Banner Graphic, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 April 1973 — Page 7
Banner-Graphic, Greencastle, Indiana
Page 7
Monday, April 30, 1973
REDEYE
By Gordon Bess BUZ SAWYER
By Roy Crane
I tmimk you'p e&mR FOR6E.T ABOUT THAT AUU-VOUUMTt&R-ARMY IDE-A YOU TELLlMOMe A0OUT
' ^
SO THAT'S IT' YOU’RE SMUGGLING NARCOTICS IN THESE BOXES OF ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT FROM OUR PLANT IN SINGAPORE. CARLOTTA. m
BIND AND GAG HER.' WE'RE TAKING HER WITH US.
SHE KNOWS TOO MUCH. NOW LOAP THESE CRATES INTO THE PANEL TRUCK AND ■ LET'S GET OUTA HERE. J ^ e-v 1 (£§. 4--3o
HI AND LOIS
By Mort Walker and Dik Browne
BLONDIE
By Chic Young
II 1 / its simple- You Can LEAD A HORSE ^ TO WATER
beetle bailey
By Mort Walker BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH
By Fred Lasswell
Contract f Bridge *
B. Jay Becker
Famous Hand
North dealer. North-South vulnerable.
NORTH A 10 9 8 4 V 6 ♦ A Q J 3 * A K Q 6
WEST
EAST
5
♦ 7 6 3 2
KQJ875432
V 10
K 4
♦ 10 9 6 2
10
* J 9 7 2
SOUTH A A K Q J V A 9 ♦ 875 A 8 5 4 3
Final contract - seven spades. Opening lead - king of hearts.
Milton C. Work was far and away the outstanding authority of auction bridge, the forerunner of contract. His was the one big name in auction just as Culbertson’s was the one big name in contract, starting in the 1930’s. Work made two great contributions to bridge. One was that he published several books on auction bridge which were so well received that sales ran into the millions. His other contribution — point count — did not come into
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widespread use until some ten years after his death in 1934, but when it did it was all-pervading. Today practically everyone uses Milton Work’s 4-3-2-1 point count. Here is one of Work's favorite hands. It illustrates that most dramatic of all plays in bridge, the squeeze. Declarer wins the heart lead with the ace and trumps a heart with the eight. East cannot afford to part with a diamond or a club, so he undertrumps dummy’s eight. South plays a spade to his hand and tries a diamond finesse, which succeeds. Another spade to his hand is followed by another diamond, dummy’s ace gobbling up West's king. Declarer then cashes the A-K-Q of clubs and queen of trumps to produce this position: North ♦ J 3 A 6
West East V Q 8 7 ♦ 10 9 A J South ♦ J ♦ 8 A 8 South now plays his last trump, discarding a club from dummy, and scores the last three tricks regardless of what East elects to discard.
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It Takes More Than New Rules To Make The Demos Go
By JOHN BECKLER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - The new high-powered, reform-mod-el House leadership machine is sputtering along like the old model it was supposed to replace. After the first 100 days of the session. Speaker Carl Albert has learned that it takes more than a new set of rules to make t h e Democratic-controlled House function smoothly. Faced by a determined President and a united Republican opposition, Albert has been unable to weld the Democrats into anything resembling a majority party. The [democrats last week were unable even to get a vote on two top-priority bills through which they hoped to carry the
fight over the economy directly to President Nixon. One, which would have rolled back prices, was replaced by a Republican substitute that would give Nixon a free hand to deal with the economy. The other, which would have extended a public jobs program for the unemployed that Nixon opposes, was withdrawn when it appeared it might be defeated. In both cases the setbacks were caused by the defection of Southern Democrats, who supposedly had lost their influence in the House this year as a result of reform, retirements and the rise of Republicanism in the South. The Southerners have been shut out of the Democratic
