U. S. JUNIOR TO FISCHE

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Vol. XI. No. 23Conducled byPo,;(;(". No. Z13IRWIN SIGMONDS15 CentsMonday, August 5, 1957 U. S. JUNIORTO FISCHE ,END solutions to Position No.213 to r ach Irwin Sigmond,5200 Williamsburg Blvd., Arlington 7, Va, by August 20, 1957. Withyour solution, please send analysisBobby Fischer Adds Junior to Trophiesor reasons supporting your choiceof "Best l\Iove" or moves.Ramirez Second and Sholomson ThirdSolution to Position No. 213 will ap.pur in the Sapt.mb 5, 1957 lnul.NOTE: Doplact JO /I'lio"1 to / ."P",;/;onl on ("' ".aj bt Jur. /( ;"J' ffltNrua "umba of pos ition bt,n , Jof. tI,"rn/ gi . r f,,11 ".m. "nri Ni,JrtJ, 0/the sol.a to IlJl i n in prop.r (miitin, of1001sol.l ionNew Western Open Draws 123 PlayersIncluding 11 Masters, 33 ExpertsInaugurating another regional chess event of major importance, theNew Western Open, Milwaukee played host to a gathering of 123 playersrepresenting all sections of the United States, Canada and Alaska overthe recent holiday perioe! of July 4, 5, 6 and 7. Included in the fie ld were33 players with exper t ratings nnd 11 with master ratings, of whom threewere senior masters.The tournament, which had a guaranteed prize fund of 1,000 forthe four days of play, was sponsored by tbe Milwaukee Chess Foundation in cooperation with the Milwaukee Municipal Chess Association.Donald Byrne, a former Brook· -;-;-;: ;-;: :;o ;--- lynite who is currently an instruetor at the University of Michiganand who has establlsbed himseUas a prime favorite in MilwaukeeJohn B. Payne of San Antoniosince tbe great 182-pl ayer National scored 4-1, losing one game to EricOpen in 1953, returned to the Bone, to win the Texas Statescene of -his greatest tri umph to Championship in an event heldwin the first New Western cham- concurren tl y wi th the Texas 'Openpionship. Byrne was followed close- at the Hilton Hotel in San Antonio.ly in the final standings by Larry Tied for second with 3.1h;·I lh. eachEvans, successor' to Samuel Re· were Morley Pastinsky or San An·sbevsky as United States champion tonio and Kenneth R. Smitb ofseveral years ago.Dall'as. Both los t to Payne andEach finished with a game score drew with each other. Eric Boneof 7- 1 and each had two draws in. was tbird with 21,2·21,2 . Payne, Pascluding a s tandoff in their own tinsky, and Smith, together witbpersonal encounter. The customary Open Champion Steven Jones,tie.breaking method was applied qualify for the 1958 Texas Cham·under the Sonnenoorn-Berger sys- pionsb ip event.tem with the statis tics lavoring'Byrne who had a weighted scorecount of .402 to .357 for Evans.At the close of the seventhround it appeared tha·t EvansAt Reykjavik, the U.S. Studentwould be the ultimate winner.Byrne was a half-point in arrears Team bas climbed to' third place,due to a draw witb S. Popel, a passing Bulgaria and only one-halfformer champion of Paris, France, point bebind Hungary. Williamwho now resides in Detroit. In Lombardy on Board One bas a 51hthe final round, however, Evans 31 score, Edmar Mednis 64, Anlost his cbance at the title when thony Saidy 601h-2Jtz, Arthur Feuerhe was held 'to a draw by Hans , stein H!!-3lh, and Robert Sobel,Berliner of Washington, D.C. the reserve player, Ph-Ph.Team StandingsWhile this was going on, ByrneU SSR30'l.t.-S'hRumania 181o'!·161o'.won a hard·fought, 47·move afiair Hunaa I7 24'1.t.·15 'hE. German y 18-18from Tibor Weinberger of Milwau- U A24 15Ecudor 13'1.t.