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Best of Chess Fischer Newspaper Archives
• Robert J. Fischer, 1955 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1956 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1957 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1958 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1959 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1960 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1961 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1962 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1963 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1964 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1965 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1966 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1967 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1968 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1969 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1970 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1971 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1972 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1973 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1974 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1975 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1976 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1977 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1978 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1979 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1980 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1981 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1982 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1983 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1984 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1985 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1986 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1987 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1988 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1989 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1990 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1991 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1992 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1993 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1994 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1995 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1996 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1997 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1998 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 1999 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2000 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2001 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2002 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2003 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2004 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2005 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2006 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2007 bio + additional games
• Robert J. Fischer, 2008 bio + additional games
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Game May Be Over for Chess King Fischer: Former world champ is held in Japan, accused of using an illegal passport. A fugitive since 1992, he faces deportation to the United States.

The Los Angeles Times Los Angeles, California Saturday, July 17, 2004 - Page 63

Game May Be Over for Chess King Fischer
Former world champ is held in Japan, accused of using an illegal passport. A fugitive since 1992, he faces deportation to the United States.
By BRUCE WALLACE
Times Stair Writer

TOKYO — For 12 years he has stayed one move ahead of the U.S. government he despises, always in motion, hard to corner. But American justice may have finally caught up with Bobby Fischer.
Wanted for defying an American ban on doing business with Yugoslavia in 1992, the onetime world chess champion was arrested by Japanese immigration officials this week as he tried to fly out of Tokyo's Narita airport. Fischer, who was headed to the Philippines, stands accused by the Japanese of traveling on a revoked American passport.
The man often said to possess the world's most brilliant chess mind — and a great eccentric in a profession bulging with them —now sits in an airport jail facing deportation and subsequent arrest by U.S. marshals as early as Sunday.
Returning to the U.S. in handcuffs would mark a bitter homecoming for the Brooklyn-raised exile. In the 1960s and '70s, Fischer transformed chess from nerdy to sexy and became a Cold War-era hem by vanquishing Boris Spassky, the Soviet Union's best, in the legendary world championship contest of 1972.
He has been a recluse almost ever since. Now 61, Fischer has emerged in public only fitfully in recent years, usually to berate the U.S. government for what he regards as its evil foreign policies and to cast himself as the victim of persecution by “Zionists.”
A return to face trial on the 1992 charge — which could carry a prison sentence of up to 10 years and a $50,000 fine — now looks increasingly likely.
Fischer has yet to hire a lawyer to fight deportation proceedings stemming from the Japanese government's contention that he entered the country with an illegal passport, said Miyoko Watai, head of the Japanese Chess Assn. and a friend of Fischer.
Watai, who said she had known Fischer since 1973, said he phoned her after being taken into custody, and “the problem is he doesn't trust the lawyers.”
Instead, Fischer has declared himself a political prisoner, appealing via a Japan-based Internet site for asylum in a “friendly third country.” Through Watai, he claimed to have been “viciously attacked, brutalized, seriously injured and very nearly killed” during his airport port arrest.
Japanese officials acting “in collusion with the U.S. government” destroyed his passport, he said.
The U.S. case against him stems from his out-of-retirement exhibition battle with Spassky in 1992, which led to a $3.5-million payday for Fischer. Staged in Yugoslavia, a federation unraveling in civil war, his appearance violated United Nations sanctions and an embargo signed by the first President Bush barring Americans from doing business in the Balkan country.
But Fischer's quarrel with Washington runs far deeper than his refusal to abide by a presidential ban — a stance he expressed at the time by publicly spitting on his copy of the Treasury Department letter forbidding him to play chess in Yugoslavia.
On his personal website and in radio interviews delivered from various points of exile, Fischer has become known as an intemperate critic of Washington, his philosophising punctuated by ferocious anti-Zionist diatribes.
His rages from the fringe culminated in an interview on Philippine radio on Sept. 11, 2001, in which he exulted in the terrorist attacks on New York and the Pentagon. He praised the horrific events as “wonderful news,” declaring that America got what it deserved for supporting Israel. “I want to see the U.S. wiped out,” he said.
Fischer has kept up the drumbeat since, and Watai believes that his verbal attacks have stirred up U.S. authorities. The chess master has been reclusive but hardly impossible to find in recent years. His peripatetic lifestyle — shuttling between his base in Tokyo and out-posts in, among other places, Hungary and the Philippines, — implies that he frequently passes through immigration controls.
“They could have arrested him anytime, anytime since 1992,” Watai said. “Since 1992 he has traveled all over without trouble.” The difference now, she argued, is that “suddenly he starts to attack America. He made the American government very angry.”
Officials at the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo refused to discuss Fischer's case Friday, citing privacy laws, although they confirmed that he was being detained by the Japanese. “We don't prosecute people for their political views,” one American official said privately.
Watai said the sequence of events concerning Fischer's passport status raises questions about Washington's interest in the former chess champion.
Fugitives may not be issued a new American passport unless it is used to enable them to return to face trial. Fischer, however, was issued a new passport in 1997 by the American Embassy in Bern, Switzerland — more than four years after his arrest warrant was signed, Watai said.
That passport was revoked in a letter sent from the U.S. Embassy in Manila, dated Dec. 11, 2003, said Watai, who added that Fischer never received the notification. According to the document, which Watai posted online, the passport was rescinded on the order of the State Department in Washington.
A Japanese government document also posted by Watai indicated that Fischer's passport was accepted as valid when he entered Japan on April 15 on a 90-day visa. That permission was rescinded retroactively only when he was stopped on his way out through Narita on Tuesday.
Fischer's arrest comes as Tokyo and Washington appear to be nearing an agreement on how to deal with the possible imminent visit to Japan of former U.S. Army Sgt. Charles Robert Jenkins, who defected to North Korea almost 40 years ago. Jenkins, who needs medical treatment, is married to a Japanese woman, and Tokyo hopes that the U.S. will not seek his arrest and extradition when he arrives.
In Tokyo, Fischer was in the city he was most likely to call home at the time of his arrest. He has lived in this sprawling metropolis of 13 million intermittently for several years, blessedly anonymous in a culture in which the Western version of chess re-mains a specialized taste.
Fischer has occasionally dropped into some of Tokyo's chess clubs, autographing a board for one group, according to a Japanese newspaper. He reportedly spends most of his time playing random chess, a game he invented in 1996. In it, back-row pieces are arranged in various orders to do away with what he calls the yawning predictability of classic chess.
But Fischer has his political quarrels with Japan too. “He doesn't like the way the Japanese government follows American policy,” Watai said. “He thinks Japan is not independent. He thinks Japan is still an occupied country. “But he doesn't want to go back to America,” she continued. “He doesn't like Americans or American food.” And, she added emphatically, “he doesn't like the American government. Not at all.”

