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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 12
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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 12

Publication:
The Baltimore Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i -n i PAGE 12 THE SUN, BALTIMORE. FRIDAY MORNING, FERRUAHY 12. 1965 0 Screen Standard Spy Film .4 mm rMt Trumps And Tricks Legitimate Larceny By ALFRED SHEIN'WOLD As AN experienced bridge player you know that you can count on the opponents to let you steal one trick. This is legitimate larceny. When you count on them to Jet you steal three tricks, however, you're pushing your luck too hard.

North dealer. Both sides vulnerable. North AKJ A A 10 6 AKQJ West East A 10 9 7 6 4 2 AAQ VQSS VK97S K4 83 6 106541 South ASS 10 4 32 98732 97 North East South West 2 Pass 2 NT Pass 3 Pass 3 Pass 3 NT Pass Pass Past Opening Lead 10 South got his first break when East could not continue spades after taking the first two tricks. East then switched to a low heart, and dummy's ace captured the queen, thus killing the West hand. Declarer had to hold his breath while be led out the ace and queen of diamonds, but his luck held.

East had the king and could get only two spades and the two red kings. Correct defense would set the contract at least three tricks. East should return the king of heartj after taking two spade tricks. This would make the queen of hearta an entry to the West hand. East would get in with the king of diamonds to lead a heart to the queen, and West's spades would swamp declarer.

North should jump to five diamonds Instead of bidding three no-trump. He needs almost nothing from his partner to make this contract and would almost surely score game and rubber despite the ghastly dummy he would get. Best Contract If East makes the normal opening of a low heart against five diamonds. North would win and draw one trump with the ace. Then he would run the clubs to discard both spades from the South hand.

This would limit the loss to one heart and one diamond. East can defeat five diamonds by opening the ace of spades. Later he will get a heart and a diamond. Anybody who would lead the ace of spades from the East hand has not only been peeking but is also a very good analyst. Daily Question Partner opens with one heart, and tht next player passes.

You hold: J532 VKQ76 8 73 10 What do you say? Answer-Bid two You have the strength for just one response, and the raise of a major suit takes precedence over any other response. Change the queen of clubs to the ace and you would respond one spade, intend' ing to raise hearts later to show the strength needed for two responses. Gounod's The collection of spring hats designed by Irene of New York is marked by the influence of a variety of foreign countries. This hat displays an elegant silhouette that might be found at an afternoon at Ascot. Appro priately named "Ascot," the hat has an eggshell linen straw brim draped in organza by two golden rings.

The organza also cascades down the back. The hat illustrates one of this designer's trends for spring. On Mental Health In Fiftieth Anniversary Year Series Th HE Maryland Association for Mental Health had as one of its aims the improvement and elevation of the standards of care for the mentally afflicted when it was organized 50 years ago. As the years have passed, some of the original aims have become the responsibility of public agencies as a result of the association's work but the standard of care for mental patients is still of much concern to the organization. When formed in 1915, tin association, a citizen's voluntary organization, had an operating budget of $3,000 and a staff of two part-time workers, a psychiatrist and a secretary who also acted as a field director.

What To Do jjaaiadf jf rael defense forces, Including mental hospitals for acute battle and mental fatigue and rehabilitation services for psychiatric cases, as well as the Air Force aircrew selection. After Israel's War of Independence, Dr. Miller was appointed Director of Mental Health Services of the Israel Ministry of Health. In 1954 he became Director of Public Health Services for the Hadassah Medical Organization in Israel. In this capacity he set up several comprehensive community health centers, in the Jerusalem area, which were used as models for the reorganization of the health centers in the country.

Dr. Miller returned to the Ministry of Health in 1959 to serve again as its Director of Mental Health Services. Primary Work His primary work since then has been continuing the reorganization of the psychiatric and mental health services in Israel, especially in the fields of community psychiatry, child mental health and children's hospitals. Among the major projects he has initiated are a community organizational program for the entire country, including the training of community organizers for new immigrant and poverty-stricken neighborhoods, and research in the quality of the community rehabilitation of mentally disturbed patients. A member of the faculties of Tel Aviv and Bar Han Universities, Dr.

Miller has lectured widely on such problems as juvenile delinquency, learning difficulties, criminology, clinical psychology and childhood development, and problems of social failure and community organization. Dr. Miller is chairman of the National Association for Mental Health in Israel. He is also an adviser to the Ministry of Social Welfare and the National Housing Agency. By R.

