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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 1

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THE V. S. Weather Bureau Forecast Philadelphia and vicinity: Sunny and cool Saturday morning followed by increasing cloudiness. High near 40 in the afternoon. Cloudy and cold Saturday night with a chance of snow.

Partly cloudy, windy and cold Sunday. Precipitation probability 30 percent Saturday afternoon and 50 percent Saturday night. COMPLETE WEATHER DATA ON PAGE 24 THE OLDEST DAILY NEWSPAPER IN THE UNITED STATES-FOUNDED 1771 ttmtrri CITY EDITION PUBLIC LEDGER AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER FOR ALL THE PEOPLE WFIL: AM, 560; FM 102.1; TV. Channel 6 SATURDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 7.

1968 Copyright 1968 by Triangle Publications, Vol. 279 No. 160 Daily: Hume Delivery 60 Cents Per Week TEN CENTS u. Has Meri mfie 2 rfr 1 1 Welfare Plan Agnew Vf rf I i Tells Governor! PALM SPRINGS, Dec, 6 (UPI). Gov.

Nelson Rockefeller's plan for federal financing of all welfare costs drew a favorable reaction Friday from Vice President-elect Spiro T. Agnew at the National Republican Governors Association conference. But the Maryland governor fell short of giving it outright backing of the incoming ad-; ministration of President-elect; Richard M. Nixon. Agnew met with newsmeni Lincoln U.

Professor Is Slain on Campus; Two Youths Arrested after the first formal session! of the conference of 33 GOPj governors and governors-elect I i 1 at which Rockefeller outlined his' plan for the chief executives. Although Agnew said it would; involve some very delicate inter-government relationships," he said he had generally favored By JAMES C. YOUNG and DOMINIC A. SAMA Of The Inquirer Staff Dr. Armstead O.

Grubb. 65, a language professor and setting welfare standards during the fall campaign and saw acting president of Lincoln University, was found eieiier proposal as someuung clubbed to death with a baseball bat Friday in a vacant we :1 have to look at. ihouse on the Chester countv campus. Two teenage boys AP Wirephoto by S. I.

Hayakawa, acting president, in an effort to end strike by minority students. cisco Slate College march off the campus shouting rejection of concessions offered Led by leaders of the San Francisco Negro community, dissidents at San Fran ''''1 i HOLDS PRIVATE TALKS Nixon arrived here shortly after noon to spend the day-talking privately with the governors and to address the group's formal state dinner Friday night. In his talk, Nixon said "we're going to see to it" that Americans now fighting in Vietnam can come home to a nation which can be united with progress and opportunity for all were charged with his murder. State Police at the Avondale barracks said Dr. Grubb was robbed.

Neighbors said one of the suspects, an 18-year-old farmer's son, was once turned in to the police by the victim for breaking into his home. Dr. Grubb's body was found shortly before 9 A. M. in the Schwartz Urges Black Militants Turn Down New Progress Rise in Parking; Concessions by Hayakawa (Toward Paris Fifl6S tO SID St'VX FRANCISCO, Dec.

6 (UPD Acting President S. I. Hayakawa yielded Friday Jo) RGPOffBCl Additional Pictures on Page 29. people. "If we ever had any doubt about the American spirit, you have renewed it here tonight," 1 Nixon said in proposing a toast rebuffed him.

Hayakawa's concessions were labeled and "piecemeal" by Dec. 6 (UPI). PARIS, speakers before a rally of sources iriaay re Diplomatic basement of a house next to his own home by a neighbor, Mrs. Marjorie Cole, and a friend, Mrs. Katherine (Kitty) Wilson, of Oxford.

3000 of the 18.000 students norfpH aerppment between the By FRANCIS LOR DAN and ROSE DE WOLF Of The Inquirer Staff City Council majority leader Glancey to Be the turbulent campus. United States and North Viet- to servicemen back from Vietnam who came as guests to the banquet of the association. CRISIS OF SPIRIT As the proposals were being nam on several procedural I Dr. Armstead O. GrubbJ PLANNED TO WED nrofessor.

