Updated: 21 July 2022.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Farrago.
Tucked away within the hallowed halls of Melbourne University lies the state championships of a little known sport of squobing winks and flicking squidgers, which brings to the table a rich serving of Australia’s international sporting history.
The game? Tiddlywinks. This year’s state championships boasted 16 of Victoria’s best teams battling it out for a spot at the national championships, which will be held at Melbourne University in October of this year.
The rules are simple: The game is played in teams of 2 who are placed diagonally opposite each other around a table. Sets of small discs called “winks” lie on a flat mat. But the fun doesn’t end there. According to the Wikipedia, “Players use a larger disc called a “squidger” to pop a wink into flight by pressing down on one side of the wink. The objective of the game is to cause the winks to land either on top of opponents’ winks, or ultimately inside a pot or cup.” Tiddlywinks was first played in the parlours of England in 1888 and has managed to survive two world wars, the onset of globalisation and the eruption of mount Eyjafjallajökull.
This year Andrew “more work?” Rowse and Shane “require additional lumber” Peirce defeated the previous champions Timothy “righto” Czydel and Jason “godlike” Ratcliffe in a thrilling final. The two winning elite athletes have since had their names proudly inscribed upon the book of State Champions by the internationally recognised adjudicator Willow “Job Done” Wilson. While this tournament has been concluded it is good to know that such obscure sports continue to flourish in the nurturing environment of the University of Melbourne.
This year’s competition showed a strong adherence to traditions created with the tournament’s INCEPTION (great movie). These traditions are varied and many but some of the more common include a traditional drink (port) and a requirement for formal dress. There are also specifications for the tournament equipment, including a requirement for red, moulded plastic pots, and for the winks to be hand crafted in Italy. A tradition particular to this tournament was the use of the original mat first purchased for the very first Victorian State Tiddlywinks Championships.
Stephanie “wicked sick” Field and Devrim “monster kill” van Dijk both competed in the Tiddlywinks state finals and did terribly.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Carleton This Week.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Carleton University press release.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Cannon.
- The lego blocks fall with the tinker toys,
- Toy cars sit idle, parked in no special order.
- Tiddlywinks line the floor in a profusion of colour.
- On the wall to wall carpet of clutter.
Humor newspaper
Toggle showing 15 tiddlywinks references for Toike Oike.
This year the Engineering Athletic Association is adopting a new policy designed to inform everyone of who does what in the Athletic Association. Each member of the Athletic Association will be responsible for a group of sports. The member’s name and phone number will be listed on a poster in the Little Red Skule House, and along side his name will be the names and phone numbers of all managers looking after the various teams which are playing the particular sport with which the member is concerned. As a result, any star tiddly-wink player from Timbucthree will be able to locate the person directly concerned with his respective sport, and will be suitably put to work earning points for dear old S.P.S.
"Bridge isn’t so bad after all”, she announced. “I can ee now why you are such an addict. So, just to please you, I invited the X’s back to our place to-morrow night for another evening exactly like this one. It should really be fun. Oh, by the way, could I have ten dollars so that we could serve them a light lunch?"
What a catastrophe! My strategy backfired—weeks of planning down the drain—years of agony lying ahead.
Anyone for tiddlywinks?
Yes, we recommend the immediate abolishment of all sadistic blood-letting hockey, basketball, skiing, sports, such as football, and tiddlywinks. Now that football has definitely proved detrimental to health, heart, and pigs, we feel that immediate legislation is required to make playing these sports a felony.
Do you realize that not one hockey player over ten years old has his own teeth? Although dentists may find this encouraging, we do not.
Rod McCormack - III Chemical
Qualifications- Participation in all body contact sports for 8 years including lovin’.
Platform- “More support for all athletics sports from tiddleywinks up”.
Toronto: Toike Oike exclusive.
[sic original="Its" correct="It's"] happened! The Engineering Society Tiddly Wink (Unbeaten in International Competition) Team is pleased to announce that the Engineering Society Tiddly Wink Championship Marathon World Record Attempt will be on Jan. 19, 20, and 21 at the Towne and Countrye Square. Eight illustrious squidgers will be tiddlying for over 58 hours, to set a new world's record in squidging and squopping. At present the record is held by squalid squidgers at Waterloo, who eked out a measly 56 hours a few months ago.
The Eng. Soc. in typical form has a real bash planned to celebrate this record attempt. At the Towne and Countrye Square (situated at Young and Steeles) There will be yelling, screaming, tiddlying, the L.G.M.B., CTV, and a cast of thousands. Associate memberships will be sold by beautiful blondes and brunettes, all proceeds going to the Heart Fund.
Everyone at U of T is invited to attend, and Arts-women are especially wel-come. Food, and people will help encourage these illustrious participants to break the record and bring honour lo U of T, and glory to the sport of tiddly winks.
To give a hand, to the tiddlers and to the Heart Fund, be there at six o'clock on Sat. Jan. 21, when the record will be broken. Everyone will be there.
Letter to the editor from Bryon Alexandroff
- The Editor,
- Varsity Newspaper,
- 91 St. George St.,
- Toronto, Ontario
Dear Sir:
I would like to comment upon the calibre of the Varsity's reporting (or lack of reporting), with regards to relevant news items around campus.
Recently (the weekend of Jan. 21st), the Engineering Society’s Tiddly Winks Team shattered the University of Waterloo's record of 56 hours, and established a new world's record ol 67 hours, of non-stop, non-sleep, non-[sic original="drup"] tiddlywinking. This all took place at the Towne & Countrye Square, North Toronto. Four players who went 56 hours, are Barry Corbin (I MPC), Mel Solmon (I APSC), Bob Osborne (I APSC) and Doc Lavelle (I APSC). The four players who went the record of 67 hours are myself, Al Laucke (I APSC), Ken Clarke (I APSC) and Paul Zutautus (I APSC). Obviously, the Varsity has little or no interest in the fact that the University of Toronto hosts a world championship team. Also, it is obvious that the Varsity wishes to deprive this knowledge from the rest of the University—but does the Varsity also discount the importance of the Heart Fund!!!
The team sold honorary associate memberships at the Shopping Plaza, with all proceeds going to the Heart Fund. We then decided to do the same at the University. Since we received little support from the students, due to lack of publicity before the marathon, we felt that possibly the Varsity would rectify this oversight, by making it known, that the team would be selling memberships on campus. The Varsity again refused to publicize this effort.
Since this world championship event was covered by CTV, CHUM, CKFH, CBC (Sports a Go-Go) and several local newspapers, it is difficult to understand why we received no coverage in the Varsity. Are we to assume that the Varsity is not interested in aiding a campus group, in raising money for a worthy charity such as the Heart Fund?
We hope that you will print this letter, and let the University population know that:
- They have a World's Championship Tiddlywink team.
- Even Prince Phillip recognized this marathon, and wished us his best, in the form of a personal letter.
- The team is still selling honorary associate memberships on campus, this week.
- The Tiddlywink team is not 'MAD' at the Varsity.
Yours respectfully,
Bryon Alexandroff (I APSC)
Listing of Toike Oike editors
Tiddlywinks Editors… Byron & Elaine
In a recent dispatch from England I learned much to my delight, that the 67 hour tiddlywinks marathon that was held last January will be published as a new world's record in the Guiness Book of Records—'67 edition. Congratulations to all participants.—Balex
Listing of editors of the Toike Oike newspaper
Tiddled Wink… Bryon Alexandroff
The Engineering tiddlywinks team is well known all over the campus for their world-shattering, record-breaking, 67 hour non-stop, non sleep tiddlywink marathon held at a shopping plaza last January. Because of their fantastic achievement last year the Engineer's team has been invited to represent the University of Toronto at the North American Championships October 27-29 at the University of Waterloo. The team will be playing with other groups from U.C.L.A., M.I.T., Harvard, Cornell, etc. (ivy league, eh). There is only one hitch. 8 players of the highest calibre must be chosen to participate at Waterloo for the North American Championship. This is for real! If the Engineering team is successful they will advance to the world championship in London against Oxford later on next year. Leave your name and qualifications at the Engineering Stores in an envelope addressed to 'Balex' as soon as possible. Don’t be shy!! We need every winker.
The Tiddlywink Team Meeting scheduled for Nov. 23 at 8:00 p.m. in Room 76 at New College has been changed to Dec. 7 same time, same place. All those interested in travelling to New York and playing the game call Balex RU. 3-9203.
The university of Toronto Tiddlywink team is again travelling to bring goodwill to winkers all over the world. This time a group of eight carefully chosen team members are travellling to Cornell University to play against the Ivy League Universltles down under. Harvard. Cornell, M.I.T., Cambridge and Waterloo utheran will be repsented at the Continental Championships December 6,7, 8. Team members Bryon Alexandroff, Mel Solmon, Lindsa Horenblas, Barry Corbin, Glen Kezwer, Don Sheldon, Paul Milgram, Arthur Slutsky and road manager Mark [sic original="Mandlsohn"] will try to capture the North American title. The winning team will travel to Europe to play in the World Championships in the Spring. Just as a small note; the endurance record of 678 hours nonstop winking was broken last month in England by three hours. The University of Toronto team is now looking for people who wish to stay awake and beat that record sometime in February. Please submit names to the Engineering stores. Godiva winks too.
In the closing minutes of the game, despair and hope were etched on the faces of the combatants. Nerves were taut. Each little nerve ending tingled. The feel of warm felt (Farsity recommends fur) against the skin sent the players into paroxysms of ecstasy. The Trawna U. Tiddlewinders were within inches (6 inches to be exact) of scoring; a major triumph. Once again they would be bringing the bacon home. The Clawed T. Bizzel Memorial Cup and Bed Pan Trophy would return to Trawna.
A squop, a wink, and two pots would end it all for another year. Months of hard work and training would culminate in bringing the whole team to a successful [sic original="climas" correct="climax"] (on the table?). After the presentation of the Bizzel Cup, we talked with the head coach of the Blews, serving his second year with the team (previous conviction 1 year for procuring). He told us of his hopes and frustrations, to which we suggested he try Freud. Eventually, he told us about the team.
"Our players are in training for the complete summer, going through a rigorous program of exercise, so that their fingers are in truly fine shape. We have some of the finest fingermen in the [sic original="cuntry" intended]. They also spend 4 hours a day on the pot squidging and desquopping. We believe that the team that plays together stays together. Our only problem now is that they are playing a little too much together.
Our summer training camp was held in Montreal this year at Norm Silver’s Moustache. The ever present talent scouts were on hand to pick up their draft choices (Labatt’s and Molson’s on tap). With the expansion of the NTNL there is a great demand for our Tiddlers. The members of our team have always risen to the occasion. Sometimes they rise for no occasion at all.
"During the regular game schedule the team is under a strict set of rules. With a 10 pm curfew, no drinking (after 1 am) and no smoking (within nose shot of a narc), life is austere. The two female members of our team though, are reall ygreat. Like I said before, our team eats, sleeps and plays together. The guys have voted them most valuable players for the last two years.
This reporter can only say that he was truly amazed. The techniques displayed by the team were fantastic. Some of their positions and methods are so revolutionary that they have not been chromi-called anywhere (which if you have read the Kama Sutra is really astounding). It was really heart rending to see the team jump the table (eh!) at the beginning of the second half shouting "Pot one for the old Gipper!".
It was a hot and blustery night. A shot rang out. Fftt! Ahhh! The bullfrogs were at it in the patch. The tiddly winked. (In the second paragraph I draw all this together).
[sic original="Sommerville"correct="Somerville"] (Boston) walked off with the North American Continentals with consistent playing that racked up 144 points before the [sic original="weakened" pun-on="weekend"] was over. MIT seconded the effort with 136 points in all; Toronto squapped in on a Sleazy 132 points. Rounding out the scoreboard were Philadelphia (111) and Cornell (104). Waterloo the only other Canadian team to enter the finals were eliminated early Saturday morning (23-40) by Philadelphia (Hythnlbtwoc)[.]
“B” teams included a class of 6th graders from Harlem, and a class from Regis (girls school near MIT), the MIT “B” and Cornell "B” teams.
Toronto now ranks as the top Canadian tiddlywinkers team ahead of Carleton, McGill, and Waterloo.
The next official tournament by the North American Tiddly Winks Association is scheduled for the 1st week of May in Ottawa with an Open Pairs Tournament (for more information contact Byron Alexandroff (783-9207)). It is hoped that Pierre Trudeau will wink-off.
Below is a partial listing of what may be done with cockroaches.
14) WASP tiddly winks
Official magazine
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for University of Toronto Magazine.
Toggle showing 33 tiddlywinks references for The Varsity.
To the Editor,
The Farcity:
I would like to recommend that you abolish the Art, Music and Drama page of The Farcity. The AM and D department serves no useful purpose in the paper and uses up space which could be used to much better advantage by the Sport's department.
With this extra space the Sports department could cover such important things as the Smart House Poker league, the House Ec Chess team, and Interfaculty Tiddlywinks.
But such is life. True heroes are never appreciated. Take me, for example. I was first string left tiddle on our high school Tiddley Winks team, and they haven't even announced varsity tryouts (in two years yet). But my day will come. I'm still keeping in practice by regular elbow bending lin the buttery, of course).
"I've been going to college long enough to learn how to be a good wife. I can discuss all things from tiddlywinks to deep dark secrets, can sing, dance, play the ukelele, chesterfield rugger, and other little things with great skill… I'm just the light-hearted kind of blonde you'd like to while away your time with—and your money. Measurements: 24 waist and 20-20 eyes—Yours in anticipation!
Signed, Lovesick Lizzy.""
Varsity had intended dressing trainer Howie Ringham for the game until it was discovered that he is an ex-professional tiddleywink player and therefore ineligible.
The company of "Katy Cruel", University College's musical show last night hurled a challene at the staff of the All-Varsity Revue "Christopher Jones".
The challenge, to contests of tiddley-winks and chess reads as follows:
"We, the people of Katy Cruel, being of sound mind and body, do hereby challenge the sound people of Christopher Jones to a public match of tiddley-winks and chess; the sound of mind to play chess, and the sound of body to play tiddly-winks.
"The place is to be the King Cole Room at at the hour of 11 p.m. on Tuesday the fifteenth day of December.
"The rules of chess will be those as originally formulated by the Chinese, while the rules of tiddly-winks will be based on the precedents created in Cambridge University versus the Duke of Edinburgh, represented by the Goons."
Christopher Jones state in their reply, "We the people of Christopher Jones, being of sounder mind and hardier constitution, accept this challenge from the people of Katy Cruel, provided that it is understood that we also use King Cole Room for its original purpose."
Several University of Toronto students waged a battle Royal in a darkened corner of the King Cole Room before Christmas.
The battlefield was a tiddly-wink board and a chess board, and the combattants were members of the University College production of "Katy Cruel" and the AVR show "Christopher Jones".
Both sides finally acknowledged tiddly-winks could not be mastered, although the cardboard game box said "a game for children from to 10".
Bill Davis, director of "Katy Cruel", managed to defeat Paul Robinson, orchestra leader of "Christopher Jones" at chess.
Commented Robinson later: "It wasn't fair. I was at a disadvantage. I couldn't see."
"Lew Solmon engaged Kyle Boumanis in a game of Tiddly Winks, and Al Oenov olso engaged In the sporting activity by sharpening pencils.
It's always great to have Johnny Metras' teams playing at Varsity, whether it is football, basketball or tiddely winks. The Old Man, as he is affectionately called, is the Casey Stengel of our intercollegiate league (no reflection on Johnny's age). If we're to beat anybody, the fans and players are at their happiest if it's one of Metras' teams. It's always better to beat the top dog.
The concluding event of the weekend will be a SAC party, with, forsooth, a bevy of U of T co-eds acting as hostesses. It is not known whether the Harvard men have sufficiently recuperated from their late loss to Oxford so that a tiddliwinks match may be arranged, but one may possibly occur on Toronto's retaliatory visit to Harvard.
The early hours of the morning find the men of McNeill House residence at Queen's University intently practising a gambit which could prove a deciding factor in inter-varsity tiddly-winking.
Oh—not again.
Please, tiddlyers, stay away from Toronto; we're mod enough as it is.
Repent! Return our tiddly winks—all six sets by midnight Sunday, November 21st, or else we shall wax exceedingly wrathful.
McLean House
In other business council also: [...]
heard a letter from the University of Waterloo challenging U of T to a series of tiddly-winks matches.
With the New Year upon us it is once again time to crank up the typewriter and polish the crystal to find out what will happen in the months to come. This is a service of The Varsity sports department designed to allow students to set aside their worries about the world in general and Varsity Blues in particular to concentrate on more important endeavours such as essays and exams.
No doubt, faculty members will pass a motion commending The Varsity for this service. Neverthless, the service will probably continue—and that can qualify as the first prediction of the new year. [...]
The board of governors of the Ontario-Quebec Athletic Association will announce formation of the Senior Intercollegiate Tiddleywinks League.
The Tiddlywink team of the University of Waterloo has won the Canadian Tiddlywink championship with a crushing 86-26 victory over an out-classed squad from Waterloo Lutheran University.
The Waterloo team was formed last fall and immediately wrote to SAC, challenging U of T to form a team and compete for the national title. However, for undisclosed reasons, the powers of SAC refused to squop winks with Waterloo.
The Waterloo club is affiliated with the English Tiddlywink Association and the International Federation of Tiddlywink Associations.
It hopes to challenge for the world Tiddlywink title and the coveted Silver Wink trophy donated by Prince Philip. Both awards are currently held by Oxford University.
Tiddlywinks only mentioned in subheadline
The Engineering Society Tiddlywinks Club will hold a marathon in the Towne and Countrye Square Mall, January 19-21.
Eight participants will try to break the 56-hour record held by the University of Waterloo, and continue toward a centennial-minded 67 hours.
The purpose of the marathon is to practice for the world tiddlywinks championships at the U of W in late February.
The club is selling memberships to interested honor students to raise money for the Heart Fund.
The Engineering Society's 67-hour tiddley-wink mara-thon has been confirmed as an offical world record.
Pat Bonham, secretary of the English Tiddley-winks Association, confirmed the record in a letter to the Engineers' [sic original="Brian" correct="Bryan"] Alexandroff.Mr. Bonham said he will attempt to have the record published in the Guinness Book of Records.
The University of Toronto tiddlywink team will travel to Waterloo Friday for this weekend's North American tiddlywink championship competitions.
They will meet competitors from Cornell University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Columbia University and Waterloo University for the North America Cup.
The victors will fly to England early next year to play Oxford for the world title. The prize there is the Silver Wink, donated by Prince Philip.
Earlier this year the U of T team set a world tiddlywink record by staying at the game 67 hours. This will be registered in the [sic original="Guiness" correct="Guinness"] Book of Records, say team spokesmen.
WATERLOO (VNS)—The University of Toronto tiddlywink team placed last in the North American tiddlywink championships in Waterloo last weekend.
The winning team will fiy to England early next year to play Oxford for the world championship.
The Toronto team met stiff competition from Cornell, MIT, and Waterloo universities. "The other teams all belong to clubs that practise every week," said team member Byron Alexandroff (II APSC). "Our team was put together at the last minute.
"Competing was a very valuable experience. We learned that tiddlywinks is not a trivial game. It's like chess. You have to think 10 moves in advance.
"We learned a lot by playing in the championships," Alexandroff said. "We're going to go back and take it next year."
Cornell and Waterloo were to play off for the title last night.
1 p.m.
Treasure Van official opening. Presentation of Von to U of T football team and Vain to Blue's Tiddlywinks team. Miss U of T and the Lady Godiva Memorial Band will award the cups. In front of Hart Mouse.
this may be the last time you get to read a masthead ad in peace…pray tues nite for jerry rubin's pig or drop your tears in the office as we mourn for big brother to the south, nael knows about that. we had jim laughing all the way to the press as we finished early for the first (read only) time this year. agi and pom deserted the cause for the theatah and mary went library all the way. jack spent the evening as hhh (or was he in the darkroom; we can't be sure) angelo pondered the csm and sa did trev, perly bless him. rod, we don't believe it was your sister but we do knaw it was balex's boxer (watch the news pages for develops on the tiddlywinks tourney), lyn and rosemary found it hard going and we only found space tor one brian story. bob fielded in and out and even the chevron loves us. suecup and suefeat got together for a front-pager and worried about the flat earth society, eric rump and t.a.m.f. tim went home early and so did phil, who resorted to phoning, confidential ottawa flash- kevin-take 99 7/8 of this, drop in a glass of beer- and you have a mooburger.
At 8 a.m. this morning Byron Alexandroff (III APSC) embarked on a 62-hour endurance test for Radio Varsity.
He has pledged to stay awake at his microphone until 10 p.m. Wednesday night to keep U of T's largest public address system on the air continously as it kicks off campaign to raise funds for U of T's Community Chest.
"I'm doing this totally straight," he says, "no bennies, wake up pills or dozing in between records. Just coffee."
Bryon has had experience at this kind of masochism Two years ago, he led a group of engineers in a tiddly-wink marathon and managed a centennial 67 hour worth of fine fingered trickery establishing a record. This year, he's after the World University Radio Station Non-Stop Broadcasting Record.
"I'm expecting the same sensory blast at 50 hours I got the last time — heightened sensitivity to light colours, weird noises."
How does he plan to keep awake? He'll be interviewing people—Pete Griggin of CHUM, John Wilson of CKEY. Steve Langdon—as well as announcing records, accepting dedications from those who call in, and giving away free LP's.
The purpose behind all this is the University of Toronto's Community Chest There will be an auction on Wednesday afternoon, with Miss U of T on the block, along with two dinners at Tom Jones' Steak House and two tickets to see Jacques Brel (who is reported alive and well).
Bryon will continue broadcasting from a trailer in front of University College. He welcomes everybody to come and see him, bringing friends, lovers, parents and children.
And a lovely time will be had by all, with the possible exception of Bryon.
Campus politics is tiddlywinks in comparison to the need to control pollution that the earth may be worth inheriting.
U of T's finest tiddlywinks players will travel to Ithaca, New York, this week-end to compete in the annual, invitational Tiddlywinks Championship hosted by Cornell.
Among the other schools competing are Harvard, Cornell, and MIT.
There will be a total of 11 teams from seven schools.
The Toronto team is sponsored by the Engineering Society which donated $75 towards travelling expenses.
The "squidgers" on the Toronto squad are Byron Alexandrof[f] (IV APSC), Barry Corbin (IV UC), Lindsey Horenblos (III New), Paul Milgram (IV APSC), Morris Cohen (IV APSC), Mel [sic original="Solomon" correct="Solmon"] (IV APSC).
"We've got a real hope of winning this yea r since most of our players have been competing for four years"", said Captain Alexandrof[f].
Twelve days ago, the U of T tiddleywinks team left unheralded for the land down under—Ithaca, New York—to make what was to be its last bid for the North American Championship.
Paul Milgram (IV APSC), Barry Corbin (IV UC), Lindsay Horenblas (HI UC), Morris Cohen (IV APSC), Bryon Alexandroff (IV APSC) and Mel [sic original="Solomon" correct="Solmon"] (IV APSC), after surviving a nasty border incident and a series of bizarre circumstances which nearly caused the team to default all its matches, put up a creditable showing, placing third in their division with 85½ points, only 8 points out of second.
Their opponents were among the best in North America: Cornell, MIT, Carleton and Somerville (who took home all the winks).
It was a nostalgic experience for all the U of T players, who had been together for three years and had competed twice before for the trophy. Five members will be lost through graduation and the future of the team is cloudy indeed. Paul Milgram broke down and sobbed convulsively as he finished his last match, while his partner futilely attempted to comfort him and at the same time hold back the flow from his own eyes.
Ten days ago, the U of T tiddleywinks team returned unheralded from the land down under—Ithaca, New York—after making what was to be its last bid for the North American Championship.
A four-year dream—to bring the trophy emblematic of the North American Tiddly winks Championship to the University of Toronto is at last within the grasp of the "Toronto Six", the unheralded U of T liddlywinks team.
During the past weekend, these players drove 250 miles to Cornell University in Ithaca. N.Y. to compete in the Western Regional Playoff that determined two of the four finalists who will compete in the "Continentals."
Veterans Bryon Alexandroff, Barry Corbin. Lindsay Horenblas, Glen Kezwer and Mel [sic original="Solomon" correct="Solmon"], aided by the strong play of rookie Wendy Levinson, played superbly against tough opposition from Cornell, McGill, Carleton and Waterloo, "squidging" and "squopping" their way to a 157½ point total.
The Toronto Six. boosted by the support of two cheerleaders, had victory at its finger-tips, so to speak but luck was not winking down at the team. Cornell trounced Waterloo in the final round, knocking Toronto from its first place position and thus nailing the coveted spot tor themselves.
But glory may yet come to the U of T should current plans to stage the February Continentals in Toronto go through. The team is hoping to bask in the full public adulation which they deserve.
Says Alexandroff, "We expect coverage from national T.V. in February of course."
WINCO STEAK N' BURGER RESTAURANTS are pleased to welcome the five visiting teams (MIT, Cornell, Waterloo, [sic original="Sommerville" corrrect="Somerville"] and Philadelphia) to the fifth annual North American TIDDLYWINKS continentals to be held in the Debates Room at Hart House, Saturday February 13 and Sunday February 14 (from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day). All matches open to the public at no charge.
GOOD LUCK TORONTO!!!
Toronto will be the host this weekend to five team from across Canada and the United States for the ultimate tiddlywinks competition of 1971.
The North American Tiddlywinks Continentals, which will be held in the Debates Room at Hart House tomorrow and Sunday from 9-5 each day, is the major competition for which all teams strive for representation.
Teams are expected from MIT, Cornell, Philadelphia, Waterloo and Somerville, Mass to play on the home mats of the Varsity team, the current top Canadian entry and second in the nation for individual play.
Members of the Toronto team: Bryon [sic original="Alexandroft" correct="Alexandroff"] (captain); graduate engineer Mel [sic original="Solman" correct="Solmon"]; law student Lindsay Horenblas and Wendy Levinson, Glen Kezwer and Barry" Corbin—all U of T students. Lani Nathanson is the substitute.
The rise of the popularity of tiddlywinks has been exponential since the time that it was introduced to North America approximately six years ago.
Teams have literally sprung up across the nation with expansion clubs in Montreal, Cleveland, Cali- fornia and Florida. Upwards to three teams are forming in some winking towns and playoffs are usually necessary to decide which team will be invited to attend the Continentals.
The Toronto delegation of six winkers anticipate tough competition, mostly from the Ivy-League colleges, but hope to fare well due to the hundreds of hours of practise they have accumulated.
While you other sportsies were out on the slopes, breaking your legs during Ski Week, a quiet, intense struggle was being staged at Hart House: the North American Tiddlywinks Championship.
