Sunday, April 24, 2011

A GeekDad Learns an Important Lesson from his Daughter

Please check out Mark Changizi's blog post of April 19, 2011 at GeekDad/wired.co.uk.  He taught his 8 year old daughter how to play chess one day, and the next day she came to him with rules for a new and improved version.  Say what!?!

I was understandably touched when she came to me the next day wishing to play chess. "Of course!" I replied. "Great," she said. "Here are the rules."

She handed me a packet of papers, and at the top of the first she had written, "Plastic Animal Chess." Below this was an enumeration of the kinds of pieces to be used (with blanks where we would record which plastic animals would be the stand-ins for each type), along with what each kind of piece does.

"This is complicated, Honey," I wondered aloud, worried it would be far too difficult for her -- and me. There were, by the end of her four hand-written pages, 10 distinct piece types and 18 pieces in all. "Chess only has six types, and it is already immensely difficult!" I said.

But more than my fright at the complexity of her game was another reaction, this one in my gut. Wasn't there something mildly wrong about this new game of hers? Chess is a revered institution. What kind of heretic plays chess once and immediately presumes to do better?

Without intellectual inquiry and curiosity, mankind will stagnate at the least, and could go extinct at the worst. Encouraging people how to think for themselves - to come up with new thoughts, new ideas, new concepts - is vital to the continuation of our species. We need this kind of creativity on both an individual and collective basis to continue to survive, to grow, to thrive, both individually and collectively as socieities, as a world. Is this something that can be taught? Or is it something innate that, somehow, doesn't get stomped out of just a few of us as we grow up?

More Las Vegas Photos

I had not been inside the Caesar's Palace Forum Shoppes for a few years, so I was absolutely unprepared for what I saw.  I entered through an entrance that hadn't been there before - nothing new there, though, as things change constantly in Vegas, even things I and other people love and don't want to see changed! 

After walking through the entrance it was time to be awed! 
View of the Sphinx that rests inside the tube formed by the spiral escalators.
Double spiral escalators!  Seeming to arise out of a classically shaped and styled pool with fountains.
Surrounded by marble benches to sit and rest a spell and enjoy the ambiance. 
Views from the going up spiral escalator.

The atrium dome overlooking all.


More Pics from Las Vegas

From Caesar's Palace Gardens, looking south toward one of the Imperial Palace buildings.

Caesar's Palace has many fountains, inside and outside.  This is on the path north toward the main entrance to the Forum Shops.  In the background is part of the street facade of Harrah's.


Love this view toward the north.  On the far right you can see the top of the Paris faux Eiffel Tower, then the Cosmopolitan with City Center buildings behind it; on the right of the sign is part of the Caesar's Palace complex.

Roses, roses all over!  Las Vegas gardens are filled with them right now, in full bloom. This is a shot looking south,
with the facade of the Flamingo (Donny and Marie are currently stationed there), then Ballys, and behind that
is Paris.  You can really see the good bones of this garden - the strong vertical elements in the upright dark green cypress and the closely clipped hedges of various evergreens provide interest all year round.

Looking south toward the Cosmopolitan.  Caesar's Palace Gardens features a long classically-styled pool with three fountains, surrounded by a walkway complimented with symetrically styled beds on all sides.  I tucked myself in here and there to take these photos.  The air in the gardens was filled with the scents of the flowers and there was a light spray from the fountains carried on the breeze.  In this photo you can see the newest addition -  Serendipity's, which has a large outdoor  public seating area off the street, under a large open-air tent structure.  A great place to take a break from the hustle-bustle, enjoy a drink and people watch.

A view toward one of the staircases in the Caesar's Palace Gardens.  I love the Siberian Iris (the deep purple flowers with the spikey leaves) that were all over the gardens!  The gardens are "sunken" in relation to the rest of the architecture on the Caesar's Palace Grounds.  You really get a feeling of being in another place and time, despite being everywhere surrounded by monumental facades which ever way you look.  Whoever designed these gardens - perfect!

2011 U.S. Chess Championships Live Coverage

I've been listening to it for the past couple of hours and I'm bored, frankly.  The women's games are being totally ignored, all the interest is focused on Kamsky v. Shankland.  Oh fricking please.

But you see, this is what happens when "combined" championships are held.  The women's games get ignored totally.  What a shame.  It's a damn shame.  We've got the best female players in the United States going at it hammer and tongs and there is NO coverage or analysis by the sponsors.

By the way, please do not throw that insufferable bore, Hikaru Nakamura, in my face again, PLEASE, St. Louis Chess Club.

Turning it off now, I can't take anymore.  Gee, thanks, sponsors, for putting what is supposed to be the premiere women's chess event in the country BACK into the women's chess ghetto.

Updated 6:22 p.m.

Men's event (the Open):
Kamsky with white defeats Shankland with black - Kamsky goes forward to Championship match
Hess with white draws Shulman with black - 2 game play-off tomorrow

Women's event:
Krush with white defeats Zatonskih with black
Baginskaite with white looks to be on the worse side against Abrahamyan with black

Updated 6:27 p.m.

Live coverage ends. Well that sucks big time! There's a game still going on, but it's only a "women's game" and no one (except me, it seems) cares.

