Argus (Newspaper) - March 1, 1967, Fremont, California Fair through Thursday with some high cloudiness Slightly cooler on Wednesday High Wednesday 57 to 62 West to northwest winds 10 to 15 miles an hour Details Page 12 Registration for Fremont Unified School District's summer session will be- gin Tuesday in the district's 43 schools Page seniors at Washington High will represent the school in the 1987 Bank of Achievement Awards program according to Principal Robert Callahan Page 3 Fremont residents will find their phone bills have a new look after April when all unit telephone calls will be shown Page 2 A school janitor who was a father confessor helpmate and friend to dren is dead but he lives on in the memories of pupils who penned notes to his widow Page 3 Three youths have been arrested by Newark police in the harassment of a Newark Negro family Police still are seeking others who might be implicated Page 1 Vacation policy for city firemen has been approved by Fremont city men despite objections from the men's association Page 1 The old fire department horns in mont may be in three years a thing of the past as a new electronic alarm tem straight out of James Bond will be installed Page 12 Ah outline of Newark's long range master plan study will be presented today at a meeting of the New? Chamber of Commerce Page Eleven candidates have filed for tions as school board trustees in Newark and Fremont as deadline for filing nears Page 1 An analysis ordered by the ture shows California will have to raise taxes million by next fiscal year if it is to continue the current level of state services Page 2 Gov Ronald Reagan doesn't expect lightning to strike but he will be a favorite son candidate in California for the 1968 presidential nomination at the Republican convention Page 24 Abandoning his college tuition plan Gov Ronald Reagan has agreed to hike his budget proposal by million for the University of California to make up for revenue derived from tuition Page 1 New Orleans Coroner Nicholas Chetta says David W Ferrie the man Dist Atty Jim Garrison called a major figure in tho probe of the Kennedy assassination from a death wish but died of natural causes Page 2 President Johnson names Ramsey Clark to be attorney general and his father Tom C Clark announces he will retire after 18 years as a Supreme Court justice because of a possible conflict of interest Page 2 Henry R Luce who pioneered news and picture magazines and became one of the journalistic giants of the 20th Century dies following a coronary Page 2 President Johnson asks Congress for an extra million to push work on rocket stages which may carry men to Mars in the Page 2 Marines pull out to sea in a den feint off the coast of nam then swing north in a landing seeking to trap a iarge North Vietnamese force Page 2 Astrology Bridge Dr Editorials 19 Financial 18 Sports 19 18 19 Want 4 Woman's S 3 Held In Glaude Case THE ARGUS Vol VII No- 275 California Wednesday March I 1967 5 Cants Capwell Store Under Construction Arm by Jick 55 million Fremont store is going up rapidly with its opening tentatively set for early in 1968 The huge three-story complex will occupy 50 per cent of the Fremont Plaza Shopping Center When completed the store will employ 350 people with an annual payroll of million according to company men The store is expected to produce a sales tax revenue of Of the square feet of store space will be devoted to selling Architects for the project are Welton Becket and Associates of Con- tractor is Dinwidde Construction Company 1 1 Seek School Jobs Area With only three days to go 11 people have filed for the 10 positions available on 3 School boards The latest to file yesterday were Lister 42 of 36706 Mulberry St Newark for he Newark School Unified school district board and Nickolas Athos of 36128 Fanshaw St Fremont for the Fremont Unified School District Board Candidates have until Friday to file for the three scats available on the Newark Unified School Board three seats on the Junior College Board and four seats on the Fremont Unified School District Board All three board elections are on April 18 ATHOS is the fifth to file for the four seats on the mont Board and the first besides the four incumbents Although he recently became involved in legal action Two Seeking Murphy's Post The 1968 supervisorial race is still 15 months away but the bait of incumbent John D Murphy's post has already drawn two South County into the field Newark school trustee Wes Soars and George P Oakes a Hayward City Councilman both signed on yesterday to tackle Murphy The incumbent a real estate agent has not yet announced his intention to seek The 1st District takes in all of the major sub- divisions south of Jackson Street in Hayward all of Union City Fremont and Newark and the Liver mador Valley OAKES interest in the tion has been rumored for some time and yesterday Sears flung his battered political hat into the same ring to head off his opponent's early surge for campaign support IP fact Sears who has held numerous school trustee and city council posts during his year residency in Newark didn't waste any time levelling the