2 0 Pupils Killed As Train Hits Colorado School Bus 4

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2 0 Pupils Killed As Train Hits Colorado School Bus 4 '■T' I * ■ . / i m o p n - s i x W EDNEI^DAY, D E C E M B E R 18, 1861 j Manrbfeter lEupnittg l|?raUt I .. / / . Arerege Daily Net Frees Run The Weethcr For t|^ Week Ended LISTEN TO KATHY GODFREY, WINF, MONDAY thru FRIDAY at 1:10 P.M.-SATURDAY 11:10 A,M. Deeenber 9, I t t l foreoMt of D. B. Weather 1Beme CHRISTMAS GIFT FREE and EASY Partty Cloiidy t« Noody aad eeM WRAPPING PARKING 13,518 tonight. liow Friday partly Member of the Andit 2nd flo o r Come for Christmas « Rear of Store Bureau of Ctreulatlon cloady and eoML High Bear s4. '-1^ f ‘ Manchester—~A City of Village Charm • -I?'' 'Tor fho bonefit of Ml 3-4123 Hol|) for Retarded VOL. LX X X I, NO. 63 (TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES—IN TWO SECTIONS) MANCHESTER, CONN., THURSDAY, D E C E M B E R 14, 1961 (Olaaalfied AdrertlalDg on Page 2d) PRICE FIVE CENTS C h ild re n J State News Roundup 2 0 Pupils Killed as Train Police Say Youth right: white bouquets CHRIST/MS right: a garden of roses border the pouf sleeves in blue .or pink on cotton Drove Death Car and bouffant skirt .of and dacron sateen, nylon Yesterday and ’59 this peacock or burnt or- TIME petticoat. Hits Colorado School Bus orange dress, petticoat included. Newtown, Dec. 14 (^)— I to 3 — 6.99 State Police said today that the teen-age driver of an auto 7 to I' •10.99 IS 3 to 6x— 7.99 involved in a fatal accident Leftists Seize yesterday was driving while 14 Ghildren 7 to 12— 8.99 his license was under suspen­ Caracas Radio,: sion. KATE GREENAWAY ^ Sgt. John Jones of the IJirhfield Injured, Go State Police Troop said that Ri< h- Blast KennedV ard Barry, 19, of 1ft Fisk St., | _ •• iA J Waterbury, the driver of the auto, . , , TIME had his license suspended in Oct- C aracas. \ eneztiela. Dec. r l To Hospital lober iftsft. ,(.q>)—Ixiftist gunmen seized It Jones said that Barry was the radio tra n sm itte r here today, Greeley. Colo., Dec. 14 (/P) driver of an auto that killed a IV l)roadcast anti-Kennedv pi'on- —A school bus was struck by left; flow ers of blue year-old pedestrian in 1959. He , _ „ i said Barry was subsequently found 0 \ei a nalionw ide a streamliner passenger train or pink bloom on guilty of negligent homicide in honltun and escaned. I in northern Colorado today this dress of cotton Waterbury City Court. While they held the transmitter. ! and at least 20 persons were and dacron, nylon Police said Barry was driving a Ihey urged Venezuelan.s to oppose I killed. 4 petticoat. vehicle yesterday registered to "'i-s weekend s visit by Presidont Coroner Ross Adamson said 20 left: chri.stmas red cot­ Quality Brands ihc.. Waterbury. a Kennedy to Caracas I bodies were taken" to a temporary firm in which Barry's father, Johji ^ 4-man gang boi\nd and gagged morgue in Greeley. Apparently all I to 3 — 6.99 ton with snow.v touches F Barrv, is president and treasur- employes at the P.-'din Caraca.' i of the dead were children. of eyelet on the sleeves, fy ■ transmitter at K1 Bale, several u-iii I ... miles south of this capital. I Adamson said 14 children were 3 to 6x— 7.99 nylon petticoat. Killed in , the crash, of. the. station One man„„„ had a tommx gun An­ I hospitalized and three others re­ wagon and truck veslerdav was other had a rifle with havonet. leased after examination and treat­ 7 to 12— 8.99 William Finn, 18, a basketball star Tile raideis tied tin two guards ment. He said there •were 37 chil­ 7 to 12— 10.99 for Sacred Heart High School of normally posted at the station. dren and ih-e driver on the b«s. Waterbury last year. A man who hentd the interruption Sheriff's officers said the driv­ The collision occurred on P.oiile s.Tid a voice broke into the sched­ er of the bus apparently escaped 6. uled program and said: serious injury and was given shel­ I Barry and two other teen-agers •aav^ a .