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Show Answer to Previous Puzzle Silence! ackoss Liw; 43 Spanish cheer Silence! 46 Insect Stillness 10 Family member 11 Set free 14 Utopian 15 Canadian province 47 Liquid 50 Say 1 6 16 17 57 58 Rocky hill South 59 Half ems 20 Library sound 21 Exirt 24 Blemish 26 Disinclined to talk 31 Icelandic narratives 33 Garden flower 34 Raise 36 Stream in Italy 37 Inarticulate 39 Japanese outcast 12 23 Musical Pastry worker Guido's note 5 Relates 14 studies French city, Saint 25 Dyeing 6 apparatus Jungle animals 26 Distinct part 29 Baltic capital 30 Scottish negative 31 Stitch together 32 Seasoning 1 Leave Loosen 4 Biddy 7 Ultimately 8 Bodv of water 9 Rodent Masculine appellation Moral lault 11 12 13 15 14 I j- 5 HTT18 16 2l27 2425 W 1 32 Quiet Odd numeral Angeles Diminutive 45 suffix Turkish dignitary 47Vascoda explorer 46 16 Source of 48 energ? Siberian liver Torrid Maid's name 49 51 52 53 55 Nothing Unit of 9 i' 12 1)3 129 130 ;19 28 ' 33 " 37 """ST 40 42 ""J 46 145 1 52 51 T "39" 38 47 148 49 " 5455 53 57 56 59 58 23 I I Win at Bridge Bad Play Caused Defeat NORTH (D) 23 KJ109854 TA K64 AK WEST EAST 43 Q762 VJ9865 4 107432 4 1082 10754 A 963 SOUTH A KQ QJ9753 QJ82 North-Sout- West vulnerable h East Pass Pass Pass Pass North 1 Pass Pass Pass 34 5 Pass Opening South 2 4 West from collecting a trump trick. It was bad luck that West had opened a singleton spade and more bad luck that East had won the trump trick with his sir.gleton ace, but nevertheless South had played badly. At trick two he should have led a heart to dummy's singleton ace. Then he could lead a low trump from dummy. East would win with the ace and lead back a spade but now South could ruff with a high trump; draw West's last two trumps and claim the slam. (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) 64 lead-- 34 By Oswald & James Jacoby "I guess I didn't have to bid six diamonds" muttered South. "Still, it was only bad luck that made me lose the contract." "Bad luck is right", replied North. "However, a real cause of your defeat was bad play." South had won the spade lead at trick one and promptly led a trump to dummy's king and East's ace. East had led back a spade and South had no way to keep The bidding has been: West North East South If Pass 3 Pass 34 23 It Pass Pass ? You, South, hold: A2?5 What do you do now? A Bid four spades. Your partner should have a bad hand with a lot of spades in it. TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of bidding three spades your partner has bid three notrump over your three clubs. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow For Saturday, Novembor 24, 1 973 ARIES (March 21 April 19) SCORPIO (Oct. Contracts you make today 22) You are entering a cyare very important because cle where you will have opthey will later play a larger portunities to fatten the old role in your affairs than you bank book. A situation you now realize. didn't count on will make this possible. TAURUS (April v. 20) 20-M- change for the better will occur in matters where you and another share an eaual Interest. Conditions look A profitable. GEMINI (May 21 June 20) An active social period is In store for you. Stronger bonds are being formed -- between you and the special person in your life. CANCER (June 22) Some improvements that you've been thinking about making around the home but have been putting off will soon get under way. 21-Ju- ly LEO 22) (July You're going to take a more active role in helping to manage the affairs of others. If you're in a career, a promotion is likely. 23-Au- g. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Se- 22) There will be a marked improvement In conditions that contribute to your basic security. Now is the time to begin building for the future. LIBRA (Sept. 23) Start now to put your Ideas 23-O- Into action regarding things that will further your Big strides can now be made. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- -' Dec. 21) Some new beginnings are in store for you. Keep a weather eye pealed for a situation that offers promise. It win come through a friend. CAPRICORN (Dec. 19) Work quietly toward your goals and keop your plans to yourself for a while. Something you want badly will be acquired soon. 22-Ja- n. AQUARIUS (Jan. 19) Benefits will soon come to you throuah your group involvements. Now is the time to get out, make 20-Fe- b. new contacts and meet new people. PISCES (Feb. 20) This is the initial phase of a very important and fortunate period for you. Don't be deterred in what you want to get for yourself -it's reachable. your bifttxJay November White House aides believe the television appearance helped shore up his sagging popularity. But they privately concede that he provided little additional information on the central question of his own involvement in the Watergate President's affair. The specific charges, they say, dealt with in detail in the V coming weeks and months. The President clearly was struggling for survival but his closest aides believe he has turned the corner. will be New Protest ft' -- . Nixon sandwiched a series of public appearances between the most intensive lobbying of both the Congress and the Republican hierarchy he has ever undertaken. To all, his message was clear: I am not resigning. Between an exhausting and sometimes humiliating round of 300 with almost meetings senators and congressmen, he journeyed first to a downtown Washington hotel and assured 4,000 cheering delegates to a realtors convention that he would "not walk away from the job." Then traveling South to a mirrored ballroom at Disney he fielded questions World, thrown at him from a group of about 400 newspaper executives for an hour and six minutes on national television. After a day of rest at his Florida home, he flew to Memphis, Tcji., to convince 19 apprehensive Republican governors that the actions of his administration had done no irreparable harm to the Republican party. He appeared combative at times during his news conference and almost pleading at others. "You car. believe them if you want," he said of his previous assertions of innocence. "I can tell you it is the truth because I have listened to ... what is in the tapes." At another point he complained bitterly about publicity which he claimed "already has convicted" his two former