![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Tags: devils, disciple |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#61
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Nov 13, 8:08 pm, Taylor Kingston wrote:
All very good points, Larry T. In the same vein, one point I'd like to add here is that "forensic analysis" a la Evans is obviously worthless without certain assumptions derived from context. Just given raw game scores, with nothing about who played whom, when, where etc, no one could possibly say with the least certainty that "34...Rd6 proves coercion." If Keres made a bad move in, say, a British tournament where he was the only Soviet player, no one would dream of saying he was throwing a game to let a Brit win. If Joe Smith made the same move in the same position in a weekend Swiss, the notion of conspiracy would be laughed at. But put the same move in Hague-Moscow 1948, and people are all too eager to say "You see, the fix is in!" with no more factual basis than they have in the other contexts. My point is that it takes far more than mere analysis to prove any sort of fix. Evidence from sources other than the board is required. In the article by Hans Ree, it became necessary for him to grossly distort the facts in order to fit the conspiracy theory under examination. In essence, HR made a case that no strong GM would *ever* play a stupid Rook maneuver where he retreats the Rook, and then places it behind a weak pawn on the edge of the board. However, instead of showing us that this in fact happened, he gives some in-between moves that change everything, that show it was not the "elementary maneuver" in question. If this was not grossly dishonest, then it was grotesquely incompetent, analysis. I also found the analysis taken from S&L to be very lame here. Instead of the obviously-correct strategy adopted by GM Botvinnik, Hans Ree has S&L -- endgame experts -- giving ridiculous moves as supposed evidence of a draw. My guess is that were it possible to enter such "theory" into any top chess program, GMs Smyslov Levenfish, and Ree would all three bite the dust here in short order. One does not draw such endings by merely huffing and puffing that it is a theoretical draw; it is necessary for the inferior side to find the best move or plan at every turn, and you must not avoid facing the best tries for the opponent via self-deceit. Mr. Kingston observed that a strategy for losing believably might entail getting oneself into time pressure. Well, in that same vein, the last thing you would want to do is get into a simple Rook ending before blundering intentionally, for this could arouse suspicion. Also note the wasted energy, which might well have been conserved by erring early in the opening, like GM Reshevsky did repeatedly. For me, the final blow was when Mr. Ree quoted "hapless victim" GM Bronstein making excuses for his own fixing of games; you cannot have it both ways -- whining of being cheated and yet being one of the many cheaters yourself. The fact that the Evans ratpackers have decided to support one cheater over all other such cheaters does not arouse my sympathy in the least; rather, I am just disgusted. -- help bot |
| Ads |
|
#62
|
|||
|
|||
|
Larry Parr wrote (Tue, 13 Nov 2007 17:07:03 -0800):
7 ... [Mr. Laurie authorized me to issue this statement on his behalf.] 7 7 "... 7 ... All anyone has to do is read Kingston's article in Chess Life to see 7 that he denigrated Evans' ability to analyze by saying Nunn was the 7 better player. 7 ..." -- Richard Laurie _ _ Does Larry Parr disagree with the claim that Nunn was the better player? _ _ Larry Parr wrote (Tue, 13 Nov 2007 17:07:03 -0800): 7 ... LETTER FROM ONE LAWRENCE ZIMMERMAN ... 7 7 ... Since [Mr. Kingston's six-page review of the evidence for Chess Life 7 in May 1998] a mountain of evidence has surfaced. Botvinnik, for example, 7 finally admitted that Stalin personally intervened; and Keres told friends 7 he was ordered to finish behind Botvinnik. Can anyone who is intellectually 7 honest still entertain serious doubts? Yet, predictably, Mr. Winter 7 endorses the claim that there "isn't even a shred of actual evidence. ..." _ _ The 'shred' quote is from John Watson. Winter reproduced it while telling the story of how GM Evans used a quote of a 1997 Kingston letter. I do not think it can be claimed with certainty that Edward Winter endorsed the Watson 'shred' quote. In any event, the statement was in the past tense: _ "... Evans ... did dispute Watson's description of Taylor Kingston as a critic of Evans' claims (claims made, wrote Watson, without 'even a shred of actual evidence') ..." _ http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/evans.html _ It is somewhat misleading to transform the assertion to the present tense and give the impression that it was a comment on evidence that has been presented in the years after GM Evans claims that were criticized by Taylor Kingston in 1998. |
