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   Oakland Tribune (Newspaper) - November 15, 1967, Oakland, California                                YEAR NO 319 A RESPONSIBLE METROPOLITAN NEWSPAPER ES WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 15 1967 DAILY A MONTH Shirley Loses Congress Race McCloskey Archibald In Runoff San Mateo County's voters yesterday nominated an Republican and a moderate Democrat to oppose each other for Congress and defeated Shirley Temple Black's first bid for political office by more than votes The former child movie star's margin of defeat in the county came as a surprise Although many had ed the Republican nomination would be won by Paul N Pete McCloskey a y e a r -o 1 d Marine hero who campaigned on a peace form it had been expected the Republican primary results would be closer Democratic op- ponent in a Dec 12 runoff election will be former San Mateo Mayor Roy Archibald 47 who finished fourth in the overall field of 1C candidates The winner will fill the unexpired congressional term of the late J Arthur Younger a Republican Gov Ronald Reagan er movie actor who entered politics sent McCloskey a telegram congratulating him on his victory and predicting he would defeat Archibald Contenders for the GOP nomination yesterday were Mrs Black McCloskey an attorney business executive William H Draper and Sheriff Earl B Whitmore With all 575 of the county's precincts counted the cial total Mrs Black Draper Whitmore Robert Barry a Republican who withdrew from the race before the election in favor of Mrs Black still polled 471 votes The opponents of Archibald the West Coast representative of the National Education Association were Edward M Keating former publisher of Ramparts zine and attorney Daniel J Monaco There were three other Democratic hopefuls Baldwin Patrick F McGucken and Bryant McDonald The final Archibald Keating Monaco Baldwin McGucken 840 Keating a radical Continued Page 2 Col 3 KATHY MCCLOSKEY 9 GETS VICTORY RIDE Father Paul the GOP winner in San Row Over Welfare Flares in San Jose SAN JOSE bers of the Santa County Board of sors got into a shoving ing name-calling row last night as 350 to 400 Americans demanded immediate answers to their welfare problems Some 30 of the tors staged an all night sit-in at the chambers under the watchful eyes of sheriff's They left quietly at 7 today Their ranks in- cluded two Episcopal priests The crowd gathered at a specially convened p.m meeting of the board to dis- cuss a site for a new branch Poverty Fund Quiz Indictments Filed MARTINEZ Indictments were returned by the Contra Costa County Grand Jury against two persons early day in an investigation of the financial affairs of the member Welfare Rights in Richmond Names of the accused were withheld pending the serving of warrants today small world MY HAT IS The indictments were re- turned before Superior Judge Thomas F Fraga Bail was set at in each case Both Richmond police and the district attorney's office have been probing the tangled financial transactions of the WRO which was funded by federal poverty money to tect the rights of welfare re- Three WRO officials com- to police Oct 11 that the president Minnie Turner of St and the tive director Stella Kelly of 431 A St opened a secret bank account with in poverty funds that were ed out Sept 1 Meanwhile a former WRO executive director Katharine Himes filed a civil suit in Richmond Municipal Court claiming that she was not paid in wages She ob- a judgment for that Continued Page 2 Col 3 Special to The Tribuna Three building of the expanding Clara fare department The board after months of searching centered on three downtown sites for the ing and on Monday asked for federal assistance to finance one of the three locations The Mexican-Americans re- presented by the United ple Arriba organization more than 50 speakers to the rostrum demanding that the welfare building be ed on the east side of San Jose where there is a large tration of Mexican-Americans They coupled this demand with another calling for a branch county hospital on the east side of San Jose The county hospital complex rently is on the west side though emergency care is vided under county contract with private hospitals on the east side Board Chairman Sam P Delia Maggiore announced at the outset of last night's ing that the hearing would be restricted to two hours The welfare speakers used up the time and Delia Maggiore cut off the meeting at p.m When Delia Maggiore and Supervisors Martin Spangler and Charles Quinn got up to leave through a rear door of the chambers Elena dez 19 leaped on the raised platform poked her finger in Delia Maggiore's face and Big man we want your answer or no A score of others in the audience vaulted onto the platform and blocked the supervisor's exit They shoved and shouted and the sors responded in kind Two sheriff's deputies signed to the community tions department tried to re- store order Council Hassle on Guidelines The City Administration long a sharp critic of fatherly federal guidelines on uplifting programs ended up with an argument over its self-made guidelines last night A standing room only crowd of 350 packed the cil chamber to debate for nearly two hours a set of sponsored guidelines for ing new public housing units in Oakland Spokesmen for the ly large turnout obviously were familiar with details of the proposed public housing ground rules But after listening to a en or so speakers Councilman Felix Chialvo complained that it seemed everyone but the