Game May Be Over for Chess King Fischer: Former world champ is held in Japan, accused of using an illegal passport. A fugitive since 1992, he faces deportation to the United States.

'til the world understands why Robert J. Fischer criticised the U.S./British and Russian military industry imperial alliance and their own Israeli Apartheid. Sarah Wilkinson explains:

Bobby Fischer, First Amendment, Freedom of Speech
What a sad story Fischer was,” typed a racist, pro-imperialist colonial troll who supports mega-corporation entities over human rights, police state policies & white supremacy.
To which I replied: “Really? I think he [Bob Fischer] stood up to the broken system of corruption and raised awareness! Whether on the Palestinian/Israel-British-U.S. Imperial Apartheid scam, the Bush wars of ‘7 countries in 5 years,’ illegally, unconstitutionally which constituted mass xenocide or his run in with police brutality in Pasadena, California-- right here in the U.S., police run rampant over the Constitution of the U.S., on oath they swore to uphold, but when Americans don't know the law, and the cops either don't know or worse, “don't care” -- then I think that's pretty darn “sad”. I think Mr. Fischer held out and fought the good fight, steadfast til the day he died, and may he Rest In Peace.
Educate yourself about U.S./State Laws --
https://www.youtube.com/@AuditTheAudit/videos
After which the troll posted a string of profanities, confirming there was never any genuine sentiment of “compassion” for Mr. Fischer, rather an intent to inflict further defamatory remarks.

This ongoing work is a tribute to the life and accomplishments of Robert “Bobby” Fischer who passionately loved and studied chess history. May his life continue to inspire many other future generations of chess enthusiasts and kibitzers, alike.

Robert J. Fischer, Kid Chess Wizard 1956March 9, 1943 - January 17, 2008

The photograph of Bobby Fischer (above) from the March 02, 1956 The Tampa Times was discovered by Sharon Mooney (Bobby Fischer Newspaper Archive editor) on February 01, 2018 while gathering research materials for this ongoing newspaper archive project. Along with lost games now being translated into Algebraic notation and extractions from over two centuries of newspapers, it is but one of the many lost treasures to be found in the pages of old newspapers since our social media presence was first established November 11, 2017.

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