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The San Bernardino County Sun from San Bernardino, California • Page 12

Location:
San Bernardino, California
Issue Date:
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12
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imjn)-r" i'rr Mirth 4, 1772 p. A THE 5UN-TELEGRAM Heart Victims Learn To Speed, Slow Beat Nixon Aide Challenges Share the Wealth Idea A film Tit. ar.Mttjl' UtttL AMWymar- Richardson said any attempt "to shut, off the prospect, of growth while radically redistributing income" might, require government of enormous power and complexity. lie urged political scientists and politicians to "gel at it." ami seek ways to stabilize population and production without destroying liberty in the process. The book, called "The.

Limits of is officially due for publication Monday. It describes attempts by a group of young economists and mathematicians at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to determine the future of the world's population under various possible patterns of growth. The MIT computer study concluded that continued growth of either popula- V.v MAN r.i:JAMi WASHINGTON (AP) -Participants 1n a conference nn 1 ho limits of growth repeatedly said that society must drastically redistribute its wraith and niter ils life stylos or face a disastrous collapse. The conference Thursday, attended by d'vons of figures prominent in environment and business, opened public debate over a new book predicting the collapse or industrial civilization unless population and material growth are soon baited. Taking this controversial prediction in grim earnest vas l.lliot Richardson, secretary of health, education and welfare." who said: "the minds of the people are unprepared to accept the political leadership that these conclusions would compel." The green light signals the patient to speed up his heart rate, the red to slow it down, and the yellow to maintain the speed achieved.

When the heart loses the altered speed, an electrocardiograph machine automatically switches the signal so that the patient knows he must change the speed. Bleecker said some patients learn to control the rate quickly, others require 10 to 15 training sessions. "We are teaching people to use the nerves to the heart," Bleecker said, adding that these are not ordinarily used. The patients in the study all were on digitalis, a drug used to control heart rates, and were able to alter the rates up to 20 beats a minute. It is necessary, the researcher said, to teach patients both to speed and to slow the heart in order for them to be able to do either.

Bleecker said research is being conducted in Boston to teach patients to decrease blood pressure. The Baltimore research now also involves conditioning patients without lights. Ultimately, If patients can be taught successfully to control their heart rates the risk of fatal heart attacks might be reduced. C. G.

McDAMEL AP Science Writer CHICAGO, 111. (AP) A group of heart patients in Baltimore have been trained to speed up and slow down their own heart rates by watching lights. The research was described yesterday at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology by Dr. Eugene R. Bleecker, who is affiliated with the gerontology research center of Baltimore City Hospitals.

Bleecker has worked with Dr. Bernard T. Engel, who has done earlier work in training patients to control their heart rates through this method. The report described work with six patients three men and three womenranging in age from 28 to 61 who had a heart condition known as atrial fibrillation. The goal of the research was to determine if patients could learn to control their own irregular heart beats, a condition now treated with drugs.

So far, the patients have been directed to speed up and slow down their heart rates only while being supervised. They lie semi-reclined in a hospital bed. At the foot of the bed is a box on which are mounted three lights in the manner of a traffic signal green, yellow, red. AP Wlrephoto Air Pollution Control Cosl For Industry 12 Billion Hon or industry must lead eventually to disaster. Dennis Meadows, leader of the MIT study group, said in a news conference the continuation of present growth rates would, if unchecked, cause population to overshoot the capacity of the.

world to sustain it. If that happened, he said, the population level worldwide would plunge sharply within the space of a single lifetime, cither because of starvation, or perhaps through wars over dwindling resources, or epidemics brought on by unbearable pollution. The report is already drawing criticism questioning its assumptions, its mathematical formulas and the admittedly incomplete data it uses. Hut most conference participants seemed to agree with Meadows that "our current conclusions are unlikely to he reversed by future research." Many participants said the book's global approach failed to display the contrast between the wealthy, industrialized nations and the poor underdeveloped ones who are pinning their hopes for a decent standard of living on continued growth. "1 think even technically, assuming some freedom, it would be almost impossible to have equilibrium (of population and production) with a grMt degree of inequality," said India's Anibasador L.

K. Jha. Philippe Dc Seynes, a United Nations representative, said growth must be allowed to continue long enough for the poor nations to raise their standard of living. "It's a question of timing," said De Seynes. "When do you start stopping?" Meadows agreed with them but said continued growth for half a century would still leave many areas of the world with per-capita incomes of only $21)0 compared with the $1,800 level of Western Kurope and $3,000 level or the United States today.

