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The Ottawa Journal from Ottawa, Ontario, Canada • Page 32

Location:
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
32
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

9 -V ft ft -i 32 Saturday January 2, LiTERATURE Sugar, By DILLON O'LEARY FROM COLUMBUS TO CASTROl The History of th Caribbean. By trie William. S7 pages. An4.ro Deatsch. SIT.fJ.

OLTAIRE sneered that Qanada is "a few. acres of "snow" when, by -the treaty of Paris which ended the Seven Years War in granted Canada to Britain As anyone can see, Voltaire had a point. Especially at that time, 1 France had done badly in the war.1 So she had the hard choice at the peace table of surrendering either the West Indies island of Guadeloupe, which the British had also captured, or Canada. Naturally, she chose to re-. tain Guadeloupe' and let Canada go.

Retain Guadeloupe? The choice seems preposterous today. Not so then. Guadeloupe and some other sugar islands of the" West Indies were money-winners for and Canada'a debit account for the empty French exchequer. The choice was a contentious one, but not only in France; in Britain a vocifer-' ous section of the governing class also wanted-Guadeloupe. But the Elder Pitt, then prime minister, chose Eric Williams in From Columbus to Castro, a history of the Caribbean, offers insights into the reasons behind Pitt's choice.

the millionaire sugar grandees of the Barbados, a Brtish colonyopposed British acquisition 'of Guadeloupe Their, logic was basic: Guadeloupe's sugar, cheaper due a fertile soil, would squeeze Barbados sugar out -of the protected British market if it gained entry when Guadeloupe became a British colony. The. Barbados plantation lords tained a powerful lobby in England, with the mercantile-shipping interests. That lobby had bought enough -seats in the House of Commons to make and break governments. So Pitt chose Canada.

Williams overlooks some other reasons. The New England and New York business interests were entering an expansive period. and coveted all Northwest; and. the American colonies, already in a mutinous 2 mood. were also tired of interminable 'wars with French Canada.

Their expectations that become British could hardly be ignored. Even so, this book, well written and extensively researched, is a fascinating story of the Caribbean area, and a mind-expanding one for -Canadians are interested in their hemispheric history. Williams, who is prime -The. Ottawa Journal and libe: Slavery and Imperialism minister of Trinidad and Tobago, is also' a historian with -four previous books to his credit. i Sugar and slaves.

That is the nub of the story. Wine, Women, Song and Cricket Columbus ing for gold. colonies was to shut West Indies There tested against as the will of The legacy ism has left And now of their good "We are uecs. ine. partial hit, sir well me DiurD on "is a thing of Food of Love he sugar cane Caribbean gold.

"sugar was centuries, just in the 20th Sugar shaped economies, the growing of fortunes. Sugar labor. After of the. native African blacks authorized it last Thus began which Europe's largely founded. vThe triangle ports for traded goods at sailed for the slaves for sugar, sold the sugar fattened into a in slaves.

In Britam'sX the triangular Small about profits Portugal, Britain. the United Caribbean ture, niurder Catholic Slave revolts Toussaint freed Santo Maroons of up a state within recognized by the ferment today. Thus Williams, ed from slaves, Black Power one understand deplores Castro's Cuba, yet admires of his accomplishments. he upen park Vienna is everlasting. say, the sand is As befits of sex in Neville: "English is only out of Austria that a she- is indeed a "I do not of London's as much to do sexual passions the erotically Beatles and the if any, erotic And for a Sir Neville, who one-day matches; fading days of like a poet for small piece of match between cricket's current "A man county, applauding good cricket by alike.

He the cloth-capped AtJasine was from the Lancashire The' dialogue like this: 'Tha enthusiastically. "Tha's not asked the man I 1 irom j-anKysnire 'Oh come up irom 'Oh, hast 'Then let me shut. This match Well, that's i aDoui nis second By JOHN LeBLANC" LONDON. "JN 1947 I was still a member' of the National Liberal Club in Whitehall Place. The vast building received a direct hit from a Hitler" bomb, demolishing the main staircase.

