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Date: 05 Mar 2007 16:57:07
From: samsloan
Subject: Sam Loyd's Cyclopedia of 5,000 Puzzles Tricks & Conundrums with Answers
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Sam Loyd (1841-1911) was the all time greatest inventor and developer of puzzles. He is described by tin Gardner, the author of the "Mathematical Games" column in Scientific American, as "America's greatest puzzlist and an authentic American genius". His fame is world wide and books of his puzzles have been published in Russian and other languages. Sam Loyd's Cyclopedia of 5,000 Puzzles Tricks & Conundrums with Answers was compiled by the son of Sam Loyd and published in 1914 after his death. Although many books have been written about some of Loyd's puzzles, this remains the most complete volume of all of his puzzles. This is considered to be the most fabulous and exciting collection of puzzles ever assembled in one volume. The puzzles come with wonderful illustrations. Sam Loyd is even more famous among chess masters,. His chess problems and compositions contain ideas that are studied by chess masters to this day. According to Grandmaster Pal Benko, the great endgame composer Troitzky used themes created by Sam Loyd for his compositions. In 1987, Sam Loyd was inducted into the US Chess Hall of Fame, the only chess player ever so honored because of his chess compositions. Bobby Fischer is a big fan of Sam Loyd Puzzles. I personally timed Fischer with a stop watch at his request where he demonstrated that he could solve the Sam Loyd 15-Puzzle every time in 25 seconds or less. Fischer and I used to hang out together late nights in Midtown Manhattan, where he would practice solving this puzzle. This was years before Fischer won the World Chess Championship. Fischer later demonstrated the ability to solve the 15-Puzzle on the Johnny Carson Show. The most famous chess composition by Sam Loyd is his demonstration that it is possible to achieve stalemate in chess in only ten moves. The moves are 1.e3 a5 2.Qh5 Ra6 3.Qxa5 h5 4.Qxc7 Rah6 5.h4 f6 6.Qxd7+ Kf7 7.Qxb7 Qd3 8.Qxb8 Qh7 9.Qxc8 Kg6 10.Qe6 Every now and then some wise guys who are conspiring to draw a game by agreement play these moves in a serious tournament game. International Master Bernard Zuckerman played this game against Larry Gilden in the Eastern Open Chess Championship in Washington DC in 1962, then the biggest money tournament in America. Gilden was fortunate that Zuckerman kept his promise to draw the game. The tournament was won by Grandmaster Pal Benko. Sam Loyd also demonstrated that stalemate in 12 moves can occur with all the pieces still on the board. The moves are 1.d4 d6 2.Qd2 e5 3.a4 e4 4.Qf4 f5 5.h3 Be7 6.Qh2 Be6 7.Ra3 c5 8.Rg3 Qa5+ 9.Nd2 Bh4 10.f3 Bb3 11.d5 e3 12.c4 f4 The Sam Loyd 15-Puzzle has a caused a minor controversy recently. A 2006 book by Jerry Slocum claims that Sam Loyd did not really invent the 15-Puzzle, which is Sam Loyds most famous puzzle. In that book, The 15 Puzzle Book by Jerry Slocum and Dic Sonneveld,, ISBN 1890980153, the authors state: "The great puzzle master Sam Loyd claimed to have invented the Fifteen Puzzle and that claim has stood largely unchallenged for 115 years." They claim that the puzzle was actually invented by Noyes Palmer Chapman, a postmaster in Canastota, New York, possibly as early as 1874. However, the Chapman puzzle was not really the same as the Loyd puzzle. This issue can be debated forever, much like debating whether Newton really invented calculus. In any event, it is clear that Loyd is the one who popularized the puzzle by offering a prize of $1000 in a New York newspaper to any one who could figure out a way to reverse the position of two adjacent blocks in the puzzle. Loyd had already worked out mathematically that the solution is impossible. The 15-puzzle problem caused a world-wide frenzy