Updated 6:42 p.m.

Abrahamyan (black pieces) wins.  Here is the final position.

Both sets of women go to two game play-offs tomorrow.  Is this Tatev's year???

2011 U.S. Chess Championships

I'm back home with a working wireless connection, hooray!

The first place I went for coverage of what's been going on in the U.S.  championships is The Week in Chess and it did not disappoint.  Nice writing about the play-off matches between Sam (I'm gonna quit chess) Shankland and second-highest rated player of the men GM Alexander Onischuk.  Shankland defeated Onischuk in a two-game play-off under shortened time controls (game in 25 minutes plus time increment added per move), so the final four going into the "final" part of the Men's - er, excuse me, "Open" tournament - are young guns Shankland and Robert Hess versus experienced Gata Kamsky and Yury Shulman.

In the Women's Championship things got interesting with a play-off between two-time U.S. Women's Chess Champion IM Anna Zatonskih and Sabrina Foisor, who'd started her tournament off with a bang by defeating reigning U.S. Women's champ IM Irina Krush.  Zatonskih, one of the highest rated female players in the United States, was favored to cruise to a position in the top four players to advance to the second part of the Championship.  Things did not go so well for her, though.  She was forced to battle back from a -1 position to even get to a play-off birth.  However, Zatonskih rallied sufficiently to win both play-off games against Foisor.  Keep an eye on Foisor.  She has always shown a lot of promise, having been playing since she was a mere tyke, raised in a family of chessplayers who play in the European circuit. 

Final

RankNameScoreM/FRatingTPRW-We1234567
1IM Krush, Irina5.5F24722578+0.84011111½
2WGM Baginskaite, Camilla4.5F23422468+1.2301½11½½
3WFM Abrahamyan, Tatev4.5F23262470+1.4010½11½½
4IM Zatonskih, Anna4.0F24992394-0.92½1½0011
5WGM Foisor, Sabina-Francesca4.0F23502415+0.6511½10½0
6IM Goletiani, Rusudan2.0F23672205-1.55½00010½
7WIM Zenyuk, Iryna2.0F22452222-0.27½01000½
8FM Melekhina, Alisa1.5F23042142-1.38½0000½½


Pairings Semi Finals game 1 (Saturday, 23 April 2011)


TableWhiteScoreRatingBlackScoreRatingResult
1IM Zatonskih, Anna0.02499IM Krush, Irina0.024721-0
2WFM Abrahamyan, Tatev0.02326WGM Baginskaite, Camilla0.023420-1


Pairings Semi Finals game 2 (Sunday, 24 April 2011)


TableWhiteScoreRatingBlackScoreRatingResult
1IM Krush, Irina0.02472IM Zatonskih, Anna1.02499
2WGM Baginskaite, Camilla1.02342WFM Abrahamyan, Tatev0.02326


The winners of these mini-matches will face-off against each other for the Championship crown.  As you can see, both Krush and Abrahamyan need to score wins today to force play-off games.

Blast from the Past: Anna Hahn, 2003 U.S. Women's Chess Champion

2003 U.S. Chess Champion Alexander Shabalov and
2003 U.S. Women's Chess Champion Anna Hahn
(photo from Chessbase article below)
There was downright consternation in certain circles in the U.S. chess scene when Anna Hahn (formerly she was known as Anna Kahn) won the U.S. Women's Chess Championship in 2003.  You see, she wasn't supposed to do that - play and actually win!Under the rules at the time, her title provided her an automatic birth on the U.S. Women's Chess Olympiad team that would be played in 2004, and certain people didn't want that to happen, possibly because they believed that Hahn was not a strong player and would bring down the team's chances of winning a medal.  And that was the big goal - to win a medal for the first time.  One of the best female players in the world at that time, GM Susan Polgar, was on the U.S. team (although it was all "unofficial" at that time as the team had not yet been announced), and a member of Garry Kasparov's "team" was providing intensive training to the women "unofficially" selected to the "training team" as they called it.  And so, the USCF hurriedly scheduled another "championship," holding two in one year!  Hahn lost her title to another player, who was promptly named to the "official" women's Olympiad team as the "reigning" U.S. Women's Chess Champion. 

Hahn was treated disgracefully.  Chess politics really really sucks.  Hahn left chess and went on to a successful career in, I believe, the investment banking industry.  Perhaps it really is true what the pundits say about those who play chess for a living.

Chessbase wrote an article about Hahn's victory in 2003.

A Jim Perry interview with Hahn after her 2003 title win. 

The dirt from Mig Greengard's Chess Ninja

I've blogged about Anna Hahn

Back from Vegas, Baby!

Oh my - and I want to go right back, LOL!  Weather was announced by the pilot as we zoomed in over my hometown from the southwest that the temperature was 59 degrees F.  Yeah, right!  It was fricking COLD out there, but at least there is no snow on the ground! I'm already coughing and hacking again from the surfeit of allergens suspended in the air, and shivering underneath a mondo large sweater because, despite the house being heated to 65 degrees F, there is still chill dampness in the air.  I hate this frigging climate. 