Teams of six poured in from all over the North-Eastern U.S. and Southern Ontario for these Continentals: M.I.T., Waterloo, Somer- ville, Cornell and Hythnlbtwoc ("Hark! Yon tree hath no leaves but they will out ! - Club["])
The Toronto team, composed of Glen Kezwer, Barry Corbin, Lindsey Horenblas, Wendy Levinson, Bryon Alexandre!!, and Mel Solmon, put their talents on the line in a final bid to cop the crown after four years of frustration.
After Hyth. knocked out Water- loo in a sudden-death match, a round-robin tournament took place, each team playing 9 matches against 4 other teams. After a disheartening first round loss to Cornell, (most analysts agreed it was the "fluke" of the tourney;) Toronto settled down to play steadily improving matches, culminating in an overwhelming 40 - 23 wallop of Hyth.
But the early setback to Cornell proved to be Toronto's undoing. Defending champion Somerville played consistently to amass 144 points in 36 matches to take first (hence retaining the Trophy they left back home). M.I.T. (whom, incidentally, Toronto also trounced) stole 2nd place with 136 2/3 points to Toronto's 132 2/3. Far behind were Hythnlbtwoc with 118 and Cornell with 105.
While the Toronto six proved themselves the best in the western region, they were forced to acknowledge the eastern region's laudable mastery of the squidge, the squop and the pot. (Actually, they were just damned lucky!)
TIDDLY WINKS: anyone interested in playing, phone [sic original="Rogar" correct="Roger"] or [sic original="Goft" correct="Goff"] at 966-3857. An invitational pairs tournament will be held at the U of T In early April.
However, UC closed quickly to be down only by two at halftime. In the second half, Meds played 'straight up' basketball to hold on for the win. Lindsay Horenblas, Meds premier tiddly wink player, scored 19 points in the game to lead all Meds scorers. For UC, the brothers Betcherman—Mike and Gordie—hooped 22 and 14 points, respectively.
Student-run newspaper
Toggle showing 18 tiddlywinks references for The Chevron.
The Tiddlywinks Club will fly to the Silver Winks playoffs in England, even if they have to cling to the wings of a Sopwith Camel.
Student Council declared itself in favor, “in principle”, of going halves with the administration on costs, while suggesting the club seek other means of financing the flight.
Council considered the $440 tab for each winker to be too high and suggested that the club approach the RCAF, the Centennial Commission, and the Canadian Union of Students for travel aid.
The tiddlywinks club won't get much from the administration—Five dollars perhaps.
Sending a group like this on a trip abroad would be a bad precedent establish, university president J. G. Hagey felt.
He agreed however, that the club is attracting widespread publicity for the university. "This is a much more desirable way for getting publicity than pushing a bed around,“ he said, referring to the fad of intercity bed-pushing several years ago.
“Tell them I’m willing to make a personal contribution” he said.
The tiddlywinks club—North American champions—hopes to travel to England in February to compete for the Silver Wink, the international championship. Student Council has promised to match what the adminw istration will contribute.
At 8:30 in the Village dining hall is the annual general meeting of the TIDDLYWINKS CLUB.
The University of Waterloo will be celebrating its tenth birthday the week of October 22 to 29.
A ton of special events have been planned for Tenth Anniversary Week under the co-ordination of Brian Iler, civil 3A, chairman of the Tenth Anniversary Week committee. The university tiddlywinks club, defending North American champions, will host a North American tiddlywinks tournament—in Canada for the first time. Fall convocation and Homecoming are scheduled for the week.
The opening of the campus center, originally set for november 1967, was moved to february 1968; and jock news—including a tiddleywinks championship—dominated the pages.
Leslie went on to say that in the math report there were appointments of a “research associate” and a “part-time instructor” and that he wouldn’t be surprised if he turned the page to find the appointment of a “tiddlywinks professor”.
ACROSS
44. National Tiddlywinks League (abbn.)
THURSDAY
Tiddlywinks club 7:30 p.m.campus centre 217.
Tiddlywinks reared its noble head again at Uniwat last thursday.
However, the turnout at the Tiddlywinks Club’s first meeting in almost three years could hardly be called overwhelming. About ten people came to learn the game which brought this campus its only north american championship in 1966. (The club lost it again in 1967 to [sic original="Cornel" correct="Cornell"] University and has since remained inactive).
This year, the club hopes to avenge that loss, and proceed on to England for the Silver Wink championships, the Olympics of tiddlywinks.
Three veterans of the 1966 and rebuild the team to its former strength and to aid in the organization of the club. Club spokesman, Ross Bell (known throughout the winking world as the Silver Dart) expressed regret about thursday’s poor turnout, but was optimistic about the club’s future.
“I am [sic original="somehwat" correct="somewhat"] regretful about thursday’s poor turnout. but I am optimistic about the club’s future,” said Bell.
The club will be meeting again this (and every) thursday at 7:30 p.m. in cc217 for anyone who is interested in learning the science and skill of tiddlywinks.
THURSDAY
Tiddlywinks Club - eliminations for team to play at november regionals. 7:30 p.m. cc217.
This weekend, U of W’s tiddlywinks team is off to [sic original="Cornel" correct="Cornell"] university to play in the first round of the north american tiddlywinks association western division championships.
The team has been preparing itself for the past month and expects to place well in the competition. They will be playing against teams from Ottawa, Toronto, Montreal, Cleveland, as well as the host [sic original="Cornel" correct="Cornell"].
The team must do well in this and a subsequent tournament in january in order to make it to the continentals next february, where they would face stiff competition from the more established teams in Boston and New York.
Club spokesman Ross Bell expressed confidence in their ability to hold up under fire, despite the team’s relative inexperience.
“Despite the team’s relative inexperience, I have confidence in our ability to hold up under fire.”
So do we.
Amidst cries of foul and “Go squidge yourself, ” the university of Waterloo Sabre-teeth benched their top pair in the final match of the west division tiddlywinks play downs Sunday, allowing Cornell university to squeak past the university of To-ronto into first place in the tournament.
The pair, who had made a poor showing against U of T in the previous match, sat out the final round in favour of two winkers playing in their first tournament ever. Cornell had an easy time against them, as they piled up sufficient points to capture first place.
The tournament, held last weekend at Cornell, included teams from Toronto, McGill, Carleton, Cornell and Waterloo. Ottawa had gone into the tourney as favorites, but were upset by both Toronto and Cornell, and finished third. The Sabre-teeth were fourth, and McGill fifth and last.
The top two teams are now assured of berths in the north american continentals next february. A third team will be determined in january at a tournament here in Waterloo.
The Sabre-teeth had gone to Cornell expecting tough competition, and they found it. Their first match was against Carleton, and it was obvious from the start that the team’s lack of experience would severely impair their performance. They lost the match 42½-26½.
They then played against a weak, and even more inexperienced McGill squad, defeating them by a 42-21 score, their only victory of the tournament.
After losing to Toronto next, it was decided that, since a first or second was impossible, to give their least experienced players a chance to play. Cornell, needing 45 points to net first won the match 46-17.
This manoeuvre prompted the disgruntled Toronto team to attempt to restrict platooning at future meets. A motion requiring the same six players to compete in all matches received little support, as it was pointed out that such a decision could not be made without first consulting teams in the eastern division.
The Sabre-teeth, though they fared rather poorly, returned to Waterloo confident that they will be going to the continentals. Six of their nine players had never faced other teams before, but will be ready when the same teams come to Waterloo in january.
Well squop that wink with a rusty squidger. Tiddlywinks is coming to Waterloo.
Yes folk, the second round of the western regional tiddlywinks playdowns is happening right here, this weekend in the campus center pub.
The playoffs shape up as one of the big events of Borealis, i.e. winter weekend, as teams from McGill, Carleton, Case Western Reserve (Cleveland) and our very own Sabre-teeth squidge off to determine the last open spot in next month’s continental tourney in Toronto.
The tournament shapes up as a battle between the powerful teams from Carleton and Waterloo, who finished third and fourth respectively, to Cornell and Toronto in November’s playdowns at Cornell. Both teams will be out to avenge their disappointing showings at Cornell.
However, both can expect trouble from McGill, playing in only their second tournament and Case, who were unable to make it to the last matches.
Sabre-teeth spokesman, Ross Bell says that the team has been hard at it this last week, practicing for the weekend’s play, and is confident the team will be going to Toronto next month.
“The team has been hard at it this last week, practicing for this weekend’s play and I am confident the team will be going to Toronto next month,” Bell said.
The team’s chances have been bolstered somewhat by the addition of H. Shields, who played with Waterloo’s championship teams in 1966 and ‘67. He was unable to make the trip to Cornell in november and his presence here this weekend should help the '-teeth' considerably.
Other members of the team include R. Rumm, like Shields and Bell, a seasoned veteran, B. “N” Anderson, B. Jackson, R. Taylor and R. Page.
As an added feature, Saturday afternoon’s play will be a licensed event, starting at 1 p.m. in cc pub. Admission is ten cents. It will also feature a performance by Waterloo’s own super stars, the legendary Running Dog and His Elektrik Lakkeys.
Play begins Saturday at 10 a.m., and there will be matches on sunday morning if necessary.
The Sabre-teeth are hoping for your support this weekend, and the chevron encourages everyone to come out and witness the drama and challenge that is tiddlywinks. See ya there.
Displaying much of the form that led them to the north american tiddlywinks championship five years ago, the university of Waterloo Sabre-teeth on saturday resoundingly squidged themselves into this year’s continentals.
The team exhibited much more poise and confidence here than they showed last fall at Cornell where they finished fourth out of five. They defeated two fine teams from Carleton and Case Western Reserve to advance to next month’s finals in Toronto. The team from McGill was unable to make it to Waterloo.
Carleton jumped off to an early first round lead as they defeated Case 37½-25½. The ‘- teeth’ played Carleton in the second round, and the squads split the match 31½-31½.
In the final round of play, the Sabre-teeth scored a convincing 43-20 victory over Case, enough to give them the total points triumph.
Leading the ‘-teeth’ were Henry Shields and Ron Rumm who won five of their six games and finished second in individual pairs scoring, Shields and Rumm were playing together for the first time since they teamed up to lead U of W to the ‘66 championship over Harvard medical school.
Ross Bell and Brenda Wilson, who also won five of their six games, finished third. Rosie Wain and Andy Tomaszewski of Carleton placed first.
Now it’s on to Toronto for the stalwart Sabre-teeth. However, once there they must participate in a playoff with a team from Philadelphia to qualify for the fifth spot in the round-robin tourney. Other teams that will be playing in the continentals are Toronto, Cornell, MIT, and Somerville (Mass.)
Perhaps most disappointing to the small but thirsty crowd on hand for Saturday’s matches was that Running Dog and his Elektric Lakkeys were forced to cancel their scheduled appearance because of the length of time needed to complete all the matches. Perhaps a fair price to pay for Waterloo’s well-deserved victory.
Club spokesman Ross Bell, who before the match felt sure the team would win, expects the Sabre-teeth to become even more powerful and says they will be forced to be reckoned with in Toronto.
“Before the match I felt sure the team would win,” Bell said. He went on to say “I expect the Sabre-teeth to become even more powerful and we will be a force to be reckoned with in Toronto.”
If the ‘teeth’ continue to improve and play as well as they did this weekend, Waterloo may well become the resting place for the north american tiddlywinks championship once again.
Tomorrow the world?
The university of Waterloo Sabre-teeth face their biggest test ever this weekend as they travel to Toronto for the 1971 continental tiddlywinks team championships.
The team has been working out all this week in preparation for the weekend’s play and look sharper than ever. They have been improving steadily since last fall’s fourth place finish at Cornell. They won the toumament here last month, and all indications are that they could go all the way in Toronto.
Their first match is on saturday morning against HYTHNLTBWOC from Philadelphia which they must win if they are to remain in the running for the big prize. Both teams ended up third in their respective divisions and the match is a playoff to determine fifth spot in the round-robin series. Other teams competing are university of Toronto and Cornell university from the western division, and MIT and Somerville from the east. Somerville is the defending champion.
Waterloo’s chances were dimmed somewhat by the departure of Ron Rumm, a six-year veteran. However, the team’s rookies are now well-experienced and should be able to take up any slack that may result from Rumm’s absence.
The team was duly unimpressed by reports circulating out of Toronto regarding U of T’s unorthodox training program, which consists of a strict diet of grapes, carrots and milk, and daily finger exercises.
“We don’t go for that kind of shit,” said club spokesman Boss Bell, “we play tiddlywinks!”
With that kind of determination, we look for the return of the north american tiddlywinks championships to Waterloo.
Abandoning their unopened parachutes on the village green after plummeting tens of feet from an armed forces dirigible the chevron waterbabies poured themselves into the jock pool to play another game of fast paced tiddly winks. Having been immobilized by a severe case of an unnamed european disease larry burko was only able to lend immoral support.
Sean Casey (Man Environment)—It is a standard practice in student election campaigns for candidates to begin by reciting a long list of obscure and irrelevant accomplishments (such as tiddlywinks champion of Village 1 72-73) and finish with platitudes about representing students best interests ad nauseam.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Concordat.
The University orf Waterloo tiddlywinks club is now North American champion.
At an invitational tournament hosted by Harvard and Radcliffe in Boston last weekend. The U of W team beat Harvard, Harvard Medical, Radcliffe, and WLU to place first.
The WLU team also put up a good show and placed third having been beaten by Harvard Medical School as well as the U of W. The W.L.U. women's team made a clean sweep by beating the only other all female team put forward by Radcliffe.
Ambitious plans are presently being made for the future.
The WLU team plans to tour other Canadian colleges in order to stir up interest and stimulate competition while the U of W team is considering sending a team to Britain to compete for the world Silver Wink Trophy.
Student-run newspaper
Toggle showing 17 tiddlywinks references for The Coryphaeus.
The Science-Engineering game is worthy of note. Not really, but it wouldn’t be cricket to discuss tiddlywinks under the title of hockey. Though probably more interesting.
—Hi Chris! where are you going?
—I’m off to the University Tiddlywinks Club.
—What! Tiddlywinks is a kid’s game!
—I used to think so too, Jim, until I went along once just for kicks and found it so fascinating that I started playing it myself. -You mean people take it seriously! !
—Sure they do, but it’s still a lot of fun.
—Sounds interesting, tell me more.
—Well, to begin with, U of W has the first official club in Canada. And what’s more, coaching is provided by a member of the Scottish international team.
—Good grief!
—Once we’ve got a good team we’re going to beat all the teams in the States like MIT and Harvard, and then we’ll declare ourselves champions of North America. And can you imagine Waterlootheran and U of T admitting that they can’t even provide a team to challenge us?
—Hmm. Sounds good. But you haven’t told me anything about the game yet.
—Well, the idea is to squidge your own winks into the pot, and try to squop your opponents. -What on earth does all that mean?
—Why don’t you come yourself and find out?
—Where is the next meeting? -The next meeting is Tuesday at 7:15 in the Village dining hall.
—Good. See you then.
—Right. ta-ta for now.
Pictures of campus organizations will be taken for the Compendium at the following times and places:
Monday, Jan. 10 - arts foyer.
5:30 p.m. Tiddlywinks Club
Most members of Student Council have little or no idea of what actions they have approved at their meetings.
This situation arises because most of council’s actions are made by approving minutes of the executive board or of one of the other boards of Student Council.
These minutes - often as long as eight pages - are, however, usually handed to members only minutes before they pass their approval.
Thus there is a good chance that if page seven of the board of student activities meeting listed a motion granting the Tiddlywinks Club $1,000 council would probably stamp it approved.
Even worse are the possible situations that could arise from council also rubberstamping executive board minutes.Admittedly some council members, Jeff Evans in particular, have been very watchful. Nevertheless the sy- stem makes a drastic error all too easy.
The remedy is simple: mail out executive board minutes a few days early. Some of the minutes handed to councillors as they go into meet- ings are well over two weeks old, there is no acceptable excuse for this delay.
It shouldn’t be too much to ask that those all-important minutes get to council members long before the chair calls the meeting to order.
The Tiddlywinks Club, after three months on campus, now has over 70 members. The big event will be the match against Harvard at the end of February.
Spurred on by our challenge, Waterlootheran has formed a team—“to warm us up on the way to Harvard,” said secretary Charlie McLeod.
Newcomers and old hands are wel- come in the Village dining hall, Wednesdays at 7:15 p.m.
The first official tiddlywinks match ever to take place in Canada will be held on Sun., Feb. 13 at 2 p.m. in the Student Village dining hall. It will be between the University of Waterloo and Waterloo Lutheran University. Spectators will be very welcome.
The match against Harvard will be on Sat. Feb. 26. There are some spare seats on the bus and anyone who wants a weekend in Boston should contact Mark Taylor, 576-1608 as soon as possible.
—The Tiddlywinks Club was given a grant of $600 for its trip to Harvard. Members of Council pointed to the fine record of the club in publicizing the university and in defeating WLU for the Canadian championship.
Sunday afternoon a strong U of W Tiddlywinks team easily overcame a plucky Lutheran team to lay undisputed claim to the Canadian title.
Club secretary Charles McLeod led a team of eight players to a solid 86-26 victory, U of W winning 14 of 16 games.
Lamentably, the club secretary blew the 16th game 1-6, his powers of concentration undoubtedly affected by the charming WLU coeds he and his partner were pitted against.
Tactics were almost invariably double-squop although Helmut Roth and Henry Shields potted out three times, winning by scores of 7-0, 5-2, and 7-0.
The greater experience of the U of W team quickly left no doubt about the final outcome, Unless Harvard has a powerful squad indeed, U of W will be the North American champs on Feb. 26.
There are still a few spare seats on the bus to Boston for the weekend of Feb. 25-28. Contact Mark Taylor, 576-1608, irnmediately if you are interested.
"We were just out-squopped,"said Michael Gottesman, president of the Gargoyle and four-year veteran of the Harvard squad.
And thus the University of Waterloo, North American Tiddlywinks Champions, left their mark on Harvard, the Ivy League college of Cambridge, Mass.
But Tiddlywinks itself started 10 years ago and 3,000 miles away in Cambridge, England when eight un-dergraduates transformed a kid’s game int the fastest-growing game on university campuses today.
What’s tiddlywinks all about?
The game, as it has developed today, is played on a six-by-three-foot felt mat. Two teammates, diagonally opposite each other, compete against an opposing pair. Each player has six winks of his particular color, four 3/8 inch and two 7/8 inch in diameter. A player may play only his own winks.
The ultimate aim is to be the first to squidge all your winks into a 2.5 inch-high pot while trying to squop the opponent’s winks.
A squop is a defe;nsive move in which a team plops one of its pieces on top of one of the opponent’s winks. Since only the top disc can be moved the covered piece is frozen until someone knocks off the upper disc.
The game is played to a time limit of twenty minutes and if at the end of this time no one has potted all their winks points are given for first, second and third places on the basis of three points for each wink in the pot and one point for each unsquopped wink outside the pot, so tactics play a major part.
At Waterloo, it all started over a pot of tea. Charles McLeod, a former tiember of the Scottish Inter- national team, John Douglas, and Mark Taylor decided on e Sunday afternoon to form a Tiddlywinks Club.
Most people laughed. So did the Board of Student Activities when we asked them to approve our constitution. So did the 64 members who joined in the first two weeks.
However, the Customs and Excise department of the Federal government didn’t laugh.
Their prompt phone call to the U of W Purchasing Department was to find out what was being smuggled in from England in the form of tiddlywinks mats and sets of discs.
The first meeting was on Nov, 17, and gradually a hard core of serious winkers formed. It wasn't long before WLU decided they could beat us at our own game, and on Feb. 13 the first official tiddlywinks game ever to ake place in Canada was held at the Village.
After a closely contested game [(]86-26). University of Waterloo walked off with the Canadian championship.
Two days later at a hastily summoned meeting of the Student Council, we were voted $600 and now nothing stood between us and a game at Harvard. Many players had practised 15 hours a week and squidged their fingers to the bone to ensure a place on the team.
On Feb, 25, two eight player teams accompanied by 24 spectators, friends, joyriders and boozers left for Boston. (WLU also managed to get there somehow)[.]
Saturday afternoon, after a sleepless 14 hour bus ride, the squad trounced an inept, overconfident Harvard University team.
After losing the first two gams while still suffering from the bus trip, the turning point came when Ross “Silver Dart" Bell and Andy Tomaino won their second game 6-1.
Sunday we met the excellent winkers of Harvard Medical School captained by former English International, Mike Crick. Crick’s playing kept the match in suspense until the final round when the U of W pulled away to win 62-50.
Highlight of the match was a two hour marathon between Chris Springer and Paul Freernan and the number one Harvardian pair. Other members taking part were John Douglas, Leroy Isaacs, and Charles Bonnycastle.
As a result of our victories the U of W are now the North American Tiddlywinks Champions. The claim to the championship has a firm basis, for, in history-making that weekend meeting, winkers from four clubs in Canada and the U.S. formed the North American Tiddlywinks Association.
I have seen our Tiddlywink Club beat Harvard’ s.
The Tiddlywinks Club is seeking a sponsor to send them to the Silver Wink competition in England.
The club has made unsuccessful applications to the administration and Student Council and now hopesthat some industry will pick up the tab in return for the publicity.
Prince Philip has donated the Silver Wink Trophy to the champions of the English Tiddlywinks Association. Our club, as present North American champions (not WLU!) wants to bring it to this campus.
Also in the club’s plans is the establishment of a Canadian league. Carleton and WLU have already expressed their support.
The coming North American competitions will probably be held here, said Ron Rumm of the club. "As champions it is our [sic original="perogative" correct="prerogative"] to say where the match will be held. Harvard can jolly well come here."
The two Harvard teams, defeated last year by a busload from Waterloo, will be invited, Both MIT and Cornell requested U of W matches.
The club has the unique distinction of actually returning a balance to Student Council last year.
The Tiddlywinks Club is holding a 54-hour marathon downtown.
A marathon winking contest started yesterday at the Waterloo Square mall, and will continue until tomorrow. The team plans to break the current world record of 54 hours of non-stop [sic original="tiddlywinds" correct="tiddlywinks"].
The team, already Canadian and North American champions, hopes to bring the Silver [sic original="Wind" correct="Wink"] to Canada during Centennial year, and this is the first step in its efforts to gain interest and the necessary funds to travel to England, said Ron Rumm, physics 3.
The Silver Wink is a trophy donated by Prince Philip to the world’s tiddlywink champions. The championships have always been held in England, with either Cambridge or Oxford the winning winkers.
If the U of W winkers can raise the necessary $4,000 to send a ten-man team in February they would be the first challengers from North America to attempt to wrest the trophy from the British.
Today
Tiddlywinks marathon continues—until?? Waterloo Square mall.
“You meet the nicest people on a Honda, but the best people play tiddlywinks" is the unqualified boast of Tiddlywinks Club chairman Mark Taylor.
I can proudly count myself one of the world’s best people now,having the broad background of one 15-minute tiddlywink match. It was undoubtedly one of the most enjoyable games I have ever played.
Being an ignorant layman, I entered the room with the inevitable snicker of one totally unfamiliar with the sport. It’s hysterical—a group of intelligent people trying to get a bunch of colored dimes into a little cup.
My snicker soon became a genuine smile of happiness as I became indoctrinated with this intriguing game.
“Initially people think of winks as a joke”, says Taylor. “However, this soon turns into a real interest.”
Moreover, interest soon becomes an almost fanatic zeal to propagate the sport. Our student winkers add to this a desire to obtain what chairman Taylor calls “instant tradition for the further glory of Waterloo”.
To gain fame for their school, the Waterloo champs are attempting to secure a sponsor willing to donate the $4,440 needed to send a ten-man team to the Silver Wink championship in Manchester, England, in February.
To demonstrateits uncontrollable energy, the club this weekend is sponsoring a 54-hour marathon contest at the Waterloo Square mall downtown to break the current world’s record for the longest match—they have to wink continuously for at least 55 hours.
Actually, an ulterior motive lurks behind this battle against sleep. The team hopes it will generate enough publicity to interest the sorely needed sponsor
Someone may realize the publicity potential in donating the necessary funds for the team to Go Forth and Wink.
The Tiddlywinks Club is suing the Coryphaeus for $4,440.
We batched up the story on their marathon in the last issue. The contest began yesterday, not last Thursday.
The $4,440 happens to be the traveiling expenses for ten tiddlywinkers contesting the world championship in Manchester, England. A sponsor for this venture has not as yet been located.
In reply to a telegram from the campus club, president Patrick Bonham of the English Tiddlywinks Association reports that the present marathon record stands at 55 hours continuous play.
The record was claimed by the Tiddlywinks Club of the Lanchester College of Technology, Coventry, Warwinkshire, England. Eight players tiddlyed as two teams under full international rules in March. The feat was accomplished on separate mats in the open air of the Coventry Shopping Precinct.
The Waterloo attempt at all-out tiddlywinking began at 10 yesterday morning in the Waterloo Square mall, and will continue until tomorrow. Hopefully, the funds necessary to send a tenman team to England to capture the Silver Wink trophy may be forthcoming from some publicity-minded spectator of the marathon.
The Silver Wink is a trophy donated by Prince Philip to the world’s tiddlywink champions. The competitions have always been held in England, with either Cambridge or Oxford the winning winkers. The Waterloo team, already Canadian and North American champions,hopes to bring the Silver Wink to Canada in February of the Centennial year.
“England, here we come! (we hope).”
A world sporting record was set Saturday at 6 p.m. by four University of Waterloo students: Ron Rumm, Andy Tomaino, Helmut Roth and Henry Shields.
They played tiddlywinks for 56 hours straight—from Thursday, October 13, at 10 a.m. until Saturday.
The main goal of the winkathon was to attract a sponsor to send ten tiddlywinkers students to the international competition in Eng-land in February. But after 56 hours of continuous playing, no sponsor appeared. $300 was raised, however, from the sale of associate memberships in the U of W Tiddly- winks Association to bemused spectators.
Two teams took part in the Winkathon. The second group played 55 1/2 hours, and thus holds the second-place championship.
When Mark Taylor, the club’s chairman and coach, was asked what would happen at 6 p.m., he re- plied, “The world’s going to end.”
With 11 hours to go, a player commented, “I’ve had forty million winks, but none of it was sleep.”
K-Mart of Waterloo supplied sandwiches, hotdogs, hamburgers and beverages. And steak was pro- vided by the AIi Baba Steakhouse.
CBC filmed portions of the marathon. The Sunday-night national news ended with an on-the-spot interview tith the Waterloo Warrior tiddlywink team, featuring an “instant replay” of a particularly spectacular squop.
