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The Ottawa Journal from Ottawa, Ontario, Canada • Page 36

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Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Issue Date:
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36
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

"34 Soturday, Jonuary 10, 1970 By DILLON O'LEARV XT TESTIMONY. Br Aaelelx Marceeake. 4M Mies. Clarke, Intta. Hl.ti.

TflWEH Anatoty Marchenko was released from a Soviet camp for political prisoners In 1966, the KGB commander told him: "I see, Marchenko, you've been reading of Lenin's works. On the whole, that is- good thing, of course, but I fear that with your view we shall be seeing you back again." Lenin was founding father of the Soviet state, and presumably his collected works were in the camp library. Even so, like any Canadian red squad cop, the KGB cop was uneasy about a young man who studied them for a message. The KGB commander was right Marchenko was arrested again in 1968. He is still in concentration camp.

Ostensibly he was rearrested for violating the residence rules for former political prisoners. His-real offence was talking out boldly bout the prison camps, and in favor of Czechoslovakia (just the Soviet inva- sion) in a letter to the Prague newspaper, Rudo Pravo. The KGB had also beard that he was writing "My Testimony" which nevertheless was smuggled out of Russia, and is the only account of what Soviet camps are like since Stalin's death. "Today's Soviet camps for political prisoners are just as horrific as in Stalin's time," he writes. "A few things are better, a few things are worse." However, on his own.

evidence, compared with the plentiful testimony of inmates in Stalin's day, conditions are not as bad. To-, day's political offender is usually sentenced by a kangaroo court, in a closed trial, but is iiot tortured into a bogus confession as was the rule during Stalin's purges. Nor is he quartered with criminal convicts; who once were allowed, and often encouraged, to ter-orize him Nor do prisoners die by the tens of thousands as they once did in some Arctic camps. Still, the camps are ghastly. Anyone who has suffered tike Marchenko can hardly be faulted for believing his hell could have few further furies.

He and his fellows were over-worked on By J. McC UUC Or THE M.VI Kill. Br aaert lWrtrf. Nl taeert eea Wlaitae. JAMES BRUCE was immensely tall, strong and determined and the Africans he encountered during his search for the source of the Blue Nile sometimes' thought he had supernatural powers.

He made remarkable journeys in the mid-18th century but he was not the first man to see the fountains whore the Blue Nile begins. Two Roman Catholic priests had preceded him into darkest Ethiopia but Bruce simply dismissed their reports of discovery. He claimed the honors for himself: 'Though a mere private Briton, I triumphed here, in my own mind, over kings and their armies." He endured fearful privations in his quest for the river source. He was away' from his Scottish home for II years before he returned in what he expected to be triumph to find that his stories were not believed. In anger he wrote detailed accounts of his journeys.

They described how he brought himself to kiss the hand of a savage ruler who could help him towards his goal, he treated leaders and their families for illness although his medical knowledge was meagre and how by displays of strength, marksmanship and horsemanship he earned the respect of tribesmen who were as apt to kill strangers as help them. He was totally unreasonable. After being away II' years he was shocked to learn By THOMAS LASK ADDimOX. BY HIMSELF. A Pnttllr John Jmma Aa4atn.

KWtrtf Alice F.rJ. Ilhntralrd. tn rMM. Nataral HUUrj rrru. IS.K.

tmVBOH. A Vlstoa. By Bakcrt rraa Warrea. SI facra. Baaaan.

TTHERE are two Audubons in these books. One in Alice Ford's volume exists uvthe fullness of his life; energetic, sharp-eyed, con-Crete, particular, sovoring nature through every sense, in love witn tne world, ine other in the poems by Robert Penn Warren is moody, philosophical, dark in mind, almost, it seems to me, overborn by a sense of defeat The difference between them is that where the poet seeks for a meaning in the life, for a justification, the naturalist simply lives it His existence with its physical Strain, its nervous sufferings, its many flashes of beauty, its sense of the sublime was justification enough. Audubon's life was part of the great outdoors he shared, contested and endured. The other work is an artifact, a producf reading room and library. In drawing his birds, Audubon sought, always to avoid the lifeless stance, the unnatural weight of death.