When I re-entered the portal -in Juhe, T947, not been there during the world's years of agony, the hail porter greeted me with: Oh, good evening sir some letters waiting for you here." This is from Neville Cardus, who is 81 and still types out foyely words on such diverse things as the opera and sport. He must be the best two-way man in the history of English literature. Every" day fans of 'Sir Neville, knighted in 1967, pick up The Guardian to see what he might be writing.about culture, or cricket, or maybe himself, which is more interesting a -subject than the others. Now Cardus has put down his memoirs in a book called Full. Score, a combination of music and sport.

The jacket calls it "a marvellous distillation of a life 'compounded by wine, women, song and cricket." For once, the Jjlurb is right. Cardus writes gently of his loves, merely suggesting that. he has been between the sheets with some noted stage andoperajtars -Here's a passage in a chapter about "one called only Mila'dy: "She burned a flame of sex and being. She" had found my wavelength; arid it was-a flame Jilown about Jtfullyjiow and then. She sensed what was passing through-my mind and.

in a low voice said: I have been naughty but I was educated in a convent in France and always help with the harvest, festival in pur Once when Cardus couldn't scare up tickets for himself and Milady at the Salzburg music festival, Milady took over and in an hour appeared with a- card of admission to the Herr Direktor's private box. When Cardus asked how she got this carte blanche, she replied: "I was-NICE to him." "And I find it necessary," Sir Neville "for the purposes of true and living communication, to have the word 'nice printed In capital letters." By GERALD LARNER THI VIINNA OPERA. By Marctl Prowy. Wiidn-' fK ond Nlcelion, Britain. J0RE than a picture book, Marcel Prawy's "Vienna Opera" is a substantial and fascinating read.

Prawy has spent most of his life in a professional as well as' emotional involvement with opera in Vienna, at present with the Volksoper, but his writing is neither PR work nor sentiment. He preserves due skepticism about even the most famous of Vienna Opera's directors," from expensive Mahler to even moe expensive Karajan. On the other hand, however, sorely tried by the productions of Wieland Wagner, and most modern he never leaves us in any and. the Spaniards came search But Columbus brought with hint and sugar became, the As Williams-Emphasizes, in the 16th, 17th fad 18th as were steel in the. 19th and oil most islands into plantation over-running Small farms for foodstuffs.

Sugar made vast seemed to demand slave slavery brought on the extermination Indians, the importation of began; the king of Spain had before Calumbus completed his' the "triangular trade" on commercial fortunes were was this. Ships left European Guinea, where they a profit for slaves. They then Caribbean, where they traded again at a profit. Then they in Europe at a profit. Liverpool great port because- of the trade the 17th century, 36 per cent of commercial profits were based on trade.

wonderif one is not fastidious soaked in black blood that Spain, France, Holland and, later, States, competed fiercely, for coloniesNmd their trade. Indeed, a revolt of the American the attempt by Britain New 'England children out of the commerce, priests so very few who pro slavery and its incessant tor and barbarity. Neaxly.all clergymen, and lauded' slavery God. were many. A fewsucceed-ed.

Louverture and Dessafines Domingo. Runaway slaves, the interior Jamaica, fought and set a state which was eventually treaty with Britain. of sugar, slavery and imperial Caribbean disorganized and in a prime minister descend-, faces agitation in Trinidad by advocates. His book may help why Williams, a moderate who totalitarian methods in Castro's purpose and some a writes of an actress, fill alive. times in 1935 or so: vounz and the snrine moraine is 4ann1 the lenwnf the mr icauxuiaiii in uic juiui- animated and, we could tmnK, Yet behind our backs, so to running out in the hour glass." Cardus, he writes as a connoisseur English music.

