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The Palm Beach Post from West Palm Beach, Florida • Page 27

Location:
West Palm Beach, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
27
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Post, Tuesday, March 5, 1985 C3 Family Commutes Across State Line for Sports (AP) The border between Ohio and Michigan also is separating John and Judy Zeiler, a Michigan couple who have chosen to live apart five days a week so their children can participate in sports. The Zeilers' home in Bedford Township, is a mile from the Ohio border and 15 minutes from Central Catholic High School in Toledo. That has prompted the Ohio High School Athletic Association to ban the Zeiler children from the school's sports program under a rule twice upheld by courts but skirted by the Zeilers and 35 other families. "It's a hardship on the whole family," Mrs. Zeiler said.

"Right now, (sports are) very important to the kids, which is why we're going through what we are." Since August, Mrs. Zeiler and three of her children have been living with her sister in Toledo, spending weeknights in the city to qualify as Ohio residents. Each morning, Mrs. Zeiler sends the children to school, then drives into Michigan to work at the family business, Zeiler's Market, and care for her two younger children. At 10 p.m., she drives back to Ohio.

The commuting allows Terri and Joanie Zeiler to play volleyball and their brother, Bill, to be on the school's wrestling team. The Zeilers' alternatives are to enroll the children in Michigan public schools, which they believe are not up to par academically, or drive them to the nearest Michigan coed parochial school, 45 miles away in Ann Arbor. The Zeilers and other families have hired an attorney to take their case to the U.S. Supreme Court. A year ago, the state's U.S.

District Court decided the Ohio athletic association may bar nonresidents from high school sports, a ruling put in effect because of suspicions that high schools were recruiting out-of-state youngsters for sports. The court ruled the athletic regulation did not deny the right to obtain a religious education, a ruling upheld without comment in January by the 1 U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati. The families in Toledo's Michigan suburbs say they can prove their children have not been recruited and say that being barred from sports threatens their children's well-being and right to a private education. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Zeiler family enjoys a rare day together Sung-Ju Lees Concert Last in Series Wf-g" A J' -r 1 i An4 yj, .7,.

sA'- S4 'Ir Temple Acoustics Heighten Violin Recital Review By Bob Brink Staff WriUr For anyone who had attended one of the Isaac Stern concerts in the West Palm Beach Auditorium a few days before, it was like hearing a different instrument when violinist Sung-Ju Lee's strains filled Temple Emanu-El in Palm Beach Sunday afternoon. Acoustics made all the difference. While Stern played wonderfully, his sound was thin, as is that of all string instruments in solo or small-group performances in the auditorium. Ms. Lee's sound was full and resonant in the acoustically good synagogue sanctuary which, unfortunately, had an audience of only about 90 in this last recital in a four-part season series.

There were some rough spots in her performance, but she evoked the spirit of each selection, playing the more emotional pieces of the program's first half with warmth and the flashier ones of the second half with technical flair. Her warmth of tone could be felt at the outset in the slow first movement of Bach's Sonata No. 3 had a good bluesy feel evoked by Ms. Lee's sensuous bending of notes. Pizzicatos were played strongly in a brief allusion to Gershwin's Fascina-tin' Rhythm, and matched the staccato rhythm of the piano, which was syncopated in this movement.

Ms. Lee's execution of the fast and tricky perpetuo mobile finale seemed effortless. Ysaye's unaccompanied Sonata No. 3 (Ballade) is full of double stops and very difficult finger work, and she played it with technical mastery and in tune throughout. Saint-Saens' Introduction and Rondo Capric-cioso also was technically demanding, and it was invigorating in the hand of Ms.

Lee, who played it with a sharp attack. It was marred by only a couple of rough spots, mainly the chromatic slide. Notes in the high position were right on the money. Ms. Lee, 1977 winner of the Young Concert Artists International Auditions and high placer in other prestigious competitions, played Fritz Kreis-ler's Liebeslied for an encore.

Her interpretation gave quick dynamic drops to phrase endings, which gave the melody more expression than if she had played them with more smoothness. IT i i i 1 in Major, though a few ragged edges showed. The slightly faster third movement had even more feeling and was played smoothly, coming as it did after a fast second movement, in which she had a chance to loosen up. In the fast finale, she negotiated the speedy passages nimbly. Balance with the piano played by Stephen Lazarus was good throughout the concert.