He said the promise of growth has been used "to defer important political demands Now it is necessary to provide some realistic allernaiives to growth, allowing people to satisfy their basic needs. "I think we're coining' to realize," said Meadows, "thai the, stability of global systems hinges on distribution." Soviets Retire Some Older Missiles, But Not ICBMS LT. GEN. T1KKA KIIAN 1971 photograph Bhutto Purees Top Officers New York Times News Service RAWALPINDI. Pakistan President Zulfiker Ali Bhutto of Pakistan purged yesterday the two military officers most responsible for putting him in power last December.

He accused them of "Ronapartic" actions. At the same time, Bhutto warned he would not tolerate breaches in law and order and implied he would crack down on some forms of political opposition in "the higher interest of the ration." Lt. Gen. Gul Hasan Khan was ousted as acting commander-in-chief Pakistan's armed forces and Air Marshal Abdul Rahim Khan was removed as commander of the air force. Lt.

Gen. Tikka Khan, known abroad mainly for his ruthless military suppression of Pjengali nationalists in East Pakistan last year, was promoted to full general and made chief of staff of the army yesterday. Command of the air force was transferred lo M. Zafir Chowdery, who war promoted to air marshal. Chowdery had been serving as general manager of Pakistan's civilian airline.

Peaee Corps Lacks Funds WASHINGTON (AP) The Teace Corps said yestereday a lack of congressional funding will require it to begin calling home some of its 8,000 volunteers unless emergency financing can be found in or out of the Clean Air Amendments of HITO. KPA pointed out. Ihc wide discrepancy between this year's estimates and those in last year's annual report. It has raised ils five-year estimate of the clean-air costs for incinerators, power plants ami factories from $0.5 billion to $17.2 billion, mainly because or wider geographical coverage in the new report. The estimate of antipollution costs on cars and trucks has jumped even more steeply, from $1 billion to $24.7 billion, because of "the higher expected cost of emission controls to meet the more stringent standards" required by the 11170 act, if said.

KPA said the aggregate price Impact of private investment, in air pollution control is about a one per cent increase but indicated heavier impact in a few major industrial sectors. Over half of the increase would be due to a II) per cent rise in the price of new automobiles, it said. "Other key price increases projected are -1 per cent for electric power, and per cent for iron and steel, cement and sulfuric acid," it said. WASHINGTON (AT) The 1 ironmeulal Protection A estimated esterday that industry must invest sonic $12 billion over Hie next, five years in air pollution controls. This is foiir times the KPA estimate of only a year ago.

l.PA said the investments in air pollution alone would force substantial price increases on new cars, electric power, iron and steel, cement, and acid. Consumer prices in general would be increased about, one per cent by the air pollution measures, with middle income groups feeling Hie greatest impact, it said. The agency is preparing a separate report on the economic impact of controls on water pollution, solid waste, noise and aesthetic blight. P.y KPA said, industry would be spending some $12 billion a year on air pollution alone, but the reductions in pollution would yield benefits worth more than $11 billion a year to society. The estimates appeared in a report to Congress on "The economies' of Clean Air," required annually by 'he over the past five years.

Friedheim said. The variable range SS-11 may be adjusted to strike targets in either the United States or Western Europe. Its deployment was first reported by the Pentagon a year ago. Phased out have been about 140 older SS-4 and SS-5 missiles, with ranges of 1,000 to 2,000 miles within range of either European or Asian targets. The Soviets have about 1,500 intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of hurling nuclear warheads at the United States.

These include about 220 vinlage SS-7 and SS-8 ICBM's, none of which have been retired. The U.S. retired 17.1 of its liquid-fuel Atlas and Titan ICBMs in the mid lOfiO's as the more advanced Minuteman ICBlI was deployed. WASHINGTON (AP) The Soviet Union has retired more than 100 medium-and intermediate-range ballistic missiles in recent years as it deployed newer weapons, the Defense Department reported yesterday. Unlike the United States, the Soviet practice had been to leave its older weapons in place ven while installing newer missiles.

