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Friday, 01/18/2008 12:34:57 PM

Friday, January 18, 2008 12:34:57 PM

Post# of 473094
Bye, bobby, good bye, you wrote a great
book. Sad you were so used. Thank you.


Express Newspapers/Getty Images
Bobby Fischer arrived for one of his 1972 chess matches against
the Soviet Union's Boris Spassky. Fischer won the series to
become world champion. Fischer died Thursday, Jan. 17, 2008.

Chess Champion Fischer Dies At 64
Reculsive American Toppled Soviet Champion In 1972
January 18, 2008

[NEWSVINE: Chess Champion Fischer Dies At 64

REYKJAVIK, Iceland -- Bobby Fischer, the reclusive American chess master who became a Cold War icon when he dethroned the Soviet Union's Boris Spassky as world champion in 1972, has died. He was 64.

Fischer died Thursday in a Reykjavik hospital, his spokesman, Gardar
Sverrisson, said. There was no immediate word on the cause of death.

Born in Chicago and raised in Brooklyn, Robert James Fischer was a U.S. chess champion
at 14 and a grand master at 15. He beat Spassky in a series
of games in
Reykjavik to claim America's first world chess championship in more than a century.


The event was given tremendous symbolic importance, pitting the intensely
individualistic young American against a product of the grim and soulless Soviet Union.

It also was marked by Fischer's odd behavior -- possibly calculated psychological
warfare against Spassky -- that ranged from arriving two days late to complaining
about the lighting, TV cameras, the spectators, even the shine on the table.

Spassky said in a brief phone call from France, where he
lives, that he was "very sorry" to hear of Fischer's death.

Fischer's reputation as a genius of chess soon was eclipsed by his idiosyncrasies.

Fischer was world champion until 1975, when he forfeited the title and withdrew from
competition because conditions he demanded proved unacceptable to the International Chess Federation.

After that, he lived in secret outside the United States. He emerged in 1992 to confront Spassky
again, in a highly publicized match in Yugoslavia. Fischer beat Spassky 10-5 to win $3.35 million.

The U.S. government said Fischer's playing the match violated U.N. sanctions against
Yugoslavia, imposed for Serb leader Slobodan Milosevic's role in fomenting war in the Balkans.

Former Russian chess champion Garry Kasparov said Fischer's ascent of
the chess world in the 1960s was "a revolutionary breakthrough" for the game.

"The tragedy is that he left this world too early, and his extravagant life and
scandalous statements did not contribute to the popularity of chess," Kasparov told The Associated Press.

Over the years, Fischer gave occasional interviews with a radio station in the Philippines,
often digressing into anti-Semitic rants and accusing American officials of hounding him.

He praised the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, saying America should be "wiped out
," and described Jews as "thieving, lying bastards." His mother was Jewish.

He also announced he had abandoned chess in 1996 and launched a new version
in Argentina, "Fischerandom," a computerized shuffler that randomly
distributes chess pieces on the back row of the board at the start of each game.

Fischer claimed it would bring the fun back into the game and rid it of cheats.

He renounced his American citizenship and moved in 2005 to Iceland, accepting an offer of citizenship from the country still grateful for its role as the site of his most famous match.

Fischer had been detained for nine months detention in Japan for trying to leave the country using
an invalid U.S. passport. Japan agreed to release him after he accepted Iceland's offer of citizenship.

Fischer told reporters that year that he was finished with a chess world he regarded
as corrupt, and sparred with U.S. journalists who asked about his anti-American tirades.

"The United States is evil. There's this axis of evil. What about the allies of evil
-- the United States, England, Japan, Australia? These are the evildoers," Fischer said.

Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

http://www.local6.com/news/15082016/detail.html#

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