As the taxi whisked me home from the airport, I found myself wondering "where are all the cars?  Where are all the people?"  Every single thing that I saw at Mitchell International Airport was CLOSED.  And things actually were semi-busy for this time of night (my flight landed at 10 p.m. and arrived at the terminal about 6 minutes later).  Five flights arrived more or less within 30 minutes of each other so luggage pick-up was crowded with many hundreds of people looking for their checked bags.  But - no restaurants or bars open (could have used a quick drink); no sundries shops open!  TSA checkpoints CLOSED!  If that doesn't define Milwaukee as a hick town, I don't know what does. 

There were all of three (yes, three) cabs in the taxi queque when I finally wheeled my bag out to "Ground Transportation."  I got the second taxi in line and was home in about 12 minutes.  It's good to be back home, but it sucks, too!  Already I miss the hustle and the bustle of the Las Vegas Strip, despite the often claustrophobic conditons of trying to walk along Las Vegas Boulevard and, despite living out of suitcase for the past four days, I miss sleeping in my kingsized bed with the door to my own private balcony open, with just a sheet on to keep me "warm."  Ahhhh....

I sure do wish I could afford to live in New York City when I retire.  I love the weather in Las Vegas, even the tremendous strangling heat Mr. Don and I experienced when visiting for my birthday a couple years ago in August, but I won't kid you.  It was brutal.  The weather was breaking temperature records then.  Interestingly, while Mr. Don and I were breakfasting at the Peppermill a few days ago ( a sentimental visit; the prices are no longer what I consider a bargain but the food is still good and we never felt pressured to leave our table once we finished eating.  We left a generous tip in consequence -- ) we both couldn't help but overhear a conversation taking place right next to us between a local talking to a young guy who was hopeful of moving to LV.  The local was telling him that last year summer temperatures broke all-time record highs. That was an eye-opener.  All-time highs had been broken while Mr. Don and I were there in August, 2009.  And in 2010, new all-time highs were set. Whoa!  I've a feeling that will become the new normal now that climate changes are settling in over our part of the globe.

Anyway, I had a wonderful time! Good company, good food - I'm sure Mr. Don still has not begun to talk himself out and now he'll have to wait until our trip to Spain in January, 2012 to exercise his vocal chords to such effect again. 

I ran around this morning taking some photos at nearby Caesar's Palace, one of my favorite hang-outs.  It has changed so much over the years from the first time I saw it way back in 1981 (that Las Vegas is almost now totally disappeared and certainly the Caesar's Palace from that era is long gone).  I had taken several photos when venturing out early in the morning (early for Las Vegas, that is) but discovered, much to my dismay, that my memory card was full and nothing recorded).  My frustration and disappointment - well, to make a long story short, Mr. Don gave me a spare memory card he had yesterday (that is, on Good Friday), but we were so busy at Georgia and Michelle's place putting together a gas barbecue grill for 'Sis that I never took the camera out of my purse.

Sis pulled out a large cardboard box to the covered patio area yesterday about 1:30 p.m.  "Here's the grill," she proudly announced.  OH SHIT, I said to myself.  Maybe I said it out loud, too. 

And I tell you I never want to undertake such a frigging project ever ever again.  The miracle is that the damn thing did eventually get put together, after we had to partially deconstruct it at least 3 separate times because somehow a prior vital step had got overlooked -- and it didn't blow up when Sis tested it out. I suppose it's a miracle since we ended up with a few of "those" and did not have enough of "them" to construct the grill according to the instructions (if we'd done it right, that is). 

In any event, we got damn good grilled steaks off of it for our efforts.  And now Sis and Michelle have a gas grill. But I swore to the Goddess that if I ever give up using my Weber charcoal grill, I will get only get a gas grill if it is fully put together beforehand by EXPERTS, and personally delivered, set-up and tested before I ever use it! And I will never undertake such a project again.  Ever.  I'd rather write a thesus.

Here are some photographs from the grounds of Caesar's ever-changing Palace.  They provide a beautiful, peaceful and cool oasis amidst the hustle-bustle and they front right on Las Vegas Boulevard.  The grounds and location also provide endless spectacular views of the Las Vegas Strip both north and south.

Just starting on the north path off Las Vegas Boulevard on to Caesar's Palace garden grounds. 
Everywhere, roses are in full bloom in Las Vegas.

Looking at one of Harrah's Casino and Resort iconic signs with the "Jesters"  as I walked toward the entrance to the new Forum Shops at Caesar's Palace (on the left).  This is looking toward the northeast. 

This is a shot of the Imperial Palace, which is located just to the south of Harrah's, as I panned my camera from the
north to the south.  My room at the IP was on the 15th floor looking out toward this view.  Gorgeous! 

On the grounds of Caesar's Palace, looking south toward the City Center and the Cosmopolitan.  Everywhere are
banks of flowers, especially this time of year, fragrant roses.  The groundskeepers do a magnificent job. In front
of the hedge, wave after wave of fragrant petunias. 

On my way out of the Forum Shops, I took this photo of the large fountain area just to the south of the main entrance.
As you can see, it was a beautiful day, about 80 degrees F, a breeze out of the south, not too strong, just enough to provide some cooling. The sun is extremely intense.  I got a sunburn without even trying. 