He overdramatized them in his pictures because he wanted to catch them on the quick. The Audubon of Mr. Warren is not dead; but he is indoors; he exists in pose set up by an unnaturalist. He writes of part of Audubon's careen "With the piratical markup of the frontier, get richVBut you did not. being of weak character." But it was not weakness of character that made him spurn the retail shop, that made him refuse to spend his life buying cheap and selling dear.

The force that drove Audubon to the wilderness drove Mozart to his piano. Whitehead to his equations. His miseries were not due to his commercial failures, but to the hardships these failures would bring to his wife and children. It was this tug between his own nature and the obligations of society that induced a sense of guilt or inadequacy: I think Audubon never fully realized the demands he made on his wife with his long absences, his uncertain income, his passion to complete his He blocked them out ot his mind because he knew that his wife could never share or understand his feeling. Mr.

Warren scarcely indicates that Audubon lived at his height with an unspoken ecstasy when he could watch a bird shape and smooth, out cow. tue" The Ottawa Journal LITERATURE AND LIFE In a Soviet University' a semi-starvation and brutalized. Despair, self-mutilation and suicide were rife. Men were sometimes "shot while trying to escape" that old alibi for murder. How did Marchenko get there? Inmates were largely -of three types: (1) intellectuals and others accused of anti-Soviet nrnnaeanda Yuli Daniel, the writer amnns them? f2i Ukrainians anH minnrttv back into the camps.

Writer's Mostly About 'The Waste Land' By WILFRID EGGLESTON "pHE ATLANTIC for January includes a feature article on T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound. Eliot was born in Missouri and Pound in Idaho, but both of them crossed the Atlantic and scent their most creative He was a young foreman with little and influential years in Eng-schooling on a Siberian drilling site. The and on the continent.

The police arrested him, while grabbing innocent part payed by Pound in te and guilty alike, after a brawl in a workers' edig snd publication ot The residence. All were sentenced to a nearby Waste te a central theme camp in a closed one-day trial. AtUmUc essay. Marchenko escaped, and was caught try- imagine that it would not ing to slip over the Iranian frontier. For this far wrong to say that the he was sentenced to six years in a camp for publication of The Waste Land political offenders.

in 1922 was the most import- He served that sentence in Vladimir ant event in the history of prison and two camps in the Soviet Repub- English-language, poetry in the uc or moroovia, aoout juu mues east ot mos- fjrst half of this century. It is not a great favorite of mid-century tensions and con- Melvyn Brass's fourth Wilfrid Eggleston vy poems guage. in the English lan- )URING the years when The Waste Land was becoming familiar to a small but influential coterie, say from 1922 to 1926, 1 myself majoring in English literature and spending much of my spare time writing verse. Yet I cannot recall a single reference to T. S.

Eliot either from any of my professors (SandwelL Dr. G. H. Clarke, James Roy, or J. F.

Macdonald) or colleagues or friends or acquaintances of mine who wrote poetry (R. W. Cumberland, Lloyd Roberts, Raymond Knister, Charles G. D. Roberts, Edgar Maclnnis).

Perhaps this reflects the essential conservatism of those times and the rirrle mnveH evidence. It was a revolution- in recall the reartion almnst work, in the same sense stanceSt notably the fail ing of horror by Lloyd Roberts Soviet peoples accused of nationalism: and Physical and mental health of when he first encountered the (3) religious believers, mainly Baptists and was ana his wife. I find it signigicant work. The first person to sectarians, who had protested state interfer- tlona'isl for the most part re- that the first reference to the praise it to me was Donald W. ence with their religion.