|
#63
|
|||
|
|||
|
Larry Parr wrote (Tue, 13 Nov 2007 17:07:03 -0800):
7 ... [Mr. Laurie authorized me to issue this statement on his 7 behalf.] 7 7 "... 7 ... All anyone has to do is read Kingston's article in Chess 7 Life to see that he denigrated Evans' ability to analyze by 7 saying Nunn was the better player. 7 ..." -- Richard Laurie _ _ Does Larry Parr disagree with the claim that Nunn was the better player? _ _ Larry Parr wrote (Tue, 13 Nov 2007 17:07:03 -0800): 7 ... LETTER FROM ONE LAWRENCE ZIMMERMAN ... 7 7 ... Since [Mr. Kingston's six-page review of the evidence 7 for Chess Life in May 1998] a mountain of evidence has 7 surfaced. Botvinnik, for example, finally admitted that 7 Stalin personally intervened; and Keres told friends he 7 was ordered to finish behind Botvinnik. Can anyone who 7 is intellectually honest still entertain serious doubts? 7 Yet, predictably, Mr. Winter endorses the claim that 7 there "isn't even a shred of actual evidence. ..." _ _ The 'shred' quote is from John Watson. Winter reproduced it while telling the story of how GM Evans used a quote of a 1997 Kingston letter. I do not think it can be claimed with certainty that Edward Winter endorsed the Watson 'shred' quote. In any event, the statement was in the past tense: _ "... Evans ... did dispute Watson's description of Taylor Kingston as a critic of Evans' claims (claims made, wrote Watson, without 'even a shred of actual evidence') ..." _ http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/evans.html _ It is somewhat misleading to transform the assertion to the present tense and give the impression that it was a comment on evidence that has been presented in the years after GM Evans claims that were criticized by Taylor Kingston in 1998. |
|
#64
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Nov 13, 8:07 pm, " wrote:
Q. Finally, I don't know who Taylor Kingston is and I don't recall much about his Chess Life article (in May 1998) except he denigrated your ability to analyze five Keres-Botvinnik games to show that Keres was coerced. I am always appalled by those who meet a solid argument with a personal attack -- like Edward Winter (who called you "shameless") and Kingston (who called you "dishonest"). Or Larry Parr, who sets the bar in this event. Or like Larry Evans -- who attacks those who point out his many gaffes as peons who ought not to attack their "vast superiors". I am beginning to wonder about this fellow, this myopic dolt, RL... . Either Keres threw the games or he did not. Nothing else matters. Good. Then we can dispense with personal commentaries and pretenses regarding who might have the moral high ground, then. When does RL plan to begin the project? The 1919 Black Sox Scandal in baseball was uncovered because experts like Christy Mathewson circled suspicious plays. This is basically what you did in "The Tragedy of Paul Keres" (October 1996) to reopen an old scandal. Translation: Mr. Laurie does not wish to discuss details regarding /how/ LE handled the matter; he wants to focus on just the fact that LE reopened an old "scandal". (This is precisely what I was saying before, but which lousy PR-man Larry Parr missed: don't go into the details!) "Mr. Kingston's memory is extremely faulty. That, we already knew. But we also know from the above that RL is no recall-machine either; he was not able to remember anything about an article he discusses and denigrates above, except that TK criticized LE. Sheesh. You would think he could at least have done a bit of research, rather than write in about something he can't even recall. "Then he said he contacted the editor and asked if it would be okay for him to say I had changed my mind.. That's when I jumped on him in my last letter, that I had not changed my mind and agreed to look at his materials only to see what he had to offer.. I found nothing substantial there Is there any guarantee that had there been anything substantial there, this dolt would have been able to find it? I don't think so. He already missed things like LE's *many* personal attacks on his critics, for instance -- things which were nearly impossible to miss. and I told him that as far as secrecy went, he already violated that by jumping the gun and contacting the editor. "Mr. Kingston e-mailed me about half a dozen times. While I never showed Evans any of his material, I told him I did feel perfectly free to show Evans my own responses. All anyone has to do is read Kingston's article in Chess Life to see that he denigrated Evans' ability to analyze by saying Nunn was the better player. Like I said, a dolt. GM Nunn *was* in fact the better player, since LE was an old man and well past his prime in chess when he penned that article. Saying this denigrates LE is like observing that a bird can fly faster than a fish can swim, and this is an insult to the fish. "Kingston