Transcript
Page 1: Marcus Foster is Slain, Assistant is Wounded (Nov. 7, 1973)

8/4/2019 Marcus Foster is Slain, Assistant is Wounded (Nov. 7, 1973)

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/marcus-foster-is-slain-assistant-is-wounded-nov-7-1973 1/3

( D a k l a n bRESPONSIBLE METROPOLITAN NEWSPAPER

100th YEA R, NO. 311 WEDNESDAY, NOVE MBE R 7, 1973 O*. IS/ DAILY, $3.75 A MONTH

Marcus Foster Slain,Assistant Is Wounded

O a k l a n d .school s u p e r i n t e n d -en t M a r c u s A . F o s t e r w a ss h o t t o d e a t h a n d d e p u t y su -p e r i n t e n d e n t H u b e r t W .B l a c k b u r n w a s b a d l y w o u n d e dl a s t n i g h t in w h a t po l i c e d e -s c r i b e a s a n a s s u b s i n u l i m i -s t y l e c r o s s f i r e o u t s i d e th e

s c h o o l d i s t r i c t ' s a d m i n i s t r a -l i o n b u i l d i n g . ;

G o v . R o n a l d R e a g a n o f f e r e da J 1 0 , 0 ( M I r e w a r d fo r i n f o r m a -t i o n l e a d i n g t o t h e a r r e s t an dc o n v i c t i o n of th e k i l l e r s .

I t w a s t h e f i r s t t i m e t h em o n e y , a u t l m n / c d u n d e r re -

• c e n t l e g i s l a t i o n , ha s b e e n o f-f e r e d in a c a s e i n v o l v i n gs o m e o n e o t h e r t h a n a s l a i npo l i c e m a n .

P o l i c e \ \ e r e l o o k i n g f o rt h r e e m a l e s us pe c t s \ \ l i o t h e ys a y f l e d o n f o o t a n d t h e n in a1 9 " ) 7 b l a c k C h e v r o l e t w i t h a

O A K L A N D SUPBUNTB4DENT O F SCHOOLS Dt. M A I C U S FOSIBtF a m e d e d u c a t o r s h o t d o w n in p a r k i n g l o t o f s c h o ol h e a d q u a r t e r s

b r o w n p r i m e r s p o t i n t h e l e f tr e a r section o f t h e c ar ' s l o p .

T he s u s p e c t s w e r e a l l d e -s c r i b e d a s s m a l l , y o u n g w i t hd a r k , c o m pl e x i o n s a n d s h o u l -d e r - l e n g t h b l a c k h a i r , w e a r i n gb l u e k n i t w a t c h c a p s , d a r kp a n t s a n d b l u e d e n i m j a c k e t sw i t h a w h i t e p a t c h o \ e r t h er i g h t b r e as t . E a r l i e r po l i c e« a \ c t h e i r d e s c r i p t i o n s a sb l a c k a d u l t s o f a v e r a g eh e i g h t , b u t r e v i s e d t h e d e -s c r i p t i o n s t o d a y .

N o m o t i v e f o r th e s h o o t i n g sh a s b e e n d e t e r m i n e d , po l i c e

s a i d . I n v e s t i g a t o r s s a i d f i r s ti n d i c a t i o n s r u l e d o u t r o b b e r yas a p o s s i b le m o t i v e .

p o s ' p f . 5 0 , w as p r o n o u n c e dd e a d a t H i g h l a n d H o s p i t a l .B l a c k b u r n . 3 S . w h o w a s h a n d -p i c k e d b y F o s t e r f o r t h e d e pu -ty s u p e r i n t e nd e nc e ' a f t e r t h e yw o r k e d t o g e t h e r i n t h e P h i l a -d e l ph i a pu b l i c s c h o o l s , u n d e r -w e n t m o r e t h a n tw o h o u r s o fs u r g e r y a t H i g h l a n d fo rw o u n d s t o h i s l i v e r , s p l e e n ,l e f t k i d n e y , a b d o m e n a n d l e f ta r m .

B l a c k b u r n i s l i s t e d i n s e r i - 'ou s c o n d i t i o n , b u t a s u r g e o nsaid he i s expec ted to r e c o v e rf u l l y .

A po l i c e g u a r d w a s i m m e d i -ate ly s t a t i o n e d at B l a c k b u r n ' sh o s p i t a l r o o m . H is h o m e a n dth e h o m e of M r s . F o s t e r alsoar e u n d e r po l i c e s u r ve i l l a n c eas a pr e c a u t i o n a g a i n s t f u r -t h e r a t t a c k s .

F o s t e r a nd B l a c k b u r n w e r e

cu t d o w n a t a b o u t 7 p .m . in at w o - c a r pa r k i n g lo t r e s e r v e df o r t h e m o n th e E a s t l l t hStreet s id e o f th e a d m i n i s t r a -t i o n b u i l d i n g , w h o s e a d d r e s sis 1025 Second Av enu e. 'I he yw e r e a p p a r e n t l y b y t h e m -selves a n d h a d g o n e t o t h e lo ts h o r t l y a f l e i a m o o t i n g o f t h eb o a rd of e d u c a ' » > n in th e ad -m i n i s t r a t i o n b u i l d i n g h a d e n d -«L, - -

B l a ck Du rn ' s car , a 1 9 7 1

white Chevrolet Vega, was theonly on e in the l o t . a n d h e «a s

Tntvr* trtwls »r X E I T H O E N M I S O N

Superintendent M a r c u s F o s t e r a n d h i s d e p u t y , vde ( 1 , B l a c k b u r n o n th « d r i v e r ' s s i d « (2) . Th.

R o b e r t M o c k b u m were shot down near the cttach* case of one of the men ended up across

loner's car. Fast er was shot on the p«s*«9er's the adjacent p a r k i n g space (3)

An Eloquent PleaBefore H is Death

Schools to OpenAgain Tomorrow

ty ntAN O A U 1 M

It's 4:39 p.ni. A

ci ty council w u r k j > ( *M i n . D r.M a r c u s Foster j« , p l f a u m g f o rr c c r w t i o n f u n d s f o r t h e < - t u -•dents of hu > d u s t nc t . H e ' s clvque n l . He's i n s i M o i l , u n w i l l -

u t m ' l —  m e s h j r r t o a c o m p r c -h c T i s i b l e j n r t u r e ?,\\ 4 : . 3 f i an p v t r c me ly a r t K - u -

•ate e d u c a t o r is an al ive, c < » m -

O a U a n d p n M i e sch ' t i l - an dJ h e Peral la Conimunrt> V « l -l e w *

wi" '"" reopened lewr-

nm a f t e r cl«sinc t o d ay in th e

lo ih eI t ' s 7 :3 ( 1 p . r c . T he

e x < T i n s c o u nc i l me e t i ng h asj u s t Ro t t e n u n d e r • n a y . Ac n m . j . h » f c e n a ty m a n a c c T isr « i a n f i in an ad j ac e n t o f f i c e .

"It's c o n f i r m e d M a r c u sF«s1<T is d e a d . " C e c i l R i l t r y a s

sTnall c r - ^ i / p -o f ro -rs a n d oty a id es

Ho w J n pu t {wlber s c e ne s

A t 1:30 hr'i < 3 r a d . In s l i f eW a M o d a n a y })>' a ssa ss in s

A n d 4 0 miriii1(* J a K - r . M a y -or J o h n R e a d m e J i a l <

4 <:J h f

i n e d i n g in procrcs-s "Hi-T'-'sm i p o i n t in c o i n s f > n . v.e'\ •r e c e i v e d s o m ewas. h e I t l l s ih chushed tha i i i lxTS. X o < m e ta n< v » r j c c J ) l r a 1 e . he C "t; n c t h e w a s of J .* j r l»j"The jn r e l : n j : s l and s

Supt. M a r c - u s A F < i s i e r a n dth e c n t i r a l l A o u n d i n i ; o f bi sd e p u t j . Kobert W . B l a e V l n i r n .

i 'he b nar d < > f f d a e < i l 3 » n h e l da ne a r ly l w o h « u r< - e s v i n n t h i s m o T T i i n c atth '

1i f np c n i n i ; v a s

Th e b o ar d v i l l h o l d a brie ff.-.nn!i1 m w t s T i c t « . n i c h l a l 7 3 0p m . a l G ar f ' r i d T3 < me nl i i r yS i h o f i ! So r a t i f j ] a > 1 m c M ' sj p p n i r i lme n l *> f Dr A l d e n \V .H a d a l as

an d l « p i d m i m s -iralw J ' t a f f Tnemij tTs m et at30 -* . ;TL today U i Ia > p l a n s lo r

Bw h Ptfr. C M . »

Reagan SuffersL o s s on Prop. 1

ROBERT W. BLACKBURN

Badly wounded

g o i n g t o d r i v e Fo s t e r h o m e ,s c h o o l a n d po l i c e o f f i c i a l s in -

d i c a t e d . I ' o l n e s a i d F o s t e rv u - s - . l a n d i n g o n t h e pa s s e n g e rs i d e o f th e c a r a n d B l a c k b u r no n th e d r i v e r ' s s i d e w h e n t h e yw e r e s h o t .

D r. \ V i l I i u m T e u f e l . H i g h -l a n d ' s as s o c i a t e c h i e f o f e m e r -g e n c y s e r v i c e s , s a i d h e s a wo n e g u n s h o t w o u n d O U T Fos-ter 's h e a r t a n d a n o t h e r in hi sr i g h t s i de . A po l i c e s o u r c esaid F o s t e r m ay h a v e b e e n

Community shockedby slaying, page 17.

s h o t m o r e t h a n t w i c e , a n dt h a t b o t h h e a n d B l a c k b u r nw e r e a p p a r e n t l y s h o t d o w n atclose r a n g e .

1'olice r e po r t e d f i n d i n g f i \ e. s h e l l c as i ng s f r o m a !! n u n . o r. . I S O - c a l i b e r a u t o m a t i c h a n d -g u n in th e a r e a n e a r Fo s t e r ' sb o d y .

B l a c k b u r n w a s h it p e r h a p s:t s m a n y .is 11 1 o r 1 2 t u n e s

w i t h s h o t g u n pelle t s , h o s p i t a lp e r s o n n e l i n d i c a t e d . T e u f e lsaid a pe l l e t o f w h a t l o o k e dl i k e d o u b le - 0 b u c k s h o t r o l l e do u t of B l a c k b u r n ' s c l o t h i n g .P o l i c e sa id t h r e e s h e l l e as i ng bf r o m s h o t g u n a m m u n i t i o n-. \e rc recovered f r o m th e a r e ao f t h e p a r k i n g l o t w ! i e i eB l a c k b u r n w a s s t a n d i n g .

As s o c i a t e S u p t . A n d y V i s -' j o x - j t c h sa id he h e a rd tw ol o u d , di s t i n c t s h o t s , t h e n as e r ie s o f s h o t s , an d t h e nB l a c k b u r n , w h o h a d m a n a g e dt o r u n a b o u t 2 0 0 f e e t a r o u n dth e r e a r o f t h e b u i l d i n g t o a ne n t r a n c e n e a r l l l t l i S t . . s h o u t -i n g f o r h e lp . > v

He assisted h im i n t o th el o b b y , w h e r e a n o t h e r s t a f f".•.ember. B a r b a r a Pa t t e r s o n ,began aid . a n d t h e n V i s - c o x -i t c h r an t o h e l p F o s t e r . H et h o u g h t h e f e l l a f a i n t pu l s ea n d a t t e m p t e d m o u t h - t o -m o u t h r e s u s i t a t i o n u n t i l m e d i -

c a l h e l p a r r i v e d , b ut s a i d th e. s u p e r i n t e n d e n t n e v e r m o v e do r m a d e a n y s o u n d .

