The Gift of Chess

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Best of Chess Fischer Newspaper Archives
• Robert J. Fischer, 1955 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1956 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1957 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1958 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1959 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1960 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1961 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1962 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1963 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1964 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1965 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1966 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1967 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1968 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1969 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1970 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1971 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1972 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1973 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1974 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1975 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1976 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1977 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1978 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1979 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1980 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1981 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1982 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1983 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1984 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1985 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1986 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1987 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1988 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1989 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1990 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1991 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1992 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1993 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1994 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1995 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1996 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1997 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1998 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 1999 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 2000 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 2001 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 2002 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 2003 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 2004 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 2005 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 2006 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 2007 ➦
• Robert J. Fischer, 2008 ➦
Chess Columns Additional Archives/Social Media

Robin Alan Ault, 1963

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November 04 1963

1963, Robin Ault Wins Massachusetts State Open Chess Title

The Berkshire Eagle, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, Monday, November 04, 1963

Robin Ault Wins State Chess Title
Robin Ault of Brandeis University won the Massachusetts Open Chess title in the two-day tournament held at the Hotel Wendell-Sherwood Saturday and Sunday under the sponsorship of the Pittsfield Chess Club.
Mr. Ault tied with Michael Valvo of Albany, N. Y., and in the game score, but won the title on tie-breaking points. John A. Curdo of Lynn came in third.
Charles Ornstein tied for fourth place, which was the highest position of any of the area contestants.
Other area players who, did well were: Clayton Williams, third in B class; Cecilia Rock, of Washington, national amateur woman champion, first in the junior class; Henry Rock, Cecilia's father, first in Class C; Joseph Aibinder, 14-year-old student at South Junior High School, second in Class C.
Robert Bilodeau of the local club directed the tournament. Thirty-one competed.


Robin Alan Ault, 1962

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March 10 1962

The News, Paterson, New Jersey, Saturday, March 10, 1962

CHESSically Yours By HENRY OVEREEM.
New Jersey chess players continually read and hear about outstanding young players from Europe, from other states, even from Australia and Brooklyn. This is all fine, the outstanding young players deserve the plaudits they receive.
Yet in so doing, in searching the far horizons for chess talent, we too often overlook the fine crop in our own back yard. New Jersey has many young players of whom it can be proud. But distance lends enchantment and adds glamour to a name; the beauty of home is overlooked because it is commonplace. The other land is always the exotic land: that odd sounding name from far across the waters conjures images far out of proportion to the reality.
Of all the young New Jersey chess players, and there are very many, one name in particular stands out strongly. Only 19, but three times a national champion; a Jerseyite who has carried the banner of his state, but who, outside of chess circles, is a comparative unknown. The lad is Robin Ault.

Modest Youth
I decided to do something about it and wrote for some background material. This came through after some prodding, for Robin is reluctant to place himself in the limelight. He is modest about his exploits, he gives himself very little of the actual credit. Yet, in chess, there is no teammate to lean on. The following are his own words. “I was born Dec. 23, 1942, and have lived all my life in Cranford. My father taught high school English, and is now a guidance counselor; my mother teaches mathematics. I have two brothers, Leslie Jr., 20, and David, 15. David plays 'Go' avidly. In high school I did quite well, and am doing fairly well as a senior at Columbia University, majoring in math. I have won or placed high in several math contests, the latest being a tie for the Van Am-Ringe (Columbia College) contest last year. I expect to go to graduate school and take a Ph.D. in math.
“My father taught Les and me chess when I was about five. After playing at home for a few years, we began going to the Elizabeth Chess Club, where we aroused interest because of our youth and our ability to knock off some of the weaker players there. In the sixth grade (I had skipped the third and caught up to Les) we played in the first interstate grammar school chess match, New Jersey against Boston, arranged by Forry Laucks. I played first board, as a result of winning the qualifying tournament, and scored 2-1.

