Syracuse Herald-Journal (Newspaper) - April 27, 1976, Syracuse, New York American among 21 new cardinals By PEGGY POLK VATICAN CITY Pope Paul VI today created 21 new cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church from every corner of the including one in a move that would en- large the College of Cardinals to 138. The single U.S. named was Msgr. William Wakefield 49, archbishop of and a native of He will be one of the youngest cardinals in modern Another newly named cardinal is a native of New but is now an Italian citizen apostolic nuncio in The Pontiff identified 19 of the new The Pope also nominated two more cardinals or within his whose names can be withheld until some later Vatican spokesman Federico making the expected said the consistory would be held May 24. It will bring the number of cardinals under the age of 80 and thus eligible to vote for the next Pope to 1189 Only three of the are over the age of 70. The oldest is Msgr. Boleslaw 74, Polish deacon of the priests making up the Tribunal of the Sacred Roman and the youngest is Msgr. Jaime L. 47, archbishop of Since the last consistory in March 1973, which raised the number of cardinals to 145, death has reduced membership to 117, only 99 of them under 80. With relations between the Roman Catholic Church and the Communist states of Eastern Europe slowly the Pope openly nominated as cardinal Msgr. Laszlo re- cently named successor to Cardinal Jozsef as arch- bishop of in Hungary this Like his last the Pope's new choices for cardinal came from throughout the world including four from four from the two from two from Europe and one from Associated Press ARCHBISHOP W. BAUM FLURRIES Low tonight in mid 30s Full page 8 SYRACUSE TEMPERATURES In Fahrenheit SYRACUSE I a 1 3 -j 4 fi li a 37 37 37 37 37 1.11 en 7 a.m. 8 a.m. 9 a m. 10 a.m. 11 a.m. noon 37 36 36 37 39 39 13) 121 Cli 111 14) H E R ALD JOU RN AL if iM if Associated Press United Press International Chicago Daily News Service if York Times Service FINAL NIGHT EDITION if Complete Local Coverage APRIL 27, 1976 VOL. 100, NO. Second class postage paid at N Y. Published Daily 15 CENTS Kt Per Week Deli vered Exchange chairman resigns By TERRY KIRKPATRICK NEW YORK J. Needham resigned today as chairman of the New York Stock Exchange following a highly unusual early morning meeting of the No reason was given for the JAMES J. NEEDHAM Good times forecast By PETER S. NAGAN Of Our Washington Bureau WASHINGTON ment officials and economists are increasingly convinced that the United States is ing an extended period of ness growth and relative price stability much like the first half of the 1960s. There are still potential de- that could derail this pleasant But there are also many parallels between the earlier period and the The similarities bring nostalgia for the five years from 1961 to 1965. More than the Ford tration finds in those five years a case for continued moderation in government forts to get the economy ing Until the failure to finance the war in Vietnam ended the the early in economic the happiest years of the postwar And they still offer an unmatched record of expanding output with minimal on Page The board of directors said it suggested that Needham re- main as a job that does not now to with his designated William M. The board said Needham declined the choosing pursue other business but would remain as a Special Meeting It apparently was decided sometime last night to hold the special board meeting at a.m. Normally the NYSE board meets in the afternoon and makes any forthcoming announcements after the close of the trading day at 4 p.m. resignation is on May 19. He has been chairman of the exchange since 1972, when he left his previous post as a com- missioner of the Securities and Exchange the in- dustry 49, was the first full-time chairman of the Needham said he had been discussing with the directors for several months his future plans as well as the problems which the exchange has been Future Unclear Needham's resignation comes at a time when the future is The SEC has mandated a central market for the ties industry and the exchange has to determine its role in this type of securities The exchange has said that the auction market as it exists on the floor of the exchange must be the cornerstone of the market place of the Some have maintained that stock trading could just as ily be conducted outside the exchanges by a tem that has come to be known as the on Wall Capital Crisis Needham also has been a consistent spokesman ing what he has called the cap- ital This campaign has called for tax incentives which would make investment by the public in stocks and bonds more Needham says such tax would generate more money for corporations to thus providing more Needham's career on Wall Street began as a part-time Batten has been a member of the Board of the NYSE since 1972 and is the former chairman and chief executive of J. C. Terrance the six-year-old missing all is happy to be in his mother's and Mrs. Lettice is happy to have him Happy ending Boy found The search for a six-year-old boy missing since 3 p.m. day ended when Crime Control Team officers found him this morning on his way back to Police said Terrance son of Mrs. Lettice Brown of 686 W. Onondaga apparently went home with one of his who lives in the 200 block of Midland Mrs. Brown said she grew concerned when an older boy who usually walks Terrance to and from school re- ported that the youngster was nowhere to be found at Known to Skip School She said that Terrance is walked to anand from school be- cause he has been known to skip school and not come home after Police were not called into search until 8 said Mrs. who started looking for him on her had trouble with Terrance and I assumed he was in the she The call had some 20 Crime Control Team under the direction of Sgt. Thomas scouring neighborhood garages and homes all An- other 20 men joined the search force at 6 this Convinced Not to Worry Eddie the boy's said Sgt. Schafer had him convinced not to saying that in most similar cases the child turns up at a Sgt. Schafer stayed with the Browns all according to Mr. Terrance morning finally was spotted by CCT officers Daniel Erwine and Gary White on Seymour and W. Onondaga on his way back to Police this morning questioned the father of the friend with whom Terrance went who said he assumed Terrance's parents knew where he Unaware of Search The whom police did not said he hadn't been aware that a search was going on for the boy because he didn't own a television and hadn't heard Terrance could not say this morning why he hadn't called his parents to let them know where