Spectators varied, in number and attitude.
“They’re out of their cottonpickin’ minds,” said one onlooker.
“This is sad, sad, sad!” said another.
“Hehehehehehe,” said storeowner Ross Klopp.
Even at 3 Saturday morning the mall doors were rattling with people wanting in.
Two student guitarists sparked an impromptu hootenanny about then, helping to keep the workers awake.
“It took us until about Tuesday to recover,” Ron Rumm told the Coryphaeus.
One of the fellows had almost lost touch by hour 56. His teammates had to remind him every move what was happening and whether to squidge from the left on the right.
It has been hypothesised that if the tiddlywinks club wanted to use the mats, they would readily get them before the judo club.
To the editor:
Believe it or not, Waterloo has finally achieved fame as a great educational center, including and above all tiddlywinks.
Last night, I discovered in the Gloucester Citizen, a local newspaper, the article which I have en- closed, emphasizing the achievements of our great university.
Longlevens, Gloucester, England.
A four-man university team claimed a new world tiddlywink record in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada yesterday. They played for 56 hours breaking by one hour the previous endurance record set up by Lanchester College of Technology team, in Coventry.
The only other news from this side of the pond is the usual. That is, that the tax rates and hemline height vary directly and proportionately. Both are rising at an unbelievable rate.
BRIAN ROBBINS mechanical 2A
Student-run newspaper
Toggle showing 4 tiddlywinks references for Imprint.
The German born computer scientist, who went to the U.S. with his family in 1936, believes that “computer literacy” is about as important as bicycle riding, and that much contemporary concern with the question is misplaced. Children must learn their natural language, and they must learn their history, said Weizenbaum. These are the priorities, and after they have learned these things, if there is time left over, riding bicycles, playing tennis, and tiddlywinks may be good things to teach.
3. Australian Rules Tiddleywinks (far too rough)
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Excalibur.
Student-run publication
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Annual Record.
[Page 36] 1995 M Fayers, member, 2010 England Tiddlywinks team, victorious over the USA, in Washington DC.
[Page 39] 1960 M A C Relle, member, 2010 England Tiddlywinks team, victorious over the USA in Washington DC.
[Page 40] 1972 G Thorpe, member, 2010 England Tiddlywinks team, victorious over the USA, in Washington DC.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for CAM Articles.
To celebrate its fiftieth anniversary, the club will be holding a celebratory dinner on Saturday 15 January 2005. Former players are most welcome. For details, contact Stewart Sage at Queens’ College on 01223 335607. Email: [email protected]. For other anniversary events, see www.etwa.org
Article about Prince Philip's role in tiddlywinks
But it hasn’t all been serious. Challenged to a match early on by the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club, the prince appointed the Goons as his royal champions, initiating a much publicised charity tournament played in March 1958 before a packed Guildhall.
‘As the royal colours,’ reported the Sunday Times, ‘the Goons wore curious long yellow cotton garments with orange, yellow and black school caps, and ties embroidered with the initials of the Royals Tiddlywinks Club 1958. Cambridge were immaculate in dinner jackets and bow-ties bearing a wink rampant.’
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Cambridge Alumni Magazine.
Illuminating but disappointing—for those of us in the Footlights in the late 70—to read the true genus of Strange Blue, the frisbee team. I had always assumed it was a brilliant chapeau to our own Hugh Laurie, whose Blackadder character, George, so movingly reminisced about the college tiddlywinks team – the Trinity Tiddlers.
Nick Miles (Corpus 1979)
ps: I thought the latest edition was a cracker.
Student-run publication
Toggle showing 11 tiddlywinks references for The Cambridge Student.
One of Cambridge’s least known and least publicised sports (I use the term sport here and hereafter in a somewhat loose and vague sense) is also, bizarrely, one of its most successful, and that sport is tiddlywinks. No other sport, perhaps activity, in Cambridge can boast of only ever losing three Varsity matches since its conception and standardization in Cambridge in 1955.
I’m sure as children we were all enticed by the jovial multicoloured ‘winks’ and passed many a happy carpet-bound hour trying desperately, and again and again, to get the infuriating little blighters into the pot, a task which I always was, and still am, convinced is the difficult side of impossible. But how far does this youthful exuberance compare with the fiercely contested sport of Tiddlywinks, which some of us have come to know and love? Well, to be perfectly honest, the answer is very closely and, at the same time, practically not at all.
So first, the essential similarities: much like the rather aimless potting of ‘kiddy winks’, the ultimate aim of tiddlywinks is to put all of your winks in the pot, to score the highest possible number of points over the opposition. As with kiddy winks, there are four colours of wink, blue, green, red and yellow, each playing in alphabetical colour order and possessing two larger and four smaller winks. The game is either played as singles or pairs, with either one player controlling two colours, red and blue playing together against green and yellow, or a pair controlling a colour each. It is with the introduction of this level of organisation that the game begins to feel somewhat different to the milling free-for-all that is kiddy winks. From here on out, the differences only magnify. The sheer detail of different types of shots that are officially recognised goes way beyond what I, at least, remember from the games of my youth. I am sure I would never have celebrated pulling off a simple ‘squop’, even less likely a perfectly executed ‘boondock’ or a tactically essential ‘John Lennon Memorial Shot’, but now, both playing, and then celebrating, these shots has become almost second nature. The joy felt after a successful pot out attempt and a 7*-0* score line, the highest possible in tiddlywinks, can only be matched by, well, lots of things probably, but nothing I can think of off the top of my head in my current winks-induced trance…
Which leads me nicely on to the single biggest difference between kiddy winks and ‘real’ winks: beer. Or cider if you’re not a real man. Or diet coke if nothing else can fuel your desperate phosphoric acid fix. At many, if not all, tiddlywinks tournaments, many of which even provide points towards a world ranking, the winks playing takes a backseat to the activities of ‘lunch’, I use inverted commas as the traditional intake of food is not the main purpose of the ‘meal’. Lunch tends to start when everyone, or at least most people, are bored of winks, and therefore is often talked about from the first round of a tournament onwards, culminating in a stop of play at around one o’clock and the beginning of lunch. This beginning consists, usually, of some gentler VDGs (Violent Drinking Games, the violent referring to the level of drunkenness, not necessarily any actual physical abuse of anything other than the liver) and a general rest from the rigours of winking. These gentler games are followed by something a little more violent, possibly a journey from drinking Blackjack, through to SEPTIC hold ‘em, in effect bastardized drinking Texas hold ‘em, and possibly finishing with Tøppen, a particularly lethal variation of whist, originating in Holland and using a shortened pack, with a ten as the highest card, going down to seven, then cycling through the picture cards. After a few hours of activities of this ilk, some actual food may be partaken in, followed by, I’m sure you can see where this is heading, more VDGs. The afternoon winks are, then, usually of a more interesting but less talented standard than the fare of the morning, leading to frequent underdog upsets, particularly if a high-seeded player had less than ideal lunchtime poker hands. After all the games have been played, at least all the games that people can be mutually bothered to contest, play, as it were, moves to a pub for, yes, more VDGs and perhaps some food if desired or needed by any of the players to absorb their ‘fines’.
And so to answer the question of how similar tiddlywinks and kiddy winks are, the answer must be not very, at least not until there is a fairly major overhaul to licensing laws or children start challenging each other to perform a Penhaligon or a six inch Bristol. And as for the question ‘Winkers: Real Men or Real Menace?’ I think we all know that the answer can only be Real Men before VDGs and Real Menace after. Unless they drink cider.
For more information about Tiddlywinks, or even to try your hand at the game, come along to the ‘Fresher’s Squash’, to be held in the Queen’s College Erasmus Room on the 24th of January, starting at 8:00PM.
Or, alternatively, you could visit the classic www.cutwc.net or even the quite delightful www.bbc.co.uk/dna/ h2g2/classic/A178634
G17 Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club
Although widely associated with rainy childhood afternoons, Tiddlywinks is a serious competitive sport.
Sarah Knight, a PhD student from Selwyn College and part-time tiddlywinks enthusiast told TCS more: “We practise one evening a week for a couple of hours, but never for so long that we can’t make it to the bar for a few swift pints afterwards...”
And what about the rules? “Well, it’s quite a complicated game! No, really. The little plastic counters – these are the “winks” – come in 4 colours: red, blue, green and yellow. You can either play doubles or singles. In a doubles game, there are 4 players who divide into teams of 2, and each person plays one colour. In a singles game, the partnerships remain, but 2 people play 2 colours each.
“The winks are moved around the mat using a bigger plastic counter – the “squidger” (again, really) – and, just like the kids’ version, there’s a pot in the middle. But unlike the kids’ version, the game isn’t entirely about getting the winks in the pot. Instead, it’s more about building up tactical areas on the mat and bringing your opponent down.
“Games last roughly half an hour, and at the end of the game, the winks that are in the pot are worth 3 points, or “tiddlies”, and uncovered winks on the mat are worth 1 tiddly.”
Overall,how would you describe Tiddlywinks? “We like to think of it as a cross between snooker and chess.”
It is as much a Cambridge stereotype as punting, bad nightlife and the snobbish (thanks to the Daily Mail). But this society is far more real than one might think at first. The game is perhaps best known as one played by children, whereby the objective is to flick all of one’s smaller counters (“winks”) into a pot, by the use of a larger counter (called a “squidger”). So far, so simple.
But, as the students at the Cambridge club can tell you, this is no child’s sport. The adult’s game emphasizes a rule that is found in the junior version, namely that should a wink land upon another wink, the lower wink cannot be played. Thus begins a game of devious tactics and high drama. The club itself is also one of a very social nature: pub crawls abound and the members are extremely welcoming.
Moreover, no other sport can match the thrashing that the Light Blues gave Oxford in the 2013 Varsity Match: 106- 6. No wonder the club has produced so many world champions of the noble sport!
The society meets Wednesdays at 7.30pm in the Selwyn’s Tower Room.
Our annual Varsity quiz against our Oxford counterparts, Taruithorn, and a variety of eclectically named events and traditions (the May Week croquet match against the Tiddlywinks Society being of particularly vital importance, plus the foreyule feast) give us very much our own calendar and subculture as a Cambridge geek society.
Did you know that you can get a quarter blue in tiddlywinks? Nicky Collins (world ranking: 72) tells us about the intricacies of the sport.
So, how difficult is tiddlywinks?
Of course, when I mention tiddlywinks many people assume I am talking about the game they played as a child: icking small plastic counters (winks) into a pot using a larger plastic disc called a squidger. The adult’s game is based on this concept, but additional elements make it somewhat more sophisticated.
The main premise of the game is to score as many points, known as tiddlies, within the allocated time. Three tiddlies can be scored for every wink in a pot, and one tiddly for every wink that is not squopped (whereby one wink is on top of another). Ultimately tiddlywinks is a game of intense strategy and skill.
How often do you train?
CUTwC meet once a week on a Wednesday in the Tower Room at Selwyn College. Practice is followed by a plentiful supply of drinking games in the bar until closing time (a key pastime of any great winker).
What’s your favourite move?
It’s a tossup between a pile ip shot and a John Lennon Memorial shot.
What’s our Varsity Record?
As far as I am aware, we have only lost to Oxford once. The most recent Varsity match was a record breaking victory and earned all those who played quarter blues in the sport.
To quote the club’s constitution: ‘[The purposes of the Club are] to play and beat Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society, should it exist, at least once a year.’
Do you think it should be considered a sport?
It is a sport.
More information: www.cutwc.org
‘[The purposes of the Club are] to play and beat Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society, should it exist.’
38. Pretend to be an expert at something you’ve never done before
Oh yes, I know all about Tiddlywinks and agrology for that matter.
78. Get a quarter blue for Tiddlywinks
Apparently it gets pretty serious in the upper echelons.
30. Get a blue
Unfortunately, at the moment of writing, you can't get a blue for RAG raiding, so if you want to fulfil this challenge, you're going to have to get creative. The phrase beg, borrow or steal springs to mind; but there are ways for the unfit and uncoordinated to earn sporting glory. Apparently tiddlywinks gets pretty serious in the upper echelons - to the extent that the most committed tiddlers can earn a quarter blue. So keep an eye out for them at the freshers' fair.
Do you guys think I should take up tiddlywinks or Buffy the Vampire Slayer society?
Both exist, by the way. My advice for clubs and societies is similar to that for your workload or friendships: experiment, then settle down. It can be tempting to immediately throw yourself into one society to start climbing its ranks, but this is a mistake.
Even the most innocent of societies like Tiddlywinks or something can’t just mere stress-outlets, because people want committee positions and CV content.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for CEB Focus.
Professor Wilkes added; ‘I was flattered to be invited by Patrick Barrie to give an illustrated talk on my reminiscences of early days in the department. Being of a certain age (OK, I’m 83!), I wanted to ensure that the slide ruler was reunited with the CEB Department, so after my talk I presented it to Patrick. He’s the ideal recipient—Deputy Head of Department (Teaching), recipient of a Pilkington Prize for Excellent Teaching, and World Tiddlywinks Champion. I have been welcomed back graciously into the CEB Department, which I hope will continue to thrive’.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Christ's College Magazine.
1954 Year Group Representative Mr Lawford Howells writes: An issue of The Spectator magazine in late 1957 had an article headlined ‘Does Prince Philip Cheat at Tiddlywinks?’. For the Cambridge University Twiddlywinks [sic] Club, founded in 1955 by Bill Steen, Lawford Howells and Brian Tyler from Christ’s, together with three other undergraduates from Trinity and Pembroke, this was like manna from heaven. What an opportunity!
Without delay a letter was sent to the Duke of Edinburgh, regretting that there should be any doubt as to his integrity when playing this noble sport, and proposing that this rumour be scotched once and for all by playing a challenge match against the CUTwC. Prince Philip accepted the idea and, as was the custom of royalty in the past, he nominated champions to represent him. The champions chosen were from the Goons – a team with Spike Milligan as captain, ably, and usually hilariously, assisted by Harry Secombe, Peter Sellers, and others associated with the popular radio comedy programme.
The Royal Tiddlywinks Tournament took place in the Guildhall, Cambridge, on 1 March 1958, before a crowd of six hundred spectators.
The picture accompanying this piece was taken on 1 March 2008, at a Royal Tournament arranged to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the Goons match. It shows five members of the CUTwC team who played in 1958, sporting their old, somewhat moth-eaten CUTwC ties. For this recent contest, the Duke of Edinburgh chose the Savage Club, London, as his champions. It was a very spirited and closely fought encounter, with the CUTwC prevailing in the end.
As in the Goons match, the event finished with a rousing rendering of the Tiddlywinks Anthem, as with the previous occasion, proceeds went to the Duke of Edinburgh’s charity.
Emeritus Professor William (Bill) Steen elected a Fellow Commoner in 2010
He writes: “It is something of a dream come true to become a Fellow of this College. Since birth the College has been part of my life; my father, S. W. P. Steen, walked to Christ’s daily bringing home news of the College. In 1952 I did my National Service as an RAF pilot. I started by flying Harvards around the Rocky Mountains in Canada and finished flying Meteors around Lincolnshire and Yorkshire. I spent four exhilarating years as a student at Christ’s studying Chemical Engineering and starting the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club with fellow 1954 matriculands – Lawford Howells (now year rep for 1954), Brian Tyler, Ian Pascoe and Roger Parker and others. After graduating I participated in the design and building of the world’s first continuous brewing plant. I married Margaret in 1960 and we went to Bengal in 1963 with the Methodist Missionary Society to lecture in Industrial Chemistry at a rural University College. We returned in 1965 and I joined the Metallurgy Department of Imperial College and lectured in Process Metallurgy. I had a spell in East Africa working for the United Nations advising on chemical industries for the East African Community. My research at ICST involved building my own CO2 laser in 1967 and was consequently awarded a BOC/SERC grant to do research. I wrote one of the first textbooks on “Laser Material Processing” in 1991, now in its 4th edition, and Liverpool University offered me “The James Bibby Chair of Engineering Manufacture”. I was invited to give laser courses around the world in Spain, Chile, Brazil, USA, China, India and South Africa as well as the UK, and asked to advise the governments of Sweden, Canada, Taiwan, and Japan on growth areas in laser processing and lead a group of scientists viewing laser work in the Japan and Korea. In 1995 I was elected as the first President of the Association of Industrial Laser Users (AILU), of which I was a founder member; in 1996 The Laser Institute of America presented me with the Schawlow Award for services to laser material processing and the University of Vigo in Spain named a laboratory after me. In my retirement the Goldsmiths’ Company, of which I am a Liveryman, uses me on their technical committee promoting apprenticeships in jewellery and precious metal work. It has also been good to serve the College as Editor of the Magazine between 2001 and 2006 and to now catalogue the College’s picture and photograph collection.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Fountain.
[Page 2] This issue of The Fountain is largely about time. [...] Charles Relle represents time extended, possibly the world’s longest-serving international sportsman, if Tiddlywinks be a sport.
[Page 16]TIDDLYWINKS
By Charles Relle
Color photograph.
Last year three members of Trinity— Matthew Fayers (1995), Geoffrey Thorpe (1972) and Charles Relle (1960), all experienced international players— were in the eight-man English team that, at an away match in Washington, beat the USA at Tiddlywinks by125 points to 99, so shaming England’s World Cup footballers. Matthew and Geoffrey, like many tiddlywinks players, read Mathematics; Charles, exceptionally, read Classics.
The world’s first Tiddlywinks Club was founded at Cambridge in1955 by eight students, two of them Trinity men, who thought that a Blue as well as a degree was useful in seeking a job. Not being sporty types, they had to invent a game—and their number, eight, became the size of a university or international team.
Tiddlywinks, once a children’s pastime, requires strategic thought as challenging as Bridge or Chess. And it is fun to stir incredulity by announcing, ‘I play Tiddlywinks for England.’
Charles Relle (1960).To learn more about the English Tiddlywinks Association visit www.etwa.org.
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for News and Events.
Report that Patrick Barrie and Ed Wynn are the tiddly wink world pairs winners.
Feature mentioning that the current world champion at tiddlywinks is Cambridge lecturer, Patrick Barrie.
Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club, founded in 1955, is facing closure due to apathy.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Queens' College Officers of the Clubs.
President: Alan Harper
Secretary: Matthew Adams
Treasurer: [note="none listed"]
President: Alan Harper
Secretary: [note="none listed"]
Treasurer: [note="none listed"]
Toggle showing 8 tiddlywinks references for Queens' College Record.
This year Queens' winkers have been busy organising a weekend of celebrations commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the invention of the modern game. During the weekend Queens' hosted the Cambridge Open, which was an extremely strong international tournament including virtually all of the world's top 30 winkers as well as many older faces from the early days of the game. Although Queens' Tiddlywinks Club may have been busy organising tournaments, we've also been winning them too, with Dr Stew Sage triumphing in the National Handicapped Individual Pairs and Dr Nick Inglis playing with the victorious group in the National teams of four. Also with Dr Anthony Horton and Alan Harper being part of the winning Varsity Match team, it has been a successful year again for Queens' winkers. Hopefully this year will see the resumption of Cuppers with King's and Caius fielding sides capable of overthrowing the dominance of Queens' in this sport.
1996 began rather quietly for Qu.Tw.C, its members contributing more to the University club than organising activities in the College. The club did manage, however, to organise a very successful bop in early May. The profits from this have enabled us to purchase an enviable collection of equipment. Qu.Tw.C. has had a very disappointing year recruiting novices, possibly the result of some poor singing at the squash, hence the active membership is currently low. We therefore invited other colleges to compete in our annual fiddled handicap tournament, this year the Sir Nicholas Scott (get drunk and fall over). As tradition demands, it was not at all clear who actually won.
It was another strong year for Qu.Tw.C. members' achievements. At Easter the current president, Andrew Dominey, won the Scottish National Pairs with old Queensman, Alisdair Grant. More recently, old members Geoff Myers and Matthew Rose won the English National Pairs, but unfortunately Geoff was unable to retain the World Singles title, losing to an American challenger. Queens', as ever, provided a splendid 5 of the victorious Varsity Match team of 8 (Ed Wynn, Rupert Thompson, Andrew Dominey, Andrew Young and David Clarkson).
The college Tiddlywinks Club has unfortunately had another quiet year with few activities - just the usual cuppers win (Queens' A: David Clarkson, Andrew Dominey, Stewart Sage and Rupert Thompson) - and poor undergraduate recruitment. Members again seem to be focusing their efforts more on the University Club. This did not impair current members' performances in tournaments, however. In March, Andrew Dominey won the Oxfordshire Open and soon after with David Clarkson, jointly won the Scottish National Pairs, a tournament now dominated by Qu.C.Tw.C. winners.
In traditional fashion, former Qu.C.Tw.C. players also excelled at the National Tournaments. Geoff Myers and Matthew Rose retained the National Pairs, David Clarkson and Richard Moore were in the winning side at the National Teams of Four and no fewer than seven former Qu.C.Tw.C. players qualified for the National Singles final, most notably Stewart Sage, who had not achieved this feat since 1987! Queens' provided slightly fewer of the Varsity Match team than in recent years, hindered slightly by a policy to field first year players! Tim Hunt and Andrew Young did play.
1997-98
- Captain: James Hopgood
- Secretary: Andrew Dominey
- Treasurer: Tim Hunt
Another quiet year for the college Winks Club, although there have been strong showings by members at University and national level. Our Junior Treasurer, Alan Harper, was President of the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club (CUTwC) for 2001-2. In February he captained a victorious Varsity Match Team, of which half the players were members of QuCTwC (Anthony Horton, Matthew Adams, Matthew Harper and Alan Harper). Stewart Sage, Senior Treasurer of the Club, was part of the Ferrets, the winning team in the Wessex Cup.
Ed Wynn retained the World Pairs title (with Patrick Barrie); Ed and Patrick have held the title since March 2000. Ed was also the joint winner of the London Open with former Qu.Tw.C player, Matthew Rose, and won the National Individual Handicapped Pairs, in November. Matthew Rose won the National Singles tournament in October.
It's been another quiet year for Qu.T.W.C. with Cuppers being uncontested again. Next year holds more hope due to a small resurgence of the University Club. However this lack of College activity hasn't meant our members have been inactive, with Dr Stewart Sage, Dr. Nick Inglis and Alan Harper all playing in this year's National Singles final and Alan and Matthew Harper representing the University in the Varsity Match. Hopefully this year we shall be a bit more active and successful.
This year Queens' winkers have been busy organising a weekend of celebrations commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the invention of the modern game. During the weekend Queens' hosted the Cambridge Open, which was an extremely strong international tournament including virtually all of the world's top 30 winkers as well as many older faces from the early days of the game. Although Queens' Tiddlywinks Club may have been busy organising tournaments, we've also been winning them too, with Dr Stew Sage triumphing in the National Handicapped Individual Pairs and Dr Nick Inglis playing with the victorious group in the National teams of four. Also with Dr Anthony Horton and Alan Harper being part of the winning Varsity Match team, it has been a successful year again for Queens' winkers. Hopefully this year will see the resumption of Cuppers with King's and Caius fielding sides capable of overthrowing the dominance of Queens' in this sport.
Dr Stewart Sage has decided to move on after 19 years as a Fellow of Queens’. He has been a most successful supervisor in Physiology for medics and vets and also natural scientists as well as serving as Director of Studies for Biological Natural Sciences. He has for many years been a Tutor for Graduate Students and for most of that time masterminded graduate admissions. He has also been a high profile member of successive May Ball Committees and was a stalwart supporter (both as a singer, as an organiser and in his undergraduate days as an instrumentalist) of the St Margaret Society. His exploits as an internationally-ranked tiddlywinks player are legendary. He will be sorely missed and the College wishes him well in his new post as a Fellow of Selwyn College.
In January the Tiddlywinks Club kicked off another busy and successful year with the Cambridge Open tournament and the annual dinner, which was held in the Armitage Room. Queens’ hosted two major tournaments in April: both the world and national pairs. The Varsity Team made a victorious trip to Corpus Christi College, Oxford, and won 80–32. Queens’ students Alan Harper, Serita Rana and Toby Wood were amongst those who returned from the Oxford match with quarter blues. Queens’ winkers ended the academic year in style with a ‘garden’ party on the rooftop of the Erasmus Building.
Officers of the Clubs 2006-7
Tiddlywinks
Captain/President: Serita Rana
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Selwyn College Council Meeting Minutes.
Council granted permission for Channel 5 to film members of the University Tiddlywinks Club in the Old SCR on the late afternoon of Wednesday 11 June. Dr Sage gave assurance that he would make the crew aware of the need not to cause disturbance in the Court and outside the Porters’ Lodge.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Selwyn College News online.
26th February-1st March
8pm, Chadwick room Selwyn College
Tues-Thurs £5/7 Fri-Sat £6/8
Book online at http://www.themightyplayers.co.uk
Boasting a talking cat, tiddlywinks champion, rebellious fellows and unpersuasive heathens this hilarious tale follows Alice, our fresh-faced heroine as she encounters the strange and mysterious Cantabridgian world.
Foremost a Fresher's tale of formals and fellows, Facebook and fire-alarms, we explore Alice's hopes, insecurities and potato-hurling habits in some mind-blowing musical numbers. Jim and Kate-her squabbling college parents, the dictatorial master, an elusive porter and the Bishop himself all impact upon whether Alice will ever truly fit in. Brought to you by 'The Mighty Players', who had recent success with 'The Zoo Story' at the ADC theatre, we hope to bring the real life and soul of Cambridge to the stage in an all singing all dancing form. This is not just a musical. This is Selwyn The Musical.
The Mighty Players are pleased to announce the premiere this brand new musical written about life in Selwyn by students at Selwyn. Produced to coincide with the 125th anniversary, we invite all students, alumni, fellows and porters to come and enjoy the show. For more information please contact Anna Seeley ([email protected])
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Societies Directory.
Our society will introduce you to a sport requiring skill, concentration, tactical awareness, nerve and most importantly, a sense of fun. You will receive first class tuition from world and national champions and many of our members go on to play in our annual Varsity match against Oxford, gaining a coveted quarter-blue. When not playing "winks", we are a very sociable society and can often be found on pub crawls, in a bar playing drinking games, on punt trips or at club dinners, with all members welcome to join in these and many other merriments.
- E-mail: [email protected]
- Category: Quirky - different and unusual
- Registered: Yes
Student-run publication
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Stop Press with Varsity.
About the 17th varsity match.
About CUTwC loss to Southampton
Undergraduate student-run publication
Toggle showing 9 tiddlywinks references for Varsity.
Article about Babycham and Guinness drinks supplied for Goons match (cited in Winks Rampant)
Dr. Rae Mitchell.
