The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 June 1967 — Page 3
Wednesday, Juna 7, 1967
Tha Dally Bannar, BraaneatHa, Indiana
Fafpa 9
CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Beckar (Tap tawid H»M«r la Maatora' ladfvMaal Ch—ipl—ahlp Hay)
Both aMM yidnantala. NORTH ♦ J7* B10S4 * 4AQ62 • r '-- WR8T BAST . 4AKQ10 4986SS BQ* V* ♦ K848 4 AQ62 SOUTH
94
4AKJ7652 J.. ♦ 107 ^KJIO Tha Uddhia: Wert North Bert Sortfc Pus 44 SV Dblo Openiar lead king of qwdM. This hand is from tha 1966 „ Tournament of Champions event held dnnually in Deauville, France. With Avarelll and ' lyAiello of Italy sitting North* ‘ Okrath, and Konstam and Hmrt Xiscm-Oray of England sitting Bast-West, tha bidding want as , shown. Tha deal is a good example of how partnership misunderstandings occur even in tha highest echelons of bridge. Gray led the king of spades _*tnid Konstam followed with the Ordinarily, the play of the —mine — an unnecessarily high *^ard — would constitute a reRnest for West to continue the -—putt. That la the way nearly
everyons plays, and that la the way Gray interpreted the nine. But whan Gray continued with a spade, D’Alelio ruffed and easily mads the contract aftar drawing trumps and discarding a diamond on dummy’s fourth dub. Had Gray shifted to a diamond, the defense would have taken tha first three tricks and D’Alelio would have gone down one. Obvtouely, Gray and Konstam were operating on different wave lengths, because Konstam intended the spede nine as a signal for Gray to shift to a diemeiid, the higher-ranking of the two side suits (clubs and diamonds). This was ih accordance with the suit - preference convention played hgr Konstam in such situations. It can ho argued that (hay should have led a diamond at trick two despite what ha thought was a come-on signal in spades, because he could tell from the bidding that declarer would ruff the next spade and that it was therefore futile to lead one. The answer to this. If we accept Gray’s theory that there can be no suit-direction signal at trick one, is that Konstam was obviously commanding another spade lead because he did not want any other suit played. But the practical answer to tha discussion is that any pair who agree to play in an important championship should settle In advance the methods of defense they plan to use.
(O 1867, Kiss restarts ■fattest* la*)
IDolnick Serves 3ks Consultant INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Dr. I^ernard Dolnick, former comJ'fcilssioner of the Indiana De^■nartment of Correction, now a tlFort Wayne public relations Consultant, was in Indianapolis
ALL YOUR CLEANING it stored. Insured, end moth-proofed free et WHITE CLEANERS AM M ms nil •—■ ffra^ wvt vowf in oHCmswi •rravr Phono OL 3-51 tl
Tuesday in fulfillment of a promise made by Governor Branigin. At the time Branigin announced the replacement of Dolnick by Anthony S. Kuharich as head of the penal system, he said that he would call upon Dolnick, a psychologist and former mental hospital superintendent, as a consultant. Dolnick, whose years in state government total 18, said the governor asked him to serve as a consultant In a study of state government mandated by the 1967 Legislature. The new law provides for continuing study of state government by the governor, with biennial recommendations for reorganization leading to greater efficiency and economy In government, and elimination of publicated functions. Dolnick said that he had promised the governor he would devote as much time as possible to the study but that details of the contract had not yet been completed.
