At about the same time I wrote to Monty Newborn, who was working at Columbia University in Manhattan and was an organizer for the upcoming ACM Fall Joint Computer Conference, suggesting that we provide some kind of a Computer Chess Exhibit. I had in mind a demonstration of computer vs. human play. Instead, Monty came up with a better idea of a computer chess tournament and we met with Keith Gorlen and David Slate (North Western University) in a Howard Johnson's cafe on the Garden State Parkway and hammered out a proposal that Monty took to the ACM for their blessing - and history was made, since no less than 25 North American Computer Chess Championships followed.
Until recently the main effort in chess programming has been to develop programs which selectively (and hopefully "intelligently") examine a small subset of the legal moves in any position. The surprising performance of the Varian minicomputer (programmed by K. King and C. Daly) in the First Annual Computer Chess Championship (New York 1970), although due primarily to good luck in the pairings, led to increased speculation about the possibility of playing respectable chess with an unselective "brute force" program.
Monroe Newborn (1975). Computer Chess. Academic Press, New York, N.Y. ISBN 0-125-17250-8.
Chapter V. The First United States Computer Chess Championship
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Table of Contents
Final Standing
[2]Participants
[4]Larry Atkin, David Slate
Rolf C. Smith, Franklin D. Ceruti
Photos & Games
First Round
Keith Gorlen operating Chess 3.0, Monty Newborn, Steven M. Bellovin with phone, unknown back of head [5]
First Prize
Championship 1970 with his and Larry Atkin's Chess program. Monty Newborn (far left), Ben Mittman (far right) [6] .
Quotes
How it Began
Tony Marsland's quote on how the ACM tournaments arose [7] :Brute Force
Quote by James Gillogly from the The Technology Chess Program [8] .Booklet
Publications
Chapter V. The First United States Computer Chess Championship
External Links
References
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