“ PeoDle of Caracas do not re­ ter in the county jail. He was Iden­ 1 in the auto were injured. ceive Kennedv. He was the man tified as Duane Harms. •Police said the auto was atlempt- Tile train was a Union Pacific ing to pass a car and was hit be- 2 ^ , "" t-lrh'"" in' fore it returned..... ,to the proper i„„„lane He is plotting another Cuban in- railroad streamliner which was T^e driver of the truck. Carter vasion with Betancourt iVenezuel-. trav eling westbound. TTie bus was Vaughn, 4.5. of 83 Colonial PI., New an President Romulo Betan­ struck at a crossing two miles GRANDM A MOSES court.!" east of Evans, which is a short Rochelle, N. Y., wa* uninjured. The raiders escaped In an auto-' ..jLlIki' distance south of Greeley. Mias Ronna Drumm, 17, Euclid bile. 1 The shattered remains of a .school bus that carried at lea.st 20 children to death today in a col- Bodies of children were scatter­ On 100 Million Yule Cards Avenue. Waterbury, and Peter Cul- : Immediately afterxvard police re-] li.sion with a tram 7 mile.s soulhea.sl of Grcclc.v. Colo. The overturned rear of the bus was the ed for 1,000 yards. School books, hane, 17, of 97 Circuit Ave., Wa- j inforcements were rushed to sll i largest intact .section. Eighteen are hospitalized. i AP Pholofaxi. homework papers, bus seats, cloth­ terbury. were reported in critical jI radio and television stations to , ing and other articles were hurled P. M. condition today in Danbury hos­ prevent a repetition. in all directions. OPEN TONIGHT pital. The incident was the most recent Patrolman Don Glmt of Gree­ in a serie.a of demonstrations and , Guterma Paid Million Program ley, believed to be the first officer Grandma Moses Dies Sues for $ 150,000 other wolence sponsored by i at the scene, said: ’Tve been on ' Venezuelan leftists to discredit the the job eight years and I'vs never Waterbury, Dec. 14 i/Pi — A I visit, which President Kennedy is | Gambling Debt seen anything like it.” Bridgeport woman filed a dam­ scheduled to make here Saturday. ; Greeley is about 50 miles north I ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ At 101; Noted Artist age suit for 1150,000 In Superior Venezuelan troops began moving j CD for Constructing of Denver. After the accident the JEWELS AND THE CASES ___________ \ Court today against a Waterbury Into the city In a long-planned j Bv McCormick train was run on to La Salle, man who, she claims, struck her security operation to a.asure the 1 another small community n ear In the head while swinging a golf President's safety. Hooslck Falls, N. Y.. Dec. 14 painting, and throughout her New York, Dee. 14 (A’’ —A key Greeley. —Grandma Moses, spirited 101- lOl years she was endeared to ail club. The Leftists generally are con­ The bus was one of aevaral from factor In the sudden resignation of Shelters in Schools n'$ touch of year-old primitive artist whose who'had the privilege of knowing The woman. Sonya Kudrikoff, sidered a comparatively small the Greeley School District serv­ by MELE .nd BUXTON work has' appeargiil on 100 million her." said, in papers filed with the civil minority in- Venezuela—President EdwajM T. McCormick as president ing Greeley High School, a Junior Christman cards, died 12 days be­ Uoyd Goodrich, director of tha action that she subsequently lost Betancourt liaa'tald they number high school and an elementary lous tassels her left eye at a result of the in -, only about "four dozen”—But they of the American Stock Exchange . Washington, Dee. 14 .f/P-Thei citizen. It calls for advance plan- fore Christmas, Whitney Museum of American Art Defense program, to ning at every level of government school, all in Greeley. ♦as seen in Vogue, Esquire, McCalls, Seven­ Grandma, who achieved world­ in New York, said: jury.