·22'1.t.1.2.1(1kee. Weinberger, who was some- Bulaarla 23'h-lZ\.!o Denmark23·ISSweden 101o'. -25 1o'.twhat un heralded at the start of Cleeh.Eng land 191o'!·161o'.PA YN E TAKESTEXAS TITLEU.S. HOLDS THIRDIN STUDENT MEET,(Continued on Page 4, Col, 4)Ic e land18'1.t.-13'1.t.Mongolia 9\o'.t·261o'.w,-30'I.t.FinlaridThe Brooklyn master junior (or junior master) Robert Fischer gath·ered in the U.S. Junior title in stride at San Franci o wit an 8J.k . score, drawing one game with California State C amplon Gilbert. RamI'rez. Rami rez o[ San Francisco placed second With 71k·Ph, losmg nogames but drawing witb Richard Owen of Salt Lake City and RonaldThacker or Richmond in additio n to Fischer. Stephen Sholomson of LosAngeles, who has recently shot into prominence. on the Pacifi7 Coa.st,was tbird with 61/z -21/z, losi ng to Fischer and Rarrurez. and drawmg WithLeonard Hill of Mt. View. Thacker was fourth with 6·3, losing to Fischerand Hill while·,drawing with Ramirez and Ralph Clark of Long Beach.Fifth to tenth on edian points them chocolate milk and ice creamwith 5 -3lh each were Mike Bre- daily.of Redwood City, LeonardDUTCH DEFENSEArthur Wang of Berkeley,u.s. Junior ChampionshipClark, Robert Walker ofSan Frilncisco, 1957, and Warren Miller of AIWhiteE leventh to fourteenthBI.ekS. SHOLOMSONeach were Rex Wilcox of G. RAMIREZR·8!Salinas, Andrew Schoene of Mala- T. P-Q94 P KB4 28. B·RS2.P·Q4Kt·KB32'.B·KI6B·Qlga, Thomas Heldt, Jr. of Albu- 3. P·KKt330. BxBAICBquerque, and David Krause of PaloP·KKI331. KI-KtSQ.Q2AIto.Frcd Wreden, aged 10, o[ SanFr ancisco won custody of the Independent·Prcss Telegraph Trophyfor ranking player under 13 years;the Milwaukee Journal, Indepcndenr-Press Telegraph Trophy forranking player under 15 and Her·mann Dittma n Trophy all wentto 14-year old Bobby Fischer.In all , 33 j uniors contcsted inthe 9-round Swiss event directedby International Master GeorgeKoltanowski, held at the SpreckelsRussell Dairy Co. auditorium inSan Francisco. While most of thefield were Californians, there wasone from Brooklyn, N.Y. (Fischer), one f rom Texas (James Bennett), one from Kansas (HowardKillough, Jr.), one from New Jersey (Andrew Schoene), one from'Oregon (Robert Walker), one fromUtah (Richard Owen) and two fromNew Mexico (Warren Miller andThomas Heldt, Jr.). California wasably represented by Ramirez andShoiomSOIl although unfortunatelyLarry Remlinger could not participate.With George and Leab Kolta·nows kl arranging matters, therewas considerable outside activityfor the players when they couldbe pried from the chessboards, including an evening as guests. of theFox Theater seeing the newestPat Boone pidure. Their hosts, tbeSpreckels Russell Dairy Co., served �QB3g·B2PxPKI·Q2P· ·K4Q-QlPxPAxR16.17.18.19.20.21.22.2:1.24.25. &-QBT26. Kt·K427. 8-Q2B·Kt20·0, p·QSKI·B3P·K4KtxPP·B38·K3Q-8 6.41.48.n.SO.51.52.KtxPP·KR4Q· 3A-Q2KI·B2B· A3P·B5PxPPxPQ·Kt7chK·KtlQ.Kt2P.B'Q.K tSRxK IRxRPxAP-Q4Q. K5p. K·QlK·B4K. 82KI·BSK-QlKtxPP' B4K·K4K·B3P·AlK· KtlK'xPKXKtK-Q3Anlln,MILLER FIRSTIN MISS. STATEW. Troy Miller of Natchez tal·lied 6-1, a loss to Dr. Claude A,Jackson, to win the MissiSSippIState title at Natchez in a 23·player Swiss event. Second to fifthon Median points with 5-2 eachwere Fenner Parham, Jr. of Natchez, Dr. Claude A. Jackson ofKosciusko, Cralos Garcia of Gulf·port, and L. Peyton Crowder ofGreenville. Sixth and seventh with4'h-2 each were Robert Lanfer·man of Keesler Falls, and Dr. TomTalkington of Natchez. At the an·nual meeting of the MiSSissippiCbess Association, it was voted toaffiliate with the t1SCF.

