Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ex-chess master returns to Phila. with new goals

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Ex-chess master returns to Phila. with new goals

    Philadelphia Inquirer, PA
    Oct 20 2007


    Ex-chess master returns to Phila. with new goals

    By Melissa Dribben and Ashwin Verghese
    INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS

    Hands in his pockets, trailed by a jostling horde of photographers
    and reporters, Garry Kasparov strolled around a long row of tables in
    the Central Library of the Free Library of Philadelphia today,
    glancing over the shoulders of a few dozen Philadelphia teenagers
    engrossed in chess.
    They barely looked up.

    Few words were exchanged. The teens were in the presence of one of
    the greatest chess minds on Earth, but felt little more than the
    draft of fame as he passed by.

    Although these two dozen students have studied some of Kasparov's
    strategies, much of his contribution to chess theory is beyond their
    grasp, at least for now, said Steven Shutt, a chess coach and teacher
    at Masterman School.

    "His games are a bit sophisticated for the kids," Shutt said. "There
    is such nuance in the moves he chooses."

    Including the one he made, coming to Philadelphia for the day.

    It was, in part, to promote his new book, How Life Imitates Chess. In
    part, to inspire the students from the after-school program
    Philadelphia Youth Chess Challenge.

    And in large part, to serve his political ends. As a prominent member
    of Russia's opposition movement and a presidential candidate,
    Kasparov has had to struggle to be heard in his own country.

    With virtually no hope of getting elected to office, he compares his
    candidacy to a chess game in which, even if victory is impossible,
    there is honor in keeping the opponent off balance to the end.

    "Every day we survive makes life for the regime more annoying," he
    said.

    Kasparov seemed interested in learning about the students - peppering
    their teachers with questions about which chess books they use, the
    number of children who play. And although he insisted that the skills
    that make someone a great chess player have no direct application
    beyond the parameters of the game, chess as metaphor was clearly the
    theme of his visit.

    In his current political role, however, he is apparently engaged in a
    life-size match, the complex details of which were analyzed earlier
    this month in a profile in the New Yorker.

    If he was furthering his strategic goals, along with his book sales,
    at the library, it registered little with the students.

    Chins perched pensively on fists, they focused on their pawns and
    rooks moving across roll-up plastic chess boards curling at the
    edges.

    The students had their own complex motives for playing. "It keeps you
    out of trouble. It keeps you occupied," said Tamir Kennedy, 14, a
    freshman at Vaux Roberts High School.

    "I heard it could help with math, and I wasn't doing so well with
    that," said Maleek Singleton, 18, a senior. Since he took up the game
    in ninth grade, he's been getting straight A's, he said. Chess, he
    said, also taught him to "show good patience and poise."

    You learn manners, too, evidently.

    "Nice move," Charmaine Brown, 15, a Vaux sophomore, said in
    graciously praising her opponent.

    Like most of the students invited to skip English, chemistry and the
    cafeteria for a chance to meet - perhaps even play against - the
    master, Brown said she knew little about Kasparov other than that he
    was a brilliant player and was involved in politics in Russia.

    She had never heard of Deep Blue, the chess-playing computer that
    Kasparov defeated in Philadelphia in 1996 - when she was 4.

    That was the last time the man who reigned for 15 years as world
    chess champion set foot in this city.

    "It's good to be back," he said, shortly after he'd been whisked over
    from 30th Street Station, where his train had arrived 15 minutes
    late.

    His remarks, delivered to an audience of several hundred, centered
    mostly on Russian politics. And in the question-and-answer period,
    only adults asked for the microphone, asking for his views on
    Armenian genocide (he's half-Armenian) and anti-Semitism (he's
    half-Jewish), if he misses being regarded as the world's greatest
    chess player (no), and whether he considers Mikhail Gorbachev an ally
    (emphatically no).

    If, during his brief walk around Philadelphia's young players,
    Kasparov detected any incipient brilliance or imminent blunders, he
    didn't let on.

    He had a bigger game on his mind.

    A few kids left grumbling that they didn't have a chance to test
    their skills against the Big Guy.

    But most, like Jacob Kelly, 13, an eighth grader at Masterman, had no
    hard feelings. Just getting to see Kasparov was worth the field trip,
    he said:

    "It was pretty cool."

    http://www.philly.com/philly/news/200 71019_Ex-chess_master_returns_to_Phila__with_new_g oals.html
Working...
X