in 1880; and made it The Greatest Puzzle of All Time. Samuel Loyd was born in Philadelphia on January 31, 1841 and raised in Brooklyn, New York. His first puzzle was published in a New York newspaper at the age of 14. From shortly thereafter until his death in 1911, he was America's undisputed puzzle king. His father, a real estate operator, moved the family from Philadelphia to New York in 1844, where Loyd attended public school until he was 17. He became obsessed with the game of chess at age 10 and as a youth frequented a chess club where his interest in making puzzles started. His first problem was published by a New York paper when he was 14, and during the next five years his output of chess puzzles was so prolific that he was known throughout the chess world. By 1858, he was hailed as the leading American writer of chess problems. In 1877 and 1878, Loyd wrote a weekly chess page for Scientific American Supplement and these columns comprised most of the book Chess Strategy, printed in 1978, and containing 500 chess problems. When Loyd was only 17, he invented his Trick Mules or Donkey Puzzle which is deceptively difficult. The object is to cut apart the three pieces and then reassemble them so that the two jockeys are riding the mules. The puzzle was sold by Loyd to the American showman Phineas T. Barnum (of Barnum & Bailey Circus fame). Loyd earned some $10,000 from the puzzle. On April 10, 1911, Sam Loyd he died in his home on 153 Halsey Street near the corner of cy Avenue in Brooklyn, New York. His obituary in the New York Times reported that he had been educated as a civil engineer and held a steam and mechanical engineers license in New York City, that he was a one time editor of The Sanitary Engineer, and that he was also a successful stock ket operator, but that he never bought stocks on gin. After his death, his son took over the puzzle business. The original name of his son was Walter but he started calling himself Sam Loyd and named his own son Sam Loyd Junior. His son operated a puzzle shop on Fulton Avenue in Brooklyn until his death in 1934. This explains a paradox in this book, because it says that a prize can be won by sending solutions to puzzles in this book to Sam Loyd before January 31, 1915. Since Sam Loyd had died in 1911 and this book was published in 1914, one wonders how it was possible to send him the solution. The answer is that the son was now calling himself Sam Loyd. A further conundrum is that in order to claim the prize one needs to solve a number of puzzles, including the 14-15 puzzle which is found on page 235 of this book. However, as we now know, this puzzle has no solution. Another problem is that in addition to sending in the solutions prior to January 31, 1915 one must also send them in after December 1, 1915. This one is a real head scratcher. The answer seems to be that this is a typo, but one can never be sure. According to the New York Times, The Donkey Puzzle sold more than one million copies. Other successful puzzles were the Fifteen-Block, page 235, Pigs in Clover, Parchesi, and Get off the Earth, page 323. Other popular problems were Back from the Klondike, page 106, and How Old is y, page 53. Sam Loyd did not claim to have invented all the puzzles in this book. Some he simply improved. Others he credited to others. An example is the Towers of Hanoi puzzle on page 223. This puzzle is still sold in every childrens store. The inventor originally named it the Tower of Brahma or Bramah, said to be in India. Loyd changed the name and moved it to Hanoi, making it more popular. Sam Sloan ISBN 0-923891-78-1
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Date: 29 Mar 2007 15:58:48
From:
Subject: Sam Sloan is a criminal who molested young girls
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Sam Sloan is a criminal. He uses Pokemon porn to lure innocent children to his website.