sisted.it. when they did not original concept of the poem Buchanan, who found some of Many prisoners, 'despite pressure and or castigate the poem is dated Nov- 9- was if highly amusing, brutality, kept their integrity. They held "nd th mthor. But it could finished in 1921; so that the 6t course the opening lines, jcach-ins, in whiclT they discussed politics, not De ignoredc and in time it period of gestation almost ex-asl with many great poems, philosophy and religion. It is a commentary helped to mould the attitude actIy coincided with those are1 electric: on Soviet society that they could debate an1 'he technique of a thous- cheerless days of European April is the cruellest freely in a manner mat nooody outside tne nu wier pucu.

famine and political revolution. camp could: they no longer needed worry about imprisonment for saying what they QNE Canadian who hailed it DOTH Eliot and Pound were who entered the camps llrt H.rr both with little education or politics, came out a 1,1 were erudite and Soviet version of the New Left He was be- ho in their literary tastes. The' friended by Laris wife of YuH Daniel haVS Wnt Waste Land was definitely not. in which the Kreml is trying rttr ti hat "In the homesteader's shack for sever- neo-lLS first prance of The Wol "-es of the poem have been months of sub-zero weather socialists used Lnd. flavmn Harris hailed it included, quotations from, allu- and wild blizzards; freed at rrTJst Lns Ursitte" In in warm and generous terms: sions to.

or imitations of some last by thaws and sunny "Here is the disillusioned. 35 different writers, as well days, dated by the bank, of ko's career and his book suggest that the uni-'eaness ana penetrating vision anemuncj ture iuiuk uutuaj versities may again be functioning. He Made a Critic Eat Raw Meat self in the top rank of Can- light reading' for; t- I I He is oart of the oresent Soviet scene. "ala" educated. i his energies that way.

Writ-. toco the Someone who month, breeding Lilacs out oj the dead land, mixing Memory and desire, stirring Dull roots with spring rain It was electric, but not con- the semi- vincing, for a lad who had haj spent his early days on a prairie larm, impnsonea in 01 tne i rue moaern me "6" cveiy nnm, na mo mm amazing agility and swiftness guages, including Sanskrit" overhead. So far from being of the mind of today that sees No wonder some of the un- the cruellest month it was the through facts and moods friendly critics dismissed it as most poetic and inspiring of all and incidents-. to a majestic "an obscure literary medley." months. The simple lyrics of and eternal background I nave no doubt that it de- Bliss Carmen more nearly "Here also is the modern serves and will increasingly echoed ourt sentiments: search for' svmohonic stvle.

repay careful study. I have Soon. ah. soon the AdHI that his "fiancee, to wnom ne naa sem nu many melodies, dissonances, read it many times and have letter, had married another. He stormed into and bils of severe or melan- followed the trails of the edi-the home of the astonished husband and de- cnojy musjc moving together tors who have translated every manded an apology; a duel appeared probable.

to form on(j grea( mifie scrap of foreign language and At last, the husband wisely decided he could wh0e:" have elucidated every literary sign a statement declaring he had known of As Atlantic article re- allusion. This leads to admir-no commitment to Bruce which had been mjnds us The Waste Land ation on my part but not af-made by his wife. was inspired by the disillu- fection. Dr. Samuel Johnson, no less, naa mocK- sjontnent and spiritual fatigue I cannot go back and read it mankind poetry is song; it is ing remarks about Brace's claims.

The lat- nrought about by four years with the wholehearted and simple, sensuous and passion-ter went off to Scotland to rusticate as a g0Dai total, horrible war growing fascination that comes ate; the dry scholars have country gentleman devoted to study and an- as seen from London by an when I read Lycidas, or Ad- moved in with their erudition thorship. His 'Travels to Discover the Source overworked bank clerk, who onais. or the Ode on Intima- and created astonishing mos-of the Nile" was published in five fat volumes wgs moreover, harassed and tions of Immortality, or any aics and intricate enigmas in-in 1790. His critics attacked again, refusing tortured fc other circum. one of a score of other great stead.