Sendak Says Report
In Newspaper Is False
INDIANAPOLIS AP - Atty. Gen. Iheodore L. Sendak said recently he has sent no letter asking the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to deny $1.34 million in comprehensive planning assistance grants to eight Indiana cities. ‘All I know is I didn’t send such a letter, 1 didn’t even speak to the people verbally, and I have never seen those eight contracts,” Sendak said at a news conference. The Indianapolis Star in a story from its Washington Bureau reported Wednesday Sendak told HUD the cities have failed to conform to a law enacted by the legislature two years ago, calling Tor reorpnization of municipal planning and coding agencies. The Star story said Sendak said he was acting upon the request of Theodore Schulenberg, director of the division of state planning. Sendak said the Star story was completely false. “There is no such letter...I have never seen the eight con-
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tracts involved. As a matter of fact, when they do come, if they do come, I will treat them individually, as I always do, and personally sign all such contracts...I don’t delegate that to anybody else," Sendak said. To Be Re-United SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Americans who were imprisoned at Son Tay will be united here this weekend with the U .S. commandos who dropped from the sky at night over North Vietnam 2'/$ years ago in a futile attempt to rescue them. Nearly all of the more than 200 invited guests will be here for a two-day party, but the Texas billionaire who is picking up the tab will be host in absentia, an aide said. Tom Meurer, who is coordinating the reunion for computer magnate H. Ross Perot, said Wednesday 59 of the 66 Son Tay prisoners had accepted invitations and 74 of the 85 raiders promised to be on hand. More replies are expected, as some guests will come from military posts outside the count ^- Perot is paying for airplane tickets, hotel accomodations for the men and their wives and other expenses at a cost Meurer said could be ‘between $100,000 and $200,000.” But Perot doesn’t plan to attend because “he wants the POWs and the raiders to have the publicity," Meurer said. The daring helicopter raid Nov. 21, 1970, on Son Tay prison camp, 25 miles from Hanoi, came too late — the American prisoners had been moved four months earlier.
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leadership for the first time in at least 50 years— records are inadequate. They have lost control of the Rules Committee, which was the pivot of their power for the last 18 years. They are consistently out-
voted in the Democratic caucus, the organization of all House Democrats that now controls the party and which, under Albert’s leadership, put through the far-reaching reforms that weakened the se-
GuidePost
Mon., Apr. 30 13:00 3-8-lON.w. 4 Chuckwagon Theatre 12:30 3 Thr«« On A Match 6 Anything You Can Do 1-10 At Th« World Tutnt 13 tot's Mako A Doal 1:00 3-6 Days of Our Uvot 4Movio "Run for YourWifo" 8-10Guidrng light 13 Nowlywod Gam* 1:30 3-6 Doctors 8-10 Edgo of Night 13 Dating Gam# 3:00 3-6 Another World 8-10 Price It Right 13 General Hospital 3:30 3-6 Return To Peyton Place 8-10 Hollywood't Talking 13 One life To live 3:00 3-6 Somerset 8-10 Secret Storm 13 Peyten Place (6W) 3:30 4 Fathient In Sewing 3:30 3 Gilligan't Island 4 Superman (BW) 6 I Dream of Jeannie 10Movie "The lawless Breed" 13 love, American Style 4:00 3 Big Valley 4 Sally Jo and Friends 6 Mike Douglas Bit Takes A Thief 13 Beat The deck 4:30 13 Bonanza 4:55 8 Weather 5:00 3 Truth or Consequences 4 Green Acres 8 To Tell The Truth 3:35 10 Paul Harvey 3:30 3-6 NBC Newt 4 Beverly Hillbillies (BW) 8-10 CBS Newt 13 ABC Newt 6:00 3-6-8-10-13 Newt 4 Hogan's Heroes 6:13 6 Tracktide 6:30 3 The New Price it Right 4 Corner Pyle USMC 6 Newt 10 To Tell The Truth 13 Hollywood Squares 6:30 8 "500" Feature 7:00 3-6 Rowan and Martin's laugh-ln 4 "300" Report 8-10Guntmoke 13 Rookies 7:30 4 Truth or Consequences 8:00 3-6 Movie "TheCeremony" (BW) 4 What's My Line? ■ U.S.-USSR Basketball 10 Here's Lucy
