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Fortnight Nears the End
World Bridge Series Championship Philadelphia Pennsylvania, USA 1st to 16th October D B 2010 aily ulletin O FFICIAL S PONSOR Co-ordinator: Jean-Paul Meyer • Chief Editor: Brent Manley • Editors: Mark Horton, Brian Senior, Phillip Alder, Barry Rigal, Jan Van Cleef • Lay Out Editor: Akis Kanaris • Photographer: Ron Tacchi Issue No. 14 Friday, 15 October 2010 FORTNIGHT NEARS THE END These are the hard-working staff members who produce all the deals — literally thousands — for the championships Players at the World Bridge Series Championships have been In the World Junior Championship, Israel and France will start at it for nearly two weeks with only one full day left. Those play today for the Ortiz-Patino Trophy, and in the World Young- who have played every day deserve credit for their stamina. sters Championship, it will be England versus Poland for the Consider the players who started on opening day of the Damiani Cup. Generali Open Pairs on Saturday nearly a week ago. If they made it to the final, which started yesterday, they will end up playing 15 sessions. Contents With three sessions to go, the Open leaders, drop-ins from the Rosenblum, are Fulvio Fantoni and Claudio Nunes. In the World Bridge Series Results . .3-5 Women’s Pairs, another pair of drop-ins, Carla Arnolds and For Those Who Like Action . .6 Bep Vriend are in front. The IMP Pairs leaders are Joao-Paulo Campos and Miguel Vil- Sting in the Tail . .10 las-Boas. ACBL President Rich DeMartino and Patrick McDe- Interview with José Damiani . .18 vitt are in the lead in the Hiron Trophy Senior Pairs. -
8383 Tables Veteran TD Headed for Retirement Nickell, Amoils out As Vanderbilt Enters Semis
Saturday, March 23, 2013 Volume 56, Number 9 Daily Bulletin 56th Spring North American Bridge Championships Editors: Brent Manley and Sue Munday Nickell, Amoils out as Vanderbilt enters semis Team Monaco. It was the second dramatic turn in the The top-seeded Nick Nickell team, winner of match, which saw Auken (Roy Welland and Danish numerous matches in come-from-behind fashion, players Dennis and Morten Bilde) stage a huge could not find the dramatic rally against the No. 9 fourth-quarter rally to make the match close enough seed, Andrew Rosenthal, and will be watching the for the appeal to matter. Auken, originally seeded 45, Vanderbilt Knockout Teams from the sidelines today won the final set 71-10, falling short by 6 IMPs. as the event enters the semifinal round. The write-up of the appeal can be found on page Matchups, by captain, are Rosenthal versus 14. Sabine Auken, and Martin Fleisher versus Ricco van In Friday’s play, Auken took on No. 5 Les Silodor Open Pairs winners: David Bakhshi and Prooijen. Amoils, captain of the winning Vanderbilt team last Billy Cohen. Rosenthal (Aaron Silverstein, Bjorn Fallenius, year in Memphis. Auken jumped out to a 25-17 lead Peter Fredin, Fredrik Nystrom and Johan Upmark) in the first quarter and was never headed on the way Bakhshi, Cohen win held a 6-IMP lead halfway through the match against to a 139-124 victory, a fourth-quarter rally by Amoils Nickell (Ralph Katz, Jeff Meckstroth, Eric Rodwell, falling short. Bobby Levin and Steve Weinstein). Rosenthal won The other two quarterfinal matches were routs. -
Phoenix Daily Bulletin 11
DailyNovember 28-December 8, 2002 Bulletin76th Fall North American Bridge Championships Phoenix, Arizona Vol. 76, No. 11 Monday, December 9, 2002 Editors: Henry Francis and Jody Latham Landen sextet victorious in Reisinger Teams The team captained by Stephen Landen won 2.5 out of 3 boards on the last round to claim victory in the Reisinger Board-a-Match Teams. Landen was playing with Pratap Rajadhyaksha; their teammates were Dan Morse-Bobby Wolff and Adam Wildavsky-Doug Doub. With one round to go, three teams were closely bunched: Landen, Malcolm Brachman (Chris Compton, Mike Passell, Claudio Nunes, Fulvio Fantoni) and Nick Nickell (Richard Freeman, Jeff Meckstroth, Eric Rodwell, Bob Hamman, Paul Soloway). Brachman split their round – 1.5 to 1.5 – while Nickell got only 1 on