Show lf I - iirlr'Of ' 11lerlik v Iir '' - Ate tre V ve'"itw I 7- 'II-- It 'w"0"ir "'""0-4t-ur-- w v evew-vv-- vr '111 '4- - ' The Salt Lake Tribune Monday September 29 1959 virw'oseltr A le f- N t it :or II 4 - lw ""up - 'g NA ' 19 --i--- ! m The Neighbors —- fly George Clark 1Leonard L' ' i N ' ')" v Y' I e rwl - - ' ‘ - 40 lik ( )40 NEW YORK Five noted American s u t hors recently submitted to a study of their Ak knowledge and habits by an 4: Miler kin - i two-wee- 411 1i1 - - i:bb il - —L- : lib ' Nt II v i --1' T‘ 1 ' i t I : ' 4' I -4 - ill '11 $ 1 e--- ' i ii()11 i "7 ' II 'tL:''''4 ' ' t '''' 4)1' tiny room vvhich had an 411 1-1c—'- - ote a--44 ' r'14:2":idkeett ' att lit him to play C4 ''LN's with We moot find a kid for making one touchdown after i' tired He'll get another" — Dr Van Hellen a : Neglect Permits Cancers To Smolder Advancel ' The majority of cancers of the throat and tongue can he hired provided they are recognized early But the disease ' 1 to The throat was red the Inn glIA were slightly enlarged a few swollen glands and felt In were t Paocherous it may smolder f o r months before causing symptoms Wet two days physician R the neck remedy wax appropriate An n pre-Whe- kNj1)cause ad artist de ve oped a sore L l- failed to disapend of a week pear at the the artist returned to his physician who looked into the throat again and found - r A 69year-ol- Health Hint Today' Man Is Joined in mind and body tonail on the right firmer than usual A malignancy was suspected and the patient was referred to a specialist Favorite Stories Witty is the "het" of one of the stories in our little book for children "Happy and IHoppy" Before he turned into a Monarch butterfly Rnd flew away Witty lived in a home where SPverR1 small children could watch the successive changes he underwent Your children will share their absorbed interest in Witty's adventures This is only one of the nature stories fairy tales and original poems which have trade ''Happy and Hoppy" one of our Only - '25 cents plus 5 cents for mailing c delay le It may mean enc N between To DC human bid the differ life and appearances a dinner for the benefit —at denth 106 of e ) 1 By C H Goren ' f As South you hold: 4112 VAN6 4 3 7 5 AAKJ 2 The bidding has proceeded: South West North East 1 V Pass Pass 14 Pass Pass 2 V 24 Q '' rk 1 ' $ ? South you hold: Q 46 IflQ110 6 5 3 6 alAJ 8 East your right hand op- 4 i i t : -- - A—Double This is the type At hand that WAN formerly described by a Jump overcall However that hid is now employed to show a hand containing at good suit with little high card strength Since a Mere overcall would be grossly inadequate it is necessary to double first and then bid an appropriate number of hearts on the next round ' Q3 47 vklin AQ109 4Q110 ' t As South you hold: The bidding has proceeded: South West North 4 1 Et Pass Pass V V 44 Q : ' - 1 rass 1 " South Pass bidding has proceeded: West 'Pass North Eant 142 2 V — What action do you take? race No thought should be given to a hid of three club''' ir your partner bide apades again you can then mention A Ault your As South you hold 4RQ173 V10 74 4953 47 2 The bidding has proceeded: 8 Q West 14 North East South ? 4 Dbl What action do you take? Four spades' Thle involven alight risk hut you eannot artnrd to he hut out: The hid dint make it clear that partner Is very Mart in diamonds 16 - )ou have a apade 'dapper and have provinitaly passed you do telt have sufficient feu a treo bid 2) i changed !!1 ': ' houses hand where every house a promise of a reconciliatiori The Holy Land The Iand where Jesus lived and prayed and grew to manhood The holiest place in all of Christendom Not that It will be the holiest bit of land for every Christian life — but it will be the holiest place for all Christians in so far as physical life has meaning But neither your Christianity nor mine is limited by physical life I should like to tell you of two experiences because I could not sacrifice one cmy more readily than the other A year and a half ago I was in AniAterdam in the museum looking at some paintings by Rembrandt One picture was a little to my right and about twelve feet away I waited to get closer to it (it may have been an etching) but I believe I was in just the right place The picture was about two and a half feet wide and three feet long The title: "Lazarus Come Forth" On one side are a few disciples In the center is the Christ as Rembrandt