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ALL OUTLETS OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 4 Detroit Chapter American Technion Society ANNOUNCES ITS 38th Annual Dinner Thursday, October 30, 41986 Adat Shalom Synagogue 29901 Middlehelt Road Farmington Hills Guest Speaker YOSEF YAAKOV Consul General of Israel, Washington, D.C. and Minister-Counsellor Embassy of Israel MARK THE DATE • For information please call the Technion office, 559 5190 - 10 Friday, September 12, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS NOTEBOOK FACTORY PRICES! 1 ■ 111/ II= III WIN • Chess Master Mixes Menace And Maneuver VICTOR BIENSTOCK Special to The Jewish News G ary Kimovich Kasparov, a youngster whose father was Jewish and his mother Armenian, making him something of a maverick in his native Soviet Union, is defending his hard-won world chess championship in a best of 24 matches against another Soviet citizen who represents almost everything Kasparov has rebelled against in his 23 years. They are planning for what are very high stakes in chess competition — purses totalling $900,000 — but both have agreed to turn the winnings over to a fund for the victims of the Chernobyl nuclear disas- ter. The first 12 games were scheduled for London and the second 12 for Leningrad. Child prodigies have been frequent in the chess world — one has only to recall Sammy Reshevsky and the moody Bobby Fischer — but Gary, who began to play at the age of six, won the Soviet youth championship at the age of 13 and took his first major inter- national tournament at the age of 16, overpowering some of Europe's most outstanding grand masters. He attained the rank of international grand master a year later and was a leading contestant for the championship by the age of 21. He won the championship title last year after a long and gruelling series that was not resolved until the final match of a 24-game duel. He took the title from a fellow Soviet citi- zen, Anatoly Karpov, against whom he is currently defend- ing his title. That match fol- lowed an extraordinary contest which was terminated after 48 games when Karpov, 35, ap- peared on the verge of collapse. A chess student said that this series "finally made the child prodigy into a real champion. From an impetuous youth who lost four of the first nine games, he grew into a patient, resourceful and mature player capable of outwaiting Karpov, yet ready to pounce." A chess aficionado has de- scribed the rivalry between the two men as a "blood feud be- tween two styles, two temper- aments, two symbols." Karpov, he said, was the master techni- cian capable of exploiting the most minute advantage through flawlessly executed if colorless maneuvers. Kas- parov, however, "is the brash artist, taking bold chances, making breathtaking sac- rifices and hunting for his op- ponent's king with passion." Something of this was evi- dent in the first game of the current series. Emulating Bobby Fischer, Gary used an opening in world cham- pionship -play that he had never tried before. It worked. A reporter covering the match noted that Gary had "found just the right mixture of menace and maneuver to dis- courage the former champion from setting up his famous brand of siege warfare." His foe was compelled to offer a draw. Gary tried to explain his game to an interviewer once in these words: "From the very beginning of a game, I strive to make it as sharp as possible and to take it outside the famil- iar patterns. My games begin with tension, then I feel more confident of myself." Gary was born in Baku and attended school there. His father, Kim Veinshtein, died when he was a child and Gary In the first game, Gary used an opening that had never been tried before. It worked. subsequently adopted hs mother's Russified name. At the age of 10, he became a pupil of Mikhail Botvinnik, the chess master who had been world champion for nearly 15 years. • Helen Suzman was a cham- pion of human rights and a foe of apartheid even before the first Nationalist regime in South Africa placed the re- strictive laws on the books that relegated the country's black majority to a state of semi- serfdom. She warned against the use of sanctions as a weapon to compel the regime to rescind the oppressive legisla- tion which even before the sanctions movement became deeply rooted. The worst laws entrenching apartheid and eroding human rights had not yet been enacted when she entered the South African parliament, she noted when she accepted the Ameri- can Liberties Medallion of the American Jewish Committee in 1984. "I have been privileged to have had the opportunity to record my oppo- sition to all those laws in the 32 years I have spent in parlia- ment," she said then, "I have had a ringside seat watching the incredible jigsaw puzzle of apartheid being assembled, piece by piece, legally entrenching racial segregation in every facet of life." Today, paradoxically, this woman who bitterly opposed - this legislation — often as the lone dissenting voice in Parli- ament — finds herself allied with President Reagan and Prime Minister Thatcher in I opposing sanctions. Her rea- sons are pretty much those she expressed two years ago when she said that the key to peace- ful change in South Africa re- sted in the expansion of the economy for the country's 24 million blacks. Suzman still holds this posi-