Phil Shipway [photographer]
A Cambridge admissions tutor denied rumours this week, following an article in The Guardian, that a person might gain a place in the university solely on the ground that he or she was a tiddleywinks champion, writes Jonathan Marsh.
When the opportunity arose to write a column with a hedonistic slant I felt relief; I always knew that the wild and frivolous hours of my youth spent amassing and archiving Mexican postage stamps from the 1860s would provide useful material for something. Even as I write this I sprawl naked upon a divan, nude except for a shower of collectable tiddlywinks, while Michael, the Chief Executive of Stanley Gibbons, shyly feeds me grapes.
[Professor Mary] Beard is also blessed with an endearing willingness to try anything that results in excellent television: during the episode she plays a game of Tiddlywinks on some ancient stone and at one point actually lies down in the dirt to assess the spaciousness of a room in the Ancient Roman equivalent of a high rise apartment block.
The legendary Boat Race is televised worldwide, and thousands of fans from each side make the pilgrimage to Twickenham each year to watch the Varsity rugby match. But some of the most popular sports at Cambridge rely less on power and athleticism, and more on delicate control or complex strategy. It’s time to take a look at the differing fortunes of some of Cambridge’s indoor sports and games. [...]
The University Tiddlywinks Club is home to the tiddlywinks national champion
ANDREW GARRARD
Last but not least, Cambridge also plays host to surely the nation’s proudest and most venerable university tiddlywinks club. The club was founded in 1955, and organizes contests for a number of curiously named trophies (like the Muscovy Duck Trophy, or the University Drunken Mixed pairs). Proving they’re (reasonably) serious about what they do, the Varsity tea&mdashl;the Quarter Blue—take on Oxford at their distinctive, deceptively technical game. They also enter national tournaments. According to the club’s website, Cambridge University is home to the reigning British men’s singles champion, Dr. Patrick Barrie.
I am a Cambridge alumnus, artist, designer, and openly trans person. My transition was from a female identity to a male one, and I went through it during my time at Cambridge. [...]
For good measure, I also joined the less-physically-demanding Tiddlywinks society. A sport of skill and dexterity (which often eluded me), I earned my ‘Quarter-Blue’ by beating Oxford. I figured if you are going to ‘do’ Cambridge, you might as well do it properly!
What links baton twirling, hovering, bridge, lifesaving and tiddlywinks? It turns out that they are all sports. In Cambridge, lifesaving, chess and Frisbee are all half blue sports, with tiddlywinks just trailing at quarter blue status. How did this happen? How are they sports? [...]
Cambridge has its own way of classing what a sport is or at least what sporting activities deserve the recognition of the student body: the blues system. A quick glance at the list of which sports are blues sports will bring up the obvious: football, rugby, hockey, tennis, and rowing. It’s in the half blue section that there are some surprise finds: try lifesaving, chess and Frisbee. Quarter blue status has also been awarded to tiddlywinks. Cambridge is a place famous for prioritising intellectual activity over any other, but can it really go so far as to call these activities sports and give them a blues status? How competitive can lifesaving really be; surely everyone would want everyone else to win to prevent, well, death? [...]
The lack of physical exertion is a theme which continues with tiddlywinks. But Nicky Collins, a committee member of the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club, argues that this isn’t an issue: “To be a world-class sports player requires multiple things: commitment, talent and desire to win. These are, of course, all qualities which a tiddlywinker must possess. Matches are won or lost not on the physical fitness of the players, but on the strategy and skill they display.” Does it bear any resemblance to any other sport? “I like to think of winks as a game with the tactical and strategic qualities of chess combined with the technical skill of basketball.” And what is this legendary quarter blue status that no other sport seems to possess? “The quarter blue status is unique to tiddlywinks and something which is over 50 years old.” There’s even quarter blue stash! Nicky, however, still has yet to receive his invitation from the Hawks Club. [...]
Our perception of sport is influenced, more than anything else, by what the public deems sport-worthy. Sometimes, the inherent nature of the sport is trivial when compared to the effect the sport’s history, popularity and coverage has on our judgement of it. Could we truly be sure that football would enjoy the same status within sport were it not for the fact that it dominates the back pages and that it’s played in every school in the country? What would happen if we played competitive tiddlywinks at our secondary schools?
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Winston.
Interview with Donnacha Kirk, President of the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Society
This week, Winston interviewed Donnacha Kirk (DK), the one and only undergraduate member of the university Tiddlywink society, and thus by default its President. We found the President a little worse for wear, glazed eyes and drinking vodka out of a toothmug, Winston feared that like many top athletes he had finally buckled under the pressure of the game
and intense lifestyle, but apparently his state was due to spending eight hours in a dark room with sub atomic particles.
Why is Tiddlywinks better than any other university sport?
It is the only game that combines a high level of physical skill and mental agility, both of which are essential to become a champion Winker. It is the only sport that allows you to have a
quarter blue (maybe that means they have jackets in a rather fetching check pattern, hmm). Also those who play are the biggest drunks in the world, each session involves drinking games that last roughly three times as long as each training session.
What has been your proudest Tiddlywink moment?
Beating Oxford because they failed to turn up, so becoming varsity champion by default and making it for the first time in to the top 100 winkers. The 50th anniversary dinner was pretty good, having to give a speech to the american and Canadian delegation, and telling the traditional president’s joke about wanking behind boulders. Actually I think the best would have to be being rung up by Richard and Judy to be interviewed about the Sport of Kings.
For ignorant people, could you give a brief outline of Winking rules? (the president explained these enthusiastically, with hand gestures).
You have teams of two. There are winks (little counters) and a pot, (a pot), and a squidger (for flipping the winks). There are two basic moves, potting (where you try and get it into the pot), and squopping (covering your opponent’s wink). That's where the strategy comes in. There are other moves as well, the boondock, the penhalligon and the John Lennon memorial shot.
Who do you respect most in the world of Tiddlywinks?
Dr Nick Inglis, a fellow here who invented the John Lennon Memorial shot. He also appeared on Blue peter as the only person who can squop nurdled winks
What qualities do you need to be a good Winker?
You must be male, fat, with a beard, over 40, and wear glasses. Studying Maths is a help, and you need to be able to consume three pitchers of real ale at a sitting without losing winking accuracy.
How would you explain the decline of Cambridge Tiddlywinking?
As a society it has a long and illustrious history, we’ve played the Goons and a select team of MPs in the House of Commons. Our patron is Phil the Greek, who presented the Silver Wink (trophy) to the society. It is also the most successful varsity sport. But the membership have discovered that playing winks and then drinking a is a lot less fun than just drinking, so now they just drink a lot rather than winking. But our undergraduate members have doubled this year (now a grand total of two), so I am sure that we are on the upward swing again.
2nd year Natsci
Close friend and next-door neighbour of Winston Editor. Has appeared in many plays around Cambridge, most recently ‘Oxygen’. Is currently working on several directorial projects (alongside Winston Editor). Also President of Cambridge Tiddlywinks Society and member of Cambridge Gaelic Football team.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Cambridge University.
Patrick Barrie: from studying Natural Sciences, to researching spectroscopy, to teaching Chemical Engineering and, throughout, playing tiddlywinks.
I first came to Emmanuel College as an undergraduate in 1984 to study Natural Sciences. I was attracted to Cambridge by the flexibility that the course offered, having always done well in maths and the sciences at school, but not having a clear idea of any career. I was attracted to Emmanuel because, even then, the College had a reputation for friendliness as well as academic excellence. I ended up specialising in chemistry, which came as something as a surprise to those who thought I was better at maths and physics.
During my final year as an undergraduate, I attended some seminars describing how recent advances in NMR spectroscopy enabled solids, rather than just liquids and solutions, to be studied. Either the subject matter, or the speaker’s enthusiasm for the topic, struck a chord with me. I therefore stayed on at Emmanuel and Cambridge to obtain a PhD in Physical Chemistry. My research area was using NMR spectroscopy to study new families of porous solids that had potential applications as catalysts. I was particularly proud of my synthesis and characterisation of one named SAPO-34, a catalyst that is now used commercially in methanol-to-olefin synthesis.
After completing my PhD, I was awarded a research fellowship at University College London where I continued to work on solid-state NMR spectroscopy for four years. I looked at a whole variety of systems using this technique and published results in a number of different areas, including materials science, biochemistry and palaeontology as well as various branches of chemistry.
Approaching 30 years old, I faced a career choice – academia or industry. The result of a few tentative applications was appointment to a lectureship in Chemical Engineering at Cambridge in 1995. The application was hesitant because I knew very little about chemical engineering, but the position had the attraction that it guaranteed that I would learn something. Indeed, I can now speak authoritatively about most, but not all, aspects of the discipline. I am a Chartered Engineer, who can think about large-scale processing, as well as being a Chartered Chemist who can think about molecules.
My research area has changed since my move back to Cambridge. I investigate the behaviour of molecules in porous solids. This involves trying to understand adsorption, diffusion and reaction in porous solids, using both experimental and modelling approaches. The potential applications are in the fields of applied catalysis and gas separations. I also spend time developing methods for obtaining physically meaningful parameters on catalysts from experimental data. These parameters can then be used to model catalytic processes and predict performance under a full range of operating conditions.
I have always enjoyed teaching. I tutored A-level maths before I started University, supervised undergraduates during my PhD, and taught at University College London before becoming a lecturer in Cambridge. Being able to think of ways to explain awkward concepts is an important skill both as a lecturer and as a supervisor. I am a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and was awarded a Pilkington Prize in 2008 by the University for excellence in teaching.
For Emmanuel College, I have been Director of Studies in Chemical Engineering since 1996, was made a bye-fellow in 2004, and became an official fellow in 2007. For the University, I am currently the Deputy Head (Teaching) of the Department of Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology. This means that I have major role in all aspects of teaching including developing the syllabus, implementing quality assurance procedures, mentoring staff and liaising with students.
Among my hobbies is the noble sport of tiddlywinks. I first started playing when I joined the student society when I was an undergraduate, little knowing that this would be the one activity that I would continue with throughout my life. I compete in national tournaments and have even managed to win the occasional world championship title.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Contra.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Eton College Chronicle.
I have often wondered if the rank abundance of indoor games, which are played in these days, is a modern affliction, or coaeval with the human race. To the former view I incline as an optimist; for to look on it as a perpetual heritage is a dreadful thought. Visions of the Cave-men playing Tiddley-winks, and the awful quarrels that must have ensued; thoughts of whole dynasties of Eameseses at their nightly Old Maid:—such things are enough to draw the fiend Despondence to him who looks into the future of the human race.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Alumni Reunion.
Jeremy Stockbridge
Electrical and Electronic Engineering 1966, MSc DIC Mechanical Engineering 1970
On the domestic side, I met Christine playing tiddlywinks at Maria Assumpta. We settled in Surbiton and have never moved!
Toggle showing 63 tiddlywinks references for Felix.
Another incident occurred a week later, when these far-flung members of I.e., the Silwood residents, having tired of pranks with Royal Holloway College, challenged Bedford College to a Tiddleywinks Match. An outstanding victory was recorded.
The President announced that Sunday, January 21st, 1962 was to be a Sport Day against R C S with 5 rugger, 4 Soccer, 2 Hoc- key, 2 Darts, 2, Dominoes, 2 Bridge, 2 Chess and 1 Tiddlywinks teams from each college. Kick off /bully off/ middle-for-diddle /first drop/ opening bid /first move/ first squidge was to be at 2.15 p.m. The contests were to be kept to departments as much as possible.
ULU Freshers' days, Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday. October 10th, 11th,12th.
For a plan of the building see your ULU Handbook: Societies' stalls are distributed as follows:—
First floor—room 1B
21. Winks Society
The second Guilds union meeting of the term held on Tuesday of last week was rather poorly attended, there being a noticeable lack of second and third year Guildsmen. The result of this was the passing of a motion declaring that if the publicity officer did not succeed in producing an attendance of two hundred or more for the next meeting he would be removed to the Round Pond and washed clean of his sins.
The meeting open, the secretary gabbled through the minutes of the previous meeting after removing the pencil from between his teeth, though judging from what one could hear this was unnecessary.
Concerning Morphy Day the president announced that an official invitation would be sent to R.C.S.U. challenging them to a tug of war on the towpath at Putney. Should this invitation not be accepted a coffin containing the remains of R.C.S.U. will be ceremoniously consigned to the river bottom.
The meeting was informed of the results of the previous Saturday's collection in the form of a tiddleywinks race down Oxford Street for this year's charity. The seventy or so Guildsmen who turned up raised some £81.
Phil Smythe then proposed a motion that a protectives machine should be installed in Mech. Eng. Dennis Taylor spoke against this appealing to all men, women and Children of Guilds to solve the problem by other means. Despite the suggestion that the machine should be installed in the coffee room and disguised as a coffee machine the motion was defeated by 36 votes to 31, a large number of people abstaining.
There being no other business the meeting was closed with the usual rendering of Boomalaka and with the unusual sight of D. Taylor actually succeeding in lifting Bolt.
IC Winks gained its second victory last Wednesday, despite attempts by the opposition to outwit us with such daring tactics as playing on their floor with the dreaded Japanese Wink (care of Woolworths). The result was an overwhelming success by 90½ points to 21½ This result was due mainly to good potting, especially by B. Pywell, who excelled himself on their floor.
Our first success was on the previous Monday, when Lower Mooney in the Union resounded to the cries of the frustrated ULU Fresh woman's team as the three pairs from IC got to work on the mats. Having removed the op[p]osition, IC went on to win 44½ to 18½.
This years' Carnival is for the Society for Mentally Handicapped Children and Carnival has already collected some money ! ? Guilds is doing phenomenally well, having collected more than £270, including £150 from the Lord Mayor's Show and most of the rest at the Guilds - Mines terrifying tiddly-winks tournament. R.C.S. also did well out of the crazy conkering i the King's Road. R.C.S. netted more than £100 from a pedestrian speed trap there to total £210. Mines has also collected about £53 !
The scene was set for a record-breaking year by a tiddlywinks marathon with M… down and across Oxford Street. About 60 people turned out on a wet Saturday morning to do battle and £75 was collected, which amazed everyone who took part and even M… (whose presence was debatable).
Lord Mayor's Show
Since the beginning of term, a lot of effort was put into the Guilds float, and its mere presence in the show was enough to promote a mammoth £150, with an estimated £20 from the Metropolitan police.This was an even more amazing result than the Winks, since street collecting during the show was "strictly forbidden".
Saturday, 7 November
TIDDLEYWINKS down Oxford Street. Assemble between 10.00 and 10.30 at Marble Arch. Come and collect for Carnival.
A good and entertaining 'race' from Marble Arch to Piccadilly Circus began with an exhibitionistic crew from Mines taking up the middle of Oxford Street, with Guilds and RCS on either flank.
After many entertaining and necessary detours from the assigned route, especially a short-cut across Oxford Circus (diagonailly), the winkers arrived in Piccadilly Circus (minus a few fingers) and assembled outside the Cockney Pride for lunch. They were not accompanied by D. Taylor Esq., who insisted on going to West End Central Police Station for his (see photograph). It later cost him five shillings.
Longest Wink—took place in Woolworths up an escalator.
Fastest Wink—somebody from Civil I.
Carnival Week began at midnight on Friday, 12th Feb. at the Lyceum, and ended on Saturday with the incredible fete opened by the equally impressive Miss Julie Ege.
Saturday morning saw tiddleywinks No 2 which turned out 60 enthusiastic winkers and a gorilla, all of whom proceeded along the new underground section of the course from Marble Arch to Bond Street, finishing with carol-singing in Piccadilly Circus and an attempted break-in to Emperor Rosko's live Radio 1 show in Lower Regent Street.
Saturday morning saw the start of the annual tiddlywinks race in aid of SUK rag. The race started the season of foolish events that are planned to follow. To those not used to ragging, a tiddlywinks race may seem to be rather tame. Well, maybe so under normal circumstances. But SUK are a little more bloody-minded than your average tiddlywinker. So they hold their race down Oxford Street at 10 a.m. on a Saturday morning.
The FELIX reporter, not having the luck to live in Hall did not get fortuitously awakened by loudhailers outside his window at 9.45 a.m. Yet he did succeed in arriving at Marble Arch by the appointed hour of 10. The story continues…
"The first apprehensions of being the only winker on show were soon dissolved by the sight of at least one hundred other idiots (freshers being well represented and all were in a rather gay mood. Passersby at this stage seemed to be quite unsuspecting of the implications of such a body of students, but when the signal came from leader to cross Oxford Street there were many a gasp as determined winkers strode forward on their unprotected knees.
COCKROACHES
Few cockroaches were encountered but winks often came to a sticky end as they rolled away down drains and miscellaneous gratings, or even stickier ends on patches of used bubble-gum. Casualty rates were high; one reporter from a scene of some of the most catastrophic winking declared that as many as three winks had gone west, and none had been recovered.
DETERMINED
Others pressed on determinedly, and I witnessed the fall of Selfridges' and the horrors of escalator winkfare. The CIA have denied any responsibility.
MICK McMANUS
The police were considered marvellous: they turned up in considerable numbers, and lent the occasion a distinct air of authority. However, serious resistance was met from a Traffic Warden resembling Mick McManus's big sister (no offence meant) and who fiercely brandished her mouthpiece, exhorting the masses to wink only on the pavements.
BODIES
By this time, I got separated from the main body, or rather bodies, and only some of the disabled lurked in doorways, collection tins still rotting in their bloodied hands. Later reports put the money collected at approximately £345, although confirmation is awaited. No reports of fatalities as a result of the event have been received.
Yes folks, you read aright, your eyes did not deceive you, Rag Week is here again. Starting on 18th November ten days of fun, entertainment and excitement. Minimum charges, maximum pleasure.
The aim of Rag this year is to raise money for the following four charities:
- ACTION FOR THE CRIPPLED CHILD
- IMPERIAL CANCER RESEARCH FUND
- COUNTDOWN CAMPAIGN
- KASTUR
Various stunts have already taken place on alternate Saturdays of this term, as all you avid followers (if not supporters) of Rag will know.
On 7th October 150 members of the tliree constituent colleges of IC assembled at Marble Arch ready with tiddlywinks and collecting tins. Objective—tiddlywink down Oxford Street and Regent Street as far as Eros, and at the same time to collect as much money as possible. On this occasion £350 was collected for Action for the Crippled Child and Imperial Cancer Research.
On 21st October another crowd of eager stuntsmen, or rather 'chars' equipped with pans, brooms and loo brushes effected a mass clean and brush up of Oxford Street, Knightsbridge and Kensington High Street. In doing so they realised £260.
Two weeks later a competition was organised in which the various departments took part, each dept. organising a stunt—the winner being the one raising the most money. Amongst the crazy schemes dreamed up and performed were rolling barrels down Oxford Street, a pedestrian speed trap (unwary passers-by were fined if they were not walking at exactly 11 miles per hour) and an escaped 'madman' from a lunatic asylum. From all these a total of approximately £500 was raised for charity. The winner was Mining and MinTech 1 with their free rides round Trafalgar Square in Clem, who collected £140.
Later in the afternoon, a few aspiring 'Guy Fawkes' went along to Westminster and attempted to "blow up" the Houses of Parliament. Their efforts did not (unsurprisingly) go down well with our beloved upholders of peace and law.
So far, IC has raised about £1300… can we make it up to £3000 by Christmas?
TIDDLYWINKS RACE ALONG OXFORD ST. SATURDAY 5th OCTOBER 1974. MEET AT MARBLE ARCH AT10a.m.OR SEE YOUR V.P. FOR FURTHER DETAILS
THE ANNUAL Tiddlywinks marathon from Marble Arch to Piccadilly Circus via Regent Street, took place last Saturday. The whole show went off quite smoothly. It was a special feature for the public who found it hilarious to see over one hundred IC students grovelling on the pavement, in some cases actually on the road, with tiddly-winks.
Mines out to avenge their defeat last year by C&G went off well before anyone else and consequently finished in first, second and fourth positions. The third position is still open. Mines collected a total of £183.71½ using 30 cans. Their highest individual total was made by Tanya Frost who collected £22.44 and this included a £20 note donated by an Arab [sic original="shiek" correct="sheik"].
C&G collected £248.67½ from 54 cans and their biggest individual total of £15.88½ was collected by Janice Ford. RCS collected the grand sum of £287.99½. Unfortunately during the count, their cans were mixed up (they had 99 of them) and so have no biggest individual total. The reason they collected more than anyone else was that they gave cans and winks to all their participants.
The proceeds from the race are in aid of the Leukemia Research Fund, the British Polio Fellowship and Guide Dogs for the Blind. The amount collected, £700.38½ is £70 up on last year's figure. Congratulations to the Rag Committee for a great race.
You have all probably seen this young lady around and people in RCS should know her quite well. Her name is Louise John and she is in Physics I. She hails from the Welsh town of Flanelli and was unlucky to come only second in the Queen of Jez competition (who were the piss-artists that did the judging?). Louise has taken an active interest in rag and other events (she took part in the tiddly-winks race) and is a keen squash player. With such vivacity and good looks she should go far and do well.
Somewhere between Oxford Street and Piccadilly Circus on the day of the Great Tiddly-Winks Race, Dave Barnes (C&G V.P.) lost his megaphone. Mines (the responsible party) were subsequently offered 2 of their Shields and 1 of their helmets in exchange by C&G. The exchange date was then set for November 5th, under the auspices of the Queen Tower. C&G arrived on time and assumed a position of superiority at the top of the steps, with their demolition squad making preparations consistent with November 5th. When Mines turned up, C&G proceeded to blow up the Queens Tower (with a loud theatrical bang in a dustbin). After shouts and hisses, the exchange actually took place, followed by the respective CCU songs/chants. Surprisingly enough, the whole event finished peacefully, with C&G shouting 'Boring'.
Last Saturday morning, Mr Peter Teague, (of no fixed address), President of IC Union was caught single-handedly WINKING in Oxford Street, W1. When approached, Mr Teague (who carried on winking) was heard to say, 'I've always done it, and I think that more people at IC should participate'. When asked why he was doing it, he said, 'For those blind people, less fortunate than myself, who through no fault of their own cannot wink any longer'.
Mr Teague was taken to Bow Street police station where he was charged with winking on the Queen's highway under section 41. In a written statement, he asked for 221 other offences to be taken into consideration. These included one of organising a vendetta against one grease merchant and wholesale distributor of cockcroaches who wished to remain anonymous, but whose family motto is "Overcharge and undercook".
Later, Mr Keith Ahlers, the President of City and Guilds Union, and himself a born winker, joined Mr Teague and together they proceeded to wink down Regent Street, causing much havoc and a mess on the pavement.
For full details and sensational photos see centre pages
Last Saturday morning. In bright sunshine, amid cheers and shouting, IC's invasion of Oxford Street, better known as the Tlddy-Wlnks race, began. The Miners, including the IF contingent, arrived late (It was their bar-night the previous evening) to taunts of' you're late' from the already present RCS and Guilds.
The race was started by the president of IC Union, Peter Teague, who was promptly followed by the hordes of IC. Meanwhile, intrepid mechanics were attempting (rather successfully) to bring Bo and Jez alive for the event. During these Initial stages, many taxi and bus drivers worked hard to contain their desire to run down those "—bloody students who are getting madder every year".
There were not many out of the ordinary happenings en route although one young lady received the boot (literally) from an indignant citizen. John Cavanagh nearly had the wrath of the law brought down on him when he winked across a police car at Piccadilly Circus.
It was a very fast race, the winner arriving at Piccadilly Circus at 10.45am . Most people were in the 'Cockney Pride' by 11.30am.
The collection was well down on last year's. RCS collected a total of about £140, Guilds £204 and Mines £220. The Mines figure Includes £60 collected by IF. All monies collected will be distributed between the various charities that RAG is in aid of this year.
[page=18]On Friday night, if anyone can remember it, the pub crawl 'occurred'; some marshals being in a worse state than the competitors. The fun now is to find out where exactly those pubs arel If you still have your scoresheet, please hand it in to the Union Office.
This event inevitably took its toll on the tiddlywinks next morning, but there was a good attendance; many thanks to all those who turned up to tiddle their winks.
The Royal College of Science Union Rag Committee wish to thank everyone who helped collect £733.57 on the tiddlywinking rag stunt on Saturday. The topthree Rag collectors were: Zosia Zbrezniak with £53.40[;] James Powell (Maths 1) £30.68[;] Jane Lavers and Helen Emms, (both of Life Sciences 1) with £30.40.
Now Richard, who rather fancied himself as a future Whitehall mandarin, thought that an appropriate beginning to such a noble vocation would be to join the Organising Committee of the Oxford Street Tiddlywinks contest, which is traditionally held on the first Saturday after term begins. For better or worse, he was allocated the task of seeing that no one cheated by surreptitiously placing their tiddlys in their pockets, and walking, rather than "winking" the course.
On the day, he was posted about half way along Oxford Street, equipped with his two anti-cheating devices,,,,two lumps of flesh, blood, tissue and nerves, four fingers and a thumb. Of course, he had thought that all his job would consist of would be first to indentify the lawbreaking winkers, challenge them, then demand that they turn out their pockets. This ad hoc procedure worked well for a while, until it finally dawned on him that there were members of BOTH sexes participating in the event.
At any rate, after sometime, his Kojak intuition suddenly told him that a buxom wench who happened to be passing him at the time was acting in a grossly suspicious manner. With the unabashed enthusiasm of a spider about to catch a fly trapped in its web, Richard laid both hands on his victim. It was at this point that he realised that his methods of search would have to be radically altered if he was to perform his task properly. With a suspicious glint in his eye, he looked at Anne, then again at what she was wearing a navy blue IC tee shirt over an elegant light blue frock.
'Where could she hide a tiddly or two?' he wondered to himself. First he took the obvious approach: he body-searched her. With cavalier gusto, he felt all over her shapely body, from shoulder to waist and so on.
Anne was quite bewildered by all this, although whatever it was, she said to herself, it was far more pleasant than tiddlywinking. All the same, when he'd completed this task, which was obviously so distasteful to him, Richard was chagrined to find no incriminating evidence whatsoever. He now went through a prolonged mental debate. Should he make a more thorough search, or perhaps suffer the humiliation of being outwitted by this foxy lady. All the while, a mischeviousvoice inside him kept insisting that this regal specimen of womanhood, who stood before him had tiddlys concealed somewhere upon her person.
Without further ado, in the middle of Oxford Street, on a lovely autumn day, Richard Bignall put his hands up a girl's dress and promptly got himself arrested for attempted rape. In reply to Richard's protest that he was 'just looking for tiddlywinks', the arresting officer was heard to comment that in thirty years of dealing with sexual offenders, he'd never heard it put like that before. But that's another story.
