-dorsement, of Assemblyman Phillip Bur-ton to the House of Representatives with-out the necessity of a run-off election onMarch 17 under a new special electionsprimary law enacted by the 1963 legisla-ture. This new primary law requires arun-off between the candidates receivingthe highest votes from each of the twomajor parties in the absence of a majorityvote for any one candidate, but Burtonobviated the necessity for run-off by poll-ing the required majority.Burton replaced Congressman John F.

Shelley, who resigned his seat in theheavily Democratic 5th CongressionalDistrict upon being elected to the officeof Mayor of San Francisco. As COPE'sendorsed candidate, Burton mopped up aclear majority of 50,297 votes cast in thespecial primary election, despite a clut-tered field of four additional Democratsand three Republicans. Burton polled 26,-269 votes or 52 percent of the total cast.The turnout of 50,000 plus votersamounted to more than 46 percent of the108,963 eligible to vote in the District.

7th State Senatorial DistrictIn another special election contest in-

volving the 7th State Senate District(Placer, Nevada and Sierra Counties),Paul J. Lunardi, Democratic Assembly-man from Roseville, narrowly won anUpper House seat vacated as the result ofGovernor Brown's appointment of Sena-tor Ronald G. Cameron to the PlacerCounty Superior Court last summer fol-lowing the adjournment of the 1963 gen-eral session. Lunardi's victory, as theCalifornia Labor COPE's endorsed candi-date, leaves a vacancy in the 6th Assem-bly District vacated by Lunardi, com-prising Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, ElDorado, Inyo, Mariposa, Mono, Nevada,Placer, Tuolumne and Yuba counties.The special primary election in the

7th Senatorial District was held on No-vember 5, 1963, with a special run-offelection scheduled for December 3, butthe majority of votes gathered by Lunar-di precluded the run-off. The COPE-en-dorsed candidate polled 7,514 votes to7,000 for Frank Sevrens, a Republicanpublisher. Because of the overlappingareas covered by Lunardi's former As-sembly District and the 7th SenatorialDistrict to which he was elected, it wasanticipated that the Democratic Assem-blyman would have little trouble in hisrace to fill Cameron's seat in the Upper

House. Instead, in some of th. majorareas where Lunardi won heavy majori-ties as an Assembly candidate in the 1962general election, Lunardi barely squeakedby in his bid for the Senate. Another seatheld by a labor-endorsed incumbent camedangerously close to being lost.

STRENGTHENINGTHE COPE STRUCTURE

Recognizing early in 1963 that well or-ganized and well financed right wing ex-tremist groups, with their eyes alreadyfixed on the 1964 elections, were intensi.fying their efforts to subvert social andeconomic progress, your secretary-treas-urer immediately expanded efforts tostrengthen the unity and structure ofCOPE units throughout the state and toinform and alert the membership.

Equally evident was the need, on ayear-round basis, for active functioninglocal COPE units to keep their member-ship both informed and prepared to acton local and state issues as the needarose.These goals were emphasized in the

course of personal reports to local move-ments made by your secretary, on the ac-tivities of the 1963 sessions of the legis-lature.

Workshops OrganizedTo implement realization of these goals,

Fred C. Smith, assistant State COPE di-rector, was assigned to organize and de-velop materials for a series of CaliforniaLabor COPE workshops to be heldthroughout the state during the summerand fall of 1963. In recognition of theautonomous status of our local councils,scheduling and programming for theworkshops was geared to the desires anddirection of the local officers.

Handbook and Aids DevelopedA 50-page California Labor COPE work-

shop handbook, pegged principally to thefour cornerstones of our COPE effort-re fistration, education, get-out-the-voteand election analysis-was developed tobe used in conjunction with the work-shops.Using films and other visual aids, the

workshop sought to survey the scope ofthe local COPEs' activities and to providematerials and methods to simplify, im-prove and accelerate their jobs. It alsosought to analyze specific problems in

46

specific local areas and to develop pro-grams and techniques tailored to localcapabilities and conditions.The workshops reviewed Election

Code changes effected in 1961 and 1963and stressed the acute need for the de-velopment of voter registration card filesof our union membership in view of therapidly increasing use of computers incounty clerks' offices throughout thestate, which affords an opportunity tovastly accelerate voter registration work.The development of union voter regis-

tration file cards, containing the essen-tial raw data necessary to utilize the com-puters, is essential to any effective mod-ernization of labor's traditional registra-tion and get-out-the-vote techniques.

14 Workshops HeldDuring a period extending from the

latter part of June through the middle ofNovember, 1963, California Labor COPEconducted more than a dozen such work-shops, generally encountering a highdegree both of interest and enthusiasm.More than 500 county and local COPE

leaders participated in the 14 workshopsheld. Average daily attendance at theworkshops, most of which were 2-daymeetings, was 36-despite a disappointingturnout at two of them, which signifi-cantly lowered the average.

Dates and locations of the workshopswere as follows:June 25-26-Monterey Tri-Council COPE

at Salinas.June 28-29 - Santa Barbara-Ventura

Counties COPE at Santa Barbara.July 9-10 - Kern, Inyo, Mono Counties

COPE at Bakersfield.July 11-12 - Fresno-Madera Counties

COPE at Fresno.July 16-17 - San Diego County COPE

at San Diego.August 14-Humboldt-Del Norte Coun-

ties COPE at Eureka.September 24-25 - Alameda County

COPE at Oakland.September 28-29 - Santa Clara County

COPE at San Jose.October 2-3 - San Joaquin-Stanislaus

Counties COPE at Stockton.October 8-9--Riverside-San Bernardino

Counties COPE at Riverside.October 11-12 - Contra Costa County

COPE at Concord.October 23-24 - Fresno-Madera Coun-

ties COPE at Fresno (2nd work-shop.)

October 30 - Solano County COPE atVallejo.

November 23-24-Orange County COPEat Santa Ana.

Without exception, however, the work-shops served to bring together the countyclerk or registrar of voters and the coun-ty's labor leadership for a candid discus-sion of mutual problems and policieswhich generally resulted in a number ofconstructive suggestions.

Registration Card FilesA step-by-step analysis of various

means of setting up card files, includingvarious cost estimates, spurred consider-able interest when it was made evidentthat adoption of the use of special "tripocards" could reduce the labor involvedin establishing such files at least seven-fold.

Subsequently, California Labor COPE,acting as a central purchasing agent, or-dered more than a half million such cardsprinted, and to date, more than one-thirdof that initial order has already been dis-tributed to local and county COPEs atcost. Tremendous savings have beenrealized by this centralized ordering sys-tem.The workshops also served as an op-

portunity to discuss mailing practices andpostage rates with local union leaders,resulting, in a number of cases, in sug-gestions through which such bodies couldeffect substantial savings in their postagecosts through changes in their presentmailing practices.

Research MaterialsProjections of each county's over-21

population for the years 1964 and 1966were also included in the workshopHandbook to give county COPEs an earlyestimate on the size of the registrationjob confronting them in both of thoseelection years.

In addition, the Handbook containsthree maps of political analysis which (1)compared voter turnout by party in 1962;(2) showed the county-by-county perform-ance against Propositions 23 and 24; and(3) the percentage of the county voteand votes per precinct for GovernorBrown in 1962.A series of tables at the back of the

Handbook provides analysis of each of thetwo major parties' votes in the 14 mostpopular counties and an analysis of the

47

registration increase between June andNovember 1962, among other things.

Some Key ProblemsTwo key problems reiterated in a num-

ber of the workshops dealt with volun-teers - where do you get them? - andfund raising - how do you do it success-fully?While there were no pat answers, the

consensus indicated that in the case ofvolunteers too often the job to be donewas insufficiently mapped out before thevolunteers were called in. As a resultwhen the volunteers arrived they spent asubstantial part of their time spinningtheir wheels and, subsequently, lost inter-est and refused to respond to later ap-peals.This served to pinpoint the problem as

basically one of organization, demandingdevelopment of detailed instructions -setting forth the what to, where to, whento, how to, and why to-for the volun-teers before calling them in.

Secondly, more direct methods of re-cruiting volunteers w e r e suggested.Where a call for volunteers at a cen-tral labor council meeting fails to pro-duce results, a direct telephone appeal tothe homes of union members asking forhelp from the union member or his orher spouse was urged.A third problem discussed in connec-

tion with the recruitment and utilizationof volunteers related to the necessityof delegating responsibility to get thejob done. The stumbling block in thisconnection, the consensus indicated, wasagain that too often the limits of theresponsibilites delegated were inade-quately spelled out.For successful fund raising, workshop

participants were quick to point out thatthe program or activity undertaken as afund raiser must be popular or have abroad appeal to the local community and,secondly, it must be thoroughly publi-cized-not just by one or two notices orstories in the local community paper anda few announcements at union meetings,but by radio announcements, store win-dow posters and direct phone promo-tion.The workshops also vocalized the need

for a thoroughgoing revitalization oflocal union and central body educationcommittees both for education on issuesand general education on what the tradeunion movement is.

One of the key problems here, it wasfelt, resulted from bottlenecks in the dis-semination of educational materials."The clearest and most convincing ar-

gument on any issue is utterly useless if,after it's printed, thousands of copies ofit wind up in bundles in union officesgathering dust," one workshop participantpointed out.

ProgressSince the major revitalization drive

initiated in the fall of 1961 when ananalysis revealed that there were onlyabout seven active year-round COPEs inexistence, the state's COPE structure hasexpanded to include 27 active countyCOPEs and four congressional districtCOPEs. These COPE jurisdictions includeapproximately 97 percent of the votingpopulation in California.But the process of stimulating and

strengthening this structure remains acontinuing challenge. In view of theshrill and rising voices of the racists andother extremists now in California, it isincumbent upon us in this election yearnot only to mount our most successfulregistration and get-out-the-vote cam-paign but also to embark upon an exten-sive and intensive education drive tocounteract and refute the many distor-tions the extremists are disseminating.The problem of improving our poten-

tial effectiveness, as discussed below,compounds the challenge.

Essential to our success is the develop-ment of political activity that enhancespolitical unity within the COPE structure.Therefore, as a matter of basic policy,all activities of state COPE undertakenin cooperation with local movements, willof necessity continue to recognize onlythe official COPE structure at the locallevel. Registration drives, get-out-the-votedrives and other coordinated state-localprograms for the forthcoming primaryand general elections discussed below arebeing developed in the light of this or-ganization objective.

ELECTION CODE CHANGESAside from an abortive effort to reim-

pose cross filing and a fight within theDemocratic Party over a so-called "truth-in-endorsements" law which was subse-quently enacted, a number of significantchanges were effected in the State Elec-tions Code during the 1963 general session of the California legislature.

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Voting HoursPerhaps the most important changes

affecting organized labor's political activi-ties are contained in three new laws deal-ing with the extension of voting hours to8 p.m. on election day:AB 1195 requires counties using voting

machines in all precincts to remain openuntil 8 p.m. on election day. If voting ma-chines are used in less than all precinctsthe Board of Supervisors may, by resolu-tion prior to publication of the notice ofelection, provide that all polls remainopen until 8 p.m. Chapter 723 of 1963statutes.AB 1537 provides that counties with a

population exceeding 300,000 shall keepthe polls open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. onany election day. Chapter 940 of 1963statutes.SB 747 allows the Board of Supervisors

of any county as well the Election Boardof any city or county to provide by reso-lution that the polls shall be open from7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on election day, includ-ing primary elections. Chapter 507 of1963 statutes.Both AB 1195 and SB 747 afford oppor

tunities to extend the time available toget workers to the polls after work ifthe Boards of Supervisors respond af-firmatively to a request for an exten-sion of voting hours to 8 p.m. on electionday. It should be noted that SB 747 alsoauthorized the election board of any cityof county to extend the voting hours byresolution.

In any case, such resolutrons must beadopted prior to the publication of thenotice of election. The notice of electionis required to be published locally atleast 10 days before a general electionand at least 5 days before any specialelection such as a primary.

Since such notice may be publishedwell in advance of these dates, county andCongressional district COPEs should, assoon as possible, explore the possibilitiesof prevailing on their Boards of Super-visors to extend voting hours until 8 p.m.

There is little doubt that such an ex-tension would accrue to the advantage oforganized labor's get-out-the-vote drives.The voting record of working people fallsconsistently and substantially below thevoting record of conservative factionswhich, selfishly and misguidedly, gener-ally oppose improvements in the lot ofthe wage earner.