premature first charge He said Oakes has encouraged and discouraged him to oppose Murphy and that the last such time was when he tried to talk Sears out of it on the strength of in campaign ments already in his pocket Oakes was quick to confirm his intention to seek the job but just as quick to deny he and Scars ever talked about it or that he ever tried to shoulder Sears out of the race with campaign pledge talk We never discussed pledges nor do I have he said Sears said his main campaign pledge would be to give full-time representation to the whole First District Murphy has been criticized by voters on the west side of the hills that split his geographically the past for not maintaining an office in Washington Township and for not giving this part of his district any real tion Sears a Democrat owns a hardware and variety store in Newark LONG ACTIVE in Newark city politics and school affairs he was a member of Newark's first city council served on the Washington Union High School District board and is currently a member of the Newark Unified School District board and Junior College District board Oakes a Republican has been a Hayward councilman since 1960 and was re-elected to a four-year term last year A native of Livermore the year-old Oakes formerly a newspaper in Fremont THERE HAS been very ineffective leadership from my district and I think we should have strength commensurate with our Oakes said Oakes hit at the impersonal aspect of our district charging that county supervisors rarely attend com- munity meetings Oakes is also critical of welfare abuses and the manner in which county hospitals are run We talking about doing something about welfare abuses but nothing is being he said against district over the so-called long hair dis- put involving his son Lawrence At h o s issue still unresolved happened months before lie decided to run for election and has nothing to do with his decision The case is still pending and Athos said he didn't know when it would get to court Athos a San Lorenzo physically handicapped teacher contested the district's decision to suspend his for ure to comply with dress regulations Officials at Washington High School felt the boy's hair was too long LISTER yesterday became the fift hto file for the three seats on the Newark board He is a civil engineering technician for the U.S Geological Survey at Menlo Park Others who have filed for the Newark board Max Joseph Kuespert III of 36617 Darvon St Mrs Corky caid wife of the vice mayor of 5649 Avington Ct Mrs Anne Candy Marshall of 36558 Blockwood Drive and Mrs Anne Graff of 5151 Tenaya Ave Others who have filed for the Fremont Board all in- are Dr Walter Hughes of 36054 Niles Blvd Mrs Mary Rodrigues of 4578 Mayfield Drive Elsworth lay of 4908 Mayfield Drive G Glankler of 4599 Alhambra Drive The only person to file for one of the three seats on the junior college board is incumbent John Costello of 5211 ler Ave of Fremont Tuition Out Budget Up SACRAMENTO Gov Ronald Reagan agreed Tuesday to increase his budget proposal by million for the University of California and the state col- leges to make up for revenue which tuition would have raised The governor told a news conference his hotly debated tuition plan was out for the current year but he promised to continue campaigning for a change in the university and college no tuition policy for future years He hinted he would ask the Legislature to use money which otherwise would go for property tax relief to replace revenue which his budget anticipated from a tuition at the university and a charge at the colleges The tuition decision and cial deficiencies in the program have cut into his property tax relief plan which he earlier estimated at million He declined to say how much he would propose to reduce local property tax bills but he said it would be well below million Newark police have arrested three youths in connection with the harassment of a Newark Negro family and s t H 1 are looking for others who might be involved Detective Beard with the help of juvenile officer Bud McHale apprehended the teenagers between 1 2 afternoon Charged with malicious mischief are Tom Kelso 14 8226 Juniper Dr Michael James Smith 14 8136 Juniper Dr and John Ray Hughes 15 37080 Poplar St Police indicated more arrests would follow Although the three insisted that their attacks on the Earl Glaude family had no racial intent Newark Police Chief Morrison was slill doubtful about the motives ACCORDING TO statements to police Smith We just thought it would be fun We didn't know it would lead to something like this though Det McHale said all three youths told officers they were involved in 50 to 40 rock and egg throwing incidents along with a cross burning last December According to Beard the boys made the cross from one- inch thick wood tied a gunny sack around it and set it afire with kerosene The harassment may have started as the result of greement between the youths McHale said The detective said Smith was arrested when it was learned that two rocks hurled at the home Monday night were pieces from a rock garden at the youth's residence The other arrests came after