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The San Francisco Examiner from San Francisco, California • 18

Location:
San Francisco, California
Issue Date:
Page:
18
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Page Mar. 27, 1974 Teachers say no; new vote tonig .4 4- From Page 1 prised at the AFT action, said, "We're proceeding on the assurance that the Labor Council will not support the AFT. The fact that the CTA has accepted is a good sign. After a day of short talks and long caucuses yesterday, the negotiators ended their meeting looking cheerful and optimistic. Crowley said he thought an agreement had been reached, but AFT President James Ballard hinted at his 13 V0 sit I if.

r. displeasure when he said, "I'm not tickled to death with 4 the proposal." ml ht i AF7- lie aaaea, we started me striKe ana i guess we cna it." Crowley offered a new counter-proposal which school district negotiator Lucy Cannarozzi presented at an executive session of the full board. lift nun A mmi mt i rrw i I i I'M Striking "A MILLION FOR YOUR THOUGHTS" Katheryn Brosch is pensive on learning of her big win Widow wins a million United Press International WYANDOTTE (Mich. A widow living on Social Security benefits has won $1 million in the Michigan Lottery's 10th millionaire drawing. Mrs.

Katheryn Brosch, 66, of Allen Park said yesterday she would split the prize evenly with the daughter who bought the ticket for her. She said she has been living on Social Security payments since her husband died a year ago. She said she would recommend acceptance only on condition that both teacher groups agreed the strike would end. Based on that condition, Dr. Hopp announced after the meeting, "We believe we have reached an agreement." He said the final package contains "elements of compromise," and that Crowley's proposal of a $1000 raise for all teachers had been helpful.

However, it was learned that the school board's final offer was a 6 percent across-the-board raise, coupled with a $585 bonus for teachers passing their 18th year with the district. An across-the-board percentage raise benefits long time teachers. The $1000 per teacher offer was more helpful to the district's newer, younger teachers. The 18-year bonus is in addition to the $585 a year bonus teachers receive after their 15th year with the district. The 10-point package also included: A 12 percent raise for substitute teachers who now make $39.25 a day and a promise of a special committee to P7J offer today Examiner photo by Gordon Stone and reject settlement SLA statement Weed hopes for Police tracing Janet's last trip develop a better phone-in system.

Expansion of the bilingual and English as a second language programs by 26 teachers and formation of a committee to study improvement of the programs. Addition of 10 teachers to the special education program and formation of a committee to study improving that program. Formation of committees to study improvement of six other programs, including reading and mathematics. Addition of 10 days of vacation, five holidays and two sick leave days for Children's Center teachers. Dr.

Hopp accused the teachers of not giving any concessions the school district asked for. They requested changes in the calendar year so teachers could get in-service training, more movement of teachers for program benefits, a a revised grievance proce Steven Weed, fiance of kidnaped Patricia Hearst, said he expects that two imprisoned members of the Symbionese Liberation Army would be allowed to make some sort of public statement this week. The two, Joseph Remiro and Russell Little, are being held on charges arising from a Concord police shootout and the assassination of Oakland School Superintendent Marcus Foster. In its last communique, the SLA asked that Remiro and Little be allowed to make a nationally televised statement. Weed said in a KQED-TV interview last night that he thought the two men might issue a statement although not in the form of a television interview with dure.

"There was no movement in any of these directions, but we have conceded everything," Dr. Hopp declared. However, the teachers were asking for a 15 percent raise and an equal raise for paraprofessionals, which they did not receive. Ballard has led his 2500 union members in a strike which effectively crippled The City's schools. Although district officials managed to keep each school's front door open, in most cases, little education was going on.

As many as half the 4600 teachers stayed out of their classrooms and up to 77 percent of the children stayed home as the on-again-off-again negotiations proceeded slowly. Attendance of both teachers and students increased slightly yesterday. There were 24,706 students (33 percent) in class and absent, while 57 percent of the teachers (2590) showed up. ienate leans to impeachment jury, meanwhile, began hearing evidence in the Foster case, and the volunteer director of the People In Need food program left for the state of Washington. A.

