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Page: of 12

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Capitol Comment
by Earl G. Waters
CAMPAIGN REFORMS
The Republican Party has scheduled a series of meetings,
starting October 19 in San Diego, for the purpose of
“restructuring’’. Presumably this includes what Republican State
Chairman Gordon C. Luce recently described as ‘‘a shift from the
heavy campaign financing of the Madison Avenue variety to a
greater reliance on the smaller donor.’’
The current awareness of faults in our electoral process has
centered reform proposals on campaign financing. This sudden
urge to ‘‘purify’’ fund raising is precipitated by the revelations,
following Watergate, of the vast sums raised in the last presidential
campaign.
This pointed up the dangers of huge contributions and an
overabundance of money leading to useages, unethical, immoral ;
and illegal.
As often happens in such situations there has been an over
reaction accompanied by hasty legislation seemingly designed
more to assuage public opinion than to truly solve the problems.
These efforts merely serve to highlight the most recent abuses.
Most of the proposals ignore three basic facts.
1. Since the founding of the nation there have always been
election abuses and there always will be. It is inherent in the ©
system.
2. Regardless of laws, there will be violations. This was made .
clear by the disclosures of the many illegal corporation
contributions to the Nixon campaign.
3. There can be no such thing as ‘‘perfect election laws’’. Laws
which are too restrictive will work adversely, creating unintended
barriers for office seekers with the result the most capable will
«refuse or be unable to participate in politics.
This does not mean that no effort should be made to improve:
the electoral process by plugging the holes when they appear. The
maintenance of our freedoms require a continuing review of our
government and all of its mechanism.
And it is difficult to argue that campaign funding is not now in
need of some reform.
\s Luce has stated, ‘‘Kingmaking”’ is resented by the voters
2nd dampens the enthusiasm cf campaign workers.
mere can only exist where a few individuals are in
‘ontr f available campa ign dollars. And this need not be donated
lars from a few big cont butors. The growing
office te use taxpayer dollars to finance their own
g trend of those in
campaigns, those
fy inked candidates, and party activities, is rapidiy undermining
party responsibility for fund raising. So, too, is the usurpation by
the party organizations.
Much
assembly speaker of the role of fund raiser for legislative
candidates, a task formerly done by the individua! candidate and
of this has been the result of soaring campaign costs.
While the expense of running for office may not need to be as great
as it tias been in many campaigns in recent years, it remains that it
ines cost a lot of money.
Congressman Harold T. Bizz’ Johnson, who has spent many
years in public office and is now in his 15th year in the House, has
oposed a law making m 1ajor changes in federal elections.
Johnson’s bill directly attacks the problem of campaign
financing and offers a sensible solution. He proposes financing
candidates with public funds. This in itself is not new. It has been
suggested before. What is different about the Johnson approach is
that he has devised a practical means of doing it.
“To avoid dissipation of treasury funds on frivolous
candidates,”’ Johnson said, ‘“‘the bill requires each candidate to
match any public money he receives with money contributed by
private persons.”’
‘ BUSINESS
BILLBOARD
WATCHES = CLOCKS
~~ )
JEWELRY
. and the
Len Gilbert
ee pep asoinic FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP
HEFFREN INSURANCE AGENCY
E. M, DALPEZ JEWELER 1117.W. Main P.O Box 1034
2 tien mana ed 1oross Valley, Ca. 2655 are
THE CIPSON’S
Pa 273.256} Park At The Door
LITTLE OLD
BAKF S St
429 E 29 E. Ridge Rd. Rd. &
Of The Friendly Store
Cedar Ridge
Ladies Shop
Colfe: — 273-4664 iwa
CHEERLEADERS FOR the seventh graders are, from left: Jill Roy, Joette Collier and
Tammi Kays. Back row: Rhonda Clark and Cathy Seghezzi.
Quilt show
Oct. 27-28
A
il] be an outstanding item at
the Nevada City Quilt Show,
October 27-28, in the Nevada
City Armory.
The stunning old quilt, now 142
years old, will be seen in a
speciai old-fashioned bedroom
setting replete with brass bed
and some fabulous oriental rugs.
A child’s bedroom will also be
featured, with old-fashioned
toys and cribsize quilts as
highlights of the decor.
In the good old days of quiltmaking they were made from
materials on hand, including in
some instances old socks, flour
sacks or tobacco pouches. One
very good example from 1890,
and to be shown here, is a quilt
made of gentlemen’s silk ties
and an old opera coat.
Among local exhibitors will be
Mrs. Lou Christie who will
display a ‘‘Carpenter’s Wheel’’
design honoring her grandfather, Mr. Marsh; and a
“‘Barrister’s Block’ designed
for her husband. The former
was a carpenter and the latter a
lawyer.
Demonstrations will include
the making of the “Pine Tree’’
“Cathedral Window”
quilt designs.
Entries have been received
from points in Oregon and
Nevada as well as from many
collections in California. All
types of quilting supplies and
books on the subject will be
avilable for purchase, as will
quilted and patchwork toys,
aprons and botique items for the
early Chrisimas shopper. A
donation of 50 vents admission is
asked to benetit the Sunflower
School in Nevada City.
A crazy quilt, begun in 1831,
Warden serves as the
As we have had occasion to
observe before, to you
sportsmen and to the public
generally the fish and game
warden is the Department cof
Fish and Game.
Because he is the day-to-day
contact point between the
department and the sportsman
or the nonhunter or the
nonfisherman who is affected by
what we do, the warden is the
image of the department.
As a result, in the minds of
many Californians, we are
looked upon primarily as a law
enforcement agency when, in
fact, law enforcement is only
one of the many, many tasks
assigned to the department.
What do the rest of us do?
Well, the 1,300 or so
department employees,
wardens included, work at 154
job classifications, running
alphabetically from account
clerk II to wildlife habitat
supervisor.
They are
agricultural
programmers, executive
officers, license officers,
hatchery managers, biologists,
land agents, statisticians, civil
engineers, fish pathologists,
patrol boat captains, clerkspatrol boat captains, clerks,
typists, deckhands,
hands, fish culturists,
virologists, wardens, patrol
captains, janitors, chemists, key
punch operators, laboratory
technicians, masters of fisheries
vessels, boat engine. men,
boatswains, personnel officers,
property inspectors,
secretaries, account clerks,
accountants,
chemists,
suction
public image for, DFG
stenographers, pilots, ship’s
cooks, statistical analysts,
tabulation marine operators,
wildlife habitat assistants,
piar:ners and many, many more.
Among other things, Fish and
Game people tag fish, build fish
screens to keep small fish from
being trapped in fields when
water is diverted from rivers,
rehabilitate spawning gravels,
prepare news releases and
television news clips and radio
news tapes, publish magazines
and booklets and leaflets, make
motion pictures, answer
requests for. information from
schools and the public generally,
review applications for land and
water developments for their
effects on fish and wildlife, test
agents for oil spill cleanups,
introduce new species of fish,
rescue fish, work to preserve
threatened species of wildlife,
study marine species, monitor
catches, manage hunting on
state and federal areas, survey
game_and nongame species,
work to control fish and wildlife
diseases, study means of
improving access to private
property for fishermen and
hunters, clean up oil sumps,
patrol lands and waters of the
state for fish and game law
violators and polluters and
others, issue permits and
licenses for such things as use of
explosives and operation of
pheasant clubs and use of
dredges, conduct
examinations for faleoners and
issue falconry permits, check
airports for imports. of
prohibited fish and wildlife
species and administer the
hunter safety program.