The Wingham Advance-Times, 1974-03-28, Page 19....WATfit: .Lik:PRILLING
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.CHESS.
What
makes
star?
Mat
By JOSEPH MILL. BROWN
Verhat Bobby Fischer Ipth
wrOUght be0ame evident- by
the world-wide news Coverage
given the Candidates Chess
Matches to pick chal-
Wager in 1975- particularly
the One feattuing Boiis Spass-
ky's comeback attempt at San
Juan, Puerto Rico, against
Robert Byrne, of Ossining,
N.Y.
Whatever else Spassity may
have suffered at Iceland, it
- did not include a loss of
• charisma. Or sex appeal. In
London, a • newspaperwoman
reported his presence in the
same breathlep tones ac-
corded Liz and Richard Bur-
ton,
The matches are proving it
takes all kinds to make a star.
If, for instance, you prefer
youth you'd have bet on Bra-
zil's 21 -year-old Henrique
Mecking or the Soviets' 22 -
year -old golden boy, Anatoly
ICarpov - ignoring Savielly
Tartakower, who once noted
that "as a rule it is towards
his forty-fifth year that an in-
tellectual worker is 'mist suc-
cessful ... it is round about
this 'critical age' that the
great discoveries of Newton
date." It is also close to the
ages of Robert Byrne and
Russia's Victor Korclmoi.
At the Hoogoven interna-
tional tournament in Wijk aan
Zee, Holland, being an expert
,chessplayer did not auto-
matically prove one an expert
bookie. Hans -Joachim Hecht,
West Germany's personable
and newest grandmaster,
cheerfully admitted all the
favorites looked good to him,
but whispered that Yugo-
slavia's Bruno Parma actual-
ly had the nerve to pick Rob-
ert Byrne.
Victor Korchnoi's former
trainer, Gena Sosonko, who
emigrated to Holland from
Russia, via Israel, was even
more audacious in choosing
Lev Polugaievsky to upset
ICarPov. No one laughed - ex-
cept when Holland's Robert
Hartoch opined that Spassky
would -win everything and go
eIVP. er-
14fotitidy Veit Fiseher,"
yocked the ebullient, bearded,
handsome 26 -year-old Miguel
Quinteros, of Argentina, who
was reportedly Bobby's
bowling and swimming coni-
panion during the ligran
Petrosian .match in Buenos
Aires. His English revealed
an allergy to prepositions.
"Maybe ten years, maybe.
Fischer figures variations
like nobody. Fischer genius.
Re.ally genius. You can't beat
GARRY S Ayy0 SERVICE
SUPPLY
20 Water Street Wingham
Phone 357=25 1 9
* SPEED EQUIPMENT 10% off all wheels and
EARLY SPRING SPECIALS: accessories in stock
* CONTROLS, ANTENNAES, RADIOS
* QUAKER STATE OIL
* VALVOLINE OIL
* iN STOCK, 24 STEREO TAPE PLAYERS,
24 SPEAKERKITS, AND 144 TAPES
EARLY SPRING SPECIALS: 10% off all players, speaker
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LIMITED SPECIAL
Utak r
`?074.7J
For PLAYER, SET
OF SPEAKERS, and
a TAPE
Tar*,
- woe 040e with 4 crowd
lyzing - variations. Tischer
walked in, tot* otos look mod
'You guys have it *11
of' lislo4lolo-
ioa have to do thia-
that-od-that I' it tattoo tAglat
minutes to /*ire out the
,wrong variatioli; it took him
two minutr to figure out the
right. OM.' I 4
It could be discouraging, if
it wore possible to discOttre0
a chessPleyer With AS**,
lions. Ex.world ehamition
Ivlikhall was once asked
by a psychiatrist friend to.
Oa)? with a young patient who
suffered delusions 0( chess
greatness inehuling Vie -
tortes over the 19th Century
greatai MikhailCldgorin and
Emanuel Luker. It was irn
perative, the psychiatrist
said, that Tal win and shock
the patient out of his psycho.
sis.
To his horror, Tal lost the
first game and barely won the
next two. The patient compli-
mented him, begrudgingly.
"You should have seen how
Chigorin and Lasker played,"
he said.
Three months later Tal
spotted the patient at a chess
competition. He turned to a
friend and said, "That's the
man who will win." But he
was wrong. The patient
played poorly.
Only then did Tal realize
what happened. The psychia-
trist had cured him.
