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Edward Lasker

Edward Lasker (born Eduard Lasker) (December 3, 1885 – March 25, 1981) was a German-American chess and Go player. He was awarded the title of International Master of chess by FIDE. Lasker was an engineer by profession, and an author of books on Go, chess and checkers. Born in Prussia, he emigrated to the United States in 1914. He was distantly related to World Chess Champion Emanuel Lasker with whom he is sometimes confused.

Edward Lasker
Edward Lasker
Full nameEduard Lasker
CountryGerman Empire (before 1917)
United States (after 1917)
Born(1885-12-03)December 3, 1885
Kempen, Province of Posen, Prussia, German Empire (present-day Kępno, Poland)
DiedMarch 25, 1981(1981-03-25) (aged 95)
New York City, New York, United States
TitleInternational Master

Early life and education Edit

Lasker was born in Kempen, Province of Posen, Prussia, German Empire (present-day Kępno, Poland), the son of Sigismund Lasker and Flora Bornstein. He studied in Breslau (now Wrocław) and in Charlottenburg (now part of Berlin).

Lasker earned undergraduate degrees at the Technical College of Charlottenburg in Mechanical and Electrical Engineering, graduating in 1910.[1]

Engineering career Edit

Before World War I he moved first to London and then, in 1914 shortly after the outbreak of war, to the U.S., the birthplace of his mother. He found a job in Chicago, working for Sears & Roebuck as a safety engineer. When the United States entered the war in 1917, he was sent enlistment papers, but with the right of exemption as a German. He waived his right to exemption, which he said would make his American citizenship be granted more quickly; however, the war was over before he was called up to military service.

In 1921–23, he invented a mechanical breast pump, which saved many premature infants' lives and made Lasker much money, although it caused his friends to refer to him facetiously as "the chest player".[2][3]

Chess Edit

His chess teacher in Breslau was Arnold Schottländer. In Berlin, he won the City Championship (1909) and wrote his first chess book titled Chess Strategy (Schachstrategie, 1911) which had many English and German editions.

 
Lasker (right) with Savielly Tartakower

Lasker published several books on American checkers, chess, and Go. He won five U.S. Open Chess Championships (1916, 1917, 1919, 1920, 1921); this tournament was known at the time as the Western Open. His best result was his narrow 8½–9½ loss in a match with Frank Marshall for the U.S. Championship in 1923; this result was achieved even after Lasker had to take a postponement while leading the match due to a severe kidney stone attack.

For that, Lasker was invited to participate in the legendary New York 1924 chess tournament, a double round robin featuring such world class players as Alekhine, Efim Bogoljubov, Capablanca, Emanuel Lasker, and Réti. He finished tenth out of eleven players, but many of his games were competitive. For instance, he split with Alekhine, won games against Réti and Savielly Tartakower, both of whom were Top 10 in the world at the time according to the estimated rankings of the website Chessmetrics.com, drew Capablanca and drew a famous game against Emanuel Lasker.

This game was truly extraordinary, as the former World Champion lost a pronounced advantage and was only able to hold the draw against Edward by demonstrating that the inferior side can hold the draw in certain types of endings of rook and knight pawn versus a lone knight. The game lasted 103 moves and changed endgame theory, as no one had demonstrated this particular draw before in theory or practice. Lasker was the only chess amateur in the very strong field of professionals.

His most famous game is probably the queen sacrifice and king hunt against Sir George Thomas.[4] After Lasker checkmated him, Thomas said, "This was very nice." Lasker, who had yet to learn English, was touched by Thomas's sportsmanship after a spectator translated Thomas's remark into German for him. Lasker wrote that had he won the game against a leading Berlin amateur, his opponent would likely have told him, "You are just lucky! Had I played [10...Bxe5] instead of [...Qe7], you would have been lost."[5]

Although Lasker never won against Capablanca, he drew as Black against him at the 1924 New York tournament.[6] Lasker was not usually so fortunate; for example, Capablanca once arrived one minute before he would have forfeited the game for late arrival, at New York 1915, and Lasker played the Riga variation of the Ruy Lopez with which he had some experience, but Capablanca found an advantageous continuation over the board.[7]

