V. • •• • • •• • • •• • t •• • • ••V • • • •• • • •• • • •• • • •• • • •• •0 •• • • •• • • •• • • •.V • • • •• • • •• • • •• a• a• t• •• •• •t •• •V.I a • • • •• • I •• * • •• • • •• • I •• • • •• •• •• • • •• •• •• •• •• •• •• tChess.vm • • •• • « •• • i •• •*•.v • •* • •• •• • • •• •• t • •• •• •• •• •• •• • ».V • •» t • •• •.V • 0• a • •• •• •* •• a f •• •• •• •V.0 • • • • • • aThere is a certain kind of player who has appeared on rare occasions in the history of chess. He is the strict logician, who will achieve a slight advantage and then with relentless technique and subtle ingenuity subdue his opponent.The clarity and simplicity of Capablanca’s play established him as supreme in this category. Bobby Fscher has been compared to Capablanca many times but his play is too rich in overt tactical complexities and too eclectic for him to' be considered of the same genre.Recently a man (or a boy, if you wish — he’s 22), has established a style that invites comparison. He is Anatole Karpov, of course, who many think will be Boris Spassky’s main obstacle on his long journey back to the world championship. Karpov is especially an anomaly today, when contemporary players shun “simplicity” for daredevilbattle.This is not to say that Karpov is not touch and aggressive but his play is unique for his ability to achieve clear goals with a minimum of means andelegance of execution. If you want a textbook lesson on how to play chess, study Karpov’s games.BLACKKarpovdo no 00 o x ex nx dxQR QN QB O K KB KN KRRukavinaWHITEA simple recapture ^Here’s a case in point. Consider the position given in diagram one. White has just played 1. RxR, capturing black’s (Karpov’s) rook at Q5. White’s rook must be recat-pured. Most players would play . . . RxR, which would 1) avoid an isolated pawn (a potential target) and 2) keep the queen file open so as to cut off the white king.But Karpov is an especially clear thinker. Static generalizations did not guide his thinking here. He played PxR. Karpov judged that theisolation of the queen pawn isirrelevant. In fact, the black king can more easily defend it at Q4. Even more important,the black pawn at Q4 will prevent white’s bishop pawn from advancing and interfering with black’s plans. A pawnahead, Karpov has defined his essential task as the exchange of his queen knight pawn for white’s queen rook pawn. Then his “passed” queen rook pawn should make the win easy. In this light, the blocking of the queen file is also an issue of non-consequence.BLACKKarpovdO NO QO O X 0* NX dXQR QN QB O K KB KN KRRub avi ndWHITEWhite' breaks through ; black gives jcFive more moves pass. Karpov has prepared the breakthrough, as seen in oursecond diagrm. He now plays7 P-QN4. After 8. PxP,RxP, Rukavina gives up the ghost.BLACKKarpovdO NO 0O OQR QN QB Q K KB KN KRRukavinaWHITEIt's all over; try •!Aware of Karpov’s merciless technique, he realizes that the extra black pawn is too powerful. If you’re not convinced try the line: 9. RxR, KxR. Ix)ok at our third position. The black knight will go to QB and force the white king to the extreme queenside. The kingside will then succumb to a black invasion.Again Karpov has shown us how “easy” it is to play chess.Movie Filmed In New JerseyThe recent “Playhouse 90” “The Migrants,’’ about migrant farm workers, was shot in Vineland, N.J. Producer-director Tom dries says they tried to shoot down south but, because of the nature of the story, they weren’t allowed' to. They werephysically kicked out of one migrant workers’ camp in Florida, Gries says.