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Dark Knight / Le Chevalier Noir
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---- Nous avons besoin d'un traduction français!
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Ted Hsu was elected as the new MP for Kingston and the Islands yesterday. He is a very talented fellow, with two degrees in physics, a background in science, financial services, and renewable energy, and has been active politically.
Ted was also a talented chess player during his youth in the Kingston area, the late 1970s! He has not played competitively for many years. :) :)
I'm planning to discuss chess issues with him, with the idea to raise the profile of Canadian chess in a positive way.
Ted Hsu was elected as the new MP for Kingston and the Islands yesterday. He is a very talented fellow, with two degrees in physics, a background in science, financial services, and renewable energy, and has been active politically.
Ted was also a talented chess player during his youth in the Kingston area, the late 1970s! He has not played competitively for many years. :) :)
I'm planning to discuss chess issues with him, with the idea to raise the profile of Canadian chess in a positive way.
It is an interesting idea, good for the chess players in Kingston's area!
Kingston's Ted Hsu, elected on Monday, May 2, is the new Liberal MP for Kingston and the Islands.
According to chess.ca, Ted has a CFC rating of 1905. His CFC number 102608 dates from the 1970s, showing he originally joined in late 1972 or early 1973, shortly before I did (my original number was 102873 but was replaced after inactivity, and my first rated event was the 1973 Quebec Carnaval Open in February of that year, for comparison purposes). His name appears occasionally as a prizewinner of Kingston events in local reports to be found in Chess Canada magazines in the late 1970s.
So Ted is likely the strongest chessplayer elected as an MP in Canadian history! :) :)
CFC Bulletin #22, May-Jun 1977, page 6
reports on the "Chess Weekend in Kingston", held in
October 1976 and organized by the late Kalev Pugi.
Amongst other chessy wonders and delights:
"The first chess event was held Thursday evening. Three
local players, Dr. R. Kewley, Michael Bauer, and
12-year-old Teddy Hsu played simultaneously against 40
players. The local TV station carried this tournament
as a news item, and the Whig-Standard ran a large
front-page picture of Teddy Hsu...."
I can think of a stronger player (Leo Williams) who has run for
political office, but not been elected. I can think of a
chess player who has ascended to a more responsible political
office (Bernard Lord, former Premier of New Brunswick), but
he was not so highly rated as Ted Hsu.
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