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Independent from Long Beach, California • 1

Publication:
Independenti
Location:
Long Beach, California
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 FEATURES INDEX AfliuciBfits CIimUM CVS Comics Dnth Notices Editorial A-S I aside Oat B-l Radio-TV C-1S Shipping Golds Bporta a a a 1 8 Women B-3-S Variable I i Finest Morning New, LONG BEACH 12. CALIFORNIA, MONDAY. JANUARY tj, high today The Southland VOL 2Q; NO. 144 Phono HE 5-1 161 Classified No. HE 2-5959 26 PAGES N.L.B.

PARENTS, SON HEROES Rescue 5 yer in Flaming Home U. 4 A is a' s. va y- Five pn I '1 A n'Vfil mt A fS; 1 A forest fire on rugged San was the only possible due Sunday Beach residents missing since Sa Palm Springs to the Long Beach Mi another plane was reported overdue on a flight from Phoenix to Long Beach. Harold McCUntock and his wife Clara, of 1501 E. 4th St, and Kenneth a collection-agency employe lives in an apartment at the same address, have been missing since McClintock radioed a flight plan at 5r46 pm.

'Saturday, six minutes after taking off from Palm Springs. MClintock is a pharmacist at the Park Pharmacy, 4726 E. 2nd St. and his wife is employed in the purchasing division of the Long Beach Board of Education. It -was learned Sunday night that a fourth Long Beach resident probably was aboard the missing Tri-Pacer.

Long Beach City College student James M. Petersen, 22, was believed by CAA authorities to have been on the plane when it left Palm Springs. Petersen is the son at Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.

Petersen 2267 Lime Ave. CAA COMMUNICATIONS official Gordon Bechard said young Petersen accompanied the McClintock party to Palm Springs and Is believed to have started the return flight San Bernardino sheriffs officers reported Sunday night a brush fire was burning at the 800-foot level of Wilshlre Peak on San Gorgonlo Mountain. Officers were dispatched by- jeep to the area after state forestry personnel at Cherry Valley Ranger Station repented seeing a flashing flight" The flight" St I CASEY Flight OHU OBJECTS PF Mr. and Harold AF Asks More Aid in Search for Weather Plane GUAM (AP) Radio signals definitely identified ps an SOS renewed hope Sunday ot finding survivors from an Air Force weather plane that vanished wjtth its crew ot 10 Wednesday in a Pacific typhoon, 600 miles west of Guam. I Lt.

Col. Richard B. Olpey, commander of the 79th Rescue Squadron at Andersen SAir Force Base here, said thelflg-nals monitored from the jbrea where the plane was last reported were definitely an SOS. Olney said the Air Force Jiad asked that more planes bn sent from HawslL The search i area was increased to 50,000 square miles. MISSING CREW members Capt.

Albert T. Lauer Jtr 37, aircraft commander, son af Mrs. Bertha- Lauer, 9353 Orange Pica He is a gradijatf of Jordan High School and Long Beach City College. Staff Sgt. Kenneth LjTeps-loff, 23, flight engineer, son of Mr.

and Mrs. George Tepzloff, 6301 St Louis Ave Long Beach. His wife, Anne, live at 1801 E. 65th St Long 3each. The Navy said Friday listening stations at Guam.

Hawaii, Anchorage and Adak picked up faint SOS signals in thy general area of the planes disappearance. FLARES also were spotted Saturday by sailors aboard the Navys ammunition ship fire-drake. The missing WB50, ja B50 bomber adapted for weather reconnoitering, last repeated its position as it headed into the center of typhoon Ophelia, (hen raging west of Guam with winds in excess of 140 miles an hour. It has since died down into relatively minor storm. MAXTON, PkiC (1 angry, qQick-triggred Ir up Ku Klux Klan to a shootingmel Bands of armed men the highways in cgrft1 out the night stashing Klansmen whom 'the had routed from i a rally jj bursts of One diite overdue Sunday on a upr from Hickam Field to! Kwaja- Ult0 lein and the Navy sai4 if was Authorities planned officially, considered crashed at diargea against at (least sea.

The Navy said thf plane, which ceased making! reports Sunday morning and Had been hunted for hours, wotild. have exhausted its fuel supply, by this time. The Navy said the plane, car-. showed ui armed wif rying a crew of had not and pistols for thef Tri-Pacer private plar from shortly before dioed the Palmi Spring six minutes ee ding picture. INCITED (CClintock; 1301 EL her persons in a te lastwas heard i Saturday When it whicltpt had left McClinwcks wed- png' $Snow Plains FAMILY SURVIVES FIRE Five members of the William H.

Brunswick family were given shelter in the home of the Rev. Wade Campbell, pastor of the First Baptist Church, Compton. after fire destroyed the Brunswick home, 6122 White North Long Beach, early Sunday. Three children are at Harbor General Hospital recovering from burns. Family members shown are (leftf to right 1, -Mrs.