Friends said Mrs. Wilson, a K5. (announced over the school's matters for expanded Vietnam iloudspeaker system, the mili- talks, including an arrangement tants began chanting obscenities, permitting all four parties to (They then quickly formed on speak separately on each issue. ixon saia uie ljhm 7 tor death at widow' had Planned to marry has the wealth to be the best; was tound beaten to aeam at fed. best housed naUon the Lincoln Lniverstty.

13 President Judge of New Municipal Court George X. Schwartz came out; Friday against giving out $6j parking tickets. Instead he! wants to give out $10 parking tickets. think the $6 parking fine is hisrh enough to deter il-, legal parking, particularly in: the midcity area," Schwartz! world has known and to share the commons in the heart of the Optimism grew that the campus for the rally. broadened conference could its prosperity more equally S'lORT RALLY next week.

U. S. diplomats jthan any people have even i ine Black Mudents Striking at the campus since! ar Dispatcli and Related By DONALD A. McDONOL'GH Charged with the murder were Richard Twyman, 18, and Gary Butcher, 15, both of whom live the university at Oxford southern Chester county near I the Maryland line. Frankie Twyman.

18, Richard's brother, was held as a material I witness. ai3. I r( Th att iNov. 6. had said earlier that its on Page snarea.

He said the crisis now is; viewed by observers of America: to be a crisis of the spirit. Butj Nixon said that problem too: can be overcome. Scranton Visits Nasser, Relays Nixon's Views Schwartz, incidentally, is con-i demands, including admission of sidered something of an au-! Joseph K. Glancey, counsel for the Democratic City, all Negro applicants, were non- met day with South Vietna- thoritv on illegal Darking For- Committee, will oe appointed president judge of the new negotiable. The group viewed mese officials to iron out snags to contact North jner City Controller Alexander Philadelphia Municipal Court, The Inquirer learned Friday.

Hayakawa's concessions as no and planned i Mim. nempmu compiamcvi Glancev must first be ap different in principle from those Vietnamese representatives for of previous administrations. 'more consultations Saturday. The President-elect's headquarter until he leaves for New York Saturday will be the home of Walter H. Annenberg, publisher of The Inquirer.

STUDENTS STUNNED The murder shocked the predominantly Negr university of to a vacancy on me, a half hour in lenzth. the rallv NO NEW DEPARTURE The agreement for separate CAIRO. Dec. 6 (Reuters). Board of Magistrates by was the shortest of the week." i Raymond P.

Shafer. Then he1 After twice marchint around 1000 students which Dr Gmhh President-elect Richard M.iwho was white, served for 31 fho mmc ah siaiemenis Dy uie liuitu WOULD PAY COSTS S. I will be selected bv Administra- States. South Vietnam, North lpariprs Rockefeller plan, firstiNixon expressed his deep con- years. in the front ranks, the Hong Kong Flu Restricts Visits in 40 Hospitals Carroll, tive Judge Vincent A demonstrators left Vietnam and the Vietcong's Na- because Schwartz' Cadillac was always parked ticket-less under a no-parking sign near City Hall.

NO DETERRENT The council leader said he thinks City Council should authorize the $10 parking fine because (a) "there will still be people who will take a chance on a traffic ticket for $6" and (Vil tho nrnenpet nf a heaw finp 400 of the Common Pleas Courts, the campus for the Civic Center tional Litmi0" front (NLF) made public Thursday night.jcern to tgypuan rresiuem. ne was one ot tne Dest-ioved caUs for the Federal Govern-jGamal Abdel Nasser about the professors here," said a dis-ment to assume all public situation Fridav night; traught Dan Mickens, a Lincoln fare costs shared with William1 University spokesman. "The and local governments. He SfeCial K7 students are stunned" suggested national minimumjvv- Scranton, rehable sources; state poIice said thg vjctjm head the new court. Plaza for a rally.

