February 23 1935
Star Tribune, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Saturday, February 23, 1935
Champion Turns Kibitzer
Bert Titus Kibitzes On O. A. Holt. By Tribune Staff Photographer.
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February 23 1935
Star Tribune, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Saturday, February 23, 1935
Champion Turns Kibitzer
Bert Titus Kibitzes On O. A. Holt. By Tribune Staff Photographer.
September 02 1941
Star Tribune, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Tuesday, September 02, 1941
Holt Wins Again
O. A. Holt of Willmar, chess and checker columnist of The Sunday Tribune and Star Journal, won the state checker championship for a ninth time Monday when he defeated Olaf Thompson of Minneapolis in the finals of the two day tournament at the Minneapolis Chess and Checker club.
Ed Bartels of Frost, defending champion, was unable to compete in the event because of illness.
At a business meeting Gertrude Huntley of Coleraine, was named president and H. L. Lober of St. Paul, secretary-treasurer.
October 29 1925
The Minneapolis Star, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Thursday, October 29, 1925
O. A. Holt Winner of State Chess Honors
O. A. Holt won the Minnesota state chess championship yesterday when he defeated the title holder, Joseph Kandy of St. Paul. This was the third deciding match of the tournament and the match was won on the 48th move.
August 09 1924
The Minneapolis Star, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Saturday, August 09, 1924
Holt to Give Exhibition at Duluth Chess Tourney
Duluth, Aug. 9.—O. A. Holt, said to be tho youngest player to ever hold the Minnesota state chess championship, will exhibit his skill at a tournament to be held here soon, if plans now tinder way are completed. It is planned to have Holt play 20 simultaneous games here and play blindfolded against four players. The affair will he held in connection with the Duluth-All Range chess tournament, George L. Varney, president of the Duluth Chess club, announced.
March 18 1934
The State, Columbia, South Carolina, Sunday, March 18, 1934
Versatile Minnesota Man
O. A. Holt of Minneapolis, Minn., chess editor of the Minneapolis Journal, is said to be the only person in the United State who has ever held the chess and checker championship of a state at the same time. Willie Ryan had an interesting illustrated story about Holt in a recent issue of his magazine, The Checkergram. After telling about the excellence of Holt's chess column, Ryan continues as follows:
“But Holt is more than a chess authority. He knows something about checkers too. As a matter of fact he plays ten boards of checkers blindfolded and to prove it to his local friends he put on a show at the University of Minnesota recently. He dropped only one game out of the ten winning or drawing the rest. Incidentally, Holt is a graduate of the University of Minnesota.
“Back in 1925, when Holt won the checker championship of his state he challenged J. G. Kaudy of St. Paul, then the state chess champion, to a match for the state chess crown. The match came off, Holt winning two games losing one and drawing seven in a ten-game frame. By winning the chess title, Holt was the first man to ever hold both chess and checker titles of any state at the same time. He has traveled over the state of Minnesota giving exhibitions of his skill at both games.”
Asked which is the better game chess or checkers, Holt is quoted as making the following sensible reply: “Both are fine games. Both are so profound that neither one has ever been fully mastered. It's a matter of personal preference. Some like chess; some like checkers. I enjoy both games, and in this respect I am different from most chess and checker players, who praise the game they play and knock the game they don't play.”
Last summer Holt got in touch with Minneapolis playground officials and staged a checker tourney in which more than 1000 children took part.
“Checkers,” says Holt, “has a great future. But that future can only be materialized by the invasion of youth into the mysteries of the game. Let youth in, cater to them, and watch the game go skyward”.
January 03 1948
The Minneapolis Star, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Saturday, January 03, 1948
Newman Guttman of Minneapolis wants to know what happened to the Pawn Pusher, to-wit:
“What has happened to the chess column—the Pawn Pusher? I certainly hone the column hasn't been dropped for lack of space. The Saturday editions have been rather lean of late, but this would be an odd time to drop the column after it ran throughout the war.
