INSIDE: Mazel Toy! . . . page 49 LESLIE ZACK College Intern F or a little girl, Louiza Livschitz of West Bloomfield has made very smart moves in all the right directions. The 9-year-old chess prodi- gy is just as dedicated to chess as Olympic athletes are to their sport. She spends 20 hours a week study- ing strategies and tactics with her father/coach, Leonard Livschitz, who _ was Ukrainian national chess team coach 1985-1989. Now he works as an automotive supplier. "We came to America in 1991 as political refugees from Ukraine," said Louiza's mother, Victoria. When Louiza is not playing chess, she is doing her homework from Pleasant Lake Elementary School in West Bloomfield, or practicing gym- nastics, karate and swimming. Victoria, who works in the comput- er industry, taught her daughter to play chess when she was 4. "It was an exceptional game for her. She caught . * at is nur * infr • a a Att Cry • z. a an IN IS it, IN Inninglink The child of immigrants from Ukraine, Louiza Livschitz is, at age 9, part of the chess elite. Louiza, at age 9, preparing for competition. *TN 1/12 2001 ww