he Chill continues When it comes to nothing beats the tral New York Chilly temperatures and scattered snow flurries are ex- to continue tonight and There is a 40 per cent chance of rain mixed with snow the overnight low temperature should be in the compared to a seasonal normal of 51. Tomorrow should bring mostly cloudy skies with the daytime high near 45, ing to National Weather vice The extended outlook for the week calls for periods of sunshine on with skies clouding up again for the weekend and bringing a good chance of rain on Temperatures for the week should range from the to the upper 50s. Women's gains limited so far WASHINGTON There are more women than men in and the women live But females have a long way to go before pulling even with males in jobs and Such are the findings in one of the most comprehensive reports ever compiled on the status of American The the first of its kind by the Census shows social and economic trends among It shows women comprise 51.3 per cent of the tion of There are 5.6 million more women By 1373, aromen could expect to live age of nearly eight years longer than compared with 3.5 years longer in 1930. The figures show the number of women in the labor force nearly doubled between 1950 and 1974 to 35.9 while the number of men increased by only one- fourth to 57.3-million. But the income differences between men and women remain substantial the median ings for women were in 1974, compared with for The report shows that among people ages 25 to 29, proximately 77 women had completed at least four years of college for every 100 men hi 1975, compared with 66 women for 100 1950. Senate report FBI identifie 431 Soviet spies By MILES BENSON Of Our Washington Bureau WASHINGTON The FBI at least 431 Soviet intelligence officers who were on permanent in the United States as recently as last the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Activities dis- closed last The true number of Soviet intelligence agents in this country is probably much said the Senate panel headed by Sen. Frank The extent of the Soviet spy threat and the problems of countering it arc part of the nal report of the Senate com- Extensive Espionage espionage activities of the Soviet Union and other Communist nations directed against the United States are extensive and the committee In some the tee efforts by U.S. cies to combat foreign espionage went too far and led to abuses against American citizens which the Senate com- was created to gate in 1975. Drawing on testimony by FBI and from a previously classified CIA report on the same the Church panel More than 40 per cent of the Soviet officials on duty in the United States in 1975, had been as members of the KGB or the two main Soviet civilian and tary intelligence Soviet Students Of 400 Soviet students at- tending American universities in the past one out of four was an intelligence And more than 100 can students attending schools in the Soviet Union the target of Soviet recruitment foreign gence agents have attempted to recruit executive branch personnel and congressional staff The CIA included as an appendix to the Senate committee said the main targets of Soviet gence efforts other than U.S. government officials are members of and political ties with access to government and other among on Page Top court issues tough drug ruling WASHINGTON A divided Supreme Court ruled today that government agents can supply suspected drug dealers with then ar- rest them when they try to sell it back to undercover Three justices said that if he defendant was predisposed toward selling illegal drugs he could not avoid conviction even if law officers pated in a key element of the The court decision coincided with President Ford's call to Congress for a stiff new law calling for imprisonment of dealers in hard drugs and ter cooperation among tic and foreign authorities in cracking down on narcotics Affirm Conviction Two while voting to affirm the conviction of a St. said that un- der more extreme circum- stances the conduct of law of- might be so offensive as to bar Three other justices dis- sented from the court's ity ruling and said in this case was beyond permissible The Charles was found guilty of distributing heroin supplied by a government He sold the drug to another government He received a five-year suspended Decision Upheld The trial judge refused to in- struct the jury that if it found Hampton was selling narcotics supplied by the government he must be The decision was upheld by the U.S. Court of Hampton admitted he was predisposed toward selling illegal but that police enticement by providing the drugs and then arresting him was so extreme he should be Justice William H. quist cited a 1973 ruling that the defense is available only if the accused had no predisposition to com- mit the crime If lice acted beyond their Rehnquist Hampton's only remedy was to file a civil suit and his nal conviction must Justices Concur Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Byron R. White concurred with Justices Lewis F. Powell Jr. and Harry A. Blackmun voted to affirm Hampton's but disagreed with quist in saying there could be circumstances in which police involvement in the crime was so great it could be a Justices William J. Brennan Potter Stewart and good Marshall Carter fights to keep lead IN GOOD Mrs. Sylvia wife of West zoo holds brown bear she has raised in her home since the cub was abandoned by its The cub weighed just a mere pound when it became an but now weighs a 20 It will be returned to the soon as it is AP T PITTSBURGH Jimmy Carter today battled traditional voter apathy and wintry Pennsylvania hoping to bury the presidential dreams of Henry Jackson and Morris Udall in this state's crucial Early reports showed light voter turnouts among vania's nearly 2.8 million tures ranged from the low 30s with occasional snow flurries in the Pittsburgh area to the mid 40s under cloudy skies in Carter the Democratic presidential frontrunner and winner of six primaries to date said he needed a big turnout to counter Jackson's ment by labor and the state's political That port was partly designed to preserve noncandidate Hubert Today's chuckle If nobody the troubles you've seen yon don't live in a small b Humphrey's chances in event of a deadlocked Election officials in the in- Monongahela River Valley in western sylvania said a few hours after the polls opened at 7 a.m. that the turnout was the lightest in Today's features Page Amusements Bridge Business Classified Comics Editorials 15 Food Section Junior Set Letters to Editor 19 Obituaries 22 Sylvia Radio Senior Forum Television Wilson 24 I TODAY'S PICTURES