H. GARDNER HE first half of "36 Hours" is such stimulating stuff that one can't help resenting script writer George Seaton's inability to keep his story from deteriorating into a standard spy-melodrama. The film, now on view at the Playhouse, concerns an American intelligence officer captured by the Germans a few days before the Allied invasion of Normandy. The capture is the culmination of an elaborate plan by which the Nazis hope to trick the officer into revealing where the invasion will occur and involves subjecting him to drugs, dyeing his hair gray, doctoring his eyes so that he needs spectacles end then bringing him back to consciousness in a place which they tell him is a military hospital operated by American occupation forces in Germany six years later. The theory is that during the psychiatric treatment aimed at helping him to overcome the lapse of memory that presumably has kept him in the dark for six years, the officer will give them the information they desire.

It is an extremely imaginative theory and, as expounded by the young German psychiatrist who conceived it, quite plausible. The flaw, in both the theory and the film itself, becomes apparent when, through a development I will not disclose, the officer learns the truth. Complete Dossier Up to this point, the spectator has been intrigued by the lengths to which the Germans have gone in perpetrating the hoax. Not only have they rounded up a whole hospital full of American-speaking "patients," but the psychiatrist, himself a native of this country, has accumulated such a complete dossier upon the officer that he knows the American backward and forward and, being a decent sort, has begun to like him. Thus he hates to turn him over to the piglike SS man sent down by the Gestapo with orders to try other means of persuasion if the plan fails.

It is when it fails that the film degenerates into the trite and the ordinary. James Garner, who plays the other side of the coin from the role of the "profes- sional coward" he handled so engagingly in "The Americanization of Emily," is good as the captured officer; Rod Taylor makes the psychiatrist both credible and likable, and Eva Marie Saint does as well as one could expect in the essentially unbelievable role of a former concentration-camp inmate forced to impersonate the officer's nurse. Baltimore Society 10DAY marks the annua' joint dinner dance of the Wednesday Club and the Twelve-Thirty Club, to be held tonight at the Elkridge Club. Mr. and Mrs.

Charles A. Webb, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Wehr, Mr.

and Mrs. Charles G. Lord, Mr. and Mrs. Roger B.

Hopkins, Mr. and Mrs. John Redwood, and Mr. and Mrs. C.

Gordon Pitt are among those with table reservations. Mr. and Mrs. C. Gerard Morgan, and Mr.

and Mrs. William S. Merrick, also have reserved a table, as have Mr. and Mrs. Richard A.

Jamison, Mr. and Mrs. J. Stevenson Peck, Mr. and Mrs.

John B. Ramsay, and Mr. and Mrs. Howard E. DeMuth.

Others planning to attend include Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Emory, Mr. and Mrs.

R. Wilson Oster, Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Rich, Mr.

and Mrs. W. Page Dame, Mr. H. K.

Douglas Cotton and Mr. and Mrs. E. Phillips Hathaway. Mr.

and Mrs. Frederick A. Savage, Mr. and Mrs. Owen Daly 2d, Mr.

and Mrs. W. Wallace Lanahan, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Worthington Hoff 3d and Mr.

and Mrs. Matthew C. Fenton, also expect to be present. Officers of the Wednesday Club include Mr. Peck, Mr.

Jamison, Mr. Carroll S. Jackson and Mr. S. Page Nelson, Jr.

The Twelve-Thirty Club's leaders are Mr. George W. Constable, Mr. Arthur R. Wyatt and Mr.

William D. G. Scarlett. Doctor and Mrs. Robert Smith Donoho, of Zanesville, Ohio, are receiving congratu.

lations on the birth of their third daughter and fourth child, Virginia Wrenn Donoho, January 24 at Bethesda Hospital in Zanesville. Mrs. Donoho is the former Miss Jane Eloise Sowell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dibrell Sowell, of Lambeth road.

Paternal grandparents are Mrs. Murray Thompson Donoho, of Triple Hill Farm, Owings Mills, and the late Mr. Donoho. Members of the Women's Committee of the Baltimore Museum of Art entertained at luncheon Wednesday in the museum's Woodward Wing for the director of the museum of Montclair. N.J., and four members of its newly formed women's committee.

The Montclair women came to meet with the more established group, seeking its advice and knowledge, studying its pattern and program. Mrs. William L. Garlick wa in charge of arrangements for the occasion. Mrs.