Leslie H. Ault, 1956

Leslie and Robin playing chess at Cranford High School, Cranford, Union County, New Jersey Yearbook 1956

Won High School Title
In high school we played on the school team, winning three successive county championships and a state co-championship. My first big year in chess was in 1956. In late Winter I amazingly won the State Rapids, and beat Arthur Bisguier in a simultaneous. In the Spring I started out playing tournament chess, placing third in the state high school tournament. Next I played in the U. S. Amateur tournament, but scored only three draws in six games. During the next few years I gradually improved to expert strength, but none of my results were as satisfying as these early victories, except a tournament victory over Walter Shipman.
My next big year was 1959. After playing third and fourth boards in my first year at Columbia, I became involved with a couple of friends in a plan to translate and publish Tarrasch's “300 Chess Games”. The friends soon dropped out and left me to carry the ball, which I did with some effects in another respect. Previous to this endeavor my play had been getting very stodgy, and I had not improved noticeably in quite some time. Many of Tarrasch's games are also stodgy, but many are just the opposite, and even in the most closed positions he plays with a spirit of aggressiveness. This spirit apparently infused itself in me, for after just a couple of weeks translating the book I won the New Jersey Junior. I played so venturesome and aggressive that some of the games I played shocked even me. A month later I shocked myself even more by winning the U. S. Junior at Omaha, not having seriously considered victory until the last round began. Immediately following I tied for sixth in the U. S. Open with 8½-3½, continuing the same aggressive but not speculative style of play.

Style Wears Off
Unfortunately this style had worn off by December, when I played in the Rosenwald tournament, in which I had the distinction of losing all 11 games. Half of these were caused mainly by my lack of knowledge of opening variations; the other half by a combination of stage-fright, a cold, and disrespect for my opponents' strength. I had excellent games against Fischer and Bernstein, and drawish positions against Sherwin and Bisguier, all of which I destroyed with moves which can only be called insane. My clear win against Benko went down the drain because of my failure to understand the whole position and time pressure.
By the Summer of 1960 my play had returned to the previous sharp style, and was even better, as I romped through the U. S. Junior for the second consecutive year. In St. Louis I tied for seventh in the U. S. Open. Since then my play has been on the decline, returning to a slow, stodgy style, although I still managed to do well for Columbia in matches and in the U. S. Intercollegiate. In 1961 I squeaked through the U. S. Junior at Dayton, Ohio, once more.”
Robin started off 1962 winning the Ivy League chess title. This year age eliminates him from the U. S. Junior, but he is the only player on record who has taken the championship three times. Actually, the minor tournaments he has won are almost too numerous to mention. When he says his games are stodgy most players would give their right arm to play that stodgily. Next week we will bring you some of his games, including the “stodgy” ones.


Robin Alan Ault, 1960

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June 27 1960

Press of Atlantic City, Atlantic City, New Jersey, Monday, June 27, 1960

1960, New Jersey State Junior Chess Championship.

New Chess Champ—Robin Ault of Cranford became the new junior chess champion of New Jersey yesterday when he emerged from the state tournament with five straight wins. Shown after the contest in the Penn-Atlantic Hotel are, from left, Raymond Fasano of Red Bank, first runner-up; Alan Spielman of Ventnor, second runner-up; Ault; E. F. Daigle, tournament director, and John Yehl of Hammonton, third runnerup. (Press Photo).

Cranford Boy Wins State Chess Title
Robin Ault, 18, of Cranford, yesterday chalked up his fifth victory in a row to become the winner of the New Jersey State Junior Chess Championship Tournament.
The five-round contest for the state title opened in the Penn-Atlantic Hotel Friday night and concluded yesterday with Ault's triumph in the fifth round.
As new state champion he will have his name engraved on a plaque kept at the Log Cabin Chess Club in West Orange.
Raymond Fasano, 14, of Red Bank is first runnerup with 4 wins and 1 loss. Second and third runners-up are Allen Spielman, 17, of Ventnor, 3½ wins, and 1½ losses, and John Yehl, 20, Hammonton, 3 wins and 2 losses.
In addition to receiving trophies, the four youths were given round-trip bus fare to St. Louis to participate in the United States Open Chess Championship Tournament Aug. 8.
Spielman was presented a travel clock for playing the most brilliant game. Fasano won the special prize for the player under 17 years of age with the highest score, while Kenneth Orbach, 12, of Cedar Grove won the prize for the shortest game.
Fourteen boys competed for the championship. Fifth through 14th places were scored in that order by Kenneth Nickerson, 17, Princeton; Orbach; Marshall Spitz, 16, Atlantic City; Michael Garner, 19, Ventnor; Peter Irwin, 16, Summit; Henry Garfield, 14, Hammonton; Ellis Mullen, 9, Millville; David Stogel, 13, Atlantic City, and John Dollard, 10, also this city.
The tournament was co-sponsored by the New Jersey State Chess Federation and the Atlantic City Optimist Club.