to believe, for instance, that he had seen Africans dine on raw steaks cut from living 1 cattle. Once, when challenged, Bruce went to the kitchen, obtained a slab of raw meat and bade his critic either eat it or fight him. The unhappy guest ate raw meat, proving it could A Novel of the Week In time Bruce's books of travel came to A A 1 rush of be respected and their author honored. much English Iiction whose When he died in 1794, in the 64th year subject matter is the middle of his age, it was written on his tomb that and professional class, often "by the unanimous voice of mankind his filled with current name is enrolled with those who were con-snicuous for eenius. for valor, and for vir Weather With the sunshine at the door, And the mellow melting rain-wind Sweeping from the South once more I think that for the masses of by Dorothy Bishop Reviewed for The Journal countrified Emily exploring the streets feels a "helpless exhilaration." But John, torn by leaving the farm for the greater pay at the coal face, sees in the peopje only their "bone helplessness.

4 tV These are not solo brieht i i A novel THE HIRED MAN is a 1 nhracec Thev are the terture Bruce and Silverberg. in this new summary wind luite literally blow- 1 1 of a v'brant humane prose of the explorer's achievements, gives due 'sn lrom iieios ana conveys Dnlliantly, tor credit to a remarkable man. of Cumberland, and fc; example, an early trade union from the century's beginnings. meeting at which John's over- Gosh, it's a fine and sen- h' 'V I zealous brother Seth with hij sitive piece of fiction. Yet Mel- I I instant workman's grievances I Vyn Bragg is only 30, himself I Vrf'l I emoamlsses the members in- AUdllbOn On the rrOIltier a -native of Cumberland, that i t0 a brutal and abrupt ad.

windy northwest county of Dorothy Bishop journment. England with its cradled Lake Or the hunt at Loweswater its nest, or could corral a trumpeter swan District, its high misty fells, j0hn Tallentire and his wife which John does go to: the -or track down a bear to its winter lair. and underneath reaching out Emily, married in their teens, early morning whiskey at the The central portion of the poem deals below the sea some of the ne a farm laborer, then a crowded bar, wading through with an episode in the "Ornithological Bi- great coal seams of the Bri- their four children, the the forty or so hounds out in ography" that tells of Audubon's encounter tish Isles. pirst World War, Emily's the yard, the day tramping with a woman and her two sons, in a lonely Melvyn Bragg grew into his death from tuberculosis, John's the fells after the hallooing cabin in the forest She desires his gold fiction by way of experience accident in the mines which pack horses could hunt watch badly enough to want to kill, him for as a BBC producer and as a sent him back-fiomJhe treach- where these dogs it. He was saved by the lucky entrance of script writer for feature films, erous coal pits- to the opeq, the square i heavy figuresof two other travellers.

The episode was evi- His talents are enormous. He fields and fells again. Cumberland men tireless to dently fictional to begin with, but in his moves his tale excellently. His seen from this end- own account, Audubon makes it an ominous descriptions are marvelously point, as time's view of a This is fie countryside John vignette of frontier -life. evocative.

His Cumberland smau segment of itself, one PeeI hunted over, he also on The Ford volume is a series of selections dialect (at least to this distant can accept the author's fre- foot despite the song. After the from Audubon's books, journals, letters and ear) is suggestive and vigor- qUent comments, otherwise in-sure rhythms of Melvyn commentary by others. It has been cleverly ous and lucid. trusive, about this particular BraM's tale, the basic things dovetailed to make a kind of autobiography. But what is most to be prized place and this small era.