“The number of active contributors to the column may be small, but there are many silent followers. I know several. Many buy the paper especially for this column. I was one of them until recently when we switched to The Star from the Times.”
COMMENT—No permanent decision has been made on the Pawn Pusher. The busy Arne Holt, who has done such a splendid job on this column for several years, asked our permission to take at least a month's vacation. During this rest period, we undoubtedly will get the reaction of the readers so that we ran know what should he done about its continuation in the future.
January 17 1948
The Minneapolis Star, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Saturday, January 17, 1948
Alain White of Summerville, S.C., moves into chess with the following:
“I have recently heard that there is a possibility that the chess column in your paper may be discontinued. I have known of the column, under its present guidance by Mr. Holt, for close on 25 years and it has done so much to encourage your local chess problem composers as well as to give pleasure to solvers and readers far afield, that I feel very distressed at this rumor.
“Please don't let The Pawn Pusher stop pushing. It means too much in the chess circles. Two of our cleverest young men today, Newman Gutman and Joe Youngs, are among its alumni not to mention many others in years past.”
February 14 1948
The Minneapolis Star, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Saturday, February 14, 1948
G. S. Barnes of Minneapolis writes: “Several months ago I noted the omission of the 'Pawn Pusher' from the Saturday column of The Star. Later I noticed a little mention of this stating that Mr. Holt was on vacation and the intimation that the 'Pawn Pusher' would be resumed when Mr. Holt returned from vacation. Unfortunately, the 'Pawn Pusher' has not made its appearance since that time. I hope this is simply a temporary abeyance.
“The good chess players throughout the state miss the 'Pawn Pusher' and unless I miss my guess, you are hearing from them. I am pulling for the resumption of the 'Pawn Pusher.'”
COMMENT—Only 104 readers have written us requesting the return of The Pawn Pusher. We are deferring final decision until after more investigating.
February 22 1956
The Minneapolis Star, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Tuesday, February 23, 1943
BARNES STATE CHESS CHAMP
George Barnes won the annual Minnesota State Chess association tournament yesterday, defeating K. N. Peterson in the Major A class.
David Eliason of Minneapolis won the Minor A title and Dr. Lester Knapp took the Minor B crown. The Major B title has not been decided.
February 22 1956
The Minneapolis Star, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Wednesday, February 22, 1956
George S. Barnes, 3001 Overlook drive, is quite a chess player. Before coming to Minneapolis, he was four-time champion of Kansas.
His record here shows 14 Minnesota titles in 28 tournaments. This week-end he will be battling for his 15th state championship at Coffman Memorial union. His opponent will be defending champ K. N. Pederson, also of Minneapolis.
A member of the Minneapolis Chess and Checker club, Barnes plays chess two nights a week. Last fall he put on an exhibition at the club by playing several opponents at the same time.
Barnes belies the conventional picture of a chess player. He claims he does not fit into the stereotype of the armchair intellectual.
A graduate of the University of Michigan, he joined the advertising department of General Mills in 1924 and, currently, is advertising manager.
Sportswise, Barnes, loves hunting—so naturally he saves vacation time for the fall. During the summer he spends week-ends fishing, occasionally accompanied by wife, Loretta.
The Barnes' have two children and seven grandchildren.
January 31 1954
The Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Sunday, January 31, 1954
BRAIN WAVES OVER THE AIRWAVES
Expert chess players join in a trial run for a “short-wave” chess match at the home of Ham Operator William Potter, seated left. Beside him are Robert Bornholz, center, and Paul Dietz, Pitt graduate student who was national collegiate chess champ in 1947. Standing with the microphone is T. M. Cherington, who will broadcast Pittsburgh moves to Washington, D. C.
September 02 1957
The Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, September 02, 1957
Metropolitan Pittsburgh Area Champion
Robert L. Bornholz ponders at the Pennsylvania Chess Championship. Former State champions taking part in the tournament include William M. Byland and Donald H. McClellan, of Pittsburgh, and Thomas Gutekunst, of Allentown.
