Abby, Pascal, Marc Esserman
Monday, February 23, 2009
Photos from Amateur Team East 2009
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Thursday, February 19, 2009
am team east game 4: I choose happiness
Amateur Team East (4), 19.02.2009
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 e5 6.Ndb5 d6 7.Bg5 a6 8.Na3 b5 9.Nd5 Be7 10.Bxf6 Bxf6 11.c3 Bg5 12.Nc2 Rb8 13.a4 bxa4 14.Ncb4 Bd7
Ok, so I thought during the game that this was all theory.
15.Bxa6 Nxb4
16.cxb4
oh my goodness me, what a huge shocker, this is a normal move! Anand has played it. I was convinced in the game that my opponent had dementia, he was this very old Russian guy, and it looked so weird plus why should I think this guy keeps up on Sveshnikov theory? wow I am very surprised. some people will do anything for a passed pawn.
16...0–0
17.0–0
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17...f5
I guess this move is "too early"? Everyone else goes Bc6, but then white sacks on a4 and starts pushing the b pawn, and black vainly attempts to get play going on the kingside before failing and suffering for eternity, so I don't really know why I shouldn't be trying for "early," probably because it doesn't work out so well. [17...Bc6 18.Rxa4 Bxa4 19.Qxa4 Qe8 20.Qxe8 Rfxe8 21.b5 is Anand -Van Wely Corus 2006. It's so depressing. So, I know I've been saying this for along time now, but I'm going to give up the sveshnikov. It just doesn't make me happy. I feel guilty all the time, I lose constantly, even when my opponent does nothing, I still get not very good positions. Maybe I'm just not smart enough to play it, but I'm ok with that. I just want a nice simple strategic position. I don't want to work so hard anymore. Dave told me to play the caro kann, and that's what I'm going to do. I'm going to be so much happier.
Also my kids play it (some of them) so it will be professionally useful.
18.exf5 Rxf5
19.Bd3 Rf8
20.Ra3 Qe8
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I wanted to play ...e4 and ...Qe5, although the e4 pawn is supersoft. I also kinda wanetd to overprotect a4 and maybe play Bd8-b6 and stop Qd1–h5. But I don't know. I don't know what I'm doing, honestly.
21.Qe2 g6
Here I got this was some weird, probably irrational fear of Bc4 and having to move my king to the h file and some imaginary mating tactics on h7, and I thought my king would be better placed on g7, but that might be wrong plus it costs a lot of time.
22.Bc4 Kg7
23.Rd1 Bd8
24.Rad3 Bc6
25.Qd2 Bxd5
26.Rxd5
26... Bb6
27.Rf1 Bd4 [27...Rf4!]
28.Rxd6 Qe7
29.Rc6
I expected this: 29.Rxd4 exd4 30.Qxd4+ Qf6 31.Qxf6+ Rxf6 and thought it was pretty good for me. I still think so, if he plays 32.b5 Rf4 I win a pawn right away 33.Be2 Re4 34.Bd3 Rd4 35.Be2 Rd2 36.Bc4 Rxb2. And otherwise I just take the pawn.
29...Rxb4
29...Qxb4 30.Rc7+ Kh8 31.Qh6 seemed like I should avoid it.
30.Rc7 Qxc7
31.Qxb4
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I felt I should be a tiny bit better here because my bishop has a target and his does not. For really no reason I felt quite confident at this moment that I would win this game in high style.
31...Rb8
31...Qa7 I'm sure I looked at this move, but now I can't remember why I didn't play it. Kinda stupid not to, since his b2 pawn should be weaker than my a4 pawn.
32.Qxa4 Rxb2
33.Qa6 Qe7 [33...Qc5 34.Qe6 I felt this might be called "losing control."]
34.Qe6 Qf8
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At this point I was outside talking to Lenderman in that area you aren't supoposed to stand and talk in and he was describing his game and I was getting excited, convincing myself that I might be completely winning, since he has no way to defend the f pawn.
35.Qd7+ Kh8
36.Qf7 I had not seen that way.
36...Qxf7
37.Bxf7 e4
38.Bd5 oh well. ½–½
perhaps a shift in soft tissue body symmetry?
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Geoffrey Miller, a, , Joshua M. Tybura and Brent D. Jordana
To see whether estrus was really “lost” during human evolution (as researchers often claim), we examined ovulatory cycle effects on tip earnings by professional lap dancers working in gentlemen's clubs. Eighteen dancers recorded their menstrual periods, work shifts, and tip earnings for 60 days on a study web site. A mixed-model analysis of 296 work shifts (representing about 5300 lap dances) showed an interaction between cycle phase and hormonal contraception use. Normally cycling participants earned about US$335 per 5-h shift during estrus, US$260 per shift during the luteal phase, and US$185 per shift during menstruation. By contrast, participants using contraceptive pills showed no estrous earnings peak. These results constitute the first direct economic evidence for the existence and importance of estrus in contemporary human females, in a real-world work setting. These results have clear implications for human evolution, sexuality, and economics.