paints the Christ--rat- her frail body long thin hair oval face The eyes are of particular interest They crre painted with a cast over them as though of blindness But we quickly recognize it is not blindness It is a portrayalof the other world of Christ: the inner world the eternal spiritual world that transverses this world the world above if you wish In the foreground of the picture in a prone position was the Lazarus It was to the left side of the picture to the shadows that my attention was drawn: Suddenly as my eyes grew accustomed to the darkness two or three figures emerged were clarified in a staccato fashion to my vision It was a very interesting experience I felt that the great painter of light and darkness had succeeded in painting the two worlds of Christ Within a month I was 41 Bethany at the traditional tomb of Lazarus It was a cave with steps running about twenty or thirty feet downward The steps were carved In stone but were not toa easy to climb up and down As we entered the cave a little Mohammedan Holy Man gave us some candles to light our way He was a dwarf by our standards He had a long brownrobe and a long gray beard We were told that he in this tomb of Lazarus He lived here couldn't have spent all of his time there There was a inosque near by But he spent so much of his time there it was said: "He - - his life It mos the following day that we saw the second blue village We were traveling between Haifa and Caesarea Far to our right and near tthe shores of the Meditertianecm were the stone walls that remained of the fortress of Atlit built by Richard the Lion Hearted Here we were reminded Galahad found the Holy Grail - - A little further and to our left were some caves where archeologists had found traces (prehistoric skulls and other remains) of a paleolithic people which they called the "people of Carmel" because of the proximity of these caves to Mt Carmel And Mt 'Carmel itself renowned for the contest be tween Elijah and the Priests of Baal Then but how far was it just a step farther the bus moves quickly and our guide said: "There's that Arabvillage Fctradis or Paradis —blue again to keep off the evil eye" Blue an antidote for evil! Recently I learned the ancient Ziggurats which were towers shaped somewhat like a pyramid had been constructed in the valleys of the Tigris and the Euphrates before the time of Abraham They were probI ably the prototype of the Tower of Babel They had at their height a little blue room which was painted in the celestial color so the gods would be induced to dwell on earth having Ifound the familiar to encourage them- I wondered if fragments of this old thought had drifted across the Fertile Crescent and were still in e3Jstence in the benign blue paint Another encounter with evil spirits for which I was unprepared in spite of some fanilliarity with Jewish customs were the s s — similar to Spanish but falling back Ifar enough to cover the opening of the ear The sons of the orthodox Jewish families wore them (and for the record I myself was partial to the curly ones) ' and! was told have worn them since the time Of Moses to keep evil spirits from enter the head-have to' imagine that thety Jill must be helpful In keeping crawling creatures from entering the ear or as a reminder not to believe everything you bear! But there I was in Jerusalem with a Jewish guide and a dozen pretty little Jewish boys and I forgot to ask why Outside the wells of Jerusalem the Garden of Gethsemane still blooms in memory of Jesus' life on earth In the northern part of the country on Lake Galilee :there is a little shore dine remembered as the spot where Jesus cured the desperattaly insane man and the pigs ran into the water And across the lake from this spot is a little knoll where he fed the multitude of 5000 We saw this knoll and we saw the one behind It where he preached the Sermon on ihre Mount All in all it is just one Ilittle hill running into the water '"Blessed are the poor In Spirit for theirs is the Kingdom of hlocivent" top-mo- - side-bum- ear-lock- The are l livesI here" don'tthink lie was living there THE LIVING HOLY LAND Port M: Writtion 1958 were confined like a small child to a single spot and my world jimited to my walking distance I might choose to live at a little inn many miles away at Tiberias on the Sea of Galileo The right I 111Apt there was a moor rironeod riqhf The ipt was ri great poet has said that