March 2012 - The Last Word Newsletter
Transcription
March 2012 - The Last Word Newsletter
W O R D G A M E N E W S The Last Word The Independent Tournament SCRABBLE® Newsletter A Monthly Newsletter Issue 27 - March 2012 Las Vegas Winners Eastern Championship Winners App Review SCRABBLE® & Art The Last Word is an independent publication for tournament SCRABBLE® players. It is not affiliated with Hasbro, Mattel, the North American SCRABBLE® Players Association (NASPA), the Word Game Players’ Organization (WGPO), or the National SCRABBLE® Association (NSA). Our mission is to provide content of interest to all SCRABBLE® players, so please let us know if there are topics you would like us to add. We welcome contributions: stories, artwork, etc. For the time being, we are hoping to provide this Newsletter at no charge; however, since it is a 100% volunteer effort, we would appreciate any donations. Advertisers are encouraged, too. If you would like to have The Last Word emailed to you, please send a request with your email address to CorneliaSGuest@gmail.com and we will add you to our mailing list. Editor in Chief: Cornelia Guest Columnists: Jan Cardia, Timothy Cataldo, Judy Cole, Joe Edley, Stu Goldman, Jeff Kastner, Joan Mocine, Tony Rasch, Lester Schonbrun, Larry Sherman, Chris Sinacola, Siri Tillekeratne, Linda Wancel Editors-at-large: Robin Pollock Daniel, Joe Edley, Stefan Fatsis, Ted Gest The Last Word is a volunteer effort. We appreciate your donations. (PayPal or snail mail--contact CorneliaSGuest@gmail.com) Photographer-at-large: Betsey Wood Contributors: Katie Bernardina, Sandee Bloom, Eric D’Souza, Wes Eddings, Ryan Fischer, Matthew Hodge, Joel Horn, Jason Jones, Jim Kramer, Sam Kantimathi, Jessica Meller, Sue Miller, Larry Rand, Shaun Roberts, Adair Salgado, Teresa Schaeffer, Debbie Scholz, Richard Spence, Geoff Thevenot, Ron Ulicny, Barbara Van Alen, Ian Weinstein For advertising rates, please email CorneliaSGuest@gmail.com Copyright © 2012 GuessWhat! Some data copyright ©1999-2011 NSA; copyright © 2010-2011 NASPA; and copyright © 2005-2011 Seth Lipkin and Keith Smith. SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark of Hasbro, Inc.in the USA and Canada. Elsewhere it is the trademark of J.W. Spear & Sons, Ltd. T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S Table of Contents From the Editor 3 Advertising Section: Equipment, Tournaments, Organizations, Books 4 Tournament News 8 Norwalk CT, 2/4 by Cornelia Guest 8 Las Vegas 2012 by Sam Kantimathi 9 Eastern Championship 2012, Charlotte NC by Ryan Fischer 14 Phoenix 2012 by Larry Rand and Barbara Van Alen 18 Saratoga Springs 2012: Off to the Races! by Cornelia Guest 22 Tournament Results 24 New Faces: Jason Jones 26 SCRABBLE® Strategy by Jim Kramer 28 Word Star by Jeff Kastner 31 SCRABBLE® and Scrabblers in the News edited by Judy Cole 34 Historic Moments: SCRABBLE® Through the Years by Stu Goldman 43 SCRABBLE® & Art: Ron Ulicny by Cornelia Guest 44 Joe Edley’s Puzzle Corner by Joe Edley 47 Wow! Games 51 App Review: Wordlist Pro 2.0 for Android phones! reviewed by Jeff Kastner 52 Club News edited by Larry Sherman 55 Manly Words by Tony Rasch 57 Word Trivia Quiz by Siri Tillekeratne 63 The Wordsmith by Chris Sinacola 65 One Up! Cup for March by Timothy Cataldo 68 Linda’s Library by Linda Wancel 69 Scrab-doku by Jeff Kastner 71 SCRABBLE® Resources 74 Tournament Calendar 77 Archives 87 2 F R O M T H E E D I T O R From the Editor As spring approaches, so does the annual highlight on the School SCRABBLE® calendar: the National School SCRABBLE® Championship. Players from across the country--and Canada--will be flying into Orlando next month for the two-day event on April 13-15. This year there are some changes. Fourth graders will be permitted to compete for the first time. Also, player from different states may team up. I applaud both of these changes. In my years of teaching I’ve had a number of very talented third and fourth graders, and I’m excited to be bringing a savvy fourth grader to Orlando on one of my teams. In the past I’ve often found it difficult for players to find partners because of the geographic restriction. With players at my School SCRABBLE® clubs from both New York and Connecticut, it’s been tough to split up good friends. That is no longer the case! Another change for the good is that players will be seeded, which will make team pairings more logical. I always found it a shame when two good teams were paired in the early rounds and a legitimate contender was denied a shot at the top prize. Games have been stretched from 22 minutes per side to the 25 minutes used in NASPA tournaments. This makes sense. At our club, the late Rita Norr Provost had a rule that players playing two on a side be given an extra 5 minutes, to allow for the time spent consulting with one another. I hope that the extra time at this year’s NSSC will encourage more thoughtful play. Last year an extra game was added to the event, giving every team seven games (and a lucky two teams a final eighth game). The same is true this year. I’d love to see even more games, as the more games that are played, the less luck plays a role in determining the champions. Last year there were seven teams with 6-1 records after game seven; however, only the top two on spread made it to the final playoff game. I’d also love to see some consideration given to a championship for kids that is similar to the National SCRABBLE® Championship: played one on one. While the team concept is fun for new and younger players, adding a social element and promoting teamwork, for serious young players it seems wrong. It’s as if Bughouse Chess were used to determine Scholastic Chess champions. I know that there may be changes for next year’s Nationals, and I’m hoping this may be one of them. As difficult as it is to encourage parents to send their child to Nationals, it is even more difficult when two kids are involved. It can be frustrating even to get two kids together to practice. It’s also difficult to organize a School SCRABBLE® tournament, as numbers must be divisible by four to make the pairings even. I think the team concept could still work with one-on-one games. Individuals from the same club could be called a “team,” and wins by each team member could count toward a team prize. This is done in chess, and I’ve often seen kids enthusiastically congratulating their teammates for wins. It would be great to see SCRABBLE® get the kind of youth support there is for chess. If so, perhaps one day there will be Elementary School, Middle School, and High School championships in SCRABBLE®--and maybe intercollegiate games, too! Good luck to all the teams competing at this year’s NSSC! Cornelia Guest 3 A D V E R T I S E M E N T SamTimer.com Home of the famous Digital SCRABBLE® Clock-the Preferred Clock in most Expert Tournament SCRABBLE® Games in North America. Thousands of Satisfied Customers!! SamTimer, SamBoard and SmoothTiles were chosen to be the official Timer, Board and Tiles of NASPA NSC09! NASPA = North American SCRABBLE® Players Association SamBoards in wood, acrylic, and steel Original SamTimer Digital Clock in 3 colors SamTiles, Smooth Tiles, SamTiles Universal 4 Apple SamBoards (red, green, orange) Board carriers Mini SamTimers in 4 colors Pocket SamTimers in 7 colors ORDERING OPTIONS: Call 1-888ORDERING OPTIONS: email Sam-Timer (1-888-726-8463) sam@samtimer.com Call toll-free from any phone in We Accept: Checks, USA or Canada International Money orders, We Accept: Checks, International Visa/Mastercard, American Money orders, Express, Discover, Diner's Club, Visa/Mastercard, American PayPal - use Express, Discover, Diner's Club sam@samtimer.com PayPal - use sam@samtimer.com SamRacks A D V E R T I S E M E N T SamTimer.com Introduces the FlipTimer ™ FlipTimer ™ • • • • • • • • NEW! Scrabble®, Boggle®, Chess Unique COMPACT folding timer for tournament and friendly Scrabble® games. Conforms to all the American and International rules for overtime, hold period for word challenges, etc! Even computes actual overtime penalties! Just fold this FlipTimer to REMEMBER the time settings in the middle of a game and unfold to continue the game later, maybe in a location miles away! A FlipTimer exclusive! Folded, the FlipTimer measures an amazingly compact 5½" long, 2 ⅝" wide and 1" high! Yet, the display digits at 1" high, are taller than existing digital clocks! Incredible. Three color choices: Red/Yellow, Yellow/Fuchsia, or Blue/Green It displays actual time spent on current move, in minutes and seconds! Cool clock. -- Conrad Bassett-Bouchard We love this new clock! -- KC Frodyma We played with it at a closed tournament--we really like this FlipTimer. -- Cesar del Solar ORDERING OPTIONS: email sam@samtimer.com We Accept: Checks, International Money orders, Visa/Mastercard, American Express, Discover, Diner's Club, PayPal - use sam@samtimer.com 5 A D V E R T I S E M E N T The tiles preferred by expert SCRABBLE® players worldwide Double Injection Molded Lifetime Tiles, Custom Silkscreened Tiles, Large Font Tiles, World Class Tiles, Bulk Orders WWW.Protiles.net 6 A S D E V Q E U R O T I I AS E C ML EU NB T See http://wordgameplayers.org for flyer, registration and contact info BROW-RAISERS EDITION II Brow-Raisers Edition II is a brilliantly organized study guide geared towards the success of beginning and intermediate players. It provides an efficient means to learn the words most important for winning an extra game or two. Excellent Present! http://www.browraisers.com/ ADVERTISE HERE! With more than 1,500 subscribers and over 3,000 hits per issue, The Last Word is a great way to reach Scrabblers around the world. For information on our reasonable rates contact CorneliaSGuest@gmail.com. Made for Word Lovers by Word Lovers IncredibleTileBags.com Fun. Unique. Festive. Start 2012 with a fun new tile bag! Now featuring flat-bottom tile bags! Check out our Sale Bin, up to 33% off! www.IncredibleTileBags.com 7 N O R W A L K Norwalk CT, 2/4 By Cornelia Guest; photos by Jessica Meller An impressive group of 40 players attended the 2/4 Norwalk Tournament, including 4 there for the unrated "novice" division. In the group were 10 players coming to Norwalk for the first time--I hope they'll come again! I opted for a later start time, plus made some other changes in hopes to draw entries, so I'm very pleased attendance was so strong. Some players commented that lunch lasted too long, so at the next tournament I'll be shortening that some so that we'll be done a little earlier. Division 1 went to Jeopardy! star Jason Keller, who arrived in orange with his lucky orange vuvuzela at his side. He finished 6-2 +345, with Seth Lipkin close behind for second (6-2 +181). Jason also won the tournament prize for High Play (QUOINED, 123). Evans Clinchy was third (5-3 +330), and Mack Meller fourth (5-3 +18). Mack won the tournament prize for High Game: 575 against Andrew Friedman in the final round. Nancy Konipol, the last seed in Division 2, went 7-1 +587 to take the division and increase her rating 95 points to 1663. Second was Paul Avrin (5-3 +427). Ben Harrison and Adam Townsend, each with 4 wins, were third and fourth. Winners at Norwalk: (L-R) Division 3 winner Mike Kapernaros; Division 1 winner Jason Keller; tournament director Cornelia Guest; Division 4 winner Kathy Hooper; Division 2 winner Nancy Konipol. Three players finished with 5 wins in Division 3, with spread determining the winners. First was Mike Kapernaros, who finished 5-3 +276 over Joan Kelly (5-3 +122) and Brandon Randall (5-3 +72). Mike also helped between games as a director apprentice--a great help as some late entries presented re-pairing challenges. Division 4 was the largest, with 12 players. The winner was Kathy Hooper, with a 7-1 +358 spread, over Linda Wancel (6-2 +352). Kathy's final 8-point victory over Linda in the KOH round clinched the win. Third was 7th grader Kyle Imperato, who finished with a 5-3 +134 record. The Main Event offered a prize for "Best Super Bowl Word." Joan Kelly was the winner for WIDEOUTS (which Joan hadn't realized had anything to do with football!) A Patriots fan, she selected a Patriots tile bag as her prize. The unrated Novice Division had some no-shows, which was unfortunate, as one adult ended up playing with three youth players. The undefeated winner was 7th grader Seth Tilliss (3-0 +505), over his brother Jared Tilliss, who was 2-1 -93. Seth also won the division prizes for High Game (455) and High Play (VISITOR, 89). Sheng Guo won the division prize for "Best Super Bowl Word" for FUN--and chose a Giants tile bag for his prize. Joan Kelly was a winner for WIDEOUTS; the Patriots were not as lucky! 8 Complete results are at cross-tables.com at http://cross-tables.com/ tourney.php?tourneyid=7517 L A S V E G A S Las Vegas 2012 By Sam Kantimathi Sam Kantimathi, one of the SCRABBLE® world’s top players and maker of much of the equipment used by top players, invited Scrabblers to attend his inaugural Las Vegas Tournament over President’s Day Weekend. A strong group of players from all over the country--and from several different countries--took part in this event. In the end, the top prize went to Canadian player Robin Pollock Daniel, who prevailed in one of the most exciting moments in SCRABBLE history--fit for an opera! Coming into the final game, Robin was badly trailing her opponent, Jesse Day. She needed to win the game by at least 197 points to take the division title. She won by 228 points and was awarded the $1,000 first prize! I haven't seen a more exciting finish in a long time in SCRABBLE. One of the very best. I was privileged to watch all this unfold in the adjacent board. For a tournament organizer who is organizing his first multi-day event in the USA in three decades, there is no greater thrill! It was a fitting win for Robin, as on the Friday of the tournament this Queen of Canadian SCRABBLE celebrated a landmark birthday at the posh Palms Resort tournament venue. The incredible moment for Robin captured in film by the alert organizer, who was playing his own game on the adjacent board. Mike Baker admiring in the background. Robin celebrated her birthday that weekend with two cakes and a $1,000 win! 9 L A S V E G A S ROBIN POLLOCK DANIEL’S FANTASTIC VICTORY I knew I had to win by a bunch (turned out to be 197 -- not bloody likely, as even my brother-in-law opined downstairs in the Mexican restaurant while he and my husband checked out the scenario on his cell phone). It's not that he wasn't being supportive; he makes these wonderful board games and understands how difficult it is to overcome such a huge deficit. I was very fortunate to start the game with a natural bingo (CARTAGE). I've been in Jesse's position before of not having to win, but just not having to lose by a set amount. It's not an easy situation, and it throws you off your normal game. So he tried to muck up the board by making multiple overlaps and limiting bingo opportunities -- all good. Unfortunately for him, two decisions he made ended up allowing me to score huge points (playing IF at 14E, which allowed me to play SPIRANT along the bottom triple row; and changing his mind, playing INVOIcE rather than OLiVINE, which he originally put down and was actually worth a few more points. I eventually was able to play ZANIER through the I for 70 points.) I never allowed myself to be aware of the score differential throughout the game. I just figured I had to score as many points as possible, and we'll evaluate the carnage when the last tile is played. I think this limited my nervousness and just allowed me to play freely. When the dust settled, the final score was 549-321, certainly my highest game of the tournament, and what fortuitous timing. Jesse was an absolute gentleman when he realized this almost unbelievable thing had happened, and tolerated my family pulling me from the board while he recounted the game (bad etiquette on my part, but I think I was in as much shock as he was). I hadn't played a tournament game since Nationals last August, and had no expectations of doing this well. I guess all those hours of daily studying really have some benefit after all. The entire weekend was really magical, and absolutely my best birthday ever. I couldn't imagine spending it without my family and so we all came down, staying in an incredible suite at the Palms Place. My brother-in-law Andy and his family also joined us from Palo Alto, and so we were ten people strong all weekend. We hosted a dessert party in our room on the night of my birthday, and my husband Gary and son Reese arranged for two incredible cakes from Freed's Bakery in Las Vegas (they've been featured on TLC's "Fabulous Cakes" for their designs). The SCRABBLE cake was red velvet, and the chocolate one not only looked stunning, but was just the best cake I've ever eaten. There are so many different kinds of chocolate preparation in there, I can't imagine how long it must take to make. It's called the Blackout Cake, and it's easy to understand why (more like a knockout cake!). The gold flowers took it over the top. So I was already in a great mood before the tournament even started! The win was completely unexpected, and a tremendous gift. I look forward to next year's tournament at this fabulous location, and props to Sam Kantimathi for bringing SCRABBLE back to Las Vegas. --Robin Pollock Daniel The final game can be seen at http://cross-tables.com/annotated.php?u=10698#0# [NOTE: In the photo above of the board the S in QIS had been moved to the right of where it was in the game.] 10 L A S V E G A S And there was more! For the $2000 first prize in Collins, Nathan Benedict of the USA won the division by a mere 5 spread points, as the erstwhile leader Craig Beevers of the UK, a fantastic player, lost his last game to Canadian Evan Berofsky by something like 174 points! The Collins division at Las Vegas was one of the strongest yet at a North American event, attracting 23 players from across the globe, including players from Australia, the United Kingdom, and Ghana. Tournament organizer Sam Kantimathi presents the $2,000 first-place check to Nathan Benedict, winner of the Collins Division Main Event. Among the other winners that weekend were Bruce D’Ambrosio and Wilma Swank-Pitzer, who won Divisions 1 and 2 of the Wee Bird on 2/16, both with perfect 6-0 records; Michael Baker, Linda Wancel, and Steve Moniz, who won Divisions 1, 2, and 3 of the 2/17 TLW Early Bird; and New Yorker James Curley, who won the 2/17 Collins Early Bird over Nathan Benedict and Chris Lipe, raising his rating from 1551 to 1663. James went on to place 12th in the Collins Main Event, going home with a rating of 1702. Winners at Vegas! Clockwise from top right: Sam Kantimathi with Wee Bird Division 1 winner Bruce D’Ambrosio; Collins Early Bird winner James Curley; TWL Early Bird Division 1 winner Michael Baker; TWL Early Bird Division 2 winner Linda Wancel; TWL Early Bird Division 3 winner Steve Moniz receives a check from Sam K; Wee Bird Division 2 winner Wilma Swank-Pitzer. 