W. Bowdoin Davis is chairman of the Women's Committee of the Baltimore Museum of Art, and Mrs. Richard F. Cleveland is vice chairman. At the meeting, Mrs.

Cleveland spoke in behalf of the ball committee; Mrs. Bradford McE. Jacobs, as chairman of the pro-pram for children; Mrs. Archibald M. Hart, as chairman of the rental gallery, and Mrs.

Edward Castagna, representing the Sunday lecture series. Operation of the museum cafe was explained by Mrs. Wendell DeWitt Allen, chairman of that committee. Others present to describe the work of their committees were Mrs. Albert Keidel.

hospitality; Mrs. George Parkhurst, gallery tours, and Mrs. Morton Rome, G. BREEN Free Library and the Maryland Association for Mental Health, in cooperation with the Metropolitan Baltimore Mental Health Chapter, are sponsoring, a series of four public services. All the lectures will be held at 8 P.M.

at the central library on Cathedral street. The first lecture will be delivered by Dr. Louis Miller, director of Mental Health Services of Israel. His topic will be "Community Mental Health Emerging Trends." Series Continued The series of lectures, called "Looking Ahead," will continue on April 14, with Dr. Eugene Brody, director of the Psychiatric Institute, University of Maryland School of Medicine, as the speaker.

Dr. Paul Lemkau, professor of psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins University, School of Hygiene and Public Health, Department of Mental Hygiene, will speak on September 29. Dr. Joel Elkes, psychiatrist in chief at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, will speak on November 10. Wednesday's speaker, Dr.

Miller, was born in South Africa in 1917. After receiv-" ing his medical degree from the University of Cape Town, he served first as medical officer in the South African Army, and later as psychiatrist in the 6th South African Division in World War II. Private Practice After the war, Dr. Miller went into the private practice of psychoanalysis in Johannesburg before going to Israel in June, 1948, as a volunteer in Israel's defense forces, where he became Chief of Air Force Psychiatry and Director of Psychiatry of the Israel Army. In this position, Dr.

Miller was responsible for establishing the mental health services and psychiatric facilities for the Is Social Stationery Of Lectures By ROBERT Today the association has an annual budget of nearly $74,000 and maintains a full-time staff of six people. These include an executive secretary, two field workers and two stenographers: The large budget became a necessity as the result of a decision made in 1951 to support a general State program. Since that time the association has formed chapters in seventeen Maryland counties. An additional chapter is now being formed in Allegany county. The Metropolitan Baltimore -Mental Health Chapter serves both Baltimore city and Baltimore county.

As a means of observing the association's fiftieth anniversary, the Enoch Pratt realize that she is "Mrs." wishes to reply. To avoid misunderstanding, she would have to write or type her married name under her signature, which would then read: Lillian Jones (Mrs. Harry Jones) The kind of imprinted stationery everybody uses for routine correspondence carries full information the name (Mrs. Harry Jones), the address and often, the telephone number. This is a utility paper but is often used for simple social correspondence where formal paper is not needed.

In writing to people in the instance you state, say either "my husband" or "we." You could say "John" if you know your husband to be on a first-name basis with them and presumably you would be, too. Patent Leather Dear Miss VanderbiltThe girls where I work have been having a discussion. Can you or can't you wear patent leather all year around? Answer In northern climes patent leather looks a little cold during snowy weather. It is, however, shown in the shops throughout the year. Modern patent leather, unlike its predecessor, no longer cracks in the cold; hence, it is a year around leather.

My own feeling, however, is that it looks more suitable in the spring, summer and early fall than it does in the snow. Regional Preferences Dear Miss Vanderbiltl recently moved to the New York area from Chicago where at cocktail parties bourbon was always the most popular drink. This does not seem to be the case in the New York area. In planning a large cocktail party here, how should I figure my supplies? Answer In the New York area, in order of popularity, here is the line-up: Blends, Scotch (with the "light Scotches" growing very popular), bourbon and finally, vodka. In the national picture, bourbon is first choice, however, and it is first in San Francisco, Los Ange'es, Washington as well as you have noted in Chicago.

This is an American whisky. In the New York area there is little call for fancy mixed cocktails. At private cocktail parties in New York you rarely see a "cocktail" with the possible exception of an occasional martini. Plain whisky on the rocks or in a highball or simple vodka on the rocks are all lower in calories than fancy cocktails, a matter that is getting increasing attention from men as well as from women. To calculate approximately the calories in an ounce of any non-sweet liquor, look at the proof listed on the bottle.