Manila -1973
(Brilliancy Prize)
William Lombardy
(USA)
Miguel Quintero,
(Argentina)
SICIL
LP -K4
2. N-KB3
3. P -Q4
4. NxP
5. N-QB3
6. B-KN5
7. P -B4
8. Q -B3
9.B -R4
10.0-0-0
11. Et -K2
12. Q -N3
13. KR -B1
14. NtICP
15. Q-N6ch
16. P -K5
17.P -B5
1841xN,- "
19. N -Q5
20.RP
21.B -N4
22. Rx8
23. QrN7
24. Q-K7mate
DEFENSE
4.164 111,
P-QB4
P -Q3
PxP
N-KB3
P-QR3
P -K3
BrK2
P -R3
QN-Q2
rt-QN1
11-N1
P-QN4
PAR
K -Q1
PxP
PxP
ARd3
Q -B3
R -B1
R -N3
PaR
R -N2
Corn hybrids
recommended
for 1974
A. D. McLaren
College of Agr: Technology
Ridgetown, Ontario
One hundred and Sktrty-seven
corn hybrids are recoMmended
for Ontario's corn producers for
1974. These are the best choices
from among hundreds of hybrids
screened by the Ontario Corn
Committee each year. The
hybrids are ranked on the list in
order of Maturity. Some hybrids
mature in as little as 2550 heat
units and can be gown in areas
of Ontario where the growing
season is relatively short and
Oa Other hybrids need 3500 or
more heat units to mature and
should be grown only in the ex-
treme southwestern part of
Ontario.
• In order,to be included on the
recommended list, a new. hybrid
must have been proven in at least
three tests over a 2 -year period to
be as good as the average of three
other 'check' hybrids of similar
maturity. •
Each year all recommended
hybrids are evaluated in per-
formance tests across Ontario.
The results of these trials are
published so that all producers
can judge for themselves the re-
lative performance of the
hybrids. Most producers select at
least two or three different
nybrids based on trial results for
their heat unit area and evaluate
them under their own conditions.
Copies of the "Report of Hybrid
Corn Performance Trials" are
printed immediately after the
Ontario Corn Committee has
completed examination of all the
results. Copies of the 1974 Report
were off the press in December
1973 and can be obtained from
offices of the Ontario Ministry of
Agriculture and Food, Canada
Department of Agriculture, Seed
corn dealers or farm supply
outlets.
LARGEST LINER
The France, the world's
largest liner at 66,348 tons, is
running at a loss and cost
French taxpayers $13.8 mil-
lion last year. - CNS
SuPseimngyni4sarea iIyi
t ileon the
ewnagand
y, be"ca
there' no Surer proof that there's
a resurrection getting restless
underthe snow than bens catk-
ling again and roosters daring
each other to knock the chips off
their shoulders. My Leghorns and
the other streamlined breeds will
of course lay in the winter
too -now and tbeii-but v, hen the
huge. slow -footed. ,snow-s•lited
breeds iike Cochins and Brahmas.
swing into production too, you
don't have to worry whether the
groundhog saw his shadow or not.
Spring is all ready to ride north
again on the first south wind.
Which means I have eggs to
sell. Lots of them. And eggs are
worth money today if you haveto
buy them. They were 93 cents at
my grocer's last Saturday. The
hell of it is that those eggs
brought only 63 cents to the man
whose hens pooped out those
eggs. And there's no haggling
about that price either. That is
the price set .by the egg market-
ing board of this province, and
the law tells me most emphati-
cally that I am not allowed to sell
them to anyone but the board. If
you should drop by today and buy
a basketful, you could save your-
self 30 cents a dozen but you
would also be guilty" of breaking
the law, and so would I.
Come grass time and I hope to
be milking my own Jersey cow, a
trim little girl with a pulchritrude
as fetchingly female as anything
you'll see in Playboy or Pent-
house, and I know very well that
she'll give me far'rnore milk than
I can ever use. But will I be
allowed to sell you some of the
surplus? Not on your life! By law
I am obligated to sell my milk to
another marketing board, and by
the time you buy that milk at
your deep discount place it will no
longer be 5 per cent Jersey milk.
The great people will have
skimmed off enough of that won-
derful golden cream or mixed it
in with enough Holstein milk to
reduce the test to 3.4 per cent,
and you'll have to pay just twice
the price that I had to sell it for.
I killed my own beef steer this
year, a lovely grass -fat Gallo-
way. Chances are that you
couldn't buy such tasty beef at
your meat counter, and I could
sell vou a IV or a quareesa! a
'ntWJA ut
that's a nano too because for -his
ast 'rites I just hoisted him up
from the bottom limb of a maple
ree to skin him out, instead of
giving him a government ap-
proved demise in a licensed
laughter house, complete with
proper -inspection.