More photos tomorrow.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

2011 U.S. Women's Chess Championship

Somehow I missed R4 - ah, I know, I was going crazy last night trying to get Sis' and Michelle's family tree done!

R5 standings:


RankNameRating12345678Score
1IM Krush, Irina2472x0  1 1 1  1 4.0
2WGM Foisor, Sabina-Francesca23501 x ½  0 1 1 3.5
3WGM Baginskaite, Camilla2342  x0 ½ 1 1 1 3.5
4WFM Abrahamyan, Tatev23260 ½ 1 x1 1   3.5
5IM Zatonskih, Anna24990  ½ 0 x 1 ½ 2.0
6IM Goletiani, Rusudan23670 1 0 0  x½  1.5
7WIM Zenyuk, Iryna2245 0 0  0 ½ x1 1.5
8FM Melekhina, Alisa23040 0 0  ½  0 x0.5

Generated by Swiss Master for Windows on 19-04-2011 at 19:12

Krush defeated Zatonskih today to move into the lead.  Foisor lost to Goletiani.  Not the way to keep pace for one of four spots to go into the women's "final".  Step up your game, girl.  Melekhina is having a horrid tournament.  Is she just out of form or is she not feeling well?  I know she's a better player than this record is showing.  Tatev is being - Tatev.  She always seems to be teetering on the brink and then she somehow manages to come through.  I would like to see her make it through to the "final."

Got to go - Mr. Don just called, he's downstairs, lost at the Concierge desk.  LOL!

Here were the rankings after R4:

Ranking after round 4 (Tuesday, 19 April 2011)

RankNameScoreM/FRatingTPRW-We1234
1WGM Foisor, Sabina-Francesca3.5F23502673+1.4411½1
2IM Krush, Irina3.0F24722579+0.530111
3WGM Baginskaite, Camilla2.5F23422469+0.6701½1
4WFM Abrahamyan, Tatev2.5F23262478+0.8110½1
5IM Zatonskih, Anna2.0F24992341-0.81½1½0
6WIM Zenyuk, Iryna1.5F22452293+0.20½010
7IM Goletiani, Rusudan0.5F23672024-1.62½000
8FM Melekhina, Alisa0.5F23042037-1.22½000

Generated by Swiss Master for Windows on 19-04-2011 at 19:12

We're Here in Sunny Las Vegas!

Whew - finally!  Flight went smoothly except for some turbulence here and there, nothing that was nerve-rattling, thank goddess!  I left behind about 34 degrees and sleety/snowy/rainy yechy when the cab came at 9:30 this morning.  Arrived in mostly sunny skies and 80 degrees in LV and am still in the process of cooling down my hotel room!  What a change - from turning down my heat this morning to 60 at the house and turning on the AC in this room!

After what seemed an unusual amount of frustrations I finally got the WIFI going and paid for three days access.  Well, it's a cheap hotel but excellent location on the Strip, so I don't mind paying for WIFI access.  Wish the air conditioning unit was a little less noisy, but then, it does tend to drown out the sounds of partying and , er, other activities on either side of me when Vegas really gets going about 2 in the morning, if you know what I mean. 

As you can tell since I'm writing this, the Southwest Airlines jet that brought me here did not lose it's roof at 38,000 feet!  It was a full flight - at the most there were like 2 seats left over.  Wow!  For a shitty economy people from Milwaukee sure are still piling into Vegas.  Flight arrived right on time and the shuttle ride actually took less than an hour!  Amazing, absolutely amazing.  I'm waiting for Mr. Don to get here from where he's staying (Riviera) which is not that far from me as the crow flies but in Las Vegas there is no such thing as a straight line for pedestrians :)  He suggested I head out and meet him half way but, knowing our hopeless senses of direction we'd miss each other by 10 feet and be wandering around all night trying to find each other and missing messages at our hotels. We are both dinosaurs - no cell phones!  I hate the fricking things, truth be told.  Before, at least I would have relatively peaceful and quite rides on the bus - but NOW, I am subjected to the most stupid drivel and most intimate secrets of strangers that - trust me - I DO NOT WANT TO KNOW.  Have people no shame?  Geez! 

The weather promises to be beautiful while we're here, except perhaps windy tomorrow and Thursday.  Sure beats what I left behind in Milwaukee!

Now, about that family tree I put together for 'Sis and Michelle - whew!  I STILL haven't finished the monster.  Well, it's my own darn fault.  Instead of steadily working on print-outs, hole punching and organizing the stuff in this gigantic binder I bought, I kept digging for further information.  So, there I was last night and it was midnight and I'm going - I'm never going to finish this!  I solved that problem by hole punching everything and just throwing it into my bag along with the huge binder already stuffed full of family information.  At least I fell asleep for a few hours, I was that tired when I finally hit the sack.  When I travel I don't sleep well the night before - and this morning I knew my blood pressure was abnormally high, even after taking my medication.  Drat!  But things seem back to normal now, thank goddess!  Later I'll finish sorting through the stuff that didn't make it into the binder and get it where it belongs.