At the end of the afternoon, the gallant competitors assembled at Piccadilly Circus to pay their yearly homage to none other than that rascal Eros, the son of Aphrodite, the Queen of Lust. It was doubtless one of his arrows which pricked poor Richard's heart, smiting it with blinding passion. Nevertheless, perhaps it is significant that it Is at the statue of Eros, who is both the divine symbol of childhood and the personification of the most playful amorous desire, that a thousand or so IC students congregate each year.
Anne joined in the Ring-o-Round-a-Rosie in a state of complete ecstacy: she'd never realised that a tiddlywinks competition, in which, incidentally, she was not even participating, could be such a lascivious and erotic activity. It was only after she'd downed a few lager and limes in the "Cockney Pride" that she began to feel the earth beneath her dainty feet.
The last we heard of Richard was that when the judge asked him if he had anything to say before he was sentenced, he replied, "Beam me up, Scottie!"
Also there is no more time to see whether Captain James T. will come to Richard's rescue, for here my story ends. As Master of Ceremonies of this tale, it just remains to me to bid you a fond farewell. But if you'll bear with me a while longer, I've penned a few concluding remarks for your edification.
Saturday saw the first Rag collection of the year with Guilds collecting £747.50 bringing our Rag total to over £800, not bad for the first week (better than RCS). The tiddlywinking took place as usual with some people winking all the way up the steps of Eros. Despite a slight difference of opinion with the boys in blue, all of Guilds made it to the Cockney Pride, even though a large number of winks were lost down drains, up trouser legs or just into thin air.
Ring-a-Ring-a-Roses at Eros
Steve Groves [photographer]
HARDENED veterans and freshmen for whom the term tiddlywinks was merely a childish game, turned up for the first Rag stunt of the session. This traditionally is a mass wink down Oxford Street with Mines taking the middle of the road; Guilds to their left and RCS to their right.
So with their forces marshalled and ready the signal was given and the tiddles were winked. Styles varied, beer gut hindering more mature students. However, even the freshers soon gained the technique of simultaneously thrusting and rattling the Rag can.
Many techniques were used to attempt to avoid contributing but there was little escape even for the most ardent avoider. One rather lavishly embellished, but shop soiled femme fatal&eaigu; was heard saying that she was also looking for a few pennies herself. Undaunted, another willing helper approached, to whom she commented that she too was a pro. The spirit of the affair was echoed by a lady who fulfilled Wilde's comment that: "the tragedy of Old Age is that not one is Old, but that one is young". At the age of 60, she winked for a while in classic style, till whisked, with com- passionless efficiency, by her daughter to more 'fitting' pursuits.
The last thing anyone considered was legality until confronted by officers of Her Majesty's Metropolitan Constabulary.
Luckily, they either didn't find out, or mind, the fact that the event had not been licensed. Normally, rules are bent by using house to house collection licenses as very few street collections are allowed each year. However, apart from a few left over from last year in Mines possession, most collectors could not even produce this license if challenged due to an oversight by Rag Chairman, Ian Hodgson.
Despite this, the motley soon wound their way to Eros at which, to the surprise of the uninitiated onlooker, a 'Ring-a-Ring-a Roses' was performed at 12:10pm. Mines formed the innermost circle with Guilds on the outside, both moving anti-clockwise RCS in the middle performed a clockwise motion. Also surprised were those winkers told to be there at 1:00pm. The final act of the event was a well-earned adjournment to the Cockney Pride.
The laurels go to RCS who collected £930; top collector being Andy North of Physics 1 with £42. Guilds amassed £458, top collectors being, Martin Bellamy with Anthony Davis of CCD with £30.51. Mines collected £290.
Papers
Tiddlywinks was absolutely excellent. Well done all who went, I hope you keep it up.
The real blockbuster of the week took place on Saturday. About 170 intrepid [acronym short="RCS" long= "Royal College of Science"] persons turned out to tiddle and wink down Oxford Street. Despite being outnumbered by Guilds, RCS pissed all over them by collecting around £940 with a few cans still outstanding. Top collector of the day was Andy North of Physics 1 with £42. However, congratulations to everyone who came along, you're all stars as far as I'm concerned.
The next Rag stunt will be this Saturday and is a circus outside Harrods. Clowns and other performers should meet in the RSCU Office at 10:00am.
Tiddlywinks was a heap of fun, especially down the centre of Oxford St. In the end we collected £290 which means we collected more money per head than the other C C U s . Finally on Saturday night we held our annual pub-crawl, which although poorly attended, showed that the drinking spirit in Mines remains one of excess.
Imperial College's tradition of opening the year's Rag by playing tiddlywinks will go ahead on Saturday despite official opposition.
Last year, tiddlywinks raised over £1,200 in Oxford Street for the National Deaf Children's Society. This success, however, left only pennies for the less boisterous collections of the Multiple Sclerosis Society, who promptly queried the validity of IC's street collectors' licence. This year, determined not to be out-done, they have made a move against independant licences being granted on their flag day. Instead, they are extending their own licence for I C students to collect for them "provided they do not behave indecorously."!
Undaunted
Unfortunately, the Metropolitan Police, who had previously turned a blind eye to the winking of unlicensed tiddleys, feel that they must now step in because MS had officially complained that tiddlywinking was not covered by the street licence. According to regulations, collectors must stand perfectly still and at least twenty-five metres apart, and the police have informed the Union that they will be on the lookout for people infringing their rules in Oxford Street.
Not to be daunted, Union officials have decided to circumnavigate these technicalities by re-routing the students to the King's Road. Can holders and tiddlywinkers will mass together to a clicking of counters and a rattling of cans hoping to collect as much as possible before their legality is brought into question—if, indeed, it is.
Following tradition, RCS students will go down the left-hand side, C & G down the right, and Mines down the middle of the road. One participant last year spoke of tiddlywinking through a taxi, "but having a bit of trouble with the ridges in the rubber carpet." Another student hopes this year to master hopping his chip back up the steps of the tube station. Prospective tiddlywinkers are asked to appear in great numbers at their CCU offices at 9:30 on Saturday to collect counters and collecting boxes.
Quibbles
Union President Steve Goulder and Rag Chairman John Ferguson have stated that they will accept full responsibility for any legal quibbles. At the very worst, the fine could be £25, which will if necessary be paid from Union funds; but provided enough people turn up, they believe that the police will not intervene.
The Rag Tiddlywinks stunt has been postponed until next Saturday because of possible police intervention over licensing laws.
Traditionally, IC students have always tiddlywinked along Oxford Street on the first Saturday of term; this has always been considered the Freshers' Rag Stunt. But after last year's controversy over street collecting licenses, Scotland Yard informed the Union that if they went ahead on Saturday they would be prosecuted, despite the Multiple Scelerosis Society withdrawing their complaint after the Rag Committee had offered to collect for MS funds.
Several attempts to find a way around the law were made, but all of them failed. The most original of these was that tiddlywinking down Oxford Street had been done since 1968, and was therefore a folk tradition and exempt from the regulations. The Metropolitan Police wrote back enclosing a copy of the Miscellaneous Provisions Act of 1916 (section 5, regulation 3(1), schedule 2) which imposes a minimum precedent of thirty years on folk traditions.
At a meeting of the Union Executive last week, it was decided to proceed in defiance of the police, but along Kings Road to avoid the waiting constabulary in Oxford Street. King's Road is London's second busiest shopping street and, a collection in excess of £1,000 for charity was expected. But at a further meeting on Wednesday, it was revealed that Mencap (the society for the mentally handicapped) had licences which would allow the Union to collect for them on the following Saturday, and so the committee agreed that under the circumstances it would be wiser to postpone the event until Saturday week.
As an alternative Rag stunt for tomorrow, the R C S U will be selling Rag Mags at the University of Kent in Canterbury, leaving Beit Arch at 9:30am.
events. I can't blame my old mate John Eagleson, I suppose, but as Mines VP he ought to have known where to go tiddlywinking this weekend without relying on me to tell him.
The long-awaited Tiddlywinks Rag Stunt on Saturday was a great success, raising £980 for charity. None of the expected problems from police or Chelsea College arose.
Nearly a hundred and fifty students from the three Constituent College Unions started from The Vale and tiddlywinked up King's Road to Sloane Square. This represented a break from tradition, as until this year tiddlywinking has always taken place along Oxford Street, but after warnings from police and some trouble over collecting licences the event was twice put off and a new venue found.
In keeping with tradition, however, the contingent from the Royal School of Mines winked their tiddles single-mindedly down the middle of the road, while the more cautious members of C & G and RCS used the pavements. The route took them past Chelsea College, which was expected to be regarded by their students as an infringement on their territory; but there was no visible reaction from within. Furthermore, police presence was limited to a discreet inspector, two sergeants and three constables who raised no legal objections until Sloane Square was reached. At this point the students were asked not to propel their counters across the pedestrian crossings, as they had already caused a certain amount of traffic congestion.
The event drew to a close with ring-o-roses around Sloane Square. The students then descended en masse on the Royal Court tavern, where some customers complained of being harassed by over-eager collectors. Rag Chairman John Ferguson has written an apology to the landlord on behalf of the Union.
Because the money was delivered direct to MENCAP on the same day, individual totals for the three CCUs are not available.
The Tiddlywinks Rag Stunt will be held again at its traditional venue in Oxford Street this year. The stunt, usually held on the second Saturday of term, was transferred to the Kings Road last year after complaints from the Police.
The collection will be made on 15 October for [acronym short="MENCAP" long="The Royal Society for Mentally Handicapped Children and Adults"] using their cans and licences. These can be collected between 9:00am and 9:30am from CCU offices and from here will move off to Marble Arch. The finish will be held at Eros at 12:30 where ICU sabbaticals will lead 'Ring-a-Roses' around Eros. Gaynor Lewis will call a 'Hey Vivo' before everyone adjourns to the Cockney Pride for a well-earned drink.
(Gaynor tells me that she will buy a pint for anyone who comes up to her in the Cockney Pride after the Rag stunt—Ed.)
Tiddly-winks - Yes its back in Oxford Street and this time its all legal. Mencap are kindly letting us use their licence and providing us with collecting cans. Tiddly-winking will take place on the Second Saturday of term (15 October) - further details will be published in Felix.
We even had the honour of Passmore interpreting for the even more Irish Sean Davis who pronounced Eros—E-row-us and might as well have been talking about Keady High St when mentioning tiddlywinks down Oxford St (next Saturday).
And don't forget Tiddleywinks Next Week (Saturday 15th October) the biggest rag stunt of the year, and yes its back in Oxford Street.
Over 400 IC students collected a total of £2,555 on Saturday as they tiddh winked the length of Oxford Street in the second Rag stunt of the year. This represents the largest amount ever collected from this traditional event. The money is donated to the charity Mencap.
The combined forces of the CCUs took startled West End shoppers by storm with R C S starting from Marble Arch and Guilds from Tottenham Court Road. The miners took to the middle of the road so that absolutely no one got away.
The number one collector, a nattily dressed Guildsman, raised £49 and Regalia Shop salesman Carl Burgess who winked all the way, received a £16 donation from one generous character. FELIX Editor Pallab Ghosh was seen in the Cockney Pride more than an hour before the event ended, drinking large quantities of alcohol and massaging his sore feet. He still managed to collect £13, Gaynor Lewis raised £15, Sean Davis raised nothing and Christine Teller stayed in bed.
Irishman Sean Davis, not one of the sharpest people at IC at the best of times, got hopelessly drunk and lost the phone number of Mencap and was seen scurrying frantically all over Piccadilly Circus searching for a phone book.
After contacting Mencap Mr. Davis decided to hop onto a passing bus and tiddlywink on board just to say he had tiddlywinked the length of Oxford Street. He ended up in Islington.
The success of the event was due to the sterling efforts of Sean Davis, James Benbow (Rag Treasurer) and Dave Parry (RCS VP). After sorting out the Rag files they were able to persuade Mencap to allow ICU to use their street licences. Police congratulated President Gaynor Lewis on the organisation of the trouble- free event.
There is still a vacancy for Rag Chairman and the post seems unlikely to be filled before Rag Week. But the future looks bright for Rag. Larger stunts are planned including a departmental street collection during Rag Week. This has the potential of raising more than twice as much as Tiddlywinks if a similar number of people turn up.
Twenty Imperial students, mostly from City & Guilds Union invaded Capital Radio last Friday to give a demonstration of winking.
After a short practice at South Ken tube they descended upon the unsuspecting Capital Radio studio.
Ed Braman, the producer/ presenter of the news, was amazed when informed that 400 people would be winking down Oxford Street.
Mike Stuart, President of City & Guilds Union, in characteristic style hogged all the publicity and succeeded only in making a total wally of himself, as usual, to the nation's capital and was given a demonstration by Charles Relle, the London Open Tiddlywink Champion.
Wonderful response to Tiddlywinks, thanks to the 157 people who turned up. We raised about £970 and our best collector was T Burgess of Chem 1 with £38.87½.
Congratulations are in order all round for the record £2,555 raised on Saturday by tiddlywinking down Oxford Street. I understand that Mencap are absolutely delighted and are allowing us to use their collecting licence next year. Well done to Sean Davis, Dave Parry and James Benbow for persuading the Police and Mencap to let us collect and to everyone who turned up on Saturday despite the miserable weather.
If Rag is to continue successfully this year, the vacancy of Rag Chairman needs to be filled. If anyone is interested in the post they should see Sean Davis in the Union Office[.]
Tiddlywinking down Oxford Street
Raise money for Rag, and get pissed at the President's expense!
Meet at C C U Offices at 9am on Saturday morning.
Don't forget Tiddleywinks tomorrow morning. Last year we raised £2,400 for MENCAP. Please turn up to enjoy yourselves and help MENCAP.
TIDDLYWINKS down Oxford Street
Meet CCU offices 9.00am Saturday 13 October
I bet you thought this would be an article about Zen and the art of Motorcycle maintainance but its really about sex.
Sex is very interesting and quite useful if you know how to do it. Firstly you get your tiddle and wink it down Oxford Street. The method is quite straight forward. You angle your tiddle backwards and press on the edge nearer to yourself, press forcefully and this has the effect of propelling your wink a rather large distance.
We will be meeting in the CCU offices (that is RSMU, C & GU, & RCSU) at 8.30am to 9.00am on Saturday morning. I hope to see lots of you there. You can pick up your licenses, cans and tiddlywinks there.
Imperial College Charity Rag will be staging the very popular annual event of Tiddleywinks down Oxford Street on Saturday October 4. It's an event not to be missed and there are major prizes for the 3 top collectors. Meet at your CCU office at 9.00am to collect your badges and cans, and look out for posters throughout the week.
Our second major collection will be happening on Saturday October 18th, when we will be playing human monopoly. This is basically a treasure hunt thoughout London with your travelcard paid for by us. Clues will need to be solved, and a prize of an Olympus camera will be presented to whoever wins. In the evening of Monopoly, there is also a disco/concert being staged with Tri-60 and our very own 'Blue Blue Ice' performing (previously known as Duo) at the Hammersmith Town Hall. Tickets are 50p to IC Students and there's a bar at the hall.
Watch out for Rag week coming soon too, starting on November 12th. I hope you have fun participating in these events, and the money raised goes to a worthy cause.
As if all that wasn't enough, there'll be events in your Department and Hall of Residence… and the hyperactive maniacs amongst you will be up at the crack of dawn on Saturday to tiddley-wink down Oxford Street in aid of rag charities—one of Imperial College's more endearing traditions.
After you have been up until the early hours of the morning at Freshers' Ball try and get up to go tiddlywinking. The Rag article (on the page opposite) tells you about this.
Saturday
Tiddlywinking down Oxford Street… 9.00am
Meet CCU offices to pick up licences and tins. Street collection down Oxford Street to raise money for the National Society for Deaf Children. You must attend!!!
Black and white illustration of a wink having hit another wink and propelling it forward
Meet outside CCU Offices at 9am. Saturday 4th October
Saturday
Tiddlywinking down Oxford Street…9.00am
Meet CCU offices to pick up licences and tins. Street collection down Oxford Street to raise money for the National Society for Deaf Children. You must attend!!!
This is the place where the fun begins. Here to relieve the tedium and drudgery of normal college life is [acronym short="RAG" long="Raising and Giving"]. What's that then I hear you cry. RAG is Fun. RAG is Crazy. RAG is Big. RAG is Free. RAG is about Tiddlywinking down Oxford Street, Live Monopoly, Beer Festivals, Bungee Jumping, Freebies and Excellent Prizes. RAG is about having a laugh and doing it for charity. Just to prove it take a look at the line up for the first term.
Tiddlywinks 10/10/92
Yep, that's this weekend! Join hundreds of crazy students (that means YOU) armed with RAG cans and tiddlywinks and set off down Oxford Street. Tiddling under feet, round lamp posts, across roads, over Taxis and amazing tourists into handing over loadsa money. Follow this up with Ring-a-ring-a-roses round Eros and round the day off with a mammoth attempt to drink a pub dry.
[...]
Pavement Climb
If you thought Tiddlywinks was crazy you are not going to believe this. Its quite simple and straight forward even a Civil Engineer can understand it. Attached precariously to your climbing partner with nothing more than a piece of rope/string/elastic you will attempt to climb a shear horizontal pavement.
RAG TERM TIMETABLE
Day: Saturday
Date: Oct 10th
Event: Tiddlywinks down Oxford Street
The first RAG event of the year was a storming success with over 200 students taking part in the Tiddlywinks Down Oxford Street. Everyone had an ace time (despite bomb scares shutting down Oxford Circus) and we raised over £2,000. The day started outside Southside Halls of Residence with a deafening 'Wakey Wakey Southside' led by Rachel ' RAG Chair' Mountford. This was followed by Boomalakas and Kangelas from the [acronym short="CCU" long="Constituent College Union"]'s before everyone was ferried by minibus to opposite ends of Oxford Street. Armed only with RAG cans and tiddlywinks our intrepid tiddlywinkers tiddled their way down Oxford Street and Regent Street (the leaders making a small detour to avoid a bomb at Oxford Circus) to Eros in Piccadilly Circus. Shoppers and tourists alike were shocked into handing over loadsa dosh, happily making our treasurer's job a long and difficult one.
[...]
Also thanks to Dice & Games Ltd for donating the monster tiddles and A to Z Geographers Map Co Ltd for donating the 30 colour A to Z's for the top fresher collectors.
[page=11 column=1]So you survived Tiddlywinks last Saturday, had a great time, met some people and drunk a pub dry or did you stay in bed all day and miss the whole thing? This Saturday you have another chance to be Mad, Silly and Part of it. The event is Live Monopoly. Real people, real streets and real prizes. Yes, this is not a bored game (sorry!) and we should raise loadsa money for MENCAP.
Rag 'Off Your Tree '93' got off to an excellent start this year with Tiddlywinks being the first event on Saturday 10th October. Over 200 students turned up to shock the tourists and shoppers into giving their money to Action Aid by tiddlywinking their way along Oxford and Regent Streets to Piccadilly Circus. Al l went well, despite the Oxford Circus bomb scare, and overall more than £2000 was raised. Afterwards some of the collectors retired to 'The Grove' pub to take part in the traditional 'Drink-a-Pub-Dry'. The very next week the streets of London were once again invaded by students,this time playing a real life version of Monopoly. Teams of 4 to 6 people had to visit the locations on the Monopoly board,answering clues and collecting treasure on the way. Altogether £4660 was collected in aid of Mencap and the top collectors won bottles of wine. The prizes were given out at the party organised by Mencap that evening.
10 October 200 raggies raise over £2,000 during tiddlywinking. £5,000 is raised the following week during the world famous Monopoly.
Imperial College Union Rag has begun its Fungal Spore '94 campaign with vigour.
On Saturday 9th October, Rag had its first big event, the annual 'Tiddlywinking Down Oxford Street'. A total £647.28 was raised, with Imperial College students on hands and knees flicking discs of plastic down the busy London street. The start was dampened slightly with rain threatening to ruin the fun. However, as the day progressed, the rain did subside. Jane Hoyle, Rag Chairman, said: "It was a bit tiring and a bit damp, but it was really good fun... it was a good day."
Rag's next major event is the annual 'Live Monopoly Around London' which will take place tomorrow. Everyone is welcome. Those interested should meet in Beit Quad at 10am. See page 21 for further details.
RAG have been very busy since the start of term. They ran the cloakrooms throughout Freshers' Week and organised the tiddlywinking down Oxford Street last weekend. Tomorrow is live Monopoly, an event not to be missed by anyone. New students will get practical experience in finding their way around London, meet lots of people, collect cash for MENCAP and get an invite to the exclusive party afterwards. All this and it won't cost you a penny (unless you are too lazy to walk and have to buy a travelcard).
This Saturday saw the first event of the Rag year. Yes you've got it—Tiddlywinks. Many people ignored the rain to turn up and take part. Everyone gathered at the CCU offices and then went over to Princes Gardens for Wakey Wakey Southside to wake the residents up. A few people did actually join us from there—they couldn't really ignore us. Also, for the first time, Linstead Hall got a wakey wakey call.
From there we were all ferried to Marble Arch for a photocall (after we woke up one of our minibus drivers—hello Dave Goddard!). The CCUs were all there in their regalia, as were Jez and Clem (the RCSU fire engine and the Mines flatbed truck). Unfortunately Bo, Guilds' vintage car couldn't make it because of a poorly back wheel. Hopefully she will be with us for Live Monopoly this Saturday.
As soon as everyone had arrived at Marble Arch, the tiddlywinking started with a vengeance. Enthusiastic collectors made their way along Oxford and Regent Street avoiding as many obstacles as possible. Lots of shoppers and tourists were so bemused by the sight of people tiddlywinking along the street that they reached in their pockets and donated some money to Action Aid. Some tiddlywinks (but no tiddlywinkers) got run over but eventually everyone arrived at Piccadilly Circus intact. Once here, we did the traditional ring-a-ring- a-roses around the Eros, much to the amazement of the tourists. Then Jane, our esteemed Rag Chair, lost some of her dignity by being dunked in the fountain, twice! After all this, all the collectors were ferried to The Queens Arm Tavern in Draycott Street to try to drink it dry.
The total amount of money collected was the grand sum of £647.28! Well done to everyone who took part. All in all it was a great start to the year and everyone involved enjoyed themselves. Special congratulations to the top fresher collectors: Emma Russel & Chris Lewis £36.56 (team) and David Barnes £21.93 (solo).
If you missed Tiddlywinks, don't worry, the fun isn't over yet. This Saturday there's Live Monopoly. Teams of four to six run around London visiting all the sites on the Monopoly board, solving clues and collecting treasure. Sign up at the Rag Office (2nd floor, east staircase, Union Building) from 10am. Afterwards, there's a free party organised by Mencap. There are prizes for the winning teams, including a skiing trip to Andorra. See you there!
The Annual RAG Tiddlywinks Down Oxford Street took place on Saturday, raising nearly £400 for ActionAid. The amount raised was £200 down on last, year's figure, RAG chair Ian Robertson said that those, attending "collected excellently...and had a great time." Having four minibuses full of participants (as well as using RCS and BSM mascots Jez and Clem) he said he would have preferred a better turnout, but was optimistic that RAG's next event.—Monopoly around London would be better attended. Anyone wishing to take part should attend the RAG meeting on Friday, immediately after the [acronym short="UGM" long="Union General Meeting"] (which starts at 12) or they should sign up at the event on Saturday at 10am, at the [acronym short="ICU" long="Imperial College Union"] building.
Dear Felix, Rag would like to thank everyone who took part in Monopoly and Tiddlywinks. Special thanks to those on Jez and Clem, Ian, Dan, Dave, Richard and Steve for driving minibuses, and everybody who helped count money and Sam Scotcher for keeping Monopoly running smoothly.
We would also like to thank the A-Z map company and Waddington's Games for donating prizes.
The official presidential transport of the RCSU, Jez has already been present, at the Fresher's Fair, the RAG Tiddlywinks and was even used as the jail van in the RAG Monopoly last. Saturday.
It was announced that Imperial College was to acquire a new organ in the form of the National Heart and Lung institute. The merger, due to go ahead within a year, was seen as the first phase of the plan to make Imperial a medical 'super-school'. Great interest was taken in the revelation that Imperial was one of ten universities possibly planning to form a 'superleague'. On a lighter note, the Three Handled Pot belonging to the Royal College of Science Union was stolen in a suspected mascotry raid. As the two pint pewter pot is not a violate mascot it was requested that it be returned. The pot was later located in the Royal School of Mines Union office. Rag performed their annual tiddlywinking efforts along Oxford Street and raised nearly £400 for Action Aid.
This year's RAG (Raising And Giving) collections have got off to a good start with the first two making over £1600.
The first took place on the first Saturday of term, and was part of the annual MENCAP megaraid, in which students from universities all over the country take part to raise money for the mentally handicapped children and adults. This year the megaraid also had a Rocky Horror Show theme, so many of those taking part donned suspender belts and bras in an effort to emulate the gender-bending characters in the cult musical.
Imperial supplied around thirty collectors, many of whom were in drag, but also included the constituent college motor clubs, who turned up to shake tins and to ferry the wet transvestites around town.
Traditionally, IC students play tiddlywinks along Oxford Street as part of the event, but the weather prevented this from happening, a any tiddles (or winks) would simply have stuck to the ground. Ignoring the fact that the tissue paper stuffed down a lot of the collectors chests would have fallen out while bendng over to play. The cold and rain also put pay to plans to throw the RAG chairwoman, Louise Choo into the fountain on Piccadilly circus. This did not stop the very cold trannies from collecting over £1100 during the day, though.
Last Saturday also saw a collection around London, this time with no running mascara or laddered tights, for UNICEF and UNA. This collection attracted a slightly smaller following, but still managed to raise about £500 forthe charities.
Forthcoming events include a collection for John Grooms around London and the Sponsored Nude Kamikaze Parachute Jump—in which students run in the nude from Harrods to Beit Quad (15th of November), a collection at the Wimbledon vs Manchester United match (22nd of November), sponsored firewalking on Queens lawn (19th of November). To get involved, turn up at the RAG meetings in dBs on Thursday lunchtimes at 1.10pm.
What the BUCS say?
We have the BUCS fictures for the next week, so if you’d like to go to that Tiddlywinks game, you’ll know where to go…
Toggle showing 7 tiddlywinks references for IC Reporter.
Silwood Park’s Andy Purvis has won the world singles tiddlywinks championship for the fourth year running, beating American Larry Kahn by 30 points to 19.
“This was our fourth meeting in the world championships,” said Mr Purvis, a university research fellow set to become a lecturer in the Department of Biology in 2000. He is also the current UK champion and has twice won the American national finals.
Mr Purvis, who says he was very pleased with his win on 19 November, is coach for the College’s tiddlywinks club. “Everyone else has only been playing for a year while I have been playing for 15 years now. We have got maybe the second biggest club in the country.”