City Council was aware of the guidelines He said councilmen had re- copies of them only Monday night and he ed and won a special work study session next Tuesday to find out what all the fuss was about Seemingly the only turbed person at the council hearing was Paul Godkin chairman of the city's ing Authority the agency which in less than two months has neared the contract awarding stage for the first 500 of the new projects and has requested federal sion to plan more I don't know what we're worrying about here Godkin said explaining that his agency will not be delayed in going ahead with its gram council ders a set of guidelines He said the authority is foP lowing a far more demanding set of guidelines re- quired by the ment of Housing and Urban Development without undue difficulty Godkin the city were super- The Housing Authority routinely filed them when it received them Monday ing The sharp public reaction o the city guidelines was due to a provision which proposed that a majority of the new public housing units should be built in the areas of grade schools which have 50 per cent or more white dents Albert B Del Masso who said he represented an ad hoc committee Oakland for a Creditable were not aware of the guidelines they approved more public housing units last Me If we voters cannot have a proper ballot with a full disclosure of the issues in- what's the use of ing any he demanded He said his organization which consists of Continued 2 Col 7 The three supervisors ry got out the rear door lowed by shouted epithets Mate's 30 Carts of Groceries KALAMAZOO Mich AP A disgruntled husband an- gry at his wife took out his wrath on a grocery store He went on a shopping spree For more than four hours yesterday the man loaded 30 grocery carts and ran them past a checkout counter Employes waited 45 minutes the regular closing hour while the man promising to pay when finished kept ping The added up to The man from nearby age confessed he had only He told police he was an- gry at his wife The husband was allowed to leave the store empty-handed and w i t h o u t any minor court charges And the workers had to return the groceries meat produce beer wine records and toys to the shelves Reds Hammer Big U.S Base MICHAEL J ADAMS First fatality Rocket Ship Crash Kills Pilot EDWARDS AFB UPI The rocket ship holder of world speed and altitude re- cords for manned aircraft and a workhorse research craft for eight years smashed day onto the desert floor after a control malfunction 50 miles high killing the test pilot Air Force Maj Michael J Adams a combat veteran from the Korean War was at the controls of the winged ship in the test Adams was unable to ger the ejection system or at- tempted to save his stricken craft and rode to death on the desert the National Aeronau- tics and Space Administration said He was the first fatality of the experimental gram designed to unlock Top War General Optimistic Compiled from AP and UPI WASHINGTON Gen liam C Westmoreland flew in today for an American mit conference on Vietnam and said he was more aged now over progress of the war than at any time in his four years as U S er He presumably was pre- pared to give a similar istic report to President son at high-level White House conferences set to begin late today or tomorrow The Vietnam commander left open the possibility the United States may step up troop deployments in Vietnam to meet a level before the target date Very very was the way Westmoreland war effort Westmoreland was asked whether the rate of troop de- would be ened I would like to have them as soon as they can be made the four-star eral told newsmen As to the deployment program this is not yet firm Westmoreland stressed HEINRICH MUELLER Hitler aide alive? Gestapo Suspect Arrested BERLIN AP A man suspected of being Nazi Ge- stapo chief Heinrich Mueller has been arrested in Panama at West German request the West Berlin press office said Wednesday Mueller vanished after World War II and many mans thought him to be dead Ammunition Dumps Hit At Dak To SAIGON Thursday UPI North Vietnamese troops hit the U.S base at Dak To with a fourth mortar attack early today The series of at- tacks which began at 9 yesterday Wednesday d e- two big t r a n s p o r t planes blew up two tion dumps and set fire to a special forces camp Flames from burning jet fuel and from thunderous plosions at the biggest of the two ammunition dumps lit the skies through the night but by early today appeared to be burning out despite the latest attack of deadly accurate Communist The huge ammo dump is the source of supply for American troops locked in a battle in the central highlands Other Communist mortar attacks hit two other US installations in the hills near the Cambodian and Laotian ders Reporters at the scene said casualties were surprisingly light considering the severity of the attacks which hit three times yesterday and then re- The Has a loaded weight pounds pounds of it a combination of drous ammonia fuel and uid oxygen oxidizer and de- pounds of thrust during its brief seconds of ing We're not sure what said a NASA man He just plunged back in Our radar told us of the descent and we were in com- through our con- trol room but we just are not sure what happened The plan for the flight was an altitude of feet and a NASA spokesman said Ad- ams had actually reached an altitude of approximately when the control lem developed truces over mas New Year's and the nar New Year He said that in the past the Communists lated them Asked about the