I never realized how heavy this laptop is!  I mean, at the most it's like 3 or 4 pounds (it's not an uber-expensive uber-thin model) and this morning going to the airport, no problem lugging it along in a Land's End bag.  But for some reason when I got off the plane earlier this afternoon suddenly I swear the thing weighs a ton!  Now I have to find a hiding place for it in my hotel room - good luck with that, LOL! 

I'll see if I can get a few blogs in before Mr. Don arrives.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Peruvian Textile Remnants Confirm Occupation at Least 12,000 Years Ago

Past Horizons has an excellent presentation on the recent dating of textile remnants recovered from the Guitarrero Cave high in the Andes Mountains 30 years ago!  Although other artifacts also recovered from the cave dated to about 12,000 years ago, it wasn't certain how old, exactly, the textile remnants were.  Now - applying the newest tecnological advances in dating delicate objects - we have an answer.

12,000 Year Old Textiles Found in Peruvian Cave
April 17, 2011

“By dating the textiles themselves, we were able to confirm their antiquity and refine the timing of the early occupation of the Andes highlands,” Jolie said. His team used the latest radiocarbon dating technique—accelerated mass spectrometry—to place the textiles at between 12,100 and 11,080 years old.


You can see from the woven fabric remnants the "checkerboard" pattern innate within the ancient weave technique. 

2011 U.S. Chess Championships

Young buck Sam Shankland has lept to the top of the pack in the B Group in the Championship.  For a dude who last year swore up and down he was quitting chess, that's pretty darn good.  LOL!  Good for you, Sam Shankland, keep up the good chess.  He's a cutie and he has a lot of passion for the game, always a good combination in my eyes :)

Larry Christiansen (wily veteran) and Robert Hess (another young buck) are behind him with 2.0 each.

In the A Group, Kamsky, Shulman, and Ivanov (all wily veterans) are on 2.0 each. 

Women's cross-table after R3:

I'm still not clear on what's going on with this event.  At this point, I know there is another round tomorrow for the ladies (the men, too).  After that, I don't know! 

Another Newton Family Beauty :)))

Meet Milena, the youngest edition to the Newton family via my nephew Ken and his wife Osayo.  She is seven months old and my sister (Grandma Debbie) is absolutely doting on her, her first grandchild.  She's gorgeous and you've got to love those two little teethies showing!  Ah, those big brown eyes, those chipmunk cheeks.  That brown hair, that little itty bitty chin.  Hmmmm, she could be mine, come to think of it...

So, this makes me a -- grand-aunrtie?  A great-auntie?  I don't know what the difference is, but I'm one several times over! 

Zahi Hawass Sentenced to One Year in Prison!

Unbelievable!  It's like - every time I open up my email something totally disfunctional is coming out of Egypt.  Egypt, oh Egypt.

Antiquities chief Zahi Hawass sentenced to one year in jail
Zahi Hawass was sentenced to one year in jail Sunday for declining to fulfill a court ruling
Hatem Maher , Sunday 17 Apr 2011

Minister of State for Antiquities Affairs Zahi Hawass has been sentenced to one year in jail on Sunday for refusing to fulfill a court ruling over a land dispute.

The Egyptian criminal court also said Hawass must be relieved of his governmental duties and ordered him to pay a LE1000 penalty.

Hawass failed to adhere to a ruling in favour of his opponent over a land dispute when he was in charge of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA).

The SCA appealed the court ruling, arguing that the land includes monuments and therefore should be treated as government-owned land.

Hawass was recently re-appointed as antiquities chief in the newly-formed cabinet of Prime Minister Essam Sharaf.

Hales Corners Chess Challenge XIII - Final Update!

The final results/standings have been posted at the USCF website.  Final tally of players:  105!  This is just two players short of the highest-ever registration in Challenge IX in April, 2009.  Several photographs from Challenge XIII have been posted at the Southwest Chess Club's blog. Goddesschess' heartfelt thanks to Southwest Chess Club for once again putting on a fine event and congratulations to all of the winners.

There was a four-way tie for first place in the Open:



I hope I did not miss any chess femmes - here are the ones I have for the Open:
42 | TEJA KARIMIKONDA               |1.5  |L  24|D  20|L  43|B   0|
   WI | 14212197 / R: 1108  - 1138 
      |            Q:  882   - 921
  48 | PATRICE B CONNELLY             |1.0  |L  45|L  34|W  57|L  28|
   IL | 12728968 / R: 1587  - 1564
      |            Q: 1181  - 1203
 50 | RACHEL J ULRICH                |1.0  |W  56|L  16|L  26|L  29|
   IL | 13384485 / R: 1493  - 1508
      |            Q: 1440  - 1449
  53 | SANDRA R PAHL                  |1.0  |L  40|W  56|L  11|L  30|
   WI | 10318033 / R: 1349   ->1381
      |            Q: 1258  - 1281

Each win by a woman in the Open won $40 and each draw won $20 from Goddesschess. In addition, should the top female scorer choose to enter Challenge XIV, Goddesschess will pay her entry fee.

Reserve Section:

The ladies:

  8 | SUSANNA G ULRICH               |3.0  |W  38|L  19|W  20|W  21|
   IL | 13498414 / R: 1234  - 1361
      |            Q: 1059  - 1227 
48 | REBECCA RHEA MACKEY            |0.0  |L  17|L  42|L  39|L  44|
   WI | 14563835 / R:  363P7 - 351P11
      |            Q:  346P7 - 186P11

If she chooses to enter Challenge XIV, Goddesschess will pay Ms. Susana Ulrich's entry fee as her prize for finishing as top female scorer in the Reserve Section.