T e u f e l said B l a c k b u r n "ar-r i v e d t a l k i n g " a t H i g h l a n d b ya m b u l a n c e .

O t h e r s a t t h e m e e t u m —h o a r d m e m b e r s a nd s t a f fw o r k e r s — l e f t b y r e a r a ndf r o n t d o o r s , w h i l e F o s t e r a n dB la > k b u r n w e n t o u t t h r o u g h as i de d to r a f e w m i n u t e s a f t e rth e o t h e r s h a d d e pa r t e d .

Secur i ty g u a r d s p j t r o l t h eb u i l d i n g , b u t n o n e w a s in th ei m m e d i a t e v i c i n i t y w h e n th etw o m en w e r e a m b u s h e d .

A police s o urc e i n d i c a t e dB l a c k b u r n h e l pe d p r o v i d e d e -s c r i p t i o ns o f t h e a s s a i l a n t s asw e l l a s a n idea o f t h e c i r c u m -s t a n c e s , bu t o f f i c e r s w e r eb e i n g c l o s e - m o u t h e d a b o u tm o s t d e t a i l s . T h r e e h i g hschool s t u d e n t s t a k m u a n i g h tclass al n e a r b y I n e y Collegew e r e r e p o r t e d ly less t h a n < t

hl-ck f r o m th e p a r k i n g lo tw h e n th e s h o o t i n g s o c c ur re da nd h a x e a p p a r e n t l y b e e nq u e s t i o n e d , b y police

C h a r l e s t ' n i - ly o l _ ' « i ! K

Cwti»N Bark 1'asr. fn l . I

Governor

Vows to Git

State Budget

By G A Y LE M ON TG OM ERYTribune Polit ical Editor

C o v . R o n a l d Keauan's

d r e . i m o f a t a x (eilms ( . r u m -

b l e d y e s t e r d a y w i t h th e dele.it

.if P r o p o s i t i o n 1 . b u t h e

p l e d u e d t o u s e h i - , g u b e r n a t o -r i a l v e t o t o h o l d t h e same l i n eon stale s p e n d i n g

H c d x a n conceded s h o i t l y

b e f o r e m i d n m h t t h a t In s i n i -t i a t i v e m o v e t o li m i t t h e

a m o u n t of p e r s o n a l income

t h a t c o u l d be taken in state

taxes w a s d e f e a t e d , b u t h esaid h e w o u l d trim th e 197-1-75

b u d g e t t o t h e P r o p o s i t i o n 1l e v e l .

"That's a pretty safe

K u e s s . . yes. I b e l i e v e it c anbe r e d u c e d to that l e v e l ,

1'

K e a t j a n said w h e n asked

w h e t h e r t h e veto w o u l d b eu s e d to cut the budget by the

same a m o u n t he had proposed

in his i n i t i a t i v e measure. "I

s ec- n o reason to spend o n ep e n n y more."

S t a t e w i d e , the percentage

range for the p r o p o s i t i o nstayed constant t h r o u g h o u ttin n i g h t — a b o u t 55 per rent

o p p o s i n g an d - 4 " ) pe r cent fa -

v o r i n gR e a g a n c u t short a p l a n n e dv i c t o r y celebration al the Sac-ramento University C l u b t omeet reporters in the state

capital, b u t he said the elec-

t i o n results "do not change

the f a c t that the present tax

b u r d e n is increasing too r ap -

idly."

Reagan said, "I'erlians

some f e l t it should not be in

( h e c o n s t i t u t i o n , or that local

taxes mignt somehow be in-

creased and the burden shift-

ed to local government. This,

of course, w a s untrue, b u tthose w h o led a n d f i n a n c e dthe campaign against Proposi-

t i o n 1 e f f e c t i v e l y exploited

these concerns.''

The g o v e r n o r said he c o u l dnot regard the v o t e as a p o l i t i -cal defeat. "How can t r y i n g to

reduce the people's taxes be a

p o l i t i c a l d e f e a t ? N a t u r a l l y . I

w i s h w e c o u l d have w o n . b u t Id o not regret the attempt w e

made." he t o l d reporters.If th e p r o p o s i t i o n v v ? s n o t a

d e f e a t f o r Reagan, i t a t least

w a s a w i n f o r \ssembly

Speaker B o b M o r e t ti . w h o

w a g e d a lonely campaign

against the governor.

M o r e t t i opposed th e me a-

sure e a r l y . le d t h e f i g h t w h e n

others said it c o u l d n ' t be

beaten a nd f i n a l l y stood M I he

winner's circle.

"They've seen me as a

ftehter and campaigner and it

helps tremendously." M o r e t t isaid .ast night as he w a t c h e delection returns and consid-

ered the e f f e c t s on his p r - > b a -

ble g u b e r n a t o r i a l campaign inHI;-? .

Kastbay voters f o l l o w e d a

f a i r l y predictable pattern inth e election, w i t h Contra Cos-

ta staying close i< > the state

average a n d Alameda C o u n t yu p h o l d i n g its Democratic cre-

d e n t i a l s .C o n t r a O'sla voted T V ) "•. ;.tr

o-iil a g a i n s t the p r o p o > i t j » ' i !o

Jf i -T pe r cent f.ivonng. .imi

\la;:ieda C « u r . l y viu-d a

('•otinird I t a r V I'agr. C«l. fi

rH o w T h e y V o f e d

H e r e a rc h i g h l i g h t s o f y e s t e r d a y ' s e l e c -t i o n s in th e B a y A r e a :

A l b a n y a p p r o v e s 8 1 . 6 m i l l i o n s c h o o lb o n d i < s u c .

A l a u i e d a C o u n t y \ \ a t e r D i s t r i c t b o n di s s u e \ \ i n s .

M o r a u a d e f e a t s % ' i '1 m i l l i o n s c h o o l sm e a s u r e .

L a f a y e t t e r e j e c t s Sf i m i l l i o n o p e n s p a c eb o n d i s s u e .S a n F r a n c i s c o e l e c t s f o u r i n c u m b e n t

s u p e r v i s o r s a n d n e w c o m e r A l X e l d e r ,f o r m e r u o l i c e c h i e f .

S a n t a C l a r a t u r n s c i o u n a f i n a n c i n gp l a n f o r n e u s p o r t s a r e n a .

D e t a i l s o n Page 5

Valley Massacre-

Nine Slaughtered\C.\MPO ( A P ) - N i n e pe r -

sons w e r e d i s c o v e r e d t o d a ys h o t t o death a n d s U e v v n

a b o u t a l u x u r y ranch-style

house near Ibis small L o m m u -m ty about "50 miles s o u t h of

. S a c r a m e n t o , t h e S a n . l o a q u mC o u n t y sheriff* o f f i c e report-

edI n v e s t i g a t o r s said the s h o o t -

ings apparently h a p p e n e da r o u n d ! 1 p . m. \eslerda\.

• ' I r . - j u1

was blood a ll ou-t

th e place." a reporter s a i d of

t h e d e a t h seene.

T h e murder sue is ii i th ec o m m u n i t y o f V i c t o r near

Acampo.

"They were murdered, exe-

c u t i o n - s t y l e . It\ a shocking

sight It looks l i k e th e w o r k of

a madman." said S.tn .loaqum

C o u n t y S h e r i f f M i c h a e l X.f ' a n ' u s

\uthorities lheori/ed the

n i n e persons had been am-bushed last m g l i t b v m e n w h olater ransacked the grocery

store H I o n e o f the victims.

\\alter Parkin. ..,. o w n e r of

th e M ; ( I I H M l rambling modern

h o m e tw o miles east o f Lo rn ".I h e store's s a f e h a d been

b r o k e n i n t o a n d looted, a u -t h o r i t i e s said.

J \ u t c h i l d r e n were'shot tnd e a t h in ( h e i r beds a n d s e v e n

C o n t i n u e d B a c k Page. C » l - 7

Nixon Veto

Overridden

By HouseW A S H I N G T O N ( A P ) - T he

H o u s e v o t e d t o d a y to o v e r r i d e

President Nixon's \elo of a

b i l l t h a t w o u l d curb presiden-

t i a l w a r powersT h e v o t e w as 2 S - 3 t« > H i. «r

f o u r more t h a n in e t v x n - t h i r d s

v o t e s required.

T h e H o u s e v i r t u a l l y assured

e n a c t m e n t of t h e b i l l o v e r

N i \ o n " s v e t o . T he sue.isure

no w goes t o t h e S e n a t e , w h u hw a s expected to m i a l o n g w i t h

th e H o u s e a c t i o n .

Speaker Carl \ H » e r t was

a m o n g Democratic H o u s eleaders urging t h e o v e r r i d e J og i v e Congress a h a n d in war

( o m m i t m e n t s ."1 t h i n k w e n e e d t o d r a w a

d i v i d i n g l i n e on JI M howf . i r j

president can go m c o m m i t -

t i n g I S. m i l i t a r y p t rsonnel."

M l H - r t -»dThe v e t o o v e r r i d e w o u l d b e

t ' ne f i r s t m n i n e tries t h i s yc.ir

a n d t h e f i f t h o v e r r i d e " f aN i x o n v e t o since 3!"»v

T h e l n ! l v v m i l d mipuse a f i n -d . i y l i m i t 0: 1 p r e s i d e n t s * p i j x v e r

in ( i i i n m i t ' l 's forces annud

IK ( t r ; i i s v v m i l d e m p i i v \ e r< .i:!U-..ss ;,, h . i ! t tli- w . i r . i - n

v d".proof -1 -..il'r'vi " I h < r i -

• r « i n l i n u r d I U i ( V Paso. Col. i

Nixon to Ask

Halt to Pure

Air StandardsW A S H I N G T O N " ( A P ) —

President X i x o n w i l l a s k C o n -gress 'u t e m p o r a r i l y suspend

n a t i o n w i d e clean air stnn-

danK as part of a series o:steps to meet th e growing

e n e r g y shortage. Rep - I n h n J.

R h o d e s , R - A r i / . said t o d a y R h n r i e . s r e v e a l e d X i x o n ' s in -

t e n t i o n f o l i o - A i n u a bnefini: o fi ongressional loaders by

U h u e H o u s e e n e r g y experts

T h e U h i t e H o u s e a n n o u n c e d.\ixop v t n u l d snel! o u t h i s e n -i - r g y program in a n a t i o n w i d etelevision-radio address al

7.;" pm . KST. (-.-W p .m .

PST) t o n m ' n t .R h o d e s t o l d a n e w s m a n thai

X i x o n w o u l d also seek author-

it y fu r th e Federal G o v e r n -m e n t {« o v e r r i d e t h e rights

Tid- .v i r i v e n to siate irovcn:-

nients \» establish clean sirtimetables, presumably t- > e n -

able federal suspension of cer-

tain clean-up rcquirciw-nls.

R h o d e1; said, h o w e v e r , t h a i

X i x o n w a s n o t rvpe*.".«l t« >

s.fk aulhonty f o r n a t i o n w i d e

c u r t J i i l J i v n t o f b'jsujess hours.