What livi.n8 sharpened to a The whole storv is not there The trniihlc he hi In vino knmvleHpe of mieht have broken the illu-new vlew' 111 always win had getting his book published is scanted, the private core of his Cum- sions of fiction becomes part'1 Melvyn Bragg country Anrf nno tvntild hatm roar! chrO-u-rJItr hA. t-lnt the r.aw-4t of trlmihlt vie. inn mnmPntc. nf WO tween the lines to get a true idea of the re- centres of feeling and of a god's view from which we 'TH HIRED MAN. By Mel-lations between Audubon" and his wife.

thought that they would rarely return to the immediacy of vvn jT88- 220 IB Seeker The emphasis is on the outdoor exist- (some of them, never) find John, and Emily's situation, a a k8 ence and since this was, after all, his most words to express for them- pair it is impossible to forget. tano- 6-75- intense side, the book is unusually vivid, selves. Hardy like characters whose fresh, bracing. As soon as he steps outside. This- talent in him, this un- 'ive "f'P but 06 heavy, all of nature comes alive for him.

He reads demanding of a country people vel as unweighted by Hardy's the natural world as if it is a roadmap as, rooted still in their native soil, fatalism as by Hardy's in many cases, it was. He watches the mat- has a Biblical strength about comic ing habits of birds and comes every day to it as surely as do the Cum- watch the eggs hatch out; he notices the berland names of the brothers DRAGG'S lighting comes in wiles and ways of the opossum; he becomes of whom he writes, John and other ways. How evocative he aware of three local ways of hunting deer; Isaac and Seth, their father is in phrasing and in dialogue San Francisco Firemen Get New Helmet SAN FRANCISCO (AP) he describes and warns against the extinc- Josenh. (minutiae I must fall back on The, century-old leather fire. tion of the sugar maple.

We seem to go back to our sjnce I can't give you the whole man's hat with its peaked front This man who could not stand an hour own roots in THE HIRED book- its brilliant larger and flaring rear brim is being behind the counter could spend all the time MAN, the ancient countryman effects.) replaced here with a visored necessary, moored in a misery of briars, cane roots in which roads are for jonn is hesitating to go with helmet that looks as though it and palmettos, bitten and annoyed by gnats, walking, beds are for sleeping ni-g sports mad brother Isaac were intended for a car-racing sand flies, mosquitos and ticks to get close and for birth, neighbors are t0 the fox hunt on Saturday driver. 5 to the "Anhinga or Snakebird." And after six for sports and for disasters, which means asking for time Fire department officials say weeks of wading daily through salt marshes men and women are for work 0ff rom njs demanding boss: the new helmets will give better and swamps, and of scrambling through thick-' and for families and for taci-jre has thou workin' like protection en route to fires, at ets of scrubby live oak, he reports that he turn daily struggles between stink." tne fires. an during civir dis- was "none the worse for our adventure." minor' lusts and major responsi- ne doesn't drive me to the" turbances. I don't see how anyone can make more bilities. work." Made of plastic and multi-lay- immediate, more tactile the frontier as it "No thou needs no whip- ered glass fibre, the new hel- fhen existed in Ohio, Kentucky and the IT IS vital that the author pin'.

Thou's like iur mother mets have a shield to cover the western banks of the Mississippi. His book possess these genius skills, she'll tidy up her grave and backs of firemen's necks. They is a long celebration of his America, with For THE HIRED MAN is real- pop up in heaven with her also have straps to keep them its dangers, evils but also with ly social history, a picture of pinny on." from falling over and a liner of its unlimited space, its richness of resources a whole district in a period When John and Emily move shock-absorbing cushion foam, and its never-ending promise. It was great between 1898 and the early to the coal town, for "West The visor can be pulled down in then to be alive, and knew it. J920s, told aa the story of Cumberland sat on shy case of rock attack An Attic Salt Shaker By E.

E-. JN 1906, Felix Frankfurter began his career in public service, when he joined the staff of Henry L. Stimson, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York. It was the beginning of an enduring friendship between the two, reports Lhra Baker in "Felix "However, there always remained a tinge of father and son about the relationship.

In spite of the fact that Frankfurter's public position -ultimately outranked Stimson's, he continued to be "Felix' to Stimson and the latter was 'Mr. Stimson- to him. "Once, at a Washington funeral. Frankfurter fell back In line to greet his former boss. Conscious of protocol, Stimson, then Secretary of War, told him to take his proper place up ahead with rhe Supreme Court Justices.