Ludlow Kramer said that with Monday's distribution of about $1 million worth of high-quality food the PIN program was complete except for disburse-men of what remains in PIN stockpiles. Kramer said this will be distributed in the next few days to Northern California Indians and residents of Chinatown here. The $2 million food program was financed by Hearst and the William Ran-dolph Hearst Foundation with procedures in the last distribution changed to meet SLA criticisms. U.S. official in Mexico is kidnaped From Page 1 official" had been abducted and that he was canceling a planned trip to Mexico this weekend because "my visit there might be misconstrued." It was generally assumed that the kidnapers, presumed to "be terrorist extremists, would make demands on the Patterson family and the Mexican government.

This posed a possible major dilemma for the Echev-erria administration which since last October has had a policy of no negotiations with terrorists. Mexican Attorney General Pedro Ojeda Paullada then anounced that "past experiences in various nations of the world show that this kind of crime simply multiplies if blackmail is strong-willed girl, had moved out of the Taylor family home in Atherton. She was working as a ship dispatch teletype operator for Oceanroutes, of Palo Alto, and living in a rented cottage in La Honda with her boyfriend, Russell Bissonnette, 24, a Canada College student. Miss Taylor was one quarter away from being graduated at Canada. Sunday evening, Miss Taylor was visiting two former classmates from Menlo-Atherton High School, Susan Ernst and Deborah Adams, at the Adams home on Ger-ona Road near Junipero Serra.

Shortly before 7, Miss Taylor said she had to feed her two Dobermans at La Honda. She left, intending to hitch a ride on Junipero Serra. The Taylors had given her a car, but she had traded it for another that had broken down. She had been hitchhiking or using Bissonnette's car for several weeks. Monday morning, Bissonnette called Mrs.

Adams, expressing concern that Miss Taylor had not come home. That afternoon Mrs. Adams saw a newspaper story about the body on Sand Hill Road and told police it might be Janet. The Taylor family identified the body Monday night. Investigators saw similarities between the slaying of Miss Taylor and that of Leslie Marie Perlov, 21, a librarian found strangled on wooded Frenchman's Hill near Stanford on Feb.

16. 1973. She too was barefoot and wearing a raincoat. The sites are about two miles apart. Officers from San Mateo and Santa Clara counties planned to meet tomorrow to assemble parallel details.

Board touchy on promoting the hrass teachers line up to vote in two days. Despite the efforts of Patricia's father, Examiner editor Randolph A. Hearst, two judges Superior Court Judge Sam Hall in Martinez and Municipal Court Judge Stafford Buckley in Oakland denied permission for a TV appearance. Weed said he was depressed over the time it has taken to arrange for a TV appearance, and added that Remiro and Little are "anxious that Patty be returned safely for their own sakes as well as her's." He said he had talked to attorneys for the pair and gathered that Remiro and Little don't have a specific plan for Miss Hearst's release but just want to talk about the kidnaping in general terms. bet's said, senators have ranged from being verbose to dropping many private hints on their attitudes.

There are few surprises among those leaning toward a guilty vote, either on the Democratic or Republican side. One exception is Sen. James L. Buckley, the New York Conservative Republican, who has publicly stated only that the President should resign because of the crisis Watergate has precipitated. Buckley, most of the staff members said privately, believes that conviction would be more healthful for the country and for the GOP.

The key to the President's dilemma, according to most of the staff members, lies in the defection of prominent conservatives who are now swinging toward a vote for conviction. They include Baker, Bellmon, Brooke, Cook, Dole, Gurney, McClure and Stafford. Baker and Gurney are both members of the Senate Watergate Committee and Democrats (37) Abourezk (S.D.) Bayh (Ind.) Biden (Del.) Chiles (Fla.) Church (Idaho) Clark (Iowa) Cranston (Calif.) Eagleton (Mo.) Gravel (Alaska) Hart (Mich.) Hartke (Ind.) Haskell (Coio.) Hathaway (Maine) Hughes (Iowa) Humphrey (Minn.) Inouve (Hawaii) Jackson (Wash.) Ke'nnedy (Mess.) Mansfield (Mont.) McGovern (S.D. Mclntrye (N.H.) Metcalf (Monf i Metzenbaum (Ohio) Mondale (Minn Montoya (N.M.) Moss (Utah) Muikie (Maine) Nelson (Wis.) Pastore (R.l.) Fell (R.l.) Proxmire (Wis.) Ribicoff (Conn.) Stevenson Symipcton (Mo.) Talmadge Tunney (Calif.) Williams (N Republicans Brooke (Mass Buckley Case (N.J.) Hatfield (Or.) Javits (N.Y.) Mathias (Md.) Percy (III.) Weicker (Conn.) C'lassil'k-aiion (1i famdick (N.C.; Of the failure so far to obtain permission for a TV appearance Weed said: "Prison officials don't include Patty's safety as a most important part of their interest." Commenting on the offer of the Hearst Corporation to provide another $4 million in two installments if Patricia is released unharmed, Weed said he was disappointed that the date for the second installment had been delayed until next year. He said that "engendered the idea they were trying to avoid losing that money.