Here is Sir women have assured me that it England in France, Italy or woman is made aware that woman; not in England. regard the swinging sex obsessions 1970s as erotic. They have with romantic and civilized as pills, drugs, guitars and respectable waitings of the Rolling Stones. There is little, English poetry or music." switch to his beloved cricket detests the current trend to hymns nostalgically of the the. five-day games.

He writes chapters but here is justa Cardus catching the flavor of a Lancashire and Yorkshire, Battle of the sat among the denizens of the everything, appreciative of Lancashiremen and Yorkshire-men was looked at curiously by populace surrounding him. aaaresseu oy a manr- cieany hinterland." as translated by Cardus goes seemsto beenjoying-thisel' im thelmpartial spectator 'Splendid cricket. Oh well from these parts, are from Ramsbottom. 'Tha's not 11- 1 or lorKsnirer of poetry have sold 13,000 cop-" responded the enthusiast. 'I've ie, ungnion.

said the Lancastrian. tell thi to keep thy clapper has nowt to do with Sir Neville writing casually i iavorue pasume. Ana, as nis dook says, on every page simple, and expressive beauty. (Canadian Press) doubt as to the proportions of his love for the art and his love for the great house on the Ringstrasse. In fact, his history reads as though he had ta-fio no research and that all he did was to scratch his head for the details stored in his enthusiastic memory.

The magnificent series of pictures clearly did, however, requiFe' the most painstaking, research. They make a rewarding study, but it is a pity that there are no cross references between pictures -and text and a pity that the captions are not absolutely Pity too that Prawy should be clumsily translated from time to time although his bright style does in general survive a translation well above the average. (A Journaf-Guardiari Review) WrUers'Notehook: On Humorundin the Country By. WILFRID EGGLESTON "HEN I was a young reporter there was a harm- less bit of fantasy afloat among newsmen that the way to heaven was to "buy a country weekly and spend the rest of your life playing the village philosopher and taking lots, of time off for fishing, and hunting. It was all a part pf the conviction that God made the' country and man made the city and that there was something Idyllic and soul satis-, lying about the viUage and.

even the small town. It would be interesting to know how. this stereotype of the village" Did it arise in the nostalgia of people imprisoned in the big city and dreaming of their childhood? Did Oliver Goldsmith and A1-' fred and Wordsworth have something to do with it? Was it fostered by Hollywood and the New York stage? Cynics and realists came along and destroyed the illusion. The first really classic assault on the image that I recall was Edgar Lee Masters in his Spoon River Anthology. After things went from bad to worse and from there to Peyton Place.

The editor of the Peyton Place Gazette, if any, would hardly fit the sen-' timental portrait we all had of the village sage, kindly, grey -bearded, naive, ingenuous, assort of father confessor to his innocent village flock, 'v. started me on this train or tnougnt was a couple of paperbacks Santa thoughtfully put in my stocking, one "of which almost convinces that our youthful dreams about the village edi tor had some substanceafter all. It is called Theiuniof Ga- zette. Funniest Stones from Country Papers, and there is an introduction by Harry Golden the well known author and editor, Vho publishes what hexcalls "a monthly newspaper In North Carolina that is reallyXa personal journal" and who says that he is "a small town editor at heart." praises small -town humor as illustrated in the columns of the weekly newspaper. He reminds us TL IX 'i' 1 iviurc i nun fv filing miiuuiucu By JOHN CUNNINGHAM TORONTO (CP) Can a- lian'poet Langford Dixon of 'Toronto says he's making it on his own and is proud of it.

And for the cynics who maintain that making a living from poetry in Canada is about as difficult as selling snow in the Northwest Territories, Mr. Dixon's only comment was: "It can be done." "But," added the soft-spo-, ken poet, "you have to do the 'work yourself all of it." When Mr. Dixon said he does all the work himself, he meant it He not only writes his own poetry, he has it published fer him in a printing shop. He does the layout, the binding, the cuttinz and even sells most of the copies himself. A Tew are sold through book stores.