X' n . v o i i l d ) u - M - e s a u i h o n i j• it i : i i p o » v A J i a i i i ' : i ' . v : ' J f 'n >

r>i-

• A . I \ s j > r e d i i i f i J t 'i(

-''i vni'-s

C o D t i n a r d I J a c k Pacr. C«l. 3

On the InsideDramatic p h o t o . " , o f N i m . t , z

5 dea!h scene . Pcgc 5 .

Democrats g a m e d h e a v i l y

o r o u n d th e n o t i o n . P c g e 3.

N«w way lo l e a c h poor

r e a d e r s . P a g e 7 .

Actiwi Lin-t . 13-A

Astrology - .13-A

.13-A

E a s t B a y R e g i o r c l P e r k s

n o t e d . P c c 8.

B A RT s'a'ion i m o r o v e m e n i sg e t i e n t a l i v e O f C . P c g e 6.' a l e r t s h i g h - r i s e

t e n a n t s o f f i r e s . P a g e 13.

W h o l e s a l e o r i c s s c o v / n ; Se c c ^ O T i y s ' i ' l ii*'o''oi3"y. P c n c *

13 . |

J im P a l m e r o u i p c A H j n l o r S

fo r C y Y o u n g c - A o r d . P c g c 41. * £ .

49ers w i l l s. 'a rt Jos R e e d a t li

q u a r t e r b a c k S u n d a y . P a g n - 41 . ?•

PR . A U M N W . 1A O A 4 .•^P -B^^-BB ^f w 99999

Funtimc...landers

Martha Ic*

$port»

T*«n foge . . .

Thtoleri .

W and lodio

VifoU . .

21

15- A

1-A

41

25

28

. .20

. 22

IIS r t o w e r s f o r s c c s l , s e e P o g e 2 2

Page 2: Marcus Foster is Slain, Assistant is Wounded (Nov. 7, 1973)

8/4/2019 Marcus Foster is Slain, Assistant is Wounded (Nov. 7, 1973)

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/marcus-foster-is-slain-assistant-is-wounded-nov-7-1973 2/3

U **IM*mtWktttt W*d., Nov. 7, 1973

Foster Is Slain, Aide

Wounded by GunmenC o n t i n u e d f r o m Page 1

T J t h S t . . n e a r t h e p a r k i n g l o t .sa id "I c o u n t e d s e v e n shots,"

bu t d e c l i n e d t o e l a b o r a t e .

O f f i c e r s said t h e y u r o no tf a m i l i a r w i t h w h i t e b r e a s tp a t c h e s w o r n b y t h e s u s p e c t sas b e i n g associated w i t h an yp a r t i c u l a r o r g a n i z a t i o n .

T wo b r o w n a t t a c h e cases,p r e s u m a b l y b e l o n g i n g lo Fes-

. t c r a n d B l a c k b u r n , w e r e o nt h e p a r k i n g lo t p a v e m e n t af -t e r t h e s h o o t i n g s — o n e b e h i n dt h e c a r o n t h e passenger side

a n d t h e o t h e r across t h e l o tj u s t b e y o n d th e u n o c c u p i e dspace r e s e r v e d fo r Foster.T h e o n e o n t h e p a s s e n g e r s i d eh a d a b u l l e t h o l e i n i t . p o l i c es a i d . N o t h i n g h a d b e e n t a k e nf r o m th e cases o r t h e v i c t i m s ,po l ice s a i d .

A l i g h t - c o l o r e d W e s t e r n -s t y l e h at w i t h a b i g b r i m wa son t h e t o p o f a s h o r t s t a i r w a ya d j o i n i n g t h e l o t a n d c l o s e toth e street. It w a s n o t k n o w n if

it wa s r e l a t e d l o t h e ease.I)i*. A t i y . L o w e l l . J e n s e n

a n g r i l y t e r m e d t h e k i l l i n g "a na m b u s h a n d a s s a s s i n a t i o n "

OAKLAND

SCHOOLS

ADMINIS-

TRATION

BUILDING

MA P LOCATES SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION OFFICE

Morcus Foster, Robert Blackburn were slain outside it

an d said hi s o f f i c e is s h o c k e da t t h e s a v a g e r y o f t h e s h o o t -i n g s

H e s a i d h e h a s a s s i g n e d as p e c i a l t e a m of i n v e s t i g a t o r s

f r o m h i s o f f i c e t o w o r k w i t hp ol i ce in s o l v i n g th e c r i m e .

O a k l a n d P o l i c e H o m i c i d eS g t s . J o h n A g l e r an d G a r r yF u r r y h a v e b e e n place d inc h a r g e o f t h e h u n t f o r t h es l a y e r s . F o u r t e a m s of i n s p e c -

t o r s ar e a s s i s t i n g w i t h th ei n v e s t i g a t i o n .

AP Pnoto

SECRETARY OF STATE KISSINGER WITH EGYPT PRESIDENT SADAT

'We are moving toward peace/ said U.S. diploma) and Sadat agreed

U.S., Egypt Agree to Trade

Ambassadors, Resume TiesC A I R O ( A P ) - Egypt and

Ih e U n i t e d S t a t e s h a v e agreedt o e x c h a n g e a m b a s s a d o r s i m -m e d i a t e l y , th e o f f i c i a l M i d d l eEast Nws A p e n c y said to -n i g h t .

In W a s h i n g t o n , a - s i m u l t a -n e o u s a n n o u n c e m e n t f r o m th eW h i l e H o u s e said th e tw oc o u n t r i e s agreed in p r i n c i p l eto resume d i p l o m a t i c r e l a -t i o n s "at an '-any date."

T h e a n n o u n c e m e n t s w e r em a d e f i v e h o u r s a f t e r Secre-t a r y of S t a t e H e n r y A . K i s s i n -ge r an d Egypt ian P r e s i d e n tA n w a r S a d a t m e t f o r more

t h a n t h r e e h o u r s t o d a y a n dagreed t h e y w e r e " m o v i n gtoward peace."

E g yp t b r o k e d i p l o m a t i c re -l a t i o n s w i t h th e U n i t e d Stalesd u r i n g t h e 1 5 ) 5 7 Arab-Israeliwa r because of U.S. s u p p o r tfo r Israel.

S i n c e t h e n t h e t w o c o u n t r i e sh a v e m a i n t a i n e d contacts

t h r o u g h s m a l l d i pl o m a t i c m i s -sions in each other's capital su n d e r th e f lag o f f r i e n d l y n a -t i o n s . '

T h e n e w s a g e n c y said th et w o g o v e r n m e n t s h ad "agreedin p r i n c i p l e to restore d i p l o -m a t i c r e l a t i o n s - soon" an dm e a n w h i l e w e r e n i i s i n g i h er e p r e s e n t a t i v e s 35 w.-]i < if

• h v i r s i i r i l l i n t e r e s t s e c t i o n sin ! h < - tw o capita ls to amlxis-

s - i r f o n a l l e v e l .K c y p l a pp o i n t e d A s h r a f

( i h o r b a l as a m b a s s a d o r to

W a s h i n g t o n , an d H e r m a nK i l l s . U . S . ambassador toS < i u d i A r a b i a f r o m 1 9 f o lo3SI70. U A S n a m e d J o t h e C a i r opost. This was c o n f i r m e d i n

a f t e r n o o n visi t to the Pyra-m i d s a n d t h e S p h i n x .

U.S. o f f i c i a l s said K i s s i n -g e r . i n h i s c o n v e r s a t i o n s inW a s h i n g t o n l a s t w e e k w i t h

E g y p t i a n F o r e i g n M i n i s t e r I s-m a i l F a h m y . d e t e c t e d w i l l i n g -ness t o u s e t h e "good of f i ces '"of th e U n i t e d States t o s m o o t hou t c e a s e - f i r e problems be -t w e e n Egypt and Israel and toa p p r o a c h p e a c e t a l k s .

Sadat has v o w e d p u b l i c l y h ev.ill no t b a r g a i n w i t h th e - Jew-is h s t a t e . K i s s i n g e r , h o p i n g toac t as a c a t a l ys t , i n t e n d s tof i n d ou t w h e t h e r t h e K g y p t i a nl e a d e r r e a l l y is a d a m a n t .

T h e p r i n c i p a l i m m e d i a t e is -sues f o r d i s c u s s i o n a r e I s -rael's d e m a n d s f o r a p r i s o n e re x c h a n g e an d th e l i f t i n g of th eE g yp t i a n b l o c k a d e at them o u t h o f t h e R e d S e a . a n dE g yp t ' s i n s i s t e n c e that Israelg i v e u p t h e territory i t o c c u -p i e d a f t e r Ih c f i i>i ^ease-f ireo r d e r O c t . 22 .

T h e s e m i o f f i c i a l C a i r o n e w s -p a p e r A l A h r a m s a i d t o d ayt h a t Ih e o n l y g u a r a n t e e fo r th e.success of Kissinger's pcaci;

:r.iss:<in is th e i m m e d i a t e - im -p l e m e n t a t i o n n f t h e U . N . reso-l u t i o n s c a l l i n g f o r I s r a e l iw i t h d r a w a l .

U . S w i l l i n g n e s s in « - \e r cis<-pressure on K r a e l to i r - i i u e k:< i th e l-.r.vs it h e l d « m Or".. '1 1

as a p r e l u d e * o compete w i t h -d r a w a l f r o m al l ( u n i p i ' - dA r a b t e r r i t o r y v u l l }*• ih e u-s i"f A nx-r ic . in i ^ w i d i a i t h . th e

A m e r i c a n secretary o n histalks w i t h t h e A r a b leaders.

Israel's m i l i t a r y c o m m a n dr e p o r t e d t w o n e w a t t e m p t sy c j t a r d a y b y t h e E g y p t i a n 3 r d

A r m y to b r e a k t h r o u g h th eI s r a e l i f o r c e s e n c i r c l i n g it.

bu t th e c o m m a n d sa i d b o t ha t t e m p t s w e r e c o n t a i n e d .

S o u r c e s i n C a i r o sa;d F.gyptwa s p u s h i n g f r e s h wa r m a t e -r i a l e a s t w a r d t o w a r d i Mi i ai l i aan d S u e / .

T h e I s r a e l i s , u n d e r p r c !» s u r ef r o m W a s h i n g t o n , l e i 1 25I r u c k l o a d s o f f o o d , w a t e r a n dm e d i c a l s u p p l i e s pass t h r o u g ht h e i r l i n e s l o t h e 3 r d A r m y .M o v e m e n t of t h e s e s u p p l i e swa s c o m p l e t e d ye s t e r d a y, an dIs rael a n n o u n c e d i t was let- ,t i n g a n o t h e r 5 0 t r u c k l o a d st h r o u g h .

Pure Air Act

Suspension

To Be Asked( ' •mi ll ia rd f r o m Page I

. ' i i i i - i nL1

:t • iu:nlx-r suli in i iu-d :»

N i v m fo r b is o m s i d e r a l i n nH ' iwi- vcr . S e n a t e M a j n n t y

I x M d e r M i k e M a n s f i e l d o fM u n t a n r sai t] l o w e r h i g h w a ys j t t x l l n n i t s w o u l d be

Both -soil laVe ap their posi-tions " i m m w J i a t c l y , " b o t h an -n o u n c e m e n t s said.

Kissinger t < i l d n e w s - m e n inCairo his f i r s t talks wi t h S a d -at had b e e n "very construe-In e."

Sadat, we a r i n g a k h a k i u n i -f o r m . .srniH-d a m i a b l y as Jifan d K j s M i w r ar.s-wered a f i -w

q u e s t i o n s art f i*fM'd fo r pbo-

Kicraphers 1 i < - s a i d lh''irt h r e e - h o u r lalk was the o n l yon e ibt -y w o u l d h a v e d u r i n gK ; s 5 n n ^ < r ' s •us-u *.f 3 da y an da h a l f .

