Ihe Cadre,Marcn l6,1976,page 11 your jack is captured by de— -clarer's ace. South leads NORTH A Your partner leads the Giving declarer the A-K of 3 J65 ten of hearts on which you hearts: and diamond king, H 62 play the eight and declares he must also have both black ' D AJ1093 the seven. West continues queens for his ZNT bid. Two C 1064, with the five of hearts and heart triCkS, four diamondsi and 3 tricks in the black suits adds up to nine so the only hope for the defense is EAST the 2 of diamonds, your par— S K82 tner plays the 4 and dummy that declarer's diamond hol— H J83 the nine. How do you plan ding is K2. D Q75 the defense? . _ Even after you duck the A C KJ93 Partner clearly led from diamond declarer may still a five card suit to the ‘Q—lO—9 (although if declarer had won the second heart trick with king, you could not be sure of this). If get home if he makes a ser— ies of inspired guesses, but that does not affect the le- sson of the hand. partner had only 2 diamonds WEST , . . he might_have echoed to S Q93 . defense at than show his distribution. H Q10954 “ . Even if yours is the kind of (g8g64 (lave gallant- partner who has never heard of an echo you should still —~ duck this trick, for if dec— SOUTH larer has 3 diamonds to the S A1074 king his contract is umbeat— H AK7 .able anyway. A count of the D K2 C AQ72 Chess Reviews Continued Tartakower and J. Dumont. It is a book composed of three books. Book one is on open games, two is about smi—open games and three is about closed game.. I took this book to a tour— . nament in Fredricton where I ifiréafl most of it. It got rave ""reviews from the players i'there. One old man asked me where I had got it. I told him that it was available from General Publishing or Dover Books. Later he told me he had the previous two and had not been able to get the third. It made him very happy- Definitely what one would call a good book. Maybe our library will one day be in- clined to get it as the sel- ection of chess bOOkS'iS gr— oss. This book is set up acor— ding to openings. This gives the games effected an addit— ional value. One can easily compare how one master tre— ats an opening to another. Thus you get the idea your— self of how to treat it and the complications which fol- lows. ’ Tartakower is one of the grandmasters whose work I points will show you why. 4'»: 6‘4» chair could be yours. . i This is where you could find yourself if you become a Maritime Engineering Officer in today's Canadian Armed Forces. The Master Engineering Control centre of one of our new DDH280 Destroyers. No boilers. No stokers. No sweat! _ The power within these beautiful ships comes from jet turbine engines. The machinery that heats, cools. ventilates and provides water throughout these ships is the latest. Maritime Engineering Officers on these "ships work with some of the most sophisticated equipment in the world...with expertly trained men who are as proud of their work as they are of their ships. if you're studying engineering. think‘about . this Officer's job. It's a very special one. It could take you anywhere in the world! respect theimost. In many books the examples are taken from his own games. His sty- 1e is well—grounded as is his annotations to the games. -Du Mont is an equally talen- ted player who has played many brilliant games. He and Tartakower have put together a good book which can truly be appreciated by both the master and the duff. Begin- -NAMEuu' V ADDRESS ner will find this book dif— . cny . ‘_ PROV ficult but if they read it . . ‘ . ~ 2 from cover to Cover, they ' POSTALCODE *' . . _ \UNIVERSITY Will be”a lot better for it. ‘ COURSE V_. 7 V], we YFAR Directorate of Recruiting & Selection, National DefenceHeadquarters, ‘ Box 8989, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0K2 ‘ FORCES' Please send me more iniormation'about opportunities in the Canadian Forces of Maritime Engineers. -