The left side of last month's 'On the Cover' post,
August 1973 & 1998
(August 2023) featured Robert Byrne, 'who finished 3rd at the Leningrad Interzonal and thus qualified for the Candidates' Matches'.
This month features the winner of the second Interzonal for that cycle. It was the first World Chess Championship cycle to have more than one Interzonal.

Left: '?'
Right: '1998 U.S. CHESSathon'
'Interplay Junior Championship ...
Junior Open ...
Cadet Championship ...
National Scholastics ...
U.S. Amateur Championships ...
World Open ...
it all begins [inside]!'
Chess Life & Review (50 Years Ago)
Henrique Mecking, winner of
the Interzonal in Petropolis, Brazil, in a typical pose. Bulletin [inside], full story next month. Photo
by Burt Hochberg.
The bulletin '[inside]' said,
Twenty-one-year-old Henrique Mecking
of Brazil triumphed on his home territory, winning the second of the two
1973 Interzonals with an undefeated score
of 12.0-5.0. Pre-tournament favorite Lajos
Portisch of Hungary suffered a disastrous last-round loss to Soviet Grandmaster Lev Polugaevsky, creating a
three-way tie for 2nd-4th places among
Yefim Geller, Portisch and Polugaevsky
with scores of 11.5-5.5. Since only the
top three may advance to the Candidates
Matches, a playoff match among the
three tied players is necessary to eliminate one of them. The date and site of
this playoff is not known at this writing.
Here are the final scores from Petropolis.
[...]
Bronstein replaced Leonid Stein, who died
suddenly a few weeks before the tournament.
For more about the two Interzonals, see:-
The footnote saying, 'Bronstein replaced Stein', doesn't square with related info on my other pages. More research needed...
Chess Life (25 Years Ago)
It almost didn't happen. Having made the decision to not hold a CHESSathon this year, the USCF
office was dragged, kicking and screaming, into an
organizational nightmare, when one very determined USCF Past President, Denis Barry, decided
that there would be a CHESSathon!
Executive Director Mike Cavallo gave Denis the
green light, and with less than three months lead
time, Denis was able to find a site, secure the
cooperation of an entire city (Newark, New
Jersey), find local sponsors ("Just One," a division
of the Office of the Mayor of Newark, Public
Service Electric and Gas [PSE&G]), a state sponsor (New
Jersey State Chess Federation) AND he was to convince the majority of the employees of the USCF
business office to once again, donate their time
and experience to make the CHESSathon a reality.
But that's only the beginning of the story. The
rest of it appears [inside]. Our cover shot,
from the sixth floor of the PSE&G building, overlooks the PSE&G Plaza, and was taken by Brian
Killigrew.
This is the first issue that most youth members,
coaches, and parents will receive as the new
school year begins. Make the most of it! Our three
National Scholastics, the Cadet, the Junior, the
Junior Open, the CHESSathon, a bright piece on
college chess and scholarships, Chess-in-the-Schools, our youth team in England -- it's all in this
issue. Just what the doctor ordered to convince an
edgy school board, a doubtful principal, or a curious PTA, to get a chess program started or
expanded.
By any standard, that's a long explanation of the month's cover. It raises a number of points that deserve a deeper look, but I've run out of time for now.
***
Later:
If ever there was an issue of Chess Life (CL) devoted to scholastic chess, it was for September 1998. The table of contents looked like this:-
p.36 College Chess by Tim Redman
p.38 National High School by Steve Immitt
p.40 National Junior High
p.42 National Elementary
p.44 U.S. Cadet Championship by Anthony Crawley
p.46 U.S. Junior Open Championship by Karl Heck
p.48 U.S. Interplay Junior Championship by Steve Immitt
p.50 Intercontinental Youth Team Tournament by Beatriz Marinello
p.52 Chess in the Schools by Brian Killigrew
p.53 Chess Profiles: David MacEnulty by Brian Killigrew
p.56 CHESSathon 1998
p.58 U.S. Amateur Championships
p.64 Goldin is Golden at the World Open by Jerry Hanken
p.69 Donny Ariel by Nick Conticello
p.71 U.S. Amateur Playoffs
p.72 Dahlia vs. PBS by Shay Bushinsky
p.73 Alexei Shirov visits N.Y. by Irina Krush
The first 11 stories were about scholastic chess. The next two stories, the U.S. Amateur and the World Open, would have been lead stories in most other issues of CL. Following are some highlights.
Hikaru Nakamura had his photo in the three related stories that started with the 'National High School' championship, as did his brother Asuka.
The brothers appeared together in the first photo for 'CHESSathon 1998'.
The younger Nakamura, a future GM and U.S. champion, had his own CL cover a few months ago in
May 1973 & 1998 'On the Cover'
(May 2023).
Jennifer Shahade was honored as 'Player of the Month' and had her photo at the top of the story for the 'U.S. Junior Open Championship'. From that tournament report:-
The 17-year-old Shahade became the
first woman ever to win the U.S. Junior
Open in its 53-year history, on July 19 in
Ithaca, New York, by scoring 5.5-0.5 in the
tournament's Open section. Shahade
(2200), the tournament's highest-rated
player, won her title the hard way, by facing four of the top five players below her
in the standings.
Shahade's brother Gregory (Greg) was also mentioned in 'Player of the Month' and had his photo in the report 'U.S. Interplay Junior Championship'. He finished in the middle of the ten-player event.
Irina Krush, on top of writing the story 'Alexei Shirov visits N.Y.', was pictured in 'Intercontinental Youth Team Tournament', where she led the '14 and under' team that finished well ahead of the three other national teams. For another angle on the Shirov visit, see last year's post
Shirov's SmartChess Videos
(December 2022).
Cover photographer Brian Killigrew has been mentioned in two previous 'On the Cover' posts this year. His credits for the two 'Chess in the Schools' stories in this issue were for 'Photos and Text'. I expect we'll be seeing more of him in future 'On the Cover' posts.