The stock answer liable to be encoun-

tered in opposition to an extension ofvoting hours is that it will mean eitheran additional hour's pay for poll boothworkers or no additional pay resulting ina reduction in their generally meager re-muneration.But this is not an insurmountable prob-

lem by any means. President Kennedy'sCommission on Registration and VotingParticipation recommended just last No-vember that all polling places in the na-tion be kept open throughout the dayand remain open until at least 9 p.m.The Commission pointed out that by

keeping most voting places open till 9p.m. real bottlenecks to a greater voterturnout could be eliminated.Moreover the greater voter turnout in

other western democracies is attributablein part to the longer period of time al-lowed. In Italy, for example, citizens mayvote all day Sunday and until Mondaynoon.

Absentee VotidngA measure which may help spur the

use of absentee voting rights by unionmembers is AB 74, which requires a no-tification to the voter to be printed onsample ballot envelopes informing thevoter of his right to apply for an ab-sentee voter ballot.

Heretofore, perhaps largely due to lackof information, the absentee ballots havegenerally run two to one against labor-endorsed candidates. If this provision,which is presently scheduled to remainin effect only until January 1, 1965, isgiven an opportunity to operate, it mightsignificantly decrease the large gap be-tween registrations and votes cast in Cali-fornia elections.SB 191, another absentee measure, per-

mits the return of absentee ballots up to5 p.m. the day before an election insteadof not less than three days before theelection and permits persons who haveapplied for and received absentee voterballots to vote in person up to 5 p.m. onthe day before the election in the Countyor City Clerk's office.

Other ChangesIn an effort to curb practices tending

to intimidate voters near the pollingplace, the Legislature also passed AB1116 which prohibits the place-ment ofsigns relating to voters' qualifications orspeaking to a voter on the subject of his

49

qualifications within one hundred feet ofa polling place.Among other Election Code changes

which should be noted here are the fol-lowing:AB 1329 sets forth procedures and per-

mits voters confined to a hospital, sani-tarium, or nursing home just a few daysbefore an election to vote by absenteeballot.AB 295 provides a new method of

changing one's registration from one pre-cinct to another without requiring the ex-ecution of a new affidavit of registration.The procedure requires the County Clerkto accept U.S. Post Office change of ad-dress cards and, subsequently, to estab-lish that the voter's move is permanentand not temporary.AB 3042 provides for a primary elec-

tion to be held on the fourth Tuesdaybefore the day of a special election to fillany vacancy in Congress or the Legis-lature in a special election. However,since the measure provides that all can-didates shall be listed on one ballotin such special primaries, the measure, ineffect, amounts to a return to cross-filingin California in special elections.AB 2947 permits city and county em-

ployees during off duty hours to partici-pate in political activities involving stateand federal offices, but carries the follow-ing restrictions on participation in localpolitical activities: prohibits officers andemployees of a local agency from receiv-ing or soliciting political contributionsfrom other personnel at the agency, fromsoliciting and receiving political contribu-tions on agency property with specifiedexemptions, from promising employmentbenefits to officers or employees of theagency, from participating in political ac-tivities while in uniform and from takingan active part in a campaign for oragainst any candidate for office of theagency, or for or against any ballotmeasure relating to the recall of an of-ficer of the agency. It also provides thatlimitations set forth under existing lawregarding political activities of state em-ployees are the only restrictions on suchemployees, with specified exceptionwhere the officer or employee engages in"incompatible activity."

REAPPRAISAL OF POLITICALEFFECTIVENESS

As indicated earlier, the successesscored at the polls at the 1962 generalelection gave every indication that the

climate for progressive legislation in ma-jor areas affecting the economic securityof workers and the general welfare of thepublic had been significantly improved.Thus, the prospects for constructive ac-tion ran high as the Executive Councilof the California Labor Federation, AFL-CIO, met in December 1962 prior to thecommencement of the 1963 general ses-sion of the California legislature in Jan-uary to put the finishing touches on la-bor's legislative program as advancedearlier by convention action. More than100 legislative proposals were presentedto the state's lawmakers as a compre-hensive and forward-looking blueprintto enhance the conditions of life and la-bor of more than 6 million workers inCalifornia. It was pointed out that thecommunity of interest uniting the gen-eral voter and organized labor wasamply evident in the 1962 general elec-tion when labor-endorsed candidates wonthe support of the general voter in nearlythree out of every four races. In this re-spect, the aims of organized labor's legis-lative program reflected that communityof interest.

Yet, after almost six months of contin-uous session in Sacramento and labor'sassessment of its gains and losses at thegeneral session, it was reported in theSACRAMENTO STORY that the 1963session "reflected a divided and confusedlegislature, lacking in orientation towardsocial and economic objectives," thusleaving behind it "an uneven record ofachievement, failure and inaction."

Indeed, the SACRAMENTO STORYcontained a blunt warning that the sorryperformance in Sacramento demanded''an accounting on the part of some keylegislative leaders and individual mem-bers of the legislature whose penchantfor power, prestige, and acceptancecaused them to place the interests ofspecial privilege above those of the gen-eral welfare, and who turned their backson the very people who helped electthem to office."

Special Conference on Legislativeand Political IssuesThe sequence of events, both legisla-

tively and politically, coupled with thegrowing evidence of unrest manifestedat the political action workshops con-ducted locally by the California LaborCOPE in cooperation with the COPEorganizations of central labor bodies,gave rise to the necessity of calling a

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special statewide conference represent-ative of the strongest possible cross sec-tion of the state AFL-CIO movement toreview and revamp ways and means ofassuring unity of action in both the politi-cal and legislative fields. Accordingly, theconference was convened at the SheratonPalace Hotel in San Francisco on Decem-ber 5, 1963. In the interest of getting abroadly based consensus of opinion onwhat needs to be done, the special con-ference call was directed to the secre-taries of all central labor councils, craftcouncils and similar bodies at the local,regional and state levels, as well as todesignated representatives of interna-tional unions throughout the state. Morethan 150 key labor representatives at-tended the day-long session, even thoughit was made clear that the conference it-self had no official status since the Con-stitutions of the California Labor COPEand the California Labor Federation,AFL-CIO, assign all policy functions be-tween conventions regarding political andlegislative matters respectively to the Ex-ecutive Councils of the organizations.While the conference produced a strong

consensus favoring remedial action on thelegislative front, the focus of attentionon the political front was drawn to thenecessity of programming ahead to "moreeffectively relate endorsements and cam-paign efforts to the achievement of legis-lative goals." The following principleswere evolved from the consensus of thelabor leaders on political action matters:

* The evaluation of performance rec-ords of individual legislators should takeinto consideration not only floor votes,but also the legislators' activities andperformance behind the scenes and inlegislative committee operations. Priorto actual endorsements, the records andactivities of individual legislators shouldbe reviewed with closer communicationbetween the state and local labor move-ments.

* Particular attention must be given tomaking endorsements more meaningfulunder California's closed primary sys-tem, to the end that the strongest pos-sible candidates are developed, with spe-cial attention to the composition of theelectorate in each Assembly, State Sen-atorial and Congressional district.* Closer coordination of endorsementprocedures through the official COPEstructures is essential at both the localand state levels to preclude the frag-mentation of labor's strength, which in-

vites legislators to play off one labororganization against another to thedetriment of the labor movement as awhole.* Vigorous adherence to the principleof labor's non-partisan political actionis an absolute necessity to guard againstthe possibility of either party's directinglabor's political activities.These principles that evolved out of

the special conference were carried to theExecutive Council of the California LaborCOPE for consideration at its Januarymeeting earlier this year. Accordingly,as a means of implementing the consen-sus, the Executive Council recommendedto local COPE organizations that in theconsideration of their recommendationsfor endorsement in the primary election,special consideration be given to the fol-lowing types of districts:

1. Districts that are Republican incharacter where organized labor shouldbe considering the endorsement of theRepublican incumbent based on his rec-ord, or encouraging a primary opponenton the Republican ticket.

2. Districts that are Democratic incharacter by registration and where or-ganized labor should be giving consider-ation to encouraging opposition on theDemocratic ticket against an incumbentwho has turned his back on the peoplewho elected him to office.

3. Marginal districts that are neitherbasically Republican or Democratic incharacter that require special consider-ation as follows: (a) Development ofstrong support for either an incumbentDemocrat or Republican who has a goodrecord and is in trouble; (b) Support foran incumbent Republican or Democratwho shows promise, and, (c) Develop-ment of a candidate in either party inthe primary to unseat an unsatisfactoryincumbent in the general election.

PRE-PRIMARYCONVENTION CALL

The official call to the Pre-PrimaryEndorsement Convention of the Califor-nia Labor COPE was sent out to all affili-ates on February 7, 1964, setting the dateof the convention for Wednesday, April8. 1964, in California Hall, San Francisco.The business of the convention was de-clared to be the endorsement of candi-dates for the United States Senate, theHouse of Representatives, and the StateLegislature in the statewide primary elec-

51

tion to be held on Tuesday, June 2, 1964.In a Convention Call message to affili-

ates, your Secretary-Treasurer reiteratedthe major points of the earlier "consen-sus" in these words:

"In this crucial election year, we arechallenged to relate our political activi-ties more effectively to the achievementof labor's economic and social goals."The persistence of high levels of un-

employment and idle productive capa-city in the face of hugh pockets of pov-erty and a vast backlog of communityneeds leaves no choice for organizedlabor. We can no longer tolerate furtherprocrastination among those who claimthe friendship of working people."In today's automated society, the ex-

ercise of public responsibility on thepart of legislators and other governmentofficials is a precondition to the attain-ment of economic security and full em-ployment. It is labor's obligation, inturn, to help keep public servants re-sponsible to the people who electedthem to office."The political tradition of the AFL-

CIO is to 'elect our friends and defeatour enemies.' The success of this effort,however, is measured not alone in thenumbers elected, but in the perform-ance of those who attain public officewith the effective support of workingpeople.

"In this pre-primary convention,therefore, our endorsements must cap-ture the full potential of the labor move-ment. There are no short-cuts. We canaccomplish our purpose and precludethe fragmentation of labor strength onlyby achieving closer coordination of en-dorsement procedures through the of-ficial COPE structures at both the localand state levels."At the same time, we must vigorously

assert the principle of labor's non-parti-san political action and guard againstany possibility of either party's directinglabor's political activities."

At this writing, local COPE organiza-tions have begun the process of reviewingrecords and interviewing candidates forrecommendation to the Executive Coun-cil of the California Labor COPE and thebody of the convention. The full assist-ance of the State COPE organization hasbeen extended to local groups in this ef-fort.

Issues Guides forInterviewing Candidates

Following past practice, extensive is-sues guides for interviewing district can-didates at both the state and federal levelwere developed by the State COPE of-fice and sent out to all central laborbodies and local COPE organizations en-gaged in the interviewing process. Aneffort was made in the preparation ofthe guides to place greater emphasis onfundamental issues, coupled with suc-cinct descriptions of labor's policy posi-tions, while at the same time devisingalternative responses for the candidate,to extract more explicit answers. Accord-ingly, the preface to the issues guidescautioned interviewing bodies as follows:

"The issues developed (in the guide)are not intended to cover the full rangeof labor's interests and involvement inthe legislative process. Their purpose,rather, is to measure the candidates'basic commitment to the welfare ofworking people as producers, consum-ers, and citizens in our modern indus-trial society. Individual interviewsshould be conducted in depth as de-sired locally, but each candidate seek-ing labor's endorsement should be re-quired to indicate clearly where he orshe stands on . . . fundamental issues."

The 1964 primary election guidegrouped the fundamental issues for can-didates for state legislative office underthese headings: State Labor Law; Unem-ployment Disability Insurance; Unem-ployment Insurance; Workmen's Com-pensation; Health Insurance; Farm La-bor; Civil Rights; Planning for Growthand Full Employment; Taxation; Hous-ing; Consumer Protections; Education;Social Welfare Legislation; Water Re-sources Development.

In the federal office guide, the issuesfor interviewing candidates were groupedunder the following categories: EconomicPolicy and Planning for Full Employ-ment; Public Needs and Federal Expendi-tures; Shorter Work Week; Manpowerand Skill Development Programs; Pov-erty; Minimum Wage Increase and Ex-panded Coverage; Labor-Management Re-lations Legislation; Federal Standards forUnemployment Insurance; Other SocialSecurity Improvements; Civil Rights;Housing and Community DevelopmentPrograms; Education; Consumer Protec-tions; Farm Labor; Water Resources Development; Congressional Reform.

