America ~ Che:J:J New:Jl'al'el Cop~R L Ghl 1"0 by Un Ll" Sillies Chess Federation Vol

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America ~ Che:J:J New:Jl'al'el Cop~R L Ghl 1 J • I America ~ Che:J:J new:Jl'al'el Cop~r l ghl 1"0 by Un ll" SIllies Chess Federation Vol. XIV, No. 18 Friday. May 20. 1960 15 Cents SHERWIN-WEINSTEIN TIE FOR MARSHALL C. C. CHAMPIONSHIP TAL NEW WORLD CHAMPIO Mikhail Tal. the 23 year old Latvian . twice USSR chess cham­ James Sherwin and Raymond pion. winner of the Portoroz interzonal tournament in 1959, winner NEW ENGLAND AMATEUR Weinstein each scored 12lh·l ifl in of the 1960 Challengers' Tournament in Yugoslavia, has won the the annual Marshall Chess Cl ub world championship from Mikhail Botvinnik, in a match which WON BY JACQUES GOSTELI Championship, and will reign as lasted for over seven weeks. Details and the exact score are not The New England Amateur co-champions in 1960. Anthony yet 3lIailabie to CHESS UFE, the last authentic information received Open, sponsored by the USCF in from Moscow being to the cffect that after eighteen games of the cooperation with the Massachu· Santasierc placed 3rd, with 9·5. scheduled twenty-fou r game mateh Tal enjoyed the commanding lead setts Chess Association. and the Sidney Bernstein and John W. Coi· of 1Olf.!·7lh. having at that time won five, lost two. and drawn eleven. Boylston Chess Club. was won by Lins tied Cor 4th with 81,i·51h. a dark-horse who has recently im­ The nineteenth game was postponed for several days, with migrated to this. counlry from Sherwin also lied (or 1st place Botvinnik, for the second lime during the match . requesting a fi ve Switzerland. Jacques Gosteli, in in the final event of the Marshall day adjournment because of illness. As we go to press we are in­ his first American try for chess CC season, a rapid·transit tourna­ formed unofficially thai the match is over and that Tal has wo n. honors. was impressive as he took Details will undoubtedly· be available for the nexl issue of CHESS ment, in which he and Allen Kauf· hi s first four games in succession. LIFE, along wtih the final game scores. including one from pre·tournament man each scored 9·2, with Theo­ favorite Harlow Daly, the 76 year dore Dunst and Bernard Zucker­ LA TER: Our Moscow correspondent has just informed us that Tal clinched the title by forcing a draw after 17 moves of the 21 st game old veteran who has been a force man tied for 3rd and 4th. which was started with Tal leading by a 12·8 score. Botvinnik was in New England chess since 1907. thus placed in the aimost impossible spot of having to win foul' In the 5th round he was held to a in a row to retain his tille. The draw made it impossible for him draw by William Gould of Provi­ KAUSE :rAKES to attain the drawn match which had saved him in previous matches dence, R.I., a talented youngster of CAPITAL CITY OPEN against challengers Bronstein and Smyslov. So "Tal, The Terrible" 17 , who eventually took third has confounded most of the grandmaster critics, and is now the chess place. Richard Kause won live in a row champion of Ul e wor ld! In the £inal round Gosteli met tq..ta.ke the top spot in the Capital J. Foster of Miami, F lorida, wbo City Open. played at Columbus, also had compiled a score of 4%, Ohio, in late March. Second place and the game was drawn after the in the 33-player event went to TOURNAMENT REMINDERS four-hour time control had been passed, with Gosteli a pawn up. Ross Sprague, who won four and May 14-1S-S0UTH TEXAS OPEN, Kingsville, Texas. (C L-4!20/ 60) MIlY 28·30-ALBUQUERQUE OPEN, Albuquerque, N.M. (CL4j 20/ 60 ) I Although he and Fosler each drew one, for 4 h-lh. C. A. Wil· May 29·30-BUCKEYE OPEN, Columbus, Ohio. (CL4!20j 60) finished with 5· 1 scores. tie break­ liamson took third spot on tic May 28·3O-MISSOURI OPEN, St. Louis, Mo. (CL4/ S/ 60) ing points gave lhe young Swiss breaking points over, Tom Womey June 1I·1 2_ INDIANA STATE CHAMPIONSHIP, Logansport, Ind. the tille, and placed Foster 2nd. who placed fourth, after each had (CL·S/ S/ 60) The tournament, played in the July 2·3 4 COLORADO OPEN, Denver, Col. (CL·5/ S/ 60) scored 4-1, each with four wins and YMCU on Boylston St., Boston, and directed by USCF Business a loss. Charles Weldon placed fifth Manager Frank Brady, drew 51 with 3lh·llh. The event was di­ players from eight states. The de· rected by James Schroeder . OPEN LETTER TO EVERY USCF MEMBER fending champion, Boston high Dear Member: school student James O'Keefe, fin­ ished in a live-way tie for 4th·8th BERLINER PLAYS­ We, the undersigned, the regional appointees for Operation "M" places, with Daly and Elow itch of publicly lind collectivety IIp peal to each and every USCF member Mai ne, S. Brandwein of Boston, OPERATION M WINSI to bring in one new member by June 5th. and R. (1. N·QR3) Durkin of New The Colorado Springs Chess Club The USCF is still some 800 members short of the g01l1 set by J ersey. each with a 41f.!