Robin Alan Ault, 1959

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June 29 1959

Press of Atlantic City, Atlantic City, New Jersey, Monday, June 29, 1959

1959, New Jersey Junior Chess Championship

Junior Chess Champ—The N. J. junior chess champion, Robin Ault, 17, of Cranford and other top players were congratulated by E. F. Daigle, right, director, at the close of a three-day tournament at the Penn-Atlantic Hotel. The young lad in front is Jeffrey Harris of 51 N. Windsor Ave., who was awarded the tournament's “Brilliancy Prize.” Others, from left, are Ault, first runner-up Roger Pitasky, 16, of Trenton, and third place winner Leslie Ault, 18, the champion's brother. Press photo.

Cranford Boy Wins Tourney Here To Become State Chess Champion
Seventeen-year-old Robin Ault of Cranford became New Jersey's junior chess champion yesterday at the Penn-Atlantic Hotel.
Ault defeated Glenn Reitze, 16, of Jersey City in the championship match to end the three-day State Junior Chess Tournament here. His record was four wins and one draw.
Reitz and five other competitors came through the tournament with three wins, one draw and one loss. Their places were determined by a tie-breaking system based on how they played their matches, with these results:
Second place went to Roger Pitasky, 16, Trenton; third to Leslie Ault, the winner's 18-year-old brother; fourth to Reitze; fifth to William Lukowiak, 16, Belleville, and sixth to Jerome Finkelstein, 17, Long Branch.
The first six placers were awarded trophies. Pitasky also won a trophy for accumulating the highest score of any competitor under 17.
Jeffrey Harris of 51 N. Windsor Ave. was awarded the tournament's “Brilliancy Prize” for his first-round victory Friday evening over John Yehl, 19, of Hamonton.
Yesterday's competition opened with the two Aults, Pitasky and Reitze tied with two wins and one draw each. In the morning's fourth tournament round, Robin Ault beat Pitasky and Reitze defeated Leslie Ault.
Reitze lost to Robin Ault in the fifth and final round, while Pitasky and Leslie Ault were recording wins over other opponents.


July 19 1959

Omaha World-Herald, Omaha, Nebraska, Sunday, July 19, 1959

1959, Chess Meet Like A Wake With Tension

Ault (left), Gilden…Studies in concentration.

Chess Meet: Wake With Tension
The United States Junior Chess Championship Saturday had the atmosphere of a wake with tension.
The ballroom of the Rome Hotel was hushed except for a murmur of young voices. Dozens of observers moved silently from table to table. Players oblivious of all got up from their boards between moves' with sober thoughtful faces.
But filtering through the hush was a suppressed excitement. Players and observers were watching to see who would be the new champion.
Leading contenders were a study in the different ways youngsters concentrate.
Larry Gilden, 16, Washington, D. C., complained several times about noise. The Rev. Howard Ohman, tournament director, agreed and ordered the murmur back to a lower pitch.
Gilden returned to his table, shook his head nervously as if to indicate he had fathomed the strategy of his opponent, Robin Ault.
Ault, 17, Cranford, N. J., sat over the board with a classic poker face. But he sat on only a third of his chair with his right leg doubled up under him and his left foot waving up and down.
Ault was the winner and became tournament champion. Second was Gilbert Ramirez, 19, San Francisco, Cal., and third was Gilden.
Tournament rules forbid opponents to talk to one another or to discuss the game with spectators.
“But this doesn't prevent them, once the game is over, from going into the next room to restudy the moves,” the Rev. Mr. Ohman said.
“These kids play chess all the time. They finish the tournament games and play all night.”
Doesn't the pace and the excitement wear them out?
“I haven't seen any sign of it,” the Rev. Mr. Ohman said.
Monday at 7 p.m. the United States Open chess tournament, which attracts master players from over the United States, will begin at the Sheraton-Fontenelle Hotel.


Robin Alan Ault, 1994

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September 19 1994

Robin Alan Ault, Chess Champion, Obituary

The Boston Globe, Boston, Massachusetts, Monday, September 19, 1994

AULT-Of Newtonville, Sept. 16, Robin A. Beloved son of Margaret (Stinson) and the late Leslie Fleming Ault. Brother of Leslie Hastings Ault of Closter, NJ and David Stinson Ault of Linden, NJ. Also survived by many nieces and nephews. A memorial service will be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers memorials may be made to Mass Choice, Statler Bldg, 20 Park Plaza, Suite 1129, Boston MA 02116-4399. Late Quality Control Manager and Software Engineer for Micrologic. Arrangements by Eaton Mackay Funeral Home, Newton Corner.