11 L A S V E G A S In the main event, Las Vegas local Gerry Greenside finished first of 28 players in Division 2 with an impressive 18-5 +1369 spread. Second was Ed Saunders (17-6 +473) and third Luise Shafritz (16-7 +1036). Division 3 went to Alan Kait, who finished with a 17-6 +734 record over Stan Khury (16-7 +898) and Marina Villena (15.5-7.5 +574). Newcomer Michelle Whitaker, also from Las Vegas, was the runaway winner of Division 4, winning all but two of her games to end with the tournament’s best record, 21-2 +2021, which earned her an initial NASPA rating of 1197. Second and third, both with 13-10 records, were Julia Scruggs and Tamara Grady. Division 4 winner, newcomer Michelle Whitaker, from Vegas, who won 21 out of 23 games! Many people helped with the tournament. Thanks to Mark Milan for superb directorship. Sarah Terry, daughter of Scrabbler Paul Terry, helped out in many ways. Zana Anderson and Sandy Nang assisted when they could. Mike Frentz assisted me every single day. San Francisco Bay Area boasts in my opinion, one of the strongest cores of SCRABBLE players in the world. Yes, I said the world. Jesse Day, Conrad BB, Cesar del Solar, Mike (words with) Frentz, and a few other Bay Area friends dazzled us with their wordgame# wizardry in Vegas. Bay Area legend Jerry Lerman was signed up, but his recent eye surgery prevented him from coming. We wish you a speedy recovery, Jerry, and hope to see you and Lester, also recuperating from surgery, in Vegas next February. And then there are Kenji Matsumoto, Jason Katz-Brown, Peter Armstrong, Noah Walton, Chris Patrick Morgan and a few others we hope to attract with a bigger prize fund next year. Leaving Vegas: 2/21/12 It is 3:50 am. In a few hours I will be heading out from Vegas to start a three-month odyssey to Southern Africa, then Istanbul, Dubai, Shanghai, Sydney, Dunedin, new Zealand, Saudi Arabia, and Europe. Last night was let us say eventful, and I am probably forgettingsome people I should thank, among the over hundred people who showed up to support me and enjoy Las Vegas, a city unlike any other in the world. Thanks to Chris Lipe, JC Green, and others for loaning their laptops for Zyzzyva. Talking of which, a thankyou# to Mike Thelen, who donated five sweatshirts for the high Z word in the Collins and the four TWL divisions. Thanks, too, to his fellow Utahns: Mike Stevens, who carried those heavy shirts here, and Kent Nelson--welcome back! Luis Shafritz donated a tilebag for the best Vegas-themed word, PASTIES. Mike Baron kindly donated a Wordbook for the best word containing my initials, SK, and laminated sheets of wordlists to the about ten newcomers. All these newcomers were also given their choice of free SmoothTiles or PermaTiles. Trip Payne enjoyed his visit to the Pinball Hall of Fame while some others went to an Elton John concert where he sang praise of some pinball wizard. Of course Palms is rated #1 for nightclubs for the younger crowd. I spotted Kelly Clarkson, P Diddy, et. al. on the marquee. There were also a variety of magic shows, the Blue Man Group, Le Reve, O, Absinthe, and tons of other entertainment. 12 L A S V E G A S Thank you Vegas, for an unbelievable eight days, and thank you SCRABBLE players, for all your kind words, especially from super winners Robin Pollock Daniel and Nathan Benedict. The setting for Robin's landmark birthday celebration at Palms Place, with a panoramic view of the Vegas strip was most memorable. See you all next February in Las Vegas! Tournament organizer Sam Kantimathi with 2012 winner Robin Pollock Daniel. 13 E A S T E R N C H A M P I O N S H I P Eastern Championship 2012, Charlotte NC By Ryan Fischer; Photos by Adair Salgado, Katie Bernardina, & Teresa Schaeffer Over Presidents Day Weekend in February, 87 players turned out for the 15th Annual Eastern SCRABBLE Championship, held for its 4th year in Charlotte, NC. The festivities started at 10 am Friday morning with 28 people gathering to play the Early Bird for a top prize of $305. That prize ultimately went to Matthew Bernardina, who went 8-0, knocking out the 2002-rated Ian Weinstein by finding INTA(G)LIo for 132 points, forming L(OX). (cross-tables.com/annotated.php?u=10675#22#) In the final round, Bernardina and Heather Steffy played for first, Steffy needing a blowout to win. She couldn't quite pull it out and slipped to 3rd. Rachel Knapp, a last-minute entrant all the way from California, finished 2nd, with Weinstein salvaging 4th and Joey Krafchick sneaking into 5th. The performance prize went to Charlene White, another last-minute entry, who had a 5-3 -30 record to finish 9th, 11 seeds over her initial 21 seeding. This total of 87 players in attendance included 15 players in the Newcomers Tournament, an event which this time coincided with the main event, helping to legitimize it and boost the number of new players signing up. Overall, 8 people got first-time ratings. Local newcomer Becky Armstrong-Helms made a brave last-minute decision to move from the Newcomers Tournament to the main event and had the time of her life doing so. Andy Hoang, the 2009 National School SCRABBLE® champion with partner Erik Salgado, made a similarly gutsy move, opting to play up to Division 1 despite his initial 1138 rating. It paid big dividends for him too, as he won 8 of 24 games in the main event, and between that and the early bird gained 93 rating points to raise his rating to 1231. Andy also won a $25 bounty for the biggest upset, defeating Cynthia Seales by scores of 441-338 and 383-360 (their ratings difference was 464 points). Ember Nelson, who also chose to take on the experts, took the other $25 bounty prize, defeating 1838rated Rachel Knapp 422-415 (a ratings difference of 476). In the Newcomers Tournament, local player 11year-old Nicholas Miklaucic took the division by storm, going 5-1 +427 to win the division and the $100 first prize. He gained 137 rating points, rocketing from 483 to 620. The previous day Nicholas had braved the chaos of the Eastern Championship's Early Bird division, and though did not win a game there, those games were invaluable to him in preparing to take on other players of his ilk. Suraj Rao, brother of 2011 National SCRABBLE Championship Division 3 winner Suhas Rao, took second place, and a mother and decent SCRABBLE player in her own right, Marla Newcomers Tournament winners: (L-R) Marla Choslovsky (3rd); Choslovsky, took third. Her son Micah Nicholas Miklaucic (1st); Suraj Rao (2nd). Greenberg also played in the EB, while his brother Morris Greenberg played in the Main Event. Much thanks is due to local Charlotte SCRABBLE Club member and apprentice director Randy Morrison for running the Newcomers show. Without the efforts of him and Katie Bernardina, that event would have in no way gone as smoothly, let alone be possible. 14 E A S T E R N C H A M P I O N S H I P For the second year, the Eastern Championship's main event featured a Collins division. This time six players duked it out. Matthew Bernardina, last year's champ, got off to a rousing start, but David Koenig eventually caught up to him, making it a respectable nail-biter. Bernardina did end up repeating his championship, and between his 8-0 record in the Early Bird and his 8-0 start in the Main Event, he had a 16-game winning streak, and ultimately finished the weekend 25-7, pocketing another $250 for his CSW win. Since Bernardina has started playing and attending the Eastern Championship tournament, he has never failed to win in the Main Event, first winning Division 2 in 2010, then winning back-to-back Collins titles in 2011 and 2012! L-R: Matthew Bernardina, winner of both the Early Bird and the Main Event Collins Division, with Erik Salgado, winner of Division 3 of the Main Event and winner (tied with Will Scott) of the Tournament High Play for UNHINGED, 176. In the Under 1200 Division, Erik Salgado of Durham, NC, the 2009 National School SCRABBLE® champion with Andy Hoang, started out 3-0 and rarely looked back, though he often tangled with Lindsey Dimmick and Tom O'Laughlin. Erik was able to lock up the tournament with one round to go, but not with a fight. He took home his division $225 first prize and a free roll to 2013's EC Division 2, and his rating jumped from 989 to 1088. Looking at the standings after the first evening of play in the Under 1600 Division, no one could have predicted it would be Tracy Bowman and David Englehardt vying for all the marbles at the end. Bowman started 1-2, and Englehardt started a very uncharacteristic 0-3; however, both of them rallied on day 2, each going 7-1 to claim spots in the top 4. By the end of day 3 they had claimed the 1 and 2 spots, with Connie Creed and Matt P Hopkins and Francis Anum -- the local favorites -- hot on their tails and Will Scott not far behind. Bowman's and Engelhardt's final game ended Division 2 winner Tracy Bowman with a 316-316 tie. This tie (Engelhardt's 2nd of the tourney) allowed Engelhardt to get another half game on Hopkins, just eking him out on spread for 2nd place. And since Bowman was ahead going into the final game, she finished 1st, pocketing the division's $475 first prize and 2013 EC Division 1 free roll, catapulting her rating from 1274 to a new peak of 1394! After the first evening in play in Division 1, it came as surprise to few people that David Gibson was the only undefeated person, even in a field with many heavy hitters and three national champions. However, that tide would slowly, gradually change throughout the tournament. If you thought Bernardina's unlikely 3x3 versus Weinstein was odd, by round 5 in the main event, Weinstein, the eventual champ, found himself victim to a second 3x3 ending in -LIO, when he dropped an E in the 2nd position of a 3x3 and Fischer held AILORS?. OSC: Fischer could have played one other 3x3 too. And if you're curious, the third -LIO 8-letter-word is CURCULIO. If just -IO, there are 14 8letter-words that fit the bill-io. 15 E A S T E R N C H A M P I O N S H I P The high-play skins list, a staple of the Eastern Championship since its move to North Carolina, has always been a delicious cornucopia of word salad. Typically, to win the high-play skin for the round (awarded each round at $5 a pop for the main event, $5 per session for CSW) in Division 1, your play needs to score over 100 points. SERAGLIO fit the bill for Fischer once, and other colorful entries included Joel Sherman's round 1 natural find of D(IF)FICULT for 102, a play that Joey Mallick without skipping a beat noted wasn't all that hard to Joeys find. In round 3, Gibson played BACCARAT for 104, proving that rack balancing isn't always necessary to score big. Joel Sherman also later played CADUCITY for 102, and in the middle of Day 2, Debbie Stegman made a stunning find of MiLKMAID for 114! The high play of the whole tournament was a tie: Erik Salgado's UNHINGED and Will Scott's ECLIPSED, both for 176. Falling just short of that mark was Michael Bassett's MISGRADE for 167. Michael said this Charlotte tourney had always been kind to him as far as high games go. He had a previous high score here of 600-something last year, and this year, he had his career high of 725! Other notable plays in other divisions include local player Jesse Cromer's DANGLERS for 117. Cromer recently returned to tourney play after a long hiatus, and was in contention in Division 2 for a quite a long stretch of time. Hannah Lieberman played GUSTIEST for 122, Rachel Knapp played SQUINCH (!) for 105, and Doug Szymkowiak, coming all the way from Ohio, made his trip well worth it, playing DEFENDER for 117. Oddly enough, none of the CSW high plays were CSW-only words. The most colorful one was Bernardina's CRAPOLAS for 149. Other plays included John Van Pelt's PRONATED for 131 and Bob Lipton's LIQUATE for 123. The full list is available at http:// www.charlottescrabble.com/ec/2012/ec-2012-skins.xls Division 1 winners: (L-R) Ian Weinstein (1st), Joel Sherman (3rd), and David Gibson (2nd). 16 After Day 2, Gibson was still on top, his only early loss to Ryan Fischer, who was in 2nd place at the time. Four people remained in 3rd place at 7-4, all within striking distance, but the eventual champion was 4 games off with 13 to go, going to show anything can and does happen in a SCRABBLE tournament. Gibson had a rough day 3, going 3-5, and Joel Sherman came surging ahead to move into the lead at13-6 with 1000+ spread. Fischer was the other 13-6, in 3rd place by spread. Weinstein quietly maintained his position among leaders, starting the final day in 4th place. He won his last 6 games, including the final over Joel Sherman, to win his first Eastern SCRABBLE Championship, winning a $750 first prize and a free roll to the 2013 festivities. Gibson held on to finish second; Sherman was third; and E A S T E R N C H A M P I O N S H I P Rachel Knapp, coming all the way from California, turned her SCRABBLE sojourn into quite a lucrative trip, cashing in at both the Early Bird and Main Event. The $100 performance prize went to Ryan Fischer, who came in seeded 10th and finished 5th, gaining 101 ratings points over the event, going from 1701 to 1802. Lou Cornelis and Lilla Sinanan Lou Cornelis celebrated a birthday on this auspicious weekend. To celebrate, Susan Blanchard got the crowd waiting for the awards ceremony to sing him a rousing round of "Happy Birthday!" Congratulations to all of the winners, many of whom are pictured in this article. Thanks go out not only to apprentice director extraordinaire Katie Bernardina for all her help with data entry and directing, but to Randy Morrison for his help with the Newcomers Event, John Luebkemann and Katya Lezin for moral support and so much more, and Adair Saldago, for so many random acts of kindness over the tournament weekend and for being a wonderful chaperone to kids who have already had such amazing SCRABBLE success stories! (L-R) Rachel Knapp, a last-minute entry, flew in from California--and flew out with prize money from a 2nd place finish in the Early Bird and a 4th place Division 1 finish in the Main Event; Tom O’Laughlin finished 2nd in Division 3; Charlotte Scrabblers Katya Lezin, Noah Lieberman, and Hanna Lieberman competed in the EC and helped in many ways. 17 P H O E N I X Phoenix 2012 By Larry Rand and Barbara Van Alen The 28th annual Phoenix tournament is in the record books and we have a new expert champion to add to the history book: John Karris, who finished 17-3 +1336 to win $850 first prize. Second in the TWL division went to Lisa Odom (16-4 +1547) and third to Rick Wong (15.5-4.5 +1422). Arizona’s undisputed SCRABBLE® Queen, Laurie Cohen, was the winner of the Collins Division (new this year!) over Albert Hahn. Other division winners were Marcia Wade, the Gibsonized winner of Division 2; Huguette Settle, Division 3; and Andrea Hatch, Division 4. A list of winners follows at the end of this report; complete results can be found at http://wordgameplayers.org/tournaments/past-tournaments/ Through the generosity of many players and sponsors, we had 16 items in our raffle this year. The raffle and FOTD netted the 2012 WGPO Word Cup tournament committee $541. Thank you so much for your support. The two biggest raffle winners were Mary Parrish, from Las Vegas, who won a framed water color created by Richard Lauder; and Albert Hahn, from Calgary, won a Gene Tyszka board, cover and tile racks; and a set of Bob Schoenman Protiles. Together with a digital clock that he won in the Silent Auction, Albert now has a complete set of equipment to replace a bag of equipment that he lost! Kay Knappmiller and Barbara holding a SCRABBLE® quilt that was made by Kay's children. Jeff Kastner donated four One Up! games for the player in each division who won by the fewest points. The winners were Miriam Green (4); Sarah King (2); Polly Moyer (1); and Jeffrey Later (2). For information on One Up!, please visit http:// www.uppityshirts.com/mr.write.shtml Thank you to our table sponsors and other supporters! 