·11f.! score. our National Membership Chairman, Mr. Fred Crllmer. It is our aim sponsored Hans Berlincr in a simul­ Dr. G. Katz was present to as· to exceed Ihe 5000 quota by a wide margin. This Clln only be sist with adjudications, but his taneous exhibition giVen at the achieved through a nlltion-wide push. services were not required, since plush Broadmoor Hotel in Colorado We want more Tournaments, an improved publiclltion with wider all games were either won or lost Springs on March 18, and partici­ circuilition, greater opportunities for our rising youngsters lind over the board. or draws agreed pants who joined tbe USCF were stronger partici pilltion in International competition with better re­ upon by mutual consent of the op­ sults. We need greater independence from patronage, not because permitted to play free of charge. ponents. we lI,re ungrllteful but because it is high time we became self.sup­ Twenty-o ne memberships were porting. We want greater internlltionlll prestige lind at least one Student in Ghana Wants netted including seventeen new IInnual Internationlll Tournament on U.S. soil. Postal Games With members, two former members Finally, we do not want to perpetuate the impoverished condi. Opponents in Africa t ions which force our officials to work at sub-stllndard rates of pay whose memberships had expired, li nd which invite our Stllrs to choose between 'll precllrious livelihood Marvin L. Sender; Adl.adel Coitege, and two who extended their mem­ and increasing divorcement from Master Competition. Cap e! Coast, Ghana, writes "I am des­ bership for an additional year. We can only bring these things about if we build a strong USCF. perate for some postal cheM competl. This meens more members-by far more than we have ever had tlon. I no,,' have 6 games goIng against Thirty·seven chess players from before. players In the O.S. but 4 of them are seven different Colorado towns and It is time that U.S. Chess graduated from the Bush Leagues to old games which will end soon. I would like to get SOmc nCw gamcs going with cities participated in the event, the Maior Leagues. We are not a Bush·Lellgue country. We clln do it, if we wa nt to do it. k een competitors In Africa, If they are including some of the best pl ayers to be found. My playing strength Is in th e state. Hans won twenty.nine, Fraternally yours, nbout 1850 on thc USCf' rating scale. lost five and drew three. but Oper­ ALL OPERATION "M" CHA. IRM EN AND CO.WORKERS I would like about 6 games. prl!rcrably In Africa. CHESS Uf'E Is II welcoml! ation M was the big winner. pllpI!r In this chess·slarved country. PA R T IF gage III sessions of some regularity. Individuals may Wlll or lose but PROGRESS REPORT ON RATING SYSTEMS the wealth of the group IS essentially conserved. When a big willner decides to quit the game permanently the wealth of the remam1llg by Prof. Arpad E. ;:10 group will have been diminished. Its members may continue to play Ch ll irman USC F Rating Committee and win or lose to one another but individually they are on the average The revised formula for the computation of US CI-' r:Jtings was de­ poorer. Now this is just the sort of thing that happens to the rating scribed In previous issue~ of CHESS LIFE. For the continued satisfac­ system when a master either dies or retires from competition. In such lory operation of the rating system the proper formula alone is not a case he literally takes his rating points with him as these points sufficient. To avoid distortion of the rotings over a long period of are not available to be won by a rising young master. New players who time it is necessary that uniform conditions be applied for the rating come into thc rated group enter with some arbitrarily set tentative of all players participating in a tournament and also that some com· rating which is usually quite low. These players can rise in rating only pensation be made for the natural attrition of rating points within the by taking rating points fr om the other members of the group.
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