They crowded was sce" f' On Jan 1 the city's mazis into cars- trucks- buses-private sources as the first allied break On Jan. 1 the citj mjgis-, flnd munici jfor toe i(rmjle from its avowed policy of a Urates become municipal judges, t0 protest before Mayor two-sided conference with one oojibiivv4 wrCr a tAf a in itit Mill ivcaui luinwJtu Joseph Alioto in City Hall. said. was beaten around the head and standards for welfare benefits. will bring more business to mid-! The rampaging Hong Kong and Saigon and the other com-' nosed of Hanoi and the NLF.

STORM MEETING Gov. Ronald Reagan of Cali apart from expressing his pockets were emptied of But Profile on Pane 14 city parking lots." -m a- iiu nas accounted tor visiung 'restrictions at some 40 hospi- about S100. They placed the a fornia responded to tne pian, President-elect's concern i Court or Traffic Court. It stormed meeting of about the failure so far to xne m-uc "V'" tals and nursing homes in East-explains, will be burdened with em rennsylvania. expected niet jonn, wwium oi-ie uuncisny ir-: frnm the allies itime of the murder between 8 M.

and midnight Thursday. "We have reason to believe 'the possibility, and I say possi a in nercent increase in the jbut said he would "try to keep The latest addition to the listi P- Walsh will head the new; gents and not-geared your.side formula Picture on Page 2. my mind open" on the proposal. Traffic Court. A chief magis- coun.

a cniei niagis- gross receipts tax under coun cil's new tax plan. 'where visitors are totally cetline the talks started. bility, that the boys baited him," Gov. Tom McCall of Oregon, red or severely restricted is the trate, selected by each go uuuuiiiK on uie umversiiy oi from among the magis- Connecticut campus. MtM iuu.tt muiii State Hospital at ernor however, praised the plan as achieve a political settlement, said Lt.

Robert S. Shuck, of the "not splendid, but just basically! Scranton did not convey any I Criminal Invest'gation Division, necessary" and said it would orooosals to the Egyptian' Mrs. Cole said Dr. Grubb i 1, compromise on the parking fine took extra; trates, has run Traffic I would be willing to see a Ffid in the past. S10 fine levied in midcity and Court: There also were protest dis- Bui Diem, South Vietnam's jturbances or threats or after-jambassador to the United maths of camDus outbreaks states mrt all dav with Cvrus allow states to take the money oo; usually took his cat for a walk i' L.

HA 3 rti, BiBtKRi Washington Universitv St. R. Vance. Nn. 2 man on the U.

S. at night. $6 in other parts of the city SAVING' FOR CITY uicv die usms ikji vvcudie iiiu put it into education. TWO-HOUR SESSION The rate of the highly con-; Glancey's appointment has Louis; Wittenberg University in negotiating team, and described tagious virus infection at By- been agreed to by the Governor springfield, Bluefield Statethe session as "verv frank and TELEPHONED LATER i ccn inArmo tho rtrm AT FRUSTRATING TASK r-rnWi haH viit Tr I berrv is only 3 percent, common tne recommendation ot in Princeton. W.

nieasant." Diem said he was Schwartz explained his own practice of parking illegally i 4 11- "The most frustrating thing Pennsylvania Governor about and kft her home at I have to do is try and conduct developments in the area since 17:30 p. M. Thursday. A half iI pared to an estimated 10 to 20 William J. Green.

Democratic! and at the University of Notre making an immediate report to iiemp-, cllulir.Kc (Citv chairman: Mavor James riamo in smiih TicnH inri hct rnc in ncmp- suburbs center cuy io cuuuwiiw nKivn.nrt hot ra tiac rn I v. iwelfare programs, having un- mu j( vium.6 u. lT ma ntain the low rate, ex- h. j. late ana KepuDiican.