Brunswick, Dottie Louisq, Brenda Kay; and Brunswick. (Staff Photo. ers in where to round spot is about 20 miles south of lies sou from welled up out Sunday, piastre! plains, with freezing ratal sross' the na-and sheading lower Miolsslp- warnings of blockades or dan-' ray slicks were la-extending from the-Texas and Minnesoto I up taf depths rang-to three Indies rn New Mexico i the Oklahoma Western Kansas, southern Nebraska, stern Xowa Into. Port Torn by Quake TidalWave Smoke in Bedroom Awakens ather Five young children, rapped in a fuming bedroom, were rescued by their parents and an older brother shortly before fire destroyed their North Long Beach home early Sunday. s.

QUITO, Ecuador An, earthquake rocked northern! Three of chlldren Ecuador Sunday, heaving up altered burns before they wefe tidal wave that engulfed the removed through a window of Pacific port of Esmeralda. the William H. Brunswick home First reports said at least 14 at 6712 White Are. ThethrU persons were killed, 45 were1 were hospitalized at Harbor tribesmen pptist minister, hundred tri-armed with jubilantly ens (ite, their ded into ears the Klansmen the shooting es in three cars which three and one CBS) reporter I way after the Flames Kill L.B.-Widow in Apartment injured and four persons were Hospital in TorrancZ missing. The reports said 45 per AS even deeper In 'bine it measured TriAidad and Ala- Sth.

four inches eight in; the region of Cortes, drizzle and snow of the up-the storm spread plains to The glaze cov-the Dakotas, Ne and of northern Brunswick. 34, a plastic boat firm employe, said he wpsjto death Sunday while alone in awakened just before dawn by her apartment 'at 528 Cherry dren were killed when a J-U Jnt hU A' KOO ot a childrens hospital cd- th- Mae, 29. and their sJn, Cherry was found dead in ttohildrsn srsiuwt herausi- Jimmie. -M. rescued the five living room chair by a friend, yard.

Police ye aft tiled! itylve vigil a car utodPresa hetwork' speedfiig i '1 liiikued 01 iiEkjtT i Pi Big Bear Lake on the west side of Wilshlre Peak. Men were dispatched on foot to reach the blaze and determine the cause. It was possible, Snowrj officials said, it might have been set by a plane crash or by survivors- attempting to summon help. CIVIL AIR PATROL planes acrotl. searching the Big Bear area gout for the McClintock plane were notified Sunday to be on the lookout for another plane, a cream-and-gray, four seater Piper Apache which left Phoenix Saturday afternoon was due in Long Beach at 3:45 pjn.

Civil Aeronautics Administration officials in Long Beach 1. did not know SuAday night how many persons might be aboard the Apache. The CAA aid it-believed the plane, registration N1237P, wasj piloted by someone named Hughes, who is beligved to in Los Angeles. Midi Twelve Civil Air Patrol planes Sunday conducted a search for the McClintock Tri-Pacer. The search was -interrupted by darkness, but it was to be resumed this sway Extreme turbulence and high hamletj winds were reported In the air over the mountain.

The' Bechard, a flying friend ofjl McClintock, said the missing hereto Idiots habits discounted thejwli possibility of his forgetting to by notify authorities if he landed at any airport. heav Tow toil fram but been heard from since 5:05 ajn. and that a vast all-out air-sea search was being launtihed over a 75,000 square mile afes. cross-burning treated in wild the Indians moved fii ft estimated 1,000 shojs. The Indians, anigrV ever earlier Klan -said lyi.

Campbells clothing caught fire from an open heater in the living room. They said she apparently tried to open a bathroom door to get water to put out the flames but failed when the door stuck. A CUSTOMS cutter with four men sank in the heavy sea. Bodies of two victims were recovered. The governor of Esmeraldas State said losses in the center of the city were huge.

He reported the governors palace and the city hail were on the point of collapsing. a todays serii the? iSEASE Tells tgress nt presents the six artiries page sumbeing against dis-irt and circula are appearing art Month in door-to-door which will Long Beach tibn on Heart HOSPITALIZED for bums were Betty Jane. 11; Lfnjda Mae, and Danny Ray, 6. The two other children rescijed from the burning room Dottie Louise 2. and Brenda Kay, were uninjured.

Mrs. Brunswick was treated at Seaside Hospital for miijor burns and shock and released- Investigators said the fire Apparently was caused by a faulty floor furnace, whjch ignited paint and paint thinner. The Brunswick! spent night at the home of jhe Rev. Wade Campbell, pastor? of the First Baptist Church, of Compton. 12 ipes Out (Toll 100 eru The death landslide that swept mountain chaco was reported readied IOOl Iter occurred last It word of it reached Saturday.