wanted me to retract my printed view of the situation as it appeared in Evans On Chess. He wanted me to say that I was wrong and, therefore, Evans was wrong ..I even wrote the editor saying I had not changed my mind, and that ended the matter. Wrong! This matter may well not die until LP and/or LE do. KINGSTON TOOK NOT ONE BUT TWO MOVES BACK That would make him even better than Gary Kasparov (at cheating). In fact, it would make him better than most skilled cheaters I have played -- and they were pretty darned good! Finally, Mr. Kingston in a Further Review of the Evidence arrived at the same conclusion as GM Evans about the Soviet fix in 1948: the Commies did it. Don't kid yourself: even Capitalists could do this, if they studied and prepared and trained. It's like GM Tal: no one could play with us, if we would only learn to program ourselves (to cheat) properly. A good red herring dinner. But we all know that the real issue was the flawed GM Evans article, not TK, EW, or RL's inane opinions. Anybody with a mega-base can set up a Rook ending and find similar gaffes by GMs which involved no hanky- panky. A better approach would have been to gather all relevant information, weed out the chaff, and then coalesce the remainder into a logical discussion of known facts, not speculations (and certainly not arrogant claims to singular chess abilities unique to LE). Too late now; you can't go back in time -- not even with your clock of silence. -- help bot |
|
#65
|
|||
|
|||
|
"... of secrecy ..." - Larry Parr
(Tue, 13 Nov 2007 13:44:47 -0800) |
|
#66
|
|||
|
|||
|
LAURIE REBUTS KINGSTON'S VERSION OF EVENTS [Playwright Richard Laurie just authorized me to post this message.] "When I refused to retract my letter to Chess Life, Taylor Kingston told me, in effect, that I was even more evil than Larry Evans. That was the last I heard from him directly. I will keep looking for his e- mails to me. It is largely a matter of time. I have them somewhere and will keep searching." -- Richard Laurie |
|
#67
|
|||
|
|||
|
WHY DID KINGSTON TELL LAURIE TO KEEP IT CONFIDENTIAL?
One of NMnot Taylor Kingston's trademarks is to explain away cowardice (his obvious horror of losing a match to Sam Sloan) and rank intellectual dishonesty (writing under false names IN PRAISE OF HIMSELF) with a series of shifting or absurd explanations and justifications. What follows is a bit of past history. NMnot Kingston told us that he marked his correspondence with Richard Laurie "Confidential" because ... well, here is his reason: The reason should be obvious to anyone familiar with Mr. Parr's newsgroup tactics, with which by then I was thoroughly familiar. I knew that if Laurie told Evans, Evans would tell Parr, and Parr would mount a smear campaign, misrepresenting my correspondence with Mr. Laurie. -- Taylor Kingston, May 23, 2005 NMnot Kingston feared a smear campaign; therefore, the gent preferred to keep his pristine, totally innocent correspondence private. Nonsense. He could defend innocence, but what he could not defend was what playwright Laurie smelled. Smelled? That was the excuse NMnot Kingston used to avoid playing Sam Sloan. He jabbered to us that he feared his olfactory senses would be offended by breathing the same air in the same room with Sam. The actual reason why our self-proclaimed, 2300+ Elo NMnot refused to play 1900-or-so rated Sam for four-figure money was obvious to everyone else. We continue with yet another NMnot excuse for trying to keep his e-mails with Richard Laurie from ever seeing the light of day. Like a good defense lawyer, he tailored his responses as the pressure mounted. [But] the first time around Mr. Kingston claimed he marked many of his letters CONFIDENTIAL and that it had no special significance. -- Larry Parr That is also true. I was trying to spare your feelings, Larry, then I realized you have none. If you consider this condemnatory, I'm sorry. ;-D -- Taylor Kingston Readers will judge for themselves whether NMnot acted to spare this writer's feelings. Yet another lie replete with the man's proud contumely. NMnot Kingston tells us he has "standards." WE ASK ONCE AGAIN: Did our NMnot post under false names on this forum (Xylothist, Paulie Graf) in PRAISE OF HIMSELF, for Pete's sake? Does he regard self-praise using false monickers as an example of his "standards." He won't answer. Never has. Never will. Finally, we ask that he make ALL of his e-mails with Richard Laurie public, not just the "relevant" portions that he wants us to see so we can compare them with the e-mails that Laurie actually received. Let there be no gaps a la president Richard Nixon. Yours, Larry Parr wrote: LAURIE REBUTS KINGSTON'S VERSION OF EVENTS [Playwright Richard Laurie just authorized me to post this message.] "When I refused to retract my letter to Chess Life, Taylor Kingston told me, in effect, that I was even more evil than Larry Evans. That was the last I heard from him directly. I will keep looking for his e- mails to me. It is largely a matter of time. I have them somewhere and will keep searching." -- Richard Laurie |