13 Movie "Man-Trap" (BW) 8:30 4 Merv Griffin 10 Tony Huiman Clastic Preview 9:00 10 Bill Cosby 10:00 3-6-8-10-13 Newt 4 Big Volley 10:30 3 Johnny Carson 6 Wild Wild West 8 Name ef the Game 10 Movie "The Comedy of Terrors" 13 Star Trek 11:00 4 Perry Mason (BW) 11:30 6 Johnny Carson 13 Today At The Track 11:33 13 Jack Pear Tenite 13:00 4 Newt 8 Movie 13:30 4 13O'Clock High (BW) 1:05 13 Newt 1:30 13 Crest Exam 1:43 8 Newt lues.. May 1 6:00 13 Close-Up 6:13 6 Today In Indiana 6:30 8 Sunrise Semester 13 Time For Timothy 7:00 3-6 Today 4 Newt (BW) 8-10 CBS Newt 13 Kindergarten College 7:30 4 Janie 8:00 8-10 Captain Kangaroo 13 Paul Dixon 9:00 3-6 Dinah Share 4 Movie "It’s A Great Feeling" 8 Joker's Wild 10 Mike Douglas 9:30 3-6 Baffle 8 >10,000 Pyramid 13 Phil Donahue 10:00 3-6 Sale ef the Century 8-10 Gambit 10:30 3-6 Hollywood Squares 4 Bewitched 8-10 leva ef life 13 Password 10:35 8-10 CBS Newt 11:00 3-6 Jeopardy 4 Heavens To Betsy (BW) 8-10 Yeung and the Rest lets 13 Bab Braun's 30-S0 Club 11:30 3 Who, What or Where 4 News 6 Afternoon/Channel 6 8-10 Search For Tomorrow 11:33 3 NBC Newt
nionty system and undercut the power of committee chairmen— the two main sources of Southern influence in the House. “They talk about change around here” says Rep. David N. Henderson, D-N.C.,“but in politics, one thing never changes. You have to have the votes to win. Albert has been paying too much attention to people who are actually a minority in the House” Last week's events also underscored the illusory nature of one of the key reforms—the
creation of a steering and policy committee headed by Albert that is supposed to recommend Democratic policy on major legislation and seek caucus support for it. The committee never even met on the two bills. More strains are ahead. The effort to establish congressional control over the budget threatens an even w ider split between liberals and conservatives. And a move to restructure the House committees has a vast potential for stirring unrest.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
[CASEl oral)
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Saturday’s Answer
ACROSS 1. Rose essence 6. —Society (German religious sect) 11. Ross or Rigg ’ 12. Fumed 13. Guff: tinneccssan talk (si.) (3 wds.) 15. Torino 16. Uncle (Sp.) 17. Well-read 22. Guarantee 25. Ramble 26. Jitter’mgging 3 wds. i 29. Silkworm 30. Up till now 12 wds. i 31. Tranquil state 34. Hebrew letter 35. Peer Gynt’s mom 38. Chopin composition (2 wds.’i 43. Plowed field 44. English composer 45. Insurgent 46. Item in a queen's wardrobe DOWN 1. “— Bede’’ 2. Floor covering 3. Rangy
4. Social insect 5. Hooray! f>. Shaw 7. —in (special ize) 8. Moslem ruler •9. Nose i Fr.) 10. Cutting tool 14. All ears 17. Polish weight 18. Son of Bela 19. Taj Mahal site 20. Highstrung 21. Margin 22. Tennis points
23. Definite 24. Budge 27. Obtained 28. Hungar ian poet 32. Musical composition
35. Seaweed 36. Headline 37. — Taft Benson 38. Disfeature 39. Anger 40. Seize 41. Clammy 42. Ring name
ones birth
22 123
18 39
DAILY ( RYI’TOQUOTE-Here’s how lo work it: AXYDLBAAXR is LONGFELLOW' One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L’s. X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQVOTES U Q R PZBRCZGO I V X K Y X R O Y X K T R X C H . T Y W R C U X C U T G O G K C Z C Q R P Q YX Y X F V C R L , U X A HR C CQYLOCH. — CQZIUO U A L 1 I O Saturday’s Cryptoquote: 1 THINK THE MOST UNCOMFORTABLE THING ABOUT MARTYRS IS THAT THEY LOOK DOWN ON PEOPLE WHO AREN’T.-SAMUEL N. BEHRMAN (^ 1973 King Features Syndicate, Tne.i