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Heloise(Continued from Page S) Dear Heloise: Instead of discarding or packing away my baby’s plastic bathtub when she outgrew it, I put it under her bed to keep toys in. This is so easy for her to pull out to choose a toy and sometimes she even has fun just sitting in it Mrs. Rita Brancayco • • • • Dear Heloise: I would like to share one of my children’s favorite afterschool macks. I spread peanut butter on sal tine crackers and pop a marshmallow in the center of each cracker. Stick them under the broiler until the marshmallows become nice and brown (takes just a few minutes) and they are ready to eat. One could use small party crackers and miniature marshmallows and have delicious hot canapes for an informal gathering. Betty Wood • • • • Letter of Laughter Dear Heloise: . .. for heavens sakes, do not even print my initials. My reputation as a housekeeper is not the greatest! * • • • I didn’t Love, Heloise • • • • Dear Heloise: I always preferred terry kitchen towels for drying dishes but found them too small for this purpose. So now I buy the least expensive white bath towels whenever they’re on sale. They are absolutely perfect for drying dishes. One doesn’t want them too heavy for this purpose so the inexpensive, lightweight ones are ideal. I like the plain white best because they can be bleached. Heloise Fan
Dear Heloise: Watering fresh cut flowers from the florist was always a problem for me. I got water everywhere but in the container. But no more . . . Now I use my turkey baster. I can push it right through the leaves and squirt the water right into the container with no more spills. Mrs. Humburg
Fellowship Groups To Meet Thursday Christian Women’s Fellowship Groups of the First Christian Church win meet Thursday, June 8. Picnics are the order at the day, with the following hostesses, locations and starting time: Group 1, Mrs. Ted Glidewell, 12:30 p. m. Group 2, Robe-Ann Park, Southeast Shelter, 12:00 p. m. noon, Mrs. Frank McKeehan, hostess. Group 3, Mrs. Josef Sharp, 12:30 p. m. Group 4, Mrs. Aaron Arnold, 316 Redbud, 6:30 p. m. Group 5, Mrs. Harley Hedge, 6:00 p. m. Group 6, Mrs. Jack Torr, 6:30 p. m. Group 7, Mrs. Roy Sutherlin, 6:30 p. m. Group 8, will not meet.
Hocked To Death CAIRO UPI—Angry Egyptian peasants hacked a captured Israeli pilot to death with axes Monday, informed sources said. The unidentified pilot apparently had bailed out of his crashing plane or emerged alive from the wreckage in fields near the Nile delta provincial center of Za Agazig. The sources said he whipped out his revolver as the peasants closed in on him with their hatchets but was overpowered.
Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERE
TYURING THE RECENT triumphant revival of "Annie JL/ Get Your Gun," the star, sharp-shooting Ethel Merman, got around to the scene where she fires a rifle into the air
and a bird is supposed to plop down upon the stage. This time she pressed the trigger of her rifle—and nothing happened. Ditto on a second attempt. The trigger was jammed. As she lowered her rifle, the bird suddenly dropped onto the stage. It takes more than that, however, to nonplus a gal like La Merman. She picked up the bird, held it out to the enthralled audience, and exclaimed, “Well,
whaddya know? APOPLEXY!"
Eihal
Merman
Among the friends of Jack E. Leonard: 1. A lady who’s such a fussy housekeeper she puts a newspaper under the cuckoo clock. 2. An East Side kid whose block is so tough a cop edged up to him last week and whispered, “Wanta buy a radio patrol car?” 3. A neighbor whose 8-year-old dispatched this impassioned request to Santa Claus: “Last Christmas you sent me the baby brother I asked for. This Christmas I’d like you to take him back.” C 1667, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate
Arab Nations Cut Off Oil Shipments to U.S.
Brown Scheduled to Die Sept. 20
CROWN POINT UPI — A judge has set Sept. 20 for death in the electric chair at Indiana State Prison for George Robert Brown, condemned “dunes slayer” of a Gary beautician. Judge John H. McKenna set the date in Lake County Criminal Court. McKenna acted after the U. S. Supreme Court last month rejected Brown’s latest effort in a 10-year battle for life. It was the seventh time a death date was set for Brown. The first of six stays of execution granted the alleged rape-killer of two women came April 17, 1958, and since then attorneys for Brown have kept a nearly constant series of appeals going in his behalf.
•Brown was convicted in the 1956 slaying of Mrs. Mildred Grigonis, whose body was found buried in a shallow sandy grave in the dunelands near Gary. The body of a 15-year-old New Chicago schoolgirl, Lana Brock, was found in another nearby dunes area, and Brown was charged with both crimes. But he was convicted only in Mrs. Grigonis’ death. The high court rejection in Washington two weeks ago apparently exhausted Brown’s last legal avenue to save himself from the chair. It appeared to court observers that only a de-
cree by Governor Branigin could spare Brown’s life. The 1965 Legislature repealed the law which permits the state to exact capital punishment But Governor Branigin vetoed the repeal bill. A similar bill was introduced in the 1967 session but failed to pass.