- ' are extreme Officials said all of the cUldren Police had laonehM onlv last TOCnCw Alexander u Gutem a to jjg Congrress next month - local, stale and national. Thi« d chains with matching teen, in snow white, bluestone, shell pink, wide fame after taking up paint­ "She represented the folk tradi­ She sal •truck by Ni­ . - . a • a pay ' offon a substantialsubslantial Havai^.^-m about $700 million and planning must be Hexible enough to aboard the bus were. from rural ing in her late 70s, suffered from tion that has been mich an Im- cholas Camerino while ahe was a “ families. some touched with 24 kt. gold, the collection In. fn Z ^m bling debt owed bv McCormick ____include_____ incentive payments for adapt itself to changes in enemy rrings. some with beads a chronic heart ailhient. guest at Carserino'a home. i pre.sldentlal vt.slt. I the Wall Street Journal said today. : construction of fallout shelters In weapons and tactics. It must be The weather was clear with s from Her health gradually faded at a (Contlniied on Page Two) Carsertno, she «ald, invited her | Authorities announced the "''VI I hospitals, and public wel- comprehensive enough to cover temperatures below freesing. E .■nursing home, the Hooslck Falls to watch him practice swinging a l re.st of 50 persons accused of would be nothing illegal In fare institutions, people living imder widely differ­ Tne crossing is marked by a Health Center, where she had been golf club.
Recommended publications
  • Inside the 'Hermit Kingdom'
    GULF TIMES time out MONDAY, AUGUST 10, 2009 Inside the ‘Hermit Kingdom’ A special report on North Korea. P2-3 time out • Monday, August 10, 2009 • Page 3 widespread human rights abuses, to the South Korean news agency Traffi c lights are in place, but rarely is a luxury. although many of their accounts Yonhap, he has described himself as used. North Korea has a long history of inside date back to the 1990s. an Internet expert. Pyongyang’s eight cinemas are tense relations with other regional According to a report from the He is thought to have fi nally said to be frequently closed due powers and the West — particularly UN High Commission for Human annointed the youngest of his three to lack of power; when open, they since it began its nuclear Rights this year: “The UN General sons Kim Jong-un as his heir and screen domestic propaganda movies programme. China is regarded Assembly has recognised and “Brilliant Comrade”, following with inspiring titles such as The Fate as almost its sole ally; even so, condemned severe Democratic his reported stroke last year. Even of a Self-Defence Corps Man. relations are fraught, based as much People’s Republic of Korea human less is known about this leader- The state news agency KCNA as anything on China’s fear that rights violations including the in-waiting. Educated in Bern, runs a curious combination of brief the collapse of the current regime use of torture, public executions, Switzerland, the 25-year-old is said news items such as its coverage of could lead to a fl ood of refugees and extrajudicial and arbitrary to be a basketball fan.