That isn't the Weed closed his interview by saying: "I want to tell Patty how much I miss her." An Alameda County grand have seen the evidence, the staff members say. Besides, they are said to believe that the President's troubles run so deep that removal, either by conviction or resignation, is the only wray the office and the Republican Party can be saved. Brock, according to leading Republican staff members, is thinking more in political terms. He is chairman of the GOP Senate Campaign Committee and believes that only with Vice President Ford assuming the presidency can the party avoid a debacle in November. Other senators facing tough re-election campaigns also talk in terms of being able to win only if Ford becomes president.

Nearly all the staff members interviewed cited a number of cautions against drawing firm conclusions. Another conclusion drawn from the survey by several staff members was the thin quality of Nixon's support from Southern Democrats on whom he has counted for support. Only three could be found firmly in his corner: James Allen Harry F.Byrd Jr. (Va.) and John C. Sten-nis Listed as question marks were James 0.

Eastland Sam J. Ervin Jr. (N.C), Ernest F. HoUings (S.C). Johnston, Russell B.

Long John L. McClel-lan (Ark.) and John J. Sparkman Alameda base picket line Twenty Teamsters Union members set up a picket line today outside the east "tie of the Alameda Naval Air Station to protest continued deliveries of Coors beer. Several drivers refused to cross the line. By Don West The last four miles in the life of strangled Janet Ann Taylor, 21, daughter of for-m Stanford University athletic director Chuck Taylor, are being traced in an effort to find her killer.

Miss Taylor was last seen at 7:05 p.m. Sunday, hitchhiking at Junipero Serra Boulevard and Mayfield Road west of Stanford. Her body was found four miles away by a milkman at 10:30 the next morning beside Sand Hill Road near Manzanita Drive and the entrance to Searsville Lake. She had been strangled by hands but was not sexually molested, San Mateo County sheriff's assistant Eugene Stewart said. Death occurred before 3 a.m., when the rain began, because the ground under the body was dry.

Police want help from anyone who saw the girl after 7:05 Sunday. She was dressed in a black rain jacket, heavy gray turtleneck sweater and green bell-bottom corduroy trousers. Miss Taylor, dark blonde, was carrying an Indian-style shoulder bag and wearing an Indian silver and tur-qoise bracelet. Both are missing. Her body was clothed except for missing shoes.

Sheriff's Inspector Rudy Siems-sen said one shoe was found a quarter mile east of the body on Sand Hill Road, and the other shoe and a coat belt a short distance east of that. Siemssen pictured a struggle in the car, the girl strangled and pitched into the cutbank. After that, it was theorized the killer sped away toward the 280 freeway, throwing out the victim's belongings as he drove. Miss Taylor, described by friends as an independent, tenko, chief of the Middle East desk at the Soviet Foreign Ministry. Gromyko, who is edging slightly away from a lifetime of public impassive-ness, had a small joke for the two dozen American and Russian reporters and photographers invited to Spasso House, the spacious yellow and white U.S.

ambassador's residence. Asked by one how the talks were "going, he replied: "Ahead." At the heart of the talks is an attempt by Kissinger to manage w-hat he calls a "conceptual break-through" in the deadlocked negotiations at Geneva on limiting the two powers' offensive From Page 1 in the survey as question marks. 17 13 Republicans and four Democrats are tilting slightly toward a vote for conviction The 13 Republicans are Howard H. Baker Jr. J.

Glenn Beall Jr. (Mil, Henry Bellmon Bill Brock Marlow W. Cook Robert Dole Pete V. Do-menici (N.M.), Peter H. Dominick Edward J.

Gurney James A. McClure Bob Pack-wood Richard S. Schweiker (Pa.) and Robert T. Stafford The Democrats are Lloyd Bentsen Assistant Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd (W.Va.), Howard W.

Cannon (Nev. and J. Bennett Johnston Jr. Nearly all senators have taken the public position that they will be required to sit as jurors in a Nixon trial if the House impeaches him and therefore it would be inappropriate to comment now. Privately, the staff mem- against the promotions.