"A publishing house could do a better job," he admitted. "But the book would cost $5 to $6 a cppyNobody-would buy-it. 7 "My books sell for $1.25. I'd rather selllO books for a dollar each than two at Mr. Dixon said his six books "For a poet to sell 3,000 copies in Canada, that's a best-seller." His best selling collection of poems was The Devil You jch ne has had re- orinte(j five times "I don't think there is a bet ter testing ground for the quality of writing than having someone buy it," he said.

TO tJie quality of his poetry? "I leave thatup to the guy who reads it." Mr. Dixon said the sale of his poetry hasn't made him a rich man. Like the' rest of us, Jjfs plagued by rising costs. "You have to face these things. However, if you are going 'to survive in a field that's varied you have to do a lot of Mr.

Dixon, 49, has a case to prove, his point. He now is employed with the Ontario department of education as co-ordinator of a poetry exchange between Canada and the West Indies. He also finds time to give an av in I Wilfrid Eggleston that humor in otheKsettings (the night club?) -has become sick and black. "Meanwhile, small town humor retains its enduring values. It is not Mack.

It is not grim. It is not mocking. It is not always uproarious, but it is always sensible." -Perhaps there never was a time when small town humor was more badly needed, as antidote: Golden calls it "cheerful news in the midst of world news that's often bad. Small town hifMor distracts us from the ominous. It.

light- ens the heart FOUND this to be so. This Collection is and restores one's belief somewhat in the basic sanity, of the anonymous masses. The only quarrel I have with the book is that the title Is inaccurate. These are not "the funniest stories from country papers." They arethe pifty sayings, maxims, proverbs, aphorisms, seldom more than a sentence long, the distillations of wisdom by country editors, based on long acquaintance with man's peculiarities and foibles. As a sample, Lpick out two or three amost at random: "If at first you don't succeed, you're running about average." (News, Strong City, Kan.) "They say it is better to be poor and happy than rich and 'Making If as a erage of 30 recitals of poetry a year to elementary schools, communi colleges and teachers' colleges.

The schools pay for the appearances, Once, afain to prove a point, he rented Toronto's, fashionable Collonade Theatre' to give a poetry, recital to see "if. I could fill the He did just that. Turned out in a tux and tails and charging $2 a head, he performed to a capacity crowd. The Toronto Star, referring to the performance the next day, carried a headline: "Who would have thought poetry can'fill a theatre?" His total take for the recital after expenses was something jn the order of $9.60. "What really counted to me was the idea you could do it." pOR his school performances, Mr.

Dixon discards his rormarattireandgener-" ally dresses iasomewhat subdued and conventional suits. His appearance is more like that of a school principal than a visiting poet perhaps, the hair is slightly longer. The shoulder-lengtl locks and the roll-neck sweat- ers of many of the poets of the day are not for him, he said. On stage he' presents not only his own work but something of a kaleidoscope of Canada's poetic bistory. "I don't go along with people who say Canadians don't like poetry.

It's a lot of non- 1 sense. "Those that tell us Canadi-' ans are not interested in certainly have not had the pleasure of reading to the Canadians I've been reading to across the "One of the exciting things aboaf giving poetry reading is that you play it by ear you gauge the reaction in your audience. You lfave to give them something that gets hold of them. "When I'm in front of an audience I can't afford to be -indifferent I've got to deliver or soon lose my audience. I haven't lost an audience ytt'f JN job with the depart- ment of education, Mr.

weekly miserable. But couldn't something be worked out, such as being moderately rich and just moody?" (Gazette, Augusta, Kan.) "There's no point In meeting trouble Let it travel the fun distance something micht hannen to it C3 ri I en route." tNewsT Monon. Ind.) "One of the delicate jobs in life is teaching the kidshow to avoid hurting other people's feelings without being liars." (Record, Mt. Mo.) gUT not all of the humor- In country (or city) papers is intentional The other paper- is called Classified Hu- mor, and some of the humor stems from bloopers. There is the "misplaced modifier" slip, for example: LOST: Fountain pen by lady half-full of ink (whichls from the Spokane, Wash.

