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Show 6E Keith Jarrett concert evokes crowd response Sunday, May 22, 1983 The Sail Lake Tribune The chessboard By Craig Madsen . The 1983 Utah Amateur Championship will be getting underway this Saturday in the Ogden Mall Chamber of Commerce Room, 2307 Washington Boulevard, Ogden. The "Amateur is open to all players rated below 2000. Its still not too late to get your advance entry in the mail, but you better hurry. Your entry must reach Brent Pitt by Wednesday. Entry fee is only $4 if received by this date, and 2 more at the site. Note: Everyone in the tournament must become a member of the Utah Chess Association. Yearly dues are 35, and all participants will receive a copy of the Utah chess magazine En Passant. Entries should be sent to Brent Pitt, 236 West Creek Drive, Murray, Utah 84107. This event is nationally rated, so all players must be or become members of the United States Chess Federation. Memberships may be purchased at the site. Trophies will be awarded to the top two finishers, as well as the top two in categories II, IV, III, VVI, Unrated (3classaward.) Time control for d Swiss is 45 moves in this 90 minutes. Kim Barney of Kays-vill- e will be the tournament director, and Kevin Johnson of Provo is the defending champion. Round Times Round 1 Saturday May 289:00 a.m. Round 2 Saturday May 281:00 p.m. Round 3 Saturday May 286:30 p.m. Round 4 Monday May 30.9:00 a.m. Round 5 Monday May 30 2:00 p.m. Soviet Championship World Chess Champion Anatoly Karpov won the 50th USSR Champiscore cf onship by scoring a sub-pa- r 9W-5in this closely contested tournament in Moscow. The champion won in typical Karpov fashion, winning five, drawing nine, and losing only one. Finishing in second place, only one-ha- lf point behind Karpov was Grandmaster Vladimir Tukmakov with a score of Grandmasters Yuri Balashov and Lev Poli'gaevsky c to finish in a tie each scored for third, while Grandmaster Lev Psakhis and Vladimir Malaniuk each scored the only other plus scores. This years championship was very strong, with 12 of the top 40 rated players in the world participating. Such standouts as former World Champions Tigran Petrosian and Mikhail Tal were on hand, although Tal withdrew after seven rounds because of illness. In fact, about the only missing, were former World Champion Vassily Smyslov and Garry Kasparov, both were Involved in the Candidates Matches. I will be reviewing the tournament book 50th USSR book! Batsford Chess Openings by Garry Kasparov and Raymond Keene. I will also be reviewing this book in the very near future, as I was sent a free!" copy from an unknown source, and I feel its the least I cap do IR DEFENSE I. e4, d6 2. d4, g6 3. Nf3,Nf64. Nc3, Bg7 5. Be2, 0-- 0 6. 0-- 0, Bg4 7. Be3, Nc6 8. Qd2, e5 9. d5, Ne7 10. Radi Preventing c6. In this popular variation, Black usually plays either 10. . . . Bd7, 10. . . . Bf3, or 10. . . . Nd7. Zurab plays a very sharp, but little known variation. 10. . . . b5! Sacrificing a Pawn for immediate counterplay on the queenside.il. a3 One cannot refute a gambit by declining. Critical is II. Bb5, Bf3 12. gf3, Nh5, which BCO gives as unclear. Chicken Karpov tries to stop Blacks queen-sid- e activities. 11. . . . a5 12. b4, ab4 13. ab4, Ra3! Threatening Rc3! 14. Bg5, Rc3! 15. Bf6 15. Qc3 would be answered by 15. . . . Ne4 16. Qe3, Ng5 17. Qg5, Bd7 with excellent winning chances for the sacrificed exchange". 15. . . . Bf3 16. Bf3, Ra3 17. Bg7!7, Kg7 18. Ral, Qa8 19. Ra3, Qa3 20. Be2, Qb2 Threatening to win with Ra8. 21. Rdl, ft! Attacking the Pawn chain at the base. 22. ef5,Nf5 23. c3, Each sides Qd2 24. Rd2, Ra8 chances are approximately equal Karpov now makes a mistake after which Black quickly seizes the initiative. 25. Bb5? Best here was 25. g3 and if 25. . . . Ne7 then 26. Bf3 with complete equality. five-roun- . Ra3! 26. Rc2, Ne7! 