"We n a v f (-onclud ' .1']." he

v a i d .Xi**wr q i j h y j srM'-d . "1

'"V T » C - l

Sadat coT J H - •".•mtery "f >t i

K i - s i n o T v u l l < i ' n v e > Sad-at's i j r A - s to the l y r .T - h s A n d« h i l f p l a y i n c 'he m i d d l e m an!>euv<-cn i'cM)" a:-,d Israfj. he

is t v i n f : d f n l J h a t I h r Soviet

U n i r a o r a n n l h e r s o v c r n m e n lwll us e ilj, i n f l u e n c e I n enlist

Syria, th e olhtr major com-

}>a1ant m t h e * O c t o b e r •a'ar.

s h o u l d a ;iec"tiatmc processIsrael an d Esji>l < J e -

Ka h n r .

a m e t o C a i r o last

m z h t a f t e r m e e t i T i C s in R a b a tw i t h Kin: : H n s s a n < > J M o r o r c o

an d in T i i m s w i t h 1'rrsidentH a b i b I V c j r c i n b a o f T u n i s i a .T o m o r r o w he M - C - s K : T ; C H u s .M i n o f - l o r d a r i i n A m m a n an dJ u n e Tai^l of S a u d i A r a b i an Ki.V'i 'lh.

Is rael i I ' r e m i c T i J M d a M r - j j

ha d p l a t j T H - f ] :> < r<7«. r« J-'i lnj. 3 < .

* - < T ^ t U T l w r r i f t A 'm her 'all;*.Kissir,i;<T an d

]a^l ?.«•};. Bu ther •s;«

f't'J

1 ^flo awai t w/rrd

M a n s f i e l d also s a i d 'ha!

N i v i a ' wouM pro jx isc t - \ 1 « ' T i d -i n - ^ d h v l i ^ h l sa\inv:s t i m v ;« -jy e a r - r o u n d basis.

< J a s * > h n c ra t i (m;nj ; 3 ;'T-M Jii

3 he picture"at present. Mans-f i e ld said. Bu t he < s a ; d .s'qism ay b e t a k e n t o prepare f o r i t<-arty ne\1 year i f c o n d i t i o n sw a r r a n t .

M a n s f i e l d saida] l e a d e r s at th e hriefpg

" u n i f o r m l y a f f i r m a t i v e " toN i x o n ' s prt'piisals.

R h ' i d c s a i s o said Ih c Prrsj.d e n t w o u l d s'i"J: t o o j m i pro-• d u d j i m of oi l f r o m < hr Kl kH i l l s N a t a l Petroleum Ro -M T V <

%:TI Cali formji as part of

h is e f f o r t s to inrrwise p r o d u c -lpn while tniTbi r .g r o n s u m p -

l ion «f prtrolnim.

I m m c d la tely af l<T th e <-"n-

A s p e c i a l r o o m i n t h eS c h o o l s A d m i n i s t r a t i o n B u i l d -in g h as b e e n se t a s i d e tor e c e i v e an y i n f o r m a t i o n th e

p u b l i c m i g h t o f f e r r e l a t i n g toth e c r i m e .T h e r o o m h a s a d i r e c t

p h o n e l i n e t h e p u b l i c m a ycal l : 273-3427.

Foster's w i f e , A l b e r l i n e .w a s a t H i g h l a n d w i t h t h e i rd a u g h t e r . M a r s h a , f o r a b o u ttw o • h o u r s b e f o r e b e i n gw h i s k e d a w a y. B l a c k b u r n ' swife . B a r b a r a , a n d t h e i r s o nC h r i s t o p h e r , a s t u d e n t at Sky-l i n e H i g h S c h o o l , w e r e n o t f a rf r o m h i m m u c h o f t h e t i m e h ewa s in s u r g e r y . H i s n o tk n o w n w h e t h e r t h e B l a c k -b u r n s ' d a u g h t e r S a m a n t h awa s also a t t h e h o s p i t a l .

S e r v i c e s f o r D r . Foster ar cp e n d i n g .

Last Plea

By FosterTo CouncilContinued from Page I

T h e n e w s c a m e in bits an dpieces. T he f i r s t w o r d — a b o u tin m i n u t e s b e f o r e th e c o u n c i lm e e t i n g w a s to b e g i n —  wa st h a t t h e r e h a d b e e n a s h o o t i n ga t t h e s c h o o l a d m i n i s t r a t i o nh e a d q u a r t e r s . A n a s s i s t a n t su -p e r i n l e n d e n l m a y h a v e b e e ns h o t .

T h e n c a m e t h e a w f u l de -tai l s. Rile y wa s on t h e t e l e -p h o n e , D e p u t y C h i e f o f Pol iceT h o m a s D o n a h u e w a s o n t h eo t h e r r i i d . F o s t e r wa s d e a d .R o b e r t B l a c k b u r n , d e p u t y su -p e r i n t e n d e n t w a s c r i t i c a l lyi n j u r e d .

No a n n o u n c e m e n t w a s m a d ei m m e d i a t e l y . Jiul th e messagewa s (ui ickly passed to c o u n c i l -m e n a n d c i t y o f f i c i a l s .

K a c h u n d o u b t e d l y w a s r e -m e m b e r i n g t h e scene o n l y

t h r e e h o u r s e a r l i e r .T h e s e s s i o n w a s o n th e

c i t y ' s f i n a n c i a l crisis. F n s t e rwa s t h e r e b e c a u s e t h e r e ba db e e n c u t s i n t h e r e c r e a t i o np r o g r a m r u n b y t h e c i t y i n t h es c h o o l s a n d m o r e w e r e p r o -p o s e d .

R e p e a t e d l y Foster r e m i n d e dc o u n c i l m e n o f t h e schoo l d is-trict's p r o b l e m s w i t h v i o l e n c e .v a n d a l i s m an d t r u a n c y .

" 1 s h u d d e r t o t h i n k w h a t w em ay see," h e d e c l a r e d in r e f -e r e n c e t o t h e e l i m i n a t i o n ofprograms t h a t p r o v i d e d aplace fo r y o u t h t o g o a f t e rs c h o o l .

U h e n r e m i n d e d o f th e city'sf i n a n c i a l s i t u a t i o n a n d t h es t u d i e s n o w g e t t i n g u n d e rw a y , Foster c o u n t e r e d m o r et h a n o n c e : " T h e schools.. theg> ins.. are closed."

H e t a l k e d a b o u t "false e c o n -omy." a b o u t what's a "goodi n v e s t m e n t i n t h e l o n g r u n . "

T he c o u n c i l wasn ' t in a po-s i t i o n t o m a k e a d e c i s i o n . Bu tFoster m a d e i t clear h ew o u l d n ' t g i v e u p .

H is p a r t o v e r . Dr . Fosterl e f t th e c o u n c i l sess ior i f o r as c h o o l b o a r d m e e t i n g . 1 ! w a sa r o u t i n e sess ion.

There's no wa y t o p u t itt o g e t h e r i n a w a y t h a t m a k e ssense.

"Only th is afte rnoon l ie wa sp l e a d i n g fo r children." C o u n -c i l m a n J o h n S u t l e r n o t e d .

"It r e a l l y b o u g i e s th e m i n d .Wh o w o u l d k i l l M a r c Foster?H is w as th e \oicr ai reason int h i s city." Sutt'.T said.

M a y o r H e a d i n g remem-

U-rcd that "Dr. Foster \vas- af r i e n d of ewryonc. It's soh a r d t o u n d e r s t a n d . "

C i t y M a n a g e r R i l e y ex -pressed d e e n sorrow ands h o c k . "He \vas a -jood m a n . 1c a n ' t f i g u r e it out."

A i a m t h e n - a r e t h e j a r r i n gm e m o r i e s < m S y ih re *- h o u r s-•span. I) wa s w a r m in th ec r « i v \ i j » 3 w o r k session. S e v e r a liinvs Dr . F'ISVT \ \ i j K - d h isl i n i w as he waite d 1« i make h is;> r;- srn tal i"n . He had a ;>ro-jwtvd >j*v«-li. Bu t w h e n his

!«ra l« i speak came hi - sjoker x U - U M H i r a n c ' u i s l y "f ihe

3s -i f O a k l a n d x o u l b . K I I -

i m n h i H - n V » J ' « « k alJh c "Jo ' ia l nnl jcu." mmndincIfiein t h a t all •segment'' »-f Ihc

onumnnly have t< » w«rk to -

Bu t it"*, hard tt > put theparts < rf Ih c cfln fusin j: yiclurclogethcr n o w.

Ontario Forest fir**

Rtductd This YearT O R O N T O (AI M -The Ik

p a r t r n f T i l *if N a t u r a l H e-

j-frnrocs said «n Srpl J thaiyi n c c th e brannine «f lb?\ CHT . 3 7 f i fo rosl fin* h a v edes1r<'<ycd 3 2 f i .< » W l »CT<« *.f fo r--•M ;n O n t a r i o .

- , t'. /;- •; .-»

aide*7 i f > r s an d «\

nty an d manly o f f i c w j l s onth e f f l r th c w n in s

AWOOB

W ASHI NG TO N" -TbfvihJc<i f U.S. dirwl investments

abroad t«lal«l $M lottim at3 h < - start < »f 1*tT?>, » rj*^ si f $7 *

in ? ycxr.

Oft. WILLIAM TEUFiL

Dttcribts wounds

Dr. Badal

AppointedBy BoardC o n t i n u e d f r o m Page 1

Ih e o r d e r l y r e s u m p t i o n e-f th es c h o o l p r o g r a m . P r i n c i p a l sh a v e b e e n d i r e c t e d to m e e tw i t h s t a f f s at e a c h of th es c h o o l s in th e c i t y at 8 a.m.t o m o r r o w .

D r . B a d a l . f o l l o w i n g th em e e t i n g t o d a y , read a l o u d a

p r e s s r e l e a s e f r o m t h e b o a r dw h i c h s a i d m e m b e r s o f t h eb o a r d a n d t i le s e n i o r s t a f ih a v e b e e n in c l o s e c o n t a c tw i t h t h e f a m i l i e s o f t h e t w os h o o t i n g v i c t i m s s i n c e th et r a g e d y o c c u r e d . A t t h i s t i m e ,f u n e r a l a n d m e m o r i a l serv-ices h a \ e n o t y e t b e e n s c h e d -u l e d , h e said.

A ll c i t y b u i l d i n g flags w e r el o w e r e d to h a l f mast t h i sm o r n i n g an d w i l l r e m a i n sou n t i l a f t e r D r . Foster's f u n e r -al.

T h e Peralta C o m m u n i t yC o l l e g e s, l o c a l ly i n c l u d i n g t h e

. A l a m e d a . L a n e y , M e r r i l l an dN o r t h Peralta campuses

c a n c e l e d classes f o r t h e d a y .P c r a l t a B o a r d P r e s i d e n t C u r -ti s A l l e r a n d C h a n c e l l o rT h o m a s Fryer .1r. m a d e aj o i n t a n n o u n c e m e n t o f t h e c l o -Mi re " a s a m e m o r i a l t o w h a tM a r c u s Foster stood f o r a n da s a g e s t u r e o f d e e p regret."