Press) or, more risque, LOST, Invalid's wheelchair by lady with a smooth cane bottom, (Which first saw light in the Phoenix, Ariz. Daily Journal). Some of them might be classified as Unconscious Candor, as with this item from the (Tehn.) Journal: Drive-In Theatre, God Created Woman Brlf gitte Bardot. In colorNot recommended for children, teen- -agers or adults." Or this from the Sonoma (Calif.) Daily Review: "Wl rend your garments elsewhere when our up-to-date laundry can do work more effectively?" Sometimes context is embarrassing, as "with this item in the Rome "(NY) Daily Sentinel: "PIANO MOVING: If you-have a piano to move, take advantage of our. expert, service arid careful handling." Kindling wood for sale." Let Clarence Tune Your Piano, says another classified ad.

"You won't know it when' he gets through with it." The Boston (Mass.) Globe was guilty of another ambiguous item: "No matter how small the matter is with your car, you can depend on Martin's garage making a major repair." 2 Poet Dixon encourages young poets, especially those in grade school, to write verse, some of which was published in a booklet by the department. He is also preparing tapes of the Canadian and Caribbean poems which are to be exchanged. Mr. Dixon described the exchange program as an advance project. "I don't know of any other government in the world that has hired a poet to get poetry into the schools." The former naval engineer, interior decorator, social worker, television and film scriptjyriter said his interest in poetry developed in almost an evolutionary process.

"After the war I decided I wanted to write. In writing I had one objective in mind. I was aiming' at saying as much as I could in as few words as possible and when you arrive -at-efficiency-with words you are actually writing poetry." GOREN ON BRIDGE oi i.ttAKL.tM uuhen i iwii Tie ceiceee Times i If WMIlWt WAellUlil Vl Q. 1 Neither vulnerable, as South you J85J K10I32 OAS IZ The bidding has proceeded: East South West North Pan Past Pm 1 Pan 1 Pan 2 Pan: What do you bid how? Q. East-West vulnerable, as South you hold: 4T VAK873 OKJ4 KQS2 The bidding has proceeded: South West North East IV Pbsb INT Past What do you bid now? Q.

As South, vulnerable, you hold: 4KQ 7AKJJ OAIJ 4Klff The bidding has proceeded: East, Soath 'West -North Pass Paw Pisa 1 4 Dble. 2 4 iV 'Pats' What do you bid now? Q. 4 Neither vulnerable, at South you hold: 4 OKQJ19SS7 413 The bidding hat proceeded: North East South what do you bid? An iUtic; Salt Shdker By E.E.E. HUROK was the manager of Feoddt Chaliapin when the latter was a star at the Metropolitan Opera. The Russian who had an ex-: plosive clashed frequently with his colleagues; One day, he traded angry words with Gatti-Casazza, the Met general manager, who had a pretty fiery temper himself.

They were still fuming when friends separated them. It-was apparent to Hurok that if there was to be a re-conciliation, he would have to effect it, as both men were too proud to take the first step After allowing a little time for tempers ta cool, he went to Gatti and told him that Calia-pln regretted the things he had and-had instructed him to offer an apology. This done he went po Chaliapin and told the singer that Gatti 'was reproaching himself for his-bitter words, and had authorized him (Hurok) to extend bis Pretty soon, Gatti emerged from his office and Chaliapin came out of his dressing Meeting in the corridor, they threw their-arrhsround each ether and pledged eternal friendship. "Hurok, having weathered another crisis, breathed easily again. JNTRODUCED to ai American society queen, Sacha Guitry bent over her hand and kissed it.

