Page 8-Sunday,'April 16, 1978-The Michigan Daily SUPPOSE this is what is called a guest column. I don't write the regular bridge column-Ken Parsigian does that-but last night he sort of. suggested that I write it: "If you're so bloody clever, Friedlander, you write the friggin' column!" I had never claimed to be clever. Ken was referring to the mishaps that I had been involved in (he says, caused) at the local club that night. On the round in question we were playing together, and our opponents were two grey-haired old ladies with squeaky voices and orthopedic shoes who could remember Goren as "some hotshot upstart in the bridge world," but who could not remember the cards they had played to a previous trick. Sitting East I opened one spade, but Ken held his usual miserable collection, so the ladies bid to three no trump. Ken led my suit and dummy's king of spades held the first trick. This was the hand: North ' , : 1; 1 SK H32 D8754 CAKJ 987 West S832 H 10974 D 1063 C643 South 'East SQ J1075 HQJ6 DAJ2 CQ10 BRIDGE' SA964 HAK85 DKQ9 C52 East South West North 1i iNT pass 3C pass 3NT All pass Opening lead: 8 of spades I had heard South's one no trump bid, so I knew where all the missing high cards were, but South had heard my opening bid, so she knew where they were too. My clubs seemed especially vulnerable, for knowing I had the queen, South would drop my ten and queen with ace and king, picking up the whole suit. The old lady declarer pondered, and when she remembered which hand she was in, played the ace of clubs. Very smoothly, as if it were a singleton, I played the quegn. Clever, huh? If the queen were singleton, then Ken would have four to the ten-spot. Declarer would finesse dummy's nine, and I'd produce the ten after all, cutting her off from the rest of the clubs! Sure enough, South came back to her hand with a heart and led her last club. Ken played low. "Finesse the jack," she decided. 'I threw my ten-spot on the table in disgust. "What do you mean 'finesse the jack,"' I demanded as South serenely ran-dummy's now-good clubs. "The jack was high-my queen had already dropped." "Oh?" asked the puzzled old lady. "The queen fell? When?" ped through a wrinkle. One of them had- to be played to this trick, but instead of letting her just pick up the other card and put it back in her hand, I saw an opportunity to avenge the last hand. I made the four of diamonds a penalty card which had to be played at the first legal opportunity. This was going to give me extra chances in both the diamond and trump suits to avoid a loser. As I smiled in an- ticipation, Ken frowned, also in an- ticipation he said afterwards. I cleverly led my deuce of diamonds. West had to follow with the four (her penalty card) and if she had started with a normal pre-empt. of seven diamonds to the KQJ, dummy's ten-spot would win this trick. But East ruffed, another clever idea shot down. West had had eight diamon ds, although I'll offer two to one that she never knew it. Anyhow, East shifted to a club and I won the ace, preparing again to tackle trumps. But now, since East had had to ruff, there was one less trump out, and I could brigpg in the suit with any two-two break. So I led a small one to the king, and West followed with the jack. That gave me another option, so I stopped to think. "Don't," Ken said. "Don't what?" "Don't think. Just play." But I. didn't listen to him, which is why I'm writing this column. Instead I tried to divine the heart position, to figure out whether to finesse, against the queen East might have held or to drop the queen West might have held. Well, you know what I did. Otherwise you'd be reading about some other hand. I finessed and lost. Down one. "Why?" Ken asked, shaking his head. "Tell me why." I could have said I was playing the odds, that a 3-1 break is more likely than a 2-2 break once there are only four trumps left. I even could have said that I was following the theory of restricted choice, which somehow maintains that if one of two equal cards is played, the person who played is less likely to hold the other equal card. (Or else he might have played that one. I know, it seems odd to me too.) Instead I said that I was being clever, that after East ruffed the diamond, I had a chance to pick up a trump holding that nobody else could. To play for the original chance of QJ doubleton, would have neglated any advantage I had gained from the penalty card. "Some advantage," Ken muttered and refused to say anything else. Meanwhile, the little old lady, com- pletely oblivious to the fact that drop- ping two cards at once had deflected me from the successful line of play into the only unsuccessful line, apologized to her equally oblivious partner, "I guess we could have beaten them one more if I'd held onto my cards." ken parsigian "And why would you ever finesse my partner for the queen when I opened the bidding?" I continued. "I could only have 11 points without it." "Young man. I opened the bidding with one no trump-do you want to count my 16 points? Besides, what would we be doing in game if you had opened?" What could I do? There is no law that says she has to listen to my bids or notice the cards I play. "Ah well, Ken," I philosophized. "The best laid plans..." But Ken was buying none of that. "If you'd pretended to be human and played your cards normally, she'd have finessed to your queen on the second round. Always being so bloody clever," he growled. I mulled over this insult as the next hand was dealt. North South SQ2 .H A 109876 DA2 CAK6 North East pass 3S West 3D All pass South 4H Opening lead: 7 of spades I'VE CHANGED the directions for convenience. I was South and the little old lady who had destroyed me last hand opened three diamonds. Even after I became declarer in four hear- ts-completely on my own, as Ken reminds me-I wouldn't have wanted to guess what she might have held for her bid. But I was going to have to. The defen- se started with the top two spades and switched to a diamond through my ace. Was there any chance? Only, if the queen and jack of hearts were doubleton somewhere. But since there was no other play, I won the ace of diamonds and prepared to tackle trum- ps. The lady on my left followed with a small diamond. Twice! She dropped the three and the four on the table-the four-spot must have accidentally slip- 5J 9 HK4 D 108 CQJ98753 West S74 HQJ DKQJ96543 C4 East S A K 108653 H532 D7 C102 - e. b. white (Continued from Page 7) like a father attending to measles. But soon the patient slipped away in a fashion not assumed by White when he brought the pig to reside on his farm. "Once, n the last, while I was at- tending him I saw him try to make a bed for himself but he lacked the- strength, and when he set his snout into the dust he was unable to plow even the little furrow he needed to lie down in. He came out of the house to die. When I went down, before going to bed, he lay stretched in the yard a few feet from the door. I knelt, saw thathehwas dead, and left him there: his face had a mild look, expressive neither of deep peace nor of deep suffering, although I think he had suffered a good deal. I went back up to the house and to bed, and cried in- ternally-deep hemorrhagic in tears." Why I've recounted all of this I'm not sure, except. to say that I once hated pigs and I don't any more. The vision of the bleeding woman and her frightful scream are still intact, but the fat pig in his pen of dirt is less of a villain. After reading "Death of a Pig" it's just like White says-there is no turning back, no chance of resuming one of life's more stereotyped roles. This summer I may even return to the state fair. sunday magazine Co-editors Patty Montemurri Tom O'Connell inside: Books Editor Brian Blanchard Cover photo by Wayne Cable Tom Easthope: The student's connection Books: The legacy of Vietnam The powe essays of E.B. Whi Supplement to The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, April 16, 1978 . , , 4 4 ' .. 4 4_e ac-. - '.: ' f f -