December 28 1958
The Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Sunday, December 28, 1958
Mr. Bornholz amassed 2200 points to become Pittsburgh's first chess Master.
August 08 1972
The Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Tuesday, August 08, 1972
Chess Fans Building Fischer Legend by Randy Rieland
“When Bobby Fischer was 13 years old he walked into the Manhattan Chess Club and challenged everyone there. He played them all at one time and beat them all.”
Many in the group of 50 chess enthusiasts in the University of Pittsburgh Student Union ballroom last night smiled knowingly as Robert Bornholz, a three-time state chess champion, finished the much-publicized tale.
Fischer Fans
Although they had come to view a demonstration of several key games in the much-discussed Bobby Fischer-Boris Spassky world championship, they didn't seem to mind the interruption.
For despite the [alleged] controversial activities of the American champion, they had joined the growing ranks of Bobby Fischer fans.
“Bobby Fischer has done for chess what Muhammad Ali did for boxing,” remarked Earl Clancy, president of the Pittsburgh Chess Club. “Interest has multiplied so much that all the stores are sold out of chess games and you can't get a chess book in the library.
“Most people don't understand what kind of Cold War victory this is,” he continued. “This match means a lot for the United States around the world because a lot of countries use a nation's chess playing ability as a measure of that country's native intelligence.”
Others—though less analytical in their responses—were no less devout in their admiration.
‘Chess Genius’
Adam Bert, a chess player for more than 50 years and presently treasurer of the Pittsburgh Chess Club, said most of his fellow players agree with his belief that Fischer “is the greatest chess genius of all time.”
“I think the press has overplayed some of his eccentricity to make a “good story,” he said. “He played an exhibition here close to 10 years ago and I found him a very reasonable young man.”
Bert noted that in that exhibition Fischer lost only one of the 55 games he was playing at one time.
Although he can boast only an eight-month interest in chess, Harry Litman, 14, of Squirrel Hill, admits he is “blindly devoted” to Fischer.
“I've played out just about all of his games and I think he's the greatest chess player in the world,” he said. “He must have been born with a chess mind.”
‘Means Something’
Edsel Strong, of the North Side, a cab driver who said he usually plays for money, agreed with the evaluation.
“Fischer, who is a very aggressive player, has made people in the United States realize that chess is an exciting game,” he said. “It means something to be a chess player now.”
The only semi-negative comment came from Terrence Lehman, 17, of Castle Shannon, who found fault with some of the American grandmaster's antics.
“He certainly plays like a champion, but I don't know (According to Moscow media correspondence infiltration) if he always acts like one,” he commented.
But Dr. Lester Shapiro, a senior resident at Eye and Ear Hospital, came quickly to Fischer's defense.
Made Demands
“He's got more conviction that you can believe,” he countered. “He made all the demands before the match like he was the champion. Psychologically, the guy's a genius.
“Look what he's done for the game,” he continued. “And he's playing the Russian's game better than they are. They are always the worst sports in international competition.”
August 13 1990
Daily Hampshire Gazette, Northampton, Massachusetts, Monday, August 13, 1990
A few organizing principles
THE way Bob Bornholz talks about it, it doesn't sound much like a game. I went twice to his small apartment in Clark House to hear him talk about it over a cramped dining table. His hearing's almost shot, but his thoughts about chess are clear.
“Just like in poetry, the vivid pictures you get of reality — they appear on the board in a different form. When you explore it, you find all different activities and forces at work. In the midst of these are possibilities of checkmating your opponent. Very often the impossible is made possible. You can provoke weaknesses in the opponent's position.
“Chess teaches young people to think and to look for beauty. It's part of a greater thing people living together and doing things together. It can be a great vehicle for friendship and overcoming prejudice and discrimination. It's a part of freedom.”