52

Under COPE procedures, the inter-viewing for district offices is carried onat the local level, while the interviewingof candidates for statewide office is con-ducted by the Executive Council of theCalifornia Labor COPE. In this pre-pri-mary convention the only statewide officein question is the U.S. Senatorial seat cur-rently held by Clair Engle, whose tragicillness and incapacity have brought fortha number of challengers in both parties.The interviewing of these candidates,based on the federal issues guide, is theresponsibility of the Executive Council atits meeting scheduled for April 7 at theDel Webb TowneHouse on the day preced-ing the date of the convention.

SERVICES TO LOCAL COPESAided by additional staff, the Califor-

nia Labor COPE office in San Franciscohas continued to expand its services toCOPE organizations at the local level. Inaddition to providing up-to-date statisticalinformation on voting patterns, the politi-cal composition of districts, registrationchanges and population projections, everyeffort has been made to provide localCOPE organizations with background in-formation necessary to the developmentof effective year-round political actionprograms. The handbook distributed atthe various local workshops noted previ-ously is a specific example of such ex-panded services. Illustrative of the kindof information in the handbook is thesection reviewing the future potentialfor the use of computers to speed up andsimplify voter registration drives, the in-clusion of information on how to mailmore for less, and estimates of potentialvoters in 1964 by counties and similar in-formation.As an aid in combating the growing

menace of rightist groups, the CaliforniaLabor COPE is making arrangementsthrough the National AFL-CIO COPE fordistribution in California of 3,000 copiesof the semi-monthly Group ResearchReport on radical right organizations dur-ing the year ahead. The 3,000 copies areto be mailed in bulk to the San FranciscoOffice of the California Labor COPE andfrom there they will be mailed out indi-vidually or in smaller bulk packages asthe distribution process is worked outwith the local COPEs and other affiliates.These group research reports have estab-lished beyond question the close workingrelationships between the radical rightextremists and anti-labor forces support-ing various "right-to-work" campaigns

and other efforts to further outlaw bona-fide activities of labor unions.

It was pointed out in connection wi-ththe workshops held locally during thepast year that growing emphasis is beingplaced on the use of card files by localunions and central labor bodies to estab-lish some continuity in union voter regis-tration activities. To accelerate and sim-plify the creation of such card files theCalifornia Labor COPE is making avail-able, at cost, special 3" x 5" voter registra-tion file cards.The cards - in triplicate, in three

colors, with carbon paper insertedcome in 5" x 15" strips with five sets oftripo-cards per strip. They are designedto reduce at least seven-fold the laborinvolved in establishing and maintainingvoter registration card files for unionmembers and their families.The three sets of cards are used to

form (1) an A to Z file; (2) a precinctfile; and (3) a working file. Suggestionsfor setting up and utilizing the card fileshave been detailed in the California La-bor COPE workshop handbook distribut-ed to local COPEs.The tripo-cards cost $8.75 per thousand

sets. This means that three 3" x 5" filecards and two 3" x 5" strips of carbon cost83/4 mills or less than 9/lOths of a centper set. The bulk printing of these cardsby the California Labor COPE has re-duced the cost to about one quarter ofwhat they would otherwise cost localCOPEs by printing them locally.

NATIONAL COPECOORDINATION

While working closely with local COPEorganizations within California, the statepolitical arm of the AFL-CIO has endeav-ored at all times to coordinate its activi-ties with the political action programs ofthe national COPE organization. In thisconnection, your Secretary, President andAssistant COPE Director have traveled toWashington on a number of occasionsduring the past two years to participatein COPE Big Cities Conferences andother special meetings to help developand implement national programs gearedto both year-round COPE functions andspecial campaign efforts. Likewise, thestate COPE has extended full coopera-tion to the national office in connectionwith COPE area conferences held inCalifornia with participation from variouswestern states.

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The 1963 COPE area conference forCalifornia, Arizona, Hawaii and Nevadawas held at the St. Francis Hotel in SanFrancisco, May 28-29, and was attended bywell over 200 COPE officers and directorsof state, congressional district, county,city central bodies and other full timerepresentatives. The most recent confer-ence held at the El Rancho Hotel inSacramento on March 6 for California,Hawaii and Nevada drew some 400 dele-gates. In driving home the importanceof this year's elections in a presidentialyear, national COPE director Al Barkanwarned delegates that the fate of organ-ized labor's national goals in social andeconomic fields will pivot substantially onthe outcome of some 84 key Congres-sional races this year. Fourteen to sixteenof the key seats, he pointed out, are inCalifornia. While emphasizing the im-mediate priority of registration activities,the conference set forth the followingregistration drive goals: (1) a union regis-trar in every AFL-CIO local union ascalled for by the last AFL-CIO conven-tion; (2) door-to-door registration drivesin worker precincts as well as at plantsto sign up workers and eligible voters intheir families; and (3) close coordina-tion and cooperation between localCOPEs and women's auxiliaries.Although run by the national COPE

office, the state COPE worked to pro-mote broad participation in the area con-ferences. Delegates' registration formswere supplied through the state officeon request.The COPE big cities conferences in

Washington and other special meetingscalled by the national COPE have servedthe useful purpose of airing COPE opera-tional problems at various levels of or-ganization with particular reference tofinancing matters, continuity of politicaleffort, and the relationship of COPE ac-tivities to the political party structures.At all times, in these conferences, theCalifornia Labor COPE has steadfastlycautioned against the subordination oflabor political activities to the goals ofparty politics. Based on our experience inCalifornia, we h a v e demanded adher-ence to labor's traditional non-partisanapproach to political action.At the last COPE big cities conference

in September, AFL-CIO President GeorgeMeany warned delegates in a kick-off ad-dress that "the money and manpowerof big business and the right wing" would"be pumped into the 1964 elections in un-precedented amounts to elect conserva-

tive candidates." Recent formation ofconservative political action groups pro-vides conclusive evidence that reaction-aries are stepping up their political ef-forts in hopes of making 1964 a year toelect a Congress and President whowill "turn back the clock on progressivelegislation," Meany stated. He noted spe-cifically the stepped-up political educa-tion efforts of big business groups andcorporations and pointed to the Ameri-can Medical Political Action Committeeof the American Medical Association andthe Business-Industry Political ActionCommittee launched last summer by theNational Association of Manufacturers.In order to offset the conservative driveby using "our natural advantage in thebig cities and their suburbs," Meanyadded that "we must register recordnumbers of union members, their fami-lies and friends and we must conducta massive get-out-the-vote campaign."

Pointing out that in 1960 about 60 per-cent of union members voted in the Presi-dential contest and that in the 1962 Con-gressional elections about 50 percentvoted, Meany said: "This just aboutequals the voting performance of thepopulation as a whole. We should do bet-ter. The outcome of the Presidential andCongressional elections (in 1964) willhinge on what we are able to accomplishin the major industrial cities and the fastgrowing suburbs around them."

Statistics substantiating the gap in vot-ing performance between city dwellersand rural and other non-urban residentswere supplied by political analyst LouisHarris. Comparing the voting perform-ance of eligible voters in urban areaswith those of non-metropolitan areas,Harris reported that the turnout in theurban areas was 18 percent less than inthe non-metropolitan areas of New YorkState; in Missouri, 15 percent; Wiscon-sin, 9 percent; Illinois and Minnesota, 7percent; Michigan, 6 percent; and Cali-fornia, 5 percent. The lag in performance"costs hundreds of thousands of votes forliberal candidates" he pointed out.

REGISTRATION ANDVOTE CAMPAIGN

As we approach the June 2 primaryelection and move into the period of in-tense campaigning for the general elec-tion, the emphasis is on the developmentof sound registration and vote campaigns.Once again, the national AFL-CIO COPEis assisting this effort by providing finan-

54

cial aid on a non-partisan basis to localCOPE programs developed in cooperationwith the California Labor COPE. ARl na-tional COPE registration and vote fundsare being distributed through the stateCOPE office on the basis of local budgetsthat have been developed or are being de-veloped. Budget forms have been sup-plied local COPE organizations by the na-tional office through the state COPE.

In this connection, it should be notedthat the workshops conducted locally lastyear under cooperative arrangementswith the state COPE were designed toplan ahead for the current registrationand vote drives through development ofpermanent year-round programs. Whenit was known definitely that national as-sistance funds would be forthcoming,the assistant COPE director made numer-ous follow-up trips to various areas ofthe state to encourage early developmentof registration and vote budgets gearedto local needs and the development ofcontinuity in local political action efforts.Subsequent communications were also di-rected to the local COPEs in regard tothe development of feasible budgets.Up to this point, progress has varied

from area to area, and as a whole hasbeen slower than the immediate chal-lenge ahead demands. In devoting ourefforts at the state level to stepping upthe pace of activity, there are severalgeneral problem areas that should be

identified as the source of continued ob-struction.

In too many local jurisdictions, year-round political action programs are stilllacking, or they are only partially in oper-ation. Thus, in a number of areas, regis-tration and vote programs are still beingdeveloped on a "crash" basis.The financing of COPE operations at

the local level is far from satisfactory inmany areas. Where this is the case, thetendency is to depend on national AFL-CIO financial aid for financing year-round functions that should be carriedlocally so that national aid may be ef-fectively used for expanded registrationand vote campaigns.The non-affiliation of some organiza-

tions with local COPEs, as well as withthe California Labor COPE, presents al-most insurmountable communication prob-lems in developing an effective registra-tion and vote campaign. The inevitableresult is a fragmented approach thatthwarts unity and the very base of all suc-cessful trade union activity.We all share in the responsibility to

help overcome these problem areas andimprove the effectiveness of our politicalactivities.

Fraternally submitted,Thos. L. PittsSecretary-Treasurer

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REPORT OF THE AUDITORSCalifornia Labor Council on Political Education995 Market StreetSan Francisco, CaliforniaWe have examined the statement of cash receipts and disbursements of the Cali-

fornia Labor Council on Political Education for the two-year period ended January31, 1964. Our examination was made in accordance with generally accepted auditingstandards, and accordingly included such tests of the accounting records and suchother auditing procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances.

Cash receipts as recorded were found to have been deposited regularly in thebank. Disbursements were evidenced by paid cancelled checks on file which we com-pared with the cash book entries as to payees and amounts and scrutinized as tosignatures and endorsements. Disbursements were either supported by voucher orapproved for payment by the Secretary-Treasurer.

The commercial account with Bank of America N.T. & S.A. and savings accountson deposit were reconciled with statements and passbooks on file for the period underreview. The balances on deposit in these accounts at January 31, 1964 were confirmedby correspondence with the depositaries.

Surety bonds in effect at January 31, 1964 were as follows:Thos. L. Pitts, Secretary-Treasurer................................$10,000.00David M. Boring, Accountant-Office Manager..............$10,000.00

The aecounts of the Council are maintained on a cash basis; no effect has beengiven in these statements to income accrued but uncollected at January 31, 1964, orto expenses incurred but unpaid at that date.

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of cash receipts and disbursementspresents fairly the recorded cash transactions of the California Labor Council onPolitical Education for the two-year period ended January 31, 1964, and the cashbalances on deposit at January 31, 1964, on a basis consistent with that of precedingperiods.

