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Word: chess (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...Chess, like mathematics and music, is a nursery for child prodigies. Great players often distinguish themselves at tender ages. Before he reached 14, the renowned champion Paul Morphy (1837-84) had reddened the faces of the best adults in his hometown of New Orleans. International Grand Master Samuel Reshevsky, when he was six, toured his native Poland playing two dozen opponents simultaneously and rarely losing. At 14, Bobby Fischer, the game's reclusive genius, won both the U.S. junior and senior championships. But none of these men quite prepared the chess world for the triple-threat Polgar sisters of Budapest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Don't Play Around with the Polgars | 4/21/1986 | See Source »

...starters, Susan, 16, the eldest of the Polgars, finished just one victory away from accumulating enough points to achieve grand-master status. Tied with Sweden's Pia Cramling, 22, as the world's second-ranked female chess player (behind the Soviet Union's Maya Chiburdanidze, 25), the teenager soundly thrashed six-time U.S. Champion Walter Browne, 37, on her way to a respectable showing of 25th in the top section of the tournament. Sister Sophia, 11, meanwhile swept to second place in the expert category. Finally, the baby of the family, Judith, a pudgy, self-confident nine-year-old, astounded...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Don't Play Around with the Polgars | 4/21/1986 | See Source »

...carefully plotted as a Nimzo-Indian Defense. "I knew that any children of ours would be champions since the day my wife and I decided to marry," says their father Laszlo. "He's not joking," Susan explains. "When I was four or five, they told me to choose between chess and mathematics. I thought chess would be better." Her sisters just naturally followed. Their parents, both teachers and neither gifted chess players, now oversee the children's careers full time. The girls have never attended conventional schools, and study a high school curriculum at home between practice games...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Don't Play Around with the Polgars | 4/21/1986 | See Source »

...Polgars are controversial in Hungary, where the game is extremely popular. Susan was at one time dropped from the national team because of feuds with chess authorities, and Laszlo has fought to keep his daughters from being | limited to playing in women's tournaments. Has their father made pawns of them? Do the girls feel deprived by the regimentation? "No," says Susan. "We don't feel that we have missed out on anything." She pauses, her eyes veiled reflectively: "To win is the reward." Check...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Don't Play Around with the Polgars | 4/21/1986 | See Source »

...Ghana, man of the world, a portly, elegant, globe-trotting charmer who seems to awe those who encounter him. "A very intelligent, cultured man," gushed one American admirer. "He knows every opera and can recognize a symphony from just a couple of notes. He is a nationally ranked chess player. He speaks nine languages." He is also, say authorities, a world-class swindler...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Out of Africa: Stung by a Ghanaian smoothy | 4/21/1986 | See Source »

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