|
#68
|
|||
|
|||
|
FAST EDDIE'S ATTACKING METHODS
Over the past couple of days, I have been reprising several essays that I wrote on Edward Winter's tactics when attacking GM Larry Evans, his superior as a writer and, of course, his superlative as a player and analyst. Yesterday I present a portion of an essay dealing with how Winter fabricated an error that Larry Evans never made. Readers may recollect that Larry Evans reversed the identity of players in Borochow-Fine. A CL reader pointed out such, and GM Evans acknowledged the correction in his Chess Life. Enter Mr. Winter's frosty, malevolent dishonesty: he quoted from a collection of GM Evans' chess columns, a book that appeared in 1982. His point was to make it appear that GM Evans was once again reversing the players in Borochow-Fine after the correction made in 1978. He did NOT tell readers that the 1982 volume contained photographic reproductions of Evans' newspaper articles as they had appeared during the 1970s. The column in question appeared in 1976 BEFORE the correction was made in Chess Life. That is the kind of stuff that NMnot Taylor Kingston regards as honest polemical conduct. Nor will he tell us that it was deeply dishonest. His response thus far has been the formulaic one for Winter's disciples. NMnot Kingston told us he is not obligated to comment on everything under the sun. The alternative explanation for his silence is cowardice. Here is a continuation of an essay presented earlier. We see here yet another Winter technique of attack that apparently meets the "standards" of his disciple Taylor Kingston. MR. WINTER'S CONTUMELY Was Mr. Winter really unaware that Teichmann was a human 1/5-fraction at the great events of his prime years? I don't think so. He knows his dates and name-spellings well enough. But he could not restrain his disdain for conventional wisdom, even when that wisdom is evidently sound. He HAD to heap scorn on what others have long thought. Such is Mr. Winter's contumely. How does Mr. Winter's contumacious misrepresentation of Teichmann's career compare with Larry Evans misremembering when one Quesada died or with misdentifying the winner of a game between Fine and Borochow, etc.? The few errors that appear in the millions of words written by GM Evans over the course of half a century were mistakes made in good faith. They were not major misjudgments motivated by scorn for the understanding and work of others. On the subject of Mr. Winter's contumely, one of his favorite devices is to affect obtuseness so as to score debater's points. A typical snippet of nastiness is his "Horowitz philosophe" in the "Gaffes" chapter of Chess Explorations. Writes Mr. Winter, "On page 24 of The Chess Beat [by GM Evans] Al Horowitz is quoted: 'Chess is a great game. No matter how good one is, there is always somebody better. No matter how bad one is, there is always somebody worse.'" To which Mr. Winter responds tartly, "What other game can match that?" Just awful. Even at the level of formal logic, Mr. Winter's putdown falls flat. For, of course, there is at any given split second one person who is the very best and one person who is the very worst. So, in fact, there is not "always" somebody better or "always" somebody worse. So, contrary to Mr. Winter's obtusely ironic claim, no other game can match that does not really exist. But forget the formal logic. Even most of his ratpackers understand that Al Horowitz committed no gaffe. Horowitz was speaking jocosely and, in truth, rather deeply. He was claiming that egos among chess players are such that we have all seen club players looking for some poor sucker to lord it over - some young kid or old duffer to whom one can pose as the genius of the age. Horowitz was speaking with a chuckle about the foibles of chess players and, perhaps wrongly though interestingly, suggesting that the trait of seeking out dragons to slay or schlumps to dominate is stronger among chess players than among players of other games. The New York Times obituary of Horowitz included part of the quotation that Mr. Winter calls a "gaffe" because the obit writers understood that a point was being made about human nature not about the mathematics of exceptions. I am sure that Mr. Winter also understood orowitz's thrust. He chose to take the man's words at face value so as to tar a great man of chess with the ironic subhead, "Horowitz philosophe." (A minor point of connotation: A rather tin-eared Mr. Winter would have served his malign purpose better by titling the paragraph, "Horowitz the Philosopher." I am sure that a few readers know that in English the word "philosophe" [Mr. Winter did not italicize it to suggest strictly a French connotation.] has a somewhat negative