"Why do you French always kiss a lady's hand when yotf meet her?" she demanded. "Madam," shrugged the actor, "it's a start." DOROTHY, PARKER doted on apgs. sne gusnea over 'them, she even talked to them, relates John Keats in You Might As Well Live: The Life and Times of Dorothy Parker." "On xone occasion, she a couple of friends drove to a "dog showIn the car was -a boxer belonging to one of the riders. It claimed her entire attention on the way, uptown. "Arrived at thexshowplace, she expressed' amazement when she learned that.

the boxer could not be admitted as a guest, like any You mean he catj't see other she demanded. "The man at the door explained that the only dogs al- lowed inside were those being shown. Since the boxer was not being shown, it would have to remain outside. In scornful outrage, Dorothy returned to the car and said to the boxer: "'We're, going to a fish show." ROBERT LEHMAN, the banker and art collector, was a shy man who avoided the public eye, reports Calvin Tomkins in "Merchants and Masterpieces: The Story of the Metropolitan Museum of Art." v-- one day by a classmate who invited him to a fund-raising juncheon for their alma mater, Yale University, Lehman inquired somewhat plaintively whether he might not just send a check for $40,000 instead. "His classmate gravely informed him that he could not-get away so easily the class expected half a million from him at the very least.

Oh well, sighed Lehman, might as well go to the TAN A I had reached the cautious age of 30 when he went to England to make his debut. Although confident of his ability, was aware of the pitfalls in the path of a concert artist. Not too proud to accept assistance, he asked a well-known musician for a letter of recommendation to influential fBotn vulnerable, at South vou hold- eK943 VKQJS3 Oil The bidding hit proceeded: Wett North East South 2 3 Past IWtsk) What do you bid? Q. As South, vulnerable, you hold: Q10 874 82 OJtIS eAK The bidding has proceeded: South West North East Pan 1 1 pan leV Past '24 Pan. What do you bid now? Q.

7 Both vulnerable, at South you hold: KS4 VAQll OAKI KJ87 Tha bidding hat proceeded: South West North East 1 Pan Past 2 4 What do you bid now? Q. As South, vulnerable, you hold: AQ1 5 OAQ32 4KQM2 The bidding hat proceeded; North East South West Past Pan 1 Past 1' Pan What do you bid now? Look for ontverM Monday) 7 Londoners, who might further his career. The musician gave hmi a a sealed 'envelope. Paderewski had every intention of making it on his own, -but he wanted the letter, just In' case. As it turned out, his success was immediate and he had no occasion to make use of it.

Several years later, while going through his papers, he came upon the letter. Curious, he opened it and read: will, introduce, Jan Paderewski, who loves to play the piano, for' which he has no conspicuoVis talent" 7 DURING a. visit to the i jn 1964, James. Roosevelt reminisced about, his father's first in augural in 1933, records Lady Bird Johnson, in Wftte, House Diary." "FDR's youngest son John, then 16 and at school, had a ramshackle car of his own. He went, out to some late parties after the Inaugural Ceremo- nieswereover, "The President had told him he must come in by 11 o'clock, ecuse the-gate-dosed thenr He didn't.

He got to the gate at 3 a.m. The guard looked at him with a jwary eye when young Roosevelt introduced himself, and said: "No son of a President would be riding around in a car like that!" "Se--J6hn. had to go to a ho. tel for the 'night, James said he" thought that's why John is a Republican now." -f ROOSEVELT. -'i possessed a pro "digious memory; rarely forgot anything he read.

For him, to -scan a printed page was to memorize it. Years later, he could recall the contents verbatim, -Aftep, leaving the White House 'TR travelled One night, at a banquet in Budapest, he was called on unexpectedlyto say a few words. As the got. tq his feet; he paused for a moment-to assemble his. thoughts.