90% of all entry fees were returned as cash prizes this year. Early Bird The 2012 Phoenix Early Bird attracted 50 players, which was a small increase over 2011. Some players arrived early, skipped the Early Bird, and spent the day by the pool. It was warm and sunny for our northern visitors! Two new players, Terrell Atkins and Bret Bender, were awarded an OWL2 for playing in their first tournament. L-R: Early Bird Division 1 winners Lisa Odom (1st), John Karris (2nd), and Steve Pellinen (3rd) 18 The 8-game event had 6 divisions, with Division 6 having 10 entrants, and 8 players competing in Divisions 1-5. 91+% of all entry fees were returned in prizes. In addition, the player with the High Game in each division was awarded a Zyzzyva t-shirt produced by Michael Thelen. P H O E N I X Each division was awarded prizes for 1st thru 3rd places ($120, $80 and $50), and Division 6 had a Best Over Seed (BOS) prize of $40. Division winners were Lisa Odom (1); Michael Bradley (2, seeded last in the division!); Fran Galt (3); Maggie Morley (4); Richard Martin (5); Julia Swaney (6). Main Event, Day 1 Saturday, February 18th, was the start of the 28th annual Phoenix Main Event, a 3-day, 20-game tournament. At least you can say we are consistent. For the past three years, the attendance has been 80, 80 and 79. Considering that this was the first year that another tournament in the Western States was being held on the same weekend, we are very pleased that players showed their loyalty to this long-standing tradition of President's Day weekend in Arizona. The weatherman cooperated with cloudless skies and 70-degree temps. A large contingent spent lunch time by the pool or in the hot tub. Rich Moyer started his morning well by being selected in a raffle for his "early entry." Rich (and Polly) received a four-night gift certificate for the Grace Inn, valid for up to one year. At current hotel prices, the gift certificate has a value of ~ $350. First-time tournament competitor Satya Mahapatra, who lives in Ahwatuee, was presented with a copy of the OWL2 as a gift for his participation. For each of the four-game sessions on Saturday and Sunday, morning and afternoon, we had a FUN prize ($20) for each of the four divisions. On Saturday morning, the word played had to contain the letters "A" and "Z." The four winners were Maddy Kamen ZANIES, 50); Cason Lane BRAZENED, 88); Keith Hagel (ZETA, 66); and Jeffrey Later (ZAX, 52). In the afternoon session, the word played had to begin with a "W," "G," "P," or "O." The division winners were Joe Gaspard (OXTAILS,102); Sarah King (WAIVERS, 98); Ron Barker (PATINAE, 77); and Satya Mahapatra (PASTING, 86). Following the final game of the evening, about 50 of the players and their family and friends attended Bennett Jacobstein's "Trivia Contest." The special event was catered by Firehouse Subs. After the initial 30 questions, the four highest scorers--Peter Dolgenos, John Wiley, Fran Galt and James Johnson--all vied for the championship honors. Peter kept his undefeated record intact with a crushing victory and was crowned the Phoenix 2012 Trivia Champ. Main Event, Day 2 The second tournament day is always smoother sailing as the players get into a rhythm and directors only tend to data entry and an occasional "director" call. For the morning session, the FUN prize for each division was for words containing "X" or "Q." The winners ($20 each) were Laura Scheimberg (QUASI, 51), Bonnie Redland (TOXINES, 77), Maggie Morley (SQUALOR, 100), and Chora Eilertsen (AFFIXES, 90). In the afternoon session, the FUN prize was awarded for the best "cruise" word in each division. Since nearly half of the entrants in the tournament had taken a cruise, this was a knowledgable group! The points scored did not matter. Some of the submissions were pretty hilarious, and the final choices were difficult, but the directors settled on four winning words: Roy Kamen (LIDO), Yvonne Knickerbocker (QUAIS and HELMS in one game), Jo Anne Cohen (CABIN), and Karin Somerville (SHIP). 19 P H O E N I X FINAL RESULTS Collins Division 1. Laurie Cohen 17-3 +1354 $200 2. Albert Hahn 13.5-6.5 +955 $130 Division 1 1. John Karris 17-3 +1336 $850 Congratulations to our new expert champion for the Phoenix tournament's Main Event! 2. Lisa Odom 16-4 +1547 $450 3. Rick Wong 15.5-4.5 +1422 $250 High Game: Lisa Odom (580) $20 High Loss: Laura Scheimberg (478) $20 Best Upset: Robert Collins (1456) vs. Stan Miranda (1763) $70 Best Overseed: MIriam Green (seeded #18, final rank #5) $200 Division 2 1. Marcia Wade (Gibsonized) 14-6 +465 $750 2. Gary Smart 12-8 +309 $400 3. Max Dwyer 11-9 +487 $200 High Game: Max Dwyer (556) $20 High Loss: Harriet Strasberg (438) $20 Best Upset: Bonnie Redland (1311) vs. Sarah King (1449) $70 Best Overseed: Margie Goron (seeded #19, final rank #5) $200 Division 3 1. Huguette Settle 14-6 +1007 $650 2. Jacqueline Stewart 14-6 +530 $350 3. Susan Hoehn 13.5-6.5 +366 $200 High Game: Carole Miller (538) $20 High Loss: Keith Hagel (441) $20 Best Upset: Ron Barker (1081) vs. Hugette Settle (1300) $70 Best Overseed: Ben Settle (seeded #12, final rank #4) $150 Division 4 1. Andrea Hatch 15-5 +1126 $550 2. Chora Eilertsen 15-5 +523 $300 3. Erik Anderson 14-6 +916 $150 High Game: Satya Mahapatra (485) $20 High Loss: Richard Martin (411) $20 Best Upset: Satya Mahapatra (no rating) vs. Erik Anderson (1042) $70 Best Overseed: Satya Mahapatra (seeded #19, final rank #7) $150 Early Bird Winners Division 1: Lisa Odom, John Karris, & Steve Pellinen. High Game: Lisa Odom (547) Division 2: Michael Bradley, Ruth Hamilton, & Andrea Michaels. High Game: Michael Bradley (539) Division 3: Fran Galt, Huguette Settle, & Richard Lauder. High Game: Barbara Gray (567) Division 4: Maggie Morley, Bobbi Hendrickson & Susan Hoehn. High Game: Mary Parrish (499) Division 5: Richard Martin, Kay Knappmiller & Susan Kessler. High Game: Susan Kessler (520) Division 6: Julia Swaney, Aron Smith & Sara Boykan. High Game: Sara Boykan (543). Best Over Seed: Tony Ludwig PLEASE MARK YOUR CALENDARS, the Phoenix 2013 tournament will be held at the Grace Inn, Ahwatukee. The Early Bird (8 games) will be on Friday, February 15, and the Main Event (20 games) on Saturday through Monday, February 16-18. A Collins division will be offered again for a minimum of four players. Thank you to everyone who sponsored tables and supported the tournament, and to all the players who attended. We greatly appreciate your loyalty to one of the longest continuous SCRABBLE® tournaments in North America. --Larry and Barbara 20 P H O E N I X 28+ YEARS OF PHOENIX WINNERS 2012: John Karris 2011, 2010: Conrad Bassett-Bouchard 2009: Sam Kantimathi 2008: Nathan Benedict 2006, 1999, 1996, 1995: Jim Geary 2005: Jerry Lerman 2004: Michael Baker 2003: Iffy Onyeonwu 2002: Chris Cree 2001: Joey Mallick 2000, 1997: Ira Cohen 1998: Carol Kaplan 1994: Kent Nelson 1993, 1989, 1988: Brian Cappelletto 2007: Dave Wiegand Photo unavailable 1992: Mike Baron 1991: Stuart Goldman 1985: Jim Lamerand 1990: Lester Schonbrun Stan Rubinsky, winner of early Phoenix tourneys in 1981 and 1979 1987: Frank Hertz 1986: Ron Mikolka 2012--First Collins Winner! Laurie Cohen 21 S A R A T O G A S P R I N G S Saratoga Springs 2012: Off to the Races! By Cornelia Guest; photographs by Betsey Wood This year the annual Saratoga Tournament moved to a new venue: the Holiday Inn on Broadway. Players were treated to a horse-themed environment, and to rooms priced at about a fourth of what is charged during racing season at the Spa. Organizers Linda Wancel and Annette Tedesco and deserve praise for a smoothly run event! Thanks, too, go to Kieran O’Connor, who assisted with directing and data input. At the beginning of the tournament Kieran was introduced as an apprentice director by his mentors Linda Wancel and Cornelia Guest--then presented with a certificate from Mary Rhoades announcing that he is now a full NASPA director! Twenty players competed in the Friday Early Bird, which was split into three divisions for five games. In Division 1, Evans Clinchy and Ross Brown, the two top seeds Kieran O’Connor and Linda Wancel directed with skill (the “heavy favorites”), finished in that order. Director and good humor. Linda Wancel (a “late entry,” playing to even divisions) and Kevin Gauthier came in 1-2 in Division 2. Both had 4-1 records, but Linda beat Kevin in the stretch by 100 spread points. Jane Whitmore won Division 3 handily, finishing with a 4-1 +358 record over Barbara Bordwell McGrew. The Main Event was run as a 15-game round robin, followed by a KOH final. In all but Division 4, where there were 21 players, every player got to play each other--almost. Unfortunately, Division 1 player Ed Liebfried was sick the final day and unable to play. This “late scratch” proved important in the final division placements, as five players had byes that day. Division 1 featured two brothers running neck and neck to take the top prizes: Larry Sherman and Joel Sherman. Larry finished first with a 12-4 +492 record (with a 50-point bye win), Joel second with an 11-5 +1141 record, with no bye. Third was Jason Keller, 11-5 +482 (with a bye), over fourthplace Seth Lipkin, 11-5 +381, with no bye. Division 1 winner Larry Sherman receives a congratulatory hug from Linda Wancel. 22 Division 2 was dominated by Terry Kang Rau, who was Gibsonized. Terry scored a runaway victory with a 12-4 record, and an outstanding spread of +1544! Second and third, with 10.5-5.5 records, were Dave Engelhardt and Dean Porporo, with Dave nosing out Dean by 84 spread points. Fourth was 15th seed (“longshot”) Samantha Southard, whose rating went up 65 points to 1469. Gibsonized D2 winner Terry Kang Rau went 12-4 +1544, the tournament’s best finish. S A R A T O G A S P R I N G S Division 3 was practically a photo finish, with a players all in contention tightly bunched going into the final game. Lydia Keras won by a nose, finishing 11.5-4.5 +762 over Judy Cole (11-5 +768), Matt O’Connor (11-5 +366), and Nicholas Vasquez (11-5 +42). Matt and Nicky are both 8th graders, and they’ll be heading next month to the National School SCRABBLE® Championship in Orlando for their final year of NSSC competition. Betsey Wood was the decisive winner of Division 4, finishing 13-3 +468. Betsey also won a Flip Timer for “Best Saratoga Theme Word” for FARRIER. Trailing Betsey were three players with 12-4 records: Mary Ellen Bergeson, Gerianne Abriano, and Barbara Bordwell McGrew. Thanks to all who made Saratoga 2012 a most enjoyable event! Lydia Keras, Division 3 winner by a nose! Division 4 winner Betsey Wood, who also played FARRIER to win the prize for “Best Saratoga Theme Word.” 23 T O Tournament Results FEBRUARY 1-29 AKRON OH 2/2 U R N A M E N T R 1. 2. 3. 4. Chris Cree Robert Fenske Paul Hagelstein Joey Titzman ARCATA CA 2/12 1. Nigel Peltier 2. Michael Machi BALTIMORE (CATONSVILLE) MD 2/4 PHILADELPHIA PA 2/12 Connie Creed Thomas Ensey Jason Jones Andrew Cave NORWALK CT 2/4 1. 2. 3. 4. Jason Keller Nancy Konipol Michael Kapernaros Kathy Hooper NORWALK NOVICE (UNRATED) 2/4 1. Seth Tilliss SEVEN HILLS OH 2/4 S SALADO TX 2/11-12 1. Stephen DeBacco 1. 2. 3. 4. E 1. 2. 3. 4. Joel Sherman Tobey Roland David Dlugosz Ferdinand Addo LAS VEGAS NV 2/16 1. Bruce D’Ambrosio 2. Wilma Pitzer CHARLOTTE NC 2/17 1. Matthew Bernardina CHARLOTTE NC 2/17-20 1. Ian Weinstein 2. Tracy Bowman 3. Erik Salgado U L T S CHARLOTTE NC 2/18 1. Nicholas Miklaucic LAS VEGAS NV 2/18-20 1. 2. 3. 4. Robin Pollock Daniel Gerry Greenside Alan Kait Michelle Whitaker LAS VEGAS NV (COLLINS) 2/18-20 1. Nathan Benedict PHOENIX AZ (WGPO) 2/18-20 1. 2. 3. 4. John Karris Marcia Wade Huguette Settle Andrea Hatch PHOENIX AZ (WGPO COLLINS) 2/18-20 1. Laurie Cohen DALLAS TX 2/18 1. Paul Holser 2. Linda Villarreal 3. Robin Gates 1. Jason Idalski 2. Michael Bassett 3. Eileen Popich CHARLOTTE NC (COLLINS) 2/17-20 GUELPH ON CAN 2/19 BERKELEY CA 2/5 LAS VEGAS NV 2/17 1. Noah Walton 2. John Karris 3. Andrea Michaels LAGUNA WOODS CA 2/5 1. Rachel Knapp LAKE OSWEGO OR (WGPO) 2/5 1. Dave Johnson SALADO TX 2/10 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 24 Steve Glass John Dalton Jason Randolph Jan Asuquo Deborah Gaudier 1. Matthew Bernardina 1. Max Panitch 2. Alex Rodriguez 1. Michael Baker 2. Linda Wancel 3. Steve Moniz MOUNTAIN VIEW CA (WGPO) 2/19 LAS VEGAS NV (COLLINS) 2/17 SARATOGA SPRINGS 2/24 1. James Curley PHOENIX AZ 2/17 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Lisa Odom Bradley Michael Fran Galt Margaret Morley Richard Martin Julia Swaney 1. Jeff Widergren 1. Evans Clinchy 2. Linda Wancel 3. Jane Whitmore SARATOGA SPRINGS 2/24-26 1. 2. 3. 4. Larry Sherman Terry Kang Rau Lydia Keras Betsey Wood T O U AUSTIN TX 2/25 1. Geoff Thevenot FORT LAUDERDALE FL 2/25 1. Howard Pistol 2. George Rogers 3. Jennifer DeGlopper COVINA CA 2/26 1. Cesar Del Solar 2. Nick Fraher 3. David Postal R N A M E N T R E S U L T S N E W F A C E S New Faces Since our last issue, 31 new faces have competed at NASPA, NSA, and WGPO tournaments. Four players won their division first time out: Andrew Cave, who won Division 4 at the Baltimore (Catonsville) MD Tournament on 2/4 with a 7-1 +662 record, earning an initial NASPA rating of 1003; Ferdinand Addo, who won Division 4 at the Philadelphia PA Tournament on 2/12 with a 6-1 +731, earning an initial NASPA rating of 1308; Michelle Whitaker, who won Division 4 at the Las Vegas NV Tournament on 2/18-20 with a 21-2 +2021 record, earning an initial NASPA rating of 1197; and our featured “New Face,” Jason Jones, who won Division 3 at the Baltimore (Catonsville) MD Tournament on 2/4 with a 7-1 +576 record to earn an initial NASPA rating of 1268. _________________________________________________________________________ Jason Jones Most newcomers start in the bottom division at their first tournament--and many finish at the bottom of that division. However, the organizers of the Baltimore (Catonsville) MD tournament knew 35-year-old local player Jason Jones from his games at their club, and they thought he should play up into Division 3. Jason showed that their faith in him was not misplaced: He took the division handily, winning every game but one, heading home with an impressive first rating of 1268. Jason, a private tutor focusing mainly on mathematics, has many hobbies. He enjoys reading, classical music (both listening to it and playing it on the piano), and games such as chess, backgammon, poker, and “German-style” board games. And SCRABBLE®, of course! “I’ve been playing SCRABBLE since about the age of six,” said Jason. “However, I didn’t start seeking out other competitive players till about four years ago.” That was when he started playing at a casual club in the Baltimore area. About four months ago he started playing at the Baltimore NASPA SCRABBLE® Club #50, which is more competitive. “I play a lot online, too, mostly on ISC [the Internet SCRABBLE Club].” Jason doesn’t study much, but he usually plays at least ten hours a week, and he has a very good memory for words he’s seen while playing. “I know I’m setting a bad example for new players here,” he said. “I’ve mainly only studied the words on ‘The Cheat Sheet,’ and I don’t even know everything on there cold. Embarrassingly, I let two 3-letter phonies get by me at the tournament.” Jason enjoyed his first tournament. “The tournament was a lot of fun for me. I wasn't very intimidated by it. Both the SCRABBLE clubs I had attended were frequented by tournament players, so I was already familiar with most of the tournament procedures such as using a clock, what happens if you overdraw, holding the bag up high when you draw, etc. The only part of the tournament protocol that was new to me was the slips where you circle what the blanks represent and write down challenge words, but that was easy to get used to.” “I really enjoyed the competition of the tournament and everyone was very helpful.” 