Lybrand, Ross Bros. & MontgomeryFebruary 21, 1964

CALIFORNIA LABOR COUNCIL ON POLITICAL EDUCATIONStatement of Cash Receipts For the two-year period

and Disbursements ended January 31, 1964Regular Voluntary

Total Funds FundsCash Receipts:Contributions received:Per capita receipts .....................................$317,754.01 $317,754.01Voluntary contributions .63,312.86 $63,312.86Council dues 2,884.10---------------------2,884.10 2,884.10

383,950.97 320,638.11 63,312.86Other receipts:

Interest on savings accounts........................ 26,101.65 26,101.65Miscellaneous receipts and refunds . .........7,158.83 7,158.83

Total cash receipts............................ 417,211.45 353,898.59 63,312.86

Cash Disbursements:Campaign contributions:Regular .................... ........... 85,208.2985,208.29Voluntary .- 58,823.22 58,823.22

Registration campaign expenses ................... 54,735.86 54,735.86Officers' expenses and allowances. 8,162.97 8,162.97Assistant Director .39,16. 44.......39,169.44 39,169.44Office salaries .-------------- 29,745.41 29,745.41Convention expenses .......... 14,158.14 14,158.14Conference expenses.1 330.81.......................1,330.81 1,330.81Accounting fees.1 505.00........................... .1,505.00 1,505.00Insurance .............................................................. 1,910.721,910.72

56

Legal fees and expenses .------------------$ 800.00Taxes .................................. 7,068.40Retirement plan contribution .......................... 14,757.00Printing ......... .......................... 3,800.06General and office expense .............................. 28,673.68

Total cash disbursements ...................... 349,849.00

Excess of cash receipts over disbursementsfor the two-year period endedJanuary 31, 1964 .............. ................... 67,362.45Add: Cash balances, February 1, 1962........ 409,276.60

Reserve for payroll taxes .................. 94.15

Cash balances, January 31, 1964..........................$476,733.20DETAIL OF CASH BALANCES,JANUARY 31, 1964:Commercial account, Bank ofAmerica N.T. & S.A..- ----------------------... $ 81,287.62

Savings accounts, see below ...................... 395,445.58

$476,733.20

$ 800.007,068.40

14,757.003,800.06

28,673.68

291,025.78 $58,823.22

62,872.81394,330.75

94.15

$457,297.71

$ 61,852.13395,445.58

$457,297.71

4,489.6414,945.85

$19,435.49

$19,435.49

$19,435.49

CALIFORNIA LABOR COUNCIL ON POLITICAL EDUCATIONDETAIL OF SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

For the two-year period ended January 31, 1964

BalanceFebruary 1,

1962Banks:Bank of America

N.T. & S.A.-.----------------------$ 54,108.03Crocker-Citizens

National Bank.--------------------- 119,493.70The Hibernia Bank ................ 118,630.63United California Bank.

Transfers(to) and fromCommercial

BankAccount

BalanceInterest January 31,Earned 1964

$(25,000.00) $ 2,918.05

50,000.00

292,232.36 25,000.00

Savings and loan associations:Argonaut Savings andLoan Association .................. 10,970.33

Bay View FederalSavings and LoanAssociation ........................ 10,970.08

Citizens FederalSavings and LoanAssociation ........................ 10,861.68

Home Federal Savingsand Loan Association 9,654.73

Home Mutual Savingsand Loan Association 9,654.75

52,111.57

Totals . . ............................ $344,343.93

8,625.168,562.93872.35

20,978.49

$ 32,026.08

128,118.86127,193.5650,872.35

338,210.85

1,085.01 12,055.34

1,074.67 12,044.75

1,065.45 11,927.13

947.08 10,601.81

950.95 10,605.70

5,123.16 57,234.73

$ 25,000.00 $26,101.65 $395,445.58

57

CALIFORNIA LABOR COUNCIL ON POLITICAL EDUCATIONDETAIL OF CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED

For the two-year period ended January 31, 1964

ALHAMBRACommunications WorkersNo. 9505.--------------------$

Electrical Utility WorkersNo. 47 ........................................

ANAHEIMBarbers No. 766..........................Rubber Workers No. 657 .........International Union of

Electrical Workers No. 1505

ANTIOCHPapermakers No. 330................Papermakers No. 606 ...............Pulp, Sulphite and Paper

Mill Workers No. 249 ............Pulp, Sulphite and Paper

Mill Workers No. 713 ............Rubber Workers No. 60 ...........

ARCATALumber and Sawmill Workers

No. 2808 ....................................Plywood and Veneer WorkersNo. 2789 ....................................

AZUSAChemical Workers No. 112 ......

BAKERSFIELDBarbers No. 317.........................Bricklayers No. 3 ......................Building and ConstructionTrades Council ........................

Butchers No. 193 ........................Carpenters and JoinersNo. 743......................................

Central Labor CouncilofKern County ......................

Communications WorkersNo. 9416 ....................................

Electrical Workers No. 428 ......Hotel and Restaurant

Employees No. 550 ................Kern County Council on

Political Education ................Oil, Chemical and Atomic

District Council No. 1 ............Oil, Chemical and AtomicWorkers No. 19......................

Operative Plasterers No. 191Plumbers and SteamfittersNo. 460 ......................................

Theatrical and Stage EmployeesNo. 215 ......................................

Transport Workers No. 3005 ....

Typographical No. 439 ..............Utility Workers No. 170 ............Lathers No. 300 ..........................

BARSTOWTheatrical, Stage and Motion

490.38 Picture Operators No. 730 ....$BELL

360.00 International Union ofElectrical Workers No. 1501

20.16 International Union of73 94 Electrical Workers No. 1504

Steelworkers No. 2018.20.67 Steelworkers No. 3941.

United Auto Workers No. 230..BELLFLOWER

36.00 Rubber Workers No. 476 ..........96.99BELL GARDENS

72.00 Rubber Workers No. 417.BERKELEY

21.00 Meat Cutters and Butchers117.12 No. 526.

Painters No. 40.Teachers No. 1078.United Auto Workers No. 567

399.66 BIJOU

388.02 Carpenters and Joiners388.02 No. 1789 .-.----

BLOOMINGTON24.15 Steelworkers No. 4155.

BREA82.77 Rubber Workers No. 490 .

43.20 BURBANKOperative Plasterers No. 739....

12.00 BURNEY324.00 Woodworkers No. 269.

578.44~CAMINO578.44 Woodworkers No. 286.24.00 CHESTER

Lumber and Sawmill Workers288.48 No. 3074.306.00 CHICO

Carpenters and Joiners1,005.00 No. 2043.

Typographical No. 667.12.00 Lathers No. 156 .

CITY OF INDUSTRY12.00 Rubber Workers No. 585.

CLARKSBURG516.720 Sugar Workers No. 182.140.40 ~COLMA130.47 Cemetery Workers and Greens

Attendants No. 265 .29.77 COLTON63.81 Steelworkers No. 5647.76.95 COMPTON5.28 Carpenters and Joiners9.09 No. 1437.

58

9.00

176.46

27.092,750.25

43.531,165.23

27.81

97.68

53.64234.7845.6323.19

144.39

1.35

159.53

403.20

110.43

9.45

594.99

184.1125.385.25

18.14

66.75

52.65

61.59

734.28

CORONACarpenters and JoinersNo. 2048 ...................-$7!

Glass Bottle Blowers No. 192.... 7Glass Bottle Blowers No. 254.... 2

COVINACommunications WorkersNo. 9579------------------------ 24

CROCKETTSugar Workers No. 1 ................ 71

CUPERTINOUnited Cement, Lime andGypsum Workers No. 100 8....

DALY CITYNorth County School Dis-

trict Employees No. 377 ------ 2Daly City MunicipalEmployees No. 919................ 4

Teachers No. 1481DAVENPORT

United Cement, Lime andGypsum Workers No. 46 ------ 14

DOWNEYCommunications WorkersNo. 9595.----------------------- 58

Rubber Workers No. 171 0.......... 1Rubber Workers No. 451 .......... 45

EAST SAN GABRIEL VALLEYBarbers No. 835 ........................ 3

EL CAJONCarpenters and Joiners

No. 2398 ........................ 39EL CENTRO

Central Labor Council .............. 2Theatrical Stage EmployeesNo. 656 ...............1.........

EL CERRITOOperative Potters No. 165 ........ 8

EL MONTEChemical Workers No. 78 ........ 12Glass Bottle Blowers No. 39 .... 11Painters No. 254......................... 40

EL SEGUNDOOil, Chemical and Atomic

Workers No. 547 .................... 77Transport Workers No. 502 ...... 28

EMERYVILLEOil, Chemical and Atomic

Workers No. 589 .................... 27EUREKA

Bakers No. 195 ........................ 3Bartenders No. 318.................... 11Building and Construction

Trades Council ........................ 1Butchers No. 445 ................... 13Central Labor Council of

Humboldt County .................. 2Cooks and Waiters No. 220 ...... 26

Hod Carriers and GeneralLaborers No. 181....................$

9.50 Hospital and Institutional76.47 Workers No. 327..2.26 Council on Political Education

of Humboldt and Del NorteCounties.

s0.06 Laundry Workers No. 156.Lumber and Sawmill WorkersNo. 2592.

74.24Machinists No. 540....................Municipal Employees No. 54Redwood District Council16.55 of Lumber and SawmillWorkers ....................................

Lumber and Sawmill.8.80 Workers No. 3019.

FIRE FIGHTERS8.304 Federated Fire Fighters of

California ................................Federal Naval Fire Fighters

of the Bay Area No. F-15 ....24.00 Fire Fighters Association

No. 689 ....................................Fire Fighters Association

39.86 No. 1428.3.49 Fire Fighters Association3.57 No. 1301 .

Fire Fighters of Berkeley8.40 No. 1227 .

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 778......................................

Sacramento Fire FightersB5.34 Association No. 1412.

Fire Fighters of Contra4.00 Costa County No. 1230.

Coronado Fire Fighters1.52 Association No. 1475.

Fire Fighters Association9.85 No. 1465 .

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 652 ...................................

0.76 Fire Fighters AssociationL1.60 No. 1274 .------------------------------'8.63 California State Forestry

Fire Fighters No. 1388 .........Professional Fire Fighters

'5.23 No. 753.8.00 Fresno County Fire Fighters

Association No. 1180 ............Gardena Fire Fighters

6.46 Association No. 1413 ..............

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1490 ..................................

0.49 Fire Fighters Association0.79 No. 1477.

Fire Fighters Association2.00 No. 1225 .

8.27 Federal Fire Fighters ofLong Beach Veterans

4.00 Administration Hospital9.10 No. F-58 ..................................

59

267.51

45.00

24 0027.81

460.05120.6725.20

30.00

135.72

24.00

29.87

54.42

9.00

98.37

122.58

54.72

40.50

132.36

1.74

8.01

29.43

23.88

11.10

168.75

15.33

22.05

.57

4.98

6.54

10.32

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 372 .................................

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1167 ...........................

Professional Fire FightersNo. 748 .....

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1014. .......................

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1165 .---------------

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1466 . ....................

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1396 .................

Merced Fire FightersAssociation No. 1479 .......

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1289. .......................

Monte Vista Fire FightersAssociation No. 1473 ......

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1353 ..... ...........

Newark Fire FightersAssociation No. 1483 ...-.

Federal Fire FightersAssociation No. F-85 .....

Fire Fighters Association ofOakland No. 55 .............

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1430 .......

Palo Alto Fire FightersAssociation No. 1319 .....

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 809..........................

Petaluma Fire FightersAssociation No. 1415......

Federated Fire Fighters,Flight Test CenterNo. F-53 .......

Professional Fire FightersNo. 1354 ...............-----

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 188 ................ --

Federal Fire Fighters ofGreater Sacramento AreaNo. F-57 ............... -.

Fire Fighters Association ofSacramento No. 522 ...............

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1439 ..............

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1270. ..............

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 891 .................. .

San Diego Area Federal FireFighters No. F-33 ..

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 145 ........

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 873......................

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1136 .......................

255.60

6.39

659.97

870.99

29.61

3.90

12.43

3.48

27.06

2.70

13.47

1.59

44.55

415.57

27.66

18.87

113.37

10.14

57.33

Fire Fighters Association ofSanta Clara No. 1171 ..... $

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1401 ...... ............

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1218......---

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 810 ............................

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1434 ...... .....

Fire Fighters Association ofStockton No. 1229 .... ...

Fire Fighters Association ofSan Joaquin County No. 1243

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1138 .....

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1186 ...........................

Fire Fighters AssociationNo. 1429 ..............................

Fire Fighters of Santa CruzCounty No. 1272 .................

West Sacramento Fire FightersAssociation No. 1482 .......

FAIRFIELDCommunications Workers

No. 9422. ......................

FONTANASteelworkers No. 2869 ..........Steelworkers No. 3677..........Steelworkers No. 4954 ..........Steelworkers No. 5632 ........

FORESTHILLWoodworkers No. 3-86 ........

FREMONTUnited Auto Workers No. 1364

FRESNOBakers No. 43 ...................... .

13.56 Building and ConstructionTrades Council of Fresno

86.70 County .

Building Service EmployeesNo. 110 ................... .....