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Date: 29 Mar 2007 15:50:01
From: samsloan
Subject: Re: Sam Loyd's Cyclopedia of 5,000 Puzzles Tricks & Conundrums with Answers
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Sam Loyd's Cyclopedia of 5,000 Puzzles Tricks & Conundrums with Answers has been reprinted today !!!! http://www.amazon.com/Cyclopedia-Puzzles-tricks-Conundrums-Answers/dp/0923891781/ Originally published in 1914, many of the individual puzzles in this book have been reprinted and republished many times, but this is the first time the complete 384 page book with ALL of the diagrams and drawings has been reprinted. Sanitized versions of some of these puzzles have been published especially by tin Gardner, the mathematical games columnist for Scientific American, but he removed the off-color reks and drawings. Sam Sloan On 5, 8:57 pm, "samsloan" <[email protected] > wrote: > SamLoyd(1841-1911) was the all time greatest inventor and developer > of puzzles. He is described by tin Gardner, the author of the > "Mathematical Games" column in Scientific American, as "America's > greatest puzzlist and an authentic American genius". His fame is world > wide and books of his puzzles have been published in Russian and other > languages. > > SamLoyd'sCyclopedia of 5,000 Puzzles Tricks & Conundrums with > Answers was compiled by the son ofSamLoydand published in 1914 > after his death. Although many books have been written about some ofLoyd'spuzzles, this remains the most complete volume of all of his > puzzles. > > This is considered to be the most fabulous and exciting collection of > puzzles ever assembled in one volume. The puzzles come with wonderful > illustrations. > > SamLoydis even more famous among chess masters,. His chess problems > and compositions contain ideas that are studied by chess masters to > this day. According to Grandmaster Pal Benko, the great endgame > composer Troitzky used themes created bySamLoydfor his > compositions. In 1987,SamLoydwas inducted into the US Chess Hall of > Fame, the only chess player ever so honored because of his chess > compositions. > > Bobby Fischer is a big fan ofSamLoydPuzzles. I personally timed > Fischer with a stop watch at his request where he demonstrated that he > could solve theSamLoyd15-Puzzle every time in 25 seconds or less. > Fischer and I used to hang out together late nights in Midtown > Manhattan, where he would practice solving this puzzle. This was years > before Fischer won the World Chess Championship. Fischer later > demonstrated the ability to solve the 15-Puzzle on the Johnny Carson > Show. > > The most famous chess composition bySamLoydis his demonstration > that it is possible to achieve stalemate in chess in only ten moves. > The moves are 1.e3 a5 2.Qh5 Ra6 3.Qxa5 h5 4.Qxc7 Rah6 5.h4 f6 6.Qxd7+ > Kf7 7.Qxb7 Qd3 8.Qxb8 Qh7 9.Qxc8 Kg6 10.Qe6 > > Every now and then some wise guys who are conspiring to draw a game by > agreement play these moves in a serious tournament game. International > Master Bernard Zuckerman played this game against Larry Gilden in the > Eastern Open Chess Championship in Washington DC in 1962, then the > biggest money tournament in America. Gilden was fortunate that > Zuckerman kept his promise to draw the game. The tournament was won by > Grandmaster Pal Benko. > > SamLoydalso demonstrated that stalemate in 12 moves can occur with > all the pieces still on the board. The moves are 1.d4 d6 2.Qd2 e5 3.a4 > e4 4.Qf4 f5 5.h3 Be7 6.Qh2 Be6 7.Ra3 c5 8.Rg3 Qa5+ 9.Nd2 Bh4 10.f3 Bb3 > 11.d5 e3 12.c4 f4 > > TheSamLoyd15-Puzzle has a caused a minor controversy recently. A > 2006 book by Jerry Slocum claims thatSamLoyddid not really invent > the 15-Puzzle, which isSamLoyds most famous puzzle. In that book, > The 15 Puzzle Book by Jerry Slocum and Dic Sonneveld,, ISBN > 1890980153, the authors state: "The great puzzle masterSamLoyd > claimed to have invented the Fifteen Puzzle and that claim has stood > largely unchallenged for 115 years." They claim that the puzzle was > actually invented by Noyes Palmer Chapman, a postmaster in Canastota, > New York, possibly as early as 1874. However, the Chapman puzzle was > not really the