But now, possibly because of the expense of keeping these weapons on the line, the Russians are phasing out a number of their earlier generation missiles. "It appears to be a forced modernization decision on their part," said spokesman Jerry W. JYiedheim. The older weapons are being replaced with the variable-range SS-11 missile, of which about 120 have been deployed Mumai Funds Stocks Gain in Heavy Trading tr tirini ff nv. New lrk (On) DelAWAH l.rwlh 4 0 5 11 lull' IhV l.l oi to Bdlnnc 16.BJ lo S.I 1011 lt.

II .1 ID tfl u. 13. Ml Inrom 4.19 4.54 11 71 trst Ut 3 .19 84 0.M Trst 1161 1371 -oHnwino 's liiuur; hid And aed Deist p. Irei, on Mutual Del imrt quoted by Delia tht NASD Inc. daVegh Co fndav DodaCx S't-t-UXITY f-Ui: 7 07 0 ltti Full in ll) 1 o1.

fi I ivv r-unn v.u v.i i Invml 44 1JS Ulltt 11.99 IS I nfln win -v 7-'V 7.. Varrh J. 107 OtPxnl Er KEYSTONE Am In, lO.Jv Tl.M A herrln i ju i.ou i. ru o. FU 1013'mni Dud I 1 I8.n.l in n7 lo an ut Business ADMIRALTY: Orvf Iv H1 70 7-J'0 Shi ft 17 HA I SS an on tusl B4 V09 Snlinl 10 tiA Kl 8.5? 9.l4s.-ntiv 169' 18.

.19 Kussian Chess Cliauip Warned: Play or Forfeit LGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) The president of the International Chess Federation said yesterday that world champion Boris Spassky must forfeit his title if lie refuses to accept the sites selected for his match with Bobby Fischer. The statement by Dr. Wax Euwe was reported from Moscow by the Yugoslav news agency Tanjug. Spassky protested the decision, saying the climate of Belgrade was too hot. 7 20 7,89 ijhmriik 8.V 8 II iw i onmiiiK on 7 RA Pol Mi mini t.M Inrom 4 EATON Iisuni II MM HOWAHO: rLuVt ArlvuM 5.7(1 Bali Id 10.20 11.

15 Aetna Pd II 4" 40 l.wlli I- 10 41; VS Alnliiip IS I.I 15.13 lmni 6 1 7.J1 i SI 22 00 24 11 SHANEHLD GRP 9 Ofl 10 94 i 4.71 5.1 S4 6 6.1 7.27 i. nti or 7.64 8. .15 I ntipi- 7.64 8 .15 cirr I Ift Fd 6 56 7.17 Mai or 9.09 9 91 Ipgal I. 6 69 7.JI 15 01 16 44 5. '5 6 29 7.5 8 2R II 11 17.7 Id f.

44 S7 MWi.ll 1 ll.MIJ.V4 v0r, AlKMlr USHI4M) SUk rd 14. JB 15.72 0rti Alpha fd 14 96 lo J5 Iw-isld 1.S.46 16.90 Knirkr Anun 7 bo 7 NO 79.S0 Knkr C.lh Ani fura 1196 130; I qlv lr 10.08 1 1 .05 F-d 13.11 V. i t-o 1 in. i 7 99 8 71 cut- OL.7U rc Fd 12 .00 A-n I olv 09 ttl EK MOMT OKF; Lr. AM FXPRESS l(tv I'l 4 'B r.

nd Am 9 0S 9.9V iblv Trt 17 ni ii int.njv i wj- 'i Illilllll 19 20.90 I7. J' Invrsl 12 12 13.25 "5, 5 Sh Prn W.oj 20 03 19 9,1 ni '-rt "-4S 17 17 90 14 10 10 11 70 bqret (.1 14 15.74 Jtf Inlv 9 si 10 I Hun rt 21 3B Lllo Gi "00 OMlm.MO 7 48 8 1 7 1.0 in IS 11 Lneiq MH 13 25 nd 9 3M0 2J Luuilv 9 oo 10.49 TOND5: rtplrtl I ni. Oil I Invstni l.Wl A -s An Invsl Am Mlit AcvNt C-r ANl HOR CROUTi 82 7 45 Jirlld l. sp Stir Inv 31 II .11 11 13.46 13 46 ii4i is i Smith 12 .60 IJ 77 SAYLESl 10.85 111. 85 tanatl 5 40 5 HI (-HO OV 1 .1 6 6 02 Bum a to in 17 i ntl 11 08 12 11 12 37 13.5.' 9.60 10 49 13.10 14 32 13.77 1 3 27 1.1.67 13.69 14 7() 15 19 9 37 10 08 8 70 9 SO murifi 4 LORO ABB: jr7 7 ii 7 ci So GenF i 1 1 All 14 01 Ani Ml 3 41 .1.69 St Inv 11 97 5w Inv 14 1A 45 Rnd do 4S1(I I 10 li.l 10.90 x9 7 10.70 tonlrtl 13 38 14 65 Liitti'n 11 70 12 7 Snvr In a 7o lis 1 4 nt-ti II 91 9 34 10 74 sSflqnrt OS 14 1 45 9 26 InlV it Sfl 17 11 1110 SUTF PNO T.RP 1J 82 14.80 The Aces On Bridge (7) (71 Com Fd 577 A.1I f.i th Inrom 5ntlir 5' HH A i nn A HiaK on 45 vftt si Fund Pui itn Slfm I I' 44 MM Gsvt 10 9J 11-VS MASS CO: so 84 55 15 19 I6.6S 45 5 12 35 13.50 5.62 5.67 Pivpsit Onp Will 1 7 55 1 7.55 then moved steadily upward throughout most of the session.

