Chess compositions from George Grätzer
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Re: Chess compositions from George Grätzer
This seems to be a somewhat odd question, unless you are thinking the author may have moved after retirement. He has been a professor of mathematics at the University of Manitoba for many years, I believe, as the website provided suggests. He is well known in the world of TeX / LaTeX for his classic book Math into LaTeX. I have it around somewhere...Originally posted by J. Ken MacDonald View PostThis is a CDN website. Do you know if the composer is resident in Canada?
John
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Re: Chess compositions from George Grätzer
The compositions are all from 1954-57, although the last one is reconstructed, in 2009, from "defective compositions of old". I can't recall him playing in any Winnipeg chess events.
Interestingly, there's a David Gratzer of Winnipeg (blank) rating in the CFC rating list. A relative, perhaps?
There is another Hungarian composer in Winnipeg whose output far exceeded Gratzer's. His name is Zoltan Bodnar and his specialties were help double stalemates (HDP's - in German), fairy problems, shortest proof games (SPG's) and others. Zolly doesn't compose any more, but he has, tucked away, a gigantic collection of problems and their solutions. In all the years that I knew him, I failed to convince him to publish any but a few of his compositions. That's a real shame as some of the proof games were possibly world records. My old blog, Exclam! Online, has some of the few published compositions from Zoltan.Dogs will bark, but the caravan of chess moves on.
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Re: Chess compositions from George Grätzer
Universities rarely give "Distinguished Professor" titles to passing-bys:
http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/sc...aculty/651.htm
For what it's worth, I am not even sure Grätzer exists.
My hypothesis regarding his non-participation in the CFC is that the Chess Federation of Canada does not provide any services that touches chess composition. Actually, it might be more honest if it re-abreviates itself the OTBCFC.Last edited by Benoit St-Pierre; Monday, 14th December, 2009, 05:55 PM.
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Re: Chess compositions from George Grätzer
I meant problem 3, with the Q vs R and 5 pawns. You described problem 2 , where Rh6+ is illegal, it should be Rh8+Last edited by Alan Baljeu; Tuesday, 15th December, 2009, 02:08 PM.
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