23.94 Butchers No. 126.Central Labor Council.

186.27 Committee on PoliticalEducation ..... ......

8.01 Cooks, Pastry Cooks andAssLstants No. 230 ...............

25.62 Culinary, Bartenders and HotelService Workers No. 62.

88.29 Electrical Workers No. 100.Hod CarriPrs and General

47.58 Laborers No. 294 ................ .Iron Workers No. 155 ................

Lathers No. 83 ................... ....334.11 Motion Picture Machine

Operators No. 599.200.82 Motor Coach Operators

No. 1027 .4.86 Office Employees No. 69 ......

33.69

27.96

14.91

27.24

15.30

111.99

27M4

64.26

49.38

14.73

8.55

2.25

97.00

240.0021.008.52

82.08

47.07

288.18

315.42

18.00

179.91360.0012.00

12.00

244.74

720.00108.00

434.1672.0027.42

22.86

37.5911.46

60

Painters No. 294 .........................$Plasterers and Cement Masons

No. 188 ...................................Plumbers and Steamfitters

No. 246 ....................................Production Union No. 3184 ......Retail Food, Drug and Liquor

Clerks No. 1288......................Sheet Metal Workers No. 252....Theatrical Stage Employees

No. 158 ......

Stereotypers and ElectrotypersNo. 104 ....................................

Typographical No. 144 .............FULLERTON

Flat Glass Workers No. 187 ....

GARDEN GROVERubber Workers No. 393 ..........

GARDENARubber Workers No. 433 ..........Steelworkers No. 2273 ..............Teachers No. 1301......................

GLENDALECarpenters and Joiners No. 563Painters No. 713 ........................

Plumbers No. 761 ......................Printing Pressmen No. 107 ......Typographical No. 871 .............

HANFORDCarpenters and Joiners

No. 1043..................HAYWARD

Brewery Workers No. 293 ........Communications Workers

No. 9412 ..................................Culinary Workers and

Bartenders No. 823 ..............Hayward Federation ofTeachers No. 1423 ..................

Glass Bottle Blowers No. 53 ....

Painters No. 1178.....................Steelworkers No. 5004..............

HOLLYWOODAffiliated Property Craftsmen

No. 44 ................................Hollywood A.F.L. Film CouncilCarpenters and JoinersNo. 1052. ........................

Film Technicians No. 683 ........Hollywood Painters No. 5 ........-Motion Picture Cinetechnicians

No. 789............................Motion Picture Costumers

No. 705 .......Motion Picture Screen

Cartoonists No. 839 ........Motion Picture Sound

Technicians No. 695 .........Motion Picture Studio Electric

Technicians No. 728 ..............

230.76 Motion Picture CraftsService No. 727......................$

137.58 Motion Picture Set PaintersNo. 729.

57.92 Motion Picture Studio First85.11 Aid Employees No. 767.

Motion Picture Studio720.00 Projectionists No. 165.126.75 National Broadcast Employees

No. 53 .

11.58 Scenic Artists No. 816.Screen Actors Guild, Inc..

18.60 Studio Electricians No. 40.139.50 United Auto Workers No. 179..

HUNTINGTON PARK45.87 Butchers No. 563.

Furniture Workers No. 1010394.71 Glass Bottle Blowers No. 114.Glass Bottle Blowers No. 137

Packinghouse Workers5.88No. 78-C ...................------.--------

110.85 Painters No. 95.---------------.-------11.70 INGLEWOOD

Painters No. 1346.872.52 IONE412.32 Brick and Clay Workers

642.09No. 750 ...................-------19.89 Brick and Clay Workers

37-95No. 844 .----------------------------------JACKSON

Lumber and Sawmill Workers143.85 No. 2927 .

LAKEWOOD84.03 Rubber Workers No. 357

LA MESA328.59 National Broadcast Employees

No. 54 .

1,831.10 LAWNDALE

11.64 Glass Bottle Blowers No. 19 ....

188.63 LODI214.29 Carpenters and Joiners153.04 No. 1418 .

LOMPOC

1,440.0012.00

1,024.201,796.40471.06

380.34

108.00

268.62

216.00

360.00

Barbers No. 363 .............Chemical Workers No. 146 ......

LONG BEACHBartenders No. 686 ................Building and ConstructionTrades Council ..... ..

Cement Finishers No. 791 ...Chemical Workers No. 1.Chemical Workers No. 255.Communications WorkersNo. 9571.

Culinary Alliance No. 681 . 3Hod Carriers and General

Laborers No. 507.Joint Executive Board of CulinaryWorkers, Bartenders and HotelService Workers ....................

117.00

190.80

55.05

215.22

574.5042.57

1,500.00126.00

1,313.37

1,815.7247160144.00875.36

13.86345.24

444.51

24.40

19.98

337.14

49.85

46.74

295.71

148.56

1.08228.96

755.14

24.00200.25135.51253.47

501.963,499.89

780.45

24.00

61

I

j

I

LMhers No. 172 -.---$)Iaiclans Association No. 353..i, Chemical and AtomicWorkers No. 128....................

Painters No. 256..........................Plasterers and Cement

Finishers No. 343 ..................Printing Pressmen No. 285 ....

Retail Clerks No. 324 ................Rubber Workers No. 640 ........California State Council of

Culinary Workers andBartenders ................................

Steelworkers No. 5038............Stereotypers No. 161 ..............Teachers No. 1263 ..........Teachers No. 1384 ......................Typographical No. 650 ..............United Auto Workers No. 148..United Auto Workers No. 805..United Cement, Lime andGypsum Workers No. 59 ......

Utility Workers No. 246 ..........

LOS ANGELESAdvertising and Public Rela-

tions Employees No. 518 ......Asbestos Workers No. 5 ..........Bakers No. 453 ......................Bartenders No. 284 ..................Bill Posters No. 32 ....................Boilermakers No. 92 .................Bookbinders and Bindery

Women No. 63 ........................Building and Construction

Trades Council ........................Cabinet Makers andMillmen No. 721 ....................

California State Association ofElectrical Workers ...............

California State Association ofBarbers and Beauticians ......

Carpenters and Joiners No. 25..Cvrpet, Linoleum and Soft

Tile Workers No. 1247 ........Cement Masons No. 627 ............Chemical Workers No. 11 ........Chemical Workers No. 350 ......Cleaners, Dyers, Pressers and

Allied Trades No. 268..........Clothing Workers No. 55-D ......Clothing Workers No. 81 ..........Clothing Workers No. 278 ........Clothing Workers No. 372 ......Clothing Workers No. 408 ......Commercial TelegraphersNo. 48 ......................................

Communications WorkersNo. 9590 ..................................

Cooks No. 468 ............................Council of FederatedMunicipal Crafts ....................

Dining Car Employees No. 582

130.56 District Council of Brick and72.00 Clay Workers No. 11 ..............$

District Council of Carpenters3,642.00 of Los Angeles County.488.85 District Council of Chemical

Workers No. 5.159.78 District Council of Painters44.85 No. 36 .

324.00 District Council of72.30 Machinists No. 94.

Electrical Workers No. 11.Electrotypers No. 137.

24.00 Food Processors, Packers,36.09 Warehousemen and Clerical25.74 Employees No. 547.28.74 Glass Bottle Blowers No. 2926.04 Hod Carriers and General

128.38 Laborers No. 300.4,280.82 Hod Carriers and General392.40 Laborers No. 696.

Hotel Service Employees83.85 No. 765.

335.79 Housing Authority of LosAngeles No. 143.

Iron Workers, ShopmenNo. 509 .....

24.96 International Union of216.00 Electrical Workers No. 850.216.00 International Union of

1,310.82 Electrical Workers No. 854.85.00 International Union of

480.00 Electrical Workers No. 1503..International Union of

90.00 Electrical Workers No. 1511..International Union of

24.00 Electrical Workers No. 1514..Jewelry Workers No. 23.

1,876.68 Joint Executive Board ofCulinary Workers.

24.00 Joint Executive Conference ofSouthern California

24.00 Electrical Workers.555.03 Ladies Garment Workers

No. 55 .

1,641.58 Ladies Cloak Makers No. 58792.30 Ladies Garment Workers322.50 No. 84 .

33.27 Ladies Garment WorkersNo. 96 .

288.00 Ladies Garment Workers360.00 No. 97 .

108.00 Ladies Garment Workers936.00 No. 451 .

108.00 Ladies Garment and Accessories312.00 Workers No. 482.

Ladies Garment Workers135.00 No. 483 .

Ladies Garment Workers786.09 No. 496 .

1,200.00 Ladies Garment WorkersNo. 497 .

24.00 Ladies Garment Workers157.50 No. 512 ....................................

62

12.00

12.00

12.00

24.00

12.003,600.00

46.38

60.00204.72

1,200.00

136.65

460.00

25.62

46.00

157.44

355.89

175.65

68.85

43.11150.00

12.00

24.00

708.00381.00

216.00

144.00

163.50

72.00

144.00

107.25

72.00

348.00

72.00

Lathers No. 42 ...........................$Lathers No. 42-A ........................Los Angeles Allied PrintingTrades Council........................

Los Angeles County Federationof Labor ..................................

Los Angeles County Council onPolitical Education................

Los Angeles CityEmployees No. 119................

Los Angeles County ProbationOfficers No. 685 ....................

Los Angeles County GuardsNo. 790 ....................................

Los Angeles State EmployeesNo. 1406 .................................

Lumber and Sawmill WorkersNo. 2288....................................

Machinists No. M-311................Mailers No. 9 ............................Meat Cutters No. 421 ................Metal Polishers No. 67 ..............Metal Trades Council ofSouthern California ............

Miscellaneous RestaurantEmployees No. 440 ...........

Miscellaneous Foremen andPublic Works Superin-tendents No. 413 .........

Molders and FoundryWorkers No. 374 ..............

Motion Picture ProjectionistsNo. 150 ..............................

Musicians No. 47 ....................Newspaper Guild No. 69 ........Operating Engineers No. 12 ....

Packinghouse Workers DistrictCouncil No. 4 ........................

Packinghouse Workers No. 200Painters No. 434......................Painters No. 1348 .....................Paper Handlers No. 3 .............Paper Makers No. 349 ..............Photo Engravers No. 32 ..........Printing Specialties and PaperProducts No. 388 ..............

Public Service CarpentersNo. 2231 .................................

Pulp, Sulphite and PaperMill Workers No. 266 ........

Pulp, Sulphite and Paper MillWorkers No. 268 ...................

Pulp, Sulphite and Paper MillWorkers No. 303 ...................

Pulp, Sulphite and Paper MillWorkers No. 307 ................

Pulp, Sulphite and Paper MillWorkers No. 550 ..................

Reinforced Iron WorkersNo. 416 ................................

Retail, Wholesale andDepartment StoreEmployees No. 112 ...............

1

1

2

1

4

170.20 Roofers No. 36 . $559.95 Rubber Workers No. 43.

Rubber Workers No. 44.24.00 Rubber Workers No. 131.

Rubber Workers No. 141.24.00 Rubber Workers No. 335.

Rubber Workers No. 428.25.00 Rubber Workers No. 430.

Rubber Workers No. 458.33.23 Rubber Workers No. 656.

Sheet Metal Workers No. 108..178.80 Sign, Scene and Pictorial

Painters No. 831.53.15 Southern California Conference

of Allied Printing Trades20.40 Council.

Southern California Council,982.16 of Public Employees No. 20..150.00 Southern California District280.50 Council of Laborers.L,440.00 Southern California District72.00 Council of Lathers.

Southern California Joint Board24.00 of Amalgamated Clothing

Workers of America..,017.40 Sportswear, and Cotton

Garment Workers No. 266Sprinkler Fitters No. 709.

109.20 Stage Employees No. 33.State, County and Municipal

72.00 Employees No. 800.Steelworkers No. 1547.

422.43 Steelworkers No. 1986.,080.00 Steelworkers No. 2172.933.27 Steelworkers No. 5504.L,600.00 Stereotypers No. 58.

Street, Electric Railway and12.00 Motor Coach Employees

243.12 No. 1277 .

61.50 Studio Grips No. 80.200.25 Switchmen No. 43.63.00 Teachers No. 1021.76.77 Terrazzo Workers, Helpers

433.44 No. 117 .

Textile Workers No. 99.72.00 Textile Workers No. 818.

Textile Workers No. 915.56.46 Textile Workers No. 1291.

Los Angeles Joint Board of144.00 Textile Workers.

Theatrical Press Agents and43.41 Managers No. 18032.