A priest walked to a near-the -news, iide was caused by and an earthquake. THE SEARCH AREA is rectangle 500 miles long and Stared to frighten 150 miles wide from the planes nifwi trying last reported position 585 miles southwest of Oahu to Johnston Island. Taking part in the search were three escort destroyer, two Coast Guard cutters, two Navy cargo ships anil the carrier Philippine Sea, which launched 10 S2F Sentinel antisubmarine planes tq precede her to the search are(. The missing plajie was cargo plane from the 6501st Air Transport Wing, Travis Air Force Base, Calif. 1 with whites, fired the air or the'gropnd least, four persons' One faced possible riot Sheriff.

Malcolm he will seek an day against the I Cole, who fled the behind his car tires shot out. I HdXOD SAID ruc keliminaiy. rebrjiy pn ol of Curfew Ordered VALLEJO, Calif. CE -Police Sunday ordered a strict curfew for all teenagers in the wake of a week-end outbreak of vandalism by roving bands of youngsters. 3T tooetly bu jrigg diarges tag.

Jamei scene With all i he will 7 Solicitor Maurice study the possibility ing an indictment of WMS ALtyAYi BEEN WORLi BEST RIDDL1 The WM crazjr riddles. Sunday, bis a i Cancellation rapped 3, Members of Band Die WRIGHTS VI LLE, Gs. UEI Five persons including three members of the Ray Eberle band were killed in a two-car collision early Sunday and two other band members were seriously injured. Hie Georgi highway patrol listed the dead band members as singer Lucy Colosimo, 25, and her sax-playing husband, Phillip Colosimo. 31, of Wood-side N.

and Salvatore Carbone, tromobinst of East MeadowC L. I N. Y. The dead in the other car identified as Herbert Jackson, 45, and R. W.

Jackson. 27, both of Route 1. Bartow, Ga. The band members were en route to Marianna. Fla tot a performs ce at Graham Air Force base.

L.A.C. New Water Floods NEW ORLEANS un-Search-ers found parts of wreckage of a Navy anti-submarine plane that crashed in tho Gulf of Mexico early Sunday! while on a training flight. The Navy said the four reservists on board were presumed dead, The S2F Guardian whs based at nearby Callender Field and was part of the weekend warrior reserve squadrod. A Navy spokesman said the cause of the accident had not been determined. i The wreckage jri a located about 65 miles 'south of New Orleans.

.1 Airlift Shi iwAStnNC polities Jr invent 1 7V2 Donald of the ft CoLhas told this coun-djdency-in the Senate iihconmittee. In testimony made that to07 uxl are needed ta knd their fir- Defense Boss Quits in Turkey, Replaced Qul eplai Union Pacific-and LBOD wells will be injecting 200,000 barrels of water daily into the Wilmingtop field. That will total about 250,000 barrels a day including all other water floods now In action ank authorized. But engineers have estimated it will takp a million barrels a day to stop subsidsnes. That Is why the city is hopeful that the Legislature, meeting next month, will pass a measure compelling the 122 operators in tho Sold to unitizs and cooperate stopping subsidence.

No one can say lor sure how much water injection is needed to stop subsidence. It has nevqr been done in that purpose. But there is a giet deal of information on water flooding to produce (Continued on Page A-6) illistic missiles and than, available to the. i -032 Was being feany a bigger cargo rtitudes and for ptinces than any they 'declared he is war Air Force plans -Ihtermedlata tango (IRBM) launch-st, eoncroto Ihlls a step hack- on Page A-5, CoL 1) nmey (D-Okla), who complained about the last year of development work cm the Douglas C132 turbo-prop transport. Monroney, who is not a mem- at her of the subcommittee, said greafr completion of the C1J2 project, preset on which about 70 million -dollars was spent, would advance the military airlift and civilian to loq air freight programs About 10 years.

DOUGLAS AND. HIS Donald Douglas Sr.agreed tHfct the would be better able (( 1 one! A RUNAWAY PLANE gave three small children a terrifying ride Sunday In New Smyrna Beach, Fla. Page B4 ANKARA, Turkey CP Defense Minister SemtjjEfrgin resigned Sunday night and Public Works Minister Etjien Men-deres was appointed 1 1n his place, an official announcement said. jj No reaaon was given for Ergins resignation, air move ml udehers to Ingaitea Tba vi raised a A CAVITY starred in the role of a vanquished villain as a TV drama unfolded before 1,100 dentists Sunday in San Francisco. Page will it be cloudy to the ing, sunny in the with blizzards, tornados hurricanes in Answer: Todayb wepi He 'lied aout Jth blizzards and hmBanes, ft 4.

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About Independent Archive

Pages Available:
764,821
Years Available:
1938-1977