same as theLoydpuzzle. This issue can be debated > forever, much like debating whether Newton really invented calculus. > In any event, it is clear thatLoydis the one who popularized the > puzzle by offering a prize of $1000 in a New York newspaper to any one > who could figure out a way to reverse the position of two adjacent > blocks in the puzzle.Loydhad already worked out mathematically that > the solution is impossible. The 15-puzzle problem caused a world-wide > frenzy in 1880; and made it The Greatest Puzzle of All Time. > > SamuelLoydwas born in Philadelphia on January 31, 1841 and raised in > Brooklyn, New York. His first puzzle was published in a New York > newspaper at the age of 14. From shortly thereafter until his death in > 1911, he was America's undisputed puzzle king. His father, a real > estate operator, moved the family from Philadelphia to New York in > 1844, whereLoydattended public school until he was 17. He became > obsessed with the game of chess at age 10 and as a youth frequented a > chess club where his interest in making puzzles started. His first > problem was published by a New York paper when he was 14, and during > the next five years his output of chess puzzles was so prolific that > he was known throughout the chess world. By 1858, he was hailed as the > leading American writer of chess problems. In 1877 and 1878,Loyd > wrote a weekly chess page for Scientific American Supplement and these > columns comprised most of the book Chess Strategy, printed in 1978, > and containing 500 chess problems. > > WhenLoydwas only 17, he invented his Trick Mules or Donkey Puzzle > which is deceptively difficult. The object is to cut apart the three > pieces and then reassemble them so that the two jockeys are riding the > mules. The puzzle was sold byLoydto the American showman Phineas T. > Barnum (of Barnum & Bailey Circus fame).Loydearned some $10,000 from > the puzzle. > > On April 10, 1911,SamLoydhe died in his home on 153 Halsey Street > near the corner of cy Avenue in Brooklyn, New York. His obituary in > the New York Times reported that he had been educated as a civil > engineer and held a steam and mechanical engineers license in New York > City, that he was a one time editor of The Sanitary Engineer, and that > he was also a successful stock ket operator, but that he never > bought stocks on gin. > > After his death, his son took over the puzzle business. The original > name of his son was Walter but he started calling himselfSamLoydand > named his own sonSamLoydJunior. His son operated a puzzle shop on > Fulton Avenue in Brooklyn until his death in 1934. > > This explains a paradox in this book, because it says that a prize can > be won by sending solutions to puzzles in this book toSamLoydbefore > January 31, 1915. SinceSamLoydhad died in 1911 and this book was > published in 1914, one wonders how it was possible to send him the > solution. The answer is that the son was now calling himselfSamLoyd. > > A further conundrum is that in order to claim the prize one needs to > solve a number of puzzles, including the 14-15 puzzle which is found > on page 235 of this book. However, as we now know, this puzzle has no > solution. > > Another problem is that in addition to sending in the solutions prior > to January 31, 1915 one must also send them in after December 1, 1915. > This one is a real head scratcher. The answer seems to be that this is > a typo, but one can never be sure. > > According to the New York Times, The Donkey Puzzle sold more than one > million copies. Other successful puzzles were the Fifteen-Block, page > 235, Pigs in Clover, Parchesi, and Get off the Earth, page 323. Other > popular problems were Back from the Klondike, page 106, and How Old is > y, page 53. > > SamLoyddid not claim to have invented all the puzzles in this book. > Some he simply improved. Others he credited to others. An example is > the Towers of Hanoi puzzle on page 223. This puzzle is still sold in > every childrens store. The inventor originally named it the Tower of > Brahma or Bramah, said to be in India.Loydchanged the name and moved > it to Hanoi, making it more popular. > > SamSloan > > ISBN 0-923891-78-1
