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Lansing State Journal from Lansing, Michigan • Page 17
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Lansing State Journal from Lansing, Michigan • Page 17

Location:
Lansing, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
17
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Tuesday Television Where They Are Now 0D with the United States Army Europe forecast center. Tv Air Weather Service Moorman Award is given each year to the outstanding detachment performing a centralized analysis and-or forecast function for other Air Weather Service units. Sgt Williamson is the son of Mrs. Neva P. Williamson, Beaverton.

WILLIAMSON Tech. Sgt. Richard E. Williamson, whose wife, Doris, is the daughter of George Connor of 1000 Bentley Lake Road, Howell, is a member of Detachment 14 of the Seventh Weather Squadron at Heidelberg, Germany, that has won the Air Weather Service Moorman Award. Sgt.

Williamson is a weather technician with the detachment operating PYLE Airman Deborah D. Pyle, daughter of Mrs. R. C. Blackmar, 739 Shepherd, Charlotte, and Jack E.

Pyle of Dayton, Ohio, has graduated from the Defense Information School's broadcast specialist course at Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Ind. She was trained in communication techniques of radio and television to help prepare her for assignment in the broadcast field. By ALFRED SHEINWOLD When I was a young man of 7, my mother would sometimes send me to buy a loaf of bread. One of the nearby grocers would sell me the bread and send me home with a kind word, but another grocer would sell me the same loaf for the same ic and would sometimes give me a cooky all for 1 f.

That was many years ago, but I still look for the extra cooky especially at the bridge table. WOOD Robert E. Wood, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E.

Wood, R. 1, Riverdale, has been promoted to sergeant in the U.S. Air force. He is an ad-ministriative specialist at Takhli Royal Thai Air Force Base, Thailand, in a unit of the Pacific Air Forces. ROBERTS, AVERY Two Lansing area men recently attended Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps Summer Camp at Ft.

Riley, Kan. Cadet Raymond J. Roberts, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard W.

Roberts and a student at Michigan Technological University, Houghton, was an acting commander, Cadet Lawrence J. Avery, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mflbourne H. Avery, 3841 Oke-mos Road, was an acting squad leader.

He is a student at Michigan State University. 3IEYERS Army Pfc. Donald E. Meyers, 23, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Harold S. Meyers, 303 Regent, has been assigned to the Americal Division in Vietnam as a radio operator. MINOR Army Spec. Four Michael L. Minor, 21, whose wife lives in Lansing, is serving with the 199th Light Infantry Brigade, near Long Binh, Vietnam, as a cook.

He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Jt Minor, 4023 Turner. PRICE Michael H. Price, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Lyle W. Price, 1419 Bailey, has been promoted to major in the U.S. Air Force, Maj. Price, a logistics officer at Lindsey Air Station, Germany, is assigned to a unit of the U.S.

Air Forces in Europe. TICKNER Army Pvt. Robert L. Tickner, whose wife, Rory, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Francis S. Darling, 8615 W. St Joseph, R. 2, has been promoted to the rank of private E-2 upon completing his basic training at Ft. Knox, Ky.

Pvt. Tickner has been assigned to Ft. Polk, where he is currently attending a two-week leadership preparation course before beginning his advanced infantry training. McDONALD Staff Sgt. William G.

McDonald, son of Mrs. Velma McDonald, 1804 Beal, is on duty with the 4258th Star-tegic Wing at U-Tapao Airfield, Thailand. He is a Strategic Air Command radio equipment technician. Sgt. McDonald's wife, Beatrice, is the daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Max Martinez, Cheyenne, Wyo. 6:00 QOQQQQOO News, Weathei, Syvus Truth or Market and Business 6:15 News 6:30 QC News-Waller Cronkite Huntley-Brink-ley News What's My Line 7:00 Truth or Consequences Michigan Sportsman News, Weather, Sports I Love Lacy News Hantley-Brinkley QC F. Troop That's Life THE STATE JOURNAL Lansing, ALL DAY ALL NIGHT July 29, 1969 B-3 Michigan mm IJ IP1 1Q1.7 nn uu woo mmj rsTfl nrnT JOHNSON Airman l.C. William L.

Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence H. Johnson, 1503 Mason, Dansville, is on duty at Cam Ranh Bay Air Base, Vietnam, as an air freight specialist in a unit of the Pacific Air Forces. Before his arrival in Southeast Asia, Airman Johnson was assigned to the 4900th Air Base Group at Kirtland Air Force Base, N.M.

nan nr? IMS) mm Sooth dealer North-South vrfnerabte NORTH 4 KQ84 K72 J5 A854 'WEST EAST 52 4 63 J83 Q1094 0 AQ106 9872 1092 KQ7 SOUTH AJ97 A65 K43 63 Sooth West rVdilb Essf 1 Pass 3 a Pass 4 AH Pass Opening lead fr i South took the first trick in dummy with the ace of clubs, drew two rounds of trumps and led dummy's low diamond toward the king. West took two high diamonds and then led another club. The defenders eventually got a heart trick as well, and South was down one. South got his loaf of bread, but he forgot to look for the extra cooky. South should begin the diamonds by leading low from his own hand toward dummy's jack.