....
A final limitation is that our study did not identify the precise proximal mechanisms that influence tip earnings. These might include the previously documented shifts in body scent, facial attractiveness, soft-tissue body symmetry, waist-to-hip ratio, and verbal creativity and fluency—or they might include shifts in other phenotypic cues that have not yet been studied. We can, however, exclude some possible mediators based on previous exotic dancer research. Tip earnings are unlikely to be influenced by cycle shifts in stage-dance moves, clothing, or initial conversational content because these cues just do not vary much for professional dancers ([Barton, 2006] and Beasley, 2003 J. Beasley, Lapdancer, PowerHouse Books, New York (2003).[Beasley, 2003]). The tip earnings pattern in Fig. 1 is similar to the pattern of estradiol levels across the cycle (with a main estrous peak and a secondary midluteal peak); hence, it is plausible that estradiol levels might mediate the tip-earning effects.
Perhaps, most importantly, from an evolutionary viewpoint, further research could clarify whether women have evolved special adaptations to signal estrus through such cues—or whether the cues are “leaking” to sexually discriminating men as unselected side effects of cycle physiology. Distinguishing between estrous “signals” and “leaked cues” may be difficult in practice because estrous females (seeking extra-pair copulations with good-gene males) and extra-pair males (offering good genes) may have shared interests in female fertility signals being “conspiratorial whispers” that are accurate but inconspicuous (Pagel, 1994). In serially monogamous species such as ours, women's estrous signals may have evolved an extra degree of plausible deniability and tactical flexibility to maximize women's ability to attract high-quality extra-pair partners just before ovulation, while minimizing the primary partner's mate guarding and sexual jealousy. For these reasons, we suspect that human estrous cues are likely to be very flexible and stealthy—subtle behavioral signals that fly below the radar of conscious intention or perception, adaptively hugging the cost–benefit contours of opportunistic infidelity.
When Chess Bitch came out, Rowson's NIC review of it made a point something like 'feminists shouldn't shy away from a discussion of the effects of menstruation on chess because people do talk/think about it, and better to have a reasonable discussion*.' It seems like this should be pretty easy to look at, if you have a dozen female players who have regular cycles and are willing to tell you about them and let you compare to their rating history. (I tried looking at my own before writing this, but despite playing ten reasonably long tournaments this year, it seems like I didn't have my period at any of them. what a shame. )
Let me just add, I think you might see no effect at all on performance, i.e. I'm not suggesting it's a terribly important study, just a relatively easy one to do, at least non-rigorously. (Certainly one should expect to see far far less of an effect than you would see in a stripclub.)
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
am team east, rd 5: no rossilimo but a pseudo-zwischenzug
Amateur Team East, 17.02.2009
1.e4 c5
2.Nf3 g6
I was too lazy to prepare anything against this move, which is very stupid because Perelshteyn's very good and very, very popular book, Chess Openings for Black, Explained, recommends it. I know c3 and d4 are both moves, and I figured c3 was a better choice against a kid.
3.c3 Bg7
4.d4 cxd4
5.cxd4
9...Nc6
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but back to reality, I actually played...
18...Bxg4
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20.g3 Nc6
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Tuesday, February 17, 2009
us am team round 3: Bb5 sicilian, 2: A players, 0
Amateur Team East, 15.02.2009
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 g6 4.Bxc6
I spent some time deciding between this move and 4.0–0 because I had been looking at this fun gambit line that goes 4...Bg7 5.c3 Nf6 6.Qa4 0–0 7.d4
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amateur team east, round 1: I'm off to a vigorous start!
Amateur Team East, 14.02.2009
1.e4 c5
2.Nf3 d6
3.Bb5+ Bd7
4.Bxd7+ Qxd7
5.0–0 Nc6
6.c3 Nf6
7.d4
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Monday, February 16, 2009
It is nice. I do not want to talk about it.
Now the questions from the media starts, and of course, the first question is to Gata Kamsky, "Why was your arrival to Bulgaria so secret?". Kamsky replied that it was not a secret, it was according to the organization, and for him it is normal.
The Bulgarian National Radio asks, "The greater number of matches played is an advantage?". Topalov replied that it does not matter, nor matters the system - weather KO, round robin, or a match. As an example Topalov gave Vishy Anand who has won the title in different formats. Kamsky agreed with Topalov on the subject.