Dr . B a d a l s a i d h e i 'ell d e e p -ly th e loss of a m a n w h o h a db e e n b o t h a s u p e r i o r a n d agood p e r s o n a l f r i e n d , an d saidhe ha d ru > d o u b t t h a t i)r.F o s t e r w a s " o n e o f th e m o s to u t s t a n d i n g e d u c a t o r s , n oto n l y i n o u r state b u t i n t h ee n t i r e U n i t e d States.

"It is a great loss to ourc i t y , o ur state a n d o u r socie-ty..."

T h e r e g u l a r b o a r d o f e d u c a -t i o n m e e t i n g , s c h e d u l e d atI'M p . m . t o d a y at G a r f i e l dS c h o o l , h as b e e n c a n c e l e d ,Badal said .

Dr. Badal is in charge ofp l a n n i n g , research an d e v a l u -a t i o n f o r t h e s c h o o l d i s t r i c t , aposi t ion h e h a s h e l d sinceJan . 1 . 1971.

Nixon VetoOverriddenBy HouseC o n t i n u e d f r o m Page I

c o u l d be a 311-day e x t e n s i o nfo r w i t h d r a w a l .

P r e s i d e n t Ni x on v e t o e d th eb i l l im g r o u n d s t h a t iv wasu n c o n s t i t u t i o n a l a n d " w o u l ds e r i o u s ly u n d e r m i n e t h e n a -t i n n ' s a b i l i t y t o act d e c i s i v e l ya n d c o n v i n c i n g l y in times ofi n t e r n a t i o n a l crisis."

N i x o n said h e agreed, h o w -e v e r , w i t h t h e p r o v i s i o n i n t h eb i l l r e q u i r i n g a p r e s i d e n t t oc o n s u l t w i t h Congress b e f o r eh e c o m m i t s t r o o p s abroad.

T h e b i l l also w o u l d require

a p r e s i d e n t to report d e t a i l s ofh is w a r c o m m i t m e n t t o C o n -gress w i t h i n 4 S h o u r s a n d t h efi l l -day period w o u l d start r u n -n i n g w h e n Congress r e c e i v e dt h a t r e p o r t .

House GroupReverses on

Security BillW A S H I N G T O N ( A I M - The

H o u s e W a y s an d Means C o m -miller today reversed itself onSwal Security U-gislation andtenlathely airroed on a two-step b e n e f i t boost totaling 11per cent n e x t year.

By voice vole, the commit-

tee rejected the version that ithad approved h y 1 3 to ]2yesterday. That version wouldh a v e boosted b e n e f i t s by H IP;T c < 7 > " <-f f fc Ji v r wi t h next

July's check*, a plan e n-dorsed \n- the N i v m a d m i m s -'ration and barked by th ecommittee's R e p u b l i c a n s .

The new v r r v jo n . a D e m o -crat-sponsored compromise

T h a t c o u l d come n n d < T attackM the \j\on a d m i n i s t r a t i o n ,g a i n e d t e m p o r a r y approval byv f r t - r M C , C . O c n T H j t Uwirn;/lh • n r O c r f l f o r m a l

d r a f t e d arid sa?d« cam th e p*wTs f i n a l

htrr t o d a y «r t o m o r -ro w

Reagan Vows to Cut

State Budget AnywayC t t t t i u c d t r t m

h e a v y 62.8 p e r c e n t a g a i n s t itto 37.2 pe r c e n t in f a v o r .

V o t e r t u r n o u t in b o t h c o u n -t i e s wa s h i g h e r t h a n e x p e c t e d .C o n t r a C o s t a o f f i c i a l s c h a l k e du p 5 7 p e r c e n t and in A l a m e d aC o u n t y , 40.8 pe r c e n t v o t e d .

Ke agan m et n e w s m e n last

n i g h t w i t h h i s w i f e . N a n c y ,a f t e r w a t c h i n g r e t u r n s on h'ispe t p r o g r a m c o m e in w i t hd i s h e a r t e n i n g r e s u l t s .

" M y f e l l o w C a l i f o r n i a n s

h a v e r e s p o n d e d — s o m e a t t h ebal lo t b o x , s o m e b y s t a y i n ghome," h e said. "Those wh ow e r e c o n c e r n e d e n o u g h t ov o t e t o d a y e v i d e n t l y fe l t P r o p -osi t ion 1 wa s n o t t h e so lu -t i on ,* ' R e a g a n a d d e d .

M o r c l t i h e l d h i s v i c t o r y p a r -iy i n L o s A n g e l e s , w h e r e h et o ld s u p p o r t e r s . "They o u t -s p e n t us $2 m i l l i o n t o o u r$400.001) an d t h e y w e r e w o r k -in g o n a s o n i e t h i n g - f o r - n o l h -in g p r o p o s i t i o n . " He said.

" T h e p e o p l e h a \ e t o ld t h e b i gi n t e r e s t s t h a t n e v e r a g a i n w i l lt h e y b u y a n e l e c t i o n i n Cal i -f o r n i a , they're g o i n g t o h a v eto c o n v i n c e t h e m mi t h e i s -sues."

T h e t a x c o n t r o l p l a n , w h i c hR e a g a n p r e s e n t e d l a s t s p r i n g ,w ould h a v e se t a c o n s t i t u t i o n -al l i m i t o n ( h e a m o u n t o f t h estale's p e r s o n a l in c o m e t h a tc o u l d b e s p e n t o n state g o v -e r n m e n t .

T h e g o v e r n o r 's r e m a r k s o ne l e c t i o n e v e s h o w e d h is c o n -

. c o r n t h a t h i s m e a s u r e w a sfa i l ing . "I h a v e f u l f i l l e d m yp r o m i s e o f 1 3 m o n t h s a go . "R e a g a n said. "Tomorrow,

C a l i f o r n i a n s w i l l h a v e ac h a n c e to v o l e t h e m s e l v e s a

t a x c u t . B u t t h e y m a y n o t d oso b e c a u s e t h e y are b e i n gc o n f u s e d b y t h e m a s s i v e , b i gl i e t e c h n i q u e o f t h o s e o p p o s -in g P r o p o s i t i o n 1. "

S t a l e w i d e . t h e p r o p o s i t i o nw on i n o n l y 11 c o u n t i e s , w i t h-57 v o t i n g a g a i n s t i t . A l t h o u g hi t was b i l l e d as a n o n p a r t i s a ni s s u e , i t w on o n l y in h e a v i l v

AP Photo

GOV. REAGAN CONCEDES PLAN'S DEFEATIt was his first loss at the polls in his career

R e p u b l i c a n c o u n t i e s a n d l o s tb y b i g m a r g i n s in h e a v i l yD e m o c r a t i c areas.

M o r c t t i ha d s a i d b e f o r e t h ee l e c t i o n t h a t h i s c a m p a i g na g a i n s t R e a g a n w o u l d n o th u r t h i m i f h e losl, b u t t h e r ewa s l i t t l e d o u b t t h a t t h e w i ns e n t h i s s t o c k i n t h e g u b e r n a -t o r i a l p r i m a r y s o a r i n g u p-w a r d . "There i s n o q u e s t i o nt h i s h e l p s m e t r e m e n d o u s l y , "M o r e t t i s a i d l a s t n i g h t .

T h e A s s e m b l y s p e a k e r a l s oha d said t h a t R e a g a n c o u l d n ' tlose w i t h th e i n i t i a t i v e . "He'ss t i l l a m a r t y r l o t h e r i g h tw i n g a n d s h o u l d d o v e r y w e l lw i t h t h a t e l e m e n t o f t h e c o n -

v e n t i o n . " M o r e t t i said in sug-g e s t i n g R e a g a n s t i l l i s a s o l i dc a n d i d a t e f o r t h e R e p u b l i c a np r e s i d e n t i a l n o m i n a t i o n i n1976.

W i t h v i r t u a l l y al l r e t u r n s in .th e p e r c e n t a g e o p p o s i n g t h em e a s u r e s t o o d a t 5 4 p e r c e n t ,w i t h 4 (j pe r c e n t f a v o r i n g .T h r e e p r e c i n c t s in L o s A n g e -le s C o u n t y a n d o n e i n Sacra-

m e n t o C o u n t y w e r e m i s s i n g ,a n d e l e c t i o n o f f i c i a l s said itm i g h t be j u s t h o u r s o r a sm u c h a s d a y s b e f o r e t h e f i n a lt a l l i e s ar e a v a i l a b l e .

X n n e o f t h e m n - u l d a f f e c tth e f i n a l r e s u l t .

W a te r g a te Nixon SecretarySentencing m _ , 

S c h e d u l e d Plans to TestifyW A S H I N G T O N ( A P ) -

F e d e r a l J u d g e J o h n J. S i r i c at o d a y d e n i e d v a r i o u s m o t i o n sb y s i x o f t h e o r i g i n a l W a t e r -gate d e f e n d a n t s f o r n e w t r i a lsor' w i t h d r a w a l o f g u i l t y pleasan d set F r i d a y m o r n i n g f o rt h e i r s e n t e n c i n g .

The six are James W.M c C e r d Jr. , K. H o w a r d H u n t .B e r n a r d L . B a r k e r . E u g e n i oM a r t i n e z . V i r g i l i o G o n / a l c san d F r a n k A . S t u r g i s .

A ll bu t Ale- Cor d ha d p l e a d e dg u i l t y a t t h e W a t e r g a t e t r i a lin J a n u a r y a n d h a d b e e n inp r i s o n u n d e r p r o v i s i o n a l m a x -i m u m s e n t e n c e s fo r b u r g l a r y .c o n s p i r a c y a n d w i r e t a p p i n g .

M c C o r d . w h o sUxxi t r i a l an dw a s c o n v i c t e d , h a d a s k e d f o ra \erdicl o f a c q u i t t a l a n d ane w t r i a l . T h e o t h e r s h a dasked to w i t h d r a w t h e i r g u i l t yp leas,

A s e v e n t h W a t e r g a t e de -f e n d a n t . G . G o r d o n L i d d y .was convicted w i t h M c C o r dan d s e n t e n c e d to a t e r m of M X

years a n d e i g h t m o n t h s t o 20years.

T h e t r i a l s t e m m e d f r o m th eJ u n e 17 . 1972 b r e a k - i n atD e m o c r a t i c n a t i o n a l h e a d -q u a r t e r s at th e Watergate.

NixonStartsExpansion of

Legal StaffW A S H I N G T O N ( A P ) - The

W h i l e H o u s e said t rn i ay Presi-

d e n t N i x o n i s e x p a n d i n g h i s

l egal s t af f t o d e a l w i t h W a t e r -gate proble ms- "j>e . rhaps t n n r ce ffe ct ive ly I h n n w e h a \ e b e -fore."

Pros Six-Mary l { o n a l < i I..Xie gle r said n F l o r i d a i a w j r r .Sam JVviM-rs. wa s ih e f i r s tr e c r u i t fo r Ih e a u g : n c n l < - d

legal t e r m ,ng !« > th e nun>U-r »f

ys i n v o l v e d in varanis

i n v e s t i g a t i o n s o f t h e W a t e r -u a t c i-candal and related niat-!crs. /iejjlcr said Ih c W h i t eH « u s c had It cxjand its staffbecause "\\n can't deal «ith100 lawyers with 5.

