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Charles Kalme
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* Charles Kalme
Charles Ivars Kalme
, (Kārlis Ivars Kalme, November 15, 1939 – March 20, 2002)
was a Latvian American electrical engineer, mathematician,
International Master
of chess, Master of
Contract Bridge
, and early computer chess programmer. Born 1939 in
Riga
, he and what was left of his family fled
Latvia
after
World War II
, lived for years in a
Displaced Persons Camp
in
Allied-occupied Germany
until he arrived in
Philadelphia
in the
United States
in 1951
[1]
. He earned his master title in chess at age 15, was US Junior champion in 1955, US Intercollegiate champ in 1957
[2]
, and drew in his game against
Bobby Fischer
in the 1960
US championship
[3]
.
In 1961, Kalme graduated with honors in electrical engineering from
University of Pennsylvania
, and received his Ph.D. degree in mathematics in 1967 at
New York University
under thesis advisor
Lipman Bers
[4]
. He became a professor of mathematics at the
University of California, Berkeley
for two years, and at
University of Southern California
for four years. When
Latvia
restored its independence
in 1991 from the
Soviet Union
, Kalme returned to Latvia, where he worked on a National Strategy for Bringing Computer Literacy to Latvian Schools
[5]
.
Charles Kalme 1960
[6]
Table of Contents
Computer Chess
Selected Publications
External Links
References
What links here?
Computer Chess
In the early 70s at
University of Southern California
, Charles Kalme became team member and chess advisor of the
USC CP
team around
Albert Zobrist
and
Frederic Roy Carlson
[7]
[8]
.
Selected Publications
Charles Kalme
(
1967
).
Contributions to the Theory of Discontinuous Groups of Mobius Transformations
. Ph.D. thesis,
New York University
, advisor
Lipman Bers
Charles Kalme
(
1969
).
A note on the connectivity of components of Kleinian groups
.
Transactions of the American Mathematical Society
, Vol. 137
Charles Kalme
(
1970
).
Remarks on a paper by Lipman Bers
.
Annals of Mathematics
, Second Series, Vol. 91, No. 3
External Links
Charles Kalme from Wikipedia
The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Charles Kalme
The chess games of Charles I. Kalme
from
chessgames.com
Una Riga di scacchi | SoloScacchi
by Martin Eden, March 24, 2010 (Italian)
The United States Chess Federation - Victory at Leningrad: The 50th Anniversary
by
Eliot Hearst
, October 20, 2010
Mathematicians and Chess | Charles Kalme
by
David Joyner
Office of Student Affairs at the University of Pennsylvania
References
^
Charles Kalme from Wikipedia
^
Eric Tangborn
,
John Donaldson
(
1999
).
The Unknown Bobby Fischer
. International Chess Enterprises
^
Mathematicians and Chess | Charles Kalme
by
David Joyner
^
Charles Kalme
(
1967
).
Contributions to the Theory of Discontinuous Groups of Mobius Transformations
. Ph.D. thesis,
New York University
, advisor
Lipman Bers
^
Mathematicians and Chess | Charles Kalme
by
David Joyner
^
Charles Kalme vs. Suren Momo,
7th World Student Team Chess Championship: Leningrad 1960
, from
Una Riga di scacchi | SoloScacchi
by Martin Eden, March 24, 2010 (Italian)
^
Albert Zobrist
,
Frederic Roy Carlson
(
1973
).
An Advice-Taking Chess Computer
.
Scientific American
, Vol. 228
^
Monroe Newborn
(
1975
).
Computer Chess
.
Academic Press
, New York, N.Y., Chapter VII. The Third United States Computer Chess Championship
What links here?
Page
Date Edited
ACM 1972
Dec 22, 2017
ACM 1973
Jan 19, 2018
Albert Zobrist
Jun 12, 2016
Charles Kalme
Oct 20, 2013
Frederic Roy Carlson
Oct 19, 2013
Mathematician
Apr 9, 2018
People
Feb 28, 2018
University of California, Berkeley
Sep 5, 2016
University of Southern California
Aug 10, 2016
USC CP
Aug 10, 2016
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was a Latvian American electrical engineer, mathematician, International Master of chess, Master of Contract Bridge, and early computer chess programmer. Born 1939 in Riga, he and what was left of his family fled Latvia after World War II, lived for years in a Displaced Persons Camp in Allied-occupied Germany until he arrived in Philadelphia in the United States in 1951 [1]. He earned his master title in chess at age 15, was US Junior champion in 1955, US Intercollegiate champ in 1957 [2], and drew in his game against Bobby Fischer in the 1960 US championship [3].
In 1961, Kalme graduated with honors in electrical engineering from University of Pennsylvania, and received his Ph.D. degree in mathematics in 1967 at New York University under thesis advisor Lipman Bers [4]. He became a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley for two years, and at University of Southern California for four years. When Latvia restored its independence in 1991 from the Soviet Union, Kalme returned to Latvia, where he worked on a National Strategy for Bringing Computer Literacy to Latvian Schools [5].
Table of Contents
Computer Chess
In the early 70s at University of Southern California, Charles Kalme became team member and chess advisor of the USC CP team around Albert Zobrist and Frederic Roy Carlson [7] [8].Selected Publications
External Links
References
What links here?
Up one Level