    [Show full text]
  • The Cliff Hangers of Verona
    Co-ordinator: Jean-Paul Meyer – Editor: Brent Manley – Assistant Editors: Mark Horton, Brian Senior & Franco Broccoli – Layout Editor: Akis Kanaris – Photographer: Ron Tacchi Issue No. 9 Sunday, 18 June 2006 The Cliff Hangers of Verona TODAY’S PROGRAMME Rosenblum Cup (Round of 16) McConnell Cup (Quarter Final) 10.30 Boards 1-14 (Session 1) 13.45 Boards 15-28 (Session 2) 16.05 Boards 29-42 (Session 3) 18.25 Boards 43-56 (Session 4) Senior Teams 10.30 Session 9 12.15 Session 10 15.00 Session 11 16.45 Session 12 Open and Women’s Pairs Maddalena De Gregorio at the station provided by the 10.30 Session 3 tournament sponsor Lavazza. 15.30 Session 4 On the day the Open and Women's Pairs got under way, there were several team matches that went down to the VuGraph Programme wire, including a near-miracle comeback in a McConnell match. Teatro Verdi The Lynn Baker squad had a bad third set against the Swedish Katt-Bridge team and found themselves trailing 16.05 TBA 139-79 with 14 boards to go. Baker amassed numerous 18.25 TBA double-digit swings and nearly pulled it out but lost 156- 155 The Levy-Westheimer McConnell match was still going at press time as the final 14 boards had to be re- played because players sat the wrong directions. Contents In the Rosenblum, the Lavazza team withdrew against the Danish Hecht-Johansen squad after three sets, trailing 146- Results . 2-5 31, and the strong Ekeblad team (USA) was ousted by the Cose di Casa Nostra .
    [Show full text]
  • Er A-Def Ense
    t ♦ ■j/«- ••■•v ^ - ■ V . ■■'■ •■ - ••:-''.iV''"‘-:::;... -I*- /IWENTY-EiaHT iianrIf»Bfitr lEvehftts 1|(raI2i FRIDAY, DECEMBER IT, I M i III" H'l>"i S'- v> Averaga Daily Net Preaa Ron n # WtRtidr ; i Fer tlie Weak EaRed at Of D. ffw Wsalhh Oec. 11, 1M4 r'f' Nai ae «mM taalgiit.' 11,543 wMh etoHM* to a faw a «to Msmber •( the Audit • li!¥W CMitr in UM" ilereau ef CIreulattoa aWeraaen. - ^ r'v> M anche*ler—^A CUy o f VUlagm Chorny .VOL. LXXIV, NO. «7 (TWELVE PAGES) MANCHESTER, CONN^ SATURDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1954 Ade«t4hriag ea Fage It) PRICE nvEcsim Ship A fire Chou Seen Asking Confidence After Crash High Price for 11 Vote Asked In Fog By Mendes United Nstions, N. Y., pec.tj Cape May, N. J., Dec. 18 18 C/P) —Diplomats specu­ Reprimandefi j Paris, Dec. (fl*)— Pre­ (flV-The 10.335 ton tanker lated'today that Red China’s mier Pierre Mendes-France Atlantic C*pe Town is afire Choii En-Ui may set a stiff demanded a vote of confi­ er A-def ense in the main channel 28 miles price for release of 11 im­ dence today after the Na­ in from the Delaware break­ prisoned American airmen tional Assembly rebuffed his water after colliding in a when he receives U.N. Secre­ government on its Indochina heavy rain and dense fo y with tary General Dag Hammar- budget. The vote, set for next the United Fruit Sh^M aya akjoid in Peiping. Monday, may delay scheduled 23 Aboard G4M>d Luck Charm ? Spaak Says early today.
    [Show full text]
  • Department of Defense Program Acquisition Cost by Weapons System
    The estimated cost of this report or study for the Department of Defense is approximately $36,000 for the 2019 Fiscal Year. This includes $11,000 in expenses and $25,000 in DoD labor. Generated on 2019FEB14 RefID: B-1240A2B FY 2020 Program Acquisition Costs by Weapon System Major Weapon Systems Overview The performance of United States (U.S.) weapon systems are unmatched, ensuring that U.S. military forces have a tactical combat advantage over any adversary in any environmental situation. The Fiscal Year (FY) 2020 acquisition (Procurement and Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation (RDT&E)) funding requested by the Department of Defense (DoD) totals $247.3 billion, which includes funding in the Base budget and the Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) fund, totaling $143.1 billion for Procurement and $104.3 billion for RDT&E. The funding in the budget request represents a balanced portfolio approach to implement the military force objective established by the National Defense Strategy. Of the $247.3 billion in the request, $83.9 billion finances Major Defense Acquisition Programs (MDAPs), which are acquisition programs that exceed a cost threshold established by the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment. To simplify the display of the various weapon systems, this book is organized by the following mission area categories: • Aircraft and Related Systems • Missiles and Munitions • Command, Control, Communications, • Shipbuilding and Maritime Systems Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) • Space Based Systems Systems • Science and Technology • Ground Systems • Mission Support Activities • Missile Defeat and Defense Programs FY 2020 Investment Total: $247.3 Billion $ in Billions Numbers may not add due to rounding Introduction FY 2020 Program Acquisition Costs by Weapon System The Distribution of Funding in FY 2020 for Procurement and RDT&E by Component and Category* $ in Billions $ in Billions * Funding in Mission Support activities are not represented in the above displays.