September 20 1994

The Boston Globe, Boston, Massachusetts, Tuesday, September 20, 1994

Robin Ault, 52; Software Engineer, 'Gentle Fighter' for Women's Rights by Tom Long, Globe Staff
Robin Ault of Newton, a senior software engineer at MicroLogic Inc., former professor of mathematics at Boston State College and a longtime activist with Mass Choice, the state affiliate of the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League, died of cancer Friday in Newton-Wellesley Hospital. He was 52.
Born in Elizabeth, N. J., Mr. Ault graduated from Columbia College and earned a doctorate in mathematics at Brandeis University. During his undergraduate years he was national junior chess champion three years in a row and, during the Vietnam War years, he was a volunteer draft counselor for the American Friends Service Committee.
After teaching mathematics at Boston State College from 1965 until its closing in 1981, he joined Micro-Logic, where he was software quality assurance manager.
Yesterday, Susan Kannenberg, a Mass Choice Foundation board member and a former colleague on the faculty of Boston State, said, “Robin was as gentle in his demeanor as he was strong in his commitment to women's civil rights, especially abortion rights. In the early '70s, through student demonstrations and eventual faculty layoffs and closing of the school, Rob remained strong and perseverant in his goal of respect for students' rights to quality teaching and to faculty rights to fair treatment. He was a gentle fighter.”
He was a member of Mass Choice since 1970. The group plans to dedicate a volunteer award in his name.
Yesterday, Joyce Cunha, executive director of Mass Choice, said Mr. Ault “has done more for the women's movement than any other man and most women I know. Feminists from all walks of life owe him a profound debt of gratitude.”
She remembered him as a “computer nerd” who was particularly helpful with the group's computer programs, though it was not beneath him to stuff envelopes, answer telephones and handle other “gritty jobs” important to the nonprofit group.
According to Cunha, Mr. Ault inherited his activism from his mother, who would bring her young son along to community meetings.
He leaves his mother, Margaret Ault of Cranford, N. J.; and two brothers Leslie of Closter, N.J. and David of Linden, N. J.
A memorial service will be held Oct. 8 at 1:30 p.m. in Sachar Auditorium at Brandeis University in Waltham.

Robin Ault, Junior Chess Champion Obituary

Robin Alan Ault, 1970

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May 03 1970

The Boston Globe, Boston, Massachusetts, Sunday, May 31, 1970

1970, Robin Ault.

Robin Alan Ault, 1961

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June 26 1961

Press of Atlantic City, Atlantic City, New Jersey, Monday, June 26, 1961

Robin Ault Wins New Jersey Junior Chess Champion Trophy

Chess Winners—Robin Ault of Cranford is presented a trophy as winner of the New Jersey State Junior Chess Championship Sunday in the Penn-Atlantic Hotel. From left are Raymond Fasano of Red Bank, second place winner; Gladys Nan Pollock of Passaic, state girls champion; Leslie Ault of Cranford, third place winner; Robin Ault, and E. F. Daigle, tournament director. (Press Photo).

Cranford Boy, Robin Ault, Wins State Chess Tourney 3rd Time
Robin Ault, 19, of Cranford, won the New Jersey State Junior Chess Championship for the third year in a row Sunday by topping 25 other contestants in the tournament played at the Penn-Atlantic Hotel.
He won four and drew one in five matches conducted during the three-day tourney.
Runner-up was Raymond Fasano, 15, of Red Bank and third was Leslie Ault, 20, brother of the champion.
Gladys Nan Pollock, 15, of Passaic, was crowned New Jersey State Girls Junior Chess Champion. She was the lone girl entered in the tournament, which is open to state boys and girls under 21. She won a single match and was automatically recognized as champion.
Peter Irwin, 17, of Summit, placed fourth and won the brilliancy prize.
Robin Ault, Fasano and Irwin won trophies and were given $50 in cash each with the understanding they use the money as bus fare to the United States Junior Chess championships, to be held from July 31 to Aug. 5 in Dayton, Ohio.
Alan Spielman, 18, of Margate, placed fifth and won the prize awarded to the winner of the shortest game. Other prize winners were:
John Xenakis, 17, of Eatontown, sixth; John Greevy, 17, of West New York, seventh; Donald McCoy, 17, of Montclair, eighth; Leonard Karabell, 13, of Margate, ninth; Percy Whiting, 17, of Upper Montclair, tenth; Kenneth Orbach, 13, of Cedar Grove, eleventh, and James Goldman, 16, of East Paterson, twelfth.
Prizes were awarded by E. F. Daigle, director of the tournament. The tournament was co-sponsored by the resort Optimist Club and the New Jersey State Chess Federation.