the round. That put Landen on top with 33.14, followed by Richard Schwartz (Michael Becker, David Berkowitz, Larry Cohen, Zia Mahmood, Michael Rosenberg) with 31.12 and Nickell with 30.65. Landen and Rajadhyaksha claimed their second North American championship as a partnership; they won Open Pairs II at the 2000 Spring NABC in Cin- cinnati. Landen won the same event at the 1990 Spring NABC in Fort Worth. Morse and Wolff won their second North Ameri- can championship at this tournament – they were mem- bers of the winning Senior Knockout Teams earlier in the week. Morse, District 16 representative to the Reisinger winners: (seated) Doug Doub, Dan Morse and Bobby Wolff, holding the Reisinger Trophy; (standing) Adam ACBL Board of Directors, was named ACBL Honor- Wildavsky, Pratap Rajadhyaksha and Stephen Landen. -
CERL Project (Career Education Resource Laboratory Project) Final Report
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 110 663 CE 004 452 AUTHOR Sanders, Carol; And Others TITLE CERL Project (Career Education Resource Laboratory Project) Final Report. Phase II. INSTITUTION Eastern Illinois Univ., Charleston. Center for Educational Studies. SPONS AGENCY Illinois Research and Development Coordinating Unit, Springfield. PUB DATE May 75 NOTE 59p.; For the Phase 1 final report, see ED 101 077 EDRS PRICE MP-U.76 HC-$3.32 Plus Postage DESCRIPTORS *Career Education; Community Resources; Inservice Teacher Education; *Resource Centers; Teacher Workshops ABSTRACT The purpose of Career Education Resource Laboratory (CERL) at Eastern Illinois University is to provide services to the 125 schools in the area and to the Division of Vocational and Technical Education at the University. During Phase 2 of the project the laboratory has presented 20 in-service workshops for area school districts; conducted indoctrination and consultation sessions; developed a directory of resources and services offered by industry, parents, and teachers in a 10-county area of east-central Illinois; distributed a free monthly newsletter; demonstrated the Computerized Vocational Information System; and previewed and evaluated commercial educational materials. Each of these accomplishments is described. More than half of the booklet is made up of appendixes which reproduce workshop handouts, CERL materials, correspondence, and publicity. (PR) *********************************************************************** * Documents acquired by ERIC include many informal unpublished * 4t materials not available from other sources. ERIC makes every effort* *to obtain the best copy available. nevertheless, items of marginal * *reproducibility are often encountered and this affects the quality * *of the microfiche and hardcopy reproductions ERIC makes available * *via the ERIC Document Reproduction Service (EDRS). -
Hall of Fame Takes Five
Friday, July 24, 2009 Volume 81, Number 1 Daily Bulletin Washington, DC 81st Summer North American Bridge Championships Editors: Brent Manley and Paul Linxwiler Hall of Fame takes five Hall of Fame inductee Mark Lair, center, with Mike Passell, left, and Eddie Wold. Sportsman of the Year Peter Boyd with longtime (right) Aileen Osofsky and her son, Alan. partner Steve Robinson. If standing ovations could be converted to masterpoints, three of the five inductees at the Defenders out in top GNT flight Bridge Hall of Fame dinner on Thursday evening The District 14 team captained by Bob sixth, Bill Kent, is from Iowa. would be instant contenders for the Barry Crane Top Balderson, holding a 1-IMP lead against the They knocked out the District 9 squad 500. defending champions with 16 deals to play, won captained by Warren Spector (David Berkowitz, Time after time, members of the audience were the fourth quarter 50-9 to advance to the round of Larry Cohen, Mike Becker, Jeff Meckstroth and on their feet, applauding a sterling new class for the eight in the Grand National Teams Championship Eric Rodwell). The team was seeking a third ACBL Hall of Fame. Enjoying the accolades were: Flight. straight win in the event. • Mark Lair, many-time North American champion Five of the six team members are from All four flights of the GNT – including Flights and one of ACBL’s top players. Minnesota – Bob and Cynthia Balderson, Peggy A, B and C – will play the round of eight today. • Aileen Osofsky, ACBL Goodwill chair for nearly Kaplan, Carol Miner and Paul Meerschaert. -
