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Milan Vukcevich


 

Milan Radoje Vukcevich (March 11, 1937May 10, 2003) was a scientist and chess problem composer.

Related Topics:
March 11 - 1937 - May 10 - 2003 - Scientist - Chess problem

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Vukcevich was born in Belgrade. In 1955 he won the Yugoslav Junior Championship, drawing a six game match with Bent Larsen in the same year. He became a chess International Master in 1958, and in 1960 played for Yugoslavia at the Chess Olympiad in Leipzig and had the second best overall score at the Student Chess Olympiad in Leningrad. In 1963 he moved to the United States, settling in Ohio.

Related Topics:
Belgrade - Bent Larsen - Chess - International Master - Yugoslavia - Chess Olympiad - Leipzig - Leningrad - United States - Ohio

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Vukcevich decided on a career in science rather than chess, and in the year he moved to the United States he entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He went on to teach at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio for six years before leaving to work for General Electric where from 1989 he was Chief Scientist. He was considered for a Nobel Prize in Chemistry and published two books on science.

Related Topics:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Case Western Reserve University - Cleveland, Ohio - General Electric - Nobel Prize in Chemistry

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Vukcevich continued to play chess. In 1969 he was joint winner of the U.S. Open chess tournament with Pal Benko and Arthur Bisguier and in 1975 he finished third in the U.S. Championship ahead of Samuel Reshevsky, Robert Byrne, Benko and Bisguier among others. From 1976 to 1979 he played in the National Telephone League, scoring 16.5 from 22 games, including wins against Yasser Seirawan, Nick De Firmian, Leonid Shamkovich and Bisguier.

Related Topics:
Pal Benko - Arthur Bisguier - U.S. Championship - Samuel Reshevsky - Robert Byrne - Yasser Seirawan - Nick De Firmian - Leonid Shamkovich

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Vukcevich is better known as an author of chess problems than as a player, however, being the first American resident to be awarded the title of International Composition Grandmaster by FIDE. In 1981 he published Chess by Milan: Problems and Games of Dr. Milan R. Vukcevich and in 1998 was inducted into the US Chess Hall of Fame, becoming only the second person (after Sam Loyd) to be primarily inducted for their achievements in problem composition.

Related Topics:
Chess problem - FIDE - Sam Loyd

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Vukcevich's compositions were gathered together in My Chess Compositions (2003). He composed in all genres, including directmates, selfmates, helpmates, problems with fairy pieces and a small number of endgame studies.

Related Topics:
Directmate - Selfmate - Helpmate - Fairy pieces - Endgame studies

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Vukcevich died in 2003 in Cleveland.

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