talks with neighbors and students at school HUGHES who lives in Manteca Calif was visiting friends The trio is being held by Alameda County juvenile authorities Smith has a record of past offenses McHale said ing malicious mischief disturbing the peace petty theft and truancy Kelso is on for battery disturbing the peace and a weapons violation The Claudes don't think the harassment is over and in- stalled floodlights on the roof of their house Mrs Glaude said carloads of juveniles continued to pass the house last night and have been following members of the family I'm still going to put up my Mr Glaude said It doesn't seem like it will end yet because I see kids ing in the streets But I feel the police are doing a good job Phone calls of people expressing regret for the dents continued to pour in Visitors have been in and out of the house all day SOME PEOPLE have offered to come over and stand guard Others have been bringing us food It's very nice of them but we don't need said Mrs Glaude Everybody I have talked to is very unhappy about the situation and are ashamed of the community One visitor at the Claudes This is no way to come newcomers I don't like being in a town where people can't be halfway decent to their neighbors Before arrests were made yesterday The Argus queried several neighbors who live on Juniper and Poplar Streets Neighbors insisted that the problem was not a racial one MRS LEO CLARK a Negro who has lived at 37067 Poplar St for the past year said that no one has bothered her since she moved to the Newark address in January 1966 Mrs Manuel 8145 said thai she has been bothered with harassments like ones waged against the Claudes for the last three years Mrs Sousa said that she always saw who was tossing eggs and hurling rocks and spoke fn their parents No one on either of the two streets had anything but praise for the conduct of the entire Glaude family and claimed that the trouble couldn't be because of racial hatred Fremont Council Grants Firemen Vacation Policy Fremont city councilmen last night approved a tion policy for city firemen over objections from the mont Association The plan gives firemen 12 vacation days a year the same number the association had requested The difference between the two is that the association plan is based on the number of days worked while the city's proposal is tied to the number of shifts worked Thornton Bunch an attorney for the tion said firemen could lose vacation tune as the number of work hours is decreased under the city's plan men currently work 72 hours a week three 24-hour shifts COUNCILMEN said that under the shift system firemen can organize their shifts so that a tion could be stretched out over a maximum period Bunch said this plan penalizes the firemen simply be- cause they must work longer hours When the policy goes into effect this week the work week will be decreased from 72 hours a week to 67.2 it THE CITY employs 77 firemen 70 men in fire pression service Bunch said at the close of the meeting that for a year he has been unable to convince the council that the proposal would not have to be changed each time the work week was altered On the he said it is the city policy that Continued on 12 Coi 1 NEWARK SCHOOL TRUSTEES SEEK FOREIGN LANGUAGE OUTS By JIM WILSON Unified School Dis- trustees last night took actions against tory state foreign languages programs for the sixth graders The district will first ask the stale again to be exempted from the program for another year If that doesn't work it depends on several state bills and eral funds for financial relief The district which already provides language in- struction for seventh and eighth graders will be required by the state next term to extend the program the sixth grade level at an additional cost of approximately SUPT JACK MACGREGOR held little hope of getting an- other year's exemption after recent discussions with state of- The board and Gregor went to Sacramento last week and argued against the mandatory program MacGregor said there is some hope in two bills recently in the state legislature one to let the local districts de- cide whether to teach foreign language to sixth graders and the other to provide state funds to a local district ASST SUPT Evelyn Kipp also asked the trustees to approve an application for a National Defense Education act NDEA Grant of to help defray costs for the foreign language program if there is no other re- course The trustees approved the application Trustees accepted the new tion to Milani School which was completed last week The district plans by next week to transfer about 300 dje n t s from Lincoln Muller Graham and Kennedy schools back to Milani their own at- tendance area THE MOVE will cut tation costs but will require four or five new teachers Most of the students will be transferred from the Lincoln School which will re- lease about four or five rooms for other uses The district also approved for another grant for up to for counseling and guidance and psychology ices The purpose o cation is to hire experts to uate the district's special ices The purpose of the for improvement or expansion of the program