Saturday, March 17, 2001
Miami welcomes grandmaster
Gold domes will pop up in Oxford just in time for the big match.
This week, Miami University brought to town two 2,000-pound onion domes, each 15 1/2 feet around, to be placed atop Harrison Hall, home of the new Center for Russian and Post-Soviet Studies.
That's appropriate, for at 6 p.m. March 28 the Miami University Chess Club will host games with a Russian, the grandmaster Gregory Kaidanov.
These won't be just any games, mind you, but 25-board simultaneous chess matches against club members and other local players. According to faculty adviser Clyde Brown, a simultaneous chess match pits a skilled player against multiple opponents.
In this case, the grandmaster will move quickly among his 25 opponents. Rules require club players to make a
move within 10 seconds of the grandmaster's arrival at their boards.
This is the chance of a lifetime for chess players, Mr. Brown said. It is like playing golf with Tiger Woods, tennis with Martina Hingis, basketball with Wally Szczerbiak.
Mr. Kaidanov was born in Russia in 1959. He earned the title of grandmaster in 1988 and immigrated to the United States in 1991. For the last 10 years, he has ranked among the top three American players and in the top 40 or 50 chess players across the world, said Michael Gribov, president of the Chess Club.
In this age of video and Internet use, over-the-board chess games are probably suffering a little, Mr. Brown said.
But chess on the Internet is booming, he said. At any time, thousands of players from all over the world are playing. So if you're awake at 2 a.m. you can find somebody to play chess.
Miami's Chess Club is 2 years old. It has 60 members. Mr. Brown is trying to attract interest and grow the membership by inviting Mr. Kaidanov, of Lexington, Ky.
Mr. Kaidanov will also discuss Russian Chess: Past, Present and Future, and discuss American chess. His free talk will be at 2 p.m. March 28 in the Bystrom Room in the Shriver Center.
MASON Gary Malinak will speak on his favorite topic trains at Tuesday's 7:30 p.m. meeting of the Mason Historical Society.
Information: Alverta Green Museum, 207 Church St., 398-6750.
Randy McNutt's column runs on Saturday. He may be reached at (513) 860-7118 or at The Cincinnati Enquirer, 4820 Business Center Way, Cincinnati, OH 45246.
Cincinnati's decline leads Ohio cities
Ohio becoming more diverse, count shows
Minorities become some areas' majority
Numbers reveal flow of Hispanics into area
State numbers may lead to political shift
Tracts, blocks and undercounts: a census vocabulary
Ohio's motto constitutional, federal court rules
Thousands support injured firefighter
Villa Hills: The whole story
Villa Hills chronology
Successor next question for city
New anti-profiling bill in works
NKU luring transfer students
Remark to mean discipline for boy, 13
UK fandom runs deep
Ceremony today for creation museum
New defenders sought in morgue case
Schools to rely on own smoking policies
Woman guilty in crash -- again
Abortion coverage dropped
Butler Co. honors Voinovich
Free cabs for safety on St. Pat's
HOWARD: Uniting faiths for tolerance
Kentucky Digest
Law may help no-smoking rules
Local Digest
McNUTT: Miami welcomes grandmaster
Mom keeps daughter's memory alive
One teen pleads in bias case
Separate abuse-case trials sought
Keeneland to test for drugs
Schools lead poll as Ohio's top issue
Three guilty of swindling investors' $26M