26 N E W F A C E S Jason suggests other players study more than he did before playing in a first tournament, and he recommends Zyzzyva as a great tool. “Also, I would read the tournament rules to make sure you are familiar with how tournament SCRABBLE differs from kitchen-table SCRABBLE.” The best moment in the tournament for Jason was in the final game. “I successfully challenged my opponent’s phony bingo play, and then followed it up with my own bingo, gaining a significant lead. I realized then there was a very good chance I would win my first tournament, and that was a good feeling.” Jason did not have any amazing plays to share. “I just drew very solidly the whole tournament and was able to use the tiles well. I do remember winning one game despite my opponent getting a triple-triple. Also, my opponents challenged my words unsuccessfully many times. I was surprised how aggressive people were with challenging. I'm pretty cautious about challenging because I play a lot with people better than me who often play unfamiliar words that are legitimate.” Jason hopes to play in more tournaments. “I'm definitely hooked on tournaments now, so I'm going to try to attend at least four a year.” He hopes to be at the April Philadelphia tournament. “I plan on studying a lot more for that tournament so I can maintain or raise my rating.” Look out, Philadelphia players! _______________________________________________________________________________ Welcome to Jason Jones, Andrew Cave, Fernando Addo, Michelle Whitaker, and the following other new faces: AKRON OH 2/2: Tere Akers BALTIMORE (CATONSVILLE) MD: Laura Petillo, Marla Posey-Moss, Mary Salhorst, Alex Vratsanos LAKE OSWEGO OR 2/5: Howard Neal SALADO TX 2/10: Milissa Mondrik ARCATA CA 2/12: Ira Blatt PHILADELPHIA PA 2/12: Nancy Carliner, Rose Gutsche, Jakob Karstens, Nancy Katz, Amy Kelly, Rachael Silverstein, Jenny Weatherford CHARLOTTE NC 2/17-20: Becky Armstrong Helms PHOENIX AZ 2/17: Terrell Atkins, Bret Bender CHARLOTTE NC 2/18: Joshua Cohen, Micah Greenberg, Matthew Luter, Suraj Rao, Jackson Santander, Marshall Silverman, Christy Wilhelm PHOENIX AZ 2/18-20: Satya Mahapatra COVINA CA 2/26: David Goldsmith 27 S C R A B B L E S T R A T E G Y SCRABBLE® Strategy By Jim Kramer Why don't ducks fly upside down? Because they'd quack up. I managed to lose the game shown below. Can I assure myself of making this duck quack up no matter what I draw? Jim: 383 Quackle: 378 Jim's rack: EEMNORS Unseeen: AADEFRRS ANSWER on next page 28 S C R A B B L E S T R A T E G Y In the actual game, I played MOREENS and drew the F. Quackle then won with ARRASED. JK: N4 MOREENS 80, 463 F LEAVE Q: O1 ARRASED, 89, 467 + 8 pts for F = 475 Final: JK 463, Q 475 What I found interesting is that there are so many promising ways to block ARRASED. You can play down from EXCELS, or play ERNES/EXCELS, play down from AFGHANS or ZEES, hook an S on KOJI in a number of ways, play through the I in KOJI, or even make a play like MENSAE, hooking BOYOS. I've only found one play that seems to always work, and that's Joel Sherman's idea of SNORE/KOJIS. Kudos, Joel! [SNORE N3, 23] TOTAL 406 [FARADS or FADERS 07 or A5, 38] TOTAL 416 [(R)EM F8, 22] TOTAL 428 [DREARS or DARERS 07, 27] TOTAL 405 [FEM 14M, 21] TOTAL 427 I haven't fully investigated all the tries, so if you find another play that works with every draw, let me know. After looking at it a bit, I had assumed ERNES N6 would work, but it actually loses if you draw the E (at least against a player of Quackle's stature). 29 S C R A B B L E S T R A T E G Y [ERNES N6, 26] Total 409 MO leave & E pickup [FARADS A5, 38] Total 416 R leave [FARAD A5 35] Total 413 RS leave [MO F10, 22] Total 431 E leave [(E)R CR 8] Total 424 get 2 points for E = 426 S(ER) M12 17, total 430 + 2 points for E = 432. 30 W O R D S T A R Word Star By Jeff Kastner Play Word Star, a word game with similarities to Boggle, created and presented each month by Phoenix, AZ expert Jeff Kastner. The puzzle grid is in the shape of a hexagram…also known as the “Star of David.” Your object is to find and list as many words as possible, using only the 7 letters contained in the Word Star puzzle. All words must be OWL2 or Long List acceptable. There are 3 basic rules to finding words within a Word Star puzzle: 1. Words must be at least 3 or more letters long (with no limit on how long the word can be). 2. Words are formed by using letters that adjoin each other. For example, the words KIN and RAG are acceptable, but not GIN, because the “G” and the “I” are not neighboring letters. 3. Letters within a word may repeat as many times as possible, as long as such letters are repeated twice (or thrice) in a row, or as long as Rule 2 is followed. So, for example, ROOK and GAGA are acceptable. But, NOOK would not be acceptable because the “N” and the “O” are not adjoining. Note that the Center Star, located in the white middle portion of the puzzle, is the most important letter. It is the only letter that adjoins each of the 6 others in the puzzle. In addition, there are bonus points awarded for using the Center Star as often as possible. The Center Star in this month’s puzzle is the letter “A.” 31 W O R D S T A R Multiple forms of the same word are acceptable (for example, RATE, RATED, RATER, RATERS, and RATES would all be fine, if they were in the puzzle). No points are awarded (and no penalty points are assessed) for any entries on your word list that are not in OWL2 or the Long List, or that do not adhere to the above rules. Points are scored as follows: • • • • 2 Points for each WORD found. 5 Bonus Points for each BINGO (7 or more letters) found. 1 Point for each LETTER of every word found. 1 Bonus Point for each CENTER STAR of every word found. Example of Points Scored: Let’s say a Word Star puzzle has an “S” as the Center Star letter, and your list consists of the following words: ATTIRE ATTIRES SAT SATE SATIRE SATIRES TIRE TIRES Your score would be: • • • • 16 Points for the 8 WORDS found. 10 Bonus Points for the 2 BINGOS (ATTIRES and SATIRES) found. 42 Points for each of the 42 LETTERS used in the 8 words. 7 Bonus Points for each CENTER STAR used (the letter “S” is used 7 times). TOTAL SCORE in this imaginary example = 75 Points. Par Scores for this month’s Word Star: 250 points (Novice); 400 points (Intermediate); 500 points (Advanced) Once you’ve compiled your list, check out my SOLUTION on the next page. See you next month with another Word Star puzzle! …Jeff Kastner Jeff Kastner, originally from New York City, has been living in Phoenix, AZ since 1985. Jeff is one of a handful of players who has ever been ranked in the USA-top-50 in both SCRABBLE® and chess. He is the 2010-2011 Phoenix SCRABBLE® Club champion as well as the 2011 Scottsdale SCRABBLE® Club champ. 32 W O R D S T A R Word Star Solution for: The Last Word March 2012 AGA AGAIN AGAR AGGRO AIN AKIN ANA ANGA ANGAKOK ANI ANNA ARAK GAG GAGA GAIN GAINING GAN GANG GAR GNAR GNARR GRAIN GRAINING GRAN GRANA GROAN GROANING GROK GROKKING INGRAIN INGRAINING INIA INN INNING KAIAK KAIN KAKA KAKI KANA KANAKA KANGAROO KAROO KARROO KIANG KIN KINA KINARA KING KININ KOA KOAN KOOK KOR KORA KORAI NAAN NAG NAGANA NAN NANA OAK OAR OKA ORA ORANG ORGAN ORGANA ORRA RAG RAGA RAGG RAI RAIA RAIN RAINING RAKI RAKING RAN RANG RANI ROAN ROAR ROOK ROOKING PAR SCORES: 250 points (Novice); 400 points (Intermediate); 500 points (Advanced) BEST SCORE: 2 Points for each WORD found: 84 Words = 168 points. 5 Bonus Points for each BINGO found: 10 Bingos = 50 points. 1 Point for each LETTER of every word found: 380 Letters = 380 points. 1 Bonus Point for each CENTER STAR of every word found: 97 A’s = 97 points. TOTAL = 695 Points 33 S C R A B B L E I N T H E N E W S SCRABBLE® and Scrabblers in the News Edited by Judy Cole See something about SCRABBLE® or a SCRABBLE® player in the news? Let us know! Send your stories to Judy Cole (judithcole@msn.com). _______________________________________________________________________________ SCRABBLE® Tournaments SCRABBLE® tournaments are in the news: • Israeli SCRABBLE® Open – More than 40 players are expected at the fourth Israeli Open SCRABBLE® Tournament scheduled for February 10 to 12, 2012, in Netanya. FEBRUARY MILESTONES CESAR DEL SOLAR reached 1900 for the first time at the Las Vegas (NV) tournament. MATTHEW BERNARDINA reached 1900 (Collins) for the first time at the Charlotte (NC) Eastern Championship tournament. JAMES CURLEY reached 1700 (Collins) and 1600 (Collins) for the first time at the Las Vegas (NV) tournament. GEORGE ADDO reached 1600 (Collins) for the first time at the Las Vegas (NV) tournament. ALEX RODRIGUEZ reached 1500 for the first time at the Guelph (ON) tournament. MARTIN DEMELLO reached The tournament, organized by Israeli national champion 1500 (Collins) for the first time at Evan Cohen, is expected to attract at least 18 players the Las Vegas (NV) tournament. from outside Israel. Some players, such as Estelle Matthews of Calgary (AB), combine the tournament with a family visit while others, such as British expert Mikki Nicholson, welcome the opportunity to escape a bleak European winter. The Canadian Jewish News (01/30/2012) http://www.cjnews.com/index.php?q=node/89245 Israel21c (02/07/2012) http://www.israel21c.org/briefs/netanya-set-for-global-word-faceoff • Charm City SCRABBLE® Tournament - The February 4th tournament at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, campus drew over 50 players, including a number of School SCRABBLE® participants and alumni. Eighth-grader Neal Kewalramani, who plays in the Arbutus (MD) Middle School club led by tournament organizer Linda Oliva, won the Youth Division at the tournament. 34 S C R A B B L E I N T H E N E W S Eleventh-grader Thomas Ensey, who competed five years ago in the School SCRABBLE® Championship, won Division B in the main event with a 7-1 +625 record. His coach at the Our Lady of Victory school, Sharon Moser, competed in Division A and is trying to start a club at Notre Dame Prep where she now teaches Latin and French. ! The Baltimore Sun (02/06/2012) http://www.baltimoresun.com/ explore/baltimorecounty/news/ph-at-ca-scrabble-umbc-20120206,0,3793003.story?page=1 • DeSoto County (TN) Schools SCRABBLE® Tournament – The 5th annual tournament drew 600 second- and third-graders to the Bank Plus Training Center on February 7 and 8, 2012. “A lot of children don't feel comfortable with chess, with that one-on-one,” said Hernando Hills Elementary Spotlight teacher Kaye Roehm, “where with this, they have a partner. It's just such a laid-back atmosphere for them that they don't feel as threatened in taking a chance.” The Commercial Appeal (02/09/2012) http:// www.commercialappeal.com/news/2012/feb/09/boardmeeting/ • Classics SCRABBLE® Invitational – The 12th annual tournament took place at Classics Used and Rare Books in Trenton (NJ) on February 12, 2012. http://www.nj.com/mercer/index.ssf/2012/02/photos_trenton_scrabble_tourna.html Turn Down the Heat Toronto (ON) SCRABBLE® player Vivienne Muhling stars as the lead granny, Gladys, in a video promoting National Sweater Day on February 9th. The campaign, initiated by the World Wildlife Fund Canada, invites Canadians to put on a sweater and turn down the thermostat to help take action against climate change. http://sweaterday.ca/ 35 S C R A B B L E I N T H E N E W S Comedy Tonight The New Yorker (03/01/2012) chronicles the return of SCRABBLE® player Matt Graham to the stage as a stand-up comedian. Matt compares his SCRABBLE® playing to his comedy: ““In Scrabble I pull randomness and create order, and in comedy I am making observations about the world and translating them to an audience. Scrabble is a math game, mostly, and my jokes are very mathematical.” http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/culture/2012/03/a-cult-comedian-getsback-in-the-game.html Couch Potato The February 19, 2012, Foxtrot comic illustrates why you want to rack up your tiles before you play – anything to avoid the dreaded SCRABBLE® victory song! http://www.foxtrot.com/2012/02/19/ Piano Man The Washington Post’s review of a recent concert by pianist Trey Wright at the National Gallery of Art on February 26, 2012, mentioned that his virtuousity extends to SCRABBLE®. Trey won the National SCRABBLE® Championship in 2004. The Washington Post (02/26/2012) http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/ style/roger-wright-brings-freshness-and-subtlety-to-impressionist-pianoworks/2012/02/27/gIQAKYJfeR_story.html Lido Love On January 28, 2012, scores of locked to London (UK) Fields’ open air swimming pool for an extravaganza of performance art, music - and SCRABBLE®. A game of SCRABBLE® with a twist broke the ice – visitors were given a key to a locker in which they found a letter to hang around their necks. People joined forces to create the longest word, which turned out to be ACADEMIA. FEZ was the word with the highest word score. The event, which was first held in 2010, celebrates the alternative history of London’s only 50-metre heated outdoor swimming pool, which closed due to funding cuts in 1988. Before it reopened four years ago, the empty pool hosted squatters and underground raves. Hackney Gazette (01/30/2012) http://www.hackneygazette.co.uk/what-s-on/arts/ lido_love_2012_london_fields_hosts_karaoke_rave_and_scrabble_with_a_twist_1_1192589 36 S C R A B B L E I N T H E N E W S Show Me the Money The Penny Hoarder (02/02/2012) recommends tournament SCRABBLE® as one of its wacky ways to make money. http://www.thepennyhoarder.com/2012/02/make-money-playing-in-scrabble-tournaments Courage, My Friend Triangle SCRABBLE® Club director David Klionsky, along with some of the students he coaches in School SCRABBLE®, appeared on the February 15, 2012, episode of Courage Cocktail, a radio show on WCOM 103.5 FM. You can download the show at http://wcomfm.org/index.php/resources/ podcasts/146-courage-cocktail. Eat Your Words You can order edible SCRABBLE® tiles and racks from Andie’s Specialty Sweets - $58 will get you 2 tile racks and 12 tiles of your choice. http://technabob.com/blog/2012/02/22/edible-scrabble-tiles/ Love Match Valentine’s Day provided a suitable occasion to highlight the many couples who met as random opponents over Words with Friends. While the game’s co-creator, Paul Bettner, intended for the game to be played by people who were already friends, he added the Random Opponent option just in case someone did not have enough friends. As it turns out, more than 30% of the players use the option to find their opponent and in some cases, their future spouse. Stephen Monahan, who goes by “Hotdog Phingers” in the game, met fellow Texan Britney Hilbun by clicking random opponent last year and proposed this past Christmas by constructing a proposal on the game board. While Charles Briggs has never won a game against Kyla Smith, he knew that he was making a love connection when Kyla played SEXY. The couple continue to play online every day and now see each other in person every three weeks. 