This play does not cost South his loaf of bread: he will still make the contract if East has the ace of diamonds. SWITCH DIAMONDS Imagine that the diamonds are switched, so that East has the A-Q-10-6. South leads a low diamond, losing dummy's jack to the queen. Back comes a heart to dummy's king, and declarer leads dummy's low diamond. East can take the ace, but then South has time to discard dummy's losing heart on the king of diamonds.

South gets his extra cooky whenever West has the queen of diamonds. When South leads the low diamond from his own hand, West must step up with the queen. The defenders cash a club trick and then lead a heart to dummy's king. South leads dummy's jack of diamonds and now he doesn't have to worry about the location of the ace of diamonds. The jack forces out the ace of diamonds, and South wins the heart return and cashes the king of diamonds to discard dummy's heart loser.

Declarer's actual line of play would work only when East has the ace of diamonds. The right line of play works not only when East has the ace of diamonds but also when West has both the ace and the queen. DAILY QUESTION As dealer, you hold: 8, H-K, 7, D-J, 8, 5, 4. What do you say? ANSWER: Bid one club. The hand is just barely worth an opening bid.

If you start with one club you can rebid one spade over a red response; you can raise one spade to two; and you can pass a response of one notrump. (A POCKET I TO BRIDGE is available. Get your copy by sending 50 cents to The State Journal, Box 3318 Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10017.) (C) 1969. General Features Corp.

Steel Gains BERLIN West German steel production last year reached 45.2 million tons, surpassing the previous record, set in 1964, by 5 million tons. The 1968 total was 12 per cent above 1967's. Qt -1 7:30 OC Lancer Spotlight on the Stars CD Star Trek CD The Mod Squad 8:30 News Special OQQC Liberace CD JUa CD It Takes a Thief 9:00 The President's Trip 0 CD Movie 9:30 QC Doris Day N.Y.F.D. 10:00 Smoking Clinic Face Michigan Confrontation QC Eye on Michigan CD Dick Cavett 10:30 OC The President Abroad 11:00 QQOQQOOQC CD CD News, Weather, Sports 11:30 Movie Movie 0 CD Tonight Show Movie CD Joev Bishop QC Laredo 1:00 Beat the Champ News, Movie The Texan CD (D News Channels ABC WXYZ-TV, Detroit CD WJRT, Flint CBS WJBK TV, Detroit WKZ0-TV, Kalamazoo WJIM-TV, Lansing WWTV, Cadillac NBC WWJ-TV, Detroit WNEM-TV, Bay City WOOD-TV, Grand Rapids CD WILX-TV, Jackson WMSB-TV, Lansing You'D find the times of all of today's scheduled programs in the accompanying TV listings. For complete program descriptions covering the entire week and news stories of the television world, The State Journal publishes TV WEEK as a reader service every Saturday.

Stations reserve the right to make last moment changes, and The State Journal makes these changes when notified by the stations. Radio Stations WJIM-FM 7.5 iWVIC 73f WKtR-FM 0-5 WSWM-FM 1 WW Kt WJIM WILS 13J0 WITL 1010 WILS-FM 101.7 WITL-FM 100.7 WKAR 870 AJR-FM M.J WWJ-FM 7.1 WUNN lilt WVIC-PM 4. WJR 760 aw Our no an uffwday. Bn nsn 5. Oil companies are deeply concerned with air and water conservation.

The Department of Commerce reports that the petroleum industry "leads all American industries in expenditures devoted to solving the problems of clean air and The oil industry has spent over $1 billion in the past three years, or more than $1 million a day, to help reduce air and water pollution. We hope you will think about these things and that you will think, too, about how it could be America without a healthy oil industry. ten years averaged 11.5 as compared with 12.1 for all manufacturing. Oil companies must step up their already large capital investments if they are to meet America's soaring energy needs. To generate these funds, adequate profits are absolutely essential.

3. The oil industry pays its fair share of taxes. In recent years, the oil industry has paid a higher share of its gross revenue in direct taxes (federal, state, and local) than the average for other industries and this doesn't include sales and excise taxes collected from consumers. If the oil industry's taxes are substantially raised, the result will have to be higher prices. 4.

Oil import controls strengthen our nation's security. Limitation of oil imports is an important national energy policy. This program has been supported by the past three administrations as essential to our national security and is being reviewed by the present administration. The critical question is how heavily our country wants to depend on foreign sources for its vital energy supply. Right now some people are pressing for major changes in the oil industry that could radically undermine its ability to serve you, the American public.

The people proposing these changes are laboring under five basic misconceptions: that oil prices are too high; oil company profits are too high; oil industry taxes are too low; sharply increased imports of foreign oil would not endanger our national security; and the oil industry has done little about air and water pollution. Let's take these misconceptions one by one and look at the facts. 1. Oil products are reasonably priced. Even in the face of spiraling inflation, oil prices have risen far less than most other products.

Retail gasoline prices, before taxes, are up only 1 2 since 1957-59, while the cost of living is up 27. The reason prices may look high at the pump is that gasoline taxes have jumped 219o. Home heating oil prices are up only 15 in the same period. 2. Oil company profits are below average.

Oil's return on investment during the past For more facts, write to the Petroleum Industry Information Committee, 380 Madison New York, N.Y. 10017. America runs on our business is your business PETROLEUM INDUSTRY INFORMATION COMMITTEE 380 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10017.

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Pages Available:
1,932,376
Years Available:
1855-2024