The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 August 1966 — Page 3

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iSheinwold^Bridge

Put Money In Hie Bank And Keep Tour Trumps By Alfred ShlemroM "One thing you can do with money ia spend it,” I remarked the other day. "Now you’re talking,” my wife interrupted. "The other thing you can do is put it in the bank so that I you can spend it at a better time,’* I continued. "Oh pooh,” said my wife. ‘1 suppose you have a bridge hand to prove that too.” East dealer Both ads veiaerab! fMMTH 4 Q* <7 962 O AQ5 +KJ652 WBT EAST 4 15 4AKS72 V *7 V IBS <> 1064S O KI9 * 91743 * AQ IB SOUTH * 10943 S? AKQJ43 0 172 * Now

1 * 2 9

AH Pass

Pbss 4 9 lead — * I

East took the top spades and led a third spade. South playsd the nine, and West ruffed with the seven of hearts. Declarer, a very charming woman, reached over and overruffed with dummy’s nine of hearts. That nine of hearts was like money, and the lady couldn’t wait to spend it. As you may have gathered, no good came of this play. Declarer led a trump to her hand and cashed the ten of spades, discarding dummy’s low diamond. Then she led a diamond

and finessed with dummy's queen. East took the king of diamonds and returned a trump to remove the last trump from dummy. South eventually lost two diamonds as well as two spades, and thus lost the game and rubber. THRIFTT PLAT If South were a man, preferably a thrifty married man. he would make the contract. Instead of over-ruffing the third spade, declarer should throw fixe low diamond from dummy. Dummy’s trump is not wasted; it is simply saved for another trick. West returns a diamond to dummy’s ace, and South leads a trump to his hand, thus drawing West’s remaining trump. South cashes the ten of spades, discarding the queen of diamonds from dummy. Now South can ruff his two diamonds with dummy’s ace trumps and can return to his hand each time by ruffing a club. Thus South makes game and rubber and gives his wife a lesson in thrift all at one and the same time. DAILT QUESTION As dealer, you hold: S-Q 6; H-9 6 2; D-A Q 5; C-K J 6 5 2. What do you say? Answer: Pass. Tou have 12 paints in high cards and 1 point for the doubleton but should deduct a point or so for the double ton queen. You would open the bidding if you had two little spades and a club suit head by K Q J, but the actual hand is just a trifle too weak for an opening bid.

Office Building Hearer Reality WASHINGTON UPI — A new, $13,698,000 federal office building for Indianapolis came nearer reality Wednesday when the Senate passed the $14 billion Independent Offices Appropriation bill. Both Senate and House versions of the bill earmarked $10,952,000 for construction, while an earlier appropriation provided $2,746,000 for land acquisition and design work on the city’s near north side. Rep. Andrew Jacobs Jr., D-j Ind., said the General Services; Administration experts next ] month to approve tentative j sketches. The design is to be! completed by next April, bids advertised in July and contracts | awarded in September. Construction is expected to require two years.

Raises Roof

MILAN, ItalyUPI—Pasqualq Ciriello, a landlord, literally raised the roof when Antonio Adetta, his tenant, fell behind in the rent. Adetta took the hint, and has asked the city for help in finding a new home.

Mew Program for Insurance INDIANAPOLIS UPI — A new program calling for noncancelable automobile liability insurance and for coverage of high risk drivers was adopted formally Wednesday. Indiana insurance commissioner Joseph a. Wood said the commission accepted a plan from the insurance industry, affording automobile liability insurance to the public. The program has been la the planning stage* several months. High risk drivers who have lost their ordinary insurance policies are to be served, at a higher cost, through a licensed resident insurance agent or broker. TZhe automobile has become n necessity in the American way of life and an integral part of the American economy, and the insurance industry must meet the demand for automobile liability coverage or the public will go to the govemment,” the bulletin said. The mder requires any company writing private passenger auto insurance in Indiana which does not adept the non-cancel-able liability plan to state on the face of the policy that "this policy contains none of the minimum standards regarding policy cancellation promulgated by the Insurance Department of the State at Indiana.** The order also said "companies and agents shall cooperate to make wide use of the automobile assigned risk plan and to explain the plan to the public. It is recognized as the duty of the company and the agent to assist the public in obtaining automobile liability coverage where ordinary coverage cannot be obtained.”

De Gaulle Seeks Viet Nam Peace PARIS UPI — French President Charles ds Gaulle set off Today on a 30,000-mile trip around the world. His mission was to try to aid the cause of

peace in Viet Nam.