BLACK STUDIES delaying the opening of the ex last year six-aay war, uiejflour iater, he telephoned her sources said. I to say lie had arrived home Scranton, who arrived here -safely. aving tne taxpayers money. xie ined Df John Lansbury, di- happy people who aren't get The main concessions granted Panded talks leaaer wiuiam a. ine Inauirer learned.

eaid ne naa a pass ior me of thp medical-surzical ting enough, knowing they aren by Hayakawa were the imme- In Saigon, Vice President i iriu 1 1 getting enough and can't get! from Beirut, Lebanon, on the Shortly before 11 P. Mrs. W7ilson said, she telephoned his ground parKing garage AJ jmjjt Byberry ordered its doors' Judge Carroll, who is also and Arch sts. but passed it up, dosed jPresident Judge of Common enough," McCall said. 'third leg of his week-long, six diate establishment of a black' Nguyen Cao Ky, who will su-studies program, assignment oflpervise the South Vietnamese 11 teaching positions to the pro-! negotiating team at took because ine cuy-owneu gjiusc Agnew's response was more 'nation fact-finding tour for Because the flu is not a legal-, Pleas Court 2, has the right to i z.n it iha cnaro is Continued on Page 29, Column 2 Nixon, met Nasser at his home vT- rc7Vr ily reportable disease.

precise appoint tne neao oi tne new gram, and admission next a naro-une stance as ne pre after a two-hour session earlier with Foreign Minister Mahmoud! Riad. I cautious. He said it could involve "a reallocation of responsibility" and that "if the federal governmen picks up welfare costs, we may ask the states to Crash Kills spring of an additional 128 minority students not fully qualified to enroll. pared to depart for the French capital. "Even though negotiations 'accounts of its ravages are im- Schwartz also took a position.

ibe to determine. However, on the City Council proposal toassprted a spokesman for the levy a 5 cent tax on stock trans-, Department of Public Municipal Court in the constitutional reorganization of the magistrates courts. Glancey, 42, will head a 22- Riad was understood to haveiO CPi.m I LJlir.J. He also anounced the creation! are to open soon, it does not 4. I I VIII I I IUI I ipick up costs in other areas." "there is a great deal actions, lie buggestcu a aiiums jjeajjj, scale instead, based on the of respiratory illness prevalentlContinued on PaSe 14, Column 2 Continued on Page 14, Column 5 Continued on Page 2, Column 3 in the Philadelphia value of the stock.

J'f HiinL- ifc fair tn AifIA Hits 'Micculcss Adventures9 1 MEASURE Continued on Page 19, Column 7j a State Department of Health lofficial called the ban on vis Heart Implant Curbs Urged itors at Byberry and the other underlined Egypt's willingness to continue cooperating withj United Nations envoy Gunnar Jarring in efforts to promote peace in the region, UP TO NASSER It wras not known whether a possible resumption of diplomatic relations between the two nations broken off as a result of the 1967 war was discussed by either side. Political observers believed it unlikely that Scranton would raise the issue before Nixon took over the presidency. institutions "a sound preventative measure." The state official INVITES DISASTER Although the sessions were closed to newsmen, Agnew and other governors held a post-session news conference. In formal remarks to the governors, Agnew proposed formation of a special committee with membership from Congress, the states and the Nixon administration to promote harmony among the three segments of government. His plan was certain to get a sympathetic audience from the On The Air WFIL-RADIO 56 6:00 A.

M. Dr. Don Rose with Music Power CHARLOTTE AMAL1E, Virgin Islands, Dec. 6 (AP). Six persons died and eight others including a Woodbury, N.

physician and his wife were injured Friday night when a small chartered plane smashed into a house after take-off from the St. Thomas Island airport. Among the injured were Dr. and Mrs. David Gehring, of 177 Briarhill lane, Woodbury.

Killed were two children and a maid in the house, which burst into flames, and two passengers and said the major concentration of infection is in the Philadelphia with 'area. Several persons most of 12:00 Noon Dave Parks By VICTOR COIIN Special to The Inquirer And Washington Post CHICAGO, Dec. 6. A number of heart transplants have been "reckless adventures" by "in- them elderly and previously ill have died from complications induced by the virus. Music Power 6:00 P.

M. Long John Wade with Music Power The State official said his of WFIL-TV Channel 6 fice's "surveillance system" had-complete teams" doctors whose Continued on Page 7, Column 2 It was understood to be the 11:43 A. M. NCAA Football 'documented 41 cases of flu by "ambition exceeds" their pro- uicuu -i th nlane carrvin? American view that NasserL fessional balance the Journal laboratory tests. Most were in has been "Class or They said they would like to find a Class B.