Next week, his team plays Oxford University, a long-standing club in comparison to Imperial’s which is just over a year old.
Mr Purvis added: “Cambridge is the dominant force and we get crushed by them on a regular basis.”
US challenger Larry Kahn, who holds the record for winning the world singles the most times, says he has spent £20,000 on tiddlywinks, an amateur sport.
The 1998 world singles championship was the 49th contest. The IC tiddlywinks club meets every Monday at 17.00 in the summer room at Silwood Park.
Dear IC Reporter,
I was delighted to read in the IC Reporter that Imperial boasts the world tiddlywinks champion, and that Imperial are in training to play Oxford. It reminded me of my own fine career as a member of the 1978 Cambridge University tiddlywinks team. In those days Oxford were in demise. Well actually they didn’t even have a team. So for the Blues match we drove over to Oxford, rounded up eight people who were prepared to learn, taught them in the morning, and thrashed them 8-0 in the afternoon. This gave us great satisfaction and we were consequently awarded our colours - quarter Blues - for this resounding success.
Yours sincerely,
Steve Warren
Blackett Laboratory
WHEN Ian Thompson was 12 years old, he fell off his chair laughing at an old tape of the Goon Show that his grandfather gave him.
Fourteen years on, the research assistant in the department of materials spends his spare time as editor of the Goon Show Preservation Society magazine.
Ian Thompson with a 1958 photograph of the Goons playing tiddlywinks at Cambridge University, and a poster celebrating Spike Milligan's knighthood"I joined the Society four years ago and was made editor in February, probably because of all my computer equipment at home," he explains.
"I’m able to scan pictures and write word documents; before, the magazine was all typewriters and glue sticks. I’ve brought the magazine into the 21st century."
The antics of Goons, Peter Sellers, Harry Secombe, Michael Bentine and Spike Milligan, resulted in an inimitable style of comedy which used characters such as Eccles, Bluebottle and Neddy Seagoon.
Ian has been able to reproduce previously unseen, original scripts, due to part of a bequest to the Society by the late George Brown, its former chairman.
The scripts were written by Spike Milligan and produced by Peter Eton. They show handwritten changes that occurred during Sunday night run-throughs of the Goon Show before broadcast.
"George left us a treasure trove of material. We are the only people with the six original scripts from pre-series three and a large percentage of images and recordings. The BBC don’t have them as they frequently recorded over original tapes to recycle them," said Ian.
"We also have audio recordings of series four and five — copies were taken by people who worked on the show — as well as footage of the Goons mucking about off-stage between recordings."
Puppets
The Goon Show Preservation Society’s Patron is the Prince of Wales. Its Honorary President is last surviving Goon, Spike Milligan, and it has 650 members in Britain and 150 members abroad. Most of its collection is kept with Society secretary, Dr Steve Arnold, at his home in Tilbury, Essex.
The organisation owns one of four puppets used in the series, Telegoons. Leek-chewing Neddy Seagoon is two feet high, worked by original strings and rods and has a plaster of paris face. Society members are constantly trying to track down the remaining six, believed to be hidden in attics.
"There were rumours they were seen in an Indian restaurant in Kensington so a lot of us zoomed off to try and find them but without any luck," added Ian.
"John Hamilton, the special effects man from the show, has also given us private tapes, bits and pieces. With this latest material, there is no reason why we could not stage a proper collection at one of our conventions.
"We’re not looking to sell it, but for people to appreciate it. It would be a celebration of Spike’s genius."
For more details, go to www.goonshow.org.uk.Andy Purvis, biological sciences, Silwood Park, has taken the world title in singles tiddlywinks.
The Imperial College lecturer went head to head against American Larry Khan who was defending his world title. Andy won by 30 and a third to 11 and two thirds after becoming hooked on the game almost 20 years ago as a student at the University of Cambridge.
“It’s a brilliant game which deserves to be taken seriously,” he said. “It is complex, quite creative and there is a lot of strategy but it is not frustrating like chess because you can recover from mistakes.”
January is the 50th anniversary of modern tiddlywinks, invented by Cambridge University students Bill Steen and Rick Martin.
This week Dr Andy Purvis, Department of Biological Sciences, became the world champion at tiddlywinks. Dr Purvis commented: "It's a brilliant game which deserves to be taken seriously. It is complex and quite creative. There is a lot of strategy but it is not frustrating like chess because you can recover from mistakes, or like professional snooker which is impossible for a mortal to play."
w3.cambridge-news.co.uk
Professor Andy Purvis from the Division of Biology has fought off American challenger Larry Kahn to retain his world tiddlywinks champion crown. Professor Purvis, who has been playing the sport since he joined the tiddlywinks society at Cambridge University in the 1970s, also took the English singles title for the fourth consecutive time at Queen’s College, Cambridge, last month. He explains that there’s much more to the game than just flicking ‘winks’ into a cup: “It’s a strategically complex game—like croquet or chess— with players trying to capture each other’s winks by covering them with their own, and recapturing their own captured winks.”
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Imperial College.
Coverage of rag events was a regular and popular item within STOIC’s programme schedule. Whether it was: a simple collection; tiddlywinks down Oxford Street or, as we’re about to see, “Guilds Silly Sports” outside Harrods in Knightsbridge.
"We played tiddlywinks down the Kings Road. RCS down one side. Guilds down the other side and Miners down the white line in the middle. The police stopped us tiddlywinking across the zebra."
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Imperial Engineer.
Tiddlywinks
For Rag Week, Mike Bartlett recalled 85’s tiddlywinks down Oxford Street.
Alumni magazine
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Imperial Matters.
Andy Purvis, Biological Sciences, Silwood Park, won the world title in singles tiddlywinks.
The Imperial College lecturer went head to head against American Larry [sic original="Khan" correct="Kahn"] who was defending his world title. Andy won by 30 and a third to 11 and two thirds after becoming hooked on the game almost 20 years ago as a student at the University of Cambridge.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Imperial-News.
This week Dr Andy Purvis, Department of Biological Sciences, became the world champion at tiddlywinks. Dr Purvis commented: "It's a brilliant game which deserves to be taken seriously. It is complex and quite creative. There is a lot of strategy but it is not frustrating like chess because you can recover from mistakes, or like professional snooker which is impossible for a mortal to play."
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Lancaster University.
For those more interested in less taxing sports, there was also a Tiddlywinks club, an apparently competitive sport that required "teamwork, guile, resilience at the knees, gamesmanship and co-ordination between the eye, thumb and the index finger."
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Lancaster University.
Student clubs were also widespread during the early existence of the University. The Film Society boasted that “for half a crown”, you could watch anything ranging from The Grapes of Wrath to A Hard Days Night. There was also a Marxist Discussion group for the more left wing political brains and the Conservative and Unionist Association which was one of the first clubs to be formed at the university. University politics were hotly debated. The first JCR meeting for Bowland and Lonsdale occurred in 1967.
RunnersThere was also the ’64 Society Debating Club’, departmental groups such as the Historical and Biological Society, Scottish Country Dancing and musical groupings such as the Choral Society (for “whether you think you don’t sing or whether you’re sure you do”). For the student interested in doing something more physical during their spare time, there were also numerous clubs and associations to choose from including golf, lawn tennis, rugby and athletics. The Mountaineering club was active in the late 1960s and assured any potential members that “you could do worse than enjoy a leisurely day out with the Mountaineering Club…at least you’ll spend Sunday evening in a different pub than normal.” (Nothing changes!) Boating Society For those more interested in less taxing sports, there was also a Tiddlywinks club, an apparently competitive sport that required “teamwork, guile, resilience at the knees, gamesmanship and co-ordination between the eye, thumb and the index finger.” The Rag Association was also very popular with students.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Gryphon.
So we may justly say that Britain is THE Top Sporting Nation, an observation amply confirmed by the following facts: (a) we have discovered innumerable sports (tiddleywinks, marbles, foxhunting, Parliament). (b) in all sports we are definitely superior—latently at any rate, (c) Damn it, man!… we’re British.
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Leeds Student.
Explained was finishing tiddly drinks when he picked up my glass and emptied contents onto floor.
Toggle showing 17 tiddlywinks references for Union News.
David Jacobs, guitarist and pianist, had to turn down an offer to take part in Rag Revue. “There are some pretty spirited chaps in the Department—we could have put on some decent stunts, only it wasn’t worth planning any thing when we knew we wouldn’t be here” he said. Chris Tideman, member of the eight-man beer-drinking team, was also planning “a 48-hour marathon stunt—either a tiddly-wink contest or dominoes.”
WEDNESDAY was the time, and the Union the venue for the Engineers Gala Day last week. Visitors, some 500 or more of them, descended on the University precinct well armed with Union Cards, Sports equipment, maps, and rules for Skronging.
The idea of a Gala for Engineering societies from the northern universities, Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester and Sheffield, first reached fruition lest year. Basically the Engineers want to get together at least once a year, and feel that an organiised massed visit would not only be more mutually profitable, but would save expense on private trips.
The activities organised included football competitions, tiddley winks, skronging and a film show and hop in the Union.
ANOTHER innovation in this year’s [acronym short="Rag" long="Raising and Giving"] is a tiddlywinks competition, included in Thursday’s entertainments. The idea is to get the tiddlywinks up all 40 or so of the Town Hall steps—one at a time. All classes of entrants very welcome. No sexual discrimination.
FOR many Houldsworth scientists, H-week celebrations this year will be eclipsed by an afternoon’s sport arranged with the young ladies of Tetley Hall.
The exact form that the sports will take is uncertain, but many of the scientists would prefer to get to grips with the situation in some sort of rugger match.
Pretty Bobbie Boam, President of Tetley, believed that most of the Hall lovelies would like to play games with the Holdsworth men. However, she envisaged something more like marbles and tiddly-winks.
A LETTER received by Union President, Tony Lavender, last week invites Leeds University to take part in a National Tiddlywink Competition for ‘the Prince Philip Silver Wink.’
Leeds have been drawn against Hull, where it appears there is a competent team. If Leeds makes no challenge before November 15th Hull passes into the second round.
Other information given includes the rule that all matches shall be played ‘according to the International Rules of Tiddlywinks and the news that results will appear in the March issue of ‘Winking World.”
THURSDAY
Tiddlywinks race.
GENERAL Athletics Secretary Keith Watkin is short of a Tiddlywinks captain. Anyone prepared to lead a team against Hull University on November 15th should contact him in Exec. Office.
Junior Vice-President Ian Morrison, who was Entertainments Secretary last year, asked, “Why hold up Trafalgar Square for a game of Tiddley-winks? ” He felt that the majority of Union members would prefer Hops to films on Saturday night.
THE return of the inter-college tiddlywinks match saw Arts win. The victors were away to a flying start and continued in fine form to beat the other colleges.
Result: Arts 37, Techno logy 26, Housecraft 2.
Present League positions are Art and Technology with 6pts. followed by Housecraft who have yet to get off the mark.
University Halls and Societies are invited to join a local League for teams of four players. Interested parties should contact Pete Sotheran at the Tech College, Leeds 1.
Last Thursday a Bradford team of tiddlywinkers flipped a wink from Leeds Town Hall to Bradford in 19½ hours. Leeds will try to beat this record in Rag Week. Said Grant, “We’re bound to win. Our winks are made of stronger stuff.”
ABERYSTWYTH newspaper ‘‘Courier” gives pride of place on its sports page to tiddlywinks of all things. No doubt that while Freshers here will be feeling their aches and bruises after their trial matches, the Freshers of Aberystwyth will be going around winking freely.
WHEN people hear the word tiddlywinks' the usually think of children playing on a carpet Several such children have now come to Leeds, but we take our tiddlywinks very seriously.
Winks, as we prefer to call it, has developed into a great sport demanding immense skill and concentration. In fact, quarter blues are awarded to dedicated members of Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club, as well as having their own scarf and tie.
DEXTERITY
Each year Universities including Manchester, Cam bridge, Exeter, Soton, Edinburgh and Glasgow compete for the Silver Winks trophy. Leeds must now be one of the few universities unable to boast its own set of winkers; this we find surprising as Tiddlywinks is one of the few sports in which the strength of forefinger, intensive training and finesse, that is so often found here, is required. And so we at Leeds hope to be competing in this knock-out competition in the near future.
When our constitution has been passed by the relevant committees we will call upon our reserves to become a society flourishing with up-to-date equipment and know how. So if you wish to participate in a society to cater for your inner drives in this direction keep your eyes on the main notice-boards where we will keep you well informed of our activities.TiDDLEYWINKS Club, recently given official recognition by the Union now has 28 members.
The “squidgers” and “squoppers,” as devotees of the sport are called, plan to hold Tuesday evening practice sessions in the Terrapin.
The Society’s first match is at York tomorrow. A Tiddleywink Weekend ” is planned at the Mountain Hut, and other activities are in the planning stage. Said a member, “We are endeavouring to give Tiddleywinks its rightful place in the sporting world. Precisely what this is, is anybody’s guess!“
THE Tiddlywinks Club won again last Wednesday in their match with Hull University.
Nine games were played and the Leeds team won by 36 points to 27.
Two weeks before, Manchester College of Advanced Technology was soundly beaten by 68 points.
Besides these major attractions, there is a variety of [sic original="minients"]. They are being organised by Stan Norman, and take place in the Garden of Rest outside the Art Gallery, and include mock trials, Scottish dancing, fencing and possibly judo. Other activities include snail race, bubble-blowing, tiddly-winks, pea-pushing, hop scotch and many others under the general heading of Hobbits. In addition there is a mixed rugby maitch between the Engineers and the Polytechnic on November 1st on Wood house Moor.
Many students from York are said to be cynical about the efforts of York’s sports teams against other Universities. Apparently, the excuse that they play larger Universities is no excuse.
The University of York is said to offer very reasonable facilities for a wide variety of sports, including rugby and football, and more obscure ones like lacrosse and tiddly winks.
It has been said that what is needed is for talented individuals to face a higher standard of competitor so that they can develop their full potential. The choice seems to be one of cultivating social or playing skills.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Leicester University Virtual Genetics Education Centre.
It is a hands-on activity which will grab the interest of younger pupils as well as being of great interest for older students who may be able to use it for more directed study about the human genome and causes of human diseases.
The aim of this activity is for students to use tiddlywinks to represent sections of jumping genes, which they then flick onto a poster which is representative of a section of the human genome. Where their "gene" lands either will or will not disrupt the gene and may then cause disease. An accompanying PowerPoint presentation is used for students to look up the gene on which their jumping gene has landed and information is provided about what cause (if any) this will have.
The University London Union was also known as "ULU".
Toggle showing 5 tiddlywinks references for Sennet.
There is little doubt that it will be accepted by the nation
Letter re London School of Economics team (cited in Winks Rampant)
A planted story.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Student Projects.
Mini-project:
This project was one where we were given a brief before hand. The task was to create a mechanism that would consistently flick tiddlywinks into a cup from a set distance away.
CAD Model of a device to flick tiddlywinks - Integrating Studies 1a- Part A, Semester 1.
This assignment was part of a large group project to design and manufacture a device capable of flicking tiddlywinks into a cup a set distance away. The slideshow above shows both the CAD model from NX5, and also pictures of the final, manufactured device. The device failed to work, due to the adhesive used failing in use.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for ELGAR: Electronic Gateway to Archives at Rylands.
- Reference VSS/1/162
- Physical Description 1 folder
- Scope and Content
- Established in 1959 for the playing of tiddlywinks.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Ulula.
Alumni magazine
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Connect Online.
"One of the societies I joined as a student was the NUTS (Nottingham University Tiddlywinks Society). Not only did we squidge, [sic original="squad" correct="squop"] and pot winks locally, we also played matches against other universities. It was a great delight when a notice appeared for an 'abroad' match—I signed up and the team went via mini-bus to Aberystwyth!" Philip J Watson (Economics, 1965)
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for University of Nottingham website.
Philip Watson (Economics 1965)
Philip Watson, an eminent professional statistician for over 40 years, was granted Chartered Statistician status in 1993 having held fellowships the Royal Statistical Society and Institute of Statisticians.
Born in Lincolnshire, some fifty miles up the River Trent from Nottingham, Philip Watson won a County Scholarship to attend The University of Nottingham, where he read Economics and nurtured a keen interest in statistics. As for so many undergraduates, University was a life changing experience.
Author of over 40 papers, Philip Watson worked as a Statistician for internationally renowned companies such as Bassetts confectioners and Pirelli tyres prior to becoming Chief Statistician at the International Rubber Study Group in London and subsequently its Consultant Statistician.
More recently he has advised the Office of National Statistics and the Department of Work and Pensions, devoting much of his semi-retirement to the earnest pursuit of bridge - as Committee Member and Tournament Director. It turns out that his passion for economic statistics and bridge date back to his university days where, as a resident of G Block, Lincoln Hall, Philip honed his skills, cannily sharing a room with fellow economist and international bridge player, Tony Sowter.
Philip's experience of university exemplified just how much can be attained in just three short years. Not merely a dedicated scholar, Philip engaged in all aspects of university life, as Manager of the Students' Union Stationery Shop, member of NUTS (Nottingham University Tiddlywinks Society, a game, incidentally, at which he claimed to be "reasonably proficient") and University Carnival.
Recalling those student days he wrote, "I felt as if I was putting something back into university life", a commitment that continues to the present day as sponsor of the School of Economics' student magazine Nottingham Economic Review. Philip's generosity contributes significantly to its production costs and is of significant importance to the publication.
Philip Watson (Economics 1965)
Philip Watson, an eminent professional statistician for over 40 years, was granted Chartered Statistician status in 1993 having held fellowships the Royal Statistical Society and Institute of Statisticians.
Born in Lincolnshire, some fifty miles up the River Trent from Nottingham, Philip Watson won a County Scholarship to attend The University of Nottingham, where he read Economics and nurtured a keen interest in statistics. As for so many undergraduates, University was a life changing experience.
Author of over 40 papers, Philip Watson worked as a Statistician for internationally renowned companies such as Bassetts confectioners and Pirelli tyres prior to becoming Chief Statistician at the International Rubber Study Group in London and subsequently its Consultant Statistician.
More recently he has advised the Office of National Statistics and the Department of Work and Pensions, devoting much of his semi-retirement to the earnest pursuit of bridge - as Committee Member and Tournament Director. It turns out that his passion for economic statistics and bridge date back to his university days where, as a resident of G Block, Lincoln Hall, Philip honed his skills, cannily sharing a room with fellow economist and international bridge player, Tony Sowter.
Philip's experience of university exemplified just how much can be attained in just three short years. Not merely a dedicated scholar, Philip engaged in all aspects of university life, as Manager of the Students' Union Stationery Shop, member of NUTS (Nottingham University Tiddlywinks Society, a game, incidentally, at which he claimed to be "reasonably proficient") and University Carnival.
Recalling those student days he wrote, "I felt as if I was putting something back into university life", a commitment that continues to the present day as sponsor of the School of Economics' student magazine Nottingham Economic Review. Philip's generosity contributes significantly to its production costs and is of significant importance to the publication.
Toggle showing 9 tiddlywinks references for MCR Freshers' Handbook.
Blue: Awarded in certain sports for competing in a varsity match for the University. Some sports only award a ‘half blue’, and tiddlywinks a quarter blue.
Blue
The Blue is the highest sporting achievement at Oxford and Cambridge, and is awarded only to members of certain sports clubs who have competed in the annual Varsity Match. In respect of some sports, only a ‘half blue’ is awarded. Despite suggestions to the contrary, there is no ‘quarter blue’ for the sport of tiddlywinks.
Blue: The Blue is the highest sporting achievement at Oxford and Cambridge, and is awarded only to members of certain sports clubs who have competed in the annual Varsity Match. In respect of some sports, only a ‘half blue’ is awarded. Despite suggestions to the contrary, there is no ‘quarter blue’ for the sport of tiddlywinks.
Blue: The Blue is the highest sporting achievement at Oxford and Cambridge, and is awarded only to members of certain sports clubs who have competed in the annual Varsity Match. In respect of some sports, only a ‘half blue’ is awarded. Despite suggestions to the contrary, there is no ‘quarter blue’ for the sport of tiddlywinks.
Blue: The Blue is the highest sporting achievement at Oxford and Cambridge, and is awarded only to members of certain sports clubs who have competed in the annual Varsity Match. In respect of some sports, only a ‘half blue’ is awarded. Despite suggestions to the contrary, there is no ‘quarter blue’ for the sport of tiddlywinks.
Blue: The Blue is the highest sporting achievement at Oxford and Cambridge, and is awarded only to members of certain sports clubs who have competed in the annual Varsity Match. In respect of some sports, only a ‘half blue’ is awarded. Despite suggestions to the contrary, there is no ‘quarter blue’ for the sport of tiddlywinks.
Blue: The Blue is the highest sporting achievement at Oxford and Cambridge, and is awarded only to members of certain sports clubs who have competed in the annual Varsity Match. In respect of some sports, only a ‘half blue’ is awarded. Despite suggestions to the contrary, there is no ‘quarter blue’ for the sport of tiddlywinks.
Blue: The Blue is the highest sporting achievement at Oxford and Cambridge, and is awarded only to members of certain sports clubs who have competed in the annual Varsity Match. In respect of some sports, only a ‘half blue’ is awarded. Despite suggestions to the contrary, there is no ‘quarter blue’ for the sport of tiddlywinks.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Alternative Prospectus.
John’s is secretly the best-equipped college in Oxford for sport, but we don’t like to brag. We play virtually every sport available—from football to tiddlywinks, hockey to pool (it is a sport!). Our teams regularly place strongly in the college rankings, and members of the college are often on university teams.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Cherwell.
On Sunday afternoon, amidst the hymns and hangovers of Mayday, Oxford hosted another less well-known but equally idiosyncratic event, the annual Varsity Tiddlywinks match.
The match, which was held at Balliol College, was won by the Cambidge University Tiddlywinks Club (CUTwC) by a disappointingly impressive 99 to Oxford’s 13.
Cambridge has only lost the Varsity Cup on four occasions since it was first contested in 1964.
John Lees, a Balliol student who represented Oxford in the match, commented “CUTwC came prepared with a selection of squidgers, despite our early attempts to Blitz out we were foiled by the Tabs excellent squopping. Two failed John Lennon memorial shots later, and it felt like every wink[ ]had been subbed at once.”
Although the Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society is used to losing to the Tabs, this defeat was particularly hard for the team as out of a total of 16 games Oxford has only won one. The loss also seems to have caused tension within the team.
Lees commented, “It was widely agreed that [Daniel] Kessler's tactical ineptitude and poor potting technique led to our 99-13 defeat, and he has now resigned from his post as president due to pressure from the team.”
Despite the upsetting outcome for Oxford, the entire team were awarded quarter blues.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for University of Oxford Archives.
Box T3
Tiddlywinks Society
Student-run publication
Toggle showing 7 tiddlywinks references for The Oxford Student.
Having £130 in your possession to buy a membership comes in handy as does attending the annual European Affairs Tiddlywinks competition to meet new people.
The 'pure' light-blues have argued that in addition to their better standing in the Times league table, their recent victory in rugby Varsity match, and their near-total dominance in tiddlywinks over the last half-century, theirs is also the more exciting town.
Queens' College, Cambridge is not just a haven to Stephen Fry, Erasmus and the mathematical bridge, it is also the inspiration for two of the world's greatest winkers. Yes, tiddlywinks is the new sex and they don't come much hornier than Queens' tutors.
OXFORD UNIVERSITY TIDDLYWINKS SOCIETY recorded their first varsity victory since 1995, and only their second in 40 years, at Queen's College Cambridge last Sunday.
Despite an inaccurate implication in the popular BBC sitcom Blackadder Goes Forth that the varsity tiddlywinks fixture was played as early as 1914, the modern game dates back to the formation of the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club in 1955.
The varsity match consists of 16 pairs matches: each of the four pairs on each team play each other once during the course of the day. Seven points are available in each match.
The match on Sunday was delayed due to the late arrival of some Oxford players who were stuck on their coach in Bedford. However when play did get underway after lunch, the first blood went to Oxford as captain Charlie Oakley won the squidge off. Oxford went on to win all four first round matches to lead 18 1/2 to 9 1/2.
Cambridge had the better of the second round, but the Oxford second pairing of Andrea Gorman and Matt Moorhouse won, with some impressive baseline potting from Gorman, and Oxford held on to their lead.
In the third round Oxford again took all four games, including a 6 - 1 thrashing of the Cambridge number ones by Moorhouse and Gorman, who were undefeated throughout.
The Dark Blue's lead was now strong, although not unassailable, and the Tabs began the final round well, both of the Cambridge third pairing potting out againt our third pairing of Ann Carter and Rachel Gray. But despite good squoping by Chris Abram, Moorhouse and Gorman won 4-3, and when Andrew Walpole scored a point in the first pairs match, the Blues were home and dry. In the remaining game, the Tabs won 6 consolation points.
Charlie Oakley, the world number 33, spoke exclusively to the OxStu sports section about his teams victory.
What squad was it you were in, little man? The tiddlywinks squad?
The Inter-Varsity Tiddlywinks trophy is heading back to Cambridge after a record-breaking defeat for Oxford on Sunday. The first match since 2005 finished 99-13 to the visitors after a late recovery prevented the humiliation of the first single figure score since 1958.
After the result an open letter of apology was written by the team to Oxford Chancellor Lord Patten explaining their failure and vowing to make amends.
The contest took place over several hours in a lecture room in Balliol College where the Light Blues prevailed over the recently reformed Oxford team to maintain their dominance. Hopes of a fourth ever triumph were dashed as players who had up to six years experience quickly opened up an unassailable lead. The match looked entirely one-sided until the final game when Dawn Hollis successfully ‘potted’ six ‘winks’ to thwart a Cambridge century and salvage a shred of dignity for the hosts.
Cambridge captain Dannish Babar assured the Oxford squad that they had the potential to become “a force to be reckoned with”. But in the dark blue camp there was anger at the scale of the capitulation. One team member branded the scoreline “disgraceful and embarrassing”. The President’s suitability was questioned amid accusations of “poor tactics, questionable pairings and egotism” as well as a “complete lack of preparation”.
Wearing a ‘quarter blue’ scarf, an award not recognised by the Blues Committee, the President dismissed these comments as a “transparent attempt at self-advancement”. He declined to be named, and it has been reported that he has since resigned. Under the constitution of the society an Extraordinary General Meeting must be held to identify and address the reasons for the defeat within 13 days.
The result was wrongly reported on the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Society website, stating the final score as 62-50 in Oxford’s favour, although this has since been corrected.