27. f4 Artificial protection by 27. Bc4 would be answered by 27. . . . Nd5! ef4 28. Bc6, Nf5 29. Kf2, 27 25 Ne3 30. Rcl, Kf6 31. g3, Ke5 er 32. Kf3, g5 33. gf4, gf4 34. h4, Nd5 AzmaiparashviU now switches over to a winning Rook end game. 35. Bd5, Kd5 36. Kf4, Kc4 37. Rel, 38. Re7, Rc3 Guarding the Kb4 39. Rh7, d5 40. Ke5, c6 41. Kd4. Here Zurab wrote down his obvious move 41. . . . Rc4ch and Karpov resigned without resuming the game. Chess Clubs Wanted I am trying to put together a list of chess clubs in Utah. If you know of a club that meets on a regular basis, I would appreciate knowing where, and when you play. All replies would be greatly appreciated. Send them to me, co The Salt Lake Tribune, P.O. Box 867, Salt Lake City, Utah 9-- 6. 8tt-6Vf- 8-- 7, 84110. 9 7 6 big-gu- 1 4. i 5 mm wM wm 'wm mmi 1983 by R.G. Wade in the very near future. GM Editions of London are the publishers of this book. 3 m 2 AA t mm m m H m mm mm 1 abcdefgh Karpovs only loss in the tournament was to Zurab Asmaiparashvili (wew!). The young Georgian used a little known line in the Pirc Defense, and simply outplayed the current world champion. I quickly turned to all my Pirc Defense books, and I was only able to find Zurabs move in one White to play and win. Solution to last weeks problem. Orehov-Petrus- USSR 1967. a, Jarretts manner, genius that he Concert Review no middle ground with the pianist and the performance he puts on. And so it was Friday evening in the Capitol Theatre as a crowd listened to two hours of Jarretts acoustic solo piano music. He played two extended improvisa-tionpieces that explored everything from Baroque to Indian ragas, and a lovely rendition of Somewhere Over the Rainbow. near-capaci- ty al ' is, is to put the audience on the defensive immediately. Some would call him a temperamental artist whuae talent is such that he can get away with anything. Others would simply call him an arrogant hind end. Whatever your feelings, Jarrett does cause a reaction to his performance. The Capitol Theatre stage looked magnificent Friday evening in its simplicity. There was Jarrett, three microphones and a grand piano; nothing more. The crowd was hip and attentive throughout sitting, watching, enjoying, smiling, trying not to cough. And thats when Jarretts personality got in the way of his performance. About three quarters of the way through his first improvisation- - Investors keep close eye on the hits and bombs Desmond Ryan Newspapers Just before Close Encounters of the Third Kind came out six years ago, people began calling me with questions about whether Steven Spielbergs film was really the blockbuster everyone expected. The callers were not movie fans, but investors. The stock of Columbia Pictures actually fluctuated in anticipation of what Close Encounters would earn at the box office. But in an age when the big studios are minor diviColumsions of huge corporations bia, for example, is owned by the Coca-Col- a Co. the performance of a single movie seldom affects the profits of the whole enterprise. Some Exceptions There are exceptions. The earnthe Extra-Terresings of E.T. tial, which are well over $350 million and counting, made a difference to Universal Studios. And observers credit the vast profits of Star Wars with saving fiscally ailing 20th Century-Fo- x from a corporate takeover in 1977. But those cases are rare. Even so, the stock market has its share of players who see visions of corporate ruin when a studio has a movie that falters at the box office. The latest victim is Walt Disney Productions Something Wicked This Way Comes. After the $20 million film opened last month with a tepid gross of 2.4 million, Disney stock lost 4 Vi points in heavy trading. Analysts capped that by knocking as much as 40 cents off their estimates of Disney earnings. Similar Drubbing Disney stock took a similar drubbing when Tron, its 321 million cinematic video game, failed last summer. What makes this silly is that Disney can afford to absorb expensive mistakes. Maybe thats why the studio keeps making them. With Epcot Center flourishing in Florida and the new Magic Kingdom at Knight-Ridd- er -. film-indust- first-weeke- re tracting' throngs of Japanese . visi- tors in Urayasu, and with a new cable channel doing well, Disney needs no mourners. I hope the studio continues to push Something Wicked until it finds its e audience. It is an unusual and ghost story aimed at children, and that is a tough sell in todays well-mad- market When she is not out pushing her thinly veiled autobiographical