Go Edit

Lasker was deeply impressed by Go. He first read about it in a magazine article by Oskar Korschelt which suggested Go as a rival to chess, a claim that he found amusing.[8] Later on his interest was piqued again when he noticed the record of a Go game on the back of a Japanese newspaper being read by a customer of a cafe where they played chess.[9]

He and his friend Dr. Max Lange (1883–1923) – not to be confused with the more famous 19th-century chess master Max Lange – took the paper after he had left, and deciphered the diagram, but the game was not complete. The position led them to assume that the notation under the game would indicate a Black victory, but being unable to read Japanese, they had to ask another Japanese customer at the cafe. To their surprise, it was a resignation by Black. Only after three weeks of study was Max Lange able to understand the reason for White's victory. This experience led them to a deeper appreciation for the game, and they studied it in earnest, but were unable to interest other chess players.[10]

After two years, Emanuel Lasker, then the world chess champion, returned to Germany from the United States. When Edward told him that he had found a game to rival chess, he was skeptical, but after being told the rules, and playing one game, he understood that Go was strategically deep. They started studying Go with Yasugoro Kitabatake, a Japanese student, and after two years were able to beat him with no handicap.[11]

Kitabatake arranged a game for Edward, Emanuel, and Emanuel's brother Berthold, against a visiting Japanese mathematician, and strong Go player. The Laskers took a nine-stone handicap, and played in consultation with each other, considering their moves deeply, but their opponent beat them effortlessly and without taking much time to think. After the game, Emanuel suggested to Edward that they travel to Tokyo to study Go. In 1911, Edward got a job at AEG. After a year at the company, he tried to get transferred to the Tokyo office, but as the company only posted fluent English speakers in Tokyo, he went to work in England first.

Edward was detained there during the early part of World War I and never made it to Tokyo. He was, however, given permission to travel to the United States by Sir William Haldane-Porter, who was head of what would become the UK Immigration Service. Haldane-Porter remembered that Lasker had won the London chess championship in May 1914 and he had personally witnessed Edward's famous game against George Alan Thomas that same year. Edward Lasker was instrumental in developing Go in the U.S., and together with Karl Davis Robinson and Lee Hartman founded the American Go Association.

In 1971, Nihon Ki-in awarded him the Okura Prize for international promotion of Go.

Personal life Edit

Lasker lived on the Upper West Side (153 East 37th Street) of New York City until his death in 1981. He was friends with former World Champion Emanuel Lasker. Edward wrote in his memoirs of the New York 1924 tournament as published in the March 1974 edition of Chess Life magazine: "I did not discover that we were actually related until he (Emanuel Lasker) told me shortly before his death that someone had shown him a Lasker family tree on one of whose branches I was dangling."[citation needed]

In a February 8, 1973 letter to Robert B. Long, Lasker explained their exact relationship:[12]

The genealogy, incidentally, indicates that the common forbear of Emanuel and myself was the son Samuel Lasker of the Rabbi of the Polish village Łask, whose name was originally Meier Hindels. However, later the additional name Lasker was given to him to distinguish him from another Meier Hindels also living in Lask. Samuel Lasker moved to another Polish village, Kępno, in 1769, after it had been captured by Frederick the Great and became a German township, and I am the last descendant of his who was born there. He was the great-grandfather of my great-grandfather. His first-born son left Kepmen [sic-Kempen] and moved to Jarotschin, another Polish village, and Emanuel Lasker was that one's greatgrandson.

If true, this made Edward and Emanuel third cousins twice removed.