37 S C R A B B L E I N T H E N E W S Even for people who have met in the real world, Words With Friends is a low-pressure tool for breaking the ice. Some 24% of the 118,000 respondents to a recent survey about flirting said they had given out their user name instead of a phone number. The Wall Street Journal (02/14/2012) http://online.wsj.com/article/ SB10001424052970204883304577219302405394344.html?mod=WSJ_hps_editorsPicks_1 SCRABBLE® Fundraisers SCRABBLE® tournaments and events as fundraisers are in the news: •Yankton (NE) Area Literacy Council (YALC) – About 30 players attended the second annual “Spellebrate for a Good Cause” SCRABBLE® tournament and fundraiser to benefit YALC on January 29, 2012. Players, who competed in Youth, Student, and Adult divisions, ranged from 8year old novice Jack Kuchta whose first play was ROAD for 8 points to rabid fans such as Kay Adam who loves the challenge of the game. Yankton Daily Press and Dakotan (01/30/2012) http://www.yankton.net/articles/ 2012/01/30/community/doc4f261ad194dfb413915367.txt •Literacy Council of Benton County (AR) – On February 4, 2012, the Literacy Council marked its 40th anniversary with the annual SCRABBLE® Wars fund raiser, which was expected to raise $20,000 this year. Teams such as “As the Word Turns” and “Scrabbadabbadoos” had the option to play with standard rules or to go the dubious route. Most chose the latter option where players could buy letters, bribe the judges, or pay cash for extra points. The City Wire (02/05/2012) http://www.thecitywire.com/node/20234 •Skyline Literacy – On February 9, 2012, the James Madison University Honors Program hosted the Play For Literacy SCRABBLE® Tournament to benefit Skyline Literacy, a nonprofit organization that benefits illiterate adults in the Harrisonburg (VA) community. The 40 participants competed individually or in teams to win the $100 top prize or other prizes donated by local businesses. To gain a competitive edge and contribute to the cause, players could purchase Peek tickets for $5 to check the validity of words or cheat sheets with the 2- and 3-letter words for $10. The Breeze (02/12/2012) http://www.breezejmu.org/life/article_0780cf96-55e8-11e1b4cb-001a4bcf6878.html 38 S C R A B B L E I N T H E N E W S • Letters for Literacy – The Evansville (IN) Literacy Center held the ninth annual Letters for Literacy SCRABBLE® tournament on February 25, 2012. The fundraiser attracted 28 teams who paid $50 to compete in the event. Jane Bradley teamed up with her friend for 52 years, Barbara Helfrich, and Barbara’s grandson, Jacob Helfrich, as Team Hex Kex Lex. Evansville Courier & Press (02/25/2012) http:// www.courierpress.com/news/2012/feb/25/no-headline--ev_scrabble/ • Thunder Bay (ON) Literacy Group – The 14th annual SCRABBLE® tournament took place on February 26, 2012, to raise literacy awareness and promote the free literacy programs offered by the Literacy Group. More than 50 players, including 84-year old Bella Slator, competed and were expected to raise at least $11,000 to support the efforts of the Literacy Group. Thunder Bay News Watch (02/26/2012) http:// www.tbnewswatch.com/entertainment/192001/War-with-words The Chronicle Bay Journal (02/26/2012) http:// www.chroniclejournal.com/content/news/local/2012/02/26/cashrolls-literacy • Buffalo (NY) Literacy Volunteers – March 4, 2012, marked the conclusion of the 2-month SCRABBLE® Fest. Almost 400 players participated in the events leading up to the championship and raised over $7,000 to support the efforts of the Literacy Volunteers. http://www.wgrz.com/news/local/story.aspx? storyid=158895 Words With Hasbro On February 9, 2012, Hasbro announced a global partnership with Zynga, the creator of Words With Friends and other social games. The first toys and board games resulting from the partnership are expected in the fall. Fast Company (02/09/2012) http://www.fastcompany.com/1815230/zynga-hasbro-scrabblewords-with-friends?partner=gnews 39 S C R A B B L E I N T H E N E W S Tile Talk The Costa Rica office of advertising giant Ogilvy and Mather has created a series of SCRABBLE® ads that restate famous quotes into high-scoring plays. Creative Type (02/07/2012) http://boston.com/community/blogs/ creative_type/2012/02/scrabble_ads_re-tile_famous_qu.html Book Smart Random House sales rep Michael Kindness laid down his tiles as Aerbook's Nick Ruffilo used a game of SCRABBLE® to illustrate a point about the experiential differences between playing a board game and playing an electronic version of a board game. This concept was applied to the difference between print and electronic books at the Book^2 Camp held in New York City (NY) on February 12, 2012. Shelf Awareness (02/13/2012) http://www.shelf-awareness.com/issue.html? issue=1664#m15003 Jamboree On February 2, 2012, Lancaster (MA) SCRABBLE® player Norma Marshall appeared on Inside Leominster to promote the Crockett Family Jamboree. Norma directed and performed in the annual cabaret dinner theatre production by the New Players Theatre Guild. Inside Leominster (02/02/2012) http://wwww.leominster.tv/ publicweb/SitePages/video.aspx?id0=Inside%20Leominster %202-2-12 SCRABBLE® Celebrities Celebrities share our love of the game. • New Girl Zooey Deschanel poses with her iPad and SCRABBLE® triple word score. http://instagr.am/p/kTtj9/ 40 S C R A B B L E I N T H E N E W S •Indian actors Soha Ali Khan and Kunal Khemu are like the proverbial chalk and cheese. She loves him but loves SCRABBLE® a little more. He accepts the fact that he can’t beat her at it but puts up a fight just to antagonize her. Hindustan Times (02/11/2012) http:// www.hindustantimes.com/Brunch/Brunch-Stories/ Two-faces-of-love/Article1-809976.aspx • Homeland actress Claire Danes passed time on the set by playing Words With Friends and in the process, recruiting half of the crew to play as well. http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ ALeqM5ijWE7XUPiUcJJVhp6Wz_YoVsB3QQ? docId=N0526161329235680156A •Costars Tom Hardy and Chris Pine, who compete for the affections of Reese Witherspoon in This Means War, joked that their on-screen rivalry extended to games of Go Fish, SCRABBLE®, and other games off set. On the Red Carpet (02/18/2012) http:// www.ontheredcarpet.com/ReeseWitherspoon--Tom-Hardy-and-Chris-Pinetalk-This-Means-War-and-their-real-lifecompetition-Q-and-A/8549326 • Soccer player Gerard Pique may have thought playing for Barcelona and dating the singer Shakira would give him a glamorous lifestyle, but it seems he now spends his evenings playing SCRABBLE®. Metro (02/26/2012) http://www.metro.co.uk/sport/ oddballs/891426-gerard-pique-and-shakirasglamorous-lifestyle-has-room-for-scrabble 41 S C R A B B L E I N T H E N E W S • Electronic Arts, the Hasbro-endorsed publisher of online SCRABBLE® games, honored the biggest words used at the Oscars on February 26, 2012. The top word came from Best Actress winner Meryl Streep – INEXPLICABLY. http://perezhilton.com/2012-02-28-scrabble-and-electronic-arts-honor-the-biggest-words-at-theoscars#.T1z3TYGvKSo Judy Cole is co-director of the Lexington (MA) NASPA SCRABBLE® Club #108 and solves crossword puzzles when not playing SCRABBLE®. 42 S C R A B B L E I N T H E N E W S Historic Moments: SCRABBLE® Through the Years The Pre-Computerized Slippery Slope of Challenge Lookups By Stu Goldman The recent thread of favorite phony challenges on cgp made me think of some problems with challenge lookups before the computer programs did it for us. For starters, the word UNFREE appeared on a list of UN- words in Funk & Wagnalls, before the OSPD; the list contained both adjectives and verbs. I played in two tournaments from those days in which UNFREES was challenged. In one it was allowed, and in the other it was ruled unacceptable. Even the most careful challenge judge could err. In one tournament a wrong judgment on LANITAL changed the outcome of the tournament. It was played by the late, great Bob Felt on a much less accomplished expert. The challenge judge looked at it upside down and looked up LATINAL*, which was ruled unacceptable. Felt was not sure of it, so did not ask for a second opinion. That caused Bob to lose. The format for that tournament was round robin, with a king-of the-hill final round. As I recall it, the game to determine the tournament winner was between him and Joe Edley, each with the same number of wins, but Bob with a higher cume. Edley won, giving him the tournament; if Felt had had one more win, he would have won the event. But probably the wrong challenge opinion with the most dramatic result occurred in the UK in a WSC. The challenges were delivered by runners to a central location. RADDING was challenged by someone who thought a rad was only a unit of radiation. It was ruled unacceptable, and, the challenge judge, when he got the slip for a second opinion, thought it came from a different game and ruled it unacceptable again. That also probably caused a game to be lost, and the player of the word eventually came in fifth. If the judgment had been correct, the RADDING player would have played in the final four, and would have had a chance to become the world champ. So let us be grateful for the high-tech settlement of challenges. Even the best human judgements are capable of error. Stu Goldman lives in California and has been playing tournament SCRABBLE® for 38 years. 43 R O N U L I C N Y SCRABBLE® & Art: Ron Ulicny Sometimes a sculpture just makes you stop and say, “Wow!” With the work of Ron Ulicny, a 38-year-old artist from Portland, Oregon, that happens a lot. Over the past 20+ years, Ron has been creating what he calls “Viscurrealistic Fabrications,” amazing sculptures that use ordinary objects in extraordinary ways. “I have always loved making ‘things,’ whether it’s a sculpture, a painting, a photograph, a piece of furniture, or a song. My biggest influences are life, experiences, memories, and happenstance.” “Spew,” a sculpture depicting a faucet pouring SCRABBLE tiles, is just one of Ron’s imaginative works. The piece, mounted on canvas and measuring 9.25” x 7.75” x 10.75”, was created in 2011 and featured in a show at the Grand Central Art Center in Orange County, California, where it was purchased by a collector. Ron has played SCRABBLE since he was a child, and he still enjoys a game on his old board or on his iPhone. “It has always been one of my favorite games, along with Yahtzee and Jenga. I guess that’s why I was drawn to make ‘Spew’--I like to use familiar things that people can identify with yet see and experience in a different way or context. It’s amazing how many people connected or responded to that piece.” Ron does not plan to create more works with SCRABBLE tiles, however. “I absolutely try NOT to reuse or redo the same idea, medium, or technique. I feel it cheapens the original piece and is too easy. I will, however, probably use a game again at some point in my work, as games have always been a huge part of my life.” How does Ron’s work develop? “I keep a sketchbook, but I also just start putting things together sometimes. It’s really hard to see what the piece will look like without just forging ahead and making it. Some of my pieces end up in scraps or the trash. I’m a perfectionist for sure.” Ron is represented by Spoke Art in San Francisco, where his current exhibition, “New Works,” is running until March 22nd. The gallery, located at 816 Sutter St., has regular hours from Wednesday-Sunday, 12-7 pm (contact Ken Harman @kenharman@gmail.com or 415-796-3774). Most of Ron’s pieces in the show have already been sold; however, it is well worth a trip to the gallery to see them (or to buy any that are still available). 44 R O N U L I C N L-R: Spoke Art Gallery owner Ken Harman and Ron Ulicny putting the finishing touches on a piece for the “New Works” show March 1-22. Photo courtesy of Shaun Roberts. Y "Keepsake: An Archival Deconstruction Of One Heroic Day From The Past” 17” x 9.25” x 14” (Actually a game-winning home run ball from when Ron was in Little League) “Skates No. 2 (Well Aren’t You a Big Girl Now?!)” 2011 13.5” x 11.75” x 8.25” “Murder Ballad” (2011) 36.25″ x 4.5″ x 2.5″ Ron has shown his work numerous times on the West Coast, including last summer at Cal State’s Grand Central Art Center. This summer he will be part of a group show at the Chautauqua Institute in New York in June and July, and he will have a hometown show in northeast Portland at the Guardino Gallery at the end of August/early September. “I am constantly working in my studio as I don’t really have much of a life outside of artwork and making ‘stuff.’” 45 R O N U L I C N Y “Painting No. 1 (Circles)” 2012 36" x 36" x 5.75" Ron is interested in commissions, too, and has done a few smaller ones. “I would really love to do something permanent outdoors or indoors somewhere. Being poor and making artwork out of ‘things’ is kinda limiting. I obviously use a lot of cheap stuff to make my work, because it’s what I can afford to use. Know what I mean!?” To learn more about Ron Ulicny, visit the following links: http://www.ronulicny.com http://www.facebook.com/RonUlicny http://ronulicny.tumblr.com/ http://spoke-art.com/ 46 J O E E D L E Y ’ S P U Z Z L E C O R N E R Joe Edley’s Puzzle Corner By Joe Edley Word Screens A word screen is a rectangle of letters such that all of the letters of the rectangle can be rearranged to spell a word. For instance, in the grid below: a b c d e 1 2 3 4 5 A N S P M T O C R L E D L B E R I G O I L U N E K The words CANTOS, GIRDLE, BELONG, BOILER and LURING are all wordscreens, or “screens” for short, in the above grid, found in 2x3 rectangles, designated by their diagonally opposite corners as: a1-b3, c1-d3, c3-e4, b4-d5 and d1-e3. BLEED is at c1-5, down the third column. GLOB, GONE, GILD, COLD and DIRE are all found in 2x2s, while BORE, LIKE and RATE are in 1x4s. The numbers in parenthesis represent: (a)number of wordscreens (b) total number of words, including all anagrams (c) number of common words. Find all six-letter screens. There are 24 screens, 32 total TWL words and 19 common words. R O G E T E A P L I C D E O V L K N O L E O A A W N E T D A L V E A D R M O V E O B A O M S T R H I A D U U N R I O T H I N N E (24, 32, 19) ANSWERS at end of puzzles. Blanagram Phrases Insert the letter in parenthesis into the word immediately next to it and remove a different letter of that word. After doing that with both words, rearrange the letters of each new combination, as necessary, to form a familiar phrase. The “theme” represents the subject of the phrase. 1. (Y) INTO DRAMA (W) theme: Broadway 2. (M) DARKEN WOOD (N) theme: retail 3. (T) SPRAY FLORA (V) 4. (S) LEAF CREEP (I) theme: take it with you theme: retail ANSWERS at end of puzzles. 47 J O E E D L E Y ’ S P U Z Z L E C O R N E R Wordlocked The object of Wordlocked is to fill in the blank spaces with the correct letters so that the words accompanying the grid can all be found in screens on the grid. You may choose ONLY from the pool of the following TEN letters to add to the grid: AEIOULNRST Add as many or as few of these letters (with repeats) as required. You may notice that these are all of the one-point tiles in that very popular crossword game. The consonants are all of the letters given in the last puzzle at the end of that popular major network tv word game show. Example (with complete solution): A B C 1 D _ _ 2 _ H _ 3 P _ _ HALO HEED HEAL HELP Solution: Since you cannot add any extra D, H or Ps, we can use those letters already in the grid to help deduce what letters to add where. The H and P must be used to create HELP, and so must outline the 2x2 HELP defined with opposite vertices at A2-B3, So we know where an E and L must be placed (A2 and B3) though not yet which specific square. Since the D and H outline HEED, the A2 and B1 squares must both have Es, which means the L of HELP must be at B3. So, now we have: D E _ E H _ P L _ HALO HEAL Since HALO doesn’t have an E, the A and O of HALO must be placed at C2 and C3 to complete it with the H and L of B2 and B3. And since HEAL doesn’t have an O, the O of HALO must be at C3, the A at C2 and the remaining letter, the L of HEAL, must then be at C1. And so the completed grid is: D E L E H A P L O Add only as many of the one point tiles (AEIOULNRST, repeating as needed) that you need to ensure that all words show up in screens. 1. _ _ _ _ C _ _ _ M _ _ _ _ _ B _ TROMBONE MOTORCAR BANNER ANTS _ _ _ _ _ _ M C _ _ D _ ATONED MODICA RANDOM AWOL BOOR MORN NEAT ROAN 2. W D _ _ 48 COMA DEAN DOWN ORAL RAID J O E E D L E Y ’ S P U Z Z L E C O R N E R 3. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ P _ _ _ _ _ D _ Y H _ _ M _ B _ _ ALPINE ARDENT OPENER OYSTER THEORY PIETA PREEN RUMBA STRUM LEND LURE Not showing as a wordscreen: SYNTH ANSWERS on next page. Joe Edley is a three-time National SCRABBLE® Champion and the author of numerous books, including the bestselling Everything SCRABBLE®. 49 J O E E D L E Y ’ S P U Z Z L E C O R N E R ANSWERS WORDSCREENS: MEDIUM, GEODIC, ORATED, DEEWAN, WEANED, LOVATS, VOICED, RADOME, ROAMED, VALVAL, CONINE, DENTAL, AMADOU, ABOARD, ABROAD, CODLIN, RETOLD, COOING, WANTED, COILED, DOCILE, GOATEE, DOOLEE, DELETE, STOVER, STROVE, TROVES, VOTERS, REAVER, STROMA, ARDENT, RANTED BLANAGRAM PHRASES: PRICE WORDLOCKED: 1. R R S T C A N A M O R N T O B E O N A O L O M C A R D I R E N P E S O R E D T Y H T N 2. W D E T 3. U L A I L 50 M U B A R 1. TONY AWARD 2. MARKED DOWN 3. PARTY FAVOR 4. SALE W O W ! G A M E S Wow! Games Some games are so impressive they must be shared. If you have games you’d like other Scrabblers to see, send them to CorneliaSGuest@gmail.com. _______________________________________________________________________________ Geoff Thevenot vs. Wes Eddings (Austin TX Tournament 2/25) From Wes Eddings: “Geoff Thevenot and I played a remarkable game in Saturday's tournament in Austin [2/25], with Geoff winning 685 to 408. I opened with WREcKED for 88 and then TRACHEA for 78, but Geoff replied with (c)LAFOUtI for 68. Two turns later he played a natural D(I)VINIZE for 248 points! Later, with eight in the bag Geoff exchanged five, and I played TERCETS for 87. Geoff replied with PERORAL for 74, drew a challenge, and then went out the next turn. Add on 14 points for my final rack of AAAEIII, and Geoff finishes with 685! Geoff went 5-1 to win the ten-player open by a full game. Thanks to the Austin club for another fun tournament.” (Photo Credit: Matt Canik) _______________________________________________________________________________ Richard Spence on ISC My third 5-bingo game...and my highest Scrabble game score (Richard Spence, 2/17-- or wee hours of 2/18) 51 W O R D L I S T P R O 2 . 