WBF Convention Card 2.19
DEFENSIVE AND COMPETITIVE BIDDING LEADS AND SIGNALS OVERCALLS (Style; Responses; 1/2 Level; Reopening) OPENING LEADS STYLE Natural. New suit = constructive NF; Jump in New suit = Nat, F Lead In Partner's Suit WBF Convention Card 2.19 (1x)-1y-..-cue = 3 card raise, Inv+ Suit 3rd and 5th 3rd and 5th (1x)-1M-..-2N = 4+ card raise, Inv+ NT Attitude Attitude Category: Jump in opponent's suit = mixed raise Subseq Country: ENGLAND Other: Event: World Championships Bali 2013 Players: Tony Forrester and Andrew Robson 1NT OVERCALL (2ND/4TH Live; Responses; Reopening) LEADS SYSTEM SUMMARY Direct = 15-18, system on Lead Vs. Suit Vs. NT GENERAL APPROACH AND STYLE Protective = 11-16, system on, except 2} = range enquiry Ace AK(x) AKx(x) 5 Card Majors King KQ(x) AKJ10(x), KQx(x) 1} = 1+ Queen QJ(x) KQ109(x), QJ(x) 1{ = 5+ Jack J10(x), KJ10(x) J10(x), A/KJ10(x) JUMP OVERCALLS (Style; Responses; Unusual NT) 10 109(x), H109(x) 109(x), H109(x) 1-Suit: Pre-emptive; responses as for weak 2 opener 9 9x 9x(x) 2-Suit: 2N = 2 lowest unbid suits Hi-x xx xxx(x) 1NT Openings: 15 - 17 (1})-2{ = Majors 5/5 Lo-x xxx, Hxx Hxx(x) 2 OVER 1 ResponsesNat FG Reopen: SIGNALS IN ORDER OF PRIORITY SPECIAL BIDS THAT MAY REQUIRE DEFENCE DIRECT and JUMP CUE BIDS (Style; Responses; Reopen) Partners Lead Declarer's Lead Discarding 2{ = Bad weak 2 in M (3-8) Cue = Michaels; (1{)-2{ = Majors 5/5; (1M)-2M = OM+m 5/5 Suit:1st Hi = Disc Hi - Even Hi = Disc 2M = Intermediate 2 (9-12) EXCEPT: (1})-2} = Majors 5/4; (1})-2{ = Majors 5/5 2nd Hi - Even Hi - Even Transfer responses to 1} Jump cue asks for stopper in opponent's suit 3rd Transfer responses after 1L-(dbl) NT: 1st Hi = Disc Smith (Hi = Enc) Hi = Disc 1}-2{ = Multi, weak in a Major VS. -
ENG Forrester-Robson.Pdf
DEFENSIVE AND COMPETITIVE BIDDING LEADS AND SIGNALS W B F CONVENTION CARD OVERCALLS (Style: Responses: 1 / 2 Level; Reopening) OPENING LEADS STYLE Natural. New suit = constructive NF; Jump in new suit = Nat, F Lead In Partner’s Suit NCBO: England UCB Suit 3rd and 5th 3rd and 5th (1x)-1M--2N = 4+ card raise, Inv+ NT 4th, middle of 3 3/5th EVENT: Ostend Open CATEGORY Green Jump in opponent’s suit = mixed raise Subseq Jumps in competition = weak 4-9 e.g. (1.)-1-(1)-3=weak Other: PLAYERS: Tony Forrester & Andrew Robson 1NT OVERCALL (2nd/4th Live; Responses; Reopening) LEADS SYSTEM SUMMARY Direct = 15-18, system on Lead Vs. Suit Vs. NT Protective = 11-16, system on Ace AK(x) AKx(x) GENERAL APPROACH AND STYLE King KQ(x) AKJT(x), KQx(x) 5 Card Majors Queen QJ(x) KQT9(x), QJ(x) 1. = 2+ Jack JT(x), KJT(x) JT(x), A/KJT(x) 1NT = 15-17 JUMP OVERCALLS (Style; Responses; Unusual NT) 10 T9(x), HT9(x) T9(x), HT9(x) 1M-2. = Art FG 1-Suit: Pre-emptive (4-11); responses as for weak 2 opener 9 9x 9x(x) 1-2 = 5+ (8+) 2-Suit: 2N = 2 lowest unbid suits Hi-X xx xxx(x) 1/-2/ = 3(4) card raise (8+) Lo-X xxx, Hxx Hxx(x) 1M-3m = Nat FG Reopen: Intermediate SIGNALS IN ORDER OF PRIORITY DIRECT & JUMP CUE BIDS (Style; Response; Reopen) Partner’s Lead Declarer’s Lead Discarding SPECIAL BIDS THAT MAY REQUIRE DEFENCE Cue = Michaels: (1m)-2m = Majors 5/5; (1M)-2M = OM+m 5/5 1 Hi = Disc Hi = Even Hi = Disc 2 = Multi, weak 2 in a M (4-9) OR any 4441 (16+) Jump cue ask for stopper in opponent’s suit Suit 2 Hi = Even Hi = Even 2M = 5M/4+m (5-10) 3 Transfer responses to 1. -
Skill Preferred, but Luck Is More Than Welcome Strul Takes Slim Lead In