possibility of a bombing pause moreland said a decision had not been made Westmoreland and s- worth Bunker U.S dor to Saigon along with ert Komer Westmoreland's deputy for pacification had been scheduled for a luncheon conference with President Johnson Secretary of Defense Robert S McNamara and er top officials However George Christian White House press secretary said the group from Saigon Continued on Page 3 Col 4 Okinawa Back to Japan but WASHINGTON A P Prime Minister Eisaku Sato of Japan said today he has been reassured by President son that the difficult problem of restoring Japanese control over Okinawa can be solved within the framework of tual trust between Japan and the United States He made the statement in a speech to a National Club luncheon four hours be- fore his second and last ing with Johnson The press club address was transmitted to Japan by Com- sat s a t e 11 i t e in what was called a historic first for such a transmission Sato said Japan fully the importance of the role played by the Ryukyu lands with the major U.S de- fense base of Okinawa in the maintenance of peace and curity in the Far East ing Japan However I am convinced that the perpetuation of this unnatural situation in the will not only be a source of dissatisfaction to the Japanese people but should be terminated if we are to maintain and to develop the present happy relationship be- tween Japan and the United States The prime minister said the reverting o f administrative rights over the Ryukyu and Bonin islands has become an increasingly serious problem for Japan He noted that 22 years after World War II as many as one million residents of Okinawa still are under the tion of a foreign power even though they are recognized to be Japanese nationals Sato said restoration of nawa to Japanese tion at the same time it serves an effective military base are not conflicting On the contrary he ed that the early return of the to Japan would itself by Continued Page 3 Col 6 ler's secret police The Berlin announcement said the request had been made after an informer had told the prosecutor of the lin district court that a man who was at present in ma was identical to Mueller The press office said the in- former had brought graphs of the suspect from Panama and presented them to the prosecutor Witnesses compared them with pictures of the former Gestapo chief and testified that they were identical persons The informer the press of- fice said also told the cutor that a Belgian gist had already analyzed a letter of er's and a sample of writings from the suspect and said they were undoubtedly written by the same person The Berlin announcement was preceded by an ment last week of the West German Central Office for Nazi Crimes at Ludwigsburg that it had informed the lin prosecutor of a new hot trail to Two Israeli nationals are under arrest in Munich after being caught while trying to break into the home of er's wife The Israelis said they believed Mueller was still alive and were trying to track him down Phoenix Mayor Wins PHOENIX AP Mayor Milton Graham was re-elected to a third term last night by a margin in the early morning hours The Communist troops have taken a beating in the two- week-old struggle for Dak To and control of the central highlands but they were able to mount mortar attacks The first attack destroyed two million transport planes and set firs to a small ammunition dump The second attack nine hours later blew up a major dump sending explosions echoing through the Dien Bien like valley and flooding the area with escaped tear gas The third attack after dark hit the special forces camp Other Communist mortar teams hit a highlands base at Continued Page 3 Col 1 Rain Tonight Sun Tomorrow Raincoats and galoshes can go back into the closet after tonight The weatherman looking ahead to the Big Game sees no hint of rain for the next five days A weak storm heading land was expected to bring some showers by nightfall in the Bay Area and move on leaving blue skies tomorrow Yesterday's ram added an- other 03 of an inch to the rain gauges at Metropolitan land International Airport weather station putting the seasonal total since July 1 at 71 of an inch Normal for this time of the year is 1.71 inches Phantom Shakes Up Coeds at Yale NEW HAVEN Conn AP In a musty niche in the book slacks of Yale University's Sterling rial Library sat a pretty studert absorbed in lier books Nearby though hidden by the stacks two or three Yale graduate students were studying Footsteps She them But It seemed to her that someone was standing above her for a iong time All of a sudden I felt body kissing my shi told Yale authorities and the Yale Daily News Here was this guy on his hands and knees kissing me I screamed but everybody ignored me The man fled I've had some pretty strange passes made at she told the News but never anything like ibis Such incidents have taken place during afternoon or ning on at least four occasions reported to Yale authorities Three of the girls have been graduate dents The fourth was a wife Phantom Fool Nibbler Haunts Sterling Stacks said p headline in yesterday's Daily News Campus police are looking for a white male pounds with blond hair ind a fair complexion who is ably an emotionally disturbed person said Yale Security Director John Powell But the News implied in its story yesterday that the tion may be less than trous He knows how to pick concluded the student newspaper after an observer had looked at the girls   

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