The exchange's price index, which was up 0.03 at 10:30 closed ahead 0.14 at 28.14. A total of 589 issues rose while 414 fell. It was almost the same story in the counter market, where the NASDAQ industrial index advanced 1.06 to 136.95. Of the 2.501 NASDAQ traded issues, 847 rose; G15 fell and 1,439 were unchanged. Turnover on the Amcx eased lo 7.47 million shares from 7.7 million Thursday although institutional activity increased.

Twenty-one blocks of 10,000 shares or more changed hands yesterday against 18 blocks the day before. The most active issue was National Health Enterprises, which rarely is heavily traded. The stock rose l1 to 614 on a turnover of 195,200 shares, paced by blocks of 24,300 shares at 5 and 10,000 shares at 5. In the counter market, turnover fell to 10.77 million shares from 11.3 million Thursday. The volume leader in the counter market was North Central Airline which gained on a turnover of 263,800 shares.

The New York Times combined average added 7.72 points to finish at 592.82. The Arthur Lipper mutual growth fund index rose 0.68 per cent to 108.23. I 04 vSOlliU Fn7 (7l Voj 7.69 7.1 1 rrnd 28.05 30 6 ndp 8 01 8.78 ll nuii.ia ri 51.46 51 HOUOMTONi FINANCIAL i i.n A 5 96 6 40 PROGRAMS: uitl Kuri FDS unrt A 8 13 (13 in uvn OI 3 Mlj 6 s9 7 15 Hn Ind 4 23 4.6.1 MIR i.l III Fin lilt 6 22 6 81 Mill trn A. A Li I Hi r-tr 11 SIR Alt II 1.1.72 14 47 a inn I v' 14 66 I. 02 Asso Fd 1 34 114 15.46 16 90 Fiducv 7 86 7 So 15 91 17 39 STEIN ROS FDS: 4.20 4 2 0 Slock 16 8'1 16 80 119 16.19 caoitl 'I 35 11 15 6 39 6 98 BaUnr 7j 0 93 40 10 69 10 lIFd 12.82 14.01 SAatPs Iv 24 614 NVtSIUKS: vio 'n Pvtk er 8 6 9 47 si, GROUP pension funds, mutual funds or insurance companies are capable of ordering.

Kimbcrly Clark, the volume leader, closed down at on volume of 357,000 shares. Only two blocks accounted for 333,100 shares of the total. Rlock trades in this and other-paper stocks have been crossing the tape all week. Other active Issues with block trades were Pfizer, Virginia Electric, American Telephone, Fanny May, Brunswick, Phillips Petroleum, Goodyear, International Nickel, Pittslon and Southern Company. International Telephone and Telegraph climbed 1 and closed at.

b2U2 on turnover of 124.700 shares as the controversy over an alleged political payoff by the company's Sheraton subsidiary continued to wage in Washington. The American Slock Exchange and the over-the-counter market registered sharp gains in active trading. Prices opened higher and Pwrn HI 09 in A AA fV.u.ln A OA 8 87 New York lines News Service Tlio Dow Jones industrial NI'IW YORK Tim stork iiun kct continued to grind out. strong yesterday in heavy trading. average, buoyed liy sharp -advances in Dupont a Mast man Kodak, closed with a gain of S.Cfi at its highest closing level in more than 10 months.