Saturay, December 1, 2007 Volume 80, Number 9 Daily Bulletin 80th Fall North American Bridge Championships Editors: Brent Manley and Paul Linxwiler Skill preferred, but luck Strul takes slim is more than welcome lead in Reisinger Many years ago, Allan Falk was playing in the Vanderbilt The team captained by Aubrey Strul, winners of the Mitchell Board-a-Match Knockout Teams. At one point early in the event, Falk and Teams earlier in the tournament, hold a narrow lead going into today’s semifinal his teammates found themselves pitted against a squad that sessions of the Reisinger Board-a-Match Teams. included some of the continent’s best players. Strul, a Floridian, is playing with Michael Becker, Larry Cohen, David Falk remembers the occasion so well because the Berkowitz, Chip Martel and Lew Stansby. heavily favored team bid five slams that rated to make After two qualifying sessions, they were one board clear of the Russian- better than two-thirds of the time – and each went down on a Polish foursome of Andrew Gromov – Aleksander Dubinin and Cezary Balicki – foul trump split, and each was a loss for the stars. Falk and Adam Zmudzinski. company surprised even themselves by advancing in the The field will be reduced to 14 teams for the two final sessions on Sunday. Vanderbilt. It doesn’t take much analytical skill to conclude that the major factor in the win by Falk’s team was good, old-fashioned luck. They were in the right place at Austrians leading the right time. Falk does note, by the way, that his team was good enough to win two more matches after their big upset. -
We Are Developing a History of ACBL Unit 174. This Will Be an Ongoing Effort and Will Benefit from the Memory and Work of All Unit Members Willing to Participate
We are developing a history of ACBL Unit 174. This will be an ongoing effort and will benefit from the memory and work of all Unit members willing to participate. Current plans are to update the document three to four times per year. We started with a history of eight clubs within our Unit and now have eleven. If your club is not listed, encourage them to send a club history to David Henke at [email protected]. The next step is a random group of remembrances from various members of our Unit. Included in the initial publication were remembrances from three of our members. We now have remembrances from twelve. I hope many of you will contribute to this. We also plan to include biographies of many unit members. The fourth update of the Unit History will be issued close to the time of the traditional announcement of the Oswald and James Jacoby Service Award by District 16. Twelve Unit 174 members have been recipients of this award. In the fourth update we plan to begin including biographies of these award winners. Volunteers to help with these biographies will be greatly appreciated. We should begin with the 1983 recipient and work our way forward. If you are willing to help with this project, please let me know at [email protected]. The previous Oswald and James Jacoby Service Award winners from Unit 174 are: o 1983 Joyce Cook, o 1988 Jim Downs, o 1989 Dan & Joan Morse, o 1995 Barry Hagedorn, o 1998 Eric Snow, o 1999 Arlene Weingarten, o 2004 Betty Starzec, o 2005 Toni Snow, o 2009 Bert Onstott, o 2012 Lew Levy, o 2016 Paul Cuneo, o 2019 Nancy Strohmer Pictures will eventually be included in the effort, but we have not yet determined how best to accomplish this. -
DOCUMENT,Yesume CE-032 861 Sanders, Carol S
DOCUMENT,yESUME . g( ED 218 480 , CE-032 861 . ., . AUTHOR Sanders, Carol S.; And Others . TITLE' Vocational Education Program ImproveMent --, Dissemination. Final Report/Phase /II. INSTITUTION Illinois Univ., Urbana. Dept. of Vocational and Technical Eduaation. SPONS AGENCY Illinois State Board of Education, Springfield.. Dept. of Adult; Vocational and TechMcal Education. PUB DATE . -Jun 82 ( . ;NOTE 222p.; For a related document see ED 204 5,15. , EDRS PRICE MF01/PC09 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Articulation (Education); Delivery Systems; *Information Dissemination; *Information Utilization; Postsecondary Education; *Program Development; *Program Improvement; Secondary Education; Statewide Planning; *Vocational Education IDENTIFIERS Illinois ABSTRACT A project wasconducted at the University of Illinois (l) to test and refine the components of the dissemination system developed for program improvement efforts in the state; and 12) to provide technical assistance to 'funding agency staff, project staffs, and persons/networks/agencies that facilitate access to a product in the dissemination process. During the year-long project,-five majOr activities were conducted.'FIrsl, dissemination activities were. 'planned for two products ("A Word Processing Guide" developed in West Virginia; and "Job Creation" curricultm materials developed in Illinois); thus testing the components of the dissemination system deeloped for program improvement. Second, inservice education activities were conducted for persons/networks/agencies which facilitate access -