,Finish It The Clever Way!Positiorl No. 201V. Henki n VI. V. Mulc hb, &/m.'" N DhPosition No. 206M. Taim,lnOv vs. D. Bronstei nUSSR, 1957--,U SSR, 1946,Whit e toBRILLIANT move leads to a decisive win of material for White inPosition No. 205. The game was played in the Moscow Champion.ship preliminaries.AIn Position No. 206, White did not find the winning continuation,and the game was drawn. The student is advised not to spend much timein trying to solve this, but to go to tbe prin ted solution for the winningideas.Correction: In my previous column, for Position No. 204, it shouldhave been, "Black to play and win".For solutions, plellse tur n to page sevenSend a ll contributions for th is column to Edmund Na.h, 1530 18th PI;ace, S.E.Washington 1D, D. C.iWith seven games completed, In.ternational Grandmaster SamuelReshevsky leads U. S. ChampionArthur Bisguier by a 4-3 score inthe l a-game match. Reshevskywon the first three games, Bisguierthe next two games, and the sixthand seventh games were drawn.HAVE YOUR TOURNAM!NTSOFFICIALLY RATEDNew RegulatioR Effective Mareh I, 1966Tournl m ents, m.tch l' (Ind ly ldU I Ior t l.m; rou n d robin o r hwlu,ra l'1!.bll when sPOnlOrld b y US C". ff llilted o""lnlullon" If p l.yedunder FIDI! LIW" d lrlcted by compmnt oHkl.l, .nd p l.y" Itt lml IIml' o f not m orl ttlln )0mOYI. Pl r h our.Thl IlInuII dllm p lon l p t OU"'Im ent o f In USC" Cl u b Ch lp", r Indt ho .n nua l ch ampionship t ou m .' m l nt of Iny USCF IHllllfe whBy.L,w, p r ovide th ,t e ll Its memben m un bl USCI' m lmbtu liso.,. r a t " wit hout ch.rte.All ottlu III"i Ole Iven tl . . ratedonly If o ffl c i.l rlpo rt of IVlnt II;acco mp.nled b y .mllt.nea CClYI r lnll , r.t inll fl. of 10( Plr lI,maf o r all IIl m et IctUIUy p laYH In t heconte.t . (III I SWill o n.h,I' thln u m ber of pl.VIt,. t im. ttta n umbltr of r o u nds reprUlnh totalglm n p ll yed If no b ylt' o r f orfllts.)N t tlwt 10, N.till, III P" ,is ,0U. d.d 1'0m tlil pltf1ns, . hrrUSCF m .btrs 0' not.Ra t in liS will ba p ublllh i d p erio dIca lly of aU p. r tl c lp l nt. tn I II US C"Rl t ed ItYents.,noOffIcI. 1 rl tlng form. shouldbe MCUred in ad v lnee f r om:MOlltgo,l1' ry Millor112 No. Humphrev AYenue0l1li: Plrtr. IllInol.0. .,ih ,. otMr USC,"jlkMU lor lion.,IIIM,'-s.JONES TRIUMPHSIN TEXAS OPENSteven Jones a 16-year old play·er from Austin won the TexasOpen at the Hotel Hilton, SanAntonio on Median points with4lh -lfz, drawing .'O(Ine game withBob Horne, Jr., of Plainview. Itwas youth-day in Texas for an·other youngster, Robert Severenceof San Antonio, placed second with4lfz - .!. drawing with Gerald Blairof Corpus Christi. Third and fourthwith 4-1 each were a third youngster, Jerry Milburn of Lubbock,and yetcran Clemente Villareal of, San Antonio. Milburn lost toJones, and Villareal: drew withHall Jones of San Antonio andJames A. Creighton of CorpusChristi.Fifth to ninth in the 38-playerSwiss event with 31h-Jlh each wereGeorge H. SmJth and Ibrabim Bah·gat of Hous ton, Mauricio Perea ofHarli ngen, Robert L. Garver of SanAntortio, and Lee Hyder of Rockdale. The event was jointly spon·sored by the Texas Chess Assdcia- .tion and the San Antonio ChessClub.BELIAVSKY TOPSPENINSULA OPENLev A. Beliavsky of Montereywon, the first Peninsula Open, conducted by the Presidio ChessClub and Monterey usa, with 5%If.! score, drawing with AlexanderParvu, Jr. Second to sixth with41fl -l .z scores were Rex V. Wilcoxof Salinas, Alexander Parvu, Jr.,and Don J . Stewardson of Monterey, George B. Oakes of Salinas,and John H. Gridley of Roselie,N.J. Paul Jeffs of Ogden, Utahwas seventh with 4-2 score andtournament director Robert A.Karch of Monterey eighth in the24-player Swiss with 3!h-21h.SHAW TRIUMPHSIN SOUTHERNDr. Steven J . Shaw of Gainesville, Fla. scored 6lk-lh to