Robin Alan Ault, 1956

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1956

Leslie H. Ault, 1956

Cranford High School, Cranford, Union County, New Jersey Yearbook 1956


Dale Alden Brandreth, 1966

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July 06 1966

Dale Alden Brandreth, Marriage

The Mercury, Pottstown, Pennsylvania, Wednesday, July 06, 1966

Local Residents Travel to Canada
Mrs. Morgan R. Rees, 1088 North Keim street, Pottstown, and Mr. and Mrs. F. Bertram Brandreth, Royersford, are home following a four day motor trip to Porcupine, Ontario, Canada, where they attended the wedding of Mrs. Rees' nephew, Dr. Dale A. Brandreth and Alice Margaret James, daughter of Mayor Arthur J. James and Mrs. James, Porcupine.
During the 2000 mile trip the two couples visited Niagara Falls and the North Bay area, where they were 35 miles within the Arctic watershed. They spent Dominion Day in Barrie on Lake Simka.


Dale Alden Brandreth, 1968

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May 23 1968

Dale Alden Brandreth, Birth of Daughter

The Mercury, Pottstown, Pennsylvania, Thursday, May 23, 1968

Births
A daughter, Wendy Lynn Brandreth, was born to Dr. and Mrs. Dale A. Brandreth, Greentree, Del., in Claymont, Delaware. Dr. Brandreth is the son of the late Herbert H. Brandreth, Royersford, and Mrs. Glenna Brandreth, Germantown, former Pennsburg resident.


Dale Alden Brandreth, 1994

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July 31 1994

Dale Alden Brandreth, Marriage of Daughter

The News Journal, Wilmington, Delaware, Sunday, July 31, 1994

Brandreth-Williamson
Lara Ann Brandreth and John Charles Williamson were married July 23 in St. Peter's Catholic Church, Charlotte, N.C.
Their parents are Dr. and Mrs. Dale Brandreth of Hockessin and Mr. and Mrs. Pierce Williamson of Charlotte.
The bride, a graduate of A. I. du Pont High School and the University of North Carolina, worked for Environment Science and Engineering. A graduate of Independence High School and the University of North Carolina, the groom will attend Columbia University. The couple will live in New York City.


Dale Alden Brandreth, 2019

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2019

Dale Alden Brandreth, Chess Champion
Dale Alden Brandreth, Tombstone

September 11 2019

Dale Alden Brandreth, Chess Champion, Obituary

The News Journal, Wilmington, Delaware, Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Dale A. Brandreth
Hockessin—Dale A. Brandreth, age 87, of Hockessin, DE, passed away on Monday, September 9, at his home. Born in White Marsh, PA, he was the son of the late Glenna (Trumbore) and Herbert Brandreth. Dale graduated with his bachelor of science and master degrees from the University of Pennsylvania, and completed his PhD in chemical engineering at the University of Toronto. Dale also served in the Army during the Korean War. While in Toronto, he met and married his wife, Alice James, and they moved to Pittsburgh and later relocated to Delaware. Once in Delaware, Dale worked as a chemical engineer for DuPont for over 15 years. He also taught chemical engineering at Drexel and Widener Universities. Dale was an avid chess book collector, publishing books on chess and even starting his own business called Caissa Editions Book Store, which he owned for over 40 years. In addition to chess, he enjoyed hiking and belonged to several hiking clubs.
Dale is survived by his wife, Alice Brandreth of Hockessin, DE; his daughters and their spouses, Lara and John Williamson of Villanova, PA and Wendy and Scott Duncan of Arlington, VA; his grandchildren, Duncan, Hugh, Reilly, Benjamin, and James; and his sister, Nancy Brainerd of Ohio.
A memorial service will be held at the Mealey Funeral Home, 2509 Limestone Road Wilmington, DE 19808 beginning at 11:30 A.M. on Saturday, September 14th. A reception will follow at the Brandreth home.
Burial will be private. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests contributions to www.worldwildlife.org or www.michaeljfox.org. Online condolences may be made at mealeyfuneralhomes.com.


