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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 88

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
88
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

6 Sec. wi usinstitttiimta SAVE 37-50 I look-of-velvet bedspreads puff-quilted in rich Bedspreads that look like big money, rrlcc-jcd (or modest spenders, lush cotton spreads wllhcn the coulure looks of velvet. Puff-quilting flows right down to the floor. Throw styla because ifs the in-fashion. Come find these beauties In red, gold or avocado.

Cotton top and back for long wear. Acetate (ill for resiliency. faudgot stores, bfldding 25 ecptVWJ.Ire Iwinorfull comp. value 39.99-4p.99 queen or king comp. valuo 59.99-69.99 "Nope no parades scheduled for this week either." ri ir-rr BY ISAAC KASHDAN I INTHNATIONAl GRANDMASTER I I Addr.M L.tt.rt Chtii Editor, l.A.

Tiffin limn Miiror Squar. In Ang.lt, Calif. MOSS 1 Miy lf71 TIMES PROBLEM 4072 By D. L. Brown BLACK I "ir if FISCHEK, TABIANOV START THURSDAY Bobby Fischer, best hope of tha U.S.

for the world chess championship, and Mark Tai-manov of the USSR, also after that goal, will start the first game of their match Thursday afternoon in the Graduate Center of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. The two grandmasters will contest a 10-game series, with 512 points required to win the match. Games will be played on Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays. Play will iie continued the following day if a game is not completed in first session. Vhe players will be in a room by themselves, with only the officials and seconds present.

Spectators will be in a large area, watching the game on wall-boards, with moves being transmitted from the playing room. If the match is tied after 10 games, up to four additional games will be played on a sudden death basis, with a win for either player deciding the eutrome. If still lied after 14 games, a toss will break the deadlock. Three other matches ill also start on Sunday, the protagonists being among the group of eight who previously qualified for the series of elimination encounters. Facing each other will he Rent Larsen of Denmark and Wolfgang Uhlmann of East Germany in the Canary Islands, Spain; former world champion Tigran Petrosian of the USSR and Robert Huehner of West Germany in Seville, Spain, and two other Soviet, stars.

Euf'im (Seller and Victor in Sochi, USSR. The semi-finals are scheduled for early July. The winners of Fischer -Taimanov and Larsen Uhlmann will nattla it out in another 10-game match, as will the other two victors. The survivors will meet in a final 12-game match in September to determine the official challenger for the championship match with titlehol-rler Boris Spassky of the USSR, which will be for the best of 24 games some time next spring. All tha games of tha Fisch-r-Taimanov match will be published in The Times as soon as available, as well as selected games of the other matches.

Who will win? Based on his fantastic successes last year, Fischer is favored by most experts to be the eventual challenger. This would break the pattern of all -Soviet championship matches which has existed since Mikhail Botvi-nnik first won the title in 1948. The four Russians in the match series are all older than their rivals. They have considerably more r-ienca in high level competition, but probably have lost some of their zest and will to win, essential qualities for a champion. The youngest player is Huehner, 22.

who was the greatest surprise when he qualified in the Interzonal Tournament last December. He is given little chance to go any iuriner, nowever. Fischer is another matter. He won the U.S. championship before he was 15, and became an international grandmaster a few months later, the youngest in history.

His record in international tournaments is already legendary, and he is now the highest rated player in chess annals. He has never before persisted in following the prescribed course for world cham pionship contenders, however. This time he may go all the way. The other non-Russians are Larsen and Uhlmann, both 36. Larsen is the more aggressive player, and far more successful in tournaments.

Ha may take the challenger's seat, should Fischer fail. Of the Russians, Geller is 46, Taimanov 43, Petrosian 42 and Korchnoi 40. None- of them measures up in this or other respects to Spassky, who is 34. EXPERT CANDIDATES The annual Expert Candidates Tournament, organized by the Southern California Chess League, will be run on different lines this year, which should make it more popular than ever. Preliminary sections will ba played in a number of chess clubs in tha area.

Thesa in effect separate club with their own A WHITE 7 Whit matn In two. Today's problem was rom-poseri especially for The Timet by David Kinwn nf Rorkford, 111. The key move seems to Rive Black some leeway, but he ii till caught In the net. SOLUTION TO PROBLEM 71: I Threat, 2 N6ch; If BxP, 2 KxP; If B-B6, R-B5ch. entry fees, sets of prizes, etc.

In the past, masters and pxperts were not eligible for the preliminaries, but this restriction no longer applies. The finals will be held June 1fl and 20 at the Downev Chess Club, Rio San (iahriel Park, 9612 Ardine, Downev. This will be a five round Swiss sysiem, starting at 9 a.m. Saturday, June 19, with two more rounds that day and two on Sunday. Each club can send three, four or five players to the finals from its preliminary section.

However, these "must never have been raied 2000 or over by the U.S. Chess Federation. Preliminary scores will not count for the finals. The tournament director for the finals is Ronald Pease, Tfil S. Garfield, Apt.

Monterey Park, 91754. Names and current ratings of those qualified should be sent to him, as well as $5 for each participant. TOUR A ES I.TS University High School scored 17 points to win the annual team championship tournament of the Los An-geles City High Schools. Grant was a close second with 1612. Other good team results were Dorsey and Syl-mar, 14, and Gardena and Van Nuys, 13.