Promising anew lhal the

President will nwl his Wat-trcate prx^lcws he ad-cm inways that w i l l Ix-come clear

."in the n e x t m o n t h »> r so."'/K'gler said o n e o f t h e f i r s tchores t» f the W h i l e H o u s eIc^al team wil l b e l o "oorn j) i]can d c l a r i f y charges t h m h a v e} > c v n made" abfra t Ni\"n an d

members of hi*- f a m i V -] Jey 'md that, he w w i l d n t i t

•say w h a t « a y < . o r m c t h n d s arc•under

W A S H I N G T O N ( A P ) - Ap r e s i d e n t i a l a i d e s a i d t o d a yt h a t R o s e .Mary W o o d s . Presi-d e n t N i x o n ' s p e r s o n a l secre-

t a r y , w i ll t e l l a f e d e r a l c o u r th e a r i n g t h a i s h e h a s n o t t r a n -s c r i b e d t h e s u b p o e n a e d W h i t eH o u s e W a t e r g a t e lapes.

x

Miss Woods will b e a w i t -ness, p r o b a b l y t o m o r r o w , atth e h e a r i n g ctlled t o e x p l o r eIh e c i r c u m s t a n c e s s u r r o u n d -in g tw o of W a t e r g a t e c o n v e r -s a t i o n s t h a t W h i t e H o u s eaides say w e r e n e v e r r e c o r d -ed .

Y e s t e r d a y, p r e s i d e n t i a l a i d eJ o h n ('. B e n n e t t said M i s sWoods had a tota l of 14 W h i t eH o u s e t a p e s a n d t h e r e w a s

o t h e r t e s t i m o n y t h a t she w ast y p i n g w h i l e l i s t e n i n g to . s o m en f t h e m .

B e n n e t t s a i d M i s s W o o d sc a m e t o h i s of f i ce t h i s m o r n -in g an d "said t o m e . '1 read

y o u r t e s t i m o n y i n t h e paper.. . If I'm called as a w i t -ness. I' m g o i n g to ba.e toe x p l a i n I d id no t I r a n -

B e n n e t t , an a i d e t o W h i l eH o u s e c h i e f o f s t a f f A l e x a n d e rM . H a i g J r. , to ld th e courlO"!said. 'Rose M a r y , t e l l th et r u t h . ' ".

L a t e r B e n n e t t restated th ec o n v e r s a t i o n a n d q u o t e d th ePresident's secretary as say-i n g . " I d i d n ot transcribe th etapes. Transcribe is the

w r o n g w o r ' l . If I 'm cal ledo v e r t h e r e . I' m goi i ig to s?y Idi d n o t t r a n s c r i b e t h e tapes."

B e n n e t t , a r e t i r e d A r m ym a j o r g e n e r a l , said h e h ada l s o h a d a c o n v e r s a t i o n w i t hM i s s W o o d s a f t e r h e r e t u r n e dlo Hi e W h i l e H o u s e f r o m c o u r ty e s t e r d a y .

"She i n f o r m e d m e a b o u ts o m e t r o u b l e o n a t a p e — s h eapparen t ly f o u n d a gap in ac o n v e r s a t i o n . S h e s a i d 'I w a n tyo u lo k n o w I'm h a v i n g t r o u -bl e w i t h it' ... A nd 1 said,"do ih e b e s t you can ."

T h e r e w a s n o i n d i c a t i o nw h e t h e r t h i s m e a n t t h a i ye l aI h i r d W h i t e H o u s e r e c o r d i n gc o u l d bec',»me c o n t r o v e r s i a l o r

w h e t h e r it was- j u s t a n a t u r a llapse in p ick in g up conve rsa-t i o n .

R i c h a r d B e n - V e n i s t e . a l a w -ye r f u r th e specia l p r o s e c u t i o nforce , q u c s t i o n e : ! B e n n e t t onwh y h e h a d t a l k e d a b o u t h ist e s t i m o n y o r t h e tapes w h e nh e w a s u n d e r c o u r t i n s t r u c -t i o n s n o t t o d i s c u s s c i t h e r .H a r l i e r . B e n n e t t h a d s a i d h eha d no l talked w i t h a n y o n ea b o u t h is t e s t i m o n y , o n l y a n -s w e r i n g a f e w q u e s t i o n s f r o mn e w s m e n .

Be n V c n i s l c a l s o p o i n t e d toa n u m b e r o f a p p a r e n t i n c o n -sistencies, in records B e n n e t tkep t a b o u t t h e tapes h e hr,dg i v e n to p r e s i d e n t i a l aidt Ste-phen V. Bul l ,

Nine Persons Slain

In ValleyResidenceOnlimrd irani I'jur I

" l h < - r I m u n d an d iragccd v i e -•iv.is "Aep- s h o t to d e a t h an ds tuffe d in a w;.lk-m rlnset :nth e master b e d r o o m , t h e s h t - r -if f v«d. A ll bai l Jn-en s h o t m5b e in ad .

T h e oihcr v i c t i m s t e n t a t i ve -ly w e r e i d e n t i f i e d as Parkin's

w i f r . Joanne. 31 : t h e i r d a u g h -ter U s u ," l 3 ; i b v i r v o n 1>.1». S;Uichand A. Karl, a neighbor;h is w i f e . W a n d a , j n her nils:

t h e i r son K i c k y , 15; theirdaughter Debbie. IS. andM a r k L a n g . 31. iden t i fk-d asDebbie Ear l ' j i b n j - f r j e n d .

T h e Kar ls an d Ihe J'arkins.al',o o f V i c t o r , apparently

we n t out together for 1h e wr-r.mz. I r a v mc D e b b i e and h'T}Kiyfr i«)d l i e hm d to b a b ys i ti< T lh«r childmj. T»"lifc said.

T h e C T i f i l y discov<-ry wa sm a d e )» y f 'an>! .Imtans". }%»

m th e Parkin h o m e

am i h is «a was parked o;it-s i d e th e P a r k i n h o m e .

T o u e t h e r M i s s . J e n k i n s an dW . - ivnc N i t s f J i K r a n d S ' t - v eM r F a d d e n . » « > l h IS. « if J^ tr t i .w e n t thnnch th e - i . ' H X ' M J U J I I T

fou l . f i j ! i r - 5 K ' i 5 r < « i m h o m e l h . i lP a r k i n f i n i s h e d b u i l d i n g am o n t h ago.

W h e n s in- saw U n - i h i l d n - n< 3 e a d i n t h e i r l>i'rls. sh*- be -came hystencal arid the tw oy o u t h s I r i e p h o n ^ d th e ruralliberty Fire J > e ; i a r t me n t .

The discou-ry brings to ato tal o f 5 7 those persons killedin J T M S S murder sprees inN o r t h e r n C - i b f o r m a i n l e - s sl h a n l h r < r yars.

-luaii C o r o n a , alabor contractor, now s sin c th e f i r s t < »f 25 c o n s e c u t i v el i f e scntmccs f o r t h e M

4cond

latent mass slajmj; in U.S.

histo ry— "nc fo r < a c h o f t h ef a r m •aor)><-rs f/nnjd in sTwI-Iw - cravr-s in a i>eaeh orchard

near Y u b a < i t y S( i mi l<-s 10 l c

0*$trt fton OR Som«

V*hkl*s SuttoinMlSA X D H T r r t i.MM - AM

jiitizf ha s r e f u s e d 5

Bert's

Sh e t o l d deputies •she camr

tyfro- at 3 a in .T » o t » c » < l

in; •Kr-'/nc an d wvri tlo *> f d Sbr was 3»al:cn(v1 hy

tw o of M a r k lire's f n e n r l iir,c tm th e dwr #1 fi a . m .

• he h a d n ' t < ' o m e

ICitt* Chin«M Mt«

S H A N G H A I — I'hei m c n l t - d Jnv-s I f / n g Jx- fo rr 1hrCfinst i ;m era and ustd thttn

S t i r jjcnalmc J-s. < « r t > as th f.Trd century.

Page 3: Marcus Foster is Slain, Assistant is Wounded (Nov. 7, 1973)

8/4/2019 Marcus Foster is Slain, Assistant is Wounded (Nov. 7, 1973)

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/marcus-foster-is-slain-assistant-is-wounded-nov-7-1973 3/3

Foster's Friends React to 'a Great L o s s

Thief of Bod GagsTh e o n l y h a p p y m an i've seen this week wa s a

g u y -h u m m i n g t o himself: "I don't like th e sunshine,I like it w h e n it rains: Fo r rain brings rheumatism,an d r h e u m a t i sm brings pain. I 'm a chiropractor". . . They had a drawing out at the SanLeandroRedevelopment Jubilee where th e prize wa s a tripfo r two to Lisbon, and the winner didn't have to be

present to w in. G o o d thing. Todd Malone w o n — a n dh e wa s i n M ad ri d a t the t im e, a stone'sthrow . . . Zbigniew K ot h a s l e f t Oakland fo r Seattlen o w , and HE is a man with a sense of hu mo r .

Zbigniew w as here lastweek, a Polish journalistf rom Wa r s a w s t u d yingA m e r i c a n n e w s p a p e r ,methods, and w h a t fasci-n a te d hi m mo st w asD e L a u e r ' s N e w s s t a n dwhere he found a book ofPolish jokes and lovedthem. He part icularlyliked the way the bookopened from th e back,(ilis electric type writer

B I L L F I S E Tthis a Polish typewrit-

er?" he asked, and collapsed laughing at his ownjoke.) H e spotted a headline in The Tribune's

f a s h i o n section saying, "Designers Play RussianRoulette W i th Hemlines ," had never heard the terman d it took a lot of explaining. Fina l ly he said heunderstood, shook his head and grinned.

Al Carter will run for sheriff out in Contra Costaand f riends set up a $25 per plate fund-raiser fo r hi mfor N o v . 29 at the C o n c o r d I n n . Nearly all the ticketswere sold in f o u r days, thus proving a man can beterribly p op u l a r a f t e r having played a lot of g o l ftournaments a n d — l o s in g a fe w s m a l l bets . . . T ha tdrive-in church in Pinole called the "Drive-InWorship Center" ha s mailed its f l o c k a request theysubscribe to a tithe of at l e a s t 5 per cent of t h e i r -incomes. I'd guess they c o u l d ge t e v e n m or e revenuesimply by charging parking f e e s . . . G uy in W a l n u tCreek got caught in that massive t r a f f i c tie-up on theB ay Bridge M o n d a y and it cost him a f u l l hour." A n d that wasn't a l l . O n c e in the Eastbay I gotbehind a Highway Patrolman and I didn't have th ecourage to p a s s h i m . T r a f f i c was miserable al l thewa y home." (Maybe there 's a b o n a f i d e reason noU FO s have dropped in on the Bay Area . No place topark .)

SLAIN SCHOOL CHIEF MA R CUS FOSTER EXPLAINS 'HELPING' POSTER

Working for welfare of children in one of his last photographs

( T r i b u n eWed., Nov. 7,1973 E 17

About U F O s : A U. C. faculty m e m b e r , Dr.James Harder, ha s become one of the country'sauthorities on sightings, and he'l l be the s t a rattraction Friday night in a public lecture at theOakland Auditorium Theater sponsored by Friendsof the Oakland Public Library. He supposedly willshow actual f i l m of a UFO taken by an Australianairline stewardess as the UFO f l e w alongside the jeto n which sh e w as f l y i n g across the Pacific. (Harderis the man who f l e w to Mississippi to hypnotize thetw o men who claimed to have been taken aboard aUF O there.) Tit le of his Friday night ta lk: "Evi-dence f or an Extraterres trial Origin" . . . Other b igdoings in t o w n : An a u c t i o n of bicycles, cars, trucksand h o u s e h o l d goods is set for 10 a . m . Saturday a tthe city's c o r p o r a t i o n yard a t 555 Hegenberger Road.As George Schneider pointed out , "W e're selling offth e s t u f f ju s t in t ime fo r Chr is t ma s" ... Sa lCampagna had one of today's common little disap-pointments. Pulled over to pick up a good-lookinggirl hitchhiker w i t h long blonde hair, tight bluejeans an d sunglasses. She got in, took off thesunglasses and thanked h i m — i n a bass voice.A n o t he r gu y traveling under fa l se pretenses.

