Talk:Alexander Kevitz

Latest comment: 2 years ago by Bruce leverett in topic Manhattan Chess Club championships
The article is missing one of Kevitz's major victories: His win in the 1954-1955 Manhattan Chess Club Championship.  After finishing first-second tied with James T. Sherwin, he won their playoff match of four games.  He thus finished first ahead of Sherwin, Arthur Bisguier, Arnold Denker, and Max Pavey, leading American players all.  See the May 1955 Chess Review issue (pages 132-133) for full details.

Abenr (talk) 03:15, 13 June 2008 (UTC)Aben RudyReply

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Manhattan Chess Club championships

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We are citing three different sources, which disagree with each other, about which Manhattan CC championships Kevitz won: Mark Ginsburg (credited to Walter Shipman via Nick Conticello); chessgames.com (which in turn cites Di Felice); and Bill Wall. Something called chessworld.org is also cited, but it doesn't exist any more, and I don't know what became of it.

I am not sure it will be possible to resolve the differences between the sources, but I will look for any obvious mistakes that can be corrected. I do not have easy access to the various volumes of Di Felice that would be involved, so anyone who has a copy of one or more is invited to help with that. Also if anyone knows what became of chessworld.org, by all means mention that. Bruce leverett (talk) 05:33, 3 December 2021 (UTC)Reply

The list on Mark Ginsburg's site supposedly first appeared in a Manhattan CC newsletter, according to Conticello (in the comments on Ginsburg's article): "It will take some time, but I can dig up a complete champions’ list that appeared in an issue of the Manhattan Chess Club newsletter (of which I was editor-in-chief) in the 1990’s. The research was done by Walter Shipman, who graciously consented to let us use his work."
I am not comfortable with the way that our article cites three differing sources in the main text. I will modify it to cite only one of the three (the one from Ginsburg) in the main text, and cite the other two, with an indication of where they differ, in a footnote. Bruce leverett (talk) 04:12, 5 December 2021 (UTC)Reply