RIP IA Carol Jarecki 1935-2021

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  • RIP IA Carol Jarecki 1935-2021

    The world of chess has lost one of its true giants. American IA Carol Jarecki, the first woman to become a world-class arbiter, has passed away recently. The fide.com website announced her death.

    I read the sad news in The New York Times yesterday; page A25 of the international edition.

    She served as Head Arbiter for the 1995 match between Garry Kasparov and Viswanathan Anand in New York, for the Kasparov vs Deep Blue match in 1997, for the Women's World Championship in 2013, for at least six U.S. Championships, and for many other high-level events. An IA since 1984, she became in 1989 the first woman to referee an event in a world championship cycle, when she directed the Seattle match between GMs Anatoly Karpov and Johann Hjartarson.

    I had the exceptional privilege of working with Carol at the 2005 Minneapolis HB Global Challenge, which attracted 1,500 players. She served as Head Arbiter, while I was an Associate Arbiter as #2 in the U2200 section, with about 200 players. The tournament was an enormous success from the chess standpoint, attracting nearly 100 GMs, while offering the record (at the time) $500,000 (U.S.) in guaranteed prizes, across seven sections. It was initiated by GM Maurice Ashley, and had a significant local charitable component, with partnerships involving chess and youth / scholastic funding, through sponsor HB, a Minnesota-based company.

    I received conditions, with my return airfare from Ottawa paid, hotel and meal money paid, and an honorarium. I was met at the airport on arrival, and escorted downtown by light rail network to my hotel, then to a meeting of tournament staff, ending the day in a fancy restaurant, where Carol picked up the dinner and drinks tab for the assembled group of arbiters. We had nearly 500 on-site registrations to deal with the next day. Carol asked for an hour with me at breakfast the next day, from which she determined my skill level, and assignment. I was well received by the group; it was my first American event as an arbiter. We were short-staffed, with the vast increase in tournament size at the last moment; working together smoothly as arbiters was essential, and it happened!!

    The event was a real treadmill of tasks, coordinated perfectly by Carol's leadership skills; it was nine rounds over five days. We were working 16 hours per day. Carol arranged for me to visit the United States Chess Federation meeting taking place on site, when I told her I was a CFC Governor; I was warmly welcomed there as a visiting guest, given a chance to speak, and offered hospitality.

    In the last round, I reported to my immediate supervisor, IA Robert Singletary, about suspicious behavior from one contestant, who kept visiting the washroom after nearly every move; he had done so in previous rounds as well. The player was among the leaders chasing the $20,000 (U.S) first prize for the section. Robert informed Carol and Deputy Arbiter IA Robert Tanner; the decision was to form an investigative team with Carol, IA Singletary and IA Tanner, splitting off the two Roberts from any more sectional duties that round, leaving me on my own, in charge of the section. Carol had enough confidence in me to do this. It turned out that the player under investigation was communicating by cell phone from the washroom with a confederate in a nearby hotel, who used a chess program to find strong moves and relay the information; local police were called to assist. The player was disqualified. I would place the two Roberts at a level comparable to Canadian arbiters IA Jonathan Berry and IA Hal Bond, having worked with all of them. Carol was a level above that, in my view.

    Carol made a special time to thank me in person the next day, and said she would work with me again anytime. Unfortunately I never had another chance for that. She was a warm person, but she expected top effort, and knew how to get people to do their best.

    Carol was an exceptional pioneer, and one of the great leaders giants of world chess.

    Rest In Peace, my friend.

    Respectfully submitted,
    Frank Dixon
    NTD, Kingston

  • #2
    Carol served as an Arbiter at the 1988 Saint John World Chess Festival, according to tournament reports in our national magazine at that time. I don't know if she was involved in any more Canadian events.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by Frank Dixon View Post
      Carol served as an Arbiter at the 1988 Saint John World Chess Festival, according to tournament reports in our national magazine at that time. I don't know if she was involved in any more Canadian events.
      Carol used to do the Bermuda tournaments, which many Canadians would go to. A very nice and well respected lady. RIP.

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      • #4

        I met Carol at the 1998 Elista Olympiad -really lovely
        person. I was a NP team captain, but also a FIDE Delegate,
        as was Carol, and we met at the FIDE General Assembly.

        We ate at a quiet place sometime later - food was incredibly
        cheap, a great meal for 2 with wine, dessert and coffee was
        under 200 roubles......but 1 US dollar then was 30 roubles!

        We shared an interest in child prodigies and beating the
        casinos - she at the roulette wheels, me at blackjack - I as
        a youngster in the early '80's when the dealers used only two
        decks, and the marker was always two-thirds down the shoe.

        Of course I card-counted a la Ed Thorpe, and made a small
        bit of money in Europe before I got leaned on, but I gather
        Carol and her husband made over a million dollars betting
        on biased roulette wheels, mainly in Italy.

        She was very hospitable, as Frank noted. Also a fine pilot.

        I have to say, she appeared much younger than I now know:)

        Which is prob why I did not see her at the wild traditional
        Bermuda Olympiad party! For those not in the know, the
        traditional Bermuda party is a virtually free dance party
        hosted by the Bermuda team for all comers, the night before
        the free day (obviously!). Spirits flow freely!

        Carol, a US citizen, represented BVI - the British Virgin
        Islands. Again, for those not in the know, FIDE 'appoints'
        it's own 'delegates' to represent 'territories' not yet
        members of FIDE - these are very useful in the elections!

        Sorry to hear of her passing, she was a lovely person
        and accomplished arbiter - and deeply saddened to hear
        she went down to that most virulent, unforgiving and
        painful of afflictions - pancreatic cancer. RIP Carol.

        Comment


        • #5
          Regrettably, Carol was not inducted into the U.S. Chess Hall of Fame before her death. I am hoping this can be attained quickly. The Hall has inducted a number of deserving people who are still active in chess, such as GM Joel Benjamin, GM Alex Yermolinsky, GM Alex Shabalov, GM Maurice Ashley, GM Susan Polgar, GM Nick de Firmian, GM Larry Christiansen; all of them are a generation or more younger than Carol. So, that is an unfortunate oversight for Carol.

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          • #6
            Frank you have a very good point. I have a suggestion. Why dont you email the induction board at the US Chess Hall of Fame with your concerns and suggest Carol Jarecki as a worthy candidate.
            That way you can start the ball rolling.

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            • #7
              Hans, that is a really good idea, and I will aim for the time to follow up with it. The U.S. Hall is really good; I was looking at the members, and there is NO ONE not deserving. I can think of a few people, besides Carol, who I think should be in: Walter Penn Shipley and Jack Peters for sure; perhaps Eric Schiller.

              I wanted to thank Francis for his informative and personal post about Carol. I also did not know she was 86; when I worked with her, in 2005, she would have been 70; I thought she was about 55 years old. I believe she and her family had a vacation home in the British Virgin Islands, so that may be why she served as their FIDE delegate for many years.

              Her work effort was simply off the charts. I was putting in 16 to 18 hours per day for the Minneapolis event, and she was at the site when I arrived, and still there when I left for the day!! What a leadership example!!

              Carol's son John Jarecki had at one stage in the 1970s the record for being the youngest U.S. National Master player; that was how she got into chess, by taking him to events. She told me that since she was there anyway at the tournament sites, she decided to make herself useful by helping to run the events. That proved to be the start of something very important!!

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