connotation. "The philosophes" or "the philosophe party" occupy a niche just above "artistes" with an "e." Kant was a philosopher, Diderot a philosophe.) Another example of Mr. Winter dishonestly playing straight man so as to ignore jocose humility was his absurdly arch reaction in Chess Notes to GM Evans' admission of error re the game between Prins and Quesada. Wrote Evans, "I recalled Prins winning a hopeless adjournment from Quesada, who died before the game could be finished. I no longer have the scoretable of Havana 1952 but if Prins says he resigned, far be it from me to quibble. I stand corrected even though you must admit it makes a good story." Responded Mr. Winter icily, "The Prins-Quesada episode is not a 'good story' once it is shown to be untrue." Now, in Chess Explorations, Mr. Winter writes, "'It makes a good story' was also the reply received from Fred Wilson after we complained that he had published inaccuracies regarding Staunton's background." The point here is that "It makes a good story" s a standard way to admit error and poke fun at oneself rather than to insist, in spite of the literal meaning of the words, that what is untrue is a good story. Most of us understand that the phrase is an idiomatic device to concede a blunder just as the famous editorial advice, "Never let the facts stand in the way of a good story," is an example of journalists laying the lash on themselves rather than advocating deliberate error. Did Mr. Winter dishonestly play the part of an obtuse pedant to administer a cranky putdown? The answer is obviously yes unless we assume utter ignorance on his part of a well-known piece of ironic idiom. Deliberate obtuseness cuts both ways. Take Mr. Winter's apparently absurd claim on page 95 of Chess Explorations: "As recorded on page 27 of Dale Brandreth's edition of the Kemeri-Riga, 1939 tournament book, the Ruy Lopez was played in that event only once in the 120 games ....It will be surprising if a reader can quote a comparable case concerning this most popular of openings." "This most popular of openings"? Certainly not by the number of games played! The Sicilian utterly swamps this "most popular" of openings. What a "gaffe"! Whoa thar, Nelly! Isn't the phrase, "this most popular of openings," an old-fashioned, rather constipated rhetorical device used to indicate wide popularity or even merely limited popularity among certain circles? Am I not being unfair to take Mr. Winter's words at face value? Of course I am being unfair. But no more unfair than Mr. Winter, who dishonestly feigned obtuseness when taking potshots at Al Horowitz, Larry Evans and Fred Wilson. Or there is Mr. Winter's absurd reference to recorded chess games coming from the "pre-history" of chess. Ought we to take him literally, as he does others, or ought we to say that the phrase was a permissible idiomatic contradiction of what the word "history" - above all else the study of written records - actually means? MALICE AFORETHOUGHT Mr. Winter often permits his canker to overcome cold calculation, though not because, in my view, he is careless. The man HAD to tell the lie in Kingpin of attributing words to GM Evans written by another. He HAD to make a historically illiterate claim in his "Richard the Fifth," though knowing full well that his attempt to debunk a piece of conventional wisdom was bunk itself. He HAD to splatter mud at Al Horowitz and GM Evans by taking literally some words that were intended jocularly and ironically. He HAD to do these things because his malign enterprise of endeavoring to humiliate those who commit honest errors in dates and spellings is a narrow, inadequate duct for his bile. He needs a wider latitude than the narrow channel of dates and spellings. Hence the lies. Hence the historically illiterate contumely. Hence the feigned obtuseness. Hence the nitpicking. "I Can't Get No Satisfaction" is the theme song for any career based on cheap shots derived from the mistakes of others. How barren. How vile, really. wrote: WHY DID KINGSTON TELL LAURIE TO KEEP IT CONFIDENTIAL? One of NMnot Taylor Kingston's trademarks is to explain away cowardice (his obvious horror of losing a match to Sam Sloan) and rank intellectual dishonesty (writing under false names IN PRAISE OF HIMSELF) with a series of shifting or absurd explanations and justifications. What follows is a bit of past history. NMnot Kingston told us that he marked his correspondence with Richard Laurie "Confidential" because ... well, here is his reason: The reason should be obvious to anyone familiar with Mr. Parr's newsgroup tactics, with which by then I was thoroughly familiar. I knew that if Laurie told Evans, Evans would tell Parr, and Parr would mount a smear campaign, misrepresenting my correspondence with Mr. Laurie. -- Taylor Kingston, May 23, 2005 NMnot Kingston feared a smear campaign; therefore, the gent preferred to keep his pristine, totally