The How's gain for the week totaled just under I'll points. Volume, on the New York Stock Exchange totaled 2II.42 million shares, down from Thursday's 22.2 million. It was the fourth straight session of 20 million-plus trading and brought the total for the week to 104.81 million shares, the highest weekly aggregate so far in 1072. The Big Hoard's price index advanced 0.34 closer to a record high, closing at just 1.20 beneath the peak it reached Nov. 20, lOtiS.

The exchange's industrial index, already in record territory, tacked on another and closed at fu.4li. Standard and l'oor's composite closed at a 11)71-72 high of 1117.94, up and only a shade beneath the record high or 1IIS.37 reached late in The Standard and Poor's 42li-stock Industrial index set a record for the fourth straight dav, closing up 0.118 at 120.10. Yesterday's market a strong from the opening and hesitated only briefly in mid-afternoon before i ahead to close at its best level of the day. A total of 90S issues finished with gains and lost ground. The gains in iHipont and Kodak signaled institutional interest.

Dupont climbed ii's and closed at ItiO and Kodak spurted to finish at Ill's. Both are components of the 30 Pow Jones industrials. I.B.M., another institutional Psaron 16 04 104 wm i 12.19 62 .19 motk p' of r.vlRA G. CORN JR. TEAM CAPTAIN Sometimes a nine-trick contract may prove more difficult than one for 10 tricks.

Today's hand is a good illustration. was plaved in the finals of the Hilton $30,000 Invitational Knockout Tournament held in Las Vegas last December. The Italian Blue Team continued its winning ways to coast lo victory over the Goren All-Stars. (, 7 3 51 MUIII ii Jo7 7 5' 1st Nal 40 8 09 Mu i-hrs I Kt 6 '8 7.43 MuM Trs Post I dn r.r 5 95 74 Nit Indll NAT SEC PUI I OCK 1 UUHUCKl GROUP: hnos Pull I 16 05 1 1 58 Grwlh 9 1 6 7 20 Inconi 06 10 59 11.07 12.03 Smmit 13 40 14. 8 I 84 17 B4 Tprhnl 8 17 8 95 7.03 7 03 Cvnrro 10 01 11 58 1 2.58 TMP AO 16 75 18 31 FOS: Tpchnrl 185 11.27 TViihu 11 "5 11 90 5 72 5 70 ToniPl 6 54 7 15 4.56 4 98 Towpr 6 87 7 57 7.

04 8 3.5 CilO 8.96 9 74 5 65 6 1 7 Travl Fn 1" 78 11 6 8 31 9 08 Tudnr 15 06 15 0 10 68 11 th CG 4 3.1 4 '5 10 55 11 58 70th I 4 4 4 89 17 84 19 39 Upifipd 11.67 17 '0 II 10 II. Umlund 13 nn 14 21 7 96 8 70 UNION SERVICE Balani Bond Sr Oiv.dn Prpf StH I nc dill Struk Sr Grwth i nn I Ii.v 'Oir Kln 'o 23 12 iniom i.i oo ..7 1 01 4 28 1 AMudl 9 46 10.34 111 fO II SUB. ll 1 17 15.49 1(1 A7 11 ft favorite, continued to trade near the 1971-72 high of it touched early Thursday. The stock closed up at only 9 1 i points from the record high of 387 reached in 197(1. Providing further proof of institutional dominance was the fact that all 11 of the.

most active stocks of the session owed major portions of their turnover to the kind of massive block trades that only such large investors as Forecasters Project Rally In Economy ml PHILADELPHIA (A I'M -Economic forecasters at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania predict the nation's inflation rate will rise during the first quarter of 1972 but settle down to between 3 and 3' per cent for the rest of the year. The forecasters said the economy a "responding well" to Nixon administration policies instituted last summer and the unemployment rate should drop to about 5 per cent by next December. The economic forecast, was made at a news conference by Profs. Lawrence R. Klein, George R.

Green and F. Gerard Adams. NY 5 i.Ai im Nfl Gh nhm Pusm Pd 7 97 8 71 i S.d Mt i i 4 I l.rii.1 cr, Fund I Npu inl Npuvvth Fr O.Hil 5 66 .:0 III 7 1 IlKm "4 7.45 no Invl slpwlon 3 u.ini i SKUiir: 21.43 23 42 PrdS Iv 14 55 15 90 nv 75 78 25 28 i Cspt 15 '4 15 '4 whihAl 8 8 8 8UNITEt 15 33 16. '5 9 54 10 43 13 9 15 26 14 01 '7 FUNDS: When replayed, Gcorgio Belladonna and Walter Avarelli reached a spadfi game. West led the same diamond queen, which was won in dummy.