In my -deep freeze right now is a
ovely side of bacon. Real bacon,
moked in a real smoke house
ver smouldering maple saw-
ust. None of this stuff which is
umped full of some kind of gov-
rnment approved embalming
uid an then sliced so thin
here's oVly one side to it. The
man I bought it from kills his own
igs and smokes the hams and
ides in his own smokehouse, and
e tells me that he could handle
the ,hams and sides of three or
our of my pigs if I care to bring
them over. I could sell you some
f that too when the maple
mudge has finished its mellow -
ng, but you'd better come after
ark and be prepared to cross
your heart and spit when you
romise me you're not a spy.
Dr. Wilder Penfield keeps tell-
' ing us that the tinl, good retire-
ment is a second career, and that
advice used to worry me, 1 just
couldn't think of a second career
that *Quid have the rightkind 0
challenge for a farmer ..who has
spent most of his life getting
madder and madder as the agri-
cultural regulations become
more and more constipating. But
now I havethe answer! For my
.second career I am going to build
me a.little vine -covered shack on
the back end of my farm -a little
store which will be open only to
card-carrying members of the
revolution. These alone will know
the way to a hideaway place
where a working man will once
again be able to buy eggs still
warm from the hen and milk that
the milk marketing people *don't
even know about and ileal 'unim-
proved' meat, plus some unpack-,
aged vegetables and ungraded
potatoes and any other uncerti-
fied Crop that my farm produces.
For my second career I will, in
short, become a bootlegger.
And I will btiild this speakeasy
store of mine way out in the sog-
giest middle of my bullfrog
swamp where the muck and
black water go halfway down to
China. For the faithful who come
there in search of the world's last.
unpackaged, unkoshered calo-
ries, I will have a little board
walk for them to tread. It will be
a board walk with a bridge built
into it -a bridge that will instant-
ly break and tilt straight down
into the ooze upon command, like
a gate. Yea verily! strait will be
that gate and narrow the way and
woe unto any government flunky
who finds it!
Energy for
tractors
R. W. Irwin,
Ontario Agricultural College
University of Guelph
The average city dweller views
the energy crisis thiough his
everyday experiences - gasoline
to power his car, electricity to
light his, home and cook his din -
Per. fui4 to pzorI4e heit Oltitilgh
the winter. It he reflects upon
agriculture's energy needs at all,
his mind probably conjures up an
linage of a hardworking tractor.
Yet, fifteen city dwellers with
black and white TV's turned on,
each year use energy equal to the
energy required to grow and har-
vest sufficient food for one person
for one year.
However, farmers could
operate their tractors more ef-
ficiently. Match the tractor to the
job. Use a' smaller tractor for
light work and a larger tractor
for heavy work. Tractors
operated at, rated engine speed
provide better fuel economy at
full loads than at light loads.
Tune the engine. A survey has
shown many tractors develop
only 75 percent of their rated
power because of neglected
maintenance. This neglect
wastes fuel.
Other ways of improving ef-
ficiency are: reduce wheel
slippage, drain wet fields, im-
prove field layout, plow shallowly
and use sharp plow points.,
Durham Mobile
Homes
11
u
Northlander
For a good home or a good deal
Call on us. We sell, we trade.
Sales and Park
Hanover HuyWq
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70.44448C
Lie&
Oil. Se tiff
othwel
Authorized dealer for CANADIAN BUILT HOMES,
large stock of new homes, o few used.
ER INTEREST RA
Now Avail!" We
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Anywhere in Ontario
RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL
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Interim FinancingVor Net.w construct*, & Land DeveloPinent
For Representatives in Your Are* '
Phone
SAFEWAY INVESTMENTS AND
CONSULTANTS LIMITED
(519) 744-6535 Celled
Head Office -56 Weber St. E., Kitchener/
-We Buy Existing Mortgagesfor iflstafltcasi
Glendale Bendix
Marlette Pyramid
'Avoid the high cost of' building.
Visit DOERSAM HOMES Hwy..
between Hanover and Walket-
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mobile and double wide horneS
on display.
4104/4 Tr Atte Seater oeiviat
• CALL 'COLLECT 3644080
Weed control in
CiArli starts here
.1)
t4o
corn herbicide
AAtrex is the greatest name in corn herbicides.
More growers depend on AAtrex than on any
other herbicide for the simple reason that it
has more going for it.
• AAtrex is effective against •both annual
broadleaf weeds and most grasses
• Control lasts through to harvest
• AAtrex can be applied pre -plant, at plant-
ing and post -emergence
• A shallow cultivation will activate AAtrex
in dry weather
• AAtrex is economical
AAtrex 90W. . . for those who p'refera wet-
table powder, less bulk to handle, high quality.
Also available in the familiar 80W formulation.
AAtrex Liquid, easiest to measure, mix and
keep in suspension, gives most uniform ap-
plication, covers more area with every tankful.
For more information talk to your .AAtrex
dealer.
CIBA-GEIGY
Agrochemscais Divicion
PMHstmed frikkintatt
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