0 App Review: Wordlist Pro 2.0 for Android phones! Reviewed by Jeff Kastner I’ve owned a Motorola Droid X cell phone for over a year now, and during this time I have been avidly searching for a word-finder app that comes close to Zyzzyva in features, speed and accuracy. Owners of iPhones and iPads have access to great programs like Zyzzyva and Zarf; but when, I kept asking, will someone fill the ‘Droid void’? Like many of you, I once spent $50 on one of those slower-than-molasses Franklin SCR-228 electronic SCRABBLE® dictionaries. I suppose in its day, the Franklin was considered state-of-the-art by the SCRABBLE world; but that was decades ago. I also have a Palm device that has LAMPwords (for basic word searches), and RoadLingua (for definitions) downloaded. It’s a big improvement over the Franklin in terms of speed, performance, and portability, but still lacks some important features. And neither of these devices has the Collins word list (CSW12). As a perennial TWL (namely, The Word List, which is OWL + The Long List) Club and Tournament player who is just starting to learn Collins, I needed an app that would cover both dictionaries thoroughly and help me learn those thousands of new words. What I found was that many of the current Droid word-finder apps (those that have Collins, because unfortunately, most don’t) haven’t even updated their dictionaries to the Jan 1, 2012 CSW12 list yet. Even for those players who only play TWL06 (which is the 2006 update of TWL + The Long List), most of the Droid apps are seriously lacking. Believe me, I’ve downloaded almost all of them…and even a few off-market ones that developers have sent me. Fast forward to March 7th, when an incredible word-finder program called Wordlist Pro 2.0 made its debut in the Android/Google market. And I’m happy to report, after assisting with its development and subjecting it to extensive testing, that Worldlist Pro is every bit the app I had been hoping for. Oddly, the developer of Wordlist Pro, Robert Andersson of Sweden, isn’t even a SCRABBLE player. I had never met him before, but somehow in January, separated by thousands of miles of land and ocean, our paths crossed in cyberspace. He asked me my opinion about what features I’d like to see in an ideal wordfinder app, and I gave him my very long “wish list” of features. Plus, I insisted that to improve on what’s already available, it had to be fast, error-free, easy to use, stable, device compatible, SD card installable, and either free or very inexpensive. The bar was set pretty high, so I fully expected that I’d never hear from him again. How wrong I was, because Rob is one tireless and determined programmer! And so…a couple of months and many email exchanges later…mission accomplished! I recruited my friend Laurie Cohen to do some beta testing before release, worked out a few minor glitches and bugs, and I have to say: the end result turned out to be pretty awesome. So, whether you play exclusively TWL06, exclusively CSW, or a little of both, I encourage all of you Droid users out there to check it out. You can download the Wordlist Pro ‘Lite’ version for free directly from the Android marketplace. It’s ad supported (after all, programmers do have to feed their families!), but the banner is not too obtrusive or annoying. Every acceptable TWL06 word (all 178,691 of them), and every CSW12 word (all 270,163 of them), are in the app’s database, completely sortable and searchable to your preferences. All of the usual and useful functions that you’ve grown accustomed to from online programs like Zyzzyva (or the old LeXpert) are contained at no charge. For instance, you can search for front and back hooks; patterns with any number of blanks; anagrams; builds; extensions, etc. Also included are some neat bonus features, like: ‘wildcard’ searches; ‘Words With Friends’ and ‘Wordfeud’ scoring; ability to tweak settings to further enhance performance; and a menu of 10 font styles to choose from. 52 W O R D L I S T P R O 2 . 0 Aside from Wordlist Pro ‘Lite’ there is a ‘Paid’ version too, which essentially means: “no ads / no limitations.” My strong recommendation for anyone reading this who owns a Droid phone (Version 2.2 or higher): sell that obsolete Franklin on eBay, and then invest $2.98 for this ‘Paid’ version. For less than the price of a Starbuck’s latte, you get lots of valuable extras, such as: • • • • • • Expands “listsize maximum” from the default maximum of 1024 words to more than16,000+ words (so, if you want to see every CSW12 word beginning with ‘A’, it will list all 15,835 of them.) A Word Judge feature for both TWL and CSW games. All lists will have the option of displaying CSW12 unique words identified with #. There is a separate dictionary just for the 91,000+ CSW12 Unique words. This is an invaluable tool for those, like me, who are studying the differences between the two dictionaries “In app definitions” (saved to your SD card, therefore not requiring Wi-Fi) for all TWL and CSW words up thru 8 letters, and many longer ones too. Plus, parts of speech and alternate spellings are given. This is a very worthwhile feature for those looking to expand their word knowledge in either TWL or CSW lexicons. A ‘Build’ search (anagrams + subanagrams) of the rack CHINE? T, sorted by descending point values (for this purpose, app assumes full point values for the blank tiles). Note the speed: 921 matches in less than a second. Y* is a ‘Wildcard’ search for all words in CSW12 starting with ‘Y’, and sorted by descending point values. The # symbol represents words acceptable only in CSW12 (A ‘Paid’ version feature only). Six different methods for sorting lists. My favorite for ‘Build’ searches is ‘Descending wordlength’ (longest words on top; words of equal length sorted alphabetically). A few of the many user options. Displaying CSW unique words and ‘In app’ definitions are for ‘Paid’ version only. The ‘Lite’ version has 3 online definition sources. The ‘Word Judge” feature. Once all words of a challenged play are entered (using the ‘Add’ button), pressing the ‘Judge’ button will determine if the play is acceptable or not. All words in CSW12 starting with BASE, and sorted alphabetically. 53 W O R D L I S T P R O 2 . 0 Finally, Rob Andersson promises that development is ongoing, so expect even more features to be added in the future to the Paid version. Rumor has it that the next update will include a separate OSPD4 dictionary for the school and home user market. Your suggestions are welcome, of course, but I’m nagging him to create a Quiz section next! Next month: An interview with Wordlist Pro creator, Robert Andersson of Sweden To get Wordlist Pro 2.0 for Android phones go to the following link: https://play.google.com/store/apps/ details?id=com.ernell.wordpro 54 C L U B N E W S Club News Larry Sherman, Editor If you'd like your club to be considered for an article or if a newsworthy event has taken place at your club in the last month, please submit material to CorneliaSGuest@gmail.com. _______________________________________________________________________________ Sue Miller’s 10-letter Bingo On February 20th at the Oklahoma City (OK) NASPA SCRABBLE® Club #673 Sue Miller, who is rated in the 500s, played a 10-letter bingo! When she made the play, it was neck-and-neck, and her opponent had the other blank. Oklahoma City (OK) NASPA SCRABBLE® Club #673 meets on Thursdays from 5:00-9:00 p.m. at Game HQ, 160 Southwest 89th Street, Oklahoma City, OK. Contact: Matthew Hodge, 405-388-8867, moh@me.com _______________________________________________________________________________ Joel Horn’s scores 126--saving the blank! On February 16 at the Lexington (MA) NASPA SCRABBLE® Club #108, Joel Horn made an amazing play in a game against Rebecca Lambert. “On just the third play of the game, Rebecca played an E at 15E. I had QU and blank but didn't have a blockbuster play, so I played QUIN somewhere else. Rebecca then played a blocking play to put another E at 15G. With my rack ? ADELMN, I then played ENAMELED at 15A for 126 points and saved my blank! Has anyone scored this many points and saved the blank?” Note: There were no other triple-triple bingos playable. The sequence of plays from the beginning, Rebecca going first, was: RL ZORIL, 8D, 48 MAVIE, E11, 31 (79) TOGAE, G11, 17 (96) JH OUTRAGED, F5, 66 (saw, but didn't play OUTGAZED) QUIN, E2, 30 (96) ENAMELED, 15A, 126 (222) (kept the blank) Lexington (MA) NASPA SCRABBLE® Club #108 meets on Thursdays at 7:00 p.m. at the First Parish Unitarian Church, 7 Harrington Road, Lexington, MA. Contact: Judy Horn, 781-942-7471, scrabbleclub108@aol.com . Club website: http:// www.wolfberg.net/scrabble/lexington/ (Club Statistician and Webmaster: Mike Wolfberg). 55 C L U B N E W S Oscar-themed SCRABBLE® Board Debbie Scholz, a member of Houston (TX) NASPA SCRABBLE® Club #359, created this Oscarsthemed SCRABBLE® Board on the big night: 2/26. Debbbie invited fellow Scrabblers Cindi Hughes and Carolyn Boyd over that night for an Oscar party and served Hawaiian chicken Salad (The Descendants), French Brie (Midnight in Paris) and Minnie’s Chocolate Pie (The Help)! Houston (TX) NASPA SCRABBLE® Club #359 meets on Sundays at 3:00 p.m. at IHOP, 2940 W. Sam Houston Pkwy. S, Houston, TX. Contact: Judy Newhouse, 281-379-1601, jnhouse@aol.com Club website: http://debbiewebbie.com/ 56 M A N L Y W O R D S Manly Words By Tony Rasch There are 352 “MAN” words and 54 “WOMAN” words acceptable for SCRABBLE® play. By a “MAN” or “WOMAN” word, I mean a noun that ends in “MAN” or “WOMAN” and whose plural ends in “MEN” or “WOMEN”. This column considers those 406 words plus selected words that have “MAN” at the beginning or middle. Plus it considers all words containing “WOMAN”, “BOY” or “GIRL”. Nouns Ending in MAN Whose Plural Ends in MEN 5-Letter ADMAN AXMAN 6-Letter AIDMAN AIRMAN ASHMAN AXEMAN BADMAN BAGMAN BARMAN BATMAN BAYMAN BOWMAN BUSMAN CABMAN CARMAN COWMAN DOLMAN FLYMAN FOEMAN GAGMAN GASMAN GUNMAN HITMAN ICEMAN LAWMAN LAYMAN LEGMAN MADMAN MERMAN NONMAN OILMAN PENMAN PITMAN POTMAN CLUBMAN CREWMAN DAYSMAN DEADMAN DESKMAN DOORMAN DRAYMAN DUSTMAN FIREMAN FLAGMAN FOOTMAN FOREMAN FREEMAN FROGMAN GATEMAN GLEEMAN GOODMAN GRIPMAN HACKMAN HANGMAN HEADMAN HERDMAN IRONMAN JAZZMAN JUNKMAN JURYMAN KINSMAN KIRKMAN LANDMAN LEADMAN LENSMAN LIFTMAN LINEMAN LINKMAN MAILMAN MEATMAN MESSMAN MILKMAN NEWSMAN OARSMAN OVERMAN PACKMAN PIKEMAN PLOWMAN POSTMAN CHOREMAN CLANSMAN COACHMAN COLORMAN CORPSMAN CRAGSMAN DAIRYMAN DALESMAN DRAGOMAN DUTCHMAN EARTHMAN EVERYMAN FERRYMAN FOILSMAN FREEDMAN FRESHMAN FRONTMAN FUGLEMAN FUNNYMAN GAMESMAN GLASSMAN GOWNSMAN HANDYMAN HEADSMAN HELMSMAN HENCHMAN HERDSMAN HORSEMAN HOTELMAN HOUSEMAN HUNTSMAN LANDSMAN PREMAN RAGMAN RODMAN SEAMAN SKYMAN SOCMAN TAXMAN TINMAN TITMAN VANMAN YEOMAN PROPMAN REEDMAN RODSMAN SAGAMAN SANDMAN SEEDMAN SHIPMAN SHOPMAN SHOWMAN SIDEMAN SHOWMAN SOCKMAN SOKEMAN SURFMAN SWAGMAN TAXIMAN TELEMAN TOLLMAN TONGMAN TURFMAN WINGMAN WIREMAN WOODMAN WOOLMAN WORKMAN YARDMAN YEGGMAN REINSMAN RIFLEMAN ROUTEMAN SALESMAN SEEDSMAN SHEEPMAN SONARMAN SOUNDMAN SPACEMAN SPEARMAN STICKMAN STILLMAN STOCKMAN STUNTMAN SUPERMAN SWINGMAN SWORDMAN TALESMAN TALLYMAN TOWNSMAN TRACKMAN TRAINMAN TRASHMAN TRUCKMAN VERSEMAN WATCHMAN WATERMAN WEIGHMAN WHALEMAN WHEELMAN WOODSMAN YACHTMAN 7-Letter ALMSMAN AUTOMAN BASEMAN BATSMAN BEADMAN BEDEMAN BELLMAN BIRDMAN BOATMAN BOGYMAN BONDMAN BOOKMAN BUSHMAN CAVEMAN CHAPMAN 8-Letter ALDERMAN BAILSMAN BANDSMAN BARGEMAN BEADSMAN BEDESMAN BLUESMAN BOARDMAN BOATSMAN BOGEYMAN BONDSMAN BOOGYMAN BRAKEMAN CHAINMAN CHAIRMAN CHESSMAN LEADSMAN LIEGEMAN LINESMAN LINKSMAN MARKSMAN MONEYMAN MOTORMAN NOBLEMAN PITCHMAN PIVOTMAN PLACEMAN POINTMAN PRESSMAN RADIOMAN RAFTSMAN RANCHMAN 57 M A N L Y W O R D S 9-Letter ANCHORMAN ATTACKMAN BOOGERMAN BOOGEYMAN BOOGIEMAN BUSHELMAN CAMERAMAN CATTLEMAN CHURCHMAN CLERGYMAN CORNERMAN CRACKSMAN CRAFTSMAN DEATHSMAN DRAFTSMAN EALDORMAN EXCISEMAN FELLOWMAN FIELDSMAN FISHERMAN GARAGEMAN GENTLEMAN GRANTSMAN GROOMSMAN GUARDSMAN GUILDSMAN LETTERMAN LIVERYMAN LUMBERMAN MIDDLEMAN MINUTEMAN MORTARMAN MUSCLEMAN OMBUDSMAN OYSTERMAN PANTRYMAN PATROLMAN PLAINSMAN PLANTSMAN POLICEMAN QUARRYMAN REPAIRMAN ROUNDSMAN RUDDLEMAN SAFETYMAN SALARYMAN SCHOOLMAN SELECTMAN SHANTYMAN SIGNALMAN SPOILSMAN SPOKESMAN SPORTSMAN STABLEMAN STATESMAN STEERSMAN STRONGMAN SWITCHMAN SWORDSMAN TILLERMAN TIMBERMAN TRADESMAN TRIBESMAN VENIREMAN VESTRYMAN WASHERMAN WHEELSMAN YACHTSMAN 10-Letter CAVALRYMAN COCHAIRMAN COUNCILMAN COUNTERMAN COUNTRYMAN DEFENCEMAN DEFENSEMAN EXPRESSMAN FORETOPMAN GARBAGEMAN GROUNDSMAN HARVESTMAN HIGHWAYMAN HUSBANDMAN JOURNEYMAN LAUNDRYMAN LOBSTERMAN LONGBOWMAN MIDSHIPMAN MILITIAMAN MISSILEMAN NURSERYMAN POULTRYMAN SERVICEMAN TRAWLERMAN TRIGGERMAN WEATHERMAN WORKINGMAN COASTGUARDSMAN COMMITTEEMAN CONGRESSMAN CROSSBOWMAN DELIVERYMAN DRAUGHTSMAN FRONTIERSMAN HANDCRAFTSMAN HANDICRAFTSMAN INFANTRYMAN LONGSHOREMAN MERCHANTMAN NEWSPAPERMAN OUTDOORSMAN Long AGRIBUSINESSMAN ARTILLERYMAN ASSEMBLYMAN BACKCOURTMAN BACKWOODSMAN BUSINESSMAN COASTGUARDMAN PLAINCLOTHESMAN SPORTFISHERMAN SUPERSALESMAN TRENCHERMAN UNDERCLASSMAN UPPERCLASSMAN WAREHOUSEMAN Nouns Ending in “MAN” Whose Plural Ends in “S” ATMAN DAMAN HUMAN LEMAN LIMAN ROMAN SOMAN TOMAN ATAMAN CAIMAN CAYMAN DESMAN FIRMAN GERMAN* HETMAN SHAMAN DECUMAN HANUMAN OTTOMAN PULLMAN TALISMAN BILDUNGSROMAN *GERMEN and GERMENS are words, but they are not related to GERMAN. Nouns Ending in “MANSHIP” AIRMANSHIP BRINKMANSHIP BRINKSMANSHIP CHAIRMANSHIP CHURCHMANSHIP CRAFTSMANSHIP DRAFTSMANSHIP FOREMANSHIP GAMESMANSHIP GRANTSMANSHIP HELMSMANSHIP HORSEMANSHIP LIFEMANSHIP MARKSMANSHIP OARSMANSHIP OMBUDSMANSHIP OUTDOORSMANSHIP PENMANSHIP SALESMANSHIP SEAMANSHIP SHOWMANSHIP SPOKESMANSHIP SPORTSMANSHIP STATESMANSHIP SWORDSMANSHIP UPMANSHIP WATERMANSHIP WORKMANSHIP “MAN” Nouns Ending in “NESS” GENTLEMANLINESS HUMANENESS HUMANNESS 58 INHUMANNESS MANFULNESS MANLINESS MANNISHNESS SUPERHUMANNESS UNMANLINESS M A N L Y W O R D S Compound* Nouns Beginning with “MAN” (“Compound Noun” is defined as MAN + a word acceptable in the OWL) MANAT MANGO MANANA MANGEL MANNAN MANTEL MANAGER MANAKIN MANDATE MANGABY MANGOLD MANHOLE MANHOOD MANHUNT MANKIND MANNITE MANNOSE MANROPE MANSARD MANTRAM MANTRAP MANDRAKE MANDRILL MANGROVE MANPOWER MANSLAYER MANSERVANT MANSLAUGHTER Selected* Nouns with “MAN” in the Middle (*Those that are semantically related to “MAN” as an adult human male) HUMANISM HUMANIST HUMANITY HUMANOID YEOMANRY HUMANHOOD HUMANIZER HUMANKIND* INHUMANITY ANTIHUMANISM HUMANITARIAN HUMANIZATION DEHUMANIZATION SUPERHUMANITY HUMANITARIANISM *HUMANKIND cannot be pluralized. Selected* Verbs Containing “MAN” (*Those that are semantically related to “MAN” as an adult human male) MAN REMAN UNMAN OUTMAN OVERMAN CHAIRMAN MANHANDLE HUMANISE HUMANIZE DEHUMANIZE REHUMANIZE All of the verbs can be declined in a normal matter except for CHAIRMAN for which it is okay to either double or not double the ending “N”. CHAIRMANED, CHAIRMANNED, CHAIRMANING, and CHAIRMANNING are all good. Declinable Adjectives MANLY UNMANLY HUMANE MANLIER UNMANLIER HUMANER MANLIEST UNMANLIEST HUMANEST “MANLIKE” Adjectives MANLIKE HUMANLIKE SEAMANLIKE WORKMANLIKE CRAFTSMANLIKE GENTLEMANLIKE SPORTSMANLIKE STATESMANLIKE UNSPORTSMANLIKE Other Non-Declinable Adjectives Containing “MAN” MANFUL MANLESS MANMADE MANNISH MANPACK MANWARD MANWISE ANTIMAN UNMANLY UNMANFUL UNMANNISH PREFRESHMAN MULTIMANNED INHUMAN UNHUMAN INHUMANE NONHUMAN PANHUMAN PREHUMAN SUBHUMAN ANTIHUMAN INFRAHUMAN PROTOHUMAN SUPERHUMAN ULTRAHUMAN HUMANISTIC ANTIHUMANISTIC HUMANISTICALLY 59 M A N L Y W O R D S Selected* Adverbs Containing “MAN” (*Those that are semantically related to “MAN” as an adult human male) HUMANLY MANLILY HUMANELY MANFULLY SEAMANLY YEOMANLY INHUMANLY MANLIKELY MANNISHLY SHOWMANLY UNHUMANLY WORKMANLY INHUMANELY CRAFTSMANLY GENTLEMANLY SPORTSMANLY STATESMANLY SUPERHUMANLY UNGENTLEMANLY Nouns Ending in WOMAN (All plurals end in “WOMEN) 7-Letter ADWOMAN 8-Letter AIRWOMAN LAYWOMAN MADWOMAN FOREWOMAN IRONWOMAN JURYWOMAN KINSWOMAN NEWSWOMAN OARSWOMAN TIREWOMAN WASHWOMAN WISEWOMAN WORKWOMAN HORSEWOMAN MARKSWOMAN NOBLEWOMAN PITCHWOMAN SALESWOMAN SCRUBWOMAN STUNTWOMAN SUPERWOMAN TOWNSWOMAN CLERGYWOMAN CRAFTSWOMAN FISHERWOMAN GENTLEWOMAN NEEDLEWOMAN POLICEWOMAN SPOKESWOMAN SPORTSWOMAN WASHERWOMAN 9-Letter BONDWOMAN CHARWOMAN CLUBWOMAN DOORWOMAN 10-Letter ALDERWOMAN CHAIRWOMAN EVERYWOMAN FREEDWOMAN 11-Letter ANCHORWOMAN CAMERAWOMAN CHURCHWOMAN Long COCHAIRWOMAN COUNCILWOMAN COUNTRYWOMAN SERVICEWOMAN WORKINGWOMAN ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUSINESSWOMAN CONGRESSWOMAN WOMANISM WOMANIST WOMANHOOD WOMANKIND WOMANIZER WOMANNESS COMMITTEEWOMAN NEWSPAPERWOMAN Nouns Beginning with “WOMAN” WOMANPOWER WOMANISHNESS WOMANLINESS (The plural of WOMANKIND is WOMENKIND. All the other words take an “S” or “ES”) Verbs Beginning with “WOMAN” WOMAN WOMANISE WOMANIZE 60 WOMANED WOMANISED WOMANIZED WOMANING WOMANISING WOMANIZING WOMANS WOMANISES WOMANIZES M A N L Y W O R D S Adjectives Containing “WOMAN” WOMANLY WOMANISH ANTIWOMAN WOMANLESS WOMANLIKE WOMANLIER WOMANLIEST Adverbs Containing “WOMAN” UNWOMANLY WOMANISHLY Nouns Ending with “BOY” 5-Letter POBOY 6-Letter BATBOY BUSBOY CARBOY COWBOY FLYBOY LOWBOY POTBOY TOMBOY HAUTBOY HIGHBOY HOMEBOY LINKBOY NEWSBOY PAGEBOY PLAYBOY PLOWBOY POSTBOY SHOPBOY TALLBOY CHOIRBOY DOUGHBOY HOUSEBOY MACCABOY MACCOBOY PAPERBOY 7-Letter BELLBOY CALLBOY COPYBOY FOOTBOY 8-Letter BEACHBOY BLACKBOY BULLYBOY 9-Letter SCHOOLBOY STABLEBOY Nouns Beginning with “BOY” BOYO BOYAR BOYLA BOYARD BOYCHIK BOYHOOD BOYARISM BOYCHICK BOYCOTTER BOYFRIEND BOYISHNESS BOYSENBERRY Nouns with “BOY” in the Middle AMBOYNA FLAMBOYANCE FLAMBOYANCY FLAMBOYANT TOMBOYISHNESS Verbs Containing “BOY” COWBOY BOYCOTT COWBOYED BOYCOTTED COWBOYING BOYCOTTING COWBOYS BOYCOTTS Other Words Containing “BOY” BOYISH ATTABOY CARBOYED BOYISHLY TOMBOYISH ANTIBOYCOTT SCHOOLBOYISH UNFLAMBOYANT FLAMBOYANTLY 61 M A N L Y W O R D S Nouns Ending with “GIRL” BATGIRL BUSGIRL COWGIRL HOMEGIRL NEWSGIRL PLAYGIRL SHOPGIRL SHOWGIRL CHOIRGIRL PAPERGIRL SALESGIRL SCHOOLGIRL Nouns Beginning with “GIRL” GIRLIE GIRLHOOD GIRLFRIEND GIRLISHNESS Other Words Containing “GIRL” GIRLY ATTAGIRL GIRLISH GIRLISHLY GIRLIER GIRLIEST Tony Rasch is the author of Brow-Raisers, an excellent study guide for beginning and intermediate players who want to move up in the standings. Tony lives in Montana and spends most of his summer in the mountains, far away from any hard-drive. During the winter he loves to put a log on the fire and then dig into the intricacies of SCRABBLE® words. His website, www.BrowRaisers.com, is worth checking out. 62 W O R D T R I V I A Q U I Z Word Trivia Quiz By Siri Tillekeratne The following unique meanings are of words which became legal in the 2006 dictionary update. What are those words? 