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...Harvard chess team tied for second place along with six other teams in the Pan-American Intercollegiate Chess Championship held in St. Louis, Missouri December 26 to December...

Author: By Bill Ginsberg, | Title: Chessmen Mate in St. Louis | 1/6/1978 | See Source »

Sixty-one schools competed in the five-day tournament open to all university chess teams from North America or South America. Penn won the tournament with a 71/2-1/2 score. The final order of the six teams tied for second place with 6-2 was decided by the overall scores of their opponents. The final order was University of Toronto, University of Texas, Columbia, Harvard, Louisville and Princeton...

Author: By Bill Ginsberg, | Title: Chessmen Mate in St. Louis | 1/6/1978 | See Source »

...skips across the living room to where her father is playing chess. "Watch this," he says, stabbing furiously at a keyboard. He is 26 moves into a grim queen's gambit saber duel with Chess Challenger, a $275 computerized overachiever built by Fidelity Electronics, Ltd. The machine is playing at the highest of its three levels, claimed in some ads to equal 1650, the rating of an average club player (the estimate is too generous). It has occurred to the father that it could be a great improvement, in the interest of strict fairness, if the computer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: Games People Play: 1977 | 12/26/1977 | See Source »

...Japanese board game Go reached the U.S. as a fad a few years ago and now has developed its own cadre of players, many of them convinced that it is far more profound than chess. Another board-and-counter game, Othello, sells well enough to indicate that its termites are nesting. Master Mind, a code-breaking game devised by an Israeli cryptanalyst, has its own fanatics. From Rumanian Jews in Israel comes a kind of gin rummy played with tiles, variously called Rummi-brick and Rummikub; one manufacturer in Korea has picked up the game and expects to ship...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: Games People Play: 1977 | 12/26/1977 | See Source »

...submarine chase, has a dandy digital readout, for instance, but the courses of the sub and the pursuing warships must be drawn on a chart with a wax crayon-which, as all twelve-year-olds will recognize, is not exactly state-of-the-art technology. Comp IV and Chess Challenger are not quite smart enough to bamboozle a good human player; Gammonmaster II plays its roles well but was rushed onto the market without a doubling cube (though one is in the works); Electronic Battleship, while physically impressive and wonderfully noisy, lacks an AC adapter to help preserve batteries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: Games People Play: 1977 | 12/26/1977 | See Source »

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