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grunger

2nd July 2020, 18:21
jigjag

It is not that I dislike it - I just never eat it, as advised by the News. I have a peppered steak slice for tomorrow which looks better than the object I ate last week.

I got the clue straight away. I never saw him play but remembered his first name. Very clever clue I thought.

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paulhabershon

2nd July 2020, 20:00
Grunger
Re chess: I have played a few Williams but none called Mike. In common with quite a few chess geeks I have a complete record of all my league and tournament games. I have certainly played Ron Harman and T.Bennett (if it's T B Bennett).
Now on my 56th scorebook of 50 games! OTB chess halted by Covid - thank goodness for online chess, bridge and Scrabble.
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brendan

3rd July 2020, 04:08
Hi Paul,

Your talk of chess with Grunger brought back some good memories. I wanted to buy a chess engine so, along with my younger brother, went to The Chess Shop in Masbro Road, Hammersmith (I don't think it's there anymore). My grandparents, along with my lots of my uncles, aunts and cousins used to live in Masbro Rd and we would often drive up on a Sunday, so we could also use the trip to have a look round the old neighbourhood. It was great to spend a couple of hours walking around the shop and looking at all the beautiful chess sets - in the end I bought Fritz 6, I don't know if either of you know it?. While in the shop we saw a poster advertising a lesson with Bob Wade - our knowledge of players was pretty much limited to past and present world champions and neither of us knew who he was, but the shop manager told us he was a Master and definitely a player of note. Unfortunately my brother had a bad case of the flu and we really should have gone home, but the lesson was that evening and only a couple of miles away, so I cajoled him into going. I'm not very good at chess but Bob Wade seemed nice and the class was full so I was enjoying it, but my poor brother was feeling worse and worse. After an hour or so there was a coffee break and, while I and most of the others stayed in the room, my brother went out to the vending machine to get a drink. Everyone was chatting and Bob Wade was asking us all how good or "strong" we were. Then my brother, who had heard none of this, came back in to the classroom. Just as he was taking his seat, Mr Wade asked him "...and how about you, are you strong?" My brother, totally bewildered, looked hesitantly round the class and replied "well,....I suppose....I do weights". Ah yes, I remember it well:-)

Paul, Grunger,

did you ever play Bob Wade?
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grunger

3rd July 2020, 11:39
Brendan

That is a lovely story which was a pleasure to read. I have asked my father and he knew Bob Wade, who was President of London University chess club when my father was there. I think he said he was an international master.

They used to play speed chess with clocks at odds of 5 mins to 1 min and Bob always won which seems incredible to me. How can you win a game in I minute? Paul will know though. My father thinks he remembers Bob winning the British Championship around 50 years ago possibly in Coventry.

I was given Fritz 14 as a present but I rarely use it.

Paul

My father remembers you but never played you. He said there were 2 Harmans and 2 Bennetts. His favourite players were Korchnoy, Hort and Uhlmann. I think he said he played bridge with some of these in the hotel. I am impressed with your 2,500 games! I have played on-line bridge but didnt know about Scrabble.
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paulhabershon

3rd July 2020, 15:15
Grunger and Brendan
Agreed about great Bob Wade chess story from Brendan.
Yes I did play Wade twice but only in simultaneous displays when he was taking on 20+ opponents at once. I drew in 1962 and won in 1963 but I wonder if he would drop a few points to encourage juniors.
Originally from New Zealand, Bob was one of the first British players to earn a living from chess, not so much from prize money but by teaching, writing and giving simuls for a fee. He was an International Master but the UK had no Grandmasters until 1975 - we couldn't match the state sponsored professionals from the communist bloc. Bob did indeed win the British Championship twice, 1952 and 1970. He did gain some grandmaster scalps, including the East German, Uhlmann, at Hastings, I think.
Chess in one minute? Yes it's called Bullet Chess online but I prefer 5 minutes each for online games.
Fritz 6? I've just bought Fritz 17!
Scrabble online - it's great; free registration at isc.ro
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rosalind

3rd July 2020, 18:18
My (late) husband used to play "Blitzkrieg" which is the only form of chess that I found exciting as a spectator. I believe it was played with two boards, the players not able to see each other or their boards and very much against the clock.
paulh, lots of photos of you on Google.
My phone number is....;-))
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jigjag

3rd July 2020, 18:30
Rosalind

I played a form of chess called kriegspiel in my youth. It is probably like your game. There were 3 boards and a referee but It took all night.
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rosalind

3rd July 2020, 18:36
Jigjag - It was so many years ago, I think it may have been "kriegspiel". The man who was the opponent collected grandfather clocks as a pension fund (so very noisy as the night wore on) and I believe his wife refereed.
I expect I took a book
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chrise

3rd July 2020, 20:38
I've just watched Jamie Oliver and Masterchef, and Jamie and John Torode have both said "toomeric" rather than "turmeric". This happens so often - what amI missing?
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chrise

7th July 2020, 21:29
Another recurring gripe. If you hear an advert promising "omega 3 oils", ignore it - they don't know what they're talking about.

"Omega-3" must be read as "omega minus 3". The carbon atom next to the ester bond in an oil is the alpha carbon, the next the beta. However many there are in the chain, the last one is the omega carbon atom. "Omega-3" means there is a carbon- carbon double bond 3 atoms away from the end.

This also means that "omega-6" isn't twice as good as "omega-3"!
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