Playing for 10 tricks, South (Avarelli) took a different course, lie drew three rounds of trumps and led a heart to dummy's nine. East won the heart king and led a club, West covering South's ten and dummy winning the ace. Dummy continued with th heart queen, declarer discarding a diamond instead of ruffing. The defense was now powerless and took only two hearts and a club for a large swing to the Italians. And another reason for bidding close games goes into the record! Sometimes they're easier to make than are part scores.

Send bridge questions to The Aces, P.O. Box 12363, Dallas, Texas 75225. Include self-addressed, stamped envelope for personal reply. Copyright 1972 by United Feature Syndicate, Inn. NORTH A532 VQJ1094 AK6 MM 03 WIO i 14 12 15 oi 10 V.

"-89 N.uHfl. riiNNING FUNDS INCP IvtT puiios GROUP; 19 34 13 49 lo.nm 1 1 74 1 78 Ompofl Rmd 10 11 10.94 fd 8 14 '14 pa'v Arruni 14.69 14 9 ont 14 '5 '5 84 4A2 in, 'l 05 Indus lr 15 19 16Ojpo Fund 14 89 16.27 font Inc l.im Slk 1'5 9 70 10 05,01 Fimrl 99 10.59 com r.rwth 17 4T11741 17DPCA1I4AJI FO' iiir WFST EAST 17 21 13 40 14 '4 16.15 I 19 9 61 11 07 13 8 9 64 13 13 13.13 10 56 '0 r.f s-s 35 70 OP A.m 14 15 57 Vaivid 1 r.7 9 46 46 On Fnd 9 54 10 43 Un FdCn r. h'l V.r 8 00 8 08 Op Tm 1102 12 04 USAA Cn Inrom pf-r 1 chasf BOSTON: run pi ri 1 1 pr 1 411 1 i 7 1 .1 9 06 9 9fl VALUE LINF FOS 1 nd Bm ana 0 01 r. 9 5310 41 8 17 I 1 nn V.il LnP Ml Inr Pa 8 6 t'UI KPV 7 4 in iu ci 17 AO 13 '8 p. AA.it 5 14 5 14 9 8 10 69 Bs Po.

Fnd Spprl FAni 7 in rpnn 0 7 87 7 87 77 ci 1a SO 8 8 10 5 so 8 .1 7, 11 RO 1 7 OO 0 Al in 11 7 98 8 77 '-oprl Chrm Fd 20 50 COLONIAL bv Brad Anderson MAIOIADUKE FUNDS HmH TA 7 77 4 7 57 nn 27 nn piionm 11 60 17 68 Bos Cm 4 00 SI 10 17 10 VnrtrWi opo 9 ct 030 10 26 6'0 7'Opicnr Fd 63 VANCE 07 107 pi.npd 17.85 1 4 04 JK H37 1117 FLI GRO Vjiinrd 5 HAOl Inc 6 91 5 44 I 7J'W I r. -jvm pntij'' 6 97 4 98 9 14 5.15 79 74 11 19 5 60 37 48 37 -8 1 ao in ao f.r.vtn S-w wr 7 4 7 77 Ff 1 I li.H Al.l 11 111111 COMMONWLTH 7ft -A 10 71 "or 85 I 85 Mn. arp 17 3612 3 11 74 17 70 TLA 11 71 14 44 10 11 "0 19.78 71 0' 17 40 13 65 75 70 28 00 1 45 70 1 71 p. Dnrlt 7 14 7 14 5 49 6 00 KPlpr .7 ok Inr ldm 1411oO Prpvid' 8 4 7 9 70 jnr Bos, 77 prov() 0 17 9 97 TRUST-U6 noTP pr T1 7TlP I I' nmn RA 'J V. To Trhniv 11.41 12.4 V7V ELLINGTON 7 7 10 .15 10 1 Krt TAti 5 4J 5 05 prH I Irtrin (Ji '7' PUTNAM Ipv C- 11 FUNDS: Inv 11 15 11.15 Eou.tv nv 8 5 f.po lv 07," 17 77 i 01 GROUP: Inc NVV 7 ot 7 to Inv Comp Fd in 1 It 99 onrrd 1 Conv Inv 12.75 50 tAln 0MW 7 11 7 79 ll '3 1 10 17 85 14 04 17 14 137' 9 10 67 67 7 85 8 58 4 5 6 15 '49 3 4 1 46 11 7 17 14 in.