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Date: 06 Mar 2007 02:56:01
From: samsloan
Subject: Re: Sam Loyd's Cyclopedia of 5,000 Puzzles Tricks & Conundrums with Answers
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INTRODUCTION Sam Loyd (1841-1911) was the all time greatest inventor and developer of puzzles. He is described by tin Gardner, the author of the "Mathematical Games" column in Scientific American, as "America's greatest puzzlist and an authentic American genius". His fame is world wide and books of his puzzles have been published in Russian and other languages. This book, Sam Loyd's Cyclopedia of 5,000 Puzzles Tricks & Conundrums with Answers, was compiled by his son and published in 1914 after his death. Although many books have been written about some of Loyd's puzzles, this remains the most complete volume of all of his puzzles. This is considered to be the most fabulous and exciting collection of puzzles ever assembled in one volume. The puzzles come with wonderful illustrations. Sam Loyd is even more famous among chess masters. His chess problems and compositions contain ideas that are studied by chess masters to this day. According to Grandmaster Pal Benko, the great endgame composer Troitzky used themes created by Sam Loyd. In 1987, Sam Loyd was inducted into the US Chess Hall of Fame, the only chess player ever so honored because of his chess compositions. Bobby Fischer is a big fan of Sam Loyd Puzzles. I personally timed Fischer with a stop watch at his request where he demonstrated that he could solve the Sam Loyd 15-Puzzle every time in 25 seconds or less. Fischer and I used to hang out together late nights in Midtown Manhattan, where he would practice solving this puzzle. This was years before Fischer won the World Chess Championship. Fischer later demonstrated the ability to solve the 15-Puzzle on the Johnny Carson Show. The most famous chess composition by Sam Loyd is his demonstration that it is possible to achieve stalemate in chess in only ten moves. The moves are 1.e3 a5 2.Qh5 Ra6 3.Qxa5 h5 4.Qxc7 Rah6 5.h4 f6 6.Qxd7+ Kf7 7.Qxb7 Qd3 8.Qxb8 Qh7 9.Qxc8 Kg6 10.Qe6 XABCDEFGHY 8-+-+-vlntr( 7+-+-zp-zpq' 6-+-+Qzpktr& 5+-+-+-+p% 4-+-+-+-zP$ 3+-+-zP-+-# 2PzPPzP-zPP+" 1tRNvL-mKLsNR! xabcdefghy Every now and then some wise guys who are conspiring to draw a game by agreement play these moves in a serious tournament game. International Master Bernard Zuckerman played this game against Larry Gilden in the 1962 Eastern Open Chess Championship in Washington DC, then the biggest money tournament in America. Gilden was fortunate that Zuckerman kept his promise to draw the game. The tournament was won by Grandmaster Pal Benko. Sam Loyd also demonstrated that stalemate in 12 moves can occur with all the pieces still on the board. The moves are 1.d4 d6 2.Qd2 e5 3.a4 e4 4.Qf4 f5 5.h3 Be7 6.Qh2 Be6 7.Ra3 c5 8.Rg3 Qa5+ 9.Nd2 Bh4 10.f3 Bb3 11.d5 e3 12.c4 f4 XABCDEFGHY 8rsn-+k+ntr( 7zpp+-+-zpp' 6-+-zp-+-+& 5wq-zpP+-+-% 4P+P+-zp-vl$ 3+l+-zpPtRP# 2-zP-sNP+PwQ" 1+-vL-mKLsNR! xabcdefghy The Sam Loyd 15-Puzzle has a caused a minor controversy recently. A 2006 book by Jerry Slocum claims that Sam Loyd did not really invent the 15-Puzzle, which is Sam Loyd's most famous puzzle. In that book, "The 15 Puzzle Book" by Jerry Slocum and Dic Sonneveld, ISBN 1890980153, the authors state: "The great puzzle master Sam Loyd claimed to have invented the Fifteen Puzzle and that claim has stood largely unchallenged for 115 years." They claim that the puzzle was actually invented by Noyes Palmer Chapman, a postmaster in Canastota, New York, possibly as early as 1874. However, the Chapman puzzle was not really the same as the Loyd puzzle. This issue can be debated forever, much like debating whether Newton really invented calculus. In any event, it is clear that Loyd is the one who popularized the puzzle by offering a prize of $1000 in a New York newspaper to any one who could figure out a way to reverse the position of two adjacent blocks in the puzzle. Loyd had already worked out mathematically that the solution is impossible. The 15-puzzle problem caused a world-wide frenzy in 1880; and made it The Greatest Puzzle of All