Congratulations to the ladies!  You go girls! 

The Texas Tech Night Raiders Win the Final Four of Chess

This is just an outstanding achievement by this young team.  The first part of the championship occurred in my hometown, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, at the end of December, 2010.  Although I was unable to attend any of the games (December is crunch time in estate and tax planning), it was my pleasure to provide several gift baskets of Wisconsin goodies for the Texas Tech contingent.  Texas Tech's "A" Team made it into the final four, and Texas Tech's other two teams placed well in the overall competition.  Maybe fueling up on fresh  Wisconsin cheese, sausage, chocolates and assorted other goodies did the trick :)

Kudos to GM Susan Polgar and Paul Truong, who took over the coaching program at Texas Tech University in 2007 in conjunction with the establishment of the Susan Polgar Institute of Chess Excellence (SPICE) which, since it's founding, has specialized in hosting some of the highest-rated invitational tournaments in the history of the United States as well as hosting invitationals designed to give young American players changes to win important IM and GM norms.  This is not the easiest thing to do, as most American tournaments do not meet the many technical requirements necessary for players to score "norms" as set forth in regulations by FIDE (the international chess federation).  In addition to introducing the SPICE Cup as well as the SPICE Invitationals in the spring and fall, Polgar and team have taken the Texas Tech chess program from yawn to WOW in a just a few short years.  Outstanding, and my heartfelt congratulations to Polgar, Truong, Dr. Karlsson and the Texas Tech Chess Team.

Interview (in full) from Susan Polgar's chess blog:

The golden coaches of the Knight Raiders about the Final Four success
Susan Polgar and Paul Truong in a large interview
Chessdom.com

The Knight Riders were successful at this year's Final Four. The team led by Susan Polgar and Paul Truong managed to win a title in what can be viewed as the Final Four with largest mass media coverage.

After the success, coaches Polgar and Truong gave an extensive interview to Dr. Hal Karlsson, Associate Professor of GeoSciences at Texas Tech University.

Dr. Hal Karlsson: Susan and Paul, first of all, congratulations! This Final Four victory is simply fantastic and quite unexpected. How did it happen?
Susan Polgar: Thank you. I think the team did great, and even though we were the lowest seed, as a team, we believed that we could win. I also think we were more unified and working together more as a team than our competitors. I’m very proud of our guys that they gave their all.

Paul Truong: It is a good feeling for the entire team because they’ve worked very, very hard to be able to accomplish this. As Susan said, they gave it their all and they deserve it.

SP: They were also fearless. They were not intimidated facing much stronger opponents, even ones they had bad records against in the past. In the first round, Grandmaster Timur Gareev of UTB, the highest rated player in Texas, offered our top board, Grandmaster Anatoly Bykhovsky, a draw in a very complicated position. Bykhovsky just lost to Gareev in an earlier encounter in Berkeley. Even with that in mind, Bykhovksy refused the draw offer against a much higher rated opponent and went all out for the win.

In the critical final round, a similar thing happened. Grandmaster Leonid Kritz of the defending champion UMBC, the highest rated player of the entire Final Four, offered our team captain Grandmaster Davorin Kuljasevic a draw with the white pieces. In the same matchup last year's Final Four, Kuljasevic lost to Kritz. Just as Bykhovsky, Kuljasevic refused the draw offer and went all out for the win. Both of them succeeded and they gave our team two vital points toward the national title. As their coach, I could not be more proud of this.

HK: Clearly all the teams must prepared very hard for the Final Four given what was at stake here. But what accounted for Texas Tech's success. What was the secret?
PT: I believe the secret is quite easy. We simply worked harder. We not only studied the games of our opponents just as everyone else, but we also study our opponents' demeanor, body language, movement, facial expression, pattern of thinking and decision making, etc. We dissected every inch of every possible aspect of the game. We put countless hours into the preparation. Even after our players were asleep, Susan spent hours double checking all the analysis to make sure there was no error. We were lucky to even get a few hours of sleep.

It does not mean that we will succeed every time. It just means that we will put our team in the best possible position to win. We had a similar approach when Susan and I ran the 2004 U.S. Women's Olympiad program which brought home the first four ever Chess Olympiad medals (2 gold and 2 silver) for the United States. If you want to win, you have to be willing to work harder than everyone else. No one will just hand the title to you. If you want it, you have to get it.

Another thing we did different than other teams is our approach before the start of the Final Four. The team arrived in Washington, D.C. very late Thursday night. We had Friday free until about 6 p.m. Other teams stayed in the hotel to do some last minute preparation. Being a world class competitor herself, Susan realized that the players were under tremendous pressure. So she decided to give them two choices:

1. To stay in the hotel like other teams to cramp in last minute preparation. 2. Go for a tour in Washington, D.C. to relax, stay fresh, and build further team chemistry.