The team’s letter of contrition to Lord Patten
Dear Chancellor Lord Patten of Barnes,
As we are sure you’re aware, Sunday 1st May saw the fiercely contested Varsity Tiddlywinks match, which Cambridge won 99-13. We write to you on behalf of the Oxford Tiddlywinks Society to apologise for our shameful defeat, the worst since records began.
Not only have we let ourselves down, but the pain of knowing we let down our fellow students, our tutors, and above all, our illustrious forefathers of the game, is perhaps too much to bear. It is tempting at this point to admit defeat, and to slink away, forgotten and unloved into the annals of history. But we are stronger than that, and it is for that reason that we collectively promise to continue as a society, and face Cambridge next year with a more experienced team. Maybe we’ll even read the rules fully before the match.
Out of the ashes of this disaster will rise the phoenix of success. As the North American Tiddlywinks Association motto says, “Fiat vincs, ruat cælum!”*
Yours sincerely,
The Oxford Tiddlywinks Varsity Squad
* Let winks be played while the heavens crumble!
Oxford University Chancellor Chris Patten has sent a letter in reaction to Oxford’s thrashing by Cambridge in the Inter-Varsity Tiddlywinks on May 1st.
Much to the surprise of the team, the Chancellor responded to the team’s letter of apology. He wrote: “News had, of course, reached me in London concerning the Society’s recent humiliation; and I understand that there was some debate about whether this catastrophe should lead on the BBC 10 o’clock news.
“You may, of course, be right that perfidy played a part in the outcome, though it seems to an outsider more likely that you have all been spending far too much time in the library!
“Perhaps I can give you a piece of advice as a very old man? If you continue through the rest of your adulthood ‘winking’ at people, you may find that it gets you into quite a lot of unnecessary trouble.”
Oxford were beaten 99-13 in the game – the first since 2005 – which took place in a lecture room in Balliol College.
After their defeat, the Oxford team wrote an open letter to Patten, “to apologise for our shameful defeat, the worst since records began.” They pledged to continue playing and improve on their display next year, saying: “Maybe we’ll even read the rules fully before the match.”
To their Cambridge counterparts, they had defiant words: “Out of the ashes of this disaster will rise the phoenix of success. As the North American Tiddlywinks Association motto says, “Fiat vincs, ruat cælum!”” – ‘let winks be played while the heavens crumble.’
Publication for alumni
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Oxford Today.
And, of course, beyond the anti-sports, youthful wit spawns spoofs like the (sadly defunct) Varsity Tiddlywinks, with its ironic Quarter-Blue, or the inter-college Tortoise Race at Corpus (still alive and crawling).
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for University of Oxford website.
Results MT11
- Jesus 32 – 12 Queens
- Jesus 28 – 5 Lincoln
- Jesus 55 – 2 Exeter
Fixtures
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for St. Hughs College Newsletter.
I spent many happy hours practising tiddlywinks with my partner, with the next away match in mind. I was captain of the University Tiddlywinks Team, a particular honour since I was the first woman to hold that position. I insisted on retaining the title used by previous male captains, “Master of the Winks”, as I felt “Mistress of the Winks” sounded distinctly louche. All who played in a Varsity match were awarded a quarter blue.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Archives Catalogue.
Ref No: WFD/17/8
Title: Tiddlywinks Club account book
Level: Item
Date: 1963-1970
Extent: 1 vol
Description: Includes details of individual receipts and expenditure of the Tiddlywinks Club between Summer Term 1963 - Oct 1970.
Includes a list of members for 1969-1970 session.
In an envelope at the back: The Rules of Tiddlywinks, issued by The English Tiddlywinks Association; list of equipment of the Club, Apr 1970; and details of expenses incurred for match at Essex on 7 Dec, c.1970.
Access Status: Open
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Pauline.
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for The Bulletin.
The Tiddlywinks Association hopes to arrange some matches next term. In the meantime practice meetings will be held, times to be posted on the notice board.
The annual Sussex Federation Field Day will be held tomorrow, March 1. Students from all over the county will descend on the campus to take part in all the usual sports, not to mention beer drinking, tiddly-winks and hop-scotch.
From the Bulletin, 27 November 1962
Society Notices
The Tiddlywinks Association hopes to arrange some matches next term. In the meantime practice meetings will be held, times to be posted on the notice board.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for University of Warwick.
The fifth international Tiddlywinks congress was held at the university during the vacation. Teams from Oxford, Cambridge, Nottingham, and Belfast Universitys [sic correct=Universities] were amon [sic correct=among] among those who competed for the annual Prince Philip silver wink competition, and other international trophys [sic correct=trophies].
The winner of the silver wink contest was undecided, however, as Oxford couldn't raise a full team, and a replay will be necessary, probably at Cambridge.
England retained the Bombay Bowl, defeating Wales by 58½ points to 52½. Commenting on the international aspect of their sport, Mr. Nigel Shepard [sic correct=Shepherd], Secretary of the International Federation of Tiddlywinks Associations, said, "Although Coventry is the ideal centre for English people, we cannot expect people from all over the world to come here."
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for EDINA Newsline.
Finally, at the end of October Ben Soares joined EDINA, having just completed his studies at St Andrews University. On his arrival he was immediately plunged into the OCLC SiteSearch software, and has already made an impact on EDINA services. He is our lead technical developer on the forthcoming Art Abstracts service. In addition to his computing prowess, however, Ben has another claim to fame – he is a world tiddlywinks record-holder!
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Edinburgh University Sports Union Treasurer's Information Folder.
Provides examples for reporting expenditures for the Tiddlywinks Club
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Bangor Student Union Council Meeting Minutes .
The motion to affiliate the Tiddlywinks Society to the Students' Union was withdrawn prior to debate on the motion.
Oriented towards Boston-area college students; published once or twice a year.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Nutshell.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Barnard Bulletin.
Threatening to become as popular as the twist, tiddlywinks is taking over the college campus. Six Barnard girls decided that the sport sounded like a lot or fun. and formed two unofficial teams in order to enter the tournament held last Saturday at Columbia.
After the purchase of a Walt Disney Ludwig Von Drake Tiddly Winks set and an evening of frustrating practice, the valiant six marched into room 212 of Ferris Booth Hall, prepared to do battle with representatives from six other colleges and universities.
To their surprise, they found that Disney and the English Tiddlywinks Association differed radically on terminology and rules although the basic idea of the game was the same. Words sounding like something from CarroII's "Jabberwock," "to squidge,· "squidger," and "to squop," replaced the usual terms "to shoot," "the big shooter," and "covering an opponent's wink."
Harvard's teams dominated the tournament, amazing all those present with their elaborate strategy and skill. However the girls from Barnard did quite well (they defeated Radcliffe) for only an evening's practice, and came in fourth.
The charter of the Tiddlywinks club will soon be presented to the Recreation and Athletic Association for its consideration. Stude nt Council did not consider the charter, stating that it was out of its jurisdiction.
The charter wass written "some time in the middle of finals" by Freshmen Ellen Zimmerman and Carol Japha (with Jane Witherspoon "adding bits and pieces"). Seventeen signatures have been affixed to the document.
The purpose of the club, according lo the charter, is to promote the game of Tiddlywinks, to arrange, and to participate in tournaments. The team was defeated at their first and last game at Columbia University. However. this game was played only two days after the group was organized and should not be considered indicative of their potential.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Meteor.
Marilyn: The tiddley winks finals were not publicized extensively, but I recieved [sic] a post card from Jackie Roy in Australia telling me of her victory.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Revue.
A new office has been created in the President's Cabinet — that of Tiddledy-Winks. This office requires a man of unusual ability, and so who should the new Secretary of Tiddledy-Winks be but Curtis Sanford!
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Blue Mountain Observer.
On Saturday, January 23, there occured [sic] a Blue Mountain first: a Tiddlywinks match in our own cafeteria, against a visiting team. The team was Hythnlbtwoc (pronounced hith-nil-bit-woc), which is one of the Tiddlywinks Powers of the Continent, and very much in the running for the North American Championship. However, the team they sent had two beginners, and only two frontline players, although one of these was Sunshine, an All-Star and a legend in his time. Blue Mountain fielded two teams, a teachers team and a kids team, and we had a 3-way match. The kids team, in its first showing, lost 50-6 to Hythnlbtwoc and to the teachers team.
All had a good time, though, and improved their play, and are eager for the next match. The teachers, meanwhile, with some more experienced players on their team, beat Hythnlbtwoc, 54–51. Top pair for the kids was Andy Lee and Jonas Bastys with 9 points, followed by Howard Schrader and Ricky Richardson with 6 points. The rest of the team was Greg Jones and Mike Burchman, and Tina Warren and Carol Schlitt. The teachers team had two pairs: Mr. Arnold and Mr. Drix (top pair for the whole match, with 31 points), and Miss Filogomo and Mr. Mongero, whose subtle strategy brought the last-minute, come-from-Page 4, column 1behind victory over Hythnlbtwoc.
More matches are planned for the futures, with a very interesting one coming ups against a 6th grade team from New York City.
On Saturday, April 3, the Blue Mountain Tiddlywinks Team went to its first away game, going to New York City to play against a team of 6th graders from a [sic correct=an] elementary school in West Harlem. Both teams had had about the same match-play expereince [sic correct=experience]: our team had a match against Hythnlbtwoc's B team and theirs had flown to Toronto to attend the Continental Championships and play in the B division. Their team played victorious, however, with a convincing 40 1/6 to 22 5/6 victory. After the first round they only led 11 2/3 to 9 1/3, but they crushed us 16-5 in the second round, and then took the third by 12½ to 8½. Top pair for Blue Mountain was the partnership of Jonas Bastys and Andy Lee, who ended up 11 1/3 – 9 2/3, the only pair on our team with a winning record. Other players were Marvin Oliver, Howie Schrader, Tina Warren, Paul Zive, and Richard Cohen. After the match, which drew a fair number of spectators despite an admission fee, we all saw films of their team’s trip to Toronto. Then we went on a guiided tour of 125th Street, expecially its pizza parlors. Despite the loss, everyone had a good time, and many friends were made. They were not only good players (two of their three pairs got 16 out of 21 points) but friendly and good hosts. A rematch is planned, here at Blue Mountain, for some time in May. Perhaps, with a home court advantage, we can avenge our loss.
Student-run publication
Toggle showing 7 tiddlywinks references for The Heights.
The funny part about this game was Wake Forrest averaged 230 in the line to the "Hoya's" 200, and the backfield was 215 to 196 respectively. For three periods the "Hoyas" played tiddly winks with the "Deacons" from down Senator Claghorn's country.
The second major athletic event tomorrow will take place at 10 A.M. in The Heights office (McElroy 102) when the B.C. Tiddlywinks Team battles Holy Cross. The team is captained by Hugh Guilderson, A&S '63. The other members are William McCann, A&S '65; Jack Sweeney, A&S '63; George Perault, A&S '63; John Mungovan, A&S '63; and Mary Lou Scalley, Nursing '63. Molly Spore, Ed '65, will handle the cheerleading duties for the Home Team. The public is invited.
The B.C.-Holy Cross Tiddlywinks match will be held at The Heights office, McElroy 102, Saturday morning at 10.
At Harvard, the intellectual bastion of the world, The Harvard Crimson reports that the Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society was out-squopped twice last week. (Being squopped is the equivalent of drawing a go-to-jail card in Monopoly, and in the sport of Tiddlywinks this is known as a defensive move.)
The Captain of the Harvard team, in explaining the defeat, stated that Harvard is more of a squiding team, and everyone knows the best squidge is a good [sic original="squopp" correct="squop"].
In discussing the effectiveness of the scholarship firm's efforts, Bernstein pointed to the diversity of available funds. Scholarships are given out for a multitude of different interests, including car mechanics, cooking and possibly even "tiddlywinks."
In its "tiddlywink example" the firm added that "somewhere, sometime, someone has set up a fund for Tiddlywink players."
For an application or more information, interested students should write to National Scholarship Data Center, 610 sth Aye., Box 1139, New York, NY, 10185.
Now we can beat Georgetown at just about anything and I get excited. The soccer team, the field hockey team, the debate team, the tiddlywinks team; it doesn't matter.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Sub Turri.
Independent, studen-run publication
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for The Daily Free Press.
Mention of tiddlywinks.
Mention of tiddlywinks.
Toggle showing 7 tiddlywinks references for Brown Daily Herald.
And so they arrived at the conclusion that Lincoln Field was not destined to be covered with buildings, but that it might become an athletic field for the Woman's College when the Varsity teams had moved up to Camp street. And why not? There was plenty of room, a good diamond for real baseball, not of the kind displayed at the Greek Play, and for football, basketball, tennis, tiddledy-winks and croquet. [...]
A sudden revival of interest in ping-pong is beginning to become noticeable here and there about the campus. [...]
The pernicious influence of the game in those houses which have decided to try it is already being felt. Bridge games grow lackadaisical and interest in billiards has come almost to a standstill. Burly athletes wander in, look sneeringly at the table, and mutter something about starting a tiddledy winks league; but they remain to watch, and soon their fingers are itching to grasp the slender handle of a paddle. [...]
In current college discussion has arisen certain sanctimonious comment to the effect that we must be calm, and that reason and resolution will win the war. Whoever thinks this does not understand the viewpoint of the soldier. [...]
There is careful thinking and decisions are made but the Germans do that just as much as we do. A war is not a tea-party or a game of tiddly-winks,—it is neither academic nor theoretical—it is a fight! [...]
[in]volves covering your opponent's wink with your own wink, thereby immobilizing it until it is uncovered. Parry concentrated on squopping the Columbia winks, while Whitesides chipped in his winks with an uncanny accuracy.
Parry sank a two-foot chip against Columbia, which is the equivalent in golf of holing out with a 9 iron from 100 yards out. Jonathan Stein of Columbia scored a septenary squop, immobilizing seven Harvard winks in one shot for an American record.
In another match played Saturday, Harvard's second team downed the Mount Holyoke Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society, in what was hailed as "the first collegiate bisexual tiddlywinks match." A Holyoke player broker her Squidge[r] while pressing down too hard on a wink.
The Harvard Gargoyl's Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society has accepted a challenge by the Brown Tiddlywinks Union, and will meet the Bruin 'winkers for the Ivy League tiddlywinks championship November 17 at Harvard.
The match is tentatively scheduled for 11:30 a.m. in the first floor parlour of Phillips Brooks House in Harvard Yard.
The Harvard acceptance was mailed to Robert Miller '63, high school All-American in tiddlywinks and coach of the Brown squad, by James Parry, captain of the Harvard team. In agreeing to the match, Parry wrote, "I hope, for your sake, that Brown makes a more presentable (but for our sake, not too presentable) showing in tiddlywinks against Harvard than it has of late in football."
Ending his letter with a "yours for better tiddlywinks," Parry promised to send Miller "a brief summary of the rules of the game" as soon as Miller confirmed the date proposed by Harvard.
Joe Sullivan and Steve Goldberg, both '63, currently comprise the Bruins' first team. In an intrasquad scrimmage last night in the Bronson House lounge, Sullivan sank two consecutive two-foot chip shots, the equivalent in golf of holing out from 100 yards. Sullivan attributed his tiddlywinks legeremain to advice offered him by Jose Amory Vazquez, associate professor of Spanish, who is instructing the Bruin 'winkers in the Spanish Gothic tiddlywinks tradition.
The Harvard team is undefeated in four matches, having beat Holy Cross, Columbia, Mount Holyoke, and Dartmouth. Parry and Robert Whitesides played a team from Oxford in August and according to the Oxford players, the Harvard duo, although losing, "was the best American team we've faced."
The Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society of Harvard rallied in the closing minutes Saturday to down a stubborn Brown team, 33-16, and retain its hold on first place in Ivy League tiddlywinks.
The match, the second meeting of the two schools, was played in the first floor parlor of Philip Brooks House in Harvard Yard before 100 partisan spectators. A photographer and reporter from Life magazine were also present.
Bob Miller, non-playing captain of the Brown Tiddlywinks Union, said that the Bruins' early squopping and offensive barrage, which put them ahead, 9-5, had Harvard "completely distressed."
"If you have even seen Republicans playing touch football," Miller continued, "then you have a pretty good idea of how disorganized and frenzied they were."
The match began promptly at ten o'clock, when the Crimson 'winkers, attired in vests, made their way through a throng of well-wishers at the north end of the parlour. A [sic original="resoulte" correct="resolute"] Brown squad, intent upon winning Brown's first Ivy championship in any sport, entered from the south.
The Harvard team was also welcomed by eight cheerleaders, who had been recruited from Radcliffe and Simmons. The cheerleaders were merrily waving crimson and white pom-poms that had been hastily put together by James Parry, self-proclaimed captain of the Gargoyle team.
As the opposing teams shined their winks and trimmed their finger nails, ten members of the Harvard marching band struck up the Harvard fight song and the spectators song, "Ten Thousand Harvard Men"—in Latin. Miller commented later that the presence of the band was "a nasty trick on the part of Harvard to destroy our team's concentration.
Undaunted, the Bruin 'winkers jumped off to an early 9-5 lead, as Sullivan and Steve Goldberg, flipping their winks with finesse and accuracy, scored an easy win over the Crimson's first team. Meanwhile, Athan Savas and Pete Carmen, Brown's second team, were staying even with their foes at the second table.
Sullivan startled the Harvard team by scoring a difficult two foot chip shot on the first play from scrimmage. What made Sullivan's shot even more unique was that it landed in the cup on a bounce. A murmur of disbelief was heard among the Harvard fans.
Just when it looked as if Harvard would go down to ignominious defeat, Parry sent in two new teams. Miller vehemently protested the substitution as "a flagrant violation of the limited substitution rule," which the captains had agreed to before the match. The referee, a member of the Gargoyle Society, disallowed Miller's protest, and allowed Harvard to continue with its wild-card substitution.
The four Brown players, who played the entire 2½-hour match without a substitution and with only two time-outs, were no match for the rested Gargoyle 'winkers in the closing minutes.
A grudge match has been scheduled tentatively for February.
When several members of the Brown community passed away this semester, the Herald editorial was there to instruct me to be more compassionate. Funny, I was having a perfectly peaceful day just mocking the dead—playing tiddlywinks on the graves of my ancestors and schoolmates. I am a fuller person today, because that one editorial sensitized me in a way that one year as a Resident Couselor never could.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Free Skills Directory.
Listing by David Solomon (Beast).
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for California Monthly.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Daily Californian.
Coverage of the First Far Eastern Tournament
Toggle showing 8 tiddlywinks references for The Carletonian.
The class of 1919 has found itself in a position in which it must perpetuate the oldest of Carleton's traditions in order that they may not be lost in a transition period. It has striven to promote the best possible class spirit, the spirit in which the best in a college's traditions live. The Seniors have tried to inaugurate as many as possible of the class events of normal years. Conditions were not all favorable—few have been these years—yet one of the most important of these events, a most virulent tradition, is being sidetracked for no better reason than as one upperclassman suggested, for tiddledy-winks and fussing! It is important that coming classes continue characteristic events of rivalry; by them, the past of the school life is linked with the present. May our lower classmen friends learn the value If the spirit of Carleton's traditions. The class of 1919 wishes to see the good in those traditions grow; they toast the persistence of that wholesome, strong, aggressive class spirit that has lately suffered.
Not to be outdone by the two lower classes, who engaged in a tug-of-war, the Seniors and Juniors of Jamestown College also crossed swords last week In the roped arena. A quiet and refined game, worthy of the age and dignity of the participants, known as TIddle-de-Winks, was the method of determining the supremacy of these two classes. The Seniors won.
The sudden and unaccountable lull in the seancer's activities has caused us to once more break into song, and in this manner: (Supply your own tune if you can't guess the right one).
- Oh where, oh where have our seancers gone,
- They've gone back to their tiddle-de-winks,
- Peace ever more.
From men who indulge in the use of powder and from frosh whose caps repose on the head in a position resembling that of a peanut on a mountain peak; from men who wear garters and from those laboring under all inferiority complex; from men whose trousers are too short and from sophs who think they are clever; from would-be sheiks who use Slickum presumably as a dust collector and from little boys with dirty ears; from men who refrain from daily shaving because of the extreme tenderness of their skin and from those who sport red neckties; from children at the M.D. who imagine that drinking glasses and spoons are made to play Tiddledy Winks with and from men who cherish the illusion that every woman they look at will fall for them; from fashion plates who fancy that the combination of plaid lumbermen's jackets and Oxford bags is fetching and from lads who can't sing and think they can; from men who use perfume and from those who are suffering with an altruistic complex; from grinders and from men who have their hair cut the day before the monthly dance; from exceedingly optimistic men and from those who are possessed with the hallucinatio that mustaches add to their manly charm; from frosh who think they are funny and from eager Charlestowners; from dumb men, from asinine men, from childish men, and from love-sick men—
Good Lord, Deliver us!
That brings us to another item of interest for the sports followers. Tiddlywinks was introduced to the Carleton sports world soon after the football season ended and has been in high favor ever since. The brand of tiddlywinks displayed has brought much favor from the national authorities. Ray Smith heads the field in all-around playing ability, but he is closely followed by Ralph Hall and Lidstrand.
There may not be any more basketball games this season but there still is ping-pong, handball, faculty squash-ball, and horseshoe competition on which there seems to be an open season. Also Mr. Smith's new game of tiddly-winks will now get back into the limelight.
Susquehanna U. has organized a tiddleywinks team. The positions are right tiddle, left tiddle, center, right wink, and left wink. Coach, may I please play parchesi too?
At Michigan State university the girls organized a football team to prove that the 'weaker sex' is an inaccurate title. They then challenged last year's intramural champions. The score: Men, 13, Women, 13.
Tiddley-winks, anyone?
Student-run publication
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Maroon.
Article(s) on planned match of University of Chicago vs. University of Cambridge (never held) and reprint of the international rules of tiddlywinks
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The University of Chicago Magazine.
He is the best sort of a good fellow; he enlivens every club corner; he is the first to call for a cheer and not the last to aid in every good thing that his University is trying to do. But his great and consuming ambition is to see his col- lege's name at the head of the sporting page as the winner in everything from tiddlywinks to rowing
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Pike's Peak Nugget.
PHILIP (who for some time has been looking more and more disgusted, rises and throws his cards on the table)—You people play whist as if it were "tiddledy winks." I beg to be excused.
Toggle showing 28 tiddlywinks references for Columbia Daily Spectator.
ARE you going up to Williamsbridge this afternoon, to see our freshmen play the Princeton youngsters?
THERE have been various spasmodic reports of class football teams and an inter-class championship; as yet, however, only the two lower classes have materialized in this form. Are the upper classmen too considerate of their reputations to risk an encounter with the former teams, or have they forsaken this vigorous exercise for golf, croquet, or tiddlywinks?
EACH year adds another team to our already long list. Now is the time for teams. Football is over and the active college "student" needs something to occupy his time. From every corner of the campus another team seems to sprout into blossom. There is a crew, a baseball team, a hockey team, a cycle team, a track team, a lacrosse team, a speech team, a chess team—ah, but these are all old teams! With the little girl in the poem, I ask, " What will the new year bring, mother ?" Will there be a parcheesie team, or a tiddledywink team, or Lord knows what other kind of a team, and will every one of the thirteen players and their thirty-seven substitutes get a Varsity "C" and a uniform and a beautiful cap wherewith to saw wood with the fair ones next summer? I think this year won't be an exception. I never was good at anything but jaw and mathematics myself, but if I can scrape up the time, I guess I'll get up five or six teams this year, and get me a couple of bathing shirts for next July.
But, as the Romans said "cui que quid" whatever the rest of it is—anyway, it means "every dog his due," or some similar sentiments, at any rate. Occasionally there is a well-managed team in the University, that doesn't scatter its insignia like chicken-corn. Look at last year's Lacrosse Team. Verily, it would be well could Mr. Starr educate for us a few little starlings to put in charge of some of the other teams.
A SPECTATOR.
The Journalists have never particularly distinguished themselves as athletes but yesterday afternoon they gave themselves over to the god of sport. Girls and boys alike joined in a merry group on the steps of the school and spun tops throughout the afternoon. At last Columbia s famous tiddledy winks team has a rival.
The coach will announce the line-ups for both of tomorrow's meets in tomorrow's paper.
"If we don't get some more men out for the water polo team," said Captain Jimmy Cleveland yesterday after practice, "we will have to disband and start a tiddlewinks team." The water polo captain was disgusted with the showing that has been made for water polo.
Suppose the Track Should Fall!
The solution of the problem is up to the A. A., and must be found. We understand that ninetynine tickets are being held for the use of upperclassmen on Saturday night, while Freshmen and Sophomores are definitely banished to the lofty heights of the running track and precarious crow's perches on the athletic apparatus. This means that there are approximately 1,800 potential undergraduate patronizers who may be grouped around the running track, in which event, Monday's flag rush would resemble in comparison, a strenuous game of tiddlywinks.
- Oh the team is so tough and its manners so rough
- That it uses soft coal for tooth powder
- While Dan Megrew and His dangerous crew
- As the cooks, put ground glass in the chowder
- There they play tiddly-winks with the Manor House sinks
- And spurn, with contempt, Terpsichore
- Til they all go upstairs where they say their prayers
- For Columbia, Watt and old Glory!
Navy Gridiron Star Hurt at Tiddledewinks
Which goes to show that one-sport men should stick to one sport.
With the All-American chosen and the football season once more drawn to a close, we sincerely hope that we've seen the last of these so-called gridiron photoplays. Surely the [sic original="god's" correct="gods"] who watch the pigskin toters must have groaned in despair when they saw this latest effort of Doug Fairbanks, Jr., for if this is the way college football is played, we'll cast our lot with tiddlywinks.
Plank IX
We also favor a broad peace, the ASU, the PDQ and the SRO. To say nothing of endorsing SPQR as the best writer in the Columbian poll—and the handsomest. We favor more milk for babies, if they are good looking babies, extended intramurals, another room for Commuters to do in whatever commuters do in a room, a funny Jester (votes on that, boy), a reorganized tiddly-wink team under Kings Crown. We will advocate support of Europe and the: battle wages by the Esquimaux for states rights, and a third assistant guard on the squash team.
Anyone who votes for this platform will be rewarded with the post of second assistant co-chairman for the next beer party.
Saturday—Faculty-student tiddleywink games. Brinckerhoff Theater.
A new area for careful and scientific investigation by the devotees of semantics is suggested with the coming of the current football season. At the University of Southern California—Alabama game the U. S. C. band played 'A Tisket, a Tasket, a Green and Yellow Basket", and all the sports' writers tore their hair and protested that such a tune would be more fitting at a contest of ping pong or tiddly-wink.