win theannual Southel'n Chess AssociationChampionship, held at the Markham Hotel, Gulfport, Miss. Dr.Shaw who teacbes marketing a tthe University of Florida drew onegame with Anthony Pa bon Secondand third on Coons points witb 6-1each were defending Sout bernChamp DI·. R A. Carlyle of St. Petersburg, Fla., and R. B. Potter ofDallas, Tex. CarJyle lost to Shaw,and Potter drew with A. B. Willsa nd Charles Shaw. Robert Eastwood of Homestead, Fla. wasfourth with. 5 · 11f.! in the 57playel' Swiss event which was unusual in the f3(!t that there wereno forfeit or withdrawals duringthe seven rounds and no gamesadj udicated.'Fifth to twelfth with equal 5-2scores were J. L. Cabe of Atlanta ,Ga., A. M. Lockett and A. B. Willsof New Orleans, La., Anthony Pa.bon, Jr. of Roanoke, Va., NewtonGrant of Monroe, La., Phil C. Knoxof Deland, Fla., Fenner Parham,Jr. of Nachez, Miss., and Mrs. IreneVines of Ne w Orleans, La. SpecialClass prizes went to Andrew M.Lockett, Fred W. Kemp of Palmerdale, Ala., Phil C. Knox, and An.drew F. Dow-ney, Jr. of Greensboro, N.C. Junior prizes to John W.Bick of New Orleans with 41h -21h,Robe rt HO.lmes of Pass Christian,Tex., David Oderr of New Orleans, and George Green of Mobile,Ala. Mrs. Irene Vines won theLadles tiUe, followed by FloridaWoman's Ch,ampio n Mrs. Kama R.Martin of Sarasota, and Mississippi Women's Cbampion, Mrs. Bertha Giani. The event was directedby R. C. Eastwood, assisted by E.A. Coons and Newton Grant. Eightwives who accompanied chess-playing hus bands to the event wereawarded girts by the Gulfport Committee, headed by Dr. S. R. Karel,secretary·treasurer of the Mississippi Gulf Coast Chess Association.At the annual meeting of theSouthern Chess ASSOciation, Prof.L. L. Foster of Columbia, S.C. wasreelected to his 7th term as president. Vice-presidents elected wereDr. Steven J . Shaw of Gainesville,Fla. and J . L. Cabe of Atlanta, Ga.Robert C. Eastwood was electedsecretary-treasurer, a post he hadheld pro tem to fill out the term ofthe late Maj. J. B. Holt.I ,---:;::--,:-:---.e ".ofl/eConducted b yFrederick H. KerrA ll college dubs and pl'Ylrs .r.u r ged 10 send n . It ems t o FradtrlckH . Kerr , T77& Sam p ll Road, AtulonPal"k, Pennsyl. nl .(Whilr Mr.K rrtlmnJs ROTC S lim ·F011 GfOr/l G . MNd., ColI g. C&SJ LiJr" is bring w,iuno Irydis/inguishtd gllrst ,oluml1ills.) m rC mptitGuest Column idMORDECA I S. RUBINHEN the much-awaited 1958Inter coll eg iate lndividtifllWChampionship Tourney ro lls aroundnext December, it will boast a newand different stage setting. In lieuof the bustling cosmopolitanism ofNew York or Philadelphia. you canlook forward -to the easier pace andmore modest appearance of Erie.Pennsylvania and the Gan non Col·lege campus. Naturally, the changeof locale adds a certain elementof mystery to this year's contest,so in order to give participantsand fans some preview of the at·mosphere a nd conditions thcy willmeet. I have been invited, as ame mber of the Gannon fac ulty(and Chess Director), to supplantFred KeIT's reg ular corumn in thisissue with a few words about Gan·non and Erie.As I write this, Erie is a rathe rcrowded place-the streets a re col·orful with beachwear, a nd thefamed peninsula beac hes are dot·ted with vacationers (t hat's whereI should he!). It necds some imaghung to project into the probablelook of things by next December.Traffic will be lighter, the breezesperhaps less caressing-there mayeven be some snow on the groundin good old white Christmas style.Just a fair·sized city in Pennsylvania's industrial section, on theshores of Lake Erie. A workingtown that goes a little mad forbowling during the wintcr, pridesitself on friendliness, and wei·comes visitors all year round. Weboast also a philharmonic arches·tra, a ballet company, a legitimatetheatre company of note, "and ofcourse, Ganno n CoUege, with itsHumanities, Business, Engineeringand Adult Education Divisions.