    [Show full text]
  • John Ben Shepperd, Jr. Memorial Library Catalog
    John Ben Shepperd, Jr. Memorial Library Catalog Author Other Authors Title Call Letter Call number Volume Closed shelf Notes Donated By In Memory Of (unkown) (unknown) history of the presidents for children E 176.1 .Un4 Closed shelf 1977 Inaugural Committee A New Spirit, A New Commitment, A New America F 200 .A17 (1977) Ruth Goree and Jane Brown 1977 Inaugural Committee A New Spirit, A New Commitment, A New America F 200 .A17 (1977) Anonymous 1977 Inaugural Committee A New Spirit, A New Commitment, A New America F 200 .A17 (1977) Bobbie Meadows Beulah Hodges 1977 Inaugural Committee A New Spirit, A New Commitment, A New America F 200 .A17 (1977) 1977 Inaugural Committee A New Spirit, A New Commitment, A New America F 200 .A17 (1977) 1977 Inaugural Committee A New Spirit, A New Commitment, A New America F 200 .A17 (1977) 1977 Inaugural Committee A New Spirit, A New Commitment, A New America F 200 .A17 (1977) 1981 Presidential Inaugural Committee (U.S.) A Great New Beginning: the 1981 Inaugural Story E 877.2 .G73 A Citizen of Western New York Bancroft, George Memoirs of General Andrew Jackson, Seventh President of the United States E 382 .M53 Closed shelf John Ben Shepperd A.P.F., Inc. A Catalogue of Frames, Fifteenth Century to Present N 8550 .A2 (1973) A.P.F. Inc. Aaron, Ira E. Carter, Sylvia Take a Bow PZ 8.9 .A135 Abbott, David W. Political Parties: Leadership, Organization, Linkage JK 2265 .A6 Abbott, John S.C. Conwell, Russell H. Lives of the Presidents of the United States of America E 176.1 .A249 Closed shelf Ector County Library Abbott, John S.C.
    [Show full text]
  • Attendance:12,367 Tables Fast and Steady Wins the Race Lall Captures
    Saturday, July 30, 2011 Volume 83, Number 9 Daily Bulletin 83rd North American Bridge Championships Editors: Brent Manley, Paul Linxwiler and Sue Munday Lall captures Mixed BAM title Spingold semis: The squad captained by Hemant Lall won the Freeman Team Monaco Mixed Board-a-Match Teams by a margin of 2.5 boards. Lall vs. Fleisher, of Dallas TX played with Peggy Kaplan of Minnetonka MN, Petra Nickell vs. Cayne Hamman of Dallas, and Winthrop Four close matches in the quarterfinal round Allegaert and Judith Bianco of of the Spingold Knockout Teams ended in victory New York City. Their two-day for the squads captained by Pierre Zimmerman, total was 35.65. Marty Fleisher, Nick Nickell and Jimmy Cayne. In second with 33.15 was Zimmerman of Team Monaco will take on Fleisher, David Berkowitz (captain) and and Nickell will battle Cayne in the semifinal Lisa Berkowitz of Boca Raton FL, round. Josef Blass of Chapel Hill NC, and Zimmerman defeated the Danish squad led by Anna Sarniak, Marcin Lesniewski Gregers Bjarnarson in the quarterfinal 175-125. and Ewa Harasimowicz of Nickell came from behind in the third quarter to Zakopane, Poland. defeat Roy Welland’s team 146-137. Cayne beat The Lall squad qualified tied Carolyn Lynch’s squad 138-85. Fleisher emerged The Freeman Mixed Board-a-Match Team champs: (front) Peggy for second place. They won 33.5 from a small third-quarter deficit to defeat Team Kaplan, Petra Hamman and Judith Bianco; (back) Hemant Lall Iceland 146-133. continued on page 5 and Winthrop Allegaert. Fast and steady wins the race Donner meets John Diamond, and Geoff Hampson, kept Lewis in the pedal to the metal to win the NABC+ Fast Pairs Friday.