57.93 Tile Layers No. 18.United Association Steamfitters

480.00 No. 250 .

United Auto Workers No. 887 ..

71.70 Utility Workers No. 132.Waiters No. 17.

546.00 Wholesale Wine and LiquorSalesmen No. 151.

Women's Union Label League10.00 No. 36 ......................................

63

738.15468-00671.16993.65200.5176.1786.9426.70

1,286.2550.55

2,802.39

120.00

24.00

24.00

24.00

24.00

12.00

360.00252.00198.00

58.5024.8444.43110.91219.57216.00

720.00255.00

7.0675.75

108.0084.9923.1978.2734.39

23.60

34.56375.00

157.5011,582.461,251.601,800.00

61.99

11.00

MADERAConstruction and GeneralLaborers No. 920....................$

MANTECACarpenters and Joiners

No. 1869 ..................................Sugar Workers No. 177 ............

MARTINEZAllied Hospital Employees

No. 251 ................................Contra Costa County CentralLabor Council ..........................

Construction Laborers No. 324Contra Costa Building and

Construction Trades CouncilElectrical Workers No. 302 ....

Oil, Chemical and AtomicWorkers No. 5........................

Painters No. 741 .......................Typographical No. 597 ...........

MARYSVILLECarpenters and JoinersNo. 1570...................................

Central Labor Council ..............Hod Carriers and GeneralLaborers No. 121 ................

MAYWOODGlass Bottle Blowers No. 145..Steelworkers No. 1981 ..............Steelworkers No. 2058 ..............United Auto Workers No. 509 ..United Auto Workers No. 808..United Auto Workers No. 811..

MENLO PARKUtility Workers No. 160-C ......

MERCEDCarpenters and Joiners

No. 1202 ..................................Central Labor Council ..............Communications Workers

No. 9407 ..............................

Construction and GeneralLaborers No. 995 ..................

Plasterers and CementMasons No. 672 ......................

Typographical No. 865 ............

MILPITASUnited Auto Workers No. 560..

MODESTOBuilding and ConstructionTrades Council .....................

Carpenters and JoinersNo. 1235 ..............................

Central Labor Council ofStanislaus County..................

Chemical Workers No. 190......Communications WorkersNo. 9418 ...................................

Electrical Workers No. 684 ....

Hod Carriers, Building andConstruction Laborers

75.00 No. 11300 $Plasterers and Cement Masons

No. 429 .

86.28 Plumbers and Steamfitters140.22 No. 437

Theatrical Stage Employeesand Motion Picture MachineOperators No. 564

166.86 Typographical No. 689.24.00 MONTEREY

720.00 Building and ConstructionTrades Council of Monterey

12.00 County .524.40 Carpenters and Joiners

No. 1323..................1,559.57 Central Labor Council of108.00 .Monterey Peninsula.57:48 Fish Cannery Workers of

the PacificHod Carriers and General

Laborers No. 690376.20 Hotel, Restaurant and Bar-12.00 tenders No. 483.

306.00 MONTEREY PARKSteelworkers No. 1502.

98.97 McCLOUD1,070 91 Woodworkers No. 3-64.343.97 NAPA

1,648.11 Bartenders and Culinary965.37 Workers No. 753.

1,906.59 California State HospitalEmployees No. 174.

Central Labor Council.54.27 Napa County Council on

Political Education.Hod Carriers and General

157.90 Laborers No. 371.24100 Plasterers and Cement Masons

24.00 No. 766.27.00 United Garment Workers

No. 197 .

303.66 NEVADA CITYCommunications Workers

25.70 No. 9431.50.00 NEWARK

Chemical Workers No. 62 ...1,369.32

18.00

131.28

24.00103.56

NEW YORKNational Maritime Unions of

California ...........................

NORTH FORKLumber and Sawmill Workers

No. 2762 ..............................

NORTHRIDGETeachers, San Fernando

Valley No. 1441 .....................

144.58 NORWALK255.60 Rubber Workers No. 158

64

427.38

41.04

144.00

15.8436.00

12.00

416.25

24.00

147.06

288.43

944.82

440.34

631.95

342.45

54.5936.00

15.00

234.57

15.00

321.18

44.46

118.11

375.00

139.41

1.68

75.87

OAKLANDAlameda County Council on

Political Education ................$Alameda County School

Employees No. 257 ................Allied Printing Trades

Council of East Bay CitiesAuto and Ship Painters

No. 1176 .................................Barbers No. 134..........................Bartenders No. 52 ......................Building and ConstructionTrades Council ......................

Butchers No. 120 ......................Carpenters and Joiners

No. 36......................................Carpenters and Joiners

No. 1149 ................................Carpenters and Joiners

No. 1473 ..................................Carpet, Linoleum and Soft

Tile Workers No. 1290 ........Cement Masons No. 594 ............Central Labor Council .............Cleaning and Dye HouseWorkers No. 3009 ...............

Commercial TelegraphersNo. 208..................

Communications WorkersNo. 9490....................................

Construction and GeneralLaborers No. 304 ..................

Cooks No. 228 ............................Culinary Workers No. 31 ........Dining Car Cooks andWaiters No. 456 ....................

District Council of ChemicalWorkers No. 2 ........................

District Council of PaintersNo. 16 ......................................

Dry Dock, Marine Waysmen,Stage Riggers andHelpers No. 3116 ....................

Electrical Workers No. B-595..Electrical Workers No. 1245Floor Layers No. 1861 ..............Glass Bottle Blowers No. 2 ......Glass Bottle Blowers No. 141Insurance Workers No. 30........Lathers No. 88 ............................Machinis-ts No. 284..................Millmens Union No. 550 ....Motion Picture Operators

No. 169 ......

9th Congressional DistrictCouncil on PoliticalEducation .........

Northern California AutomotiveMachinists Council ..............

Office Employees No. 29 .........Painters No. 127 ........................Railway Carmen No. 735 ..........Retail Food Clerks No. 870 ....

1

Roofers No. 81 ...........................$Rubber Workers No. 64 ............

24.00 Rubber Workers No. 78.Sheet Metal Workers No. 216.

199.89 Sheet Metal Workers No. 355.Shipyard and Marine Shop

12.00 Laborers No. 886.Sleeping Car Porters.

288.36 Steamfitters No. 342.330.00 Steelworkers No. 168 ................907.17 Steelworkers No. 1798.

Steelworkers No. 3702.24.00 Steelworkers No. 4468.

540.00 Teachers No. 771.Theatrical Employees No. B-82

L,313.71 Theatrical Stage EmployeesNo. 107 .....

96.00 Typographical No. 36 .United Auto Workers No. 76..

416.85 United Auto Workers No. 333..United Auto Workers No. 1031

207.00312.0024.00

21,'2,.1

OMO RANCHLumber and Sawmill Workers

No. 2728 ...............................

354.07 ORO GRANDEUnited Cement, Lime and72.00 Gypsum Workers No. 192

OROVILLE599.70 Bartenders and Culinary

Workers No. 654.160.00 Butchers and Meat Cutters440.00 No. 460 .

568.84 Central Labor Council ofButte County.

234.00 OXNARDCommunications Workers

12.00 No. 9575 .

Steelworkers No. 2029.21.00 PALM SPRINGS

Carpenters and Joiners42.00 No. 1046 .*AAn Lathers No. 454 .VUU.UU

720.7272.0072.00

432.0079.49

108.00960.00

PALO ALTOBarbers No. 914..........................Bindery Workers No. 21 ..........Carpenters and Joiners No. 668Painters No. 388 ........................Typographical Workers No. 521

76.00 PANORAMACommunications Workers

72.90 No. 9503. . ---------------------

24.00

12.00260.00373.2052.53

864.00

PASADENACarpenters and Joiners

No. 769 .....

Hotel, Restaurant Employeesand Bartenders No. 531 ...

Lathers No. 81 .. .............

Meat Cutters No. 439................Painters No. 92 ........................

180.00153.0676.98

360.0078.00

396.00180.00720.0032.40

356.821.44

296.75112.2957.60

24.54458.40661.08591.05928.71

111.94

202.41

629.34

52.50

24.00

224.6138.52

220.3537.29

72.7027.36

854.58288.3398.10

619.25

751.38

1,784.01189.79

1,296.00298.26

65

9c

if

Plasterers and CementFinishers No. 194.................$

Printing Pressmen No. 155 ......Typographical No. 583 ..............

PATTONCalifornia State HospitalEmployees No. 128 ..............

PETALUMABartenders and CulinaryWorkers No. 271 ..................

Lathers No. 268 ........................Typographical No. 600 .............

PICO RIVERAUnited Auto Workers No. 923..

PITTSBURGBartenders and Culinary

Workers No. 822 ..................Chemical Workers No. 23 ......Glass Bottle Blowers No. 160....Paper Makers No. 329 ..............Plasterers and CementMasons No. 825 ......................

Steelworkers No. 1440 ..............Steelworkers No. 4534 ................

POMONABarbers No. 702 ..........................Chemical Workers No. 58 ........Glass Bottle Blowers No. 34 ..Pacific State Hospital No. 1515Southern California

Typographical Conference ....

PORTERVILLELumber and Sawmill WorkersNo. 2658 ....................................

PORTLAND, OREGONWestern States Regional

Council No. 3 ..........................REDDING

Northeastern CaliforniaBuilding and ConstructionTrades Council........................

Butchers No. 352 ......................Culinary Workers No. 470 ........Five County Committee on

Political Education ................Lumber and Sawmill Workers

No. 2608 ..................................Motion Picture Projectionists

No. 739 ....................................Northern California District

Council of Lumber andSawmill Workers ....................

Plasterers and CementMasons No. 805......................

REDONDO BEACHCarpenters and JoinersNo. 1478....................................

REDWOOD CITYCement Mill Workers No. 760..Electrical Workers No. 1969 ....

Painters No. 1146 .$220.95 United Auto Workers No. 10934.50 RENO, NEVADA90.00 Lumber and Sawmill Workers

No. 2903.

66.48~RESEDA

66.48 Carpenters and JoinersNo. 844.

RICHMOND209.49 Bartenders and Culinary29.80 Workers No. 595.12.96 Boilermakers No. 513.

Communications Workers1,310.70 No. 9401 .

Contra Costa Committee onPolitical Education.

571.83 Motion Picture Projectionists2340 No. 560 .

138.48 Painters No. 560.134.46 Public Employees of Contra

Costa County No. 302.12453 Retail Clerks No. 1179.

1,585.77 Steelworkers No. 4113.38:34 Typographical No. 738.

RIVERA33 02 Packinghouse Workers No. 67

141:75 Steelworkers No. 5188.168.33 RIVERSIDE300.96 Building and Construction

Trades Council of San24.00 Bernardino and Riverside

Counties .

Carpenters No. 235.24.27 Central Labor Council.

Riverside County Federationof Teachers No. 1414.

District Council United24.00 Cement, Lime and Gypsum

Workers No.3.District Council of PaintersNo. 48 .

24.00 Electrical Workers No. 440255.72 Hod Carriers and General724.89 Laborers No. 1184.

Millmen and Lumber Workers24.00 No. 1959.

Roofers No. 146.641.00 Steelworkers No. 4233.

United Cement, Lime and7.20 Gypsum Workers No. 48.

ROSEVILLELocomotive Firemen and

12.00 Enginemen No. 58.

49.80 SACRAMENTOAmerican Federation State,

County, Municipal and922.26 School Employees No. 258....

Bookbinders No. 35.Bricklayers No. 9.

105.00 Building and Construction459.00 Trades Council.

66

126.00137.28

17.13

1,223.31

1,509.42264.00

83.46

12.00

13.68232.56

30.00660.0068.7039.99

307.1416.59

24.00547.0812.00

9.06

24.00

24.00217.17

973.31

75.00115.44

5.58

254.50

46.53

189.9190.00

210.00

24.00

California Federation ofTeachers --------------------$

Carpet, Linoleum and SoftTile Workers No. 1237 ....

Central Labor Council ..Construction and GeneralLaborers No. 185 ....- ...

Cooks No. 683 .........District Council of CarpentersMiscellaneous Employeeso.393Motion Picture Machine

Operators No. 252Musicians No. 12 ..........National Broadcast Employees

o. 55Northern California JointExecutive Conference ofElectrical Workers

Painters No. 487 .... --..Sheet Metal Workers No. 162Stage Employees No. 50 ......Steelworkers No. 4383 ...Stereotypers and Electrotypers

No. 86Street, Electric Railway andMotor Coach OperatorsNo. 256 -- .-

Theatre Employees No. B-66 ..Typographical No. 46 ....Union of State EmployeesNo. 411 .--------......