The players voted to go to D.C. So we spent the day on the famous Double Decker bus tour to visit the White House, Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument, the Capitol Building, and other landmarks. The players had plenty of good times and good laughs. It worked out great. But if it did not work as planned, I am sure others would be quick to criticize her decision. But as a coach, you need to make tough decisions.

HK: That is impressive. But Susan also accomplished something else in this Final Four.
PT: Yes. Last year, Susan became the first female head coach to take a men’s division I team to the Final Four. This year, she is the first female to take a men's division I team all the way. You cannot even imagine, let’s say, a female coaching a men’s basketball team or men’s football team to the national title, but in chess, she showed that it can happen.

And the success was not only in division I. In just in the past two years, the Knight Raiders also won the national division II, III, and IV titles, in additional to many other individual honors. This is simply another gender barrier that she was able to break. What is even more amazing is this is only our second year competing in division I.

UTD and UMBC have been ruling the collegiate chess world for the past decade. For us to catch up with them on this level, this fast, was pretty amazing. I am sure the competition will be a lot tougher next year as all the schools will try to improve their rosters.

Susan now has done it all. She won Olympiad gold, five of them. She won the Women's World Championship Triple-Crown (Rapid, Blitz, and Classical). Her students have won National Scholastic Championships and now Collegiate Championships. But don't worry, she'll find more barriers to break, I am sure.

HK: Was there any particular player who stood out for Texas Tech in this Final Four?
SP: No. It was total team work. They fought hard as a unit and a different player came through for us in each round. It was Bykhovsky in the first round, Sipos in the second, Kuljasevic in the final round. Diamant was solid all the way through. And Aleskerov, as a reserve player, was the biggest cheerleader for his teammates the whole time. Just like the famous song by Sister Sledge, "We Are Family", the Texas Tech Knight Raider family.

HK: I saw the Final Four chess boards the Knight Raiders were holding up. Those look unique. Did you make those and how can one get one of them?
SP: Those are very special Final Four commemorative boards. They are not for sale. Only twenty of them were done and they were made by our friends at GLOSgames.com. This is an American company out of Kansas City, Missouri. They have done a lot of good things to promote chess and bring kids into the game. When I told them about Final Four, they immediately designed and produced these twenty special boards to give out to each of the four teams and the sponsor, Booz Allen Hamilton. They also sponsored other scholastic events of mine in the past. It is a good company and good people and I am proud that they support chess and the Knight Raiders. You cannot buy these boards but you can design your own chess board with them or use one of their over 110,000 designs.

HK: That is pretty neat. So what is the next step? A long celebration or vacation? I understand the team is going to Vegas (not Disney World like football players). What was that all about?
SP: There is no time to rest. Winning it is hard. But defending it is even harder. We already started to prepare for next year with recruiting. We have a tradition of excellence at Texas Tech and we hope to win many more championship titles.

We are lucky to have strong support from Chancellor Hance, President Bailey, Provost Smith, our supervisor Vice President and Vice Provost Dr. Juan Munoz, our donors, and so many other people at Texas Tech and in Lubbock. To have people waiting to cheer the chess team on at the airport when they returned at midnight was pretty incredible. The media also prominently covered the team success. Everyone believes in us and we want to continue making all of them and this university proud. We will do everything in our power to help Texas Tech become a Tier One university. Through chess, we will attract some of the greatest minds to this university.

HK: What other goals does SPICE have in mind?
SP: As the chairwoman for the FIDE (World Chess Federation) Commission for Women's Chess, I am working with SPICE to promote women's chess and help raise the playing level of the next generation through various important initiatives. SPICE is also actively working to get chess in more schools. This is a very important part of our goal.

University Interscholastic League (UIL) of Texas, the largest inter-school organization of its kind in the world, has approved the proposal from SPICE to include chess puzzle solving as a statewide competition. This can potentially be the biggest scholastic chess initiatives in the United States as more than 2,000 schools in Texas are competing in a number of UIL competitions each year.

I am also hoping to work closer with FIDE to enhance various chess in the schools and chess in education projects in the United States. The future of chess is very bright.

HK: Thank you, Susan and Paul, for your time. Once again, congratulations and Go Tech! Check'em Knight Raiders!
SP and PT: Thank you, Hal.

Dr. Hal Karlsson is originalli from the chess loving country Iceland. He is an Associate Professor of GeoSciences at Texas Tech University. He is also the founder of SPICE as well as a student advisor for the Knight Raiders.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

2011 U.S. Chess Women's Chess Championship

Results R2:


1WGM Foisor, Sabina-Francesca1.02350FM Melekhina, Alisa0.523041-0
2WIM Zenyuk, Iryna0.52245IM Zatonskih, Anna0.524990-1
3WGM Baginskaite, Camilla0.02342IM Goletiani, Rusudan0.523671-0
4IM Krush, Irina0.02472WFM Abrahamyan, Tatev1.023261-0


Cross-table after R2:

Second Best Turnout Ever for Hales Corners Chess Challenge XIII!

Whoopee!  Highest attendance ever was 107 players at Hales Corners Challenge IX.  Challenge XIII produced 102 players!