Time. Samuel Loyd was born in Philadelphia on January 31, 1841 and was raised in Brooklyn, New York. His first puzzle was published in a New York newspaper at the age of 14. From shortly thereafter until his death in 1911, he was America's undisputed puzzle king. His father, a real estate operator, moved the family from Philadelphia to New York in 1844, where Loyd attended public school until he was 17. He became obsessed with the game of chess at age 10 and as a youth frequented a chess club where his interest in making puzzles developed. His first problem was published by a New York paper when he was 14, and during the next five years his output of chess puzzles was so prolific that he was known throughout the chess world. By 1858, he was hailed as the leading American writer of chess problems. In 1877 and 1878, Loyd wrote a weekly chess page for Scientific American Supplement and these columns comprised most of the book Chess Strategy, printed in 1978, containing 500 chess problems. When Loyd was only 17, he invented his Trick Mules or Donkey Puzzle which is deceptively difficult. The object is to cut apart the three pieces and then reassemble them so that the two jockeys are riding the mules. The puzzle was sold by Loyd to the American showman Phineas T. Barnum (of Barnum & Bailey Circus fame). Loyd earned some $10,000 from the puzzle. On April 10, 1911, Sam Loyd he died in his home on 153 Halsey Street near the corner of cy Avenue in Brooklyn, New York. His obituary in the New York Times reported that he had been educated as a civil engineer and held a steam and mechanical engineers license in New York City, that he was a one time editor of "The Sanitary Engineer", and that he was also a successful stock ket operator, but that he never bought stocks on gin. After his death, his son took over the puzzle business. The original name of his son was Walter but he started calling himself Sam Loyd and named his own son Sam Loyd Junior. The son operated a puzzle shop at 246 Fulton Street in Downtown Brooklyn until his death at age 60 in 1934. This explains a paradox in this book, because it says that a prize can be won by sending solutions to puzzles in this book to Sam Loyd before January 31, 1915. Since Sam Loyd had died in 1911 and this book was published in 1914, one wonders how it was possible to send him the solutions. The answer is that the son was now calling himself Sam Loyd. A further conundrum is that in order to claim the prize one needs to solve a number of puzzles, including the 14-15 puzzle which is found on page 235 of this book. However, as we now know, this puzzle has no solution. Another problem is that in addition to sending in the solutions prior to January 31, 1915 one must also send them in after December 1, 1915. This one is a real head scratcher. The answer seems to be that this is a typo, but one can never be sure. According to the New York Times, "The Donkey Puzzle" sold more than one million copies. Other successful puzzles were the "Fifteen-Block", page 235, "Pigs in Clover", "Parchesi" and "Get off the Earth", page 323. Other popular problems were "Back from the Klondike", page 106, and "How Old is y", page 53. Sam Loyd did not claim to have invented all the puzzles in this book. Some he simply improved. Others he credited to others. An example is the "Towers of Hanoi" puzzle on page 223. This puzzle is still sold in every children's toy store. The inventor originally named it the "Tower of Brahma" or Bramah, said to be in India. Sam Loyd changed the name and moved it to Hanoi, and made it more popular. This book is filled with wonderful illustrations. The name of the artist is not provided. It is possible that Sam Loyd himself drew the pictures. Sam Sloan ISBN 0-923891-78-1
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Date: 05 Mar 2007 20:42:54
From: samsloan
Subject: Re: Sam Loyd's Cyclopedia of 5,000 Puzzles Tricks & Conundrums with Answers
