- the now-standard move
order 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 c5 3.d5 b5 was Thorvaldsson–
Vaitonis,
Munich Olympiad 1936. In many countries,
particularly in
Eastern Europe...
-
Vaitonis pla****
three matches against Vladas Mikėnas. In 1934, he lost a
match (2-6). In 1937, he lost (4.5-5.5) and in 1938 he lost (3-9).
Vaitonis may...
-
emigrated from
Estonia to Lithuania. In 1934, he won a
match against Povilas Vaitonis (6:2). In 1935, he took 10th in Łódź (Savielly
Tartakower won), and drew...
- 1949
Maurice Fox 1951
Povilas Vaitonis 1953
Frank Anderson,
Daniel Yanofsky 1955
Frank Anderson 1957
Povilas Vaitonis 1959
Daniel Yanofsky 1961 Lionel...
-
Povilas Tautvaišas (1916–1980), Lithuanian-American
chess master Povilas Vaitonis (1911–1983), Lithuanian–Canadian
International Master of
chess Povilas...
- (Russia, 1894–1942)
Anatoly Vaisser (Kazakhstan, France, born 1949)
Povilas Vaitonis (Lithuania, Canada, 1911–1983) Árpád
Vajda (Hungary, 1896–1967) Francisco...
- (Arlauskas, Dreibergs, Jurševskis, Mednis, Ozols, Sarapu, Tautvaišas,
Vaitonis, Zemgalis, et al.),
escaped to the west just
before the
advancing Soviet...
- Edmārs Mednis, Kārlis Ozols,
Ortvin Sarapu,
Povilas Tautvaišas,
Povilas Vaitonis, Elmārs Zemgalis, etc., and
Ukrainian players, e.g.
Fedor Bohatyrchuk,...
- Yanofsky,
Frank Anderson, and
Povilas Vaitonis. In 1951, he tied for 3rd–4th
places at
Vancouver (winner was
Povilas Vaitonis), with 8.5/12. In 1955, he tied...
-
result occurring at
Vancouver 1957 when he tied for third,
behind Povilas Vaitonis and Géza Füster. Jurševskis love to play 5-minute
blitz games; he eventually...