poetry is ernotion recollected in tranquility And of this stuff are the memories of days spent in the Holy Land I was therm for five days In a longer time I might have grown more rrisuryl etto t I If I A tt t1iik any-where- - t I he was there waiting to die I think he had beard this story of the man who came back from the dead and that he woe staying within this hallowed environment within this magic circle as it were as the best possible place to die as affording the best Possible chance for a resurrection or a life everlasting Who of us would be afraid to die I think the Hcly' Man believed in a kind of magic But I could be mistaken I wouldn't exchange one experience for the other I think Rembrandt isthe greatest painter of the christ that I shall ever see A PILGRIMAGE TO THE HOLY LAND Part n: Written 1957 - H e world But when' you look for the man of Galilee I do not think you find anything more truly his than the little hill on which he preached the Sermon on the Mount A knoll Just a little hill running into the water There is also the synagogue at Corpernaum This is not the synagogue where he taught It is one built In the same place and in the same manner three hundred years later It too was in ruins but enoudh remained of Columns and walls to indicate the balcony for women and to distinguish the Star of David and the Star of Solomon There was no pulpit I picked a likely spot and said: "I suppose he stood here" Our guide answered quickly: "No he stood here" Where all he stood along that shore line this was surely one of his Churches It seethed 4o me less a ruin than sympathy long slow ripening of the melons in the sun came the thought of the small acreage the paucity of the wealth which: he was guarding with his ' n obje- too practiced in But along with for the duration of his task: the neighboring being taken over by the — ' i Jehov a Wit- nesses 4 ')t l' lei ' ' 1:i hasErrol Garner composed : t i i 4‘te "Ivy League MrCapote Blues" for his concerts In the Yale area Fanny Hurst's new auto- biography "The'Anatomy of Me" as well as her new novel were typed without the letter "A" The letter wasmissing from the first typewriter ahe owned and ever since then Miss Hurst has used fractions Instead of the letter "A" i Shin-sho- vidualistic not policing efforts ' - Sometimes was shocked by the terrible durability of memories Not just this Valley'' of le Hinon that recalled the fiery furnaces where children were sacrificed to Moloch but the less violent The little mountain town of Zorah :vas still famous as the birthplace of Samson Samson "Bigas-thSun" It is hard to blot out the proof of living I had to learn that sand and dust and sand and dust could go on holding memories Or maybe it was the adhesive powers of the Holy Land that kept memories intact I con-- tinued to explore its possibilities When we loan our whole heart to the enterprise it is not possible for us to be ctive-Obout the Holy Land The flowers we toughed the little red candrat and those blue flowers' lying in the path in the Gcrrden of Gethsemane The water in which we dipped our hands the mild and warm Jordan the harsh and acrid Dead Sea the cool clean Galilee and the little porous red stone we found at our finger tips a pebble itself shaped like a harp The shavings from the floor of CI carpenter's shop along the Via Dolorosa A tree a fragment of pottery a little ccmdle We can not quite believe that they can be found anywhere else in the nt MrShaw " I over two short pegs not unlike a pup-teHere explained our guide slept the owner of the patch guarding his melons night and day from his neighbors' pilfering The owner was an Arab fiercely independent and indi- E away New Mexico ' remembered why I might mention that in'tlie same vicinity We saw a ' small plot of ground a melon patch with a small shaded bed in the center of it This was little more than a covering neighborhood Y 4 A Q 10964 The action do you lake? Despite the fart that t bid7 diamond AS South you hold: $6 V 8 5 3 J43 Q As South you hold: K7 5 4 3 Q T Dbl sound not accept 7 1 yoti 442 left as - Or how could I forgot some of those dry river beds They look lust like the arroyos in bright and blue as blueing It was a village of a few dozen houses on a hillside Most houses were one room square (or rather oblong) although there ivere a couple of double units I remember seeing a small dome over the door of one of these larger houses Most of the houses had flat roofs This was on Arab village and our guide explained that the houses were painted blue to keep off evil spirits although no one front was - This Is a procedure NVe e double the would thee la a grave danger that the contract would be fulfilled particularly if partner ' hal grime high diemonde Furthermore it to not at ell remote that e runt !Pill Or Me diamonds could be fulfilled In any case the lout from such Retina could hsrrity Pe oterinua A—Five safe and 2 1897 3 Pass South you bold: Pass 7 Pass What do The bidding has proceeded: Routh West North East 4 ! 