Th e editors of a little magazine called Sa nFrancisco Signal this m o n t h have a piece on '"Decadence," dividing that rather esoteric qualityinto low, middle an d high decadence, an d am o ngthings listed as "low decadence" ar e NormanMailer's book on Marilyn Monroe, double-edgedrazors built on the theory that whiskers snap backfast, prefaded Lcvis. Breakfast Squares t ha t used tobe called dessert, organic vegetables, sex manuals,dune buggies, primal therapy, the Osmond Brothers,electric ho t combs—and their ow n magazine. Atleast that's objectivity . . . C l i f f Romero, the SanLeandro barber who's also a \veightlifter (h e cuts aguy's hair and then l i f t s him up to look in themirror) has a rem ark ab l e new Chinese diet g u a ra n-teed to take off 10 pounds the first week. Y ou carry apair of chopsticks with you and cat anything yo uvant , but O N L Y by using the chopsticks. You're M >

awkward at this y ou lose weight, and after a week orso when you get the h a n g of them you're thinner. Attha t point you us e only on e chopstick and continue tolose w e i g h t . . . About weight-lifters, Art Coler-Dark's Manor Health Studio in San Leandro ha sthose tj-pical before an d after photos, including oneset where the "before" is. a skinny guy and the"after" is a Bengal tiger. "

Albert Gagnon is convinced he has Hong Kongflu. "I sneeze am i cough, have a fever, a nd my suitf e l l apart" ...A yucky news brief from A P: "TheArgentine government has decided to export p igeonmeat to encourage a new industry an d bring in moreforeign exchange. Th e move is also seen as a way tocheck the country's exploding pigeon population"...Finally, as Betty Habit points out, anyone w hodoesn't believe in l i f e after death just hasn' t watchedJJ w late, late movies on television.

Marcus Foster

Believed inPeople Power

By BEV M I T C H E L LTribiM SU K Writer

NORMAN DOUGLASS

'It's a shock...'

Oa k la n d 'School Supt. Ma r-c u s A . Foster often said th a the n ev er m et a p aren t , n om at te r h o w r i c h o r h o w p o o r,w h o d i d n ' t p r i z e ed u c at i o nan d know i t was essential fo rh i s c h i l d ren .

T h e k ey to achieving it, tot u r n i n g a school districta r o un d so t h a t it offers ed u c a-tion. he said, is " p eo p le p o w -er."

Al l th e p e o p l e m u s tma t t e r — tudents , school s ta f f ,

p aren ts an d c o m m u n i ty .Thib w a s t h e a t t i t ud e he

d em o n s t ra ted in P h i l ad e l p h i aw h e r e , in 1970 at age 47. hew as asso c i a te su p er i n ten d en tan d g ai n ed th e r e p u t a t i o n ofbeing one of the n at i o n ' s m o s tprogressive ed u c ato rs .

T h i s was th e q ua l i t y w h i c ha t t r ac ted th e O a k l a n d Bo ardo f Education in t h a t s a m ey e ar . w h e n , a f t e r two b i t te rear l ier a t tem p ts to choose ane w school chief, they choseDr . Foster.

Car l .Munck. now retiredfrom the board bu t lone one ofits leaders , said l ast night. "Idid h e l p select h i m . an d h e•was c l e ar l y t he be s t m a navailable in t he country. Iknow th e city from wh i c h h ec am e w as w o r k i n g in hope ofgetting hi m b ac k there...

" Cer ta i n l y M arc Foster go ta l o n g wi th ev ery o n e , u n d er -wood people and tried to un-

de r s ta nd a nd be understood."Several of th e nation's l a r g -est school districts., includingP h i l a d e l p h i a , tried t o hi r eFoster a w a y from O a k l a n d .He a l way s re fu sed c om m e nt .except lo say,"m y c o m m i t -m e n t is hrre."

It wa s P. heavy c om m it m e nt ,sn d he lived up to his promi>cof "people power."

H u n d red s o f O ak l an d citi-zens of all ages an d p c r s ua-«ons wtrc organized into ama-ster p l an jn w ip -which still•works to develop both shortan d long r an g e p l an s for edu-cation in the city.

La.<t spring, this cnrap *»sintegral m pacing a W3.7mil l ion bond issue to bringcity *chofils u p l o slate e a r t h-qu ak e sa fe ty standards. Citi-7-en jroups c<intin'jc lo bdpform p l a n s for u « - e «f broiamonies , as *ell as 1" wo rk «u tcither problems within ihc div

IridThrcr assonale superin-

ler/dmi.s w e r e n a m e d lo bradregjrmj. «ir ' "sub-diMncts. "obring Ibe operation ot theschools clffscr lo individualc w u m u ni l J e s , parents an d t ax -

M a r c u s Foster's d ete rm i n edbelief t h a t it could be avertedwhich l ed to se t t l em en t .

Born in A th en s , G a . , Fosterc a m e from a fami ly o f ed u c a-tors. H e entered the Philadel -phia school system in 1948 andserved as a teac h er an d p r i n -c i p a l at the e l em en tary , j un -ior high an d high school levelp r i o r to becoming associatesu p er i n ten d en t .

In 1966, he became principalof Gratz High "School , then

k n o w n as a "losers' school"w i t h a h i g h d ro p o u t r a t e an dlow p erc en tag e o f c o l l eg e-bound graduates.

He l a u n c h e d a c o m m u n i t yc am p ai g n to g e t th e d ro p o u tsre-enrol led, going ou t h im « e l fto k n o c k on doors an d recruitth e y o u n g s te rs . Within th reey e ar s th e n u m b er o f d rop o u tstai led off and the n u m b e r ofseniors headed for col lege wasup from 18 to I S O .

During Dr . Foster's firstyear of teaching, in PrincessA n n e . M d . , h e b eg an th e da yby gathering wood to build afire in the stove t h a t stood inth e m i d d l e o f h is classroom.

O f t h a t period, he said, "Iw a s fo rc ed to do creativeteaching because there wer-en ' t m an y m ate r ia l s a v ai la -ble." Others said he wo u l dhave done creative teaching inan y en v i ro n m en t .

Coining here, af te r a meteo-

ric rise in th e P h i l ad e l p h i ajsvMcni. he s a id , " 1 don ' t w a n tto give the impression thathere's a fellow from th e Eastw i t h a ba g of tricks."

Instead. lie listed areas hew a n t e d to e xp l or e , a m o n gt h e m in c r e as e d cooperat ionw i t h gove r nm e nt , bu s ine s san d industry ' an d d ev e l o p m en tof al ternative models for ed u -cation. T h e r e ar e n u m ero u st-x-amplcs of his success inIhcsc areas.

Dr.Fo«rwas the au th o r ofm a ny p u bl is he d w or k s on edu-cation. and received a n u m b erof citat ions and award s in hisfield. Among ihc latter w asIh e 15*8 Philadelphia Awardfrom th e Bok Foundation, car-ry i n g a m e d a l an d $ l b , < K K l .

* H r h e l d dearer, from Pe nn-s y l va nia Slate rollegc,

lnr

U n n r r s i t y of P e n n s y l v a n i a ,L i n c o l n I'nncrsily ( l Y n n . )an d Jsl. Joseph's

Only list month, the Oric-land district wa s on the brinkcf * severe «n d bW<r toadwrstride. Few deny that ft w«s

He 5*. sunned by fl i«.Al br r t inr <.Ylibty) , whr . » 'an ad m i n M r a l n c ass.stant inPhiladelphia elemental-.:schools h r f o r r their m t n chere, an d b y U n ir daughter.M*rsha, * ttaduT in the Cas-tro Valky system.

W h en I>r, Foster w as as ke dto accept Ihe O afc h wl posi-tion, he was invited to bring

STAN KISTNER

'...adeep tragedy'

an as s is t an t of his choice.His selection wa s Ro b er t V Y.

Blackburn, then director ofth e In te rg ro u p Re l a t i o n s P ro-g ram fo r th e Ph i l a d e lp h i a dis-trict . w h o c a m e h e r e a s d e p u -ty s u p e r i n t e n d e n t a n d w h ow as severely w o un d e d joter-d ay as th e two m en werec au g h t i n a h ai l of bul le ts .

Bl ac k b u rn c am e to O a k l a n dw it h hi s wi fe . B a r ba r a , an dth e i r c h i l d ren , Ch r i s to p h eran d S a m a n l h a .

At t h a t t im e , in a le t ter toIhen board p r e s ide nt An n C«r-

n e i l l e . h e rem ark ed . "Marcu«;Foster ca n l i ft peoples ' visionan d inspire th em to successan d 1 ca n assist in m M i n n gth a t w e rea l l y c o t th a t suc-cess."

Stanford Tuition

May Be $3,375

S T A X K O R D - M a n f o n ll"

J"-

vcrsi'y trustees n ex t Tu e s da yw i l l consider r e c om m e nda -fc ons for increasing basic lui-fccm by $2*1. to $5.375 for theacademic year, starling ir.1S4-73.

Current tuit ion of J3.I35 :«;]0 pe r cent higher t ha n lhatcharged last yrar.

"W e h a % e brcn qu i te d e l i b-e r a t e i n h o l d i n g dmvn Ih e ralean d I h c a m o u n t of incTcavproposed f« r 1JC4-75." saidT Y m n st W i l l i am F. M i H r t ."There wil l b e s o me very

difficult choices 1o be m a d ean d some tight sqner/rs as - aof Ih r s mal l e r

'He was beaut i fu l

people ... loved byparents , youngsters... a Pled Piper ..*

we're lust numb ...what do yo u say?'

By A N D Y J O KE L S O NTribute SUff Writer

He s,.id salary inmws f« rstaff an d faculty , s o ar in c «n -cFrascs m the costs of l ib w r yb wV$ xnf i campus- otililwsan d Ih e skyrocketing cost ofliving are Ih e causes rf U H >wfd for th e 7.fi per centtuition hike, he

The r e was disbel ief, shockan d r ag e , but most of al l ana c h i n g sad n ess an d -sense ofgr e a t loss am o n g th e O ak l an dschool board members andothers w ho c a m e to H i g h l an dHospital l a s t n i g h t a f t e r th es l ay i n g o f S u p t . M arc u s A .Foster and the wounding

1of

d e p u t y su p er i n ten d en t Ro b er tW . B l a c k b u r n .

"This is th e greatest lossthe Ci ty o t O a k l a n d ha s everk n m v r , " sa i d board m e m b e rM el C a ug h e l l , .shaking withemotion, the w o r d s po u r in go u t . F os t e r , h e sa i d , provided

"so m u c h l ea d ersh i p , so m u c hw a r m t h , s o m u c h c h a r i s -m a — h e w a s j u s t like a PiedPiper. P eo p l e j u s t c am e tohim."

Caughel l said Foster " wasloved by p a r e n t s , h e w a sloved by y o un g s t e r s , " an dth en Cau g h e l l wen t o n to sayth a t he himsel f "adored th em a n . " Foster w a s offeredsc h o o l jo b s e l sewh ere , bu ts tay ed h ere b ec au se h e wasc o m m i t ted to O a k l a n d , saidCau g h e l l .