Lasker was the uncle of the cellist and Holocaust survivor Anita Lasker-Wallfisch; her father Alfons was Edward Lasker's brother.[13]

Bibliography Edit

  • Chess Strategy 1915 (second edition)
  • Chess and Checkers: the Way to Mastership 1918
  • Go and Go-Moku, 1934 (2nd ed. 1960).
  • Chess for Fun and Chess for Blood, 1942 (2nd ed.), ISBN 0-486-20146-5.
  • The Adventure of Chess, 1949 (2nd ed. 1959), ISBN 0-486-20510-X.
  • Chess Secrets I Learned from the Masters (semi-autobiographical and instructional) (1951, 1969) ISBN 0-486-22266-7.
  • Chess: The Complete Self-Tutor (1972, Algebraic Version 1997 with John Nunn) ISBN 0-7134-8160-9.

Notable games Edit

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Position after 10...Qe7
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Final position after 18.Kd2#

This is Lasker's most famous game, and one of the most famous games of all time.

Lasker vs. Sir George Thomas, London 1912 (offhand clock game):[14]
1. d4 e6 2. Nf3 f5 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. Bg5 Be7 5. Bxf6 Bxf6 6. e4 fxe4 7. Nxe4 b6 8. Ne5 0-0 9. Bd3 Bb7 10. Qh5 Qe7 (first diagram) 10...Bxe5! 11.Qxe5 Nc6 or 11.dxe5 Rf5 wins a pawn.[15] 11. Qxh7+!! Kxh7 12. Nxf6+ Kh6 If 12...Kh8 13.Ng6#. 13. Neg4+ Kg5 14. h4+ 14.f4+ also forces mate, more rapidly if 14...Kxf4 15.g3+ Kg5 16.h4# or 15...Kf3 16.0-0#. 14... Kf4 15. g3+ Kf3 16. Be2+ 16.0-0 or 16.Kf1, with the threat 17.Nh2# as a quicker mate. 16... Kg2 17. Rh2+ Kg1 18. Kd2# 1–0[4][16] An alternative mating move was 18.0-0-0#, and 17.0-0-0 would also mate in one with 18.Rdg1#, regardless of Black's response.[17]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ The Bobby Fischer I Knew And Other Stories, by Arnold Denker and Larry Parr, 1995, Hypermodern Press, San Francisco; see chapter 'A Knight in Shining Armour'
  2. ^ Edward Lasker, Chess Secrets I Learned from the Masters, David McKay, 1951, pp. 249–50.
  3. ^ Patent No. 1,644,257 issued by U.S. Patent Office 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ a b "Edward Lasker vs George Alan Thomas (1912) Fatal Attraction". Chessgames.com. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  5. ^ Lasker 1951, pp. 149–50.
  6. ^ "Edward Lasker vs Jose Raul Capablanca (1924)". Chessgames.com. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  7. ^ "Jose Raul Capablanca vs Edward Lasker (1915)". Chessgames.com. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  8. ^ Go Monthly Review 1961/7, p. 51, article by Lasker From My "Go" Career
  9. ^ "World Chess Hall of Fame to Induct Four New Jewish Members". 28 February 2017.
  10. ^ "Edward Lasker at Sensei's Library".
  11. ^ "How Go Came to America".
  12. ^ Edward Winter, Chess Explorations, Cadogan Chess, p. 173 (quoting Lasker and His Contemporaries, No. 3, p. 119); ISBN 1-85744-171-0. The bracketed sic was apparently added by Winter.
  13. ^ Lasker-Wallfisch, Anita (18 July 2012). Inherit the Truth 1939-1945: The Documented Experiences of a Survivor of Auschwitz and Belsen (Kindle ed.). London: Giles de la Mare Publishers. p. Loc 144/3367. ISBN 9781900357371.
  14. ^ The players played under the stipulation that neither player could exceed his opponent's time by more than five minutes at any stage of the game. "Thus, if one of the contestants plays leisurely, the other can also take his time. But a player who plays fast, compels his adversary to follow suit." Lasker 1951, p. 148.
  15. ^ Edward Lasker, Chess for Fun and Chess for Blood, Dover Publications, 1962, p. 120.
  16. ^ There are several alternate scores to this game, including one Edward himself provided for a 1962 issue of Chess Life. This is the score as written at the time the game was played, as per https://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/laskerthomas.html
  17. ^ Lasker, Edward (June 1962). "Fifty Years Ago" (PDF). Chess Life. United States Chess Federation.