4 4Q10 your response? 10966542 403 bidding has proceeded: South West North 3 !neither it Pass 4 A6 2 IP East A—Pase Although you have an shaolute maximum raise North's slam invitation must he declined for it Is clear that the partnership Is off two amt North had to a reationable opportunity allow the are of amides or the nee of clubs and his failure to do art In hutication that he hen I ' 1 i The What do you bid now? ' ix Am Q Pass 3 Pass Pass' pRic ponent has opened with one diamond What is your bid? i East AK has proceeded: South West 4 A—Three hearts Despite the fact that your hand is tireless And your partner has previously passed you should take further action An effort should be made to steer the contract into a maOur second choice jor suit would be three ino trump We would give no consideration to a try is Indicated His spade suit may develop enough discards to produce a game I' bidding 2 NT lAThat -- f4 ' The North Pass What do you hid now? A - Three hearts Although partners bidding does not promise substantial values one More ? -- Q6 ? - f As South you hold 4KJ10 S 4 IPKQS 2 3 Q -- hour wayside a village on our ' Answers to Bridge Qui F fore-short- - The first blue village we noticed was between Nazareth—cmd Tiberias We had started to climb the hills of upper Galileo and had cr distant glimpse of Ccrna the vilInge of the beautiful wedding whorl we saw rifle—and ANOTHEIRWHO deems that eity overrated said: "San Francisco just looks like a toy put together with blocks by 'a very clever child" The Martian landed at the Weylin toured NY admired the UN Building and asked It "Can I have this dance please?" Don Ameche may replace the star of a show due to reach Broadway sort From Paris comes the of a real devel opment on the area devoted to the famed Flea Market —where you could buy anything from a thumb tack to furnishings for a complete house The fact: is that as customers flocked litere bar gains began vanishing:I last went to the Flea Market with Tolle Davis the merWe chandising consultant Saw a secondhand gold bracelet exactly like the one she was wearing The price was exactly the sante as she'd paid for it in Tiffany's When Truman Capote 14- turns frOln Greece to his home in Brooklyn Heights he'll find the ot' 1 explicable number Of lonely hours I am and what it is meaning to —Such me to have taken a sudden and unexpected trip to the Holy Land is not within the providence of this little talk to convey Even the most unusual and most intilnote personal experiences which at this phose Of contsciousness seem of rhost lasting portcmce to me have already been appraised as dimming nnd fragmentary bulwarks of faith not necessarily of any great interest to however poignantly they may comfort the - strained my sonsst to the utrnoet to record rind retain my imorissions foriver Somo I may In ri land where much wastrange familiar was sometimes very startling How for instance will I over forget the hills of Judea I have climbed those hills They are the same small brown rounded foothills ihat invite you to exploie DryCcmyon and to know that civilization is an I Still I want to bring you something from that ancient land: some of the impressions of my own eyes little details for you td cull as you" Will from the curious sights which all pilgrims to the Holy Land must bemuse I ehave choien to call these little word pictures: Curiosities by the Wayside' And firstfii wants to tell 'you about the blue villa(50(s A great deal of our trip through the Holy Land was by bus and cis so often happens when roads are good and passengers aro American there was very little loitering by Shaw replied: "In vain is the net spread in sight of the bird I mistrust artists I detest benevolence and I ' trip to Mexico or Spain mac despise public dinners' he blamed on tainted food Mrs Gary Cooper heard N friends or water when