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Dayton Daily News from Dayton, Ohio • 39

Publication:
Dayton Daily Newsi
Location:
Dayton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
39
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

3-D March 10, 1985 DAYTON DAILY NEWS Birthday boys garner honors Goren on Bridge By Charles H. Goren and Omar Sharif spired work consists largely of more than 500 sonatas for harpsichord, many of them "tiny" pieces. What matters most about this 300th birthday celebration, to my way of thinking, is the increased awareness such happenings bring to widen the audience for the works of these geniuses. Of course, Bach and Handel already had a wide-ranging audience. Bach, in particular, has been arranged and homogenized and synthesized, all the way from Brahms on down.

In any case, it's time to say "Salud" or "Cheers" and lift a glass heavenward. Where else would such remarkable music-makers be? del's) operas and even many of his oratorios have yet to be recorded, and almost none of his 100 cantatas have appeared on discs." The acclaim for Scarlatti, meanwhile, is less widespread, except among the cognoscente. Born in Naples on Oct. 26, the son of musician Alessandro Scarlatti, Domenico was trained largely by his father. He first held important posts in Rome, where he served Queen Maria Casimira of Poland and was for a time music director at St.

Peter's. Later he would go to Spain when Princess Marie Barbara married Prince Ferdinand and served the rest of his life at the court. Scarlatti's Spanish-in Continued from Page 1-D. turned an hour later, often found it untouched. A year after the Dublin performance, the oratorio was first presented in London.

That's when the audience and the king (George II) were so moved they stood and established a tradition that remains today. It was at a performance of Messiah on April 18, 1759, that Handel, serving as conductor, fell ill. Eight days later, April 14, he was dead. Handel was entombed across the aisle from William Shakespeare in Westminster Abbey. "Sad to say," adds Buelow, "very few of his (Han Dayton bids goodbye to WAV I Radio Both vulnerable.

East deals. NORTH 9754 7 0 KQ7 AK954 WEST EAST K10 QJ8632 0 932 04 J86 10732 SOUTH A VKJ10832 0 AJ10865 4 Void The bidding: East South West North 2 3 Pass 4 NT Pass 6 0 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead: King of 'second hand low' and, to everyone's surprise, I won the trick. "The rest was simple. Two hearts were sluffed on the top clubs. Now two clubs were ruffed, the second high, to provide entries for two heart ruffs on the board with the king and queen of trumps.

A spade ruffed high was followed by a diamond ruffed with the seven. Ths high cross-ruff established the defenders' nine of trumps as a trick, but that was all the defense could get. Six diamonds bid and made." Send any questions for this column to Charles H. Goren and Omar Sharif, care of this newspaper. Charles Goren and Omar Sharif personally cannot undertake to answer all questions He was a grizzled veteran of many campaigns.

Despite a slight limp caused by a stray bullet at Anzio, there was a spring in the step of the Seven of Hearts as he strolled away from the game in the company of a select band of admirers. "Cannon fodder, that's all we are and all we are meant to be," he thundered. "I know that, occasionally, we win a trick by ruffing or by becoming a long card in a suit. But for the most part we are stationed in the front line to be mowed down by the enemy. "In my long career, only once can I remember when I won a trick in my own right early in the play.

What made the escapade even more satisfying was that it took place in the semifinals of the world team championship. "East's opening two-spade bid might look a bit strange to you, but I guess anything goes at the world championship. Our player in the South seat elected to make a strong takout with his cue-bid. North's jump to four no-trump was not Blackwood. Instead, it showed a good hand with the values concentrated in the minor suits.

Hence South's leap to six diamonds. "West led the king of spades, and when dummy appeared declarer realized he was not going to have a cake-walk. After winning the ace of spades, it was tempting to cross to the table with a trump and lead a heart. However, that was unlikely to gain anything and declarer was reluctant to use up one of his few entries to dummy so early in the play. "Instead, he elected to lead a low heart from his hand.