Allan Brian Calhamer, 1949

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1949

Allan Brian Calhamer, Harvard 1949-1953, Cambridge, Massachusetts

Allan Brian Calhamer, 1953

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1953

Allan Brian Calhamer, Harvard 1949-1953, Cambridge, Massachusetts

Allan Brian Calhamer, 2013

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March 09 2013

The Boston Globe, Boston, Massachusetts, Saturday, March 09, 2013

Allan Brian Calhamer, Chess Champion and board game designer
Alan Brian Calhamer, 2011.

Allan Calhamer; made board game for the power-craved
By Margalit Fox, New York Times
New York—Allan Calhamer, a Harvard-educated postman who invented Diplomacy, which for more than half a century has been a favorite board game of calculating, caffeinated intellectuals, died Feb. 25 in La Grange, Ill. He was 81.
The cause was heart and kidney failure, his family said.

Diplomacy, a board game created by Allan Brian Calhamer
Released in 1959, Diplomacy has sold more than 300,000 copies. It was a favorite game of Henry Kissinger, and John F. Kennedy and Walter Cronkite were also said to enjoy it. Mr. Calhamer (pronounced CAL-uh-mur) conceived of Diplomacy at Harvard in the mid-1950s, and from the start its object was simple: achieve world domination in as many hours (or days, or even years) as it takes.
Released commercially in 1959, Diplomacy has sold more than 300,000 copies. It was reported to have been a favorite game of Henry Kissinger; John F. Kennedy and Walter Cronkite were also said to enjoy it. In 1984 it was named to Games magazine's Hall of Fame, alongside such stalwarts as Monopoly, Clue, and Scrabble.
Over the years, Diplomacy—“Dip” to its most fervent adherents has inspired a welter of fanzines, international tournaments, and, most recently, online competitions.
Diplomacy plays out on a map of pre-World War I Europe, with each player — it is ideally suited to seven — representing one of the Great Powers of the age: England, France, Germany, Italy, Austria-Hungary, Russia, and the Ottoman Empire.
The game ends when a player captures 18 of the board's 34 strategic “supply centers,” or when all players still standing agree that they are simply too bleary-eyed and cranky to continue.
Unlike many board games, Diplomacy leaves nothing to chance: there are no dice to roll (as in the comparable board game Risk, which relies on armies to conquer the world), no cards to shuffle (ditto), no pointers to spin. Instead it relies on strategy, cunning, and above all verbal prowess.
In each of the game's compulsory negotiation periods, which involve whispering furtively in corners while simultaneously routing eavesdroppers, players in weaker positions who band together against those in stronger ones.
What emerges from these sessions, which govern the moves on the board, is a world of quicksilver alliances: joint military campaigns are planned; deals are made, then abrogated, and new agreements arise to take their place. Foe is friend and friend is foe, and it is seldom possible to tell the two apart.
In short, Diplomacy rewards all manner of mendacity: spying, lying, bribery, rumor mongering, psychological manipulation, outright intimidation, betrayal, vengeance and backstabbing.
It also rewards staying power. A typical game lasts at least six hours, and 16-hour games are far from unknown. In Diplomacy-by-mail, a version for far-flung players first popularized in the early 1960s, a single game can unspool over years.
Mr. Calhamer was an honored guest at many Diplomacy tournaments, at which he was by all accounts a good player but not a great one he was apparently too kindly to succeed at his own game. The rest of the time he lived quietly in La Grange Park, a Chicago suburb, where he worked as a letter carrier while tinkering with other games, all unproduced.
Allan Brian Calhamer was born in Hinsdale, Ill., and reared in La Grange Park; his mother was a teacher and his father an engineer.
As a boy, exploring the attic of the family home, he encountered a book of old maps and was captivated. On its pages, the past really was a foreign country, with evocative names Livonia, Courland, the Ottoman Empire that conjured a distant era. From that book, Mr. Calhamer said long afterward, Diplomacy would spring.
At Harvard, from which he graduated cum laude in 1953, the young Calhamer studied European history with Sidney Bradshaw Fay. Reading Fay's seminal 1928 book, “The Origins of the World War,” about back-room intrigue among the Great Powers, he thought, “What a board game that would make!”
Mr. Calhamer developed his game, originally called Realpolitik, in 1954, while he was enrolled at Harvard Law School. Law students, he found, adored it, as it enfranchised aggression, and it was refined over many late-night sessions in his room.
Disinclined to pursue a cutthroat career, however, Mr. Calhamer left law school before graduating. He lived for a time at Walden Pond in homage to his idol, Henry David Thoreau; he later worked briefly as a foreign service officer in Africa and a park ranger at the Statue of Liberty.
In 1959, after Diplomacy was rejected by several game publishers, Mr. Calhamer had 500 copies produced at his own expense, selling them by mail for $6.95 apiece. It was acquired shortly afterward by Games Research and has since passed through many corporate hands, including those of Avalon Hill and Hasbro. The game is currently published by Wizards of the Coast, which also makes Dungeons & Dragons.
On the strength of Diplomacy, Mr. Calhamer was hired by Sylvania's Applied Research Laboratory in Waltham, to bring his analytical stills to bear on real-world military problems. But he chafed amid corporate culture and left after six years. With his wife, the former Hilda Morales, he settled in his hometown. Besides his wife, whom he married in 1967, Mr. Calhamer leaves two daughters, Tatiana and Selenne Calhamer-Boling.
Mr. Calhamer remained deeply, if quietly, proud of Diplomacy, and though the royalties did not make him rich, they did once let him buy a Mercury Monarch.
For 21 years, until his retirement in the early 1990s, Mr. Calhamer delivered the mail in La Grange Park. He took pleasure, his family told The Chicago Sun-Times this week, in factoring into primes the license-plate numbers of cars on his route.
He almost certainly took pleasure, too for this thought was doubtless not lost on him in the idea that on any given day, slung unobtrusively over his shoulder, there might lurk a letter from one Great Power to another, filled with all the threats, blandishments and cunning hollow promises Diplomacy entails, awaiting delivery by its creator.