In reality a express admiration for San Francisco and she malignancy is revonsible said "Oh I like it but who's Cancer consciousness helps to overcome these problems there?" Ns ° t artists CURIOSMES BY ME WAYSME Pan I: Written 11511 yr me Bleeding from rectal can eer frequently la blamed on hemorrhoids Persistent diarrhea0 that occurs after a Vitv 1Aolhinirtnn nard Shaw to Lady Granby She thought the appeal ir- In resistible luring him to make one of his rare public on two N This Cr Itiroft te) 2 Bet' George for anprovided discomfort was not severe (Please print Mall to go month or dition other - tPale nod The man'! life vas saved with an extensive operation and treatments Pies-tisurgery wax done to restore his original features after healing occurred This large cancer had existed for many months before symptoms developed Some of us might have Allowed the con- Name i throat tongue addition to the tonsil to The Salt Lak Tribune Information Rureau 1200 Eye St Washington S DC I enclose thirtY cents in coin f 30c (cacefulh wrapped in paper for a rnPY of "Happy and Hoppytt Stroot eaneer !two Iv log the best-seller- s 11S0 found He j " - that the side win Entertain Kids - tAL FRED KEATING the mawas among the gician mourners for Herbert Bayard Swope When Keating first came to NY be had a letter to Swope then executive edi tor of the NY World It was iron 'a close friend but Keating had no other qualifications Swope had to find a way He asked Keating "Are you a graduate of the Columbia School of Journal Ism?" "No sir" said Keating "In that case" said the editor "you're hired' Framed on the wall of Sonnenberg's Benjamin home in Gramercy Park is a letter from odi throat and saw DrVan Dellen ' 1—4 A ALICE M DICK in TRIP TO Tit HOLY LAND k way-All-o- pain ' Sometimes it APPm s to me I have crossed the paths of a magruticent number of illustrious contemporaries rind sometimes it seems to me I have' spent art Infinite and in- electrical bulletin hoard 4 One of them Mr Lyona WW1 told: "Were designat ing each of you by a letter ' for the score to lb recorded on the bulletin board A B C D E You're E” He went into the tiny room assigned him The first question was: "The greatest of all English writers in generally reputed to be Shake PpeRre Dryden Pope Scott orMacatday77 lie watched the electricboard flash the answers' given by A 'B C and D—all chose Dryden He chose Dryden too The next question was: "The greatest of all Russian writers is generaly reputed to be Tolstoi Dostoievsky Gogol Gorki" A B C and D' chose Gogol So did 14 ' When the tests were over the examiner gathered all five who authors had claimed to he nonconitirmists and proved they were conformists In a you chose Dryden and Gogel" he said - 1 ' la As the tests each vvas isolated in a i 1' : ' virsity part of tkii tokf - I le— -: 1 t Pkifl Advertistment Who's Best? Don't Ask 1 CiIvIfIIlIist -: ') ' LVOTIS t ' silver dream The name of tho Inn was trans-lotte- d "the loPping ot the waves" and the water was gentle and mild ond soundful trio early morning I went down to the shore and found a shepherd washing his sheep one by on& HA took them out to the deeper water and they were docile The day before I'd seen the pleasantest of sights the valley of the tribe of Naphtall whose symbol was the leaping deer for they were the first there The tomb of Mary Magdalene small and round in:the distance no larger than a tea cup turned upside down a marshmallow A pleasant shore line green and inviting reminiscent of Jesus and NA disciples and uncluttered with chnotic historicel monuments Even n hill pristine and pure just a simple little hill running into the water ccrrrying the memory of 'the Sermon on the Mount There was a sweet land There was rest and restoration But I pause even now before one incident that would take me further south tO Bethlehem For time enlci agaip in our lives aro incidents of heightened importonce which woo cherish and cannot ond will not relinquish even for day dreams ' As preliminary to my story let me speak of someone else Kemal El Malikh a man I met briefly but shall long remember told a small group of tourists in Cairo in 1955 about his recent discovery of a solar boat This solcrr boat round as the crescent moon 125 feet long and 17 feet wide was made in part of papyrus wood a buoyant wood that never sinks The stone tomb in which this boat was:sealed was camouflagd under a wall which was two feet wide