The 76-yaar-old president, accompanied by his wife, Tvonne,

Foreign Minister Maurice Couve ds Murville and ranking aides, took off trim Orly Airport at B:S0 a_m., (4:30 a.m., EDT) aboard a UB.-built DCS jetliner. His first stop was Djibouti, sweltering capital of French Somililand, the last colonial possession of Francs in Africa. Ds Gaulls was spending 86 hours in the strategically located country on the Red Sea. Ds Gaulle’s plans was due in Djibouti about 6 p.m. (1 pjn., EDT). Government sources said De Gaulle feds continued escalation of the Viet Nam war will bring the risk of a head-on clash between the United States, the Soviet Uni Mi and Communist China resulting in World War

m.

DELICATE BALANCE NOTTINGHAM, England CPI—A trick artist who water skis at 40 miles per hour using only his bare feet for skis was injured when he struck a floating match. A ski dub spokesman said the matchstick threw the skier off balance, and flipped Mm over on his back. EDITOR ARRESTED SAN ANTONIO, Tex. UPI— Bob Crus Jr., 24, Ms wife, Maria, 25, and Martin Trantham, 44, were arrested Wednesday and charged with possession of marijuana. Cruz was identified as the editor of the Texas Peace Officers and Law Enforcement Association magazine.

Rusk Defends US. Commitment WASHINGTON UPI—Secretary of State Dean Rusk Thursday defended this country’s farflung commitments to defend more than 40 countries on five continents against attack. He said these reduce, rather than increase, the risk of war. Rusk said the United States should act in good faith to meet these pledges. At the same time, he said, this country does not want to be the “world’s policeman” or establish a "pax Americana.” He urged other nations to lend a hand at peacekeeping. Rusk warned would-be aggressors that the United States might under some circumstances come to the military aid of countries with which this country has no defense agreement. Rusk’s remarks, amounting to a formal policy statement, cams in a prepared opening statement at a Senate preparedness subcommittee hearing on whether the United States has become "over-extended” in its treaty commitments. Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss., head of the committee, opened the hearing with a warning that the large number of international U.S. military commitments indicates "we cannot afford to become overly preoccupied with one area of the world.” He explained that the purpose of the hearing was to determine "the extent of our military commitment and our ability to respond to them — in short, whether or not we are or many be over-extended either now or in the future."

Draft Of Some May Be Delayed WASHINGTON UPI — Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara’s plan t o “salvage” for military duty 160,000 men previously rejected is going to delay the drafting of some men now classified 1A. And it may trigger yet another round in the continuing congressional debate over the fairness of the Selective Service system’s method of choosing who will be drafted. In addition, some government authorities said the McNamara plan obviously meant that deferred college students would be even less vulnerable to the draft than they are now— another sore spot with congressional critics. Among these already classified by selective service, the only ones who could be affected by the new plan are in Class 1Y —a marginal group of men who failed to qualify for service for mental or physical reasons. Officials estimate there are about 200,000 of these. Elaborating on the plan to bring mentally and physically disqualified men up to military fitness standards, defense manpower officials said Wednesday that: Thirty per cent of the men to be drafted or accepted as volunteers will be Negroes. This compares with 10 per cent who are Negroes among all the men now taken into service.

Summer's Glamour Job Maketh Not A Career

Pakistaa Floods Hit 1.5 Million DACCA, East Pakistan UPI —Sixty hours of continuous heavy rain triggered disastrous floods Thursday in the Chittagong District, affecting an estimated 1.5 million persons, officials reported. Almost half of the district and hundreds of villages were inundated in the second flood disaster in the region in three months. The government rushed in relief and medical help to the hungry, homeless and ailing refugees. Every river in Chittagong, about 150 miles southeast of Dacca, was reported overflow-

ing.

By ROBERTA ROESCH ‘1 hope that when back-to-I school time arrives, you will devote some space in your column to urging young people who worked this summer to return to school this fall,” wrote an Information Officer for the U. S. Department of Labor I have been corresponding with. Since the opportunities of the future will always belong to the people who prepare themselves to take them, I am glad to fulfill this important request from a man who works with youth. Official Figures More than 2%million young people, or one out of every two aged 16 to 21, worked at a job this summer. It is vital that they return to school this fall. Today, as many people complete high school as finished the eighth grade a generation ago. And as many students graduate from college as earned a tion ago. As a result of this stepped-up training, today’s young people who lack high school diplomas have little chance in the world of work. Lowest In Earning Capacity They are the ones who will earn the least and advance at a slow rate through life. And, they will suffer from unemployment more than trained workers with whom they com-

pete.

The important thing for all of them is to go back to school when the school bell rings, regardless of how intrigued they are with a job that could be permanent, if they stayed out of schooL Employers I have discussed this subject with repeat the same kind of plea, and warn that the golden door to the future is opened by high school plus college training, high

school plus training in the service, or high school plus a trade or vocational training. In addition, every employer says that a maximum of education, with at least this basic high school training, will continue to grow in importance in our technological. p-’+—-'*cTi world.