A Class A match would signify identical twins, a something close. Class is the poorest. Harken said Friday transplants should be limited still to the "few sophisticated centers with a broad spectrum of capabilities embracing donor selection, heart surgery and rejection suppression." Such a limit, he said, would serve as a "firm restriction to future experimental adventures." Of the 98 patients who have lourisLs. Syracuse vs. Penn State (color) of the American Medical Asso ciation charged Friday.

Pearl Harbor Rite Scheduled Today at Peter Bent Brigham, leading Harvard teaching hospital, met Thursday and weighed the advisability of their doing a heart transplant. They decided against it, it was learned, because they felt there is still not enough knowledge of how the body rejects a donor heart, and how to spot and manage or prevent such rejection. Two members of Dr. Denton A. Cooley's famed Houston transplant team said they are tempted to slow their transplant rate until they can get better tissue matching between donor and patient.

Dr. Grady Hallman and Dr. James Nora, immunologist, said matching on all their 16 transplants the world's record or near Philadelphia. EXPOSURE LESSENED At Byberry most of the 101 6.00 P. Weekend Report- Its unusually critical editorial must make the first step toward normalizing relations.

Following his two-day stay in Cairo, Scranton is to visit Jed-dah, Saudi Arabia; Amman, Jordan; Tel Aviv, and was signed by Dr. Dwight E. Harken of Harvard University Roberts, Norton, Hochman (color) 7:00 P. Death Valley Days Robert Taylor, host diagnosed cases are confined to four of the hospital's 38 patient 1 rrU MAiAm'tti Ait flu PEARL HARBOR, Dec. 6 fAPV Representatives of the and Peter Benit Brigham Hospi National Conference of State Jerusalem.

He flew to Beirut uimuuisa. xue "-J tal. Boston, a leading chest sur (color) victims were saia i- ue i ct.u-i 3tt (Ujf Departments and Features Amusements Death Notices 12, 14 24 Auctions 43 Editorials 10 Bridge 22 Obituaries Business and 24, 29 Financial Real Estate 30 29 to 43 Sports 25 to 28 Classified Ads Television and reon. mt.nn i Ti iprinr iiirrt mnnsann nar enis 01 Legislative Leaders will this week after meeting homage Saturday to the Ameri- the shah of Iran in Teheran. 1 weenenu nepori jso far received 100 new hearts, Roberts Norton Hochman' hospital population of 3885 He did not say now many ot frolorT' have been inoculated with the the world's 100 transplants to i.

.1., date have been done at centers can iiguuug men wiiu uieu "JsisMaBISS 11:30 P. M. Movie Hnrmr r( ucwiv -ucvciupcu ovtuit. liorror Ol. u- lH rmalifipd sion 01 communicaDie uiseases.i" -1 LUC aua.A uu can nai uvi years ago.

'0 About 200 persons, 180 of whom are attending the Dracula" (color) said that "in communities where! those including expert immunol 15 ogists and research scientists as WFIL-FM Popular 102 increased respiratory illness is just 45 still live. The only two alive since last spring: Dr. Philip Blaiberg in South Africa, operated on Jan. 2, and Father Damien Boulogne in France, operated on May 12. The longest U.

S. survivor now: Fredi C. Everman, of Ar 16 to 19 Church News Radio 15 Women's News 23 1 i 12:00 Noon Bright New Sound 'occurring, limitation of visiting of Today Shopping Days I Sales Listings for the Week 10th annual meeting in Honolulu, will take part in the quiet, 15-minute service aboard the Arizona Memorial, which tops the sunken battleship that entombs 1100 Navy men 38 feet below. in homes for the aged ana chronically ill will lessen the Dr. W.

D. Schrack, of the divi- well as A-l heart surgeons. But another authority said: "Probably less than half have been done at such centers." Simultaneously this week: Surgeons and immunologists 6 Comics 22 Red Smith Complete Weather Television and Radio Listings Until Christmas appear on Page 43. lington, operated on at Page 27 Page 24 on Page 15 Houston July 21. Continued on Page, 29 Column 4.

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Pages Available:
3,846,583
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