(Continued on Page 4, Col 3)KALME CONQUERSIN LATVIAN MEETWith a score of 6ih-Jh IvarsCbarles Kalme of Philadelphiawon the Latvian Championship ofNorth America at Chicago, yielding a draw in the last round to L.Dreibe rgs of Saginaw. A. Rankisof New York was second with 5" .!I lk, losing to KaJme and di-awingwith ,v. Pupols of Seattle. Thirdto sixth on Median points with4%·1 If.! each were L. Dreibergs,Znotins of Ne w York, A. Liepnieksof Uncoln, and J. Tums of Chicago. Seventh to ninth in the 22player event with 4-3 each wereStepans, Rupeiks, and Balodis. TwoUSCF masters and eight expertsparticipated in this strong eventwhich drew players lrom NewYork, Washington, California, andthe Middle West.eo!I.,," PAUL MORPHYCentenn ial Tournament.Yankton, S.D.August 31-September 2WHOCA NPLAY:Opento &11players. Every participant recelvelPaul Morphy Gold CentennialMedal.aPRIZE S: llit prb:e 250 plul troZn d: I!1O-J 3r(!: 7 ; 4th: l5th: 2 ; 6th; '111; 7th: 10. FUrtherspeCial prizes for top player tromSouth Dakota, and a special prl te foreach 10 partlclpan t .ENTRY F EE: 5 plus USCF mem·bership ( S) rrom non.members.WH ERE: Hotel Charles Gurney,Yankton, S.D.Send your entries to:,MRS. NA NCY GUR NI!YHOT EL CHAR LES GU RNEYYA NKTON. SO. DAKOTATYPE OF TOURNEY, 6 or mo .rd Swiss; 1st rd s tarts at lZ:30 P.IIl.on Saturday, Augw;t 31st.phy;I L - - - ---

Novelty Adds AttractionTo Dual Event at YanktonTo relieve pressu re .nd e x pose th eSlaCk Kln r. Tile ope n KK t.flle Is n otd a nr ero 1I becau se of the Bish op a tQK t3.20.Px B21. Q· B4R· KB42 1. . . , n · KKt4 can be answered byp · Ka3.22 . 0 , R4It.QJn . R· B"Destro),1 Bla c k'. last h ope 23.a.Q424 . R·0 4Rx P24 . Rx H: 2'. QxR. BxB; 26. PxB.R.Q4 W 8I be tte r .25 . P· K4axa26 . PxRRx PT il e u p 0 5ed K·p osltlon nullifies t h ethree co nn e c led paned pawns.17. R· K4O Kt22' , KR· KI2 . R. K" hB· KIITh e relt II m a tte r or t ec h nIque.fl.P-KR311, Q· KB4O, Ktl10. P· KI3K 1t234. It / I · K7K·Kt231. 1t / f.KlII · B135. Rx Bch Ra5igns31. RMPp· a4 -o r If 35 . . , QxR : 36. RxQ h , KxR :37. Q-B4 c h.The two-ring circus of the Morp hy Centennial Open and the Champion of Cham pions Tourney at Ya nkton. So. Dak. is in itself a novelty inchess in the USA. But not the only one. Among other novelties wiU bethe participation in t he Morphy Cente nnial of a re presen tative fro m Bombay, India in Kama la kar Raul who is s tudying at the Uni versity of Oklahoma, Raul was one of the organizcTS of the All-India Chess Federationand was a mem ber of its ma nagi ng committee until he le ft Ind ia to s tudyin t he USA.Another novelty will be the B·QS: 18. KR.K I . BxQ; 19. futQ ch, RxR :BxB " 'It ll teh Bisho p p a ir and apresence in t he "Champion of 2(1.pawn ro r the e xc ha n ge. Ho we ver. ifChampions" tou rney of the only I'. K· BIt! i 16. QxB! Now 16. . .woman player now holding a State KxB ; 17. QMR. QxB: 18. QxB and Whiteou ld ,.In. A ) 16 . . . R·K2 ; 17. BChampion title in Mrs. irene sllK t3 . Kt-K'; 18. Q.B4!; B ) 16. . . . QIn Ih, fut u ra, Sl I,lIt as, I.u nch ed InVines, Louisiana State Champion. Q3; 17. a.Kt3 . Kt·K5; 18. Q-B4 !. B K3;10 s p" a, will c ond uct Che ss Teu rn aMrs. Vines plays an aggressive 19. B- Kt4 ! And White h ol d S he r pa wn.m a n ls o n a h llil h e r pl. n a ."R· Kt419. 