Now, obviously, he is only agreeing because this is an absolutely ridiculous thing to say and a staggering hilarious place to say it. The system of determining the world champion doesn't matter? The two potential world championship challengers don't care either way what the format is?? They don't think it makes any difference? But I prefer to think that Kamsky agreed for fun, because he recognized how aesthetically absurd it is.
Question from Novinar newspaper, "What does Kamsky think about the condition in the playing hall?", Kamsky replied that the venue is nice and that there is nothing more to comment.
....
Asked (again) if he likes the venue he answered, "It is nice, I do not want to talk about it."
Another amusing moment:
16:00 In an interview for a local news agency Silvio Danailov stated one more time that there is no such thing as home advantage in chess. He said, "What do you think, people will enter and start shouting? There will be nothing like this. This is chess."
In more personal news, I just got back from the amateur team east, where I played, for a change--I usually bring about 30 kids and go over their games, which is beautiful because I get my expenses paid and some money, and I look at that huge roomful of people all working so hard, so stressed out, and I think, "I am not working as hard as them, in fact I am very relaxed, and I am the only one getting paid! Even though we are basically doing the same thing! Hurray!"
But I played this year because of educational budget cuts, and I got 5/6, albeit playing down every round. But it was really fun to win a lot. I love winning. And I was winning the drawn games too. I'm going to post them all soon. (I am. I can because I have the week off. although guess what I'm doing with it? I'm working Wednesday Friday and Saturday. but I'm also analyzing my games because that's also important. and I'm going to the gym every day, but especially tomorrow because a good start is key.)
I would post some photos, because I took some nice ones for you, but I lost my camera. I'm thinking it might reappear.
Monday, February 9, 2009
Interview with 9Queens Founder and ChessPark/WuChess GM Jean Hoffman
EV: So let’s start with you. Can you give our readers the short version of who you are, where you are, what you do, and your relationship to chess, Chesspark, and the Wu Tang?
JH: I am a former scholastic chess player turned chess enthusiast/teacher. After college, I taught chess for three years in New York City before going back to school to get my master's in education. A little over a year ago, I moved back to my hometown Tucson, Arizona and founded the chess nonprofit 9 Queens with Jennifer Shahade. In September, I started working as the general manager of Chesspark.com and WuChess.com - an online chess and hip-hop community co-founded by RZA from the Wu-Tang Clan.
EV: Those seem like very different jobs: running a nonprofit teaching organization and a hip-hop themed chess server?
JH: I see a lot of overlap between the mission of 9 Queens and goals of Chesspark/Wuchess. I mean there are obvious differences between working for a nonprofit vs. a for-profit venture, between teaching in public schools vs. managing an online community. But Chesspark, WuChess and 9 Queens are all organizations that working to popularize chess beyond its current population. 9 Queens extends the benefits of chess to low-income youth and women and girls through chess education. Chesspark and WuChess make online accessible and appealing to nontraditional chess players. When I tell people about either organization I often find myself talking about "giving chess a makeover."
EV: How is Chesspark different from ICC? What are the coolest things you can do?
JH: I think of Chesspark as the Facebook of online chess. Chesspark combines the features of social networking sites like Facebook or Myspace with the chatting capacities of AIM. Chesspark makes online chess fun and accessible to everyone, not just serious chess players. Chesspark has a modern and easy to understand user-interface. You don't need to download anything in order to play on there. And it is really easy to chat with friends or people you are playing games with, or engage in group chat with multiple people.
Take a look at this link, it’s the official Chesspark page for the New York team in Chesspark’s College Chess League. Anyone can make their Chesspark profile look like this, or make a group page like this.
EV says: That’s fantastic, and awesome that it’s Shawn and Angel (two of my former students!)
JH: I know - I love that slideshow. I'm proud of it. This type of thing is so easy to do on Chesspark. And I think it’s what chess needs.
EV: How else is Chesspark/Wuchess trying to promote chess / help its image / attract new players?
JH: We attract new players by promoting different images of chess and by depicting a new generation of chessplayers. Whether it's RZA as a spokesperson for WuChess, or the players from the Chesspark College Association, Chesspark and WuChess show that chess can be fun, exciting and cool. In our press releases for the Chesspark College Association, we have been describing the CCA as the NCAA of chess. It's similar to what the USCL has been doing by treating chess leagues like a sport, but we want to take it one step further. The CCA makes it possible for anyone to watch the matches live, for free, even if they have never watched an online chess match before.
EV: So let’s talk about your college league. How’s it gone so far?