aides, H. R. D. and Haldeman John Ehrlichman, before they have even had a trial. Then, in an emotion-fille- d assertion addressing the whole, broad question of Watergate and bitterly-resente- d the allegations that he has used his high office for personal gain, he declared: "I have made my mistakes, but in all of my years of public life I have never profited, never profited from public service. I have earned every cent. "And in all my years of public life, I have never obstructed justice. "...People have got to know whether or not their President is a crook. Well, I am not a crook. I have earned everything I have got." AQJ874AKJ65 ( byBerniceBedeQol -P- HaigJr. reluctance 18 17 3T" "T36 34 50 42 44 K,. I A l- - Bv FWiENE V. RISHER WASHINGTON (UPi) Nixon is on the campaign trail again, not to win the presidency but to save it. months-lcn- g a Breaking moratorium on public appearances and weeks of virtual isolation, Nixon emerged last week in a whirlwind of activity. "We've got to take 'em on. We can't go on the way we are," said his chief of staff, Alexander M. Marino n2ij2r2r 2o 43 (44 Golf gadget 43 f resident 35 38 27 lab.) quadruped Goddess of 22 21 3 Took food 41 Equine ' btp,'eI IP ft EIT P ;".! IaJUi Lawyer 'ab ) Moscow daily High card Girl's name 18 DOWN 40 1 13 1 To Save Presidency tIreiaJtI 20 2 ope5 dawn American animal 19 t ixon Works Tai s;c;o;t't wrpfo p measure lab.) (keep silent) Enraged Baltic country Citrus fruit And others (Latin) 54 96 ki Friday, November 24,1973 This year will be an active one. Hopes and desires can be realized. Discard thing's that held you back and go forward with faith and assurance. Strike May Hit France - Against W3 (ggjiru an instrument IT'S A PI-Presembling a guitar, being played by a girl who locks determined, at the Children's Palace, a school of arts in Shanghai. The children attend classes here in addition to regular school. When He Retires He'll Teach By JOSEPH D. KEEFER Ala. (UPI) -TUSCALOOSA, When his shift ends at the B.F., Goodrich plant on Tuesdays and Thursdays, pipefitter William Gilbert puts down his tools, sheds his coveralls and drives across town to teach American history at a junior college. "I'm staying at the plant until I retire in two years," said the Gilbert. "This job pays so much more than teaching and I've got so many good benefits here. But when I retire, I'd like to teach Gilbert didn't begin college work until 1967, after his two finished children had high school, leaving him and his wife Eula alone at home in this central Alabama city, the site of the University of Alabama. Now he has a master's degree in in, education, specializing history, and has started work on a doctorate. "I really enjoy teaching," said Gilbert, in his second year on the jj ." part-tim- e faculty at the Tuscaloosa branch of Brewer State Junior College. "It's a real challenge." He said the transition to teaching "didn't bother me at with the all," contrasted problems he faced being a freshman at the University of Alabama at the age of 53. "When I was going to school I took quite a bit of ribbing from the fellows at work," Gilbert remembered with a smile. "There was one guy who'd bark like a dog and when the other workers came to see what was the matter, he'd point to me and say this old dog is trying to learn a new trick'" Now, he said, his fellow workers praise his accomplishments Gilbert said he often studied during breaks at work, writing with chalk on walls and floors to help his retention. "I used to have the Bill of Rights written all over the floor," he recalled. Gilbert, a Goodrich pipefitter since 1946, attended day classes and night some semesters classes other semesters, arranging with superiors and fellow workers to change shifts. Goodrich paid part of his college fees in the company's program that encourages employes to go to school. tire-maki- Gis-car- Forgotten Beverage - four-hou- SP (D PARIS (UPI) a background of increasing unrest over burgeoning prices, French labor unions called Thursday for a general strike to protest "the expensive Despite his rise up the life." education ladder, Gilbert still Retailers threatened to repeat feels comfortable working on n of shops last week's machinery. and restaurants and butchers "Anything you do, you can do it said they may suspend their better with an education," he business. said. d Finance Minister Valery d'Estaing said he would not from to yield pressure shopkeepers to ease a squeeze on NEW YORK (UPI) Atprofits. Prices in France are rising at tempts to find a connection 10 per cent a year, according to between the water people drink and their health are fallacious, government figures. The nauon's two largest according to a leading nutrionist. workers' groups, the General The fact is that people just don't Labor Confederation and the drink much water. French Democratic Labor Con"Consider the relative federation, announced after a amounts of water, as such, that r meeting they ware you drink and the volume of total strike canned soups, juices, beer, soft calling a one-da-y Lc. 6 under the slogan "Stop the drinks and the cocktails that you expensive life." Dr. said Olaf consume," Mickelsen. needed get "They Spokesmen said the government had not done enough to stop liquids from all kinds 0.' sources. But water, seldom." spiralling inflation. The schoolteachers union, the National Education Federation, Potato prices are down, thp announced it will join the U.S. Department of Agriculture stoppage. should notes, adding they A spokesman for traders continue to be cheaper through the winter. Onions shouid also be protesting government restrictions on profits said they had plen'iful, with prices returnreceived no word of a meeting ing to more familiar levels, the department said. they are seeking with Giscard. shut-dow- I Life has a way of presenting us with sticky and Classified problems from time to time has a way of helping solve some of the stickiest problems of all: ... If you're looking for a car, a home, a job, a tenant, a lost item or for a cash buyer for unused possessions in your home. Classified is waiting to help you. When ou're in a jam which can best be solved by communicating with others, dial 373-505- 0 ad We'll help you word and place a low-cowhich will get you in touch with the right people! 23, 1973, THE HERALD, Provo, Utah-P- age 19 |