"This district has continued to add to the administrative ranks so they are now three times what they were seven years ago," Dolson said, echoing the remarks last week of state schools chief Wilson Riles. Board member David Sanchez complained, meantime, that five schools which had applied for special state funding have been told they are ineligible, and blamed the failure on bad information given to the schools by administrators. Critical stage in Moscow arms talks How they stand Strike-related criticism of the San Francisco school district administration a top-heavy touched a few nerves at a board of education meeting yesterday. Although an attempt to squelch the promotion of three district administrators failed by a 4-3 vote, board members clearly were concerned about increasing the district's hierarchy. Though he said it was "without any prejudice to the persons involved," board member Lee Dolson urged his colleagues to vote that President Nixon could sign at a Moscow summit in early summer.

Kissinger told reporters at a luncheon for Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gro-myko that negotiations "are going satisfactorily." said the break in sessions allowed the Soviets to have "their own internal discussions." United States officials said they expected Kissinger to leave tomorrow. Kissinger, toasting Gro-myko, said the United States and the Soviet Union were committed to a improvement in their relations. "They will strive to maintain in all parts of the world a policy of cooperation even Chicago Sun-Times WASHINGTON Here is how senators are leaning on the question of conviction of President Nixon, according to a poll of Senate staff members. Leaning Against Conviction Leaning Toward Conviction Democrats.

(31 Allen (Ala.) Byrd (Va.) Stfe'nms (Miss.) Republicans (16) Aiken (Vt.) Bartlett (Okla.) Fong (Hawaii) Hansen (Wvo.) Hruska (Neb.) Roth (Del.) Scott (Pa.) Scott (Va.) Taft (Ohio) Thurmond (S.C.) Tower (Tex.) Young (N.D.) Bennett (Utanj Cotton (N.H.) Curtis (NeD. Fannin (Ariz.) Question Marks nuclear weapons. The second leading item is the Middle East. Kissinger is seeking Soviet cooperation in working out a separation of Syrian and Israeli forces in the Golan Heights. He is due to begin a round of talks with Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan on Friday in Washington.

A Syrian mission will negotiate through Kissinger beginning April 10. The Soviets have publicly and privately been urging Syria to continue its demands for an Israeli withdrawal from all former. Arab territory. Kissinger wants Moscow to help persuade the Syrians to defer the full range of their goals to a further round at the Geneva peace conference. i temporary obstacles might arise," he said.

Gromyko said in response that agreements concluded by Brezhnev and Nixon at the 1972 and 1973 summits, including an initial restriction of weapons, created "a truly solid foundation" for broadening and improving U.S.-Soviet relations. Gromyko arrived about a half-hour late for. the lunch at the residence of U.S. Ambassador Walter Stroessel, and four senior Soviet offi-cials, including Defense Minister Andrei A. Grechko, a Politburo member and "hard-liner," did not appear at all, The other absent guests were Vasily Kuznet-sov, first deputy foreign minister, and Mikhail Sy- Associated Press MOSCOW There were indications that talks on a new Russian-American nuclear arms treaty were reaching a critical stage late today as Leonid Brezhnev and Henry Kissinger resumed negotiations.

The Soviet Communist party leader and American Secretary of State met after Brezhnev attended a morning emergency meeting of the Communist party's ruling Politburo. A high Soviet source said the two sides had already reached agreement on several points and were "talking about numbers" of weapons, a key element in their search for a nuclear arms limitation agreement Republicans (18) Baker (Tenn.) Beall (Md.) Beilmon (Okla.) Brock (Tenn.) Cook (Ky.) Dole (Kan Domenici (N.M.) Goldwater (Aru.) Griffin (Mich.) Gurney (Fla.) Helms (N.C.) McClure (Idnho) Packwood (Ore.) Pearson (Kan.) SciiWtiker (rd.i f-taflord (Vt.) SievQhb Democrats (17) Bentsen (TC.) Bible (Nev.) Byrd (W. Va.) Cannon (Nev.) Eastland (Miss.) Ervin (N.C) Fulbripht (Ark.) Hollings (S.C.) Huddlpston (Ky.) Johnston (La.) Long (La.) (Wash.) McClellrfn McGee (Wyo Nuno (Gl.) Randoloh (W. Va.) SparKman (Ant I.

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