    [Show full text]
  • BRIDGE MATTERS  Newsletter of the Caloundra, Coolum and Sunshine Coast Bridge Clubs September 2012
    BRIDGE MATTERS Newsletter of the Caloundra, Coolum and Sunshine Coast Bridge Clubs September 2012 AROUND THE CLUBS ... ... ... SUNSHINE COAST Welcome, and happy bridging, to our new members: Susan Allport, Brian Appleby, Harriet & Les Case, Frank Castle, Pauline Clayton, Drew Campi, Brian Cordiner, Nancy Cook, Margaret Fletcher, Julie Gowan, Veronica Hawkins, John Healey, Paul Hughes, Hazel Keeley, Anne Kibble, Diana Maughan, Caroline O'Brien, Adrian Pollock, Shann Sage, Bev Scott, Wendy Scott, Millicent Seddon, Jan Thrupp, Bradley Treadwell, Helen Venter, Ann Viner and Chrissy Wassell. This year Dot Borchardt and Norine Holloway celebrate their 30 year bridge partnership on the Sunshine Coast! Incidentally, they were both taught by Ingola Meldrum. Anyone who feels they can match or outdo them in longevity, please contact the editor. Congratulations to Neville Francis & Paul Hooykaas, winners of our June Butler Pairs Congress, and Jim Wallis, Toni Bardon, Pele Rankin & Therese Tully, who won the Swiss Teams. Our August Teams Congress finished in a tie for first place between Geoff Hart, David Harris, Kendall Early & Timothy Ridley, and Susan Rodgers, Diana Stagg, Ann Mellings & Verna Brookes. Congratulations. Congratulations go also to Kevin Feeney, David Harris, Kendall Early & Timothy Ridley, winners of the club teams championship. HOT OFF THE PRESS: Olive James, Susie May & Robin A Brown, for CCBC and SCCBC, have produced a calendar for 2013. Entitled The Best of Both Worlds, it combines the natural beauty of the Sunshine Coast with our love for the game of bridge, and is a lot of fun. Available early September. Cost: $10. Support your club and buy multiple copies.
    [Show full text]
  • When the Nfl Had Character
    THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 16, No. 1 (1995) WHEN THE NFL HAD CHARACTER By Stanley Grosshandler Two generations of football fans have grown up since the 1953 season, part of the decade called "The Golden Age of the NFL." Younger fans today may find it surprising to learn that the NFL was losing star players back then to the draft (remember the draft?) and to the Canadian Football League. The Korean Conflict had siphoned several top men into the service, including Cleveland tackle Bob Gain, the Cardinals great Ollie Matson, and San Francisco's versatile tackle Bob Toneff. Meanwhile, the Canadian Football League made some inroads by luring a handful north of the border. Among the emmigrants were Cleveland's star end Mac Speedie, the Giants' center-tackle Tex Coulter and defensive end Ray Poole, San Francisco defensive back Jim Cason, and an Eagle receiver named Bud Grant who would return a dozen years later as a coach. Although these and several other well-known players missed the 1953 season, the league still continued to grow in popularity -- due in part to the individual aura that made each team special. Teams then had a their own particular character and each had an identifiable leader. They were not the plastic, look-alike teams who strive today for parity (another name for mediocracy) and play for the field goal. Reviewing those rosters of forty years ago can still produce chills among some "veteran" fans. The Cleveland Browns had the confidence and composure of their coach Paul Brown. They did not have to be told they were winners.