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

  • Works by Edward Lasker at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Edward Lasker at Internet Archive
  • Excerpt from "My Go Career" By Dr. Edward Lasker (Go review 1961, No. 9)
  • Edward Winter, Chaos in a Miniature
  • , a history of the American Go Association
  • How Go came to America

edward, lasker, businessman, businessman, born, eduard, lasker, december, 1885, march, 1981, german, american, chess, player, awarded, title, international, master, chess, fide, lasker, engineer, profession, author, books, chess, checkers, born, prussia, emigr. For the businessman see Edward Lasker businessman Edward Lasker born Eduard Lasker December 3 1885 March 25 1981 was a German American chess and Go player He was awarded the title of International Master of chess by FIDE Lasker was an engineer by profession and an author of books on Go chess and checkers Born in Prussia he emigrated to the United States in 1914 He was distantly related to World Chess Champion Emanuel Lasker with whom he is sometimes confused Edward LaskerEdward LaskerFull nameEduard LaskerCountryGerman Empire before 1917 United States after 1917 Born 1885 12 03 December 3 1885Kempen Province of Posen Prussia German Empire present day Kepno Poland DiedMarch 25 1981 1981 03 25 aged 95 New York City New York United StatesTitleInternational Master Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Engineering career 3 Chess 4 Go 5 Personal life 6 Bibliography 7 Notable games 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and education EditLasker was born in Kempen Province of Posen Prussia German Empire present day Kepno Poland the son of Sigismund Lasker and Flora Bornstein He studied in Breslau now Wroclaw and in Charlottenburg now part of Berlin Lasker earned undergraduate degrees at the Technical College of Charlottenburg in Mechanical and Electrical Engineering graduating in 1910 1 Engineering career EditBefore World War I he moved first to London and then in 1914 shortly after the outbreak of war to the U S the birthplace of his mother He found a job in Chicago working for Sears amp Roebuck as a safety engineer When the United States entered the war in 1917 he was sent enlistment papers but with the right of exemption as a German He waived his right to exemption which he said would make his American citizenship be granted more quickly however the war was over before he was called up to military service In 1921 23 he invented a mechanical breast pump which saved many premature infants lives and made Lasker much money although it caused his friends to refer to him facetiously as the chest player 2 3 Chess EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Edward Lasker news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message His chess teacher in Breslau was Arnold Schottlander In Berlin he won the City Championship 1909 and wrote his first chess book titled Chess Strategy Schachstrategie 1911 which had many English and German editions nbsp Lasker right with Savielly TartakowerLasker published several books on American checkers chess and Go He won five U S Open Chess Championships 1916 1917 1919 1920 1921 this tournament was known at the time as the Western Open His best result was his narrow 8 9 loss in a match with Frank Marshall for the U S Championship in 1923 this result was achieved even after Lasker had to take a postponement while leading the match due to a severe kidney stone attack For that Lasker was invited to participate in the legendary New York 1924 chess tournament a double round robin featuring such world class players as Alekhine Efim Bogoljubov Capablanca Emanuel Lasker and Reti He finished tenth out of eleven players but many of his games were competitive For instance he split with Alekhine won games against Reti and Savielly Tartakower both of whom were Top 10 in the world at the time according to the estimated rankings of the website Chessmetrics com drew Capablanca and drew a famous game against Emanuel Lasker This game was truly extraordinary as the former World Champion lost a pronounced advantage and was only able to hold the draw against Edward by demonstrating that the inferior side can hold the draw in certain types of endings of rook and knight pawn versus a lone knight The game lasted 103 moves and changed endgame theory as no one had demonstrated this particular draw before in theory or practice Lasker was the only chess amateur in the very strong