Archive for April, 2022

Teaching chess keeps me alive: Indias first IM Aaron continues tryst with 64 squares – Hindustan Times

Every day, even at 86, Manuel Aaron gets up from the living room in his Chennai apartment, crosses a corridor, often barefoot, to another flat on the same floor. Here, there are rows of tables and chairs, chess boards and notation books, where every evening 40 children come to be trained by him. After all, Aaron is Indias first International Master (IM) and a nine-time national champion, an inspiration for generations of Indian chess players to follow. I think it is this teaching that is keeping me alive, Aaron says, breaking into a smile.

The Tal Chess club, named after Mikail Tal, a Soviet-time world champion and Aarons hero as he grew up, began in the year 1972, under the shadow of the Cold War. It opened its doors at the Soviet Cultural Centre in Chennais bustling Nungambakkam.

Everything came from Moscow at that timethe chess sets, chess books and clocks. And we could use the place for free. I just had to manage the chess club, says Aaron. Chennai had no other places,other than the YMCA, which barely had infrastructure, where enthusiasts could go and play, and there was thus a steady stream of students. Among them was a certain Vishwanathan Anand.

There is now interest in chess in Chennai afresh, for the city is set to host the 2022 Chess Olympiad, after it was shifted, ironically, out of Russia under the shadow of another conflict, this time with Ukraine.

Aarons rise

Aaron was born in December 1935 in Toungoo, a British colony in Burma, after his parents, originally from Thoothukudi, migrated there due to poverty. By 1941, Aaron was back in Madras, already interested in chess, having watched his parents play. He taught himself chess, his natural affinity for the game making it easier. Most of the players of my generation never had a coach. It was Tamil that I found difficult, Aaron said.

Learning about chess was not easy as Aaron grew up. When he was an undergraduate B Sc student in Allahabad, he couldnt afford to buy the 6th edition of the Modern Chess Opening, which cost 16, until his older sister bought it for him. Decades later, Aaron founded Chess Mate in 1982, a monthly magazine. Now run by his son Arvind Aaron, the latest edition has on its cover the 16-year-old Grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa and his stunning win against world champion Magnus Carlsen.

In 1955, after college, when Aaron came back to Madras, he had thought he would be an engineer. Because everyone thought if you became an engineer, life would be good, Aaron says.

There was pressure from the family too. His father often asked him what chess would feed him. But Aaron was steadfast. But it did feed me. I got a job at the Indian Bank only because of chess, he adds. Aaron moved around a lot with his siblings and lived with different relatives. We had a very hard life. It taught me patience, I learnt to remain calm under pressure, he says. It also made him one of the finest defensive players. No matter how good you are as an attacking player, it cannot save you if you do not know how to defend.

His childhood influenced him intensely to be number one. I didnt aspire to be a Grandmaster, but I wanted to be the number 1 in whatever I did. All my life, everywhere at home or in school I had only been number two or three.

In 1961, Aaron became Indias first IM after winning titles that made him the number 1 in Asia. The following year, he was also the first chess player to receive the Arjuna Award in 1962. It was in Germanys Olympiad in 1960 where USSR won and he played against his idol Tal in a blitz match conducted a day after the tournament. To Aarons glee, he drew against the mighty Tal.

In 1971, Russia sent Grandmaster Alexey Suetin to train Indian players for a month in Pune. Suetin wanted the players to show him games in which they had lost. And most of them had lost to me, says Aaron, who was also being trained at the camp. Suetin advised Aaron to change his opening move from d4 (a queens pawn opening) to e4 (the more widely played and traditional kings pawn opening). Aaron followed the advice and in the next national championship, won the title with two rounds to spare.

Anand & Aaron

In 2012 after Vishwanathan Anand beat Boris Gelfand at the World Championship held in Moscow, Russian President Vladimir Putin asked him where he had trained. When Anand replied that it was at the Tal Club in Chennais Soviet Centre, Putin remarked that Anand was a problem they had brought upon themselves, Aaron says.

Anand was such a nuisance, says Aaron. He used to constantly ask questions and he would never let me finish my class. But he always asked relevant questions. I knew this boy was going to be someone great. Aaron also taught chess using foreign literature, which he translated from Russian, German and rarely French. Anand poked holes in that too, he says.

While he was coaching, Aaron also became secretary of the Tamil Nadu Chess Association (TNCA) for two stints in the 1970s and 90s. It gave him a more formal role to promote, improve and professionalise chess across the state. Spasky and Anand fuelled a spurt in chess, he says. It gave birth to more clubs, and in the 90s, Chennai had tournaments almost every weekend, and the competition was tight. 36% of 66 GMs in India as of 2020 are from Tamil Nadu. Most of the unemployed chess players started academies. There is a value for chess here and more opportunities, says Aaron.

In a sense, Aaron says, life has come full circle for him, with Chennai hosting the Chess Olympiad, which is also the first such in India since the tournaments inception in 1929.