    [Show full text]
  • Bernard Magee's Acol Bidding Quiz
    Number One Hundred and Fifty-Two August 2015 Bernard Magee’s Acol Bidding Quiz BRIDGEYou are West in the auctions below, playing ‘Standard Acol’ with a weak no-trump (12-14 points) and 4-card majors. 1. Dealer West. Love All. 4. Dealer North. Love All. 7. Dealer West. Love All. 10. Dealer East. Love All. ♠ K 7 6 4 ♠ 2 ♠ A 2 ♠ A 9 8 3 2 ♥ K 8 3 2 N ♥ K 10 3 N ♥ K Q 9 6 5 ♥ K 2 N N ♦ W E ♦ W E ♦ ♦ W E A J 4 2 A J 6 5 4 3 9 8 7 6 W E 7 6 S S S ♣ J ♣ 7 6 3 ♣ A K S ♣ J 8 7 6 West North East South West North East South West North East South West North East South ? 1♣ 1♠ Pass 1♥ 1♠ 2♥ 2♠ 1♥ Pass ? ? 1♠ Pass 2NT1 Pass ? 118-19 2. Dealer East. Game All. 5. Dealer North. Love All. 8. Dealer South. Love All. 11. Dealer West. Love All. ♠ 9 4 ♠ 2 ♠ K Q 8 7 6 5 ♠ Q J 9 5 N ♥ A K 5 4 3 N ♥ K 10 3 N ♥ A K N ♥ K Q 7 W E W E ♦ A K 2 W E ♦ A K 6 5 4 W E ♦ A 7 4 ♦ A K 8 7 6 5 S S ♣ 7 6 5 S ♣ J 10 6 3 S ♣ 8 3 ♣ Void West North East South West North East South West North East South West North East South 3♠ Pass 1♣ 1♠ Pass 1NT 1♦ Pass 3♦ Pass ? ? ? ? 3.
    [Show full text]
  • Winter Escapes on Display
    ISSUE 3 (133) • 21-27 JANUARY 2010 • €3 • WWW.HELSINKITIMES.FI DOMESTIC INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS CULTURE EAT & DRINK More Haiti Expat DocPoint: Testing options for left in forum Against ready-made first graders carnage gathers mainstream meals page 4 page 7 page 8 page 15 page 16 among others, those in danger of be- ing alienated with society should be Tighter helped while there is still time. Pent- Winter escapes on display ti Partanen, the Interior Ministry’s Director-General of the Department PETRA NYMAN ten includes trips abroad or within el encompasses literally of slower security for Rescue Services, also emphasised HELSINKI TIMES Finland,” she says. modes of travelling, such as biking that schools are not apart from the Nonetheless, the means of trav- or hiking, where speed travel refers for schools rest of society. “Actions related on- IT'S THAT time of year again, when elling have changed with the eco- to trips that take the holiday goer to ly to schools and educational institu- one can escape the winter and take nomic situation, with an increased his destination and back as swiftly PERTTI MATTILA – STT tions aren’t suffi cient. The prevention a trip to the Travel Fair, Matka 2010, emphasis on thrift. Domestic trav- as possible. MICHAEL NAGLER – HT of risks and risky behaviour requires at the Helsinki Fair Centre. Around el and trips to nearby countries are If there can be any positive out- broad socio-political action.” 1,200 exhibitors representing over popular choices at the moment. Also comes of the current economic SCHOOLS should have cameras and The report on the improvement of 70 countries will apppear at the fair.