1. A fabric contraption resembling a parachute 2. A small park 3. Distortion of the sense of smell 4. A wool from Himalayan goats 5. To transfer power to an independent country 6. A cross between a Pekingese and a poodle 7. The main body of cyclists in a race 8. A theology expert 9. Inflammation of hands and feet due to exposure to the cold 10. A criminal ANSWERS on next page. Siri Tillekeratne is a director of the Calgary NASPA SCRABBLE® Club #374 and a former Director of the Year. 63 W O R D T R I V I A Q U I Z ANSWERS 1. A fabric contraption resembling a parachute PARAFOIL/S 2. A small park PARKETTE/S 3. Distortion of the sense of smell 4. A wool from Himalayan goats PAROSMIA/S PASHMINA/S 5. To transfer power to an independent country PATRIATE/S/D/TING 6. A cross between a Pekingese and a poodle PEKEPOO/S = PEEKAPOO/S 7. The main body of cyclists in a race PELOTON/S 8. A theology expert PERITUS/TI 9. Inflammation of hands and feet due to exposure to the cold 10. A criminal PERP/S 64 PERNIO/NES T H E W O R D S M I T H The Wordsmith A Partridge in a language tree By Chris Sinacola Born on New Zealand’s North Island in 1894, Eric Honeywood Partridge seems to have enjoyed just about every advantage that a lexicographer could hope to enjoy. He was educated in Australia, served in World War I in Egypt, Turkey and the Western Front, studied at Balliot College, Oxford, and eventually settled in to a half-century of study at the British Museum Library. Anyone with a deep love of words could do much worse than that. Partridge wrote some 40 works on language, and was perhaps best known for A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English, first published in London in 1937. Subsequent editions were enriched – if that’s the right way to put it – with generous helpings of “underground” English, particularly slang drawn from his experiences with the Army Education Corps and Royal Air Force during World War II. My wife rescued a concise, paperback edition of Partridge’s dictionary of slang from her school library, which was dismantled in one of those paroxysms of misguided trendiness that sweep through education from time to time. “A surprise that emerged for me in editing Partridge’s work,” writes editor Paul Beale in the 1984 edition, “was to find how old some of our everyday slang really is.” Some early 20th century terms, or even slang from the 1960s, Beale points out, already seemed dated in 1984, whereas others “more vivid, familiar, and still in curent use,” were coined in the 17th century. And Beale is right to point out that a “disturbingly high proportion of the new terms that have come to light” since the 1983 edition “concern narcotics and the drug trade.” Much of the slang found in Partridge is unacceptable in SCRABBLE® simply because it consists of phrases. Many of the more colorful terms are acceptable only in Collins – hardly a surprise given his roots in the British Commonwealth. What follows is simply a selection of some of the interesting and delightful finds in Partridge’s book, largely excluding the drug and sexual references. As interesting as some of them are, there are abundant Internet sources that will provide plenty of similar fare. - “Cigarettes bought ‘individually’ are called loosies because they are bought loose, or at least [they] were when I was not much younger.” So wrote one Peter Holt in a letter to the Guardian in 1978. LOOSIES# anagrams to nothing in OWL2, but add an F and you have FLOOSIES, acceptable throughout SCRABBLE-dom. - A LORRY, as we all know, is a truck or other vehicle. But Partridge notes that the word was more specifically “motoring enthusiasts’ pejorative term for a dull car.” 65 T H E W O R D S M I T H - LONGHAIR, a term for an intellectual or highbrow, is a nice example of a word that has traveled a good deal, modifying its meaning somewhat through time and travels. It seems to have originated about 1920 in the U.S., and Partridge states it was adapted by Australians in about 1944. Later, when the Beatles brought their music to America, the word found still another application, to describe young people who imitated the hair styles of the Fab Four. - BUCKSHEE, a noun meaning something obtained free, derives from baksheesh, which means a tip or gratuity. The word, in one spelling variation or another, can be found in Turkish, Arabic and Urdu. Partridge gives it one more twist, a usage found during WWII: “To a clerk in the army, one might say ‘Can I have a spot of that bumf?’ ‘Sure, it’s buckshees – be my guest.’” - Ah, BUMF. We’re met that word before. It means paperwork, and can be spelled BUMPH. Partridge adds to that tale, as well, noting that BUMF is “a schoolboys’ and soldiers’ abbreviation of bum-fodder, which since mid-C.17 has meant toilet paper.” Eventually, the word came to be used for any kind of paper, and then particularly for military orders, paperwork and the blizzard of paper that accompanies bureaucracies everywhere. - SOOGAN*, a word meaning a cowboy’s bedroll, originated in the American Southwest and came into use in Canada about 1930 to mean any transient’s bedroll. It was used from about 1930 in Canada, according to Partridge, yet does not appear anywhere in the Oxford English Dictionary or Mitford Mathews’ A Dictionary of Americanisms. That such an interesting word, with roots in both American and Canadian English, can manage to have escaped inclusion in so many important dictionaries only proves that language as it evolves through time truly cannot be contained by any single lexicon. Let’s take a quick timeout from Partridge to stay with that point for a moment, and look at the word pokelogan, which, while rooted in North America, both does and does not appear in the OWL2. I found this word while reading Thoreau’s The Maine Woods. It means an inlet along a shore or river that, in spite of appearances, does not lead anywhere. Since it appears in Thoreau, a quintessentially American writer, I figured the word must be good in OWL2. But POKELOGAN# is acceptable only in Collins. However, the word comes the Ojibwa pokenogun, and is shortened in English to BOGAN, which is an uncommon but perfectly acceptable five in OWL2, meaning a backwater. As Paul Harvey used to say, “now you know the rest of the story.” (Or perhaps some of the rest of the story, for I surmise one could follow this thread a good ways further.) Partridge’s book is almost inexhaustible, at least given the time and leisure available to most readers. - There’s KYBO#, meaning a temporary lavatory. Zyzzyva claims the word is essentially an acronym for Keep Your Bowels Open, but Partridge claims it is a reference to the Khyber Pass (connecting Pakistan and Afghanistan) and dates to the 19th century. Who knows? - GOLDFISH, anyone? Sure, it’s a popular pet fish, often targeted by cats. But Partridge defines it as “A chorister who opens her mouth but does not sing,” and dates that meaning to 1935. 66 T H E W O R D S M I T H - And PEARLING? In OWL2, it is a verb meaning to adorn with pearls. It can become PEARLINGS# in CSW12, meaning a lace made from silk. But who knew that PEARLING has been used by Australian surfers since the early 1960s to mean “allowing the nose of the surfboard to slip under” the surface of the water. Having explored in recent columns words that are good in both OWL2 and Collins, others that are Collins-only, and a few that are good in neither – and tossing in a bit of Latin SCRABBLE – I’ve begun to toy with the idea of pioneering a new version of our favorite word game. In this version, we’d simply do away with word judges and just pile stacks of dictionaries on a large table, put two hours on the clock, and let word mavens do battle with ANY word they can find in any dictionary on the table. It wouldn’t exactly be SCRABBLE, I suppose. Not sure what I’d call it, but give me time, and I might find a good name for it somewhere in Partridge’s book! Chris Sinacola is director of the Worcester Massachusetts SCRABBLE® Club #600, and can be reached at sinacola@msn.com - 67 O N E U P ! C U P One Up! Cup for March By Timothy Cataldo Calling all vocabularians! Just like last year, we'll post a One Up!® “game situation” every month so all you doubledomes out there can show everyone how brilliant and quick you are. Here's all you need to know now to play: Take one or more letters from the center and add them to an existing word to make a new word. Since there won't be a 'right' answer, we'll be looking for originality, wit and wow! The winner will receive a One Up!® and have his or her name put in the drawing for the Grand Prize at the end of the year. FEBRUARY’S WINNER For the February 2012 One Up! Contest, we had a tough decision since there were so many great entries, but we finally picked Linda Stephens, who sent this beaut in: Hi Timothy, It’s your only three-time winner, Linda Stephens, once again. I was hoping last month’s contest would have added more championships to my resume, but I’m glad to see that the prizes went to a worthy cause instead. So here’s my attempt to become a four-time victor with this month’s contest. The inspiration for my February entry is the rainy weather I’ve experienced during my travels over the past few weeks. I’ll start with R_LES and make the Uppity Tile into an L. With the aid of A BUM from the tile pool, I make the word UMBRELLAS. Hope you don’t “rain on my parade,” and make me a four-time winner! Sincerely, Linda “3-Time” Stephens Editor’s Note: Guess Linda’ll have to change her business card again! 68 L I N D A ’ S L I B R A R Y Linda’s Library By Linda Wancel As an avid reader and book lover, I have found that many other Scrabblers also share my passion for books and for reading. So I am happy to have this opportunity to share some of my favorite books with you. These reviews, for the most part, were written for Amazon.com, where I have been writing reviews under a pseudonym for over ten years. I hope that the book lovers among you may find your interest piqued by some of these books. ______________________________________________________________________________ Fiction: Warden of the Queen’s March By Nigel Tranter This is historical fiction at its best. A marvelously written book, it captures the essence of a most intriguing part of Scottish history. The narrative is peppered with three-dimensional historical figures, brought vividly to life by a master storyteller, and the progression of historical events is well crafted, keeping the reader turning the pages. This is the story of Thomas Kerr, a young Scottish border lord, who from the time he first met Mary, Queen of Scots, became her most devoted and loyal subject. It was to be a lifelong devotion. It is through his eyes that the reader sees the unfolding of events and intrigues surrounding the tragic and tumultuous reign of Queen Mary, a young ruler beleaguered on all sides by the coldly implacable ambitions of the men surrounding her. The reader sees Scottish history in the making from the time of Mary's return to Scottish shores at the age of eighteen, after a fifteen-year sojourn in France, until the time of her ignominious departure for England seven years later. The paths of Thomas and Mary were to cross many times throughout those turbulent years of her reign, as men's ambitions would seek to wreak havoc. Thomas Kerr could always be counted upon to provide whatever service would be of assistance to Mary, as well as whatever protection was at his disposal to keep her--and her devoted ladies-in-waiting--safe. In the end, however, even he, her most loyal subject, could not stem the tide of the inevitable tragedy that was to befall Mary, some of which was of her own making. His last sight of her was when he bid goodbye to her as she sailed away from her native Scotland to England, hoping to find safe harbor and help from the wily Queen Elizabeth I. This novel is so steeped in Scottish history and rich detail so as to leave the reader with a distinct feeling for the period. If you are a lover of historical fiction, with a penchant for Mary, Queen of Scots, then you will really enjoy this book. Warden of the Queen’s March is available at Amazon.com. 69 L I N D A ’ S L I B R A R Y Nonfiction: The White Cascade: The Great Northern Railway Disaster and America’s Deadliest Avalanche By Gary Krist This is a riveting account of the Great Northern Railway disaster of 1910, in which a passenger train and a mail train on their way to Seattle were trapped high up on a steep ridge in the Cascade Mountains in Washington State during a blizzard. Although a battalion of men were engaged in trying to clear the tracks so that the trains could proceed to their destination, they were fighting a losing battle with snow drifts as high as thirty feet. Day after day, the passengers and crews nervously waited, the rumblings of avalanches all around them. Six nights later, with the onset of a freak thunderstorm, the inevitable happened and a huge avalanche engulfed the trains and sent them plummeting down the mountainside. The author sets the tragedy into a historical context, giving the reader an idea of the place that railways had in the national economy. He also makes the account eminently interesting because of the human perspective he able to provide, drawing upon the writings and letters some of the passengers left behind, as well as the court transcripts of ensuing lawsuits. It is a most poignant account of a tragedy, and one that will keep the reader turning the pages. The book also includes sixteen pages of archival photographs that add to the reader's enjoyment of this wonderfully written, well-researched book. The White Cascade is available at Amazon.com. Linda Wancel loves reading, writing, watching films, traveling, and Scrabbling. She is the mother of 28-year-old twins and has recently retired after having been a criminal prosecutor for nearly 25 years. 70 S C R A B - D O K U Scrab-doku By Jeff Kastner In a standard Sudoku, your object is to fill in every square of the grid so that all nine rows across, all nine columns down, and all nine 3-by-3 boxes contain the numbers 1 through 9, with no repeats. Same rules apply to this Scrab-doku, but I’ve added a few twists to help you solve it. First of all, I use letters to replace the numbers. These letters are part of a “Keyword” which I’ve scrambled below. I’ve also provided a clue to help you find the correct anagram. Once you’ve unscrambled the Keyword, one of the rows or columns will contain all of its 9 letters in the proper order. This week’s “Scrambled” Keyword: UP CENTRAL Clue: It means: feeling sick from too much food or drink; The word’s first few letters suggest a link. SOLUTION on the page after next. 71 S C R A B - D O K U Word-Finder Challenge: Here’s an additional test of your anagramming ability. Your object is to find as many words as possible of 6 or more letters, using only the 9 letters of this month’s (Scrambled) Keyword: UP CENTRAL. Words must be at least 6 letters long (or longer), and must be OWL2 acceptable. Each letter of the Keyword may be used only once within any word you find. So, for instance, PARENT is acceptable, but not APPARENT. Par Scores for this month’s Word-Finder Challenge: 28 Words (Novice); 40 Words (Intermediate); 58 Words (Advanced) Once you’ve compiled your list, check out my SOLUTION on the next page. See you next month with another Scrab-doku puzzle and Word-Finder Challenge! …Jeff Kastner Jeff Kastner, originally from New York City, has been living in Phoenix, AZ since 1985. Jeff is one of a handful of players who has ever been ranked in the USA-top-50 in both SCRABBLE® and chess. He is the 2010-2011 Phoenix SCRABBLE® Club champion as well as the 2011 Scottsdale SCRABBLE® Club champ. 