When Frankfurter continued to hang back, Stimson hissed: "You little cuss, take yqur proper RRIVING in a South Ameri- can city to give a concert, Artirro Toscanini observed with some dismay that the billboards were advertising him as "the world's greatest conductor." "Don't you think that a trifle boastful?" he asked the director of the concert hall. "But, maestro," answered the director, "is tfiere any living conductor who is greater than you?" Toscanini thought this over for a moment; Then he shrugged and "All right, lethe advertising be." fyJOVIE director John Ford has always insisted on making his pictures without' interference from the top brass, narrates Arthur C. Miller in "One Reel a Week," by Fred C. Bal-shofer and Arthur C. Miller.

"A studio executive came onto the set one day and walked over to Ford, who was studying the script on his lap. 'Yes. what is asked the director, his annoyance at this interruption quite evident. 'I've just come from a production rhe other advised him. "You'H have to move along a little faster.

The picture is a few days behind schedule about four "Ford opened the script, tore out four pages end gave them to the man. he said, 'Now we're on "And that ended the discussion." ALTHOUGH Arturo Toscanini and the Italian composer Puccini were good friends, they clashed frequently, as both had low boiling points. After each of these spats, they wouldn't speak to each other for a time. Then they would make up and all would go smoothly until the next altercation. Every Christmas, Puccini gave a coffee cake to each of his friends.

One year, after he had given his baker the list, which included Toscanini's name, he and the conductor had one of their quarrels. It was too late to recall the cake, so Puccini sent Toscanini a telegram. "Cake sent by mistake," he made it clear. To which the conductor curtly replied: "Cake eaten by mistake." WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Q. 1 Neither vulnerable, as South yon hold: KJ OAQ Jf 4.KQJSZ The bidding has proceeded: Soot West Nertk East 10 Pass IV Pass 2 pass sea, FaH What do jo bid nowT Q.

I vulnerable, as South you bold: OAKQiaWSfSI The bidding has proceeded: West Ntrttt East Soot 1 Pass 14 Pass I DM- Pass What do you bid now? Q- East-West vulnerable, as South yon hold: 4fcm7J VATS OA 4VAQZ The bidding has roceededr Sooth West Nertk Eut Pass SO Pass 2 Pass 3 0 Pass What do you bid now? Q. 4 Both vulnerable, as South you hold: The bidding has proceeded: JNVITED to attend a performance of a Wagnerian opera, Mark Twain, no devotee of classical music, had to struggle to keep awake. At the intermission, his hostess asked: "What do you think of the music?" Not to offend her, the humorist replied, as he stifled a yawn: "I'm sure it's not as bad as it sounds." I JACQUES THI BAUD, the concert violinist, was a golfer of near-professional calibre, who won quite a lot of money in.Jriendly competition. Early one autumn, he was to appear- as soloist with the symphony in Amsterdam, conducted by Pierre Monteux. At rehearsal, his playing was off, recalled Monteux in "It's AU in the Music," by Doris Monteux.

y'l was horrified. 'What is the I asked him. "I haven't had time to practice this he answered. 'There have been so many golf "I said with some heat: 'You'd better watch out, your golf will ruin your' violin "I'm only he countered, the violin will ruin my CHESS 2. N-KB1 3.

P-Q4 4. NxP 5. N-OB3 4. B-K2 7. O-O 5.

B-K3 9. P-B 10. Q-KI 11. R-Ol 12. Q-N3 13.

BxN 14. 03 15. K-Rl D. M. UDdn Block 9 Placn wi mm nil a 1 IfMUSSi B8t mm Whit Pltcn Problem by R.

St. G. Burfca. White motes In two moves. (Solution next week.) Solution to lost week's Quiz (Smlrnov vs.

Jelenwv): I P-Kkhl; BxP, Q-QSchl; 3. Resigns. For 3. QxQ, R-es mote. Or, K-Kt, RxQ: 4.