Waiters and Waitresseso. 561

Woodworkers No. 338 ..-.SALINAS

Carpenters and JoinersNo. 925

Central Labor Council -.......Council on Political Education,

12th Conaressional District.Hotel, Restaurant Employeesand Bartenders No. 355

Monterey County Council onPolitical Education ....

Packinghouse WorkersNo. 78-A ....--....

SAN ANDREASCarpenters and Joiners

No. 386

SAN BERNARDINOCentral Labor Council .......Culinary Workers andBartenders No. 535 ........

Electrical Workers No. 477 ..Hod Carriers and Laborers

No. 783. - .....Committee on PoliticalEducation of San BernardinoCounty ....--.--..--..

Lathers No. 252 ... --..Office Employees No. 83 ....

Plasterers and Cement12.00 Finishers No. 73 . $

Plumbers and Steamfitters113.67 No. 364 .

12.00 Printing Pressmen No. 138.Steelworkers No. 4765.

945.00 Theatrical Stage Employees543.21 No. 614 .

23.00 SAN BRUNOPackinghouse Workers No. 263

805.35 Transport Workers No. 505 ....

34.20108.00

8.37

24.00270.0072.0020.1928.04

39.26

104.1037.50

313.11

60.00

887.0174.79

144.0012.00

12.00

190.71

12.00

SAN DIEGOBuilding, and ConstructionTrades Council .l.......

Butchers No. 229 .................

Carpenters No. 1296 .-..Carpenters No. 2020 .......

San Diego County LaborCouncil ......

Clothing Workers No. 288 ..Culinary Alliance and Hotel

Service Employees No. 402....District Council of CarpentersElectrical Workers No. 465 ..

Cannery Workers andFishermen's Union ...

Floorlayers No. 2074 .-...Furniture Workers No. 577Hod Carriers No. 89 .........Council on Political EducationMotion Picture Projectionists

No. 297 ... .--Office Employees No. 139.Plasterers and Cement

Finishers No. 346Painters No. 333San Diego Teachers

Federation No. 1407Stage Employees No. 122.Stereotypers No. 82Teachers No. 1278Typographical No. 221United Auto Workers No. 506Waiters and Bartenders

No. 500.

rYtj4.93 LOCOMOTIVE FIREMENLocomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 91

130.38 Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 97

Locomotive Firemen and18.00 Enginemen No. 139 .- ...

Locomotive Firemen and1,368.09 Enginemen No. 143.396.00 Locomotive Firemen and

Enginemen No. 58601.00 Locomotive Firemen and

Enginemen No. 239 .-.-.Locomotive Firemen and

24.00 Enginemen No. 260

95.19 Locomotive Firemen and35.94 Enginemen No. 312 ............

67

133.29

48.0043.20

116.79

24.00

25.62144.00

24.001,335.00843.39495.84

12.00216.00

2,079.4824.00

396.00

504.0043.2920.73

540.0012.00

90.0069.59

630.39576.00

8.5520.8648.00

101.97292.56718.71

771.93

81.99

39.66

20.85

22.44

17.34

1.08

8.16

55.89

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 314................$

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 327 ...............

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 566.

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 663.

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 672

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 731.

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 756.

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 794.........

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 795Aso.......

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 808 ........

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 817 .. 9

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 820...............

Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen No. 946................

Locomo-tive Firemen andEnginemen No. 9793..........

SAN FRANCISCOAmerican Federation of

Television and Radio ArtistsAmerican Radio Association....Asbestos Workers No. 16-........Barbers and Beauticians

No. 148......... .....

Barbers Employers Guild No. 9Bartenders No. 41....................Bay Counties District Council

of Carpenters ................Bay District Joint Council of

Building Service EmployeesNo. 2......................

Bill Posters and Billers No. 44Boilermakers No.9. .....

Bookbinders No. 31-125 .Building Service Employees

No. 87.....................Building and ContructionTrades Council.............

Butchers No. 115.............Butchers No. 508.............California Allied PrintingTrades Conference.........

California Legisla-tive Board ofBrotherhood of LocomotiveFiremen and Enginemen....

California State Councilof Carpenters..............

California S-tate Council ofLumber and SawmillWorkers...................

California State Conference ofOperating Engineers........

California State Council of28.29 Retail Clerks .......... $

California S-tate Theatrical32.16 Federation ..663..........

Carpenters and Joiners16.56 No. 4836.............

Central California District26.70 Council of Lumber and

Sawmill Workers .731.......4.80 Central Labor Council...

City and County Employees21.57 No. 400.........

City and County Employees18.12 No. 747 . .....

Cloakmakers No. 8 ...........10.11 Clothing Workers No. 42.

Commercial Telegraphers16.14 No. 341.48........................

Communications Workers83.61 District Council................

Communications Workers3.24 No. 9470............................

Construction and General12.99 Laborers No. 261..........

Cooks No. 44 . .....37.02 Coopers No. 65................

Coppersmiths No. 438 .12.00 Dental Technicians of

Norther California No. 99T....Bay Counties District Council

247.65 of Painters No.8.180.00 District Council of Plasterers105.00 and Cemen-t Masons of

Northern California ........

565.95 Dressmakers No. 10193 Electrical Workers No. 6.

2,300.13 Elevator Constructors No. 8Fire Fighters No. 798

24.00 Furniture Workers No. 262Furniture Workers No 3141....Garment Cutters No. 45.

24.00 Glaziers and Glassworkers57.54 No. 718 .

69.00 Hotel and Club Service324.00 Workers No. 283...................

Insurance Workers No. 73.864.00 Iron Workers No. 377.

Joint Board of Amalgamated12.00 Clothing Workers ..261.

2,520.00 Ladies Garment Cutters420.94 No. 213.

Local Joint Executive24.00 Board Culinary Workers,

Bartenders and HotelService Workers..8 .

24.00 Locomotive Firemen andEnginemen Council .............

12.00 Automotive MachinistsNo. 1305

Mailers No. 18.24.00 Masters, Mates and Pilots

No.89.No..314154.00 Millmen's Union No. 42 ........

68

24.00

12.00

93.69

12.0012.00

144.00

72.00216.00360.00

684.00

36.00

88.38

1,731.722,160.00

18.0039.00

50.00

24.00

24.00216.00720.00108.00

1,175.31674.64172.2042.96

202.35

2,167.0963.89144.00

15.00

72.00

12.00

24.00

2,612.82144.00

36.7582.38

Miscellaneous EmployeesNo. 110......................................$

Molders and Allied WorkersNo. 164 ...................................

Motion Picture MachineOperators No. 162 .................

Musicians No. 6.........................National Broadcast Employees

No. 51 ........................................Newspaper Guild No. 52 ..........Northern California District

Council of Laborers ..............Office Employees No. 3............Operating Engineers No. 3 ......Operating Stationary EngineersNo. 39........................................

Paint and Brush MakersNo. 1071....................................

Pattern Makers Association ......Pile Drivers No. 34...................Printing Pressmen No. 24 ........Professional Embalmers

No. 9049....................................Retail Grocery Clerks No. 648Retail Department StoreEmployees No. 1100..............

Retail Shoe and TextileSalesmen No. 410 ....................

Roofers No. 40 ............................Sausage Makers No. 203 ..........Ship Painters No. 961 ................Sign, Scene and Pictorial

Painters No. 510 ....................Sprinkler Fitters No. 483 ..........State Building and ConstructionTrades Council ......................

Steelworkers Union No. 1069....Stereotypers and ElectrotypersNo. 29 ........................................

Teachers No. 61 ..........................Teachers No. 1119......................Teachers No. 1352 ......................Theatrical Janitors No. 9 ..........Theatrical Stage EmployeesNo. 16 ........

Theatrical WardrobeAttendants No. 784...............

Tile Helpers No. 7 ......................Transport Service Workers

No. 905 ......................................Tri-State Council of California,Arizona and Nevada Sheet-Metal Workers ........................

Typographical Union No. 21....Waiters and Dairy Lunchmen'sUnion No. 30 ..........................

Waitresses No. 48 ......................Watchmakers Union No. 101....Web Pressmen No. 4 ................Western Conference of

Specialty Unions ....................Western Federation of

Butchers ....................................

1,593.33

67.20

116.34495.00

111.781,179.06

24.00432.00

3,150.00

1,035.00

284.41108.00360.00472.56

75.571,260.00

2,616.69

60.00280.80501.7873.20

158.4C115.50

12.00713.75

208.90134.9457.5462.2297.20

54.00

26.64190.53

31.00

24.00844.80

2,609.973,239.03

72.00228.00

12.00

12.00

Window Cleaners Union No. 44 $SAN JOSE

Barbers No. 252 ..........................Bartenders Union No. 577 ........Bookbinders No. 3 ......................Bricklayers No. 10......................Brick and Clay Workers

No. 580......................................Building and Construction

Trades Council, Santa Claraand San Benito Counties ......

Butchers and Meat CuttersNo. 506......................................

California State Council ofLathers ......................................

Cement Laborers No. 270 ........Central Labor Council ofSanta Clara County ................

Chemical Workers No. 294 ......Clay and Tile Products No. 994Clothing Workers No. 108 ........Santa Clara Valley District

Council of Carpenters ........

District Council of PaintersNo. 33 .....-----------------------

Electrical Workers No. 332 ......Hotel, Restaurant and Hotel

Service Employees No. 180..International Union of

Electrical Workers No. 1507Council on Political Education

of Santa Clara County ....Lathers No. 144. ................

Motion Picture MachineOperators No. 431 ..............

Musicians Protective UnionNo. 153..................................

Newspaper Guild No. 98 ......Painters No. 507 ...............Retail Clerks Associa,tion

No. 428......................................Roofers No. 95..........................Sheet Metal Workers No. 309....Sign and Pictorial ArtistsNo. 484..........................

Steelworkers No. 1835..............Theatrical Stage EmployeesNo. 134...............................

Utility Workers No. 259 .......

SAN LEANDROInternational Union of

Electrical Workers No. 853....Teachers No. 1440 ................

SAN LUIS OBISPOBarbers No. 767..................Central Labor Council ........Construction and GeneralLaborers No. 1464 ...............

Electrical Workers No. 639 ...Plumbers and Steamfitters

No. 403 .................................

69

144.00

43.60528.9644.79150.00

50.67

24.00

1,498.20

12.001,080.00

12.00147.9319.3136.00

24.00

24.00621.00

2,963.85

77.97

36.0097.35

20.16

48.00226.59709.68

1,440.00103.45283.47

15.1987.33

16.7456.28

42.977.14

23.0024.00

193.5072.99

72.00

SAN MATEOAir Transport EmployeesNo. 1781 ....................................$

Bartenders and CulinaryWorkers No. 340 ....................

Building Service EmployeesNo. 81 ........................................

Butchers No. 516 ......................Carpenters and JoinersNo. 162.....................................

Cement Masons No. 583 ............Central Labor Council ..............Communications WorkersNo. 9430................................

Construction and GeneralLaborers No. 389 ....................

Electrical Workers No. 617 ......Hod Carriers No. 97 ..................Council on Political Education

of San Mateo County...........Plumbers and SteamfittersNo. 467.....................................

Theatrical Stage and MotionPicture Operators No. 409 ..

SAN PEDROBartenders No. 591 ....................Chemical Workers No. 53 ........Hotel, Restaurant,

Cafeteria and MotelEmployees No. 512 ................

Lumber and Sawmill WorkersNo. 1407..................................

Marine and ShipbuildingWorkers No. 9...................

Masters, Mates and PilotsNo. 18.....................................

Painters and DecoratorsNo. 949....................................

Pile Drivers, Bridge, Wharfand Dock Builders No. 2375

Plasterers and Cement MasonsNo. 838 ....................................

Seine and Line Fishermen'sUnion .......................................

Shipyard Laborers No. 802 ......Steelworkers No. 5303 ...........

SAN RAFAELBartenders and CulinaryWorkers No. 126 ...............

Building and ConstructionTrades Council ......................

Carpenters and Joiners No. 35Central Labor Council ...........Communications WorkersNo. 9404...................................

Golden Gate District Councilof Lathers ...............................

Hod Carriers and GeneralLaborers No. 291 ....................