72 S C R A B - D O K U SOLUTION Keyword (Unscrambled): CRAPULENT (76 Words Total) ACUTER ANTLER APERCU ARPENT CANTER CANTLE CAPLET CAPTURE CARNET CARPEL CARPET CARTEL CENTAL CENTAUR CENTRA CENTRAL CLARET CLEANUP CRAPULENT CULPAE CUNEAL CURATE CURTAL CUTLER ELUANT ENRAPT ENTRAP LACUNE LANCER LANCET LAUNCE LEARNT LUCARNE LUCENT LUCERN LUNATE NATURE NECTAR NEURAL NEUTRAL NUCLEAR PALTER PARCEL PARENT PEANUT PENULT PLACER PLACET PLANER PLANET PLANTER PLATEN PLATER PLECTRA PLEURA PRANCE PREACT PRECUT PUNTER RECANT RECTAL RELUCT RENTAL REPLAN REPLANT RUNLET TANREC TEACUP TRANCE TREPAN UNCLEAR UNCRATE UNLACE UNREAL UPRATE UPTEAR 73 S C R A B B L E R E S O SCRABBLE® Resources Has SCRABBLE® tournament aides. There are many study tools to help SCRABBLE® players hone their skills, including a number of programs that can be downloaded for free. This section will offer suggestions and links for both players and directors. Lists clubs throughout North America with their meeting times and locations. Play Online SCRABBLE® POGO SCRABBLE® The official SCRABBLE® online game. Created under agreement with Hasbro in 2008. SCRABBLE® ON FACEBOOK Select the SCRABBLE® application on the Facebook home page to play the official SCRABBLE® game. Various groups hold tournaments at this site, including a group called “Mad Scrabblers”. INTERNET SCRABBLE® CLUB A Romanian-based site and application for interactive games. A favorite site for many of the top players. Play Live SCRABBLE® CROSS-TABLES Lists all upcoming tournaments, as well as results of past tournaments. 74 U NASPA CLUB LISTINGS NSA CLUB LISTINGS Lists casual clubs throughout North America with their meeting times and locations. WGPO CLUB LISTINGS Lists clubs throughout North America with their meeting times and locations. Apps for Scrabblers ZARF A free multipurpose iPhone/ iPad utility for SCRABBLE® players in any language. It provides word list lookup, pattern matching, tournament-style adjudication and a timer customized for tournament SCRABBLE® play. ZYZZYVA/ZYZZYVA LITE iPhone app for practicing anagramming skills and learning words. Zyzzyva includes Quiz, Search, and Judge functions; Cardbox Managment; Dropbox Sync; Custom Lexicon Support; and Lexicon Symbols. Zyzzva Lite (free) includes Search and Judge functions; Custom Lexicon Import; and Lexicon Symbols. You can sync quiz data between the iPhone app and the desktop program. R C E S WORDLIST PRO 2.0 Android 2.2+ app for practicing anagramming skills and learning words. Also functions as Word Judge. Lightning fast word searches. Supports TWL06, OSPD4, CSW12, and CSW12 unique words. Reviewed in this issue. CROSSWORD GAME SCORESHEET This app keeps track of scoring in crossword games such as SCRABBLE®. SCRABBLE® Play SCRABBLE® on your iPhone/iPad. Teacher feature allows you to see what your best word could have been after every turn. Now also available for Android devices: click here. SCRABBLE® TILE RACK Turns your iPhone or iPad Touch into a SCRABBLE® tile rack. For use with an iPad. WORDS WITH FRIENDS The popular SCRABBLE® variant for your iPhone/iPad. Anagramming/ Practice Tools JUMBLETIME A free web site for practicing anagramming skills. MAC USERS: After you do a Jumbletime quiz on a Mac, the scroll bar to view the results is missing. To make it S C R appear, go to the lower right corner and grab the striped triangle and shrink the window all the way to the top left corner. When you pull it back, the scroll bar to the right of the answers to the quiz appears. (Make sure you do this before you check your score against other players.) A B B L E R E S O U FRANKLIN SCRABBLE® PLAYERS DICTIONARY An electronic handheld dictionary and anagrammer, with many helpful options and games. Includes the latest word lists, and can be adjusted from OSPD4 to OWL2 lists with a code. AEROLITH A free application for practicing anagramming skills and learning words. QUACKLE CLICK HERE TO HELP END WORD HUNGER AS YOU LEARN WORDS R C E S OSPD (ospdscrabble@yahoogroups.c om) This group, dedicated to players using The Official SCRABBLE® Players’ Dictionary, offers lighthearted humor, daily word lists, and more. Admission is to all SCRABBLE® lovers. Details can be found in the NASPA Tournament SCRABBLE® Newsletter #1. WGPO Listserv (WGPO@yahoogroups.co m) A free application for practicing anagramming skills and learning words. Also has Word Judge capabilities. This group, open to all members of the tournament community, is a forum for issues of interest to SCRABBLE® A free vocabulary testing site. players. No approval of any For every correct word, grains of rice are donated through the kind is needed to join, and readers need not be members United Nations World Food of the Word Game Player’s Program. Feed hungry people as you expand your vocabulary! Organization (WGPO). SCRABBLE® DICTIONARY Online SCRABBLE® Discussion Groups A free application for playing, simulating, and analyzing games. ZYZZYVA Type a word to check for acceptability. OSPD4 words. CGP (crossword-gamespro@yahoogroups.com) This group, for NASPA tournament players and directors only, has the largest membership of any online tournament SCRABBLE® A full-board SCRABBLE® worddiscussion group. Most finder program that shows you important events and changes every word that can possibly be in the SCRABBLE® world are made on an entire discussed on cgp. Admission is SCRABBLE® board, and by approval only. Details can be continuously updates its results found at http://sasj.com/cgp/ as you type letters onto the join.html. board or into the rack. Full version available at http://bit.ly/ ecwHPt LEXIFIND SCRABBLE® HELPER AND WORD GAME WIZARD WORDFINDER FOR GOOGLE CHROME SCRABBLE® Blogs THE BADQOPH DIRECTORY This is a database of blogs by known SCRABBLE® bloggers, primarily tournament players. As of March 29th there were 196 blogs in the directory. Cheat Sheets MIKE BARON’S CHEAT SHEET A great cheat sheet with 2s, 3s, vowel dumps, short high-pointtile words, and good bingo stems. Includes useful front and back hook letters to make 3s from 2s. Adapted from Mike Barron’s SCRABBLE® Wordbook and the Official 75 S C R A B B L E R E S O Tournament and Club Word List, 2nd Edition. has a Yahoo user group you can join as a support option. MIKE BARON’S CHEAT SHEET (for School SCRABBLE® and home play) TOURNEYMAN A great cheat sheet with 2s, 3s, vowel dumps, short high-pointtile words, and good bingo stems. Includes useful front and back hook letters to make 3s from 2s. Adapted from Mike Barron’s SCRABBLE® Wordbook and the Official SCRABBLE® Players Dictionary, 4th Edition. COOL WORDS TO KNOW A terrific cheat sheet from the National SCRABBLE® Association for School SCRABBLE® and home play. Gives useful information on how to find bingos, plus the 2s, 3s, vowel dumps, and short highpoint-tile plays. U Jeff Widergren’s software for managing tournaments. TSH John Chew’s software for managing tournaments. Books BOB’S BIBLE A terrific book to build word power for tournaments. BOB’S BIBLE, SCHOOL EDITION For School SCRABBLE® and home play. BROW-RAISERS II A brilliantly organized study guide geared towards the success of beginning and intermediate players. HOW TO PLAY SCRABBLE® LIKE A Useful links to Collins word lists CHAMPION COLLINS WORD LISTS can be found at the following websites: http:// www.absp.org.uk/words/ words.html; http:// www.math.utoronto.ca/jjchew/ scrabble/lists/; http:// www.scrabble.org.au/words/ index.htm; http:// members.ozemail.com.au/ ~rjackman/. Tournament Management Software DIRECTOR! Marc Levesque’s software for managing tournaments. Also 76 A new guide to winning SCRABBLE® from World SCRABBLE® Champion Joel Wapnick. Fantastic insights into expert playing techniques. (See review in the October issue of The Last Word.) ENGLISH LANGUAGE WORD BUILDER Bob Jackman’s guide to building a strong Collins vocabulary, organized by word length, familiarity, and part of speech. R C E S EVERYTHING SCRABBLE®, THIRD EDITION The ultimate guide to winning at SCRABBLE@ by 3-time National Champion Joe Edley and John D. Williams, Jr. Completely updated to include all new words. (See review in the January issue of The Last word.) THE OFFICIAL SCRABBLE® PLAYERS DICTIONARY, FOURTH EDITION The official word source for School SCRABBLE® and casual play. THE OFFICIAL TOURNAMENT AND CLUB WORD LIST, 2ND EDITION The official word source for NASPA tournament and club play. SCRABBLE® TOURNAMENT & CLUB WORD LIST (COLLINS) The official word list for international tournament play. (Available at SamTimer.com.) SCRABBLE® WORDBOOK A great word book for SCRABBLE® players by Mike Baron. OSPD4 words. (POO Lists available with words excluded from the OWL2.) T O U R N A M E N T C A L E N D A R Tournament Calendar Our new calendar format addresses two concerns: 1) Readers wanted as complete a list as possible of tournament dates, not just two months worth of dates; 2) Readers wanted to know easily whether a tournament was sanctioned by NASPA, WGPO, or the NSA (or was unrated). However, because new tournaments are constantly being added to the schedule, it is difficult to be all-inclusive. Please be sure to refer to the Websites of the organization sanctioning the tournament for a complete list. Click NASPA, WGPO, or NSA for the most up-to-date calendars. Links to NASPA and some NSA tournaments are also posted at cross-tables.com. Thanks to Henry Leong, who permitted The Last Word to adapt his calendar from the WGPO Website. Dates Organization Tournament/Location MARCH 3/2-4 NASPA VANCOUVER BC CAN 3/3 NASPA PITTSBURGH PA 3/3 NSA (School) BURLINGTON MA SCHOOL SCRABBLE® 3/3 NSA (School) INDIANA STATE SCHOOL SCRABBLE® CHAMPIONSHIP, INDIANAPOLIS IN 3/3 NSA (School) TEXAS SCHOOL SCRABBLE® CHAMPIONSHIP, NORTH RIDGELAND HILLS TX 3/4 NASPA 3/10 NSA (School) NORTH CAROLINA SCHOOL SCRABBLE® CHAMPIONSHIP, CHAPEL HILL NC 3/10 NASPA NORWALK CT (REGULAR & YOUTH DIVISIONS) 3/11 NASPA BERKELEY CA 3/11 NASPA GUELPH ON CAN 3/13 NASPA INDEPENDENCE, OH - LCT 3/16-18 NASPA DALLAS TX 3/16-18 WGPO INDIATLANTIC FL 3/17 NASPA BAYSIDE NY LAGUNA WOODS CA 77 T O U R N A M E N T C A L E N D A R 3/17-18 NASPA 3/17 NSA (School) PHILDELPHIA PA SCHOOL SCRABBLE® 3/18 NASPA BRATTLEBORO VT 3/18 WGPO MOUNTAIN VIEW CA 3/18 NASPA PHILADELPHIA PA (TWL & COLLINS) 3/24-25 NASPA CALGARY AB CAN 3/24 NASPA CAMBRIDGE ON CAN 3/24 NASPA FORT LAUDERDALE FL 3/24-25 WGPO HOMER AL 3/24 NASPA PALM HARBOR FL 3/25 NASPA LONG BEACH CA 3/25 WGPO PORTLAND OR 3/30-4/1 NASPA LINDEN MI 3/30-4/1 NASPA MYRTLE BEACH SC 3/30-4/1 NASPA PRINCETON NJ 3/31 NASPA AUSTIN TX (TWL & COLLINS) 3/31 NASPA DANVILLE IL 3/31 NSA (School) NEW ENGLAND SCHOOL SCRABBLE® CHAMPIONSHIP, STAMFORD CT 3/31-4/1 NASPA ROCHESTER (WEBSTER) NY APRIL 4/1 NASPA BERKELEY CA 4/1 NASPA LAGUNA WOODS CA 4/7 NASPA HUDSON NY 4/7 NASPA MOORESTOWN NJ 4/8 NASPA GUELPH ON CAN 4/13-15 NASPA BAT (BOSTON AREA) MA 78 ELYRIA OH T O U R N A M E N T C A L E N D A R 4/13-14 NSA (School) NATIONAL SCHOOL SCRABBLE® CHAMPIONSHIP, ORLANDO FL 4/14-15 WGPO BLOOMINGTON MN 4/14-15 NASPA EDMONTON AB CAN 4/14-15 NASPA LUBBOCK TX 4/15 WGPO MOUNTAIN VIEW CA 4/21 NASPA BATON ROUGE LA 4/21-22 NASPA CUYAHOGA FALLS OH 4/21 NASPA DALLAS TX 4/21 NASPA LCT - MILLBURN NJ 4/21 NASPA NORWALK CT (REGULAR & YOUTH DIVISIONS) 4/21 WGPO PHOENIX AZ 4/22 WGPO FITCHBURG WI 4/22 NASPA PHILADELPHIA PA - TWL & COLLINS 4/22 WGPO PORTLAND OR 4/27-29 NASPA SAN DIEGO CA 4/28 NASPA AUSTIN TX (TWL & COLLINS) 4/28 NASPA BERLIN NJ 4/28 NASPA FORT LAUDERDALE FL 4/28 NASPA TCC- OLIVE HILL KY 4/28-29 NASPA SIOUX FALLS SD 4/28-29 NASPA WINNIPEG MB CAN 4/28 NASPA SOUTH LYON MI 5/4-6 NASPA GATLINBURG TN (TWL & COLLINS 5/4-6 NASPA PORTLAND OR (TWL & COLLINS) MAY 79 T O U R N A M E N T C A L E N D A R 5/5 NASPA STRONGSVILLE OH 5/6 NASPA LAGUNA WOODS CA 5/6-13 NASPA BERMUDA TREASURES SCRABBLE CRUISE 5/8 NASPA INDEPENDENCE OH - LCT 5/12 NASPA BALTIMORE (CATONSVILLE) MD 5/12 NASPA NORWALK CT (REGULAR & YOUTH DIVISIONS) 5/12-13 NASPA SASKATOON SK CAN 5/13 NASPA BERKELEY CA 5/18-19 NASPA LAGUNA WOODS CA 5/19 NASPA BAYSIDE NY 5/19 NASPA DALLAS TX 5/19 NASPA FORT LAUDERDALE FL 5/19-20 NASPA ROMULUS MI 5/20 WGPO PORTLAND OR 5/20 NASPA WILMINGTON DE 5/25-28 NASPA TARRYTOWN NY 5/26-28 NASPA COLLEGE PARK GA 5/26-27 NASPA COTE ST. LUC QC CAN 5/26-28 NASPA ARDENCUP, ELMHURST IL 5/26-28 WGPO CAMPBELL CA 5/26-28 WGPO DURANGO CO JUNE 6/2-3 NASPA CALGARY AB CA 6/2-3 NASPA CORAOPOLIS (PITTSBURGH) PA 6/2 NASPA MEADOWLANDS AREA, NJ 6/3 NASPA BERKELEY CA 80 T O U R N A M E N T C A L E N D A R 6/3 NASPA LAGUNA WOODS CA 6/3 NASPA PHILADELPHIA PA (TWL & COLLINS) 6/6-20 NASPA TORONTO ON CAN (TCC, LCT) 6/7-10 NASPA HANCOCK MA 6/9-10 NASPA CHARLOTTE NC 6/9-10 NASPA SWILLLNS, CORRALES NM 6/9 NASPA HUDSON OH 6/9-10 NASPA KANSAS CITY MO 6/9 NASPA TUCSON AZ 6/16 NASPA DALLAS TX 6/16 NASPA EDMONTON AB CAN 6/16-17 NASPA KNOXVILLE TN 6/17 WGPO MOUNTAIN VIEW CA 6/16 NASPA NORWALK CT (REGULAR & YOUTH DIVISIONS) 6/20-7/2 WGPO NORWAY / ICELAND CRUISE (TWL & COLLINS) 6/23 NASPA BAYSIDE NY 6/23-24 NASPA DETROIT MI 6/23 NASPA FORT LAUDERDALE FL 6/23-24 NASPA WASHINGTON DC 6/28-7/4 NASPA ALBANY NY (TWL & COLLINS) JULY 7/1 NASPA LAGUNA WOODS CA 7/6-8 NASPA WILMINGTON DE (TWL & COLLINS) 7/7-8 NASPA OMAHA NE 7/10 NASPA INDEPENDENCE, OH - LCT 7/15 NASPA PHILADELPHIA PA (TWL & COLLINS) 81 T O U R N A M E N T C A L E N D A R 7/21 NASPA TCC-CLARKSBURG WV 7/21 NASPA DALLAS TX 7/27-29 NASPA OLD GREENWICH CT 7/28 NASPA FORT LAUDERDALE FL AUGUST 8/5 NASPA LAGUNA WOODS CA 8/3-8 WGPO WGPO WORD CUP - BLOOMINGTON MN 8/11-15 NASPA NATIONAL SCRABBLE CHAMPIONSHIP ORLANDO FL (TWL & COLLINS) 8/18 NASPA DALLAS TX 8/18 NASPA EDMONTON AB CAN 8/18-26 NASPA IRELAND TOUR AND TOURNAMENT 8/18-19 NASPA LAGUNA WOODS CA 8/25 NASPA BAYSIDE NY 8/25 NASPA FORT LAUDERDALE FL 8/25 NASPA STRATFORD ON CAN SEPTEMBER 9/1-3 NASPA ALPHARETTA GA 9/1-3 NASPA IRVING TX 9/1-3 NASPA NEW YORK NY 9/2 NASPA LAGUNA WOODS CA 9/9 NASPA NEWARK DE 9/11 NASPA INDEPENDENCE, OH - LCT 9/15 NASPA DALLAS TX 9/15 NASPA HUDSON OH 9/15 NASPA MILLBURN NJ 9/19-26 NASPA BAHAMAS CRUISE 82 T O U R N A M E N T C A L E N D A R 9/22 NASPA NORWALK CT (REGULAR & YOUTH DIVISIONS) 9/22 NASPA REGINA SK CAN 9/23 NASPA PHILADELPHIA PA (TWL & COLLINS) 9/24-10/3 NASPA TENTATIVE - EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN CRUISE 9/27-30 WGPO GRITS III, SAVANNAH GA 9/27-30 WGPO GRUNTS, BENZONIA MI 9/29 NASPA CHARLESTON WV 9/29 WGPO PHOENIX AZ 9/29 NASPA ASBURY PARK NJ 9/29 NASPA FORT LAUDERDALE FL OCTOBER 10/6-20 WGPO NEW ENGLAND & CANADA CRUISE (TWL & COLLINS) 10/6 NASPA NORWALK CT (REGULAR & YOUTH DIVISIONS) 10/7 NASPA LAGUNA WOODS CA 10/10-14 NASPA CALGARY AB CAN 10/12-14 WGPO WISCONSIN DELLS WI 10/13 NASPA BERLIN NJ 10/13 NASPA PHILADELPHIA PA (TWL & COLLINS) 10/14 NASPA BAYSIDE NY 10/18-21 NASPA LAKE GEORGE NY (TWL & COLLINS) 10/20 NASPA DALLAS TX 10/27 NASPA BERLIN NJ 10/27-28 NASPA TCC - CAN-AM CHALLENGE, MILLBURN NJ 10/27 NASPA FORT LAUDERDALE FL 83 T O U R N A M E N T C A L E N D A R NOVEMBER 11/2-4 NASPA CAMBRIDGE MD 11/3 NASPA EDMONTON AB CAN 11/4 NASPA LAGUNA WOODS CA 11/10 NASPA NORWALK CT (REGULAR & YOUTH DIVISIONS) 11/13 NASPA INDEPENDENCE, OH - LCT 11/17 NASPA BAYSIDE NY 11/17 NASPA DALLAS TX 11/17 NASPA FORT LAUDERDALE FL 11/23-25 NASPA TARRYTOWN NY DECEMBER 12/1 NASPA CALGARY AB CA 12/1-8 WGPO RESTRICTED - CABO SAN LUCAS MEXICO 12/2 NASPA LAGUNA WOODS CA 12/2-18 WGPO MALAGA TO RIO DE JANEIRO CRUISE 12/9 NASPA PHILADELPHIA PA (TWL & COLLINS) 12/9 NASPA STRONGSVILLE OH 12/15 NASPA DALLAS TX 12/15-16 NASPA LAGUNA WOODS CA 12/22-25 NASPA WILMINGTON DE (TWL & COLLINS) 12/27-1/1 NASPA ALBANY NY (TWL & COLLINS) JANUARY ’13 1/16-28 WGPO AUSTRALIA-NEW ZEALAND CRUISE 1/12 NASPA BAYSIDE NY 1/26-28 NASPA ATLANTIC CITY NJ FEBRUARY ’13 2/10 NASPA PHILADELPHIA PA (TWL & COLLINS) 84 T O U R N A M E N T C A L E N D A R 2/13-18 NASPA LAS VEGAS NV (TWL & COLLINS) 2/15-18 NASPA TENTATIVE - EASTERN CHAMPIONSHIP, CHARLOTTE NC 2/15 WGPO PHOENIX AZ EARLY BIRD 2/16-18 WGPO PHOENIX AZ (TWL & COLLINS) 2/23 NASPA NORWALK CT (REGULAR & YOUTH DIVISIONS) MARCH ’13 3/10 NASPA PHILADELPHIA PA (TWL & COLLINS) 3/15-17 NASPA POUGHKEEPSIE NY 3/29-31 NASPA PRINCETON NJ APRIL ’13 4/20 NASPA NORWALK CT (REGULAR & YOUTH DIVISIONS) 4/21 NASPA PHILADELPHIA PA (TWL & COLLINS) MAY ’13 5/3-5 NASPA NEW YORK NY 5/19 NASPA PHILADELPHIA PA (TWL & COLLINS) 5/23-27 NASPA SACRAMENTO CA 5/23-27 NASPA TARRYTOWN NY JUNE ’13 6/8 NASPA NORWALK CT (REGULAR & YOUTH DIVISIONS) JULY ’13 7/2-7 NASPA ALBANY NY (TWL & COLLINS) 7/19-21 NASPA OLD GREENWICH CT AUGUST ’13 8/31-9/2 NASPA WILMINGTON DE 85 T O U R N A M E N T C A L E N D A R SEPT. ’13 9/21 NASPA NORWALK CT (REGULAR & YOUTH DIVISIONS) OCT. ’13 10/17-20 NASPA LAKE GEORGE NY NOV. ’13 11/16 NASPA NORWALK CT (REG. & YOUTH DIVISIONS) 11/29-12/1 NASPA TARRYTOWN NY MARCH ’14 3/21-23 NASPA POUGHKEEPSIE NY MAY ’14 5/22-26 NASPA SACRAMENTO CA 5/23-26 NASPA TARRYTOWN NY JULY ’14 7/18-20 NASPA OLD GREENWICH CT AUGUST ’14 8/30-9/1 NASPA NEW YORK NY NOVEMBER ’14 11/28-30 NASPA 86 TARRYTOWN NY A R C H I V E S Archives To download previous issues of The Last Word click here. 87