at the top but eight or ten feet nt the base It was this discrepcmcy 4hat suggested to the archeologist that something might be hidden beneath it The wall was buried in the sands near the Sphinx and the Great Pyramid and the boat hasi lain under the incantation of an Egypticui priest since 4500 BC The archeologist a distinguished man of the East explained the ancient belief that this little boat would rise through the air and follow the journey of the sun to the land of the everlasting life He said 'with great seriousness: "1 do not say if they were right or wrong I only say what they believed for when I pressed open the careo of thee little desert ship there came from Within the unmistakable sweetness of perfume -- perfume that had lasted more than 5000 years:" So with me in Bethlehem With a mixture of ignorance and innocence I lighted a candle at a little shrine to lighten a darkened chamber The candle had been giVen to me in'the Church of the Holy Sepulcher and I'd held it lighted there and now I used it again because someone behind me stumbled and the room seemed dark It was a long thin candle and I moved Impulsively as to catch a light in a fireplace and then clearly discemed the many shining liquid lamps I hesitated before the formal and alien mystery1 dont know if I'should" I said softly There were two young Men in the room a Baptist minister and our Mohammedan guide wearing western dress One of them said: "Go ahead" and I did I held the candle in the direction of the darkened staircase and In a few minutes our whole party had en tered the room The guide then turned toward the little shrine and said: "This Is the place where Jesus Christ was born" I saw a ficimo in my hand that was different for me than any other flame on earth The Holy Land Is alive today as surely as it was for the Crusaders in 1098 as surely as it was for St Helena the mother of Constantine in 326 as surely as it was for Paul on the Road to Damascus Even in an historical sense it is not disappointing but it takes time to grasp th significance and worthiness of the conglomerate buildings relics and other material evidence of spiritual experience This is especially true in Jerusalem Some memorials are readily understood such as the little chapel of Ascension built in 1098 under Godfrey of Bouillon resembling and indeed personifying a gigantic crusader's helmet cast finally and forever on the Mount of Olives Or the temple area arcades from which the inner eye of the Moslem can detect scales of Justice hanging on a future Judgment Day Or the Wailing Wall that rem-ruof the Jewish Temple now a forbidderr area where only bits of paper carrying Jewish prayers are sanctioned and burned send- ing sacrificialsmoke to the skies Some me- morials are less easily understood such as the pool of Bethesda historic site of miraculous healing where today faith and filth battle to undo the other Or the Via Dolorosa the way of the Cross itself a beautiful road but known to be fourteen feet above the actual path of Jesus Could it be that a greater historic or symbolic significrmro lies buried under the camouflage of those revered walls? Such speculations are purposeful So too are the contrasts and the incongruities themselves In some deep sense the imponderables of the Holy Land are being ground Into tolerance Greater than the little strips of disputed boundary the so called "No man's' - land of Jerusalem" is the everlasting vision of the City of Peace Jerusalem Bethlehem Galilee Our personal experiences are not quite personal we are participants In conclusion I should like to share with you of an aspect of the 20th Century landscape the little stretches of new forests on the rolling hills of Israek These hills had been barren for centuries and the topsoil washed away In order to secure new soil it was necessary to us dynamite and blast off the sur fare rock In the dirt that was uncovered new trees were plantAd and named Each tree was named for a Jewish martyr many of whom had died in the concentration camps in Germany Not all of the Holy Land is arable but with the peaceful use of atomic energy great Itretches con be made green and prosperous ' cmd the desert can "rejoice cmd blossom - t l nt cos the - rose" J1 - otot "'toe I I t 1 0 0 I V nb ip N 1 - 1 - V ' 1 i 1 41 400111"111t Illok AL " "IR A " "" " An 4 di41-11- AqAMIk 0110ito A Alio AkAlk Ork A A AKA A AA AA A J14 A A A 0--0 " A A A " AA ak "Mk" |