Plasterers and Cement MasonsNo. 355 ......................................

Retail Clerks No. 1119 ..............

Theatrical Stage and MotionPicture Operators No. 811.$

72.00 SANTA ANASugar Workers No. 175 ............

2,455.74 Building and ConstructionTrades Council of Orange

3706.76 County....................706.46 Central Labor Council.

Hod Carriers No. 652 ................810.60 Orange County Council on36.00 Political Education.12.00 Painters and Decorators

No. 686......................................297.78 Roofers No. 36-C ........................

Theatrical Employees No. 504912.99 Typographical No. 579-.----------72.00 SANTA BARBARA

Barbers No. 832.24.00 Building and Construction

Trades Council.360.00 California State Conference

of Painters .34.56 Carpenters and Joiners

No. 1062 .-Central Labor Council ............

263.70 Communications Workers43.17No. 9576 ..................------------

Construction and GeneralLaborers No. 591 ....................

1,129.17 Culinary Alliance andBartenders No. 498.

360.00 District Council of PaintersNo. 52 .

144.00 Electrical Workers No. 413.Meat Cutters No. 556 ...............

54.98 Painters and DecoratorsNo. 715.

108.00 Plumbers and SteamfittersNo. 114 ................

405.00 Santa Barbara CountyTri-Council on Political

243.75 EducationtSheet Metal Workers No. 273

216.00 Typographical No. 394 ..............240.00 SANTA CLARA

* California State Council ofRoofers .

SANTA CRUZ838.78 Carpenters and Joiners

200 No. 829....................2554.0 Santa Cruz County Central24.00 Labor Council AFL-CIO

Construction and General195.61 Laborers No. 283.1 Culinary Workers No. 742 ..

12.00 Painters and DecoratorsNo. 1026 .

621.00 Plasterers and CementFinishers No. 379.

79.20 SANTA MARIA450.84 Barbers No. 941.

70

105.90

24.0012.00

1,802.55

24.00

615.08101.4027.0075.00

43.38

24.00

24.00

704.1024.00

249.63

470.10

1,531.71

21.00306.00385.45

191.31

100.80

24.00180.90

5.70

36.00

43.20

21.00

156.0058.44

86.28

21.52

18.01

Central Labor Council ..............$Communications WorkersNo. 9581 ....................................

Culinary Alliance andBartenders No. 703 ................

Oil. Chemical and AtomicWorkers No. 1-534 ..................

SANTA MONICABarbers No. 573..........................Carpenters and JoinersNo. 1400....................................

Communications WorkersNo. 9574....................................

Culinary Workers andBartenders No. 814 ................

Meat Cutters No. 587 ................Painters No. 821 ........................Typographical No. 875 ..............

SANTA ROSABuilding and ConstructionTrades Council ........................

Butchers No. 364 ......................Central Labor Council ofSonoma County......................

Committee on PoliticalEducation of Sonoma County

Electrical Workers No. 551 ......Hod Carriers and General

Laborers No. 139 ...................Retail Clerks No. 1532 ............Typographical No. 577 ..............

SAUGUSGlass Bottle Blowers No. 69....

SEAL BEACHChemical Workers No. 225 ......

SELMACarpenters and Joiners

No. 1004....................................SHERMAN OAKS

Hotel, Motel, RestaurantEmployees and BartendersNo. 694...................................

SOUTH GATECommunications WorkersNo. 9506..................................

International Union ofElectrical Workers No. 1502

Rubber Workers No. 100 ..........Rubber Workers No. 225 ..........United Auto Workers No. 216..Utility Workers No. 283 ............

SPRECKELSSugar Workers No. 180 ............

STOCKTONBartenders No. 47......................Brick and Clay WorkersNo. 528......................................

Brick and Clay WorkersNo. 874 ......................................

12.00

44.48

806.70

74.76

92.89

733.89

536.07

625.00576.00232.5729.07

24.00448.62

23.00

27.00144.00

277.5972.0040.68

Building and ConsrctionTrades Council........................$

Carpenters and JoinersNo. 266 ....................................

Cement Finishers No. 814 ........Central Labor Council ofSan Joaquin ..............................

Communication WorkersNo. 9417....................................

County Employees No. 183 ......Culinary Workers Alliance

No. 572......................................Electrical Workers No. 591 ......Hod Carriers and General

Laborers No. 73 ......................Labor League for PoliticalEducation of San Joaquinand Calaveras Counties ........

Motion Picture ProjectionistsNo. 428...................................

Papermakers No. 320 ................Plasterers No. 222 ......................Plumbers and Steamfitters

No. 492 ....

Theatrical Stage EmployeesNo. 90....-----

Typographical No. 56 ................United Auto Workers No. 792Utility Workers No. 160 ..........

SUNNYVALEBarbers No. 498 ..........................

SUN VALLEYRubber Workers No. 621 ..........

151.80 SUSANVILLEWoodworkers No. 370 ..........

19.50 TAFTUtility Workers No. 289.......

TERMINAL ISLAND122.90 Cannery Workers of the

Pacific .....................................TORRANCE

Chemical Workers No. 598 ......2,464.68 Rubber Workers No. 146.

Steelworkers No. 2586.TRACY

89.64 Sugar Workers No. 181.TUSTIN

44.65 Rubber Workers No. 510.964.53TW I223.36 TWAIN

2,243.07 Woodworkers No. 398.47.28 UKIAH

Northern Coast Counties321.69 District Council of

Carpenters .

308.04

4.08

56.73

VALLEJOBuilding and ConstructionTrades Council........................

Carpenters and JoinersNo. 180......................................

18.00

480.0036.00

12.00

282.2640.95

941.5872.00

315.00

12.00

20.07108.0022.89

114.00

12.9665.1683.0439.96

42.96

63.30

74.85

13.41

1,080.00

54.0345.0627.82

171.24

129.18

47.97

18.00

24.00

557.13

71

Central Labor Council ofSolano County........................

Culinary Workers andBartenders No. 560................

Electrical Workers No. 180 ......4th Congressional District

Council on PoliticalEducation ................................

Hod Carriers andLaborers No. 326 ....................

Labor League for PoliticalEducation of Solano County

Operating Engineers No. 731 .Plasterers and CementMasons No. 631 .....................

Painters and DecoratorsNo. 376 .....................................

Retail Clerks No. 373................Shipwrights, Joiners andBoat Builders No. 1068 .......

Teachers No. 827 ........................Typographical No. 389 ..............

VAN NUYSBarbers No. 837..........................Painters No. 1595 ......................United Auto Workers No. 645..

VENICERubber Workers No. 300 ........

VENTURAVentura County Buildingand ConstructionTrades Council ........................

Carpenters and JoinersNo. 2463 ....................................

Ventura Central Labor CouncilVentura County Councilon Political Education ..........

Lathers No. 460 .........................Hod Carriers and General

Laborers No. 585...................Oil, Chemical and Atomic

Workers No. 120 ...................Operating Engineers No. 732Painters and Decorators

No. 955......................................Typographical No. 909..............

VERNONGlass Bottle Blowers No. 224Paper Makers No. 336 ................Steelworkers No. 1927 ..............

VISALIABarbers No. 856 ..........................Carpenters No. 1484 ..................Central Labor Council ofTulare and Kings Counties..

Communications WorkersNo. 9406 .................................

Hod Carriers and General24.00 Laborers No. 1060 ..................$

Stage Employees and566.79 Motion Picture66.00 Operators No. 605.

Teachers No. 1472.Typographical No. 519.

24.00 VISTA

210.60

12.242.88

27.00

407.04 Lathers No. 527 ........................ 15.99407.04

WALNUT CREEK21.00 Steelworkers No. 5450 .............. 15.57

177.08 WARM SPRINGSBrick and Clay Workers

35.31 No. 663 ............... ......... 36.27WATSONVILLE

132.70 Brick and Clay Workers240.00 No. 998..................-.... 84.90

Building and Construction90.24Trades Council ........................ 24.00

9.81 Carpenters and Joiners64.80 No. 771 ............. ........... 161.97

SjalJOM suoqeo3unmmo3112.02 OgZ .--------------.lpunoc ioq-e lJluao432.00 No. 9427 .........................32.94

2,457.36 Electrical Workers No. 526 .... 11.25Theatrical Stage Employees

52.59 No. 611 .............. ........... 43.11WHITTIER

Steelworkers No. 4511 .............. 36.42Transport Workers No. 518 .... 18.90

12.00

471.4412.00

21.0051.87

459.00

354.0624.00

308.568.13

112.5034.50133.37

31.50112.R6

WILMINGTONButchers No. 551 ........................Chemical Workers No. 40 ........Marine Engineers No. 79 ........Ship Carpenters No. 1335 ........

WOODLANDSugar Workers No. 179 ...........United Sugar Workers

Council of California ............WOODLEAF

Woodworkers No. 365 .............

2,121.24262.2236.66

216.00

166.14

24.00

5.94

Total contributions from percapita tax and Council dues.. 320,638.11

VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTIONS:Washington, D.C. Council on

Political Education................ 55,817.77Various individual

contributions ........................ 7,495.09

18.00 Total voluntary contributions.. 63,312.86

225.33 Total contributions....................$383,950.97

72

CALIFORNIA LABOR COUNCIL ON POLITICAL EDUCATIONSUMMARY OF DISBURSEMENTS

For the twoyear period ended January 31, 1964Campaign contributions:Regular ...................................... $85,208.29Voluntary ...................................... 58,823.22

$144,031.51Registration campaign expenses:

Salaries ...................................... 997.80Expenses ...................................... 53,738.06

54,735.86Officers' expenses and allowances:Executives ................................. 1,227.55Geographical Vice Presidents .. . 4,632.76At-Large Vice Presidents ............... 2,302.66

8,162.97Assistant Director:

Salary .......................................................25................ 25,000Expenses and allowances.......................................................... 14,169.44

39,169.44Office salaries:GlennW.Martin.-------------------------------------------------17,600.00Kathryn A. Giblin .----------------------------------- 12,145.41

29,745.41Convention expenses:

Salary-W. J. Doyle ..............................................101.40Garrett Press .7,061.37Convention Committee . 2,940.00

Rental-DelWebb Towne House............................................ 454.79E.D.Conklin, Inc. - reporter.................................................. 397.80

Other convention expenses .. .. 1,180.32California Labor Federation AFL-CIO

(reimbursement of salaries) . 2,022.4614,158.14

Conference expenses .------------- 1,330.81Accounting fees - Lybrand, Ross Bros. and Montgomery 1,505.00Insurance:

MaloneyandMaritzen .-----------------------------------------------------....----.- 300.00N.Cronin&Co ........................ 808.43

State Compensation Insurance Co.-.-----------------------.---------------- 685.29Bankers Life and Casualty Co.- -------------------.--------- 117.00

1,910.72Legal fees and expenses .................................. . 800.00Taxes:

InternalRevenue Service ............................................................ 5,471.25Franchise Tax Board .................. 438.84Payroll taxes.--------------------------------------------1,158.31

7,068.40Retirement plan contribution -

Occidental Life Insurance Co .................... 14,757.00Printing .............................................. ...................3,800.06General and office expenses:

Allen's Press Clipping Service ..... 2,483.50Postage and mailing - J. Fixa, U. S. Postmaster ... .. 2,650.00California Labor Federation AFL-CIO

(reimbursement of pro rata expenses) ........................... ....... 20,305.71Stationery and supplies .3,234.47

28,673.68Totalcash disbursements .........................................................................$349,849.00

73.

I N D E X

Auditors' Report .............................. ............... ..... 56-73

Committees of the Convention ..... 6- 7

Contributions to California Labor COPE ..... 58-72

Delegates, Roll of .--------------------------------------------------14-19

Endorsement Recommendations ..............................................8-1 1, 12

Gruhn,President Albin J. - ----------------------------------------------------------3- 4

Membership of California Labor COPE .................................. 20-40(

Officers of California Labor COPE. inside cover

Pitts, Secretary-Treasurer Thos. L.- ..-..-....-..................---------12-13

Proceedings of the 1964 Pre-Primary Convention . 3-13

Resolution on Study of Constitution..........................1........ 11-12

Rules and Order of Business .----------------------------....-...........-----7- 8

Secretary-Treasurer's Report.----------------------------------------------------- 41-55

Shelley, Honorable John F., Mayor of San Francisco ............... . 4- 5


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