1504 17.47 Wlnjjr 17 37 1 3 46 8 ST 9 37 yvincsp 0 01 10 8 vvmf C-lh 11 45 1J 51 WHConi 10.65 11 64 'rh Fd 57 13 8 7ilpr I'l 8.74 1 1 ff 1 1 77 113 17 6 1 45 1 78 8 06 8 81 T7lPr AOS A 7 VlflP ln 1 11 5 VniAO cirtV 11 "1 '1 Ppi p. ia '014 in 77 r. mom Ot CbmIMsp AJ7 1I)S A fi 5 8 3 2 OR .110743 KJ75'f 4.9S SOUTH A A.Kq9S 7 952 10 6 3 The bidding: Est Sotith West North Tass Pass Pass 1 Pass 1 A Pass 1 NT Pass 2U Pass 2 4 Pass 3 4 All pass When first played, Boris Koytchou and Harold Ogust bid to three spades on the bidding shown. West's diamond lead was won in dummy and declarer (Ogust) led dummy's club ace and another in hopes of finding a ninth trick in clubs or via a club ruff. West won declarer's club and continued diamonds, dummy winning.

A spade was led to the king and a club was ruffed and over-ruffed. East now cashed the high diamond and the heart king for his "book." The lead of a fourth round of diamonds scuttled declarer's hopes and promoted West's trump jack to a winner. Down one. ronMt In pntiflll o'p Ld r7trv IIAIS Pll 1 Div tliv1d9 36 6 95 17 1 7 1 -7 177 nvtlvlnPoH 18.4J 70 19 1 7 75 17.75 48 7 77 Srhustr Stock Prices Climb On Pacific Exchange Hntter, I'ljigs Poultry Cotton Market 4 See all of kp I THE MAN t. I World Irrvmiv TJ mi China watchar I rimma Biblical uorth- "Michlna gun" tpaikar.

THE MESSAGE 1 "Enil DtThaWerW- I I or World Wiltiout mr'j i 44ar Your fulM nytl'i er hoeu NI-VV VOPK (API Collnn Nn. 1 rinsed unrhanoed 10 M.0 a tfll h.oher limn lli pievious close. AN'-ILf'j (APlirsWNI m.h: no rhurvie' live volunip ruryl. f--Qliv htm: SS.C-O .4 iVriKl Hi i WnrihlPd TV, at r-nih 4 w.nhlrrt ovg 3 Cfc 1 8110 I'd. ml 2V.

turlPvs, tryer b.0u0 ut '-so; Clost 04 341 36 82 .1.1 SJ 31 'O it) 3 a Ml SCO 31 .84 V. 7y O. 1 Dec V.c.v i 3.1 Ml ...31 JS ....32 31 f) Hav Market 32.10 32.1? Z32.20 uly Klectronics A i a Telephone, I.itton. Reserve Oil and Gas, Transamerk'a and Union Oil of California A. Down were Disney 5's; Kaiser Aluminum 1-V Admiral Boeing and KMC 's: Sears J2: Phillips, Signal and Victor Comptometer Del Monte, General Telephone, Kaiser Industries, Leslie, Lockheed and Pacific Telephone Stock prices were up in active trading yesterday on the Pacific Toast Stock Volume totaled with HI12 gains, losses and 8- unchanged.

I'p were I'omiminicutions Satellite 'J' Western Union Ford and UAL Xerox Bethlehem, Gaterpilla''. Kaircluld, rurex and RCA General Motors and Safeway Hoffman d'idi lor niglit I OS fNOUIS (AP) (F'MK. Al. Inr and Oram t.f I CrM ft com, 10 sorghum, 13 ssi.eni, baney end nals, none. Ha arr.v-no ret'Ott lonay.

re L.A. Produec T.ank Clearing I UP Pai'lr neflU Trldey a A V40 US last vfr 4' l-mnds. bank clfailng I'V "What does it LOOK like we're doing? We1 fighting over who gets the chairl I ANC-f I tl (ATI I Tioduta repul. No rroi1 trwy.

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About The San Bernardino County Sun Archive

Pages Available:
1,350,050
Years Available:
1894-1998