West could see no reason not to follow the old adage of bjSSSSSSm BlSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSlL By jJHk MRM' mBBmmtrm oV It seemed that when WAVI's personalities decided to move on, they never just quietly resigned and left town. WAVI's personalities cut and run with a flourish. In 1980, talk-show host Jim Kirk-wood went on vacation. Two weeks later, he phoned WAVI officials to tell them he had taken a job at a radio station where he had worked before coming to Dayton. RUSS GUERRA, NOW an Ohio state representative, left his "talkmaster" job in a huff in May 1973 after a squabble with station officials.

Gallagher quit on the air in 1982, claiming Crowl told him to stop criticizing President Reagan on the air. Then there was the swan song of Brad Clay. Clay quit on Nov. 6, 1981, after Crowl fined him for playing a record out of sequence. The fine had been $5.

It wasn't all anger and unpredictability, however. There were many positive accomplishments, such as news director Barrett's excellent on-location reports from Harrisburg, during the Three Mile Island nuclear problem in 1979, and a hard-hitting 1980 Mike Scinto-Mike Gallagher series on homosexual prostitutes in East Dayton. Clay's many fund-raisers, including the one he did for the widow of a murder victim, showed WAVI listeners to be generous and compassionate. Perhaps the most fitting tribute to WAVI was offered by a man who telephoned the station on its last day on the air. He told the talk-show host, "I didn't always agree with what you said or even with how you said it.

But, by God, I sure did listen." Continued from Page 1-D. ed in connection with the 1975 death of school desegregation planner Dr. Charles Glatt, Kwesell called Long a sickie. Two years later, Kwesell struck again when he called recipients of birth control and services provided by the Planned Parenthood Association and others losers and said persons suffering from venereal disease should be allowed to rot. On Feb.

4, 1975, Judge Carl D. Kessler called upon members of the Dayton Bar Association to file a complaint against WAVI with the FCC because the station's listeners were attacking a decision by Common Pleas Court Judge Douglas K. Ferguson to place a convicted rapist on shock probation. On March 5, 1976, a coalition of local black civil-rights groups asked the FCC to deny broadcast licenses to all of Dayton's radio and TV stations, charging that the stations had no blacks in management, sales or any other position ofresponsibility. WAVI was specifically accused of attacking the integrity of Dayton's black leaders.

Then, in November 1976, WAVI aired two 30-second commercials for Trojan condoms, despite the fact that the National Association of Broadcasters opposed the commercials. KWESELL LEFT WAVI in 1978, but the station found a willing successor in Mike Gallagher, who's now a sports reporter at Channel 2. Gallagher created his first big wave in March 1979, when he told Dayton police that a man had threatened to kill him. The threat came after Gallagher called members of Dayton's National United Workers Organization bums Brad Clay SUNSHINE PROMOTIONS ft W0NE WELCOME Russ Guerre ens of on-the-air personalities. Jim Boz.

Art Barrett. Carey Merker. Doug Car-rick. David Wallace Johnson. Chris Mitchell.

Bob Harris. Jack McCoy. Gene "By Golly" Barry. Malcolm MacLeod. Chuck Breece.

Dee Campbell. Jerry Malloy. and degenerates. Two months later, WAVI executives took Gallagher off the air and sent him out of town for awhile after he went on the air and described the scene at a pit-bull fight he claimed he had attended. Through the years, WAVI had doz- French banks plan 'smart' credit card i SPvWBHBfleBMeTeR PARIS (AP) French banks said Tuesday they would spend 1 billion francs ($100 million) over the next three years to introduce the "Smart Card," a fraud-proof credit card with a built-in memory chip.

The microprocessor chip and its memory makes counterfeiting or false identification much more difficult than the magnetic identification strip now in use, bank association spokesman Daniel Deguen said. AN EVENING WITH THE BUDDY GUY JUNIOR WELLS BLUES BAND FRI. MARCH 22 We've Sot mat You Want! SEYMOUR DUNCAN Tube Convertible Amplifier $875 THE MIRAGE Digital Sampling Keyboard (Dayton's Only 2:003:455:40 8:009:50 Dealer) I UTil Guitar Strings $2.75 ea. 12:405:007:00 ADVANCE TICKETS RECOMMENDED 461-9343 music 6159 Brandt Pike Dayton, Ohio 233-7294 2:004:005:55 8:0010:00 and THE JUDDS DUKE'S BARGAIN MATINEES AT K0N TIKI CINEMAS ADULTS $2.50 CHILD $2.00 MAR. 14 GIL scon HERON GOLDEN OX HURRY MUST END soon: SAT.