Recommended Books

Understanding Chess by William Lombardy Chess Duels, My Games with the World Champions, by Yasser Seirawan No Regrets: Fischer-Spassky 1992, by Yasser Seirawan Chess Fundamentals, by Jose Capablanca Bobby Fischer Teaches Chess, by Bobby Fischer My 60 Memorable Games, by Bobby Fischer Bobby Fischer Games of Chess, by Bobby Fischer The Modern Chess Self Tutor, by David Bronstein Russians versus Fischer, by Mikhail Tal, Plisetsky, Taimanov, et al

'til the world understands why Robert J. Fischer criticised the U.S./British and Russian military industry imperial alliance and their own Israeli Apartheid. Sarah Wilkinson explains:

Bobby Fischer, First Amendment, Freedom of Speech
What a sad story Fischer was,” typed a racist, pro-imperialist colonial troll who supports mega-corporation entities over human rights, police state policies & white supremacy.
To which I replied: “Really? I think he [Bob Fischer] stood up to the broken system of corruption and raised awareness! Whether on the Palestinian/Israel-British-U.S. Imperial Apartheid scam, the Bush wars of ‘7 countries in 5 years,’ illegally, unconstitutionally which constituted mass xenocide or his run in with police brutality in Pasadena, California-- right here in the U.S., police run rampant over the Constitution of the U.S., on oath they swore to uphold, but when Americans don't know the law, and the cops either don't know or worse, “don't care” -- then I think that's pretty darn “sad”. I think Mr. Fischer held out and fought the good fight, steadfast til the day he died, and may he Rest In Peace.
Educate yourself about U.S./State Laws --
https://www.youtube.com/@AuditTheAudit/videos
After which the troll posted a string of profanities, confirming there was never any genuine sentiment of “compassion” for Mr. Fischer, rather an intent to inflict further defamatory remarks.

This ongoing work is a tribute to the life and accomplishments of Robert “Bobby” Fischer who passionately loved and studied chess history. May his life continue to inspire many other future generations of chess enthusiasts and kibitzers, alike.

Robert J. Fischer, Kid Chess Wizard 1956March 9, 1943 - January 17, 2008

The photograph of Bobby Fischer (above) from the March 02, 1956 The Tampa Times was discovered by Sharon Mooney (Bobby Fischer Newspaper Archive editor) on February 01, 2018 while gathering research materials for this ongoing newspaper archive project. Along with lost games now being translated into Algebraic notation and extractions from over two centuries of newspapers, it is but one of the many lost treasures to be found in the pages of old newspapers since our social media presence was first established November 11, 2017.

Special Thanks