I used to think India couldnt conduct the Olympiad because we have so many uncertainties, natural disasters. We have basic problems in electricity, water shortage.

But now that the Olympiad is here, there is another aspect Aaron feels about strongly.

Do you see whats happening to the Muslims in our country? Arent they our people too? Aaron says.

Divya Chandrababu is an award-winning political and human rights journalist based in Chennai, India. Divya is presently Assistant Editor of the Hindustan Times where she covers Tamil Nadu & Puducherry. She started her career as a broadcast journalist at NDTV-Hindu where she anchored and wrote prime time news bulletins. Later, she covered politics, development, mental health, child and disability rights for The Times of India. Divya has been a journalism fellow for several programs including the Asia Journalism Fellowship at Singapore and the KAS Media Asia- The Caravan for narrative journalism. Divya has a master's in politics and international studies from the University of Warwick, UK. As an independent journalist Divya has written for Indian and foreign publications on domestic and international affairs....view detail

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Teaching chess keeps me alive: Indias first IM Aaron continues tryst with 64 squares - Hindustan Times

Sam falls in love over a chess board in Coronation Street – Metro.co.uk

Sam faces Jalena tonight (Picture: ITV)

Sam Blakeman (Jude Riordan) takes his seat for the finale of the chess tournament in tonights episode of Coronation Street.

This week, after discovering Sam had secretly been playing chess with Roy (David Neilson), Nick (Ben Price) accepted his son was basically a child genius and allowed him the chance to play in a chess tournament held in the bistro.

Sam beat his opponent, Oscar (who was played by Judes brother) and was thrilled to realise he was through to the final.

Oh, he also had to remind his dad to pipe down a bit as hes watching a chess match, not a football game.

Tonight, Nick goes over some chess tactics with Sam, convinced his son is going to wipe the floor with his opponent.

He takes his seat opposite Jalena but will he take the crown?

Whether Sam will be crowned winner is something were keeping secret for now, but what we can reveal is that the young lad is set to develop a bit of a crush on Jalena.

After telling Roy and Hope (Isabella Flanagan), Sam sits down with his dad and confesses all he likes Jalena.

Nick smiles as he gives Sam some advice on lurrrrve but how will things go?

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Includes exclusive content, spoilers and interviews before they're seen on the site. Find out more

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Sam falls in love over a chess board in Coronation Street - Metro.co.uk

Chess is hard; blindfold chess is much tougher – The Globe and Mail

Long before Beth Harmon saw visions of chess boards on her ceiling in the Queens Gambit series, Canadian Hans Jung was experiencing the very same thing at home.

His parents insisted he go to bed early on school nights, but hed spend the time analyzing imaginary positions. It led to a career as a chess master and a practitioner of blindfold chess.

Jungs most impressive performance came in 1993 in London, Ont. when he played 26 people simultaneously without ever looking at any board. He was pumped right after, but suffered bad vertigo over the next two days.

Its like the Ironman of chess, says Jung of blindfold play. Now in his 60s, he says blindfold ability declines with age, but hes confident he could still do five boards at once.

Jung worked for years as the City of Kitcheners chess co-ordinator, and hopes to be organizing more activities soon in his current role at Waterloo Public Library. Blindfold play always draws a crowd, but the number of people who can do it is very small.

Timur Gareyev holds the current world blindfold record. He played 48 simultaneous games in Las Vegas five years ago, winning 35 and drawing seven.

15. Nf7! If the Black Queen moves, 16. Qxe6 is deadly. But if Kxf7 then White plays 16.Qxe6+ anyway, because Kxe6 17.Ng5 is mate, and other Black moves lose as well.

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Chess is hard; blindfold chess is much tougher - The Globe and Mail

Tania returns with a thumping win in the Reykvek International Chess – News Track English

Iceland (Niklesh Jain) A performance of the female Grand Master Tania Sachdev, who is called the Chess Queen of India in the 35th Reykvek International Grand Master Chess Tournament, became the center of discussion around the world, in fact in the 7th round of the tournament, the host Iceland's Grand Master was in front of Tania. Master Stangrimson was Hadeen and Tania is about to face the Black Pieces.

Nimjo was left with only pawns and a wazir after the moves at the Indian Opening and the situation was balanced but by the time 60 moves approached, Tania lost control of the game and thought the match was going to end anytime.

Let us tell you that Tania, who has always been known for her fighting ability, did not lose hope and some last-minute mistakes by Haydeen and Tania's brilliant replies with a tear of the center gave her an unexpected victory in 94 moves. With this win, Tania has moved straight to the joint second place.

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Tania returns with a thumping win in the Reykvek International Chess - News Track English

Depths of Wikipedia: Meet the Michigander who scours the web for anything weird and wonderful – WKAR

There's a Wikipedia page just for toilet paper folding techniques at hotels.