Bourbon, for example, is low 56 proof or 84 calories tn ounct. By AMY VANDERBILT Di 'EAR MISS VANDERBILT I have a question concerning personalized stationery. In the case of a widow or a single girl, would it be proper to use the first name instead of Mrs. or Miss? In the case of a widow, should it be "Mrs. Harry" or "Mrs.

Also, for a married girl must she use "Mrs. Harry" or may she use just the first and last names? In the case of a business man's wife taking care of his correspondence such as thank-you notes, sympathy notes, to people the wife does not know, how should they be written? Should I say, "my hus band," "we," "John" and also, how should they be signed? Answer On social stationery for a woman, it is preferable to use either a monogram or initials, or as I have shown in my book a heraldic lozenge with or without the address. I don't like to see a married woman use just "Gladys" or even her first and last names on social stationery, for this becomes "complicated when someone who does not Theater Events The Children's Creative Arts Workshop, 1312 Reisterstown road, is initiating a new adult program on Tuesday at 10 A.M. The workshop for adults will be conducted for a ten-week period, with a two-hour session in drama and dance each week. Emphasis will be placed on the needs and interests of the individual.

The drama section of the course will be conducted by Mrs. Lorraine Dorf Glick, a regular member of the workshop's drama department. The dance segment will be under the supervision of Mrs. Deborah London Hoffman, executive director of the workshop. The enrollment for the course is limited to ten adults.

Interested applicants are invited to call the workshop at HUnter 6-1147. A popular music show will be presented at the Lyric Theater Sunday, February 21. Entitled the "Biggest Show of Stars," it will be presented three times, at 3.00 P.M., 7.30 P.M. and 10.30 P.M. The musicians appearing in the show include Chuck Berry.

Ronnie Dove, Solomon Burke, Joe Tex, Dionne Warwick, Little Anthony and the Imperials, and the Ad Libs. Also scheduled to appear are Betty Everett, Alvin Cash and the Crawlers, The Orlons, Walter Jackson. King Coleman, and the Imperial Show Stoppers Band, Faust' Doctor Faustut, chemist hoary, working in his laboratory, at the opening of this story, feels he's getting old and rusty, Summons Satan up from Hades, saying, "Give me wine and ladies" (he is somewhere in the eighties) wants to be both young and lusty, Satan, an efficient fixer, brews old Faust strong elixir, and so skillful is, as mixer, Faust, at once, has youth and beauty, Faust then sees a lovely vision, meets (with Satan's supervision) and with purpose and decision, Marguerite, tht village cutie. Valentine, her soldier brother watching o'er her like a mother (how those two love one another) warns he'll fiaht men for his sister. Marguerite takes Faust as lover, swears by all the stars above her, this affair she will not cover, she'll be Mrs.

to his Valentine, from war returning, scandal from the neighbors learning, anger him hotly burning, challenges young Faust to duel, Soon he's slain by rapier's thrusting, (Satan shU Fausfs skill not trusting, and for souls immortal lusting, has contrived this ending cruel) Marguerite with conscience stricken feels she's caused the "plot to thicken and her mind's begun to sicken, at she mourns her only brother, And, though Faust's in love and lenient, it is (frankly) mconrenient when uith Satan supervenient) Marguerite becomes a mother, But her babe she promptly strangles (which teems best from many angles) tn her prison cell Faust wrangles, as he beat her to escape, "Let me be" she cries "cease trying tmf am dying, as I do 'not care for frying, just forget me, don't vear crepe!" Then she leaves for realms celestial, Satan crouches, sullen, bestial, Faust regrets his tastes terrestrial, it's too late to make amends! Moral: IF YOU'RE OLD AND HOARY AT THE OPENING OF THE STORY DONT TRY TO REGAIN LOST CWRY ANYWAY, THAT'S HOW IT ENDSl AMY GRElf. I 7 I i i i wi 1 Dr. Louis Miller, Director of Mental Health for the Ministry of Health, Israel, will discuss "Community Mental Health Emerging Trends," at 8 P.M. Wednesday at the Enoch Pratt Free Library. The talk, sponsored by the Pratt and the Maryland Association for Mental Health, is being given in observance of the association's fifty years of service in the State..

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