APRIL 6, 8:00 P.M. UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON ARENA ALL SEATS RESERVED and TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE ARENA BOX OFFICE All TICKETRON OUTLETS AND RIKE'S DOWNTOWN AND DAYTON MALL. I awM til I PRICE OF 9 3:25 I DUKE'S SPECIALS Daytons All Italian Dinners 2 COMPLETE $11)00 DINNERS I $2.50 FIRST SHOW ONLY Salem Mall 837 3306 iarly bird special Beaver Valley 426-8611 CINEMA CITY VBBFT Entertainment Showplace Dabel 253-61 14 $3.00 AFTER FIRST SHOW PRIOR TO 6 P.M. 5 P.M. -10 MAR.

17 ROY AYERS LONNIE LISTON SMITH tickets at glasshouse, gem city and sears d.t. THURSDAY FRIDAY STEAK RIBS COMPLETE A E50 DINNERS FOR 10 5 P.M.-U P.M. A SURE go with someone you want to fall in love with." John Corcoran KABC TV LOS WGCLES 'The Sure Thing is a delight. Don 't let anything stop you from seeing it." jayco boston giobi Harrison Ford is John Book. A big city cop.

A small country boy They have nothing in common a murder WITH COUPON ONLY CLOSED SUNDAY 1202 S. MAIN ST. 222-6200 Ell I TTY 11V III SilllE u.o. irvrnm arena HP--B 1 50 I JO 3 Zs 30-7 45 Var I 148-4 9 20 rDk.iTBl EMBASSY FILMS ASSOCIATES MONUMENT WcruRES ROB REINER THE SURE THING" I 1000 0KmmmmSS. J0HN CUSAC' DAPHNE flJNGA WECA llNDFORS NCOUET'f SHERIDAN JpeeeeSeeeMeeBBB jZriCtjjV.

HENRY WINKLER ANDREW SCHEINMAN TOM SCOTT STEVEN I BLOOM JONATHAN ROBERTS INTO THE NIGHT' IS Grit yTBg, SgSjSBatsaXK ROGERBirnbaum rob reiser r( uwst IRRESISTIBLE A TuM 1 Wpfi R'flfl rkW tEPt SPARKLING THRILLER. I uey neu. o.uu AX I Salem Mall I 'Beam Valleyl ffV'ii i At the center are two of the Thur. Fri. 4:00 8:00 P.M.

1 I 1 I IrSij ilX. I Saturday 10:00 A.M.; 2 P.M. 8:00 P.M. 3 7 5 -0 JTST MHUi and Vc INMHHRkSiKHRhHIBS Richard Corliss Time Magazine Seats vy HaBaB IhIhbbShbH AY-s- Children Adurts $6.50 fM' Ik tB I Tr 4i General Admission XT 1 mM Children Adults $3.50 in Advance I "TT MBtM 7L4yrMC Children Adults $4.00 at the Door HBBH fmmm 7 i I bIh ar'Qerous romance Ticlccs Ow cil ow Hlhkett bbauS owvusalpictue Antioch Temple 228-0052 JTjlJ IHHHbVHHHH U.D. Arena 229-4433 jLjtdl I Salem Mall I Ifkawr Valltvl SearsRike's f77J PlM W1 4" Downtown Stores.

fTj 41 i7sjCA likawr Valleyl I Salem Mall I LSBLL3 A true Story. Nr'f 426 8611 1 833306 BREAKFAST 5 35740 fX yW 7 1 2 00-4 3 8 OO 10 06 1 68-4 30 7 46 10 00 2 00-4 JO 7 OO 9:30 THE FALCON Iclub wier 9 45 I GHOULIES I WlSSJIVG Ictton THE SNOWMAN kjujms eelds U4bH J004 J0 7JO1000 iRj unt 1 other etf this section: Qhouee. Missing in Action 2. Kinfl Fields. Breekfsst Club, I.

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Years Available:
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