There's also a Wiki list dedicated to sexually active popes. Another list focuses on future astronomical events.

Annie Rauwerda is well aware. The 22-year-old University of Michigan student spends about an hour each day scouring the web for anything delightful or weird. Then, she shares those findings to her viral page, Depths of Wikipedia.

Rauwerda, a Grand Rapids native, started Depths of Wikipedia in 2020 while she was bored during COVID lockdown. Now, it has more than one million followers across Instagram, Twitter and TikTok.

WKARs Sarah Lehr spoke with Rauwerda about her favorite corners of the internets largest crowdsourced encyclopedia.

Interview Highlights

On how casual browsers should approach Wikipedia

On the fan base and sensibility of Depths of Wikipedia

Interview Transcript

Kevin Lavery, host: Did you know Wikipedia has a page just for toilet paper folding techniques at hotels? Or that Wikipedia keeps a list of sexually active popes?

Annie Rauwerda knows. The 22-year-old University of Michigan student scours the web for anything delightful or weird and shares those findings to her viral page, Depths of Wikipedia.

Rauwerda, a Grand Rapids native, started Depths of Wikipedia in 2020 while she was bored during COVID lockdown. Now, it has more than one million followers across Instagram, Twitter and TikTok.

WKARs Sarah Lehr spoke with Rauwerda about her favorite corners of the internets largest crowdsourced encyclopedia.

Sarah Lehr: If you're just meeting someone and they're not extremely online, how would you describe what Depths of Wikipedia is?

Annie Rauwerda: I screenshot things on Wikipedia that I think are interesting or funny or make you slow your scroll just a little bit.

Lehr: Have there been posts from Depths of Wikipedia that really took off in a way that surprised you you didn't think they would necessarily be so popular?

Rauwerda: One that was popular that I didn't quite expect was, there is this photo of popcorn and they showed two different types of popcorn kernels and one is called a mushroom it's a circle, and the other has little things sticking out of it more wispy and they call it a butterfly. And I've eaten popcorn many times. I have thought a little bit about the different shapes of popcorn. I have never known that there were names. And it started a big debate and Twitter and Instagram (people) were arguing about the merits of the mushroom and the butterfly-shaped popcorn.

Lehr: Do you have any advice for other people for using Wikipedia and vetting what they're looking at? What should they be looking out for?

Rauwerda: I think Wikipedia is one of the most incredible things that exists the way that it self-moderates, the way that it allows for democratic discussion. I think Wikipedia has like this ethos of the early internet before we had these big giants that were capitalizing off of it and I think it's the best site ever.

Obviously, Wikipedia has inaccuracies on it. It's the encyclopedia that everyone can edit. So, definitely don't believe every single thing you read on Wikipedia. But the best way to engage with it is to read everything with a grain of salt. If you're not sure about something, check the citation that's on Wikipedia. And if you if you're not quite satisfied with the way something is discussed on Wikipedia, look into editing it and changing it.

Lehr: Are there aspects of Wikipedia that you think could be improved as someone who's very, very familiar with the platform?

Rauwerda: Oh my gosh, yes. Editing Wikipedia is never ending. And sometimes people wonder they're like, Okay, well, I mean, Wikipedia has, like, almost 7 million articles in English at least. What else do you need? But, in reality, like the world is always changing. Every article needs updating.

For example, you know, the population of Battle Creek. I was just looking on Wikipedia and the last citation was from 2019. And I was like Oh, I gotta quick update this. Another problem with Wikipedia, I would say, is that it can be very hard to start editing. The Wikipedia editor demographics do not represent the English speakers in the world. Right now, the percentage of Wikipedia editors that are male, it's somewhere in the 80s, in the 80 percents, which is a little bit better than it used to be, but it's certainly still not equal. And so there are projects like Wiki Women in Red that are working to get more female editors.

Lehr: How would you describe the sense of humor that your pages have and do you think there are any generational aspects and who your fans are?

Rauwerda: I do. I have statistics from Instagram of who my followers are and the demographics are pretty interesting. The gender distribution is pretty down the middle and the ages are mostly like 15 to 35. I have a friend and her mom told me, she's like, Annie, I don't get it, but my daughter loves it. And I do think that's true. It skews young.

I think the humor is kind of subtle, and there's no clear punch line. And it's less about like a ha-ha, knee- slapper joke and more about like a, oh, you kind of breathe heavily out of your nostrils because this thing is kind of interesting and a little bit funny. One example of is there's this molecule. It's an organic compound and its just the way that this molecule looks exactly like a teenage mutant ninja turtle. And so I posted it and I said, forbidden Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle, and people thought it was really funny. I would say that the humor is subtle, maybe is the best word.

Lavery: That was WKAR's Sarah Lehr talking with Depths of Wikipedia creator Annie Rauwerda.

This interview has been edited for clarity and conciseness.

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Depths of Wikipedia: Meet the Michigander who scours the web for anything weird and wonderful - WKAR