JH: Great. I have been blown away by how excited and enthusiastic the college players have been about the CCA. I remember the first person I pitched the league to was FM Elliott Liu from Stanford. I was really nervous, trying to explain the concept for the league and the benefits of Chesspark. But as soon as I stopped talking he said "I have been waiting for this. I will do whatever I can to help out and am so excited about this type of chess league." Since then we've convinced five teams from around the country to participate. It’s been really rewarding working with all these younger chess players who also see the need and have the desire to change the image of chess in the US.
EV: Could you briefly describe the format and the teams?
JH: It is a round robin tourney with matches twice a week (usually on Sunday and Wednesday). Two teams of four players face off against each other. The time control is game 30, with 2 second delay between moves. All matches start at 6 pm PST.
EV: Do you need a Chesspark account to watch games?
JH: People interested in watching just have to create a free account. Then they can play on Chesspark for free and watch all the matches live for free. There are also PRO memberships available that have other advantages - like the opportunity to chat with players after the CCA matches and go over the games.
EV: So the teams you have are Arizona, Stanford, UTD-B, Miami, and New York? Who's winning so far?
JH: UTB beat Miami on Wed, 3-1 with NM Ernesto Alvarez beating IM Dan Fernandez in an exciting match.
Stanford beat Arizona 3-1 on Thursday. On Sunday, Arizona beat New York 3-1 but NM Mac Molner from NYU ended the match with 12 seconds left on his clock and this really cool win against NM Leo Martinez. The teams are really strong, and so far the matches have been really competitive.
EV: Can new teams join? What are your goals for expansion?
JH: New teams are welcome to join the CCA for future tournaments and events. I am hoping to have at least two more tournaments in 2009, including a team blitz tournament and an individual blitz tournament.
EV: Are you thinking about doing an online high school or grade school league?
JH: Yes I am. Glad you brought that up. I was really influenced by the advice that you and Greg Shahade gave me a couple weeks ago when we were discussing the CCA. Greg brought up how there is currently no online high school or scholastic chess league. He said if Chesspark could create one, it would fill a need and activate a lot of scholastic coaches and teams to get involved in online leagues. We are working on creating a scholastic team league next fall as well.
EV: I know I talk a lot to other coaches about organizing online matches, but it never actually happens. If schools wanted to play a match over Chesspark right now, could they do that?
JH: Sure. If two schools wanted to organize a match online they could set up free accounts and host a match. But we also offer reduced PRO memberships, club rates and scholarships for schools that want to have PRO accounts for their teams.
CCA Match Schedule
Watch your favorite college chess players face off in a round robin, game 30, online tournament. All matches are played live on Chesspark. Don’t miss out on the excitement. Create your free or PRO account today!
Feb 4, 6pm PST UTB vs Miami
Feb 5, 6pm PST Stanford vs Arizona
Feb 8, 6pm PST Arizona vs NYU/BMCC
Feb 11, 6pm PST Stanford vs UTB
Feb 17, 6pm PST NYU/BMCC vs Stanford
Feb 18, 6pm PST Arizona vs UTB
Feb 22, 6pm PST Stanford vs Miami
Feb 24, 6pm PST NYU/BMCC vs UTB
Feb 28, 6pm PST Arizona vs Miami
Mar 4, 6pm PST NYU/BMCC vs Miami
Friday, February 6, 2009
war against terror / depression
Army Data Show Rise in Number of Suicides
The number of soldiers who committed suicide in January could reach 24, a count that would be the highest monthly total since the Army began tabulating suicides in 1980.
The latest Army figures, released Thursday, show seven confirmed suicides last month, with another 17 deaths still being investigated. The Army has said the vast majority of suspicious deaths typically turn out to be suicide.
24 suicides in one month seems like a lot to me.
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
Sunday, February 1, 2009
City Championships
* won the k-6 section (although Hunter and Horace Mann didn't show up, so it wasn't the fight it could have been),
*came second to hunter in the k-8. the truth is that we have no chance again them at nationals if they all show up and play in our section. but they might not all show up, or they might try to win the k-9 or k-12 (it's supernationals this year, meaning the k-5, k-6, k-8, k-9, and k-12 are all held simultaneously). still, it's kinda depressing to know that it might become apparent that we have no chance to win. not that i have to win, i'm really not hypercompetitive, maybe I'll be bummed out for a couple days, but that's all. still, it would depress me to think throughout March that there was no chance. (2 days later: Actually, I forgot that Getz and Landesmann are 9th graders, so nevermind!)
*came third in the high school behind the super-strong Stuyvescent (3 2000s? 1 1900?) and Hunter.