0· a 3B. KSgame of chess a nd is not to be 16. a a17, g ·OlQ. K210. BxKtT h a b u t Com bl n. llon s ere rvl n e d b yscorned because oC her sex as a 18.a , KUR·OI'lI . fvl a na lYI II.number of male victims have already discovered.Both to urna me n ts will be d irected by Inte rn a tional Master GeorgeKoltanowski. and owe much oftheir attrac tiveness to the generous hospitality of Charles andMrs. Ma r garet (Peggy) Lo uise Bean Gould of Newburyport, Mass.Nancy Gurney of Yan kton , who became the wi nne r of t he 1953 U . S. Wo men's Corresponde nce Chesswere hosts to the 1946 Interna· Cha m pionship by sweeping the preliminaries and fi nals 15-0, withoutt ional Tourname nt at Yanktonloss o r draw. In the prelims she downed Edwina Wa tso n, Mario n Ellinge leven yea rs ago.wood. Vi rginia Myers, Be tty Shannon, Esther Hornbuckle, DorthySEMI -SLAV DEFENS EKli p per, and Gladys McIntyre, while in the finals she tallied d oubleMeo: Pllga 1, 6, col u mn 27victories over Mary Clayton. Olga Higgins. Betty Shannon, and ClaraLouisian a Open Ch . mp io nsh lpHu r t.New Orlea ns. 1956The ne w CCLA Wo men's Cor- time vocation. Two sons, ThomasN Dtrs by A la.,." B"dr./.nJresponde nce Champion comes from B. a nd Robert A. Gould, are folWh ite8111c kJ . S. NO E Lan a rde nt chess family and is t he lowing in paren tal s te ps, learningIRE NE VI N ES1. P-Q4P Kl1. p·oa4wife o( Bartlett Go uld, for many early the fascinating game of cbess.2 . P· KlP·0 4years a USCF Director for Massa·This is Champion Peggy Go uld'sWhi l e does n ot like t o play Inltchus etts. She plays o n t he regular favo rite ga me to d ate;t h e Qu een's Cam b lt Ae :epted , AlbinCo unter Ga mbit . etc. He n ce the tinttea m of the Newburypo rt ChessCARO-KANNt hree movu.Club, of which she is secretaryMCO: p 9a 10. c olumn 143.Kt·K 8 35. Kt · Ka 3 II · KI 5treasur er, in the No rth Shore CCLA 1954 U. S. Women'S Ch.mp4. KI· O B1 P' O B3Also playa b le b . . PlrP : e. 8xP.ionshlp Corre. pondenee Che"League. a nd has t hree ti mes wonP-KKI . and 7 . . . P-Q R3.Whi t eBillektheNewEnglandWoman'sChamp6. a '020·0e. OIt· BIIt· KIM . L . GO U L OA, W ILLARDionship,7. O· BlQKt·02t . B· 0 3P. K41. P, K4p.Q al14. B Pch lK· KtlOpen g ames u. ually fa "Or Ih e be tt e r2.P-Q4P.o4IS . Bx R0 · K13c hBy profession she teaches a s ubdeveloped Ilde. In thla case White1. Kt·OBlPx P1'.K-BlKJ:aspecial class for retarded children 4. Ktx P(even tho ugh Wh it e h lll n ot c astled).Kt-Q217. Q'0 2Kt-Kt5a t the Kelly School in Newbury- . Kt· KII 3 KK I.al II, P-KRl KI· R7chPerhaps bette r II PxP followed by pQKt4. e tc.port, while h usband Bartlett Gould 6. Kt' Kt3 P, KRl It. K· K2QxKtP10. PMPKtx P13, B PP· B420. O-KUKI B3teaches mac hine shop and r elated 7. 11·0311. Kt MKtRxK I14. Q-KtlP· K3I . O'()21 . Q·1I5chK· Klsubjects at Newburyport Voca - , . R· Kl12. 0 ·0P .- P' xP22. O, KISchO OIf 14 . . Qxa: 15. KR·QI wlna fo rtio nal School. Among he r hobbies 10. KIllPB·1I423. BxO hK·· K2White.11,KI/4-1150-024, K-B2P K"are cer amics (with chess designs)15. B.-Pc h lK· Rl12.KtllKIPI25.QR-QIP Rl?and pain ti ng, while she also operOn IS . , K a !! ?; IS. Bxa 11 unclurII x P,h tlU . KI-a5c h .ndbecause o f IS. , R-K t4: 17. Q.84.ated a used book service as a spare 11. Kx BKJ:KtMargaret Gould Wins FinalsIn Women's Correspondence Event,m.'1SMORPHY CENTENNIA L CONTESTANTK.m"I.i:, ., R. I 0/ BOl1liMy, InJ., (U", J, .ill ","ongthDsr ptl" ;eip",ing in Ih M orp"" C( I Unni,,1 .I y . i:,ton.So. D . i:,ol . S, .nJing i, R. "s nephe . Viiq R""t. Ifni UtltcJ his n phnls .;fr, K.m.l.SOLE LA DY STATEM rs. irrn, Vints, on/7 A mrrie. I.J y plqt. 10 hoitl .S, .l t Ch.mpionship, in Jt/inct . / m( l piqrrs, .ill b t ,,",ongII r (ompttitD" .t 1M Clumpiofl 0/ Clumpion(' Towrnrytil Y .nkton. So. D.Jr,o/. rrprrltflt jng LowisUrrl#.d . .,lit.J,. now 1j,,"/'BI) Aben Rttd yN BRIEF: Chess has lost a Goodman. but gained a Kaufman.The marriage of Sara Good man toAlle n Kauf man took place on Sa turd ay J uly 20. I am sure myreade;s will join in wishi ng the mthe best of luck and t he most ofeverything. In an y case, may t heybe tied forever by E ternal Mateand no t overdrawn by per petua lchecks. . . . The