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INTRODUCTION Sam Loyd (1841-1911) was the all time greatest inventor and developer of puzzles. He is described by tin Gardner, the author of the "Mathematical Games" column in Scientific American, as "America's greatest puzzlist and an authentic American genius". His fame is world wide and books of his puzzles have been published in Russian and other languages. This book, Sam Loyd's Cyclopedia of 5,000 Puzzles Tricks & Conundrums with Answers, was compiled by his son and published in 1914 after his death. Although many books have been written about some of Loyd's puzzles, this remains the most complete volume of all of his puzzles. This is considered to be the most fabulous and exciting collection of puzzles ever assembled in one volume. The puzzles come with wonderful illustrations. Sam Loyd is even more famous among chess masters. His chess problems and compositions contain ideas that are studied by chess masters to this day. According to Grandmaster Pal Benko, the great endgame composer Troitzky used themes created by Sam Loyd. In 1987, Sam Loyd was inducted into the US Chess Hall of Fame, the only chess player ever so honored because of his chess compositions. Bobby Fischer is a big fan of Sam Loyd Puzzles. I personally timed Fischer with a stop watch at his request where he demonstrated that he could solve the Sam Loyd 15-Puzzle every time in 25 seconds or less. Fischer and I used to hang out together late nights in Midtown Manhattan, where he would practice solving this puzzle. This was years before Fischer won the World Chess Championship. Fischer later demonstrated the ability to solve the 15-Puzzle on the Johnny Carson Show. The most famous chess composition by Sam Loyd is his demonstration that it is possible to achieve stalemate in chess in only ten moves. The moves are 1.e3 a5 2.Qh5 Ra6 3.Qxa5 h5 4.Qxc7 Rah6 5.h4 f6 6.Qxd7+ Kf7 7.Qxb7 Qd3 8.Qxb8 Qh7 9.Qxc8 Kg6 10.Qe6 XABCDEFGHY 8-+-+-vlntr( 7+-+-zp-zpq' 6-+-+Qzpktr& 5+-+-+-+p% 4-+-+-+-zP$ 3+-+-zP-+-# 2PzPPzP-zPP+" 1tRNvL-mKLsNR! xabcdefghy Every now and then some wise guys who are conspiring to draw a game by agreement play these moves in a serious tournament game. International Master Bernard Zuckerman played this game against Larry Gilden in the 1962 Eastern Open Chess Championship in Washington DC, then the biggest money tournament in America. Gilden was fortunate that Zuckerman kept his promise to draw the game. The tournament was won by Grandmaster Pal Benko. Sam Loyd also demonstrated that stalemate in 12 moves can occur with all the pieces still on the board. The moves are 1.d4 d6 2.Qd2 e5 3.a4 e4 4.Qf4 f5 5.h3 Be7 6.Qh2 Be6 7.Ra3 c5 8.Rg3 Qa5+ 9.Nd2 Bh4 10.f3 Bb3 11.d5 e3 12.c4 f4 XABCDEFGHY 8rsn-+k+ntr( 7zpp+-+-zpp' 6-+-zp-+-+& 5wq-zpP+-+-% 4P+P+-zp-vl$ 3+l+-zpPtRP# 2-zP-sNP+PwQ" 1+-vL-mKLsNR! xabcdefghy The Sam Loyd 15-Puzzle has a caused a minor controversy recently. A 2006 book by Jerry Slocum claims that Sam Loyd did not really invent the 15-Puzzle, which is Sam Loyd's most famous puzzle. In that book, "The 15 Puzzle Book" by Jerry Slocum and Dic Sonneveld, ISBN 1890980153, the authors state: "The great puzzle master Sam Loyd claimed to have invented the Fifteen Puzzle and that claim has stood largely unchallenged for 115 years." They claim that the puzzle was actually invented by Noyes Palmer Chapman, a postmaster in Canastota, New York, possibly as early as 1874. However, the Chapman puzzle was not really the same as the Loyd puzzle. This issue can be debated forever, much like debating whether Newton really invented calculus. In any event, it is clear that Loyd is the one who popularized the puzzle by offering a prize of $1000 in a New York newspaper to any one who could figure out a way to reverse the position of two adjacent blocks in the puzzle. Loyd had already worked out mathematically that the solution is impossible. The 15-puzzle problem caused a world-wide frenzy in 1880; and made it The Greatest Puzzle of All Time. Samuel Loyd was born in Philadelphia on January 31, 1841 and was raised in Brooklyn, New York. His first puzzle was published in a New York newspaper at the age of 14. From shortly thereafter until his death in 1911, he was America's undisputed puzzle king. His father, a real estate operator, moved the family from Philadelphia to New York in 1844, where Loyd attended public school until he was 17. He became obsessed with