field of professionals His most famous game is probably the queen sacrifice and king hunt against Sir George Thomas 4 After Lasker checkmated him Thomas said This was very nice Lasker who had yet to learn English was touched by Thomas s sportsmanship after a spectator translated Thomas s remark into German for him Lasker wrote that had he won the game against a leading Berlin amateur his opponent would likely have told him You are just lucky Had I played 10 Bxe5 instead of Qe7 you would have been lost 5 Although Lasker never won against Capablanca he drew as Black against him at the 1924 New York tournament 6 Lasker was not usually so fortunate for example Capablanca once arrived one minute before he would have forfeited the game for late arrival at New York 1915 and Lasker played the Riga variation of the Ruy Lopez with which he had some experience but Capablanca found an advantageous continuation over the board 7 Go EditLasker was deeply impressed by Go He first read about it in a magazine article by Oskar Korschelt which suggested Go as a rival to chess a claim that he found amusing 8 Later on his interest was piqued again when he noticed the record of a Go game on the back of a Japanese newspaper being read by a customer of a cafe where they played chess 9 He and his friend Dr Max Lange 1883 1923 not to be confused with the more famous 19th century chess master Max Lange took the paper after he had left and deciphered the diagram but the game was not complete The position led them to assume that the notation under the game would indicate a Black victory but being unable to read Japanese they had to ask another Japanese customer at the cafe To their surprise it was a resignation by Black Only after three weeks of study was Max Lange able to understand the reason for White s victory This experience led them to a deeper appreciation for the game and they studied it in earnest but were unable to interest other chess players 10 After two years Emanuel Lasker then the world chess champion returned to Germany from the United States When Edward told him that he had found a game to rival chess he was skeptical but after being told the rules and playing one game he understood that Go was strategically deep They started studying Go with Yasugoro Kitabatake a Japanese student and after two years were able to beat him with no handicap 11 Kitabatake arranged a game for Edward Emanuel and Emanuel s brother Berthold against a visiting Japanese mathematician and strong Go player The Laskers took a nine stone handicap and played in consultation with each other considering their moves deeply but their opponent beat them effortlessly and without taking much time to think After the game Emanuel suggested to Edward that they travel to Tokyo to study Go In 1911 Edward got a job at AEG After a year at the company he tried to get transferred to the Tokyo office but as the company only posted fluent English speakers in Tokyo he went to work in England first Edward was detained there during the early part of World War I and never made it to Tokyo He was however given permission to travel to the United States by Sir William Haldane Porter who was head of what would become the UK Immigration Service Haldane Porter remembered that Lasker had won the London chess championship in May 1914 and he had personally witnessed Edward s famous game against George Alan Thomas that same year Edward Lasker was instrumental in developing Go in the U S and together with Karl Davis Robinson and Lee Hartman founded the American Go Association In 1971 Nihon Ki in awarded him the Okura Prize for international promotion of Go Personal life EditLasker lived on the Upper West Side 153 East 37th Street of New York City until his death in 1981 He was friends with former World Champion Emanuel Lasker Edward wrote in his memoirs of the New York 1924 tournament as published in the March 1974 edition of Chess Life magazine I did not discover that we were actually related until he Emanuel Lasker told me shortly before his death that someone had shown him a Lasker family tree on one of whose branches I was dangling citation needed In a February 8 1973 letter to Robert B Long Lasker explained their exact relationship 12 The genealogy incidentally indicates that the common forbear of Emanuel and myself was the son Samuel Lasker of the Rabbi of the Polish village Lask whose name was originally Meier Hindels However later the additional name Lasker was given to him to distinguish him