Then, without hesitating for a moment, he, delivered a schol-1 arly address on life in Hun- gary in the Middle Ages; Later, he was asked how he had come to choose such an off-beat subject. "I didn't 'choose it." explained Roosevelt; "When I stood up, .1 had no idea what I was going to say. Then a book on Hungarian history, which I had read in college, flashed mk and I just began to read' from it" CHESS By D. M. LtDAIN Block 8 Piece White 10 Piece White to ploy and win.

Slopero vs. Htym, Lugano, If it (Solution next week) Solution to lost week's problem (Bunting): Key, I.Q-QB3. 6 AMBITS GALORI In the Gambit tourney at ihe Ottowo RA Chess Club, arranged by N. K. Holden, ptoyers selected which section they would ploy in, Scotch, Vienna, Morra, Danish or Evans.

Winners in ttie sections completed so tor ore D. 4VAi A. Donwnom, Perth, 0nt S4, ond N. 5-0: Gombits, olthough seldom seen in rooster ptoy (except the Queen's Gom-bit) usuoMy provide a tot of lively play. The response this time Indicates mm nwniueis huuiu nn iiiwe ui i nm rittv.

uuv It uytll m-ftKnhl be the famous King' Gombit. Beginning Jan. 7, the RA C.C. will hold tourneys for club members, one five-round Swiss in two sections of approximately eauol strength, and which will be rated. N.

Holden wlH direct. For top players there Will be an Invltotlonol round robin under the direction of A. Westwell. Player who hove signified their Intention to com- i Include Lawrence Day (2272), cori. Belsheim (2117), Mlro Howat (2087), Dr.

K. Wmterton (2036), John Mac-. Phoil ond Charles Jeanneret, a newcomer who olaced third hi the recent city chomptonshlp. a.ih mo whit! Bioek: R. J.

Fischer J. Rubinettl (U.S.A.) (Argentina) White frf-M 2. N-KB3 3. P-04 4. NxP 5.

N-QB3 B-QB4 7. B-N3 i. 0-O R-Kl 10. B-NS llB-XRl. 12.

B-5S Block P-QB4 P-Ql Pxf N-KBJ P-K3 P-QR3 P-QN4 B-Nl QN-02 P-KR3 N-B4 PXB White Black 13. PxP aVehr-tCc 14. PU N-R5 15. NxN PxN H. P-QB4 17.

QxRP 1I.Q-N3 19. B-N3 20. P-BS 21. P)cP 22. R-KSch 23.

0-R4ch K-Bl Q-02 P-KN4 N-R4 PXP OxOP-K-Q2 B-B3 24. HxB Resigns (a) (a) 24. KxR; 2. N-N4 d.ch. From the -170 25.

R-Klch, K-Q2 Interionol, Polmo, Moorc: BINONI DEFENCI White: Block S. Reshevtky R. 4. Fischer iag a. White Block V.

white B4aek T.P-Q4 N-KB3 W.R-N1 QR-N1 2. P-QB4 P-QB4 17. B-Q5 N-B3 3. N-KB3 PxP 1.B-R3 KR-K1 4. NxP P-K3 19.CX33 NxB I.

N-OB3 B-N5 20. PxN F-ON4 P-K3 N-KS 21. P-K4 B-Bl 7. Q-B2 NxN. 22.H-N4 R-K4 I.

PxN B-K2 2S.P-B4 QR-K1 B-K2 0-0 .24. PxP PxP 10.0-0 P-QR3 25. K-Rl (o) Q-K2 11. P-B4 P-Q3 24.QXP RxKP 12. P-KB5 PxP 27.

RxR QxR 3. NxP BxN 21. Q-07 Q-KB5I 14. QxB N-Q229. K-N1(b) 1J.

B3 Q-B2 Q-QJch-' 30. K-R1 Q-B7 Resigns (oHLeavIng his bock rank vulnerable. Instead 25. P-KR3 wos indicated, (b) Or, 2.Q-N5, 0-K5 30.P-KR3, Q-Q7 l.QxQ, RxQ; 32.R-R1, R-Q7 etc..

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1885-1980