
Chess @ MindSay 
Checkmate
I've been pushin' these pieces
around the board
for quite some time,
just barely staying alive.
I've got no strategy
and my pawns are all but gone.
I just keep trying to get
to that Queen.
What a gal.
I'm terrible at this game, yeah
but somehow I manage
to keep myself out of check.
I've got all the right moves
and someday I know
I'll check this mate
once and for all.
Keep on rockin'
-SAW
King of the moment but the moment's gone,
now you're right back as a Pawn.
But even a Pawn can become a Queen,
make a change and whip it clean.
Few Pawns can ever earn a check,
fewer still make the eight square trek.
But the Master moves each peice in turn,
in the end the win to earn.
And a lucky Pawn protects the Knight,
while another will block a path of flight.
The King will die by the Rook,
but thats because a Pawn partook.
Thats why the Master cares for all,
from the mighty Queen to the Pawn so small.
Psalm 121
I've been playing a lot of online chess recently at www.RedHotPawn.Com (Blademaster777, sign up for free and challenge me!)
In the last week I have raised my rating by nearly 100 points, playing the game in then nearly-clinical fashion that I am capable of doing sometimes. It's the first time I've broken back through the 1000 rating since I got back into playing regularly last year.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3900793.stm
Bobby Fischer, who has died at the age of 64, was a talented chess grandmaster once hailed as an American hero for breaking a Soviet dominance of the game that had lasted nearly 30 years.
His surprise defeat of Soviet champion Boris Spassky in 1972 in the "chess match of the century" established him at the top of the game, after a run of 20 consecutive tournament victories that is still hailed as the longest winning streak in world chess.
But instead of capitalising on his win, he withdrew from competition and rarely played at international level afterwards.
In recent years, he had been better known for his paranoia, obsessive behaviour and outrageous public statements, which all but overshadowed his undoubted brilliance.
Volatile and impetuous
Born in Chicago in 1943, Bobby Fischer was a chess genius from the beginning, playing from the age of eight.
He was US junior champion at 13 and open champion at 14, a title he won seven more times.
He became a grandmaster at 15, but was already showing himself to be volatile and impetuous, often turning up late for or walking out of matches.
His victory in 1972 was unexpected, as every world champion since World War II had been from the USSR, and seemed a foretaste of a promising career.
But the man who once said that "all I want to do, ever, is play chess" played precious little of it at international level after he won the world championship in Reykjavik in 1972.
Instead of capitalising on his win, Fischer withdrew from competition. Three years later, the World Chess Federation stripped him of his title for failing to defend it against Anatoly Karpov.
Since then, apart from the Fischer-Spassky rematch in Yugoslavia in 1992 that provoked the wrath of the US government, America's greatest chess player made headlines for all the wrong reasons.
Reclusive
Until Fischer was detained in July 2004 while trying to leave Japan with a revoked US passport, his whereabouts had often been a mystery.
His reclusiveness, his anti-Semitic diatribes in radio interviews and - most unforgivably for his fellow countrymen - his support for the 11 September 2001 attacks on the US all tarnished his legend.
"This is all wonderful news. It is time to finish off the US once and for all," he told a radio station in the Philippines after learning of the attacks.
BBC journalist and chess expert David Edmonds, co-author of the book Bobby Fischer Goes To War, says Americans were profoundly shocked by the transformation.
"To many people, he had been an American icon in 1972. The match had been presented as a classic Cold War battle," he told the BBC News website.
"The Soviet Union had held the world chess title since World War II and chess was an enormously important propaganda tool. Lenin was a keen chess player, so was Trotsky - even Karl Marx himself played chess.
"Bobby Fischer was held up as an archetype after that, and many people view what has happened to him with great sadness. They feel he has been letting not only himself down, but the US down as well."
Certainly Fischer's behaviour in later years was irrational to such an extent that many questioned his sanity. He repeatedly claimed that he was being hounded by a Jewish conspiracy, despite the fact that his mother was Jewish.
Even in his heyday, he was known for making unreasonable demands at tournaments, complaining about everything from the lighting of the hall to the amount of prize money on offer.
Ruthless
Fischer also had a gladiatorial view of chess. "I like the moment when I break a man's ego," he once said in an interview, adding to the sense of theatre surrounding him that helped elevate the game from an obscure pastime to worldwide front-page news.
"He did enjoy humiliating his opponents. He could sense when his opponent was crumbling before him," says David Edmonds.
"But his style of playing was never flashy for the sake of showing off - it was clean, logical, ruthless and efficient. There was nothing ornamental about it," he says.
Despite the scale of his downfall, Fischer continued to inspire successive generations of chess players.
Many continued to see him as an artist with a unique charisma, and tried to overlook the flaws that have brought him low.
Until the end, the US government viewed him as a fugitive from justice - but his move to Iceland meant he escaped the endgame of a public trial that could have destroyed the last vestiges of his reputation.
But at least this isn't near as bad...I lost my job at the mall, but that's okay, I'm glad I have another job, I'll just up my hours at Payless now :) I'm going to apply at several places around here as well, it'll be nice to save on gas :D
Included is a picture of something I thought I'd never see...the guys playing chess against eachother, even though it is on the computer :P :O
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