from another Meier Hindels also living in Lask Samuel Lasker moved to another Polish village Kepno in 1769 after it had been captured by Frederick the Great and became a German township and I am the last descendant of his who was born there He was the great grandfather of my great grandfather His first born son left Kepmen sic Kempen and moved to Jarotschin another Polish village and Emanuel Lasker was that one s greatgrandson If true this made Edward and Emanuel third cousins twice removed Lasker was the uncle of the cellist and Holocaust survivor Anita Lasker Wallfisch her father Alfons was Edward Lasker s brother 13 Bibliography EditChess Strategy 1915 second edition Chess and Checkers the Way to Mastership 1918 Go and Go Moku 1934 2nd ed 1960 Chess for Fun and Chess for Blood 1942 2nd ed ISBN 0 486 20146 5 The Adventure of Chess 1949 2nd ed 1959 ISBN 0 486 20510 X Chess Secrets I Learned from the Masters semi autobiographical and instructional 1951 1969 ISBN 0 486 22266 7 Chess The Complete Self Tutor 1972 Algebraic Version 1997 with John Nunn ISBN 0 7134 8160 9 Notable games EditThis section uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition after 10 Qe7 abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghFinal position after 18 Kd2 This is Lasker s most famous game and one of the most famous games of all time Lasker vs Sir George Thomas London 1912 offhand clock game 14 1 d4 e6 2 Nf3 f5 3 Nc3 Nf6 4 Bg5 Be7 5 Bxf6 Bxf6 6 e4 fxe4 7 Nxe4 b6 8 Ne5 0 0 9 Bd3 Bb7 10 Qh5 Qe7 first diagram 10 Bxe5 11 Qxe5 Nc6 or 11 dxe5 Rf5 wins a pawn 15 11 Qxh7 Kxh7 12 Nxf6 Kh6 If 12 Kh8 13 Ng6 13 Neg4 Kg5 14 h4 14 f4 also forces mate more rapidly if 14 Kxf4 15 g3 Kg5 16 h4 or 15 Kf3 16 0 0 14 Kf4 15 g3 Kf3 16 Be2 16 0 0 or 16 Kf1 with the threat 17 Nh2 as a quicker mate 16 Kg2 17 Rh2 Kg1 18 Kd2 1 0 4 16 An alternative mating move was 18 0 0 0 and 17 0 0 0 would also mate in one with 18 Rdg1 regardless of Black s response 17 See also EditList of chess games List of Jewish chess playersReferences Edit The Bobby Fischer I Knew And Other Stories by Arnold Denker and Larry Parr 1995 Hypermodern Press San Francisco see chapter A Knight in Shining Armour Edward Lasker Chess Secrets I Learned from the Masters David McKay 1951 pp 249 50 Patent No 1 644 257 issued by U S Patent Office Archived 2007 09 28 at the Wayback Machine a b Edward Lasker vs George Alan Thomas 1912 Fatal Attraction Chessgames com Retrieved 8 April 2018 Lasker 1951 pp 149 50 Edward Lasker vs Jose Raul Capablanca 1924 Chessgames com Retrieved 8 April 2018 Jose Raul Capablanca vs Edward Lasker 1915 Chessgames com Retrieved 8 April 2018 Go Monthly Review 1961 7 p 51 article by Lasker From My Go Career World Chess Hall of Fame to Induct Four New Jewish Members 28 February 2017 Edward Lasker at Sensei s Library How Go Came to America Edward Winter Chess Explorations Cadogan Chess p 173 quoting Lasker and His Contemporaries No 3 p 119 ISBN 1 85744 171 0 The bracketed sic was apparently added by Winter Lasker Wallfisch Anita 18 July 2012 Inherit the Truth 1939 1945 The Documented Experiences of a Survivor of Auschwitz and Belsen Kindle ed London Giles de la Mare Publishers p Loc 144 3367 ISBN 9781900357371 The players played under the stipulation that neither player could exceed his opponent s time by more than five minutes at any stage of the game Thus if one of the contestants plays leisurely the other can also take his time But a player who plays fast compels his adversary to follow suit Lasker 1951 p 148 Edward Lasker Chess for Fun and Chess for Blood Dover Publications 1962 p 120 There are several alternate scores to this game including one Edward himself provided for a 1962 issue of Chess Life This is the score as written at the time the game was played as per https www chesshistory com winter extra laskerthomas html Lasker Edward June 1962 Fifty Years Ago PDF Chess Life United States Chess Federation Further reading EditLasker Edward 1917 Chess Strategy David McKay Company External links EditWorks by Edward Lasker at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Edward Lasker at Internet Archive Excerpt from My Go Career By Dr Edward Lasker Go review 1961 No 9 Edward Winter Chaos in a Miniature Go in America a history of the American Go Association How Go came to America Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edward Lasker amp oldid 1176602139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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