novel, "Heartburn, Nora Ephron is at work at an unsung task in the world of movie-makin- g g. script-doctorin- The patient is the screenplay of Modern Bride, which stars Diane Keaton as a woman who gets married just as her parents are getting divorced. The producers decided major surgery was needed on the first draft by Joan Taylor. Ephron and another writer, Alice Arlen, are reworking the material. Weather Vulnerability Movies are vulnerable to many things, n6t the least of them being the weather. The film is to be shot in New York and requires warm-weathscenes. If the script is not ready by August, the entire production will have to pushed back until May of next year. The director is Tim Hunter, who made such a striking debut with Tex. Short takes: The contenders for the David Di Donatello Awards, the Italian equivalent of the Oscars, are Victor-VictoriYol, Missing and Gandhi. The winner will be announced on July 2. . . . Michael Ciminos career is recovering from its association with Heavens Gate. Cimino has been signed to direct Dustin Hoffman next year in The Yellow Jersey, a film written by Carl Foreman. . . . The death of veteran special-effect- s man Wally Veevers this spring at the age of 73 has delayed the release of The Keep until late summer at the earliest. When he died, Veevers was putting the finishing touches on Michael Manns thriller about a Nazi commando who takes over a castle inhabited by a vampire. 237- - 2000 self-contr- ol - Midnight - Show : Friday and Saturday 1 a MOVIE AUDIENCE QUIDE a a a a a Theta retinae apply la fume it Sun! I xclosivn Pmm'wm! it, ISe "7 SEDUCTIONS OF MADAM LAU" Open Daily 10: 15 am Couples El er best-pictu- re Tha Salt Lake Tribune does not accept advertisements of fllmt legally adludgad pornographic or legally chad at pornographic In formal complaint. Consistent with this policy, Tha Tribune eccaofs no advertising matter In which tha exhibitor himself proclaims a film 'pornographic" by specific description, double entendre, euggeetlve lustration or any other device. Maybe. MAL la ade ladicelat the Mm ante wbmttttd aad r the Mehta Ptdere Cede ef Sett It sanitise. PG - aAOtnfts. 344471 Baraaford'a PARTY praniaral 6i15;8:00i9i45 Hal Ashby's 4 i 30 Bruca DON'S HAROLD AND MAUDE start Ruth Gordon t Rl Bud Suggested lor GENERAL audiences. All ages admitted. Suggested for MATURE audiences (parental guidance suoosstad). All agee admitted. RESTRICTED Parsons undor 17 not admitted, uniats accompanied by parent or adult guardian. Persona under 11 not admitted. Adults Only Un-rat- ed Cort Persons under It not admitted. Picture neither rated by Motion Picture Council nor exhibitor. a, RUST ft UNI "MY SISTER SEKA" MARLENE WILLOUGHBY JOANNA MIQUa CRYSTAL SYNO PATTI SE BRING RATED JULIET SEKA VICKI STEELE SARAH SHELDON TINA ROSS RsMX "BLUE MAGIC" COUSTEAU MONICA SANDS JESSIE ST. JAMES ANDERSON VERONICA HART CANDIDA ROYALLE SAMANTHA FOX MERLE MICHAELS RatsfX RATED X GiNEM'A 364-364- Open Daily 11:45 A.M. 363-174- 7 Late Show Fri. & Sat. State 0 Couples Prices - WILLAM The Market Street Grill BALLET WEST SUNDAY BRUNCH SPECIAL CHRISTENSEN, DIRECTOR F. Extended 6 Weeks 983 SUMMER SESSION at University of Utah June 6-Ju- 1 ly 9-1- - Reservations required. Individuals & Groups Bonuses! One Day Turnarounds Overnighters Nightowl fours DRIVE-OVEESCAPE - 2 day1 nigh 12 per persondouble occupancy Sun - Thurs. only, no holidays. Room & dinner. Reservations only ttvu SLC office. TENFER-TW- s10 Value Casino fun book for 2 cost. Table play, drinks, food credit, lucky buck Sold In SLC office. 5 Intensive Ballet Workshop for Children, ages Placement class for new students: June 4 For DAILY BUS TOURS iKritm,,,.. NEVADA TOURS 8 SUITE 363-930- 0 ,s ff IV 3.95 New York Steak & Eggs Eggs Benedict Market Street Omelet Join us Sundays at: 50 Post Office Place (Between Main &W. Temple) Hours: 9:30 AM, to 3:30 COMPLETE DINNEX FOR $6.95 What is Black Tie Invited Hotel Utah Spring Formal May 28 A Holy Cross Hospital Staff May 27 Opening Nights: Utah Symphony, Ballet West, Utah Opera Weddings, Second Marriages, Cruises Why not a New Tux for Father? . . . Fathers Day is June Great Meal at a Terrific Little America 19 Wests Largest Selection of Tuxedos priced 15010400 Complete accessories in stock 242 Cast South Temple Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 Price, full course dinner includes: Doth Hibochl Steak and Hibochl Chicken Hibpchi Shrimp Appetizer Soup G Salad Rice Cooked Vegetables Green Tea Ice cream or Sherbet for only 39.93. All Sun Thurs 5 00 7 OOp m. Oder good thru May 31. 