RxBch, K-N3 wins. MATCH IN JEOPARDY The lotest on the proposed best of It games match between Bobby Fischer, U.S.A., and ex-world champion, Mikhail Bolvlnnlk, USSR, is that Bobby now insists that the match decision be based on the first to score six wins, draws not to count. He also stipulates that there 'must be no spectators or photographers In the playing room. This may seem far-fetched but these conditions are the some os those lold down for the Capablaoca vs. Alekhine world championship match at Buenos Aires In 1927.

However, the Leiden Chess Club, sponsors of the match. Insist the earlier conditions, which Fischer la reported to have agreed to, verbally, must be accepted, ond have set a deadline. If Bobby turns It down they will arronge a quadruple round robin tourney among Botvinnik. Spassky, Larsen and Jan Henk Donner, Dutch grandmaster. LARSEN WINS Bent Larsen, Denmark, now me main representative of western chess prestige, won the International at Palmo, Majorca, In a very strong field, which Included world champion.

Boris Sassky. ex-champion, Tigron Petrasian, and Viktor Karchnoi. all of USSR. His victory was all the more remarkable In that he hod only scored 1W pts. in his first five games! Spassky and Petroslan were undefeated but drew too many.

Scores: Larsen. 12 Petroslan, 11Vi; Korchnol. and V. Hort. lot each; Spassky.

10; Die del Corral, Spain. Wit H. Meeting, Brazil, and O. Panna, Argentina, each; B. Parma.

M. Nadorf, Argentina, 8Vi each; L. Szabo, Hungary, and W. Unzicker. w.

Germany, each; A. Pomar, Spain, 7Vj; M. Bobotsov, Bulgaria, M. Domjanovic, ond J. Penrose.

Britain, eV each; K. Toron, Spain. A. Medina Spain, 5. A game by the winner: SICILIAN DEFENCE While: Black: w.

Unzicker B. Larsen w. Germany) (Denmark) wnne mocK wnne biock 1. P-K4 P-GB4 16. P-QR3 P-OJ 17.

OR-K) PxP It. P-IC5 N-KB3 15. BxKP P-K3 28. N-K2 N-B3 21. 0-R3 B-K2 22.

BXN O-O 23. N-04 0-B2 24. 0-K3 B-02 25. KXB P-OR3 26. R-B3 NxN 27.

P-B3 B-B3 28. R-K2 OR-Ol P-QN4 Q-N2 POR4 PxP P-N3 N-KS Q-N3 BxB RxN BxPch Q-B3ch R434 KR-Q1 Resigns fa) B-B4 (a) After 29. O-Bl. R-QI: 30. O-BZ.

R-KNSch. GOREN ON BRIDGE BT CHARLES H. GOREN West Nertk East Statfc 1 NT Pams Past DM. Pass I Pat What do you bid now? Q. 5 Neither vulnerable, as South you bold: Q8 KA OAim stums The bidding has proceeded: West North East Soath Pass Pass 10 Pass IV Pass Past What do yon bid now? J.

f-Aa South, vulnerable, you bold: The bidding has proceeded: North East Ssath West 14 Pass t9 Pan JO Pass What do you bid Dow? Q. 7 You have a 49 part score, vulnerable, partner open with three spades, and you bold: 4 4 VAQ 8 0 A 1 1 4A0J What do yon bid? Q. s-As South, vulnerable, yon hold: 4A1M5 VQJlTIS 04141 The bidding has proceeded: West North East Seath 14 14 Dot. What do you bid? fLook for aaiwert JfondayJ INTERNATIONAL BOOKS 117 BEECHWOOD AVE. 74M567 FOREIGN LANGUAGE BOOKS NOW IN STOCK DUTCH, OBRMAN, ITALIAN, SPANISH, RUSSIAN, UKRAINIAN, POLISH, CRICK, NORWCSIAN, HUNGARIAN ALSOt enolfsk Frent beaks frees areea ftm wen.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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