Note: 
                Only summaries are included below - 
                  see book for details
                  Chivalry is 
                  Not 
                  Dead                                                                                  
                  34
                  A Deadly 
                  Game of 
                  Bridge                                                                          
                  35
                  
                  
                  Unleashing 
                  Hostility
                  
                      “We believe 
                  that the bridge table is used as a socially acceptable place 
                  to get rid of frustrations in a marriage.”
                  
                  
                                                                  Jim and Lois 
                  Scott, West Coast bridge couple
                  
                  Not Just 
                  Anatomically Different
                  
                  “A woman's inner 
                  sense of value tells her that bridge is not really a matter of 
                  life and death, but a man, whose ego is at stake, is a much 
                  harder fighter and treats bridge as a challenge to his 
                  mentality.”
                  
                  
                                                                                                                       
                  Anonymous
                  
                  Woman Bridge Pro
                  
                  A female bridge 
                  professional graciously agreed to donate her services for a 
                  charity event. Her partner was nice enough, but it would be 
                  fair to say that bridge was not his game. Late in the evening, 
                  he excused himself and headed for the men's room. The hostess 
                  asked the pro how they were doing. “My partner is a charming 
                  gentleman, but to be perfectly honest, this is the first time 
                  all night I know what he has in his hand!”
                  
                  Husbands and Wives
                  
                  In an elevator at a 
                  tournament, a man and a woman were arguing about the play of a 
                  bridge hand. Someone asked them if they were married. “Of 
                  course,” the woman answered, “do you think I would live in sin 
                  with an idiot like that?”
                  
                  Teaching
                  Your Spouse
                  
                  “A husband 
                  should never try to teach his wife to play golf or drive a 
                  car. A wife should never try to teach her husband to play 
                  bridge.”
                  
                  Harvey Penick's 
                  Little Red Book
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  Chivalry is Not Dead
                  
                  “Bridge is 
                  essentially a social game, but unfortunately it attracts a 
                  substantial number of antisocial people.”
                  
                  Alan Truscott, 
                  bridge editor of The New York Times
                  
                  Picture the 
                  following: I was playing duplicate bridge against a couple who 
                  ended up in a ridiculous contract, doubled and vulnerable to 
                  boot. Mr. Smith did not look pleased during the auction, but 
                  completely lost it when his hapless wife tabled her dummy. Mr. 
                  Smith then proceeded to vent his spleen at his better half. 
                  Although no one would have criticized her for retaliating, she 
                  burst into tears and ran off.
                  
                  Boorish behavior is 
                  never justified, but it was especially ironic in this case. 
                  Mrs. Smith's bidding had been totally reasonable. In fact, if 
                  I were serving as judge and jury, my only criticism would have 
                  concerned her choice of partner/spouse.
                  
                  My partner and I 
                  were able to quiet things down a little, although the whole 
                  room continued to stare at the table where there were now only 
                  three players. We managed to finish the hand, and went plus 
                  800.
                  
                  I would like to 
                  have said something to defend the innocent victim. 
                  Unfortunately, Mr. Smith was the size of a mobile home. There 
                  had to be some clever tactic. What would Confucius say? 
                  
                  
                  And then it came to 
                  me. “Angry man fight, smart man write.” I ripped off a corner 
                  of my convention card and scribbled the following:  “Your 
                  bidding was 100% correct.”
                  
                  When Mrs. Smith 
                  returned, I waited until Moose was studying his cards, and 
                  discreetly slipped my message under her convention card. She 
                  said nothing, but her smile was worth a thousand words.
                  
                  Mixed Pairs — 
                  Everyone's Favorite Event
                  
                  “If you feel 
                  that you absolutely must play bridge with your husband or 
                  wife, I propose this rule. Each time you pick up a hand, 
                  slowly and fervently intone to yourself: No matter what 
                  happens on this deal, I won't get angry. And stick to it. Who 
                  knows, you might both get home that night in a pleasant frame 
                  of mind.”
                  
                  Helen Sobel 
                  Smith
                  
                  
                  
                  And now for the 
                  pièce de résistance.
                  
                  
                  A Deadly Game of Bridge
                  
                  
                  
                  “Husbands and wives make poor partners — unless they happen to 
                  be someone else’s husband or wife.”
 
                  
                  
                  
                  Milton Ozaki, bridge writer
                  
                  In many respects, 
                  the most disastrous bridge hand ever played took place in 
                  Kansas City, Missouri on September 29, 1929. The ill-fated 
                  victim was 36-year-old John G. Bennett, a prosperous perfume 
                  salesman. According to the police report, he met his demise 
                  because he failed to make a bridge hand.
                  
                  John and his wife 
                  Myrtle were playing bridge against another married couple, 
                  Charles and Mayme Hoffman. The Bennetts had been arguing all 
                  evening, but the situation came to a head when Mr. Bennett 
                  failed to make a 4 contract. Mrs. Bennett violently castigated her husband, which 
                  provoked him into announcing that he would spend the night in 
                  a hotel, and then leave town. As the Hoffmans started to 
                  leave, Mrs. Bennett took the family pistol from her mother's 
                  room and shot her husband. He staggered to a chair uttering 
                  the words “She got me.” On arrival, the police found Mrs. 
                  Bennett weeping over the body.
 
                  contract. Mrs. Bennett violently castigated her husband, which 
                  provoked him into announcing that he would spend the night in 
                  a hotel, and then leave town. As the Hoffmans started to 
                  leave, Mrs. Bennett took the family pistol from her mother's 
                  room and shot her husband. He staggered to a chair uttering 
                  the words “She got me.” On arrival, the police found Mrs. 
                  Bennett weeping over the body.
                  
                  Mrs. Bennett was 
                  tried for murder in March 1931 and acquitted! How was that 
                  possible?
                  
                  Legend has it that:
                  
                  Mrs. Bennett had an 
                  excellent attorney.
                  
                  Mrs. Bennett was 
                  extremely attractive and the jury was male.
                  
                  Got the picture?
                  
                  Here is the 
                  allegedly fatal hand:
                  
                  
                   
                    
                    
                    West         
                    North         East            South
                    —              
                  —              —              1
                    
                  2 4
            4 All Pass
         
                  All Pass
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  CHAPTER 6 - 
                  CUEBIDS: 
                  “MICHAELS ROW YOUR BOAT ASHORE”                                       
                  37