JOBS FOR YOUTH WASHINGTON (UPI) — The U. S. Department of Labor’s Neighborhood Youth Corps will provide summer jobs this year for some 241,000 young persons from disadvantaged homes.
CAIRO UPI —Oil-rich Arab nations Tuesday ordered oil shipments cut off to the United States and Britain in retaliation for alleged support of Israel in the Arab-Israeli war. Cairo Radio and Egyptian trade unions urged Arabs to “wreck, bomb and blow up” all American and British installations in the Arab world. In London, <41 experts said oil rationing would not be necessary in Britain or Western Europe. They said there was a world surplus of ready oil and a three-year record number of tankers sitting idle and ready for order*
Mary Kaye Wright To Be July Bride Miss Mary Kaye Wright and Roy Keith Hunteman will be married July 23 at Gobin Memorial Methodist Church. The future bride is the daughter of Mrs. Madelyn Wright and the late Arthur N. Wright, 101 Bloomington Street. Mr. Hunteman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John LeRoy Hunteman, 8906 Flynn Road, Indianapolis. Miss Wright was graduated from Indiana State University in 1965 where she was a member of Alpha Phi Gamma Journalism Honorary. She has taught English in the Greenwood Community Junior-Senior High School for the past two years where she also sponsors the Sunshine Society and the yearbook staff. Mr. Hunteman was graduated from DePauw University In 1963 where he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. He will be graduated from the Indiana University School of Medicine June 12 where he is a member of Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society. Mr. Hunteman spent three months this past winter as a Smith, Kline, and French Fellow at Creighton-Freeman Christian Hospital in Vrindaban, India. He begins his internship July 1 at Marion County General Hospital.
LOTS OF TREKS ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) — Minnesotans love trees. The 400 millionth tree to be grown in a state forest nursery has been planted near Willow River and another 25 million will be planted in Minnesota this year. Three large tree nurseries, operated by the Department’s forestry division, produce trees for planting on private and public lands.
OUT OF SCHOOL DANCE THE BLUE WOLFE Wednesday, June 7 Tht •ver-popular “Me and Them Guys” SATURDAY NIGHT DANCE (Jun* 10)
“The Rhodemen”
from Clinton
Dane* Ev*ry W*dn*sday and Saturday Nights at Th* Blu* Wolf*
The oil experts also noted an embargo might not work for long since most Arab nations are heavily dependent on oil exports for hard currency and their national incomes. The International Confederation of Arab Trade Unions called for all Arab states to join in drying up the oil flow to the two Western nations. It urged workers to blow up pipelines and oil installations in any Arab nation refusing to comply. Kuwait, the Middle East’s second largest oil producer, and Algeria were the only states to make formal announcements of a ban on shipments to the United States and Britain. Iraq ordered a halt Tuesday in the pumping of oil to U. S. and British customers. Iraq’s pipelines run through Syria en route to Mediterranean ports. Saudi Arabia, the Mideast’s largest oil producer, Libya and smaller producers were expected to follow the ban.
Appellate Court Orders Hearing INDIANAPOLIS UPI —The Indiana Appellate Court has ordered the Vanderburgh Circuit Court to hear evidence on a complaint filed by the Evansville - Vanderburgh Metropolitan Board of Zoning Appeals against construction of a bowling alley. The court agreed with the trial court to the extent thatj the board of zoning appeals lost its power to sue when the zoning and planning functions of the city and county were merged in a metropolitan planning commission. But the Appellate Court said the defendant. Meadow Ridge, Inc., had waived a challenge and that the trial court should be reversed. The action was started by the old zoning board to block construction of a bowling alley within four feet of Southern Indiana Gas & Electric Co. land in Evansville.
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IMLA-KEI
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ON HIS DAY JUNE 18th
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