the game of chess at age 10 and as a youth frequented a chess club where his interest in making puzzles developed. His first problem was published by a New York paper when he was 14, and during the next five years his output of chess puzzles was so prolific that he was known throughout the chess world. By 1858, he was hailed as the leading American writer of chess problems. In 1877 and 1878, Loyd wrote a weekly chess page for Scientific American Supplement and these columns comprised most of the book Chess Strategy, printed in 1978, and containing 500 chess problems. When Loyd was only 17, he invented his Trick Mules or Donkey Puzzle which is deceptively difficult. The object is to cut apart the three pieces and then reassemble them so that the two jockeys are riding the mules. The puzzle was sold by Loyd to the American showman Phineas T. Barnum (of Barnum & Bailey Circus fame). Loyd earned some $10,000 from the puzzle. On April 10, 1911, Sam Loyd he died in his home on 153 Halsey Street near the corner of cy Avenue in Brooklyn, New York. His obituary in the New York Times reported that he had been educated as a civil engineer and held a steam and mechanical engineers license in New York City, that he was a one time editor of "The Sanitary Engineer", and that he was also a successful stock ket operator, but that he never bought stocks on gin. After his death, his son took over the puzzle business. The original name of his son was Walter but he started calling himself Sam Loyd and named his own son Sam Loyd Junior. The son operated a puzzle shop on Fulton Avenue in Brooklyn until his death in 1934. This explains a paradox in this book, because it says that a prize can be won by sending solutions to puzzles in this book to Sam Loyd before January 31, 1915. Since Sam Loyd had died in 1911 and this book was published in 1914, one wonders how it was possible to send him the solutions. The answer is that the son was now calling himself Sam Loyd. A further conundrum is that in order to claim the prize one needs to solve a number of puzzles, including the 14-15 puzzle which is found on page 235 of this book. However, as we now know, this puzzle has no solution. Another problem is that in addition to sending in the solutions prior to January 31, 1915 one must also send them in after December 1, 1915. This one is a real head scratcher. The answer seems to be that this is a typo, but one can never be sure. According to the New York Times, "The Donkey Puzzle" sold more than one million copies. Other successful puzzles were the "Fifteen-Block", page 235, "Pigs in Clover", "Parchesi" and "Get off the Earth", page 323. Other popular problems were "Back from the Klondike", page 106, and "How Old is y", page 53. Sam Loyd did not claim to have invented all the puzzles in this book. Some he simply improved. Others he credited to others. An example is the "Towers of Hanoi" puzzle on page 223. This puzzle is still sold in every children's toy store. The inventor originally named it the "Tower of Brahma" or Bramah, said to be in India. Sam Loyd changed the name and moved it to Hanoi, and made it more popular. This book is filled with wonderful illustrations. The name of the artist is not provided. It is possible that Sam Loyd himself drew the pictures. Sam Sloan ISBN 0-923891-78-1
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Date: 05 Mar 2007 20:18:36
From: samsloan
Subject: Sam Sloan reelection campaign slogan
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I'm old, I'm mean and I'm a fucking machine. Vote for me and I'll show you how to get young pussies! Sam Sloan
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Date: 06 Mar 2007 04:40:55
From: Mike Nolan
Subject: Re: Sam Sloan reelection campaign slogan
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"samsloan" <[email protected] > writes: >I'm old, I'm mean and I'm a fucking machine. Vote for me and I'll show >you how to get young pussies! >Sam Sloan Can there be much doubt that the fake Sam Sloan(s) are sick individuals? Thankfully, I think we've managed to block their access to the USCF Issues Forum. -- Mike Nolan
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