In Brahms' Sonata No. 2 in A Major, Ms. Lee captured the contrasting moods, switching to and fro from aggressively impassioned to quietly contemplative and injecting the final statement with vigor. She played the songful theme and tranquil middle movement with a lovely fluidity. The two sustained double stops at the end of the movement were out of tune and had ragged endings.

The same occurred in the sustained notes at the end of the opening fast movement of Ravel's Sonate. But the middle movement, marked blues, Chamber Music Played With Peak Precision selection. Polio tio Pepe The dessert trolley caps off your exciting journey. You'll also enjoy exciting Broadway Showtime entertainment and-pianist John Williams at the Ex- plorers Lounge, open from 8 to 2 am. Experience distinct, elegant dining for a fraction of its regular price with the same rich service you're accustomed to.

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Vincent Garcia, Review Open Tuesday through Sat- urday evenings, 6:00 creates entree specialties like Red Snapper a la THF the dynamic level and tempo were brought low and the speed was resumed. Kalichstein's playing was full of nuances that were coordinated precisely with those of the strings. Viola and cello were well balanced and precisely unified in the second, andante movement. The coordination of the entire group stood out again in the ritardando at the conclusion. After a scherzo, the beautiful melody for which the quintet is named opened the fourth movement, marked andantino.

Led by the violin, this theme written as a separate song a couple years earlier was given a soft treatment, perhaps even a bit too dainty since it deserves an unreserved statenfcnt. However, it and the following piano and violin variations contrasted well with the third, heavy piano variation. the utmost delicacy. The third movement, a scherzo, moved speedily yet with a totally unforced feeling, as though it were a twig carried through rapids by a gushing stream. In the finale, the piano had yeoman's duty again, with a lot of light but very fast phrases that were nimbly but vigorously executed.

The lovely Trout Quintet, one of chamber music's most popular pieces, comprised the second part of the program and had violist Kim Kashkashian and double-bassist Julius Levine joining the trio. The bass seemed at first to intrude a little because its deep sound was a little too strong for the higher-pitched strings, but it soon melded with them and was an integral part. Piano trills in the fast opening movement were smoothly even as By Bob Brink Staff Writer -I" quintessence of traditional chamber music was represented last "night at the West Palm Beach Audito-Trium by the Kalichstein-Laredo-Rob-inson Trio and a quintet, both in the selections and their performance of them. Mozart's Trio in Major, Mendelssohn's Trio in Minor and Schubert's I Quintet in A Major (Trout Quintet) are elegant, impassioned and pretty pieces from the classical and early romantic periods. player had a sureness in his -or her craft that gave the three works precision.

Dynamic shadings ''Tvere effected exquisitely by the play-', -ere "individually and in coordination jvQh each other throughout the con- cert by Regional Arts Productions. The simple elegance of Mozart was to 10:30. Reservations suggested. Call Basque. Paella, Rib eye Rioja and a superb chicken brought to full flowering by pianist Joseph Kalichstein, violinist Jaime Laredo and cellist Sharon Robinson, who played as one.

The work had a featherlike quality. A dainty pulse was given out by the violin and cello strokes, and they were perfectly together with the piano. The agitated first movement of the Mendelssohn was replete with agitated piano passages that were played with understated passion and accuracy throughout. The cello had an air of resolute command. Contrast was complete in the tranquility of the second movement, the violin singing sweetly.

Extended pauses in the concluding phrase capped the movement with a touch of PGA Sheraton Resort Per person based on selections from our Spanish Fiesta Menu. Tax and gratuity not included. SHERATON HOTELS, INNS RESORTS WORLDWIDE The hospitality people ot ITT 400 AVENUE OF THE CHAMPIONS PALM BEACH GARDENS. FLORIDA 33410 (305I 627-2000 FAMILY AFFAIR 1985 FlagieihK National nn up Banli 4 presents 'A-'jr mm a wx mi to benefit THE SCIENCE MUSEUM MARCH 15, 16, 17 Featuring: DINOSAURS ALIVE eight animated dinosaurs Co-sponsored by: The palm Beach Post Cfjc jenina JEtmcs and 1 I It I Alice Jardee lost 20 lbs. in 46 days.

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