USA Recapture Mcconnell Cup
Co-ordinator: Jean-Paul Meyer (France) Issue: 12 Chief Editor: Mark Horton (England) Editors: Brent Manley (USA), Brian Senior (England) Layout Editor: George Hatzidakis (Greece) Photographer: Ron Tacchi (England) 28th August 2002 USA recapture McConnell Cup ATTENTION!!! All events begin at 10.00 Open and Women's Pairs 152 pairs play in the Open Pairs Semi-final. Approxi- mately 66 of these will qualify for the final, where about six more pairs are expected to drop in from the Rosenblum semi-finals and final to make a 72-pair final. An American team won the inaugural McConnell Cup 52 pairs play in the Women's Pairs Semi-final.We ex- contest in Albuquerque in 1994 and now eight years pect 21 to qualify for the final, with another 11 pairs later the trophy returns to its native soil.The all Amer- joining them from the McConnell semi-finals and final ican final saw Irina Levitina, Kerri Sanborn, Lynn Deas, to make a field of 32 pairs for the final. Beth Palmer, Randi Montin and Jill Meyers (pictured Both finals will be played over five sessions commenc- above) comfortably outscore Judi Radin, Shawn Quinn, ing on Thursday morning at 10.00 a.m. Mildred Breed, Rozanne Pollack, Hjordis Eythorsdottir and Valerie Westheimer. Seniors Pairs In the Power Rosenblum, after two scintillating semi fi- There are 72 pairs playing in the Seniors Pairs Qualify- nals, Lavazza meet Munawar in today's final. ing stage, of which 28 will go through to the final.This is a three-session event that starts at 10.00 a.m. -
C:\My Documents\Adobe\Boston Fall99
Presents They Had Their Beans Baked In Beantown Appeals at the 1999 Fall NABC Edited by Rich Colker ACBL Appeals Administrator Assistant Editor Linda Trent ACBL Appeals Manager CONTENTS Foreword ...................................................... iii The Expert Panel.................................................v Cases from San Antonio Tempo (Cases 1-24)...........................................1 Unauthorized Information (Cases 25-35)..........................93 Misinformation (Cases 35-49) .................................125 Claims (Cases 50-52)........................................177 Other (Case 53-56)..........................................187 Closing Remarks From the Expert Panelists..........................199 Closing Remarks From the Editor..................................203 Special Section: The WBF Code of Practice (for Appeals Committees) ....209 The Panel’s Director and Committee Ratings .........................215 NABC Appeals Committee .......................................216 Abbreviations used in this casebook: AI Authorized Information AWMPP Appeal Without Merit Penalty Point LA Logical Alternative MI Misinformation PP Procedural Penalty UI Unauthorized Information i ii FOREWORD We continue with our presentation of appeals from NABC tournaments. As always, our goal is to provide information and to foster change for the better in a manner that is entertaining, instructive and stimulating. The ACBL Board of Directors is testing a new appeals process at NABCs in 1999 and 2000 in which a Committee (called a Panel) comprised of pre-selected top Directors will hear appeals at NABCs from non-NABC+ events (including side games, regional events and restricted NABC events). Appeals from NABC+ events will continue to be heard by the National Appeals Committees (NAC). We will review both types of cases as we always have traditional Committee cases. Panelists were sent all cases and invited to comment on and rate each Director ruling and Panel/Committee decision. Not every panelist will comment on every case.