1983. rental department Presents complete dinner prepared righf or your nibachi rable by your own personal chef. He'll dazzle you A with his slicing, dicing, sizzling, "V. ;v and seasoning. Benihana. It's a magical experience. Come tonight. Come early It's a terrific way dKMimmmmmsm roenda busy day or ro begin a fun evening our. And a great treat tor the whole family Phone (801) 3220252 Also a fine tux 8 tCDeraam Come Early end Enjoy a Presidents Banquet 322-466- SIM4S0UTH 277-814- Western Shrine P.M. 138 more information, write the Academy 3 Box 9453 or call between 3:00 and 7:30 P.M. at P.O. Arrow Press Square (across from the Salt Palace) Validated Parking. Phone for information on group functions. 322-242- TUESPA Ijjf f I ( i 368 So. '45 West Broadway Clstensen 4einyv- i i i X "SLICTRIC LADY" DESIREE i FIRST RUNI "FROM HOLLY WITH LOVI" 1. . . . Be4chH 2. Resigns. If 2. Kal, Qa2ch 3. Ra2, Ra2ch Mate, or if 2. fe4, ba2ch 3. Kal, Qg3! Affiliated with 1 Whatever, the speech seemed to al work some hackers in the gallery both audience and performanimated distract the distracted apparently became preas if pianists train of thought. He paused, er. It was with Jarrett out the weeding the told stool and his from occupied leaped up torn was crowd the and a coughers, audience it was time for for and artist between listening break. coughee" hackers. The audience didn't know whether Some in the audience might even to laugh or cry. He had caught them off guard. After a brief coughing argue that Jarretts gyrations at the piano were equally distracting. He spell from the crowd, Jarrett continued the piece for 15 more minutes. stomped his feet constantly. His body continuously swayed to the The first piece was alternately music as if the inspiration came wastebrillliant and meanderingly from his stomach. His orgasmic ful. Given the fact that it takes enorwere startling. mous will power to sit down at the sighs and yelps The set wandered aimlessly for 45 piano and play extemporaneously, the music was enlightening. But the minutes. There were flashes of brilhazards of relying on improvisation liance, but nothing to grab and hold. can weigh heavily on an artist, espeJarrett has the ability to massage cially when he has to play for more the mind with pastoral soundscapes, than 90 minutes. Consequently, there yet he rarely did that Friday. In were periods when the music simply fact, the most inspiring piece of the became a vehicle for Jarretts evening was the encore, the beautiways. ful Somewhere Over the Rainbow, The first piece was better than the not because it was the most strucsecond, however, if only for Jarretts tured, simply because it expressed a knack of interweaving divergent lovely feeling. musical genres. The Indian flavor MR C. SOLD HIS FURNITURE THE was most evident here as JarreUs SAME DAY HIS AD RAN IN THE PAPER intricate chords created a sitar-lik- e drone. His stomping foot became WANT-AD- S GET YOU counterpoint RESULTS He blended European impressionism, earthy gospel, avant-gard- e jazz and Eastern trance music into an eclectic brand of Keith Jarrett exotica. The first set was very good. The pianist stumbled on the second set It was due, perhaps, to his uncalled for harangue of the "coughTribune Advertising Policy ing crowd. He again brought up the Tha Salt Laka Tribune's basic advsrtlslno evils of coughing during a perfortastatul policy Is toarcapt tha advertising of all lawful services, and of all mance, noting that it only takes a products that are legally manufactured and to suppress it. little distributed. nt per-sha- 4 Championship Final: Moscow f SB 8 By Tom McCarthey Tribune Staff Writer After attending a Keith Jarrett concert, one cannot remain ambivalent toward this gifted artist. You either love him or hate him. Theres f ila iWifiii in-n,U- B lU'WJL'liL'iii! IL! M? L,H M M i |