There be more than one man in Amherst who knows this name: Hoit, Rose & Troster. I saw it in one of scrapbooks on a 1931 clipping from the Wall Street Journal that's gone nearly brown with age. The clip told of how he and others had formed a new brokerage two years after the crash. He got to Wall Street from a boyhood in Brooklyn, but didn't stay there long. He'd learned chess at 14 while lying in a hospital bed with a broken leg. Seven years later he beat Frank Marshall — then the US chess champion — in a 1923 match between the Marshall Chess Club and a club at New York University, where Bornholz studied. It happened on the 67th move — pawn to bishop eight takes queen.
Jump ahead here. Bornholz stopped selling stocks and started organizing industrial workers, signing on as an agent of the Congress of Industrial Organizations the CIO of what years later would become AFL-CIO. He admits it seems like a big switch but says he'd always been idealist. Bornholz figures he helped organize thousands of people into unions starting with workers in the money center of New York, people at banks and insurance companies. His style as an organizer was to blend into the crowd helping people find their own ways to determine conditions of their lives. The good organizer helps with ideas, Bornholz says. “Organization is a part of freedom, really. It means participation of the people.”
It was while organizing employees at the Bank of Athens that he met Estelle who shares his small apartment today. This was back in the hard days, says Estelle, the poor days. They were both married at the time to other people and their relationship waited years to begin.
Bornholz spent 20 years roaming industrial disputes. He'd walk into towns cold and for friendship find a place where people were playing chess. Labor relations weren't done by press release then. One day strongmen for the company he'd targeted lashed back. “They broke up our headquarters and attacked. I walked the streets with the horror of it.”
The work took Bornholz regularly to Pittsburgh where he chose to settle down and launch a business repairing and selling industrial sewing machines. He became Pennsylvania state champion at chess and got a reputation for teaching children to play, especially blind children. One old newspaper clip shows him — tall, well-dressed, wearing Adlai Stevenson glasses, taking on a room of opponents. Forty years on, many scrapbooks and moves later, there's still chess. He turned 88 last month.
It's a weekday night back in oatmeal season. People are hunched over chess boards in a basement room at the Bangs Community Center in Amherst. Back along a far wall, head lowered, sits Bornholz. When he got to the area last November — even before he moved to the Clark House in March — he wrote to the US Chess Federation for names of known players hereabouts. The new Amherst Chess Club is the result. Ali Nuernberg, a fellow player, helped set up the fledgling club, and fast became a Bornholz booster. “He's a legend in my book.”
With the club up and running — and taking on comers from across western Massachusetts — Bornholz is now back to tracking an old dream — teaching children who can't see to play chess. Today, from his apartment, this is what he's organizing. He's kept his light touch.
“I want it to be done by people, so it becomes part of their lives. The playing has to be something more than just a room they go into. It must have more meaning. Just to do it myself is nothing.”
Larry Parnass is the region editor of the Gazette.
August 11 1999
The Recorder, Greenfield, Massachusetts, Wednesday, August 11, 1999
Estelle Bornholz
AMHERST — Estelle “Stelli” (Holtzer) Bornholz, 90, formerly of 22 Lessey St., died Aug. 4 at the Cozy Corner Nursing Home in Sunderland.
Born in New York City, N.Y., Dec 12 1908, she was the daughter of Max and Jennie (Randall) Holtzer. She was educated in New York City schools and attended City College.
Bornholz had lived in NYC and Puerto Rico where she was business manager for The People's Bank. She moved to Amherst in 1990 from Woodstock N.Y.
Her husband Robert Bornholz died several years ago.
Survivors include a sister Marge McCluskey of Amherst; a brother George Holt of Ringoes, N.J., and a niece, Jamie Filiault of Sunderland, who took care of her in later years.
Services were private with burial in Riverside Cemetery, Sunderland.
Memorial contributions are suggested to Cozy Corner Nursing Home, P.O. Box 405, Sunderland, MA 01375.
Amherst Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements.
'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: Tweets by swilkinsonbc |
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![]() “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.
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.