ver y inge nio uschess analyst and music love ,Juli us Stoppock, has packe d hiSana lysis and sheet·music into hisnew army duffel-bag. As this is thecongratula tory season, I wish him,the ana lysis, t he shee t-music, andthe duffel·bag the most of goodfor tu ne . . . . Belty J oy Reeves,kJ ndly wife of t he former presl.dent of the America n Chess Foun·dation , Rosser Recves, has gra ciously presented to the Manha ttanChess Club he r beautiful pas t lportrait of Sammy Res hevs ky. ThISportra it, s ketched while Sammywas de feati ng Botvinnik in our lastteam match wit h Russia, was high.Iy accla imed whe n it a ppeared onthe September '55 cover of "ChessReview" . . . As t his column goesto press the fi rs t live games of theBisg uier-Reshevs ky match havebeen completed. Wi th f ive ga mesyet to be contested the red oubtableReshevsky leads the United StatesChampion 3-2. T he series began asa rout, Sammy winning the firstthree ga mes. Bisguier . though, r efusing to sink so eas ily, bobbedback briskly to capture the ne xttwo points--remarkable. Who canreme mber when Reshevsky lastlost two consecuti ve games? . . .Long, long ago whe n Walter Ship.man we nt bare·foot a nd coffeesold for a nicke l a pound, chesscould be f ound only in the darkestcorners of t he not too nu merous,a nd highly exclusive, chess club.Sucb is certainly no t the case today. Wi t ness, for instance, a th riving chess throng in the most unlikely of places wo nder of wo nders-a ping' pong pa rlour. TheRiverside Table-Te n nis Association, of 251 Wes t 96t h St reet, ser·vices simultaneously to the needsof chess and ping-pong enthus iastsalike. Grab your racke t and pushthe Ki ng Paw n two squares! . . .New York's west·siders will' alsobe interested in the formation ofa new club (dev oted exclus ively tochess, I am assured) unde r the auspices of Donn Mosenfe lder. Bearing the na me "Morningside He ightsChess Clu b", it meets eve ry SU.n day after noon afte r 2:00 p.m. InApt. No. 86 at 517 West 113t h Sl.It would we lcome more me mbers. . . Though t for a hot Summer'seve; Chess is a n oce an in whicha gnat may ' bathe yet an elephantdrown.I.,." Check l" n nou n ced W h ite . , t e b la" Chac:kl", c r Ied BI. ck a t the n MtI. bl e, . Imost slmv lt a n eov sly." Hec k l". ra m uked . n othe r p l.yer."Ill i' cl IJIJ hal a n ech ol" ,

Vol. XI, Number 23August 5, 1957Publl shed twice a mon th on Ih e 5th an d 20lh h{, THE UNITED STATES CHESSFEDERATION. Ent ered as second elass ma tte r Sep mbe r S 19f6 at Ihe post offleeat Du buque, Iowa , under Ih e aet of March g, 1879.,. ,Editor: MONTGOMERY MAJORPOSTMASTER, Please return undeliverable copIes with Form 3579 to KannathHarknass, USCF Bulness Manager, 80 East 11th Stl"fl.'t, New York 3, N. Y.Byi\lontgomenJ MalorAdvisementT hr r,.aso ablr mafJ adaplJ hjmull to the world ; tilt l.mre .o"able one persjstJin trying /0 adapt the ",orld / hi", s.lf. Th",ejorc 011 prog,rH depends " (he "",taJo" ablt m"".GEORGE BERNARD SHAW- The Revolutionist's HlndbookECAUSE SO many reade rs and members have expressed by letteror by word of mouth the hope that we would reconsider our announced determination to retire in December , 1957, we have finallypersuaded ourself to yield up certain long-contai ned and cherished aspirations, which have no kinship with chess, provided that the Editor·ship is offered to us upon thOSe terms which we can acccept. We leaveit to the USCF Board of Directors. meeting at Cleveland, to declarewhether or no these terms are equally acccptible to the USCF. U not,the re is no need or profit in furt her negotiation , for we will accept noother.For we will n,':"t"',,ompromise, now or hereafter . our belief in a free ,for the USCF membership. We will" only consentcontinue as Editor of CHESS LrFE upon the plainly1 :,;,;;",:' n;d;;n;acceP ted principle that CHESS LIFE servesI'.'':and membership alike- and that its servto both is not subject to the veto or whim of anyofficial or committee . Unless this Editor has eomcontrol over contents and policy of CHESS LIFE, are not interested in donating the effort, energy andthat is required to publish this chess newspaper.have no objection to consulting with USCF officials;;;"of policy (as we did in the past until thet' :,': ,:; " preceded Long Beach. 