innocent correspondence private. Nonsense. He could defend innocence, but what he could not defend was what playwright Laurie smelled. Smelled? That was the excuse NMnot Kingston used to avoid playing Sam Sloan. He jabbered to us that he feared his olfactory senses would be offended by breathing the same air in the same room with Sam. The actual reason why our self-proclaimed, 2300+ Elo NMnot refused to play 1900-or-so rated Sam for four-figure money was obvious to everyone else. We continue with yet another NMnot excuse for trying to keep his e-mails with Richard Laurie from ever seeing the light of day. Like a good defense lawyer, he tailored his responses as the pressure mounted. [But] the first time around Mr. Kingston claimed he marked many of his letters CONFIDENTIAL and that it had no special significance. -- Larry Parr That is also true. I was trying to spare your feelings, Larry, then I realized you have none. If you consider this condemnatory, I'm sorry. ;-D -- Taylor Kingston Readers will judge for themselves whether NMnot acted to spare this writer's feelings. Yet another lie replete with the man's proud contumely. NMnot Kingston tells us he has "standards." WE ASK ONCE AGAIN: Did our NMnot post under false names on this forum (Xylothist, Paulie Graf) in PRAISE OF HIMSELF, for Pete's sake? Does he regard self-praise using false monickers as an example of his "standards." He won't answer. Never has. Never will. Finally, we ask that he make ALL of his e-mails with Richard Laurie public, not just the "relevant" portions that he wants us to see so we can compare them with the e-mails that Laurie actually received. Let there be no gaps a la president Richard Nixon. Yours, Larry Parr wrote: LAURIE REBUTS KINGSTON'S VERSION OF EVENTS [Playwright Richard Laurie just authorized me to post this message.] "When I refused to retract my letter to Chess Life, Taylor Kingston told me, in effect, that I was even more evil than Larry Evans. That was the last I heard from him directly. I will keep looking for his e- mails to me. It is largely a matter of time. I have them somewhere and will keep searching." -- Richard Laurie |
|
#69
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Nov 14, 3:08 am, " wrote:
LAURIE REBUTS KINGSTON'S VERSION OF EVENTS [Playwright Richard Laurie just authorized me to post this message.] "When I refused to retract my letter to Chess Life, Taylor Kingston told me, in effect, that I was even more evil than Larry Evans. Oh, man, this is getting rich. Jeez, I was drinking coffe when I read this, and I laughed so hard it darn near came out my nose! Is Mr. Laurie dabbling in hallucinogenics now? I have never said anything of the sort, about either Mr. Laurie nor GM Evans. Hitler was evil. Stalin was evil. Sauron was evil. Lex Luthor was evil. Simon Bar Sinister was evil. Boris and Natasha were evil. Snidely Whiplash was evil. But Evans and Laurie? Dishonest at worst, laughably inept at best. That was the last I heard from him directly. Actually my last direct communication to Mr. Laurie was an offer to reimburse his postage expenses for some printed materials we exchanged. I will keep looking for his e- mails to me. It is largely a matter of time. I have them somewhere and will keep searching." -- Richard Laurie I look forward eagerly to learning what Mr. Laurie considers to be this Proclamation of Evil. |
|
#70
|
|||
|
|||
|
A SIMPLE SOLUTION
All Taylor Kingston has to do is release all his e-mails to Richard Laurie to prove his case so that we can see who is lying. Taylor Kingston wrote: On Nov 14, 3:08 am, " wrote: LAURIE REBUTS KINGSTON'S VERSION OF EVENTS [Playwright Richard Laurie just authorized me to post this message.] "When I refused to retract my letter to Chess Life, Taylor Kingston told me, in effect, that I was even more evil than Larry Evans. Oh, man, this is getting rich. Jeez, I was drinking coffe when I read this, and I laughed so hard it darn near came out my nose! Is Mr. Laurie dabbling in hallucinogenics now? I have never said anything of the sort, about either Mr. Laurie nor GM Evans. Hitler was evil. Stalin was evil. Sauron was evil. Lex Luthor was evil. Simon Bar Sinister was evil. Boris and Natasha were evil. Snidely Whiplash was evil. But Evans and Laurie? Dishonest at worst, laughably inept at best. That was the last I heard from him directly. Actually my last direct communication to Mr. Laurie was an offer to reimburse his postage expenses for some printed materials we exchanged. I will keep looking for his e- mails to me. It is largely a matter of time. I have them somewhere and will keep searching." -- Richard Laurie I look forward eagerly to learning what Mr. Laurie considers to be this Proclamation of Evil. |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| The Devil's Disciple | parrthenon@cs.com | rec.games.chess.politics (Chess Politics) | 208 | November 24th 07 01:42 AM |