MAPS AND DECISIONS, IV: Club
Data.
Sandra L. Arlinghaus and
William C.
Arlinghaus
General
Introduction
Tournament level duplicate bridge
is a card
game that is a sport. As is the case with sports,
generally,
there is an overseeing body: in basketball it is the
National
Basketball Association (NBA); in bridge it is the American
Contract
Bridge League for North America (ACBL) and the World Bridge
Federation
(WBF) for all nations in the world. The ACBL is a
non-profit
organization based in Memphis, Tennessee. The ACBL has
about
150,000 members in the U.S.A., Canada, and Mexico. The
WBF has
more than 10 million members. The ACBL owns two
buildings in
Memphis where they house a large staff to maintain records,
databases,
publications, and a host of other operations associated with
this
business in the entertainment/sports sector of the business
world. The second author of this work is currently a
member of
the Board of Directors of the ACBL. This Board, as do
equivalent
boards of other corporations, sets policy for the
organization, makes
decisions that affect the entire population of ACBL members,
and
oversees the work of the Chief Executive Officer.
There are 25
Board members, each representing one geographical "district"
of the
ACBL. Thus, the members of the Board of Directors are
also
referred to, even though their charge is to represent the
interests of
the entire ACBL, "District Directors."
Club Data
Duplicate bridge is played in
tournaments that
vary in level from "national championships" to "regional" or
"sectional" championships. There are tournament
opportunities
throughout the nation on a fairly regular basis, including
three North American Bridge Championships per year.
Regionals and
Sectionals are more frequent and cater to geographic regions
more
localized than that of the continent. If, however, one
wishes to
play on a daily basis, then playing at local bridge clubs
may be an
attractive alternative. Clubs are also often a
pleasant place for
beginners to learn, away from the intense competition of the
tournament
scene. Aileen Osofsky, National Goodwill Chair of the
ACBL,
expressed to the first author a desire to have a map/data
system that
would enable her to pinpoint groupings clubs in an effort to
more
easily extend
goodwill to newcomers and promote bridge as a sport to
younger
players. In this situation the goodwill and
recruitment policy is
informed and guided by maps.
- Click
on a
district in the map below and
the list of clubs, arranged by unit, from the ACBL
database will pop up.
Use the tabs at the bottom to guide your path through
the data, or come
back to the map and click on a different district.
- Click here
and a database
with a filter applied will come up in Excel so the
user can sort the
database by any column; click on the down arrow in the
desired column
header.
Many thanks to
Aileen Osofsky,
National Goodwill Chair, ACBL. Thanks
to Jay Baum, ACBL CEO, Rick
Beye, Carol Robertson, Richard Oshlag, and Ed Evers, ACBL, for
providing
the materials directly to Sandra Arlinghaus, who then created
the map
sets
using GIS software (ESRI, ArcView 3.2) that forges a dynamic
link
between underlying
database
and outline base map. Graphic adjusments of various kinds
were
made in Adobe PhotoShop or Adobe Illustrator.
Solstice: An Electronic
Journal
of Geography and
Mathematics,
Institute of Mathematical Geography, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Volume XVII, Number 1.
http://www.InstituteOfMathematicalGeography.org/