Danny Krystall and Ronald Singleton were the top individual scorers for University, each winning five straight games. Others with perfect scores were Mike Pollowitz of Grant and Ariel Levi of Fairfax. Edward McCaskev of Morgan Hill scored 512-12 to top the 58 participants in the Visalia A mate r-nament. George Oakes of Salinas, Rick Sbepard of Santa Barbara and Walter Stuart of Fresno tied for second place with totals of 5-1. Tom Lajcik of Thousand Oaks won all his five games to take the first prize in the open tournament of the Simi Valley Chess Club, which meets Fridays at 7 p.m.

at the Larwin Community Center. Jack Cashman. Ron Pease and John Williams shared the other top prizes. AMERICAN OPEN TOURNEY SICILIAN DEFENSE Bvrnt White Blackstont Rlarlr Byrne Blackttona Whit Black N-02 N4ch BxPch QxR 0-N2 00 Q-R6 QRSch KR-0 QxP OBSch OQSch KR-N KB RxQ RxRP Resigns 1- PM 2- N-KB3 3- P-Q4 4- NxP 5- N-OBJ 0-B-K3 7- N-N3 8- P-B3 9002 10- 0-0-0 11- P-N4 12- 05 13- PxB 14- N-RS 15- N-B4 16- NxNP 17- QxN 18- Q-N3 P-QB4 P-Q3 PxP N-KB3 P-QR3 P-K4 B-K2 B-K3 ON-02 P-QN4 N5 BxN N-N3 QNxP B2 NxB Q-N2 P-QR4 l-QR4ch 20- N-QS 21- PB4 22- NxB 23- B-NS 24- RxP 25- RxN 26- N-Q5 27- K-Q2 28- B-K2 29- QxP 30- K-Q 31- K-B 32- N-K7ch 33- RxO 34- N-B 35- R-Q7 TALLINN, ESTONIA BENONI DEFENSE Kiel USSR White 1- P-Q4 2- P-QB4 3- P-Q5 4 N-0B3 5-N-B3 4- P-K4 7-B-B4 -P-0R4 t-B-02 10- B-K7 11- BPxP 1200 13- R-K 14- 0-82 15- 0R-0 16- P-ON3 TjiI Nel USSR Whit 17- PxB 18- PxP 19- N-N 20- N-R3 21- P-B4 22- P-B3 23- PxNN 24- K-N2 25- B-08 2-P-R3 27- B3 28- R-R 29- RxN 30- RxR 31- P-R4 Resigns Tai USSR Black P-B5 N-K4 CR-B USSR Black N-KB3 P-B4 P-KN3 B-N2 0-0 PQ3 P-OR3 0-R4 P-K3 PxP B-N5 0 B2 OM-02 OR-N BxN 0-Q2 NxKP B-Q5ch M-B7 B-R4 0-K2 Q-R5 NxKR R-KB OxR R-K LOUIJ STATHAM TOURNEY NIMZO-INDIAN DEFENSE Mart? Stoutenboraugh Stoutenboraugh White Else N-KB3 P-K3 B-NS P-04 BxNch P-B4 NxP 0-R4 OxPch 0-K4 02 NxP 0-K4 06ch N-B7ch White Black 1P-Q4 2P-0B4 3N-0B3 4- P-B3 5- POR3 PxB 7-PxQP H-PxP 9-P-K4 lfrB-07 11-NK2 13- B3 14- 0-04 15- X-Q 16- K-BZ 17- NxO 18- B-N5ch 19- PxP 20- RxN 21- N-K2 22- K-N2 23- R-Och 24 B-N4ct) 25B-B4cri 27RxPd 28- B-N3 29- B-R5ch 30- R-Q5ch 0x0 NxR KQ PxP P-K4 8-B4ch P-QR3 K-K2 KB? KK R-QB K-9 R-K K-Q2 Resigns "4 ltlk 4V- r.r 1 T.V- May Co stores except Downtown LA. 5y SAVE 56 king size fitted bottom sheets of white percale ff comparable value 7.99 ea.

refreshina after sa Impeccable white sheets, much color exposure. Here in king size fitted bottoms only, high-count cotton percales that wear so well end feel so luxurious. Come gather them up while the saving is high. Many of them first qualify. budget stores, domestics 8 03 except Wilshire 0DE 804SO OPEN TODAY, SUNDAY, AM.

TO 5:00 F.M. MAY CO BUDGET STORES DOWNSTAIRS, 8th Mill, LA. 90014 City- Co CO 0. Chorg. Chorg Account N.

Add 5 nl tax II dtliwrad In Colifnnia. Add ihipping choral (wyd UnM fofcl d.livKy 71c charg. for pitkur C.O.D.'t and ord.nj undw 5.00. Allow tnnw who for f. 59 TOLL-FREE NUMBER FOR YOUR AREA MA.

6-3535 ST. 1 -5000 NE. 5-71 71 CR. 6-2292 GI. 2-5360 Kl.

2-5666 OS. 6-0193 CI. 4-4161 lasVego 384-2794 Shop today, Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. at all MAY CO BUDGET siVouwira.wiram.eMtsm.eiwiM STORES WMO.TOMT,10.0MnMON;IWN..,TUtS.TOaT.iO.AfiCA WEST US ASiiLiS.Vit 0it6 SO. BAT, HONTCUiR.

MRLJBAO.KON. TO FR1. 10.9i39. SAT. D-fcCWiAaO.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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