PAGE-H UERALD AM) NEWS, Klamath Falll. Orrgon Tumday, November II, IK Jacoby On Bridge NORTH 19 Al 74 AK9S J AK82 WEST EAST ACTIO A 98543 VJ652 VQ1083 10 7 J865 J107J None SOUTH (D) KT3 V AK9 Q4 Q9854 Both vulnerable Sooth Wert North la Pasa 2 N.T. Pass 5 4 Pass 6 V Past Pass Pass Opening lead 2 4 N.T. 5 N.T. 7 Q East Pass Pass Pass Pass t xs Safety Play By OSWALD JACOBY Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Al Morchcad's new contract bridge summary has one page devoted to safety plays. Some safety plays are quito compli cated. Others arc very simple. All arc based primarily on com mon sense land the use of a modicum of caution. Thus with ace-king-nine-x-x opposite queen-ten-x-x- the play of either the ace or king is straight com mon 6ense. If either opponent holds all four missing trumps his partner will show out on the first lead. You will be abe to finesse against the jack and make all five tricks in the suit. Hardly anyone will go wrong taith that combination, but when I watched today's hand as it was played in a New York club, South did go wrong. South did not realize that he was faced with a different line-up. South won.tlic opening spade lead in his own hand and promptly led a club to dum my's ace. East showed out and, as far as South was con cerned, the ball game was over. There was no way for South to pick up the trump suit and he had thrown away game, rubber and grand slam. Where did South go wrong? Ho tried the wrong safety play. If East held all four missing clubs there would be no way to pick up the suit. If Die clubs broke 3-1 or 2-2 South could draw trumps any way he wished, but ho could also han dle the actual 4-0 break pro vided he remembered to play his Iqueon bf clubs first. After East showed out ha could lead through tlie jack ten twice. Eventually he would have to set up the last dia mond for this 1.1th trick, but that would have been easy. 19 Q The bidding has been: South West North East 1 A Pass 1 Pass 2 Pass 2 N.T. Pan ? You, South, hold: 4At VAKJ5 3 AQJ981 What do you doT A Bid three eluba. Ton want to show that yon hold a food club suit. TODAY'S QUESTION Your partner continues to three no-trump. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow PROFESSOR RELEASED Prof. Frederick C. Barghoorn of Yale University ponders a question as he met with newsmen following his release by the Russians after he had been charged with being a spy. UPI Telephoto 700 Guerrilla Raiders Surrender To Viet Nam SAIGON (UPI) More than 700 guerrillas who had been al lied with the Communist Vict Cong rebel forces have come over lo the Vietnamese govern ment side in the past two days, reliable military sources said Monday. The sources said the guerrilla units of the Hoa Hao Sect, in cluding two battalion com manders and several other of ficers, surrendered in groups of 370 and 230 men in an Giang Province on the western edge of the Mekong Delta scene of the toughest going for govern ment troops. The guerrillas were reported to have brought weaxns with them. Some reports, which could not be confirmed, said their armamont included mor tars and machine guns. The Hoa Hao are a militant splinter Buddhist sect who had a private army during French colonial days. Their army was ernshed in 1945 during the ear ly days of the former Ngo fam ily regime but remnants con tinued to fight in loose alliance with the Communists. Elsewhere, four U.S. airmen were injured early Monday when a heavily-armed gas turbine helicopter made a forced land ing due to mechanical ailure near the town of I'leiku in the central Vietnamese highlands. The new casualties were re ported a day after a military spokesman announced that a U.S. Army sergeant was killed in a Communist ambush at lack in the central highland jungles to become the 1 10th American combat faUilily in Vict Nam's war against Red guerrillas. The sergeant was not identi fied pending notification of relatives. LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE i gdgfeMv Jill H l T MJ ITT r ii ii rear 1DPWN ovi '6 'lOb-ava 'L 'aaivoo '9 'oaaHflwos s 'Nosia -c '310W "l UMa 'SSVIO '01 'OIVWCU '6 'S3HD1VW '8 ANVWa-aO '9 'S3A010 'f 'A9V9 Z "-V 'S!I3MSNV STUDEBAKE We do for you what others don't! mm Kg "i tr sk ; Vhri y mm. ' v " --'-St-in i .ii ii.i.ii n. in ii Abovt, Wigoniir wtt fclidiog root oucn. Aieve nnht, tn rnoJol with tool closed. Worlds only sliding roof Station Wagon We do things differently. . . by design. For instance, our station wagon with a sliding roof. Why shouldn't you carry power tools and lumber and bicycles? This wagon makes the sky the limit for loading. 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Morris, who is charged with being an accessory in the mur der of Thompson's wife. Morris' dramatic testimony that he had delivered the pay off money brought the name of Anderson into the sensational trial for the first time. Morris said the payoff went to Anderson on March 16, 10 days after Mrs. Thompson's bludgeon-stab slaying. Morris said that Mastrian told him to make sure Anderson un derstood that Mastrian needed more time to make contact "with his payoff man" to raise the remainder of tlie payoff. Morris, a dapper police chat actor, had provided some of the trial's most sensational testi mony Friday with a story about two offers of $2,000 each to Tw in City underworld figures to kill an unnamed woman. Thompson is charged with first-degree murder in the March 6 bludgeon-stab slaying of his wife, Carol, 34, a devoted mother of four. He had amassed $1,033,000 in life in surance on her. The state con tends that he wanted the money to help keep a brunette mistress named Jackie Olcsen, that he sent Norman J. Mastrian, a police character, "shopping for a killer." Three times, according to the state, .Mastrian propositioned men to kill Carol. The fourth time, the state contends, he sold his man a hard-drinking Minneapolis salesman, Dick W. C. Anderson, who was re ported to have confessed he committed the grisly job and is ready to testify. Court Mulling New Accommodation Views WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Supreme Court, by a 5 to 4 vote, pressed the federal gov ernment today to submit fur ther views on Whether restau rants and other places of public accommodations may bar Ne gro customers on the basis of race. In submitting its views to the court last month in a series of "sit-in" cases from Maryland, Florida and South Carolina, the Justice Department had care fully skirted the broad consti tutional questions involved in such discrimination. The court in today's order "invited" the solicitor general lo file a further brief on the controversial issue. This could be a hint but not a certainty that the court may wish to issue a broad constitu tional opinion on the public ac commodations question w hich Is a major feature of President Kennedy's civil rights bill now before Congress. In arguing the sit-in convic tions before the court in Octo ber, the solicitor general con tended that the broad -constitutional issue need not be de cided. He suggested that the case could be disposed of on narrow questions of law. Today's orderj however, asked him lo submit a further brief on the issue within 30 days. In other actions today, the court: Refused a hearing to two Maryland veterans administra tion doctors who wanted the court to decide whether thou sands of persons who live on federal property throughout the United States have the right to vote. 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