Three chess femmes (as far as I can tell from their names only) in the Open - results after R3:

Patrice Connelly IL 1574 1.0/3 (she's already won $40 for her win)
Rachel Ulrich IL 1462 1.0/3 (ditto)
Sandra Pahl WI 1380 1.0/3 (ditto)

(Added April 18, 2011:  Teja Karimikonda also played in the open and finished in 42nd place with 1.5.  And so, there were four ladies who played in the Open.  Outstanding!)

Total players in Open:  57.

Two chess femmes (as far as I can tell from their names only) in the Reserve - results after R3:

Susanna Ulrich IL 1229 2.0/3
Rebecca Mackey WI unr 0.0/3

Top female finishers in each section will have their entry fee paid for the next Challenge in the event they choose to enter. Stay tuned...

T-Mobile Rocks "Royal Wedding" Video!

This is awesome - love the "House of Love" music!

Interesting Horse Burials Uncovered in Hungary

Excerpted from digitaljournal.com, this article explains some of the ritual involved in Magyar horse burials.

Rich Old Hungarian grave could have belonged to prince
April 15, 2011
By Christopher Szabo.

Budapest - Rich grave finds from the Conquest Era of the Magyars or Hungarians have been uncovered by archaeologists in Pest Country, including ninth Century horse furniture and a belt, with a particularly rich sabretache, or pouch.

The “Gravediggers’ Journal” blog (in Hungarian, with good photos) says the initial dig took place April 5 to 8 after agricultural work overturned one of the graves. The “rescue dig”, followed when citizens called in the archaeologists of the Pest County Museums Management. Analysis of the finds and publication in archaeological journals will follow in due course.

The find is also covered by the English-language Medieval Hungary blog. This is the first significant archaeological find in Hungary since Old Magyar (700 A.D. – 1,000 A.D.) or Conquest Era graves, and a large number of Roman, Sarmatian and Bronze Age graves were found in February.

The Sarmatians were a semi-nomadic people who ruled the Ukrainian steppes and the Great Hungarian Plain from around the Fifth Century B.C. to A.D. 460. They were formidable enemies of the Romans and some formed part of the empire of Attila the Hun. They have also been linked to the Arthurian Legends because they invented heavy cavalry, using a lance called kontus.
(The “Conquest Era” refers to the time the Seven Magyar tribes entered and took the Carpathian Basin from 895-900 A.D. (some systems date it differently, including the first century of settlement, up to 1,000 A.D.)

Of the three newly-discovered graves, one had nothing with the remains; one was a “horse burial” of the type where only horse tack was buried with the body. In this case, the bit and stirrups were easily made out as well as other elements of horse furniture. The occupant of the grave was likely a warrior or hunter, as a quiver was found with the body.

The third grave contained typical materials of a mounted archer, including horse bones, the remains of horse tack and remains of archery equipment. These are typical of Magyar so-called “partial horse burials” which include the head and hooves of the horse. The reason for this is the meat of the horse was consumed during a wake or “tor”; the skin (including the head and hooves) would be placed over the grave mounted on a pole for a while and then buried, usually on a shelf or “padmaly”.

Warring States Tombs Uncovered in China

I found this article  very disturbing.  First, it doesn't say how these tombs were discovered.  From the photograph, it looks like the tomb or tombs are built out of timbers forming mausoleums that were above ground - not underneath it!  Second, what is the old man doing STANDING INSIDE THE TOMB?  I mean - this cannot be a professional archaeological dig because no archaeologist would EVER do that (except, maybe, Zahi Hawass) when it's clear as glass that there are still artifacts inside the tomb!  There are methods for working an excavation and this sure doesn't look like any method at all to me!  This looks to me like tomb robbery, not tomb excavation - and one of the thieves has got his picture in the local newspaper.  Geez!

Leather panels stitched together to form body armor.
The grave goods are impressive - that "armor" -- stitched together panels of leather - absolutely breathtaking and the large brass bowl the old man in the photograph is stealing would be worth a fortune on the antiquities market - and it looks to be in perfect condition. 

I wish I could see the bronze mirror.  I would like to know what other inscriptions or drawings were on its "back."  But only the intriguing clue "mountain" -- could this possibly be a reference to the great sacred mountain where resides the Mother Goddess Xi Wangmu (who in her archaic form was part woman, part tiger)?

Precious Relics Found in Ancient Tombs
Pub Date: 11-04-14 16:45 Source: www.cnanhui.org
More treasures were found in two ancient tombs dated back to China's Warring States (475-221BC) in Lu'an, Anhui Province, as a well-preserved sword with exquisite workmanship, and a complete suit of leather-made armour were unearthed in the southern tomb, which suggest that the tomb master was probably a military officer with prominent status then.

If other clues, such as seal or epigraph are excavated in the tomb, combing with history records that are able to prove the master's identity can be found, the discovery of this ancient tomb is expected to be listed into national annual archaeological finds.

In the meantime, clearing work in the other tomb, a smaller one, which was believed to belong to the tomb master's wife, was done, with 120 articles of relics, including copper wares, painting wares and pottery wares.

Among which, a bronze mirror , decorated with designs similar to the Chinese character of "ɽ"(mountain) on the back, was deemed as a much-treasured relic.

Total 54 articles of relics were unearthed in the southern tomb yesterday.

(By Zha Xuan)
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