Foster ha s "given his wh o l el ife to O a k l a n d , " Cau g h e l lsa i d .

B o a r d p res i d en t Ba rn ey H i l-b u n i was to o en rag ed a t f i r s tto c o m m e n t , bu t then said"w e lost a g rea t m an . " H i l .b u rn a d d e d t h a t th e shooting'sfol lowed " a v ery placid m e e t -i n g " o f th e b o ard a t ten d ed b yFoster an d B l a c k b u r n ."T h e r ew e r e no a l te rc a t i o n s wh at -

soever," h e s a id .In response to a question,Hilburn said he k n e w of nothreats having been m a d eag ain s t Foster.

B o a r d member S ey m o u rRo se l o o k ed to b e th e way h edescribed himsel f: in "totalshock. He's one of the great-est in the world an d he's deadan d it's incredible. A ll we'redoing n o w i s k eep i n g o u r f i n -gers crossed for Bob Black-burn..."

A n o t h e r b o a r d m e m b e r ,Lorenzo Hoopes, said "Thisha s c o m e so su d d en l y th a t it'sj u s t un c o mp r e h e n d a b le — t h i sthin? of an educator with fe wpeers in this country being"s n u f f e d ou t l ike this. We'rej u s t n u m b . "

Like Hilburn, Hoopes notedth e a tm o sp h ere at the boardm e e t ing— " p e r ha p s th e m o s tt ran qu i l we 'v e h ad i n m o n th san d m o n th s . "

B o a r d m e m b e r ' Ann Cor-neil le was virtual ly speech-less. " W h a t do y ou say ? It'sl i k e wh en Ken n ed y w as assas-sinated," s h e s a id . B o a r dm em b er Ch ar l e s Goady said"We've just lost a t rem en d o u sperson," an d th a t he couldn'tconceive of a n y o n e d o i n gso m eth i n g l i k e sh o o t i n g Fos-ter and Bl ac k b u rn .

Bo ard m em b er David T u c k -er Jr., reached a t t h e dis-.trict's ad m i n i s t ra t i o n b u i l d -i n g , rem ark ed o n th e t rem en -dous loss to the district. Henoted t h a t th e sh o o t i n g s fo l -l o w e d a b o ard m ee t i n g cal ledto discuss s om e of the d i s - -tricl's su c c ess fu l sp ec i a l l yfunded p ro g ram s—th e kind ofsession yo u " l ike to go to andl ike to hear."

Besides t h e i r i n d i vi d ua lc o m m en ts , th e board issued ajoint s ta tem en t w h ic h said inpart: "This ;s t he s a dde n da yin the iiislory of O a k l a n d an d

th e O a k l a n d publ ic schwiK.O u r su p er i n ten d en t M arc u s A .Foster's dca'.h is Mmiolhsiswo c an n o t yc; c o m p reh en d , as1 5 th e cnti. 'al ly w o u n d in g ;.fou r de p u t y s u p e r int e nde ntKobcrt Bl ac k b u rn .

" O u r hearts ar c filled w i lhlove and concern for Ih e K""-Irr an d Bl ac k b u rn families ."

A m o n g th e ap p ro x i m ate l y5f l school em p l o y es w ho c a m elo H i g h l a n d w as N « m i a nDouglass, p r inc ip a l nf IhtKais*r and Thonihil l e l e m e n-tary schools. " I f f a shock.;nan," hr said. "I'm justa m a z e d thai this can h a p p e nlo an educator."

Douglass said "There w asno vested inttTf-st here. Chil-dren certainly aren't a xeslodinterest." Fester, br said, ba dTii tl wi th hi m an d a r w i l 12TivTnhil l students in Foffice for abmit 15cvirlirr yesterday, Irealod Ih ry o ut h s warvnTy an d lold 5hrm"111 send yi m a brinV bewr/'le,.

Stan Kislner, president ofibf O a k l a n d Ednrati rm A s s c > -r a l in n , w as also at Highland.'1consider this 1 t» be a deeptragedy," be sznd. "Dr. Fes-ter was- a m a n of the Dealestintegrity. H e w as a s a p w i n -tenflent wto> inspired in that

h e was so c o n c ern ed ab o u tchildren." That concern, saidKistner, was reflected in Fos-ter's c o m m i t m e n t to reac h th er e c e n t s e t t l e m e n t w h i c haverted a possible strike ofschool p erso n n e l .

M r s . M a y o l a L e w i s , w hoserves as a l iaison b e tweenth e d i s t r i c t ad m i n i s t ra t i o nand 18 school site c o mmun i -ties in E a s t O a k l a n d , p o i n tedto Foster 's ef for ts to promotec o mmun i t y i n vo lve me n t i nschool activi ties .

" H e m a d e a c o m m i t m e n tan d he has been fu l fi l l ing t h a t

c o m m i t m e n t ev er s i n c e h eha s been h e r e , " s he s a id .She noted his work in get-

t i n g p aren ts i n te res ted insv± th i n g s as t h e districtbudget an d c h an g i n g c u r r i c u -l u m , c o m m u n i ty i n v o lv em en tin selection of principals an darchitects, his efforts in thesuccessful 1972 school bondcampaign and his push fo rc o mmun i t y accountabil i ty.

Mrs. Bette W i l so n , t reasu r -er of Frem o n t H i g h S c ho o l ,said "it's a great loss, that'sa l l y ou c a n say. I know th a tit's a t rem en d o u s l o ss to thes t ud e n t s at my high school ."

J o h n C a r u s o n e , th e dis-trict's coordinator of c o m m u -ni ty re lations, said "There'snu question but of the loss. Ifeel w e were b eg i n n i n g tom a k e g r e a t strides in variousseg m en ts of the c o m m u n i ty ,particularly in m eet i n g th e

needs of the various ethnicgroups."Mrs. Evelyn Bizde, an in-

structional assistant at thePeralta school an d m o th er ofthree children attending O a k -land publ ic schools, said sh ethought Foster "was a w o n -derful person mysel f. In f ac t ,he w as indescribable."

Miss Shirley Blocker, aninstructional as s is t an t at th eH o rac e M an n sc h o o l , sa.'i "Ith ink it w as terrible. H e wa s *g o od m a n . H e was a v ery goor,m a n . H e w a s b eau t i fu l pe' •pie."

Gov. Ro n al d Reag an i n S - c -ramento said "I am shockedan d sad d en ed " by Fos'.-r'sd eath . "I hope those resr .msi-M e wi l l be ap p reh en d ,d assoon as possible," he -,aid.

A s s e m b l y w o m a n M a r c hFong, D -Oa k la n d , - a i d ''Thisac t w a s s o sens^ess t ha i :twas obscene."

G. Ro b er t T v i c C o n n e l l , su -

p er i n ten d en t of the C ity ofA l am ed a ' s p u b l i c sc h o o l s .said " M arc Fo o te r was one ofth e g rea t people in Americaneducation . E v e r y t h i n g he didwa s based on fi rm beliefsa b o ut w h a t w as best fo r kids.He believed in the goodness ofpeople and in the process ofdemocracy. H is d eath is aserious loss to publ ic educa-tion and to th o se of us whow e r e hi s p erso n a l f r i en d s . "

F a t he r T h o m a s J. Paris,pnest of the Greek OrthodoxC h u r c h of the Ascension here,s a id by te l ep h o n e : "Thesenseless kil l ing of a tru lyjreat ed u c ato r l eav es th »G reek Or t h o d o x c o m m u n i t ys h o c k e d , s t u n n e d a n dsad-d e n e d . D r . M a r c u s Vost«Tc ap tu red the imagination ofal l for he gave the City ofOa k la n d th e M M c m of great-ne^s. M ay hi s un t i me ly d eathg i \ c g rea t res<i l\c to al l m en

o f good will to bring io f rui-i i « m his noblest dreams."

S ta te S u p er i n ten d en t of J-i-s t n j c lmn Wi lvm Kilcs said inSa r r a m t nt o:

" I a m de e p l y gnr xe d by Ib em u i d e r of S u p er i n ten d en t ofScfcwils M arc u s F"Mcr. Hew as n« t ivly an al ly in th ecause o f qu a l i ty ed u c at i o n .bu t nl^ a gf" d zrA de a rfne nd. Ma r c u s FovW »vas r.no u t s t a n d i n g e d uc a t o r . H isskills as an a d m i n i s t r a t o rw ? r c m a t c he d l.y hi s sensitivea w a r e ne s s of t*r h u m a n needso f children. Al l vi us. i n d u d -jn c Ih c children, - w i l l miss hisenl ightened l e a de r s hip .

"1 h o p e t ha t his mur d e r e r s• w i l l be ap p reh en d ed qu i c k l yan d bronchi swiftly \c juslioe,1 al sn h'ipe 1bat Ibe communi-ty an d scV"tls Ma r c u s Fost'TM T U -3 *«ili b"nw In m by re-. w . ninc calm a nd peaceful in

Ibis t ragic •w eek."From th e Unive r s i t y ofw h e r e Foster

n Jnis lee an d from whichb" Ttrcttttl bis master's and

decws c a m e these

B A R N E Y HILBURN

B o ar d president

ANN CORNEILLE

'What dp you say?'

SEYMOUR ROSE

Arriving at the seen*

MEL CAUGHELL

'Greatest loss...'

cator highly respected by a l lof us in P h i l a d e l p h i a . W esh a l l m i ss h i m a s a t r u s t e ean d adviser."

Universi ty of P en n sy l v an i aP r e s i d e n t M a r t i n M e y c r s t msaid. " M arc u s F os t e r w a s a •distinguished e du c a t or , a de -\ n t e d a 4 m n u s a nd t rustee ,an d a warm fn c r . d . H i s d ea this a tragtxiy fo r a l l o f u s w h »h a ve k n o w n an d w o r k e d withhim."

Mutilation,

Death of

Girl ProbedIAS A W K L E S ai'> -A

jibber an d he r bo y j n r r mh a \ e been honked fo r ir,\osli-gal lon of m u r d e r a f t e r lh "man led pnl:c» '" j-caUerc-1g r a v e s c n n l a i t o n g di- .niem-brr<--l parts, of ,hc w o m a n ' s 3-ycar-nld da u ght e r .

Th e Ttjan. Wi l l i a m Pere7," f t . said yesterday he 'ounith e girl. L is a , dead in h erbedroom on Sunday. But hegave no c vp l a na t i r a of howth e sirl die d.

P e r e r , h a d b e e n arrestedjibnut a y e a r a go in t he b eat -in c o f an o th er o f th e cbildrcnof M a r y An n Y:la!e, 2f i , - w h oh a d f n e children in all . o f f i-

"1ma s sV'C*<-d at Ih r deathof Dr. Foster," said William1^. Da y , c ha i r m a n of the boardof trustees. "He was a d**

~ - J n c n < 2 personally an d «n eda-

C < T S sGilbert Tim. 2 5. went to

T > n l i e e first an d rcprcled bisbriber bad told nim of dis-membering the bndy, bu t bedidn't V n c r w w b e l b f T to 'be-lieve hi m . The elder brothertbrn led police from j^rave toewe wer a five-mile area inth e S a r > Viilej'-TajCT^a areao f r^fth La s Angeles.

Ai^htiTilies had no report onw hy d i s m e m b e r m e n t

occnrred.


Recommended