Th# Daily BannBr, Grsancsstls, Indiana Friday, August 26, 1966

Answer The Fall School Bell Despite Lure of Vacation Job Because this is all so important, there are few other comparable factors that spoil a young person’s chance in life as readily as leaving school. So don’t close the door to your future by foregoing your present opportunity to return to school this fall. Philosopher’s Words Confucious, the Chinese philosopher and teacher, said centuries ago that success depends upon previous preparation and without that preparation there is sure to be failure. And today, the truth In his words holds more urgent meaning for everyone — especially those who have their careers ahead of them.

DR. J. F. CONRAD OPTOMETRIST SOI E. Washington St.

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Wins Top Honors CHICAGO UPI—James Buck, 15, Oakland City, Ind., won top honors in the National Egg Cooking Contest by beating 11 qther finalists, all girls. Buck’s winning recipe was called "Eggs-tremely good dip.” Janet McGrew, 17, Lucas, Ohio, was second, and Emma Lu Bernard, 12, Natchitoches, La., third.

DANCE AMERICAN LEGION AUG. 27 Music By Swingsters

TRADE TIRES TODAY No money down — 12 months to pay

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8 p.m. Sat. & 3 p.m. Sun. Aug. 27-2* J R RANCH 2 mil** watt of Merten en Rd. U.S. 34 — 5 MAIN EVENTS — Advance ticket sole at Settis Regal Market at Mortoa Admission $1.00

BACK TO SCHOOL AGAIN!

Se sure yeur child isn’t th* 1 eat of 3 returning te school with faulty visionl

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North Viet To Coatinue War WASHINGTON UPI — Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara said Thursday there are "clear indications” of a political decision by North Viet Nam to continue pushing the war in the South at a “high level of intensity.” At a joint news conference with Secretary of State Dean Rusk and other high officials in the White House cabinet room, McNamara cited increased Communist infiltration as one of the key signs. But McNamara also said the U.S. war effort in Viet Nam was inflicting heavy casualties on the Communists, thwarting a Communist monsoon season offensive and causing an "erosion” of Communist morale which has doubled the defection rate. Rusk gave newsmen a slightly different slant on Hanoi’s political decisions. The basic Communist decisions, he said, were back in 1959 and announced in 1960 in a declaration of plans to take over South Viet Nam. Rusk said he knew of no new Communist decision on prosecuting the war. He said the problem was simply that there has been no decision by the Communists to make peace. After Rusk made this point, McNamara told newsmen that while there may be no "new” Communist decision, there appeared to be a “clear decision as of today” to continue the war vigorously. The defense chief said Communist forces are entering South Viet Nam at a rate of 5,000 per month, or about 40,000 so far this year—double the previous level. But he said the allies have been inflicting casualties on the Communists at a rate of 1,000 or more fatalities a week, compared with 100 a week for U.S. forces and 200 a week for South Vietnamese forces.

Today’s "summit conference” of civil rights, religious, political and real estate agency leaders was the second to be held since King began his campaign aimed at ending racial bias in the sale and rental of homes. “If we get all our demands, then we would not demonstrate in Cicero,” said Albert A. Raby, a close associate of King. “On the other hand, anything short of those demands would make the question of demonstrating speculative.” King called another mass rally for tonight, at which tim* he said he would say definitely whether demonstrators would march into Cicero as scheduled.

OPEN FRI., SAT., SUN. ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST smAima-mma mna

From Merchant Show FRIDAY AT 2:00 - Over 4:30 lest Free Shew Aug. 24

MEADOWBROOK DRIVE IN THEATRE Infer. U.S. 34 4 Stef* Read 43

FRIDAY, SATURDAY Frank Sinatra, Virna lisi ASSAULT ON A QUEEN (COLOR) Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis PARDNERS (COLOR) SUN. THRU WED. Kirk Douglas, Richard Harris THE HEROES OF TELEMARK (COLOR) Patty Duke, Warren Barlinger BILLIE (COLOR)

Housing Crisis Conference Held CHICAGO UPI— Dr. Martin Luther King and other civil rights leaders, echoing the words of the late President John F. Kennedy, went to the conference table in an effort to resolve Chicago’s open housing crisis. They said a successful meeting could stop Sunday’s scheduled protest march by thousands of demonstrators into all-white suburban Cicero. “We will never negotiate through fear and never have fear of negotiation,” King told a cheering crowd of 2,500 persons crammed into a south side church Thursday night. Kennedy used similar words in his inaugural address in reference to foreign policy.

GREENCASTLE DRIVE-IN (Fornprly Midway) Jet. 40 a 43 FRIDAY, SATURDAY Frankie Avalon—Annette FunieeR* Fabian-Chill Wills "FIREBALL 500" PIUS Preston Foster in 'TIME TRAVELERS"

PUTNAM COUNTY PLAYHOUSE Presents "The Miracle Worker" by William Gibson Speech HeU — DePeuw University Aug. 26, 27; Sept. 2, 3 8:00 p.m. Tickets available COAN'S PHARMACY & PREVO'S

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