1955 made suchca mockery), but fin al decisions must restwith the Editor.If this basic prinCiple is acceptible to the USCF Board of Directors(and to the USCF membership), we foresee no difficulty in negotiatingthe other details of a contract. If it is not acceptible, it is always simpleenough to S3Y "Farwell" and "Good Luck!" in December.BtiA GUIDE TO CHESS OPENINGS: By Leonard Barden. Princeton, NewJersey: D. Van Nostrand Company. 238 pp., numerous diags. 4.75.HI an.ualformer British champion combines with greatguide, the analytical essay, and the anthologycurrent practice. It is directed at players of modstrength, eschewing both the primer and the en·by chapter the major openingsillustrative games. Chapter IV (of. It describes the Sicilian briefly;with six diagrams of positions fa' ::.; exemplifies the principles withISfor black and Foltys-Golombekfor white;enters a number of recent':; iiOD.' (also with games) before repeating the proc ,for the Scheveningen. The games are unhackneyed,objectives and their treatment are kept simple,.the whole performance is instructive. A particularly illuminati ng demonstration is the introductoryessay contrasting a Lopez of sixty years ago (Steinitz-Tchigdrin, 1892)with one of today (Keres·Tarnowski, 1952).Tbyorlgmahty theWoodbury (N.J.) Chesl Club, OeorgeF. Cake tallied 10-1. a loss to L . E.Wood , 10 wI n th e club champ ionshIp.Robe rt Montague was second with 8'h2Y,t , and William Ar cher third wit h 8-3 .Ew ald Carl son and Lewis E. Wood tiedror fourth wll h 6'h-4'h In the 12.-p1ayerround robin event . A USCF Club Afflll·ate .Morningside Heights (N.Y.I Chess Club:In an Invasion of the Queens CheuCl ub, Morningside lost by the score of4-2 t o Qu eens. WInning for Morningsidewa s Charles Gersch On board one whileRhys W. Hays and Myron Roe t8 dl"f!w.For Queens Schrier, E gan , and F edtallied wins while D. Gladstone and L.Goldstein d rew.USCF Membership cues, Ineludlng su bscription to Ch I' .'! Life, periodical publlca tion of n ati onal ch ess rating, and all ol her prIvileges:ONE YEAR: 5.00TWO YEARS: 9.50THREE YEARS: 13.50LIFE: 100.00SUSTAINING: 10.00 (Becomes Life Membership Ifter 10 payments) Okl.homa City, OklahomaJune 19, 1,57TO ALL USCF OFFICEIlSGentlemen:Recently George Koltanowlkl discussed with Montgomery M.lor the possibilityof st.ylng on liS Editor of Chin Life In view of pending change of administration.When It benme apparant that I might be taking over the rains from Mr. Graves,George sUllgestad that r correspond with Monty In an affort to sat UP a worklnllrelationship that would be harmonious.I hava taken a rather vigorous position, but on that strikes me as being absolutely usantial. The President does not and should not Interfere with the day·to-day opeutlon lind management of Chass Life, but If things get out of handpolicy-wise, he must have the lIuthorlty to step In and veto lids he considers det.rlmental to the USCF, Its alms and its programs. The Prasldant II always answar·IIble to the Executive Committee, of coul" e, but he must

Bobby Fischer Adds Junior to Trophies Ramirez Second and Sholomson Third The Brooklyn master junior (or junior master) Robert Fischer gath· ered in the U.S. Junior title in stride at S

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