    [Show full text]
  • Sceye PDF-File
    + ~ ) 7 t~ ,; ~ l , ..., . \ () :' 0 J S-:! + I~ (i Ill s :l + I! J .j -1 \/ IU 7 :l :.! .\ I I ~I 7 li 0 5 :1 I J ~~-~ .j + 8:; :1:.! + .\ h: \/ 1\: J H s ti 0 1\: 10 -l + .-\ jill South t·illH' r push e~ himself, u r ;.: L' t' pus lu·d h~ - his partrwr. inln a cnntr;ll ·t .,f Six lit-art s . lin tht· It-ad u f th•· ~ in ;.: ll'lnn trump. can South makt• it ; Sec page l ti . CHAS. BRADB URY Lll\IITED 26 SACKVILLE ST., PICCAD!li.Y LONDON, W.J . 'II Phone REG : 3123<l9'l; LOANS ARRA!\GEi \ With or without S ecu ~ll 'I ..· THE TO CLUB SECRETARJJ:.<...,. EUROPEAN Spread tlze neu·s of your BRIDGE activities. Write and tell tt s of your special events. Items REVIEW of general interest are ah R' fl)'S Annual Subscription Rate: welcome. 30/- post free. per Mr .. Q. A. Goldenberg, The copyright of this magazine is 10 King's Mansions, Lawrence St., vested in Priestley Studios Ltd. London, S.W.3. It is published under the authority Single copies 3/- from Newsagents of the English Bridge Union. The Editorial Board is composed of, and the Editor is appointed by, the English Bridge Union. ,RIVIERA HOTEL CANFORD CLIFFS BOURNEMOUTH I • ' FACES CHINE AND S EA AMID GLORIOUS SURROUNDINGS Quality fare prepared by first class chefs P erfectly appointed b edrooms and suites Cocktail Lounge-T ennis- Golf T elephone : Canford Cliffs 285 B rochur e on Request e You ca11 always rely on a good game of Bridge at The Ralph Evans's Hotel CONT,RACT BRIDGE ·· JOURNAL OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE ENGLISH BRIDGE UNION VoLUME 4 APRIL 1950 NUMBER 6 Vale atque Ave · CONTENT S · Page NEXT month, the Co11tract Bridge ottrnal welcomes EDITORIAL ...
    [Show full text]
  • TV 81 WEDNESDAY.Indd
    THE CYPRUS WEEKLY MARCH 14, 2012 Soldier TTVV WWEDNESDAYEDNESDAY 81 PICKSPICKS OFOF THETHE DDAYAY post-mortem. In his personal life, Dalgleish’s relationship with Deborah Riscoe comes to a crossroads when the investigation interferes with their private life. Directed by John Davies in 1993. A Touch of Frost: Mind Games (Wednesday, CYBC2, 21.00) Crime fi lm starring David Jason, Bruce Alexander, John Lyons, Keith Barron. Two young men are tricked by their girlfriends into stripping themselves nude for a midnight swim, during which the girls run off with the boys’ clothes, leaving them to streak through Denton. One is arrested but the other, Roman Cassell, gets back to his offi ce where, the next day, he is found beaten to death. Directed by Paul Har- rison in 2008. To Love and Die (Cytavisioncinema, 21:15) Action fi lm starring Shiri Appleby, Ivan Sergei and Kristin Dattilo. A young woman deals with her abandonment issues by reconnecting with her estranged dad, a contract killer who recruits her Unnatural Causes (Mega, 23.10) Crime mystery starringRoy Marsden, Simon Chandler and into his line of work. Directed by Mark Piznarski in 2009. Kenneth Colley. Commander Dalgleish of Scotland Yard investigates the apparent murder of a well- known author who is found fl oating in a dinghy with his hands chopped off. The man, Maurice Seton, had recently been ejected from a private club when he was caught photographing some of its mem- Soldier (TV Plus, 21:20) Action starring Kurt Russell, Jason Scott Lee and bers at the gambling tables. The club had been under suspicion of laundering large amounts of cash Jason Isaacs.
    [Show full text]