A student at U. S. C. promptly came forth with the explanation that "it was because an Alabama player had dropped a punt, and the suggestion was that he get a basket." Whether or not this comes under the head of "cheap kidding" or swing ratiocination, in any case there seems to be need for a new leaned volume to be entitled "The Meaningless of Meaning".
Cornell University students have formed a tiddleywinks team.
Displaying the line art of how not to spell, the Columbia spelling team barely nosed out a hard fighting, game but equally illiterate team from Good Consul College for Women.
Charles Schneer '40, President of the Debate Council, led off in the first round with a quick stab at "stogy" and fell by the wayside. Dave Kagon '4l, associate manager of the council, immediately followed suit with "stodgie," instead of "stodgy".
Then both sides vied for the greatest number of mistakes—all but one Good Consul girl was downed by "taupe" when the director "accidently" slipped and let the correct spelling get away from him.
However, "tiddledywinks" then was discovered to have five new varieties of spelling, all of them wrong, but since all missed this word, they were let back in again.
But alas! The comedy of errors finally came to an end when leprosy and garnisheed received extra "e's" and "i's". Columbia won with Abraham Lubarsky '40, Alvin Turkin '40, and Jerome Robinson '43, getting gold wristwatches. Kagon was given $10 for being "ihe next to the last man left on the winning side."
Out on the flank was a capable looking chap—capable of flipping pianoes around like tiddlywinks. Mr. Stiff, Sr.
Dear Editor,
We were wondering (all three of us) if you would kindly bring to the attention of the Administrators of this University the necessity of giving a course in "switchboard operations." It is becoming increasingly apparent that nine out of the ten students who operate the Columbia switchboards are creating more confusion and frustration than any other single activity on this campus, including final exams. Buzzing people into nervous prostration and hooking up somebody else's aunt with Joe Doakes' sister-in-law does not add to the high morale of the student body.
There is nothing difficult about operating a switchboard but for the sake of those sensitive people who dislike being disturbed in the middle of a game of tiddly winks, we suggest that the course be worth 3 points, 40 maturity credits and honorary membership in the "Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Society." In fact, we'll even go so far as to advocate paying people to take the course if only it will mean that next time the frightening buzzer goes off we win't have to explain to a person calling from Shanghai, China, that we know we're supposed to have the best telephone communication system in the world but the guy operating the board downstairs finds it difficult to locate the proper plug. He's either preoccupied with the blonde sitting on his lap or can't unravel the cords wrapped around his neck.
In the event that such a course would not be in keeping with the ultimate purposes of this university, how about having private telephones installed in every room ? Then the fellow who puts in a call to the Kremlin every night won't accidently find himself hooked up to a representative of the National Association of Manufacturers.
Name Withheld by Request.
At the graduation exercises inn 1914, Eisenhower received the Varsity "A" as well as a gold: football.
The Academy yearbook, the Howitzer, had this to say about him:
"He won his 'A' in football being the most promising back in eastern football—but the Tufts game broke his knee and the promise. Now 'lke' must content himself with tea, tiddlywinks, and talk, at all which he excels. [...]"
The Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club desires to encounter a Columbia team, in the rapidly-growing sport of Tiddlywinks.
Brandishing a letter of challenge he received from the British champions, Associate Dean Edward J. Malloy immediately appointed Proctor Walter Mohr coach of the new team.
Decision is pending as to whether the new group will be a Kings Crown Activity or an intercollegiate sport.
Candidates are requested to submit their applications to Coach Mohr, who asserted that even inexperienced men will be welcome.
Tiddlywinks is a game for "four players, those who play opposite each other being partners." The aim of the game, according to the International Rules of Tiddlywinks "is to flick the winks into the pot."
Far example, the new rules read that "should there be a tie for 'nearest the pot' on the initial squidge, those concerned have a resquidge." In the old days, it was decided by a first fight.
In addition the mentor noted that that the new rules say "a wink cannot be squopped until it has been brought into play by being squidged from its starting position."
A fallacious report has been circulating among the students of City College that a tiddlywinks match will take place between the Lions and the Beavers.
An article in The Campus, the City College newspaper, said that both schools were in the process of organizing teams for the event. Sue Greenbaum, a co-ed at City College challenged Columbia to a tiddlywinks match when one Columbia student told her jokingly that the Lions had at least one good team—their tiddlywinks squad.
But the challenge has not been accepted, because at present Columbia is not organizing a squad.
The Campus article reports the reaction of one Columbia man to the possibility of the match. When asked to comment, he repeated, several times, "Good God!!!"
Saturday, in addition to being a day of defeat on the gridiron, was a day of fiasco on the tiddlywink mat.
With cries of "You're squopped!" and "Great squidge!" the Harvard Gargoyle Tiddlywinks team triumphed, 11-3, over an improvised Columbia team in the first Ivy League tiddlywinks match.
The Harvard team had previously put up an excellent fight against the touring world champion, the Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society.
'Finger Push-ups'
The Crimson team challenged Columbia, and two juniors, William Schwartz and Jonathan Stein, knowing nothing about the sport, accepted.
The encounter began early Saturday morning with players practicing "finger push-ups" to limber up.
The game is played on a mat (in this case a beat-up rug, 1 yd by 2 yd.), and the idea is to shoot (or "squidge" a plastic disc ("wink") with another disc the size of a half dollar into a small cup ("pot") which is placed in the center of the mat.
Squidging and Squopping
One squidges the wink by pressing down on the edge of the disk thereby causing it to shoot forward. The game is complicated by "squopping," when one disk covers an opponent's thereby making the disk underneath unplayable. Above all, the idea is to get all of the winks into the pot.
What the ignorant representatives of Columbia did not know at first, and what their gentlemanly opponents did not tell them, was that playing could be enhanced with strategy. The Harvard team, composed of James Parry and Bob Whitesides of the newly formed humor magazine, "The Gargoyle," employed an attack whereby one member played offensively, going for the pot on every shot, and the other defensively, squopping with great accuracy.
It was this strategy which caught the intensely competitive Lions by surprise.
The Harvard team, taking the match quite seriously held impromptu strategy meetings where they plotted Columbia's downfall. This dedication to the game was soon shown by Schwartz and Stein who also held meetings, which proved to be futile.
The honor of Alma Mater fell as Schwartz and Stein were out squopped. The inept Lions were unsuccessful at desquopping, even when a Harvard wink covered three (a "triple squop") Lion winks.
Barnard Tiddlywinkers?
The Harvard men expressed a strong desire for co-ed tiddlywinkers and offered the idea of having a Barnard team play them on home grounds. At this point, Schwartz explained that Barnard girls "may not be the best to play with."
The Harvard team has scheduled matches with Simmons, Boston University, Wellesley and the University of Pennsylvania.
The Columbia team has not yet approached Ralph Furey, director of intercollegiate athletics, for a subsidy.
—J.S.
The powerhouses of intercollegiate athletics will converge on Ferris Booth Hall on Dec. 8 to clash in the first Ivy League and Seven College Conference Tiddlywinks Tournament. The Board of Managers has invited two teams from each school to vie for the coveted title of Top Tiddlywinker.
Enthusiasm for the game and extensive study into all its intricacies and strategies was spawned over the past summer when American teams were crushed by the powerful Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society, the current world champions.
Columbia proved herself a dismal failure in her initial attempt to be received into the higher echelons of the sport when Juniors William Schwartz and Jonathan Stein fell before Harvard's mighty Gargoyle Tiddlywinks team, 11-3, on Oct. 20.
At that match, however, the men of Columbia were under a definite handicap due to Harvard's greater experience. But on Dec. 8, this undaunted pair will be back for the sake of Alma Mater, wiser now, and better trained to make their mark on the tiddlywink pot.
Next month's contest will settle once and for all the big question being asked within tiddlywinks circles: can Columbia squidge her way to a national crown.
Twenty-five eastern colleges have been invited to compete m the First Annual Eastern Invitational Tiddlywinks Tournament tomorrow at 1 p.m. in Ferris Booth Hall. Prizes will be awarded and refreshments will be served.
In an atmosphere that included music by Beethoven, Brahms and Bach, Harvard walked away with first place in the First Annual Invitational Tiddly Winks Tournament, held at Columbia Saturday, Dec. 8.
Columbia, which was represented by two teams finished a mediocre fourth. The battling Lions were led by Jeff Rosenstock, David Hunter, Alan [sic original="harney" correct="Harney"], Steve Polcari, and Jerry Album.
Barnard, as expected wound up on the bottom, finishing below all seven [sic original="mem's" correct="men's"] schools.
Join C.U. Intercollegiate TIDDLYWINKS TEAM
Call Phil—227 Liv
1850
Tension mounted rapidly in the room. The players huddled, while the crowd's roar filled the stands. The players suddenly broke formation; Rosenblum squidged; Jeffe squopped. Rodman de-squopped, spilling the squopper off, and Gutrie potted. Tiddlywinks had arrived at Columbia.
This winter, while the College community grubbed in dormitory rooms, The Tiddlywinks Team groomed itself for its first winkathon. Monday evenings at midnight they climbed eight flights of stairs to the WARMTH office for early morning practices.
Training for a winkathon requires more than attaining mere playing skill. Tiddlywinks is a tremendous physical strain on the wrists and the elbows, and squidging plays havoc on the fingers. So, to shape up, the tiddlywinkers joined the freshman fencing team.
Who are these devoted aficionados? Ostensibly, they're College students, known to the community through their fencing. They also possess Columbia's only imported English Tiddlywinks mat and International rule book.
Since the team's formation last November, the squad has expanded to six regulars.
The climax of four month's rigorous training occurs tomorrow when the tiddlywinks squad engages in combat with Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
MIT last month lost in a three team meet to Cornell 150-135. Since "as freshman fencers we're undefeated," team member Robert Rosenblum yesterday anticipated a high quality game.
Mark Jaffe '70 the "literary* spokesman for the team, qualified Rosenblum's prediction, declaring "We don't know how good we are, for we've never seen anyone play."
"In fact,"added Larry Rodman '70, "until November, I never knew what the game was."
Tiddlywinks, a game of offensive and defensive strategy, is usually associated with childhood and is often considered a preliminary step to marble shooting. However, a tiddly-winker will insist that the game requires the skill and concentration of an adult mind to properly pot the winks and cover the opponent's pieces.
Regardless of the outcome of their bout with MIT, the squad had already received a challenge from the University of Waterloo, a Canadian school which is the current North American champion. They also joined the North American Tiddlywinks Association earlier this year when they purchased their official tiddlywinks mat and playing pieces.
Although a "mature* Columbia student might jest at our Tiddlywinks Team, a tiddlywinker is highly esteemed at Oxford University.
Members of the Columbia sqaua are Robert Rosenbloom '70, Mark Jaffe '70, Larry Rodman '70, Richard Gutrie '70, David Rogers '70, and Carl Wynt '68.
The team's enthusiasm for tiddlywinks is slowly infilitrating the campus. Columbia, take note, Trivia power is dead; Tiddlywinks is here to stay.
Columbia's Tiddlywinks team suffered defeat Saturday at the hands of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology squad, 35-28.
Mark Jaffe '70 attributed M.l.T.'s success to their superior squopping strategy, "They squopped all our winks and then systematically de-[s]quopped their pieces to squidge."
"Our team," he noted, "showed its strength in squidging whenever they could free the winks from M.I.T."
Best Feature by a Freshman: Lois Prager for her article of March 10, 1967 on Tiddlywinks at Columbia: "Go Lion, Pot That Wink"
Mental exercise outside of the classroom can also dominate a lion's life. Trivia Power comes once a year, and memorizing grafitti is on the rise. Chess and bridge clubs meet for the devotees of the games. Tiddlywinkers can squidge against MIT engineers, and bagpipers blow their heads off weekly.
All of Markowitz's self-righteous observations about Duke fans illustrate just one thing: Markowitz has obviously never been to a game at Cameron Indoor Stadium. He has never experienced what may be considered one of the most intense basketball atmospheres in the country. Perhaps Markowitz despises intensity. Perhaps he would enjoy the games better sitting in a recliner. If this is the case, Markowitz should be a fan of a sport which is by nature less intense, like badminton or tiddlywinks.
Markowitz is pleased with his decision not to apply to Duke. So am I.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for the dar-u-gar yearbook.
TIDDLEWINKS had its greatest year in Compton' s history this year. 4 and Pasadena were so incensed over the beatings we gave them that they protested to the conference officials that we were subsidizing athletes. Howard Clark was the star of the team, having scored six chuckers and a field goal in six games. The night before the L. A. struggle, he was duped away from the campus and not allowed to return for the game. Only inexperienced "Winko" Carpenter was available for the game.
Wes Godfrey opened the game with a beautiful wink at Lucille, but the umpire ruled Compton offside. However, with cheer leader Darwin Dixon leading a frenzied Tartar rooting section and Aileen Oliver protecting the cup as if it were a nickel, Compton' s goal was never in danger. Brownie Chambers made Compton' s first touchdown, catching a pass from Glade the Grade and pushing it in with his nose. Birdie Hall thought it was a game of "Spin the Bottle " and also made a hit by turning out the lights. A large crowd witnessed the championship meet.
Official publication
Toggle showing 12 tiddlywinks references for Cornell Alumni News.
William C. (Porky) Stowell writes about his recent adventures. His letter tells such a good story that I am reporting verbatim without editing.
Sorry to be so late in answering your letter of March 20, 1962, but I've been en route. Retired a year ago September and drove to the Great Northwest. Went fishing (30 lb. salmons to prove it), hunting, and panning for gold. Got none of the last two items. Took ship from San Francisco around the world and back. Journeyed to Seattle and saw the Fair. Drove back East and have settled in this burg (Binghamton) as of November. Have all kinds of trading stamps, blue, red, and plaid, but am starting to look for those big green ones that Uncle Sam prints. Anyone for tiddly winks?
IN PAST decades Cornellians, like other American college students, have enthusiastically appropriated a number of sedentary, slightly juvenile diversions, including Monopoly, punch cards, comic books,and tiddly-winks.
Now we have pinball.
For the October issue of the Alumni News, your correspondents are gathering info on the latest competitive sports activities of the '76 grads. Whether your newest activity is ice boating, tiddlywinks, skeet shooting, or log rolling, we want to hear all about it.
About Severin Drix.
These latest letters raise two kinds of questions: how does one account for the balance of material in the magazine, and why don't we do a better job with letters to the editor.
Regarding balance, one reader wanted more coverage of the Intercollegiate Rowing Association (IRA) regatta than we published, another wanted more explanation of several controversial campus matters, and both implied they would rather see less about tiddlywinks, bulίmarexίa, and frisbees, or at least no more about those subjects than about the ones they consider to be more important.
[...]
By way of example, the articles in the July issue that were published primarily because of their timeliness included 13 pages on the tenure of President Corson, 4 on a distinctive athlete whose career was at an end, 3 on spring sports, and 3 on other news of the university. To balance these we ran 1 page on international athletics, 3½ on tiddlywinks, and 1½ on student binging, primarily because these articles were available, well done, and supplemented and contrasted with the more timely articles we were publishing.
Since these are matters of concern to alumni who depend on the News for most of their information about Cornell, it would seem worthwhile to devote at least as much attention to the subject as to tiddlywinks and bulimarexia, which together occupy five pages in the July issue.
Editor: Wouldn't you say things were a little out of balance when Cornell wins the greatest crew race in the country and it is briefly reported in a squib on page 70 of July issue, while 3½ pages is devoted to"Master of Squop?"
I enjoyed the tiddlewink article almost as much as the frisbee topic, but I do feel the great crew victory got short-changed.
Frederic O. Ebeling wrote his classmates the following appeal: "Dear classmate: The Alumni News is asking for an account of your sports and athletic activities, from tennis to tiddlywinks. Use your own judgment as to what to report. Personally I would exclude the tiddlywink class…
Finally, we come to that inescapable consideration nobody likes to mention: the matter of age. Sailing is like any other sport except tiddlywinks or chess: it helps to be young.
Martin Lind has now given up serious gardening and other strenuous exercise—after a painful reminder from a bit of tired flesh—for the more gentle pastime of watching the grass grow. Martin asks, "Anyone want to contribute a set of golf clubs or tiddly winks?"
Alumni news
Dave Marshall is a partner in the re-named law firm Prince, Kelley, Newsham, and Marshall in Seattle. Most of his work is criminal defense or representation of persons unjustly dismissed from their jobs. A series of serious sports injuries over the last several years has Dave contemplating tiddlywinks.
Official Cornell University publication
Toggle showing 14 tiddlywinks references for Cornell Chronicle.
TIDDLYWINKS CHAMPIONSHIP
Vol. 1. No 18. 2/19/70
"Don't Even Wink - or Blink"
Saturday, November 20
9 a.m.-6 p.m. Tiddlywinks Western Regional Tiddlywinks Tournament. Sponsored by Cornell Tiddlywinks Assoc Art Lounge-Willard Straight Hall.
Sunday, November 21
9 am.-6 p.m. Western Regional Tiddlywinks Tournament. International Lounge-Willard Straight Hall. (see Nov. 20.)
Saturday, February 19
9 a.m.-9 p.m. "North American Continental Tiddlywinks Tournament. Saturday and Sunday. Noyes 3rd floor lounge.
Sunday, February 20
9 a.m. North American Continental Tiddlywinks Tournament. Noyes 3rd floor lounge.
Saturday, November 17
Noon — 9 p.m. Western Regional Tiddlywinks Tournament (first session). Noyes Center Third Floor Lounge. Sunday's competition will be held in the North Campus Union.
Sunday, November 18
9 a.m.-6 p.m. Western Regional Tiddlywinks Tournament (second session). Multi-purpose Room, North Campus Union. The first session held in Noyes Center
Saturday, November 17
Noon - 9 pm Western Regional Tiddlywinks Tournament (first session). Noyes Center Third Floor Lounge. Sunday's competition will be held in the North Campus Union.
Saturday, February 16
9 a.m.-9 p.m North American Continental Tiddlywinks Tournament Noyes Third Floor Lounge Sponsored by the Cornell Tiddlywinks Team Second session in Memorial Room. Willard Straight Feb. 17
Saturday, February 16
9 am-9 pm North American Continental Tiddlywinks Tournament Noyes Third Floor Lounge. Sponsored by the Cornell Tiddlywinks Team. Second session in Memorial Room, Willard Straight Feb 17
Sunday, February 17
9 a.m.-6 pm North American Continental Tiddlywinks Tournament Second session, Memorial Room, Willard Straight Hall Sponsored by the Cornell Tiddlywinks Club
Saturday, February 15
9 a.m. - 6 p.m. North American Continental Tiddlywinks Tourney. Third floor lounge, Noyes Center. Sponsored by Cornell Tiddlywinks Team. The second session will be in the North Campus Union on Sunday.
Sunday, February 16
9 a.m. - 3 p.m. North American Continental Tiddlywinks Tournament. Multipurpose Room and first floor lounge, North Campus Union. See Feb. 15.
Saturday, November 15
9 a.m.-7 p.m. Western Regional Tiddlywinks Tourney. First Floor Lounge and Multi-purpose Room, North Campus Union. Sponsored by the Cornell Tiddlywinks Team.
Sunday, November 16
9 a.m.-6 p.m. Western Regional Widdlywinks Tourney. Multi-purpose Room and First Floor Lounge, North Campus Union. See Nov. 15.
Saturday, November 15
9 a.m. - 7 p.m. Western Regional Tiddlywinks Tourney. First Floor Lounge, Multi-Purpose Room, North Campus Union. Sponsored by the Cornell Tiddlywinks Team.
Sunday, November 16
9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Western Regional Tiddlywinks Tourney. Multi-Purpose Room, First Floor Lounge, North Campus Union. See Nov. 15.
Saturday, February 14
9 a.m. Continental Tiddlywink Tourney, sponsored by Cornell Tiddlywink Team. First Floor Lounge and the Multipurpose Room, North Campus Union.
Sunday, February 15
9 a.m. Continental Tiddlywink Tourney, sponsored by Cornell Tiddlywink Team. Straight Memorial Room.
Saturday, February 14
9 a.m. Continental Tiddlywink Tourney. Sponsored by Cornell Tiddlywink Team. First floor lounge and the Multipurpose room, North Campus Union.
Sunday, February 15
9 a.m. Continental Tiddlywink Tourney. Sponsored by Cornell Tiddlywink Team. Straight Memorial Room.
However, for those interested in recreation, Cornell already has 35 organizations ranging anywhere from Tiddlywinks to Belly Dancing.
Student publication from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Cornell Countryman.
Last February a small crowd of Cornellians were absolutely "tiddlated" as they watched 70 keen-eyed winkers "pot out" in the fifth annual Continental Tiddlywinks Championships hosted by Cornell University. It was not until the Championships came to Ithaca that many of our students were even aware that Cornell has some top flight winkers to boast about.
Flipping wink after wink in the gruelling 16-hour winkathon, the dexterous Somerville team emerged triumphant from the tables in a 43-20 thumbs down victory over Cornell. The championship team was formed by a group of recently graduated MIT tiddlywinkers who joined ranks once again to thumb their way to victory.
Tiddlywinks was first introduced to several U.S. college campuses in the early '60's, but it was not until recently that it has gained a firm place among intercollegiate sports. As many come to appreciate the skill and strategy involved in the English version of the game, they display a devotion that would match any athlete's.
Tiddlywinks has been around since the middle ages but was not standardized until the mid-1950's when the Oxford and Cambridge winkers agreed upon a uniform size of winks for intercollegiate competition. Having standardized the rules they sought to publicize them and thus challenged Prince Philip to start a team. The Prince accepted the challenge and delegated Peter Sellers to be his captain. Sellers gathered an all-star team and a tournament date was set for noon in the [sic original="Oxford" correct="Cambridge"] town square. The Oxonians were determined not to be up staged by the celebrities and so shortly after Sellers led his team into the square the Oxford group parachuted in, to defeat the stars, both on and off stage.
In spite of the loss the Prince was pleased and created the "Prince Philip Silver Wink" which is awarded to the top tiddly team in England.
Coming to the U.S. in '62, the Britons challenged American teams and were able to pick up 25 consecutive wins. They even dared President Kennedy to field a team, but his physical fitness consultant declined.
Several colleges, notably Harvard, were intrigued with the idea and organized their own teams. Thus began the present day winks which is now played on American campuses across the country.
Tiddlywinks came to Cornell in the fall of '65 when Severin A. Drix, presently a graduate student and captain of the Cornell winkers, decided to organize a team. He found that all the teams which had organized to play with the English group, excepting Harvard, had since disappeared. Having only a rough idea of the rules, Drix's team arranged a match with Harvard. Although they lost, they learned from their opponents' strategy and it was not long afterwards that Cornell became one of the earliest members to join the North American Tiddlywinks Association.
Presently, Cornell boasts a team of some 20 members. Drix explains that the most difficult problems are not just in picking the top six winkers to form the A team, but also in pairing up teammates as to their playing skill and psychological interaction.
One of Drix's dreams is to have the top American players meet Britain's top winkers in a play-off tournament. However, one wonders if such a match could really be fair, since many of the top American players are British students who have come to American universities. Drix muses: "We've stolen so many from em igration (English players)—I mean as if the brain drain wasn't bad enough!"
Lee Cousins, the kilted former Secretary of the Scottish Tiddlywinks Association and recent member of the Cornell team, bears out the "tiddlywinkers drain" to which Drix refers. Along with partner Naomi Gusowski
Tiddlywinks is played on a table size felt mat with two sizes of small discs called winks. Each player is located at one of the four corners of the mat and shoots his winks toward the center cup. The game is played by two teams of six players each. Each team is divided into three two-man squads with each squad playing in one of three matches of a tournament. A match lasts about 25 minutes, after which each player is given five additional shots before the winks in the cup are tallied to determine the winner. However, a team can win by "potting out" if one of its players shoots all six of his winks into the cup within the 25 minute period.
A wink is shot with a larger disc known as a "squidger." The basic shot of flipping a wink into the cup or tiddlepot is called a "squidge." However, a player may also employ a defensive maneuver that immobilizes his opponent by flipping his disc on top of his foe's wink thereby "squopping" him. The squopped wink must be desquopped before it can be played again. This can be accomplished either by the original squopper or by the squopped player's partner squidging a third wink to knock the squopping wink off.
If a team tries to pot out early in the game by the "pot-squop" method (one partner shooting for the cup while the other partner tries to squop the foe), they are likely to find a win difficult since they may easily be squopped by their opponents. On the other hand, if they "squop-squop" (both partners squopping their opponents), their chances for a victory are much greater.
A crucial technique known as "walking" is exercised by the more nimble-fingered players. Once an opponent has been squopped, the squopper can use this method to method to walk a pile for a more advantageous shot at the pot. It is also used to squop an opponent and at the same time free a trapped wink underneath the pile.
Describing winks as a "mind's game," Drix claims it is the best balanced game he knows—"whether it be a board game or a physical game… it entails strategy and execution of the strategy."
Drix, who has snapped many a high soaring squidge to sink table-length shots, would put the finger on steady nerves as one of the most necessary qualities for a good winker. Explaining that "minor errors are huge in tiddlywinks," Drix says that when he gets nervous he loses the game.
Feeling that he was a major disappointment to the team during the championships, Drix expressed doubts about his present game. Finding it difficult to squop and squidge with his usual accuracy, Drix fears he may not make the team next year. Oh well, tiddlywinks will not be the first sport to retire its players early.
Lip syncing, mouthing the words to songs, is one of the many contests and games that have developed through the years. Over twenty years ago, masses of students were flipping plas tic chips into small plastic cups, better known as tiddlywinking. "Winking" is no longer played on campus, but in its place many new contests and games, as well as new twists to old ones, are being developed. The trends of these games and contests seem to reflect the changing times and the changing atti tudes of college students.
During the sixties, the contests of both men and women had gone through a fairly subtle transition. The more traditional parlor games from earlier decades, such as dominoes and checkers, had become outdated. Games such as chess, darts, backgammon, bridge and other card games were more common. Billiards was then one of the most active recreational activities on campus. Dance-a-thons had high interest levels and intellectual contests, like the nationally televised College Bowl, were extremely popular.
But also, a more dramatic change occurred at this time: the formation of co-ed teams. Until then, men and wom en had been segregated, but the sixties was a time of upheaval in all respects. With the development of protest move ments, the students' interests also be came more personally oriented. So, although there was an increase in co-ed events, there was an increase in more individual events, too. The late sixties and early seventies also saw the decline and eventual dying out of the College Bowl. Tiddlywinks, too, suffered at this time. These changes, and similar others, have been attributed to the more intense political climate on cam pus and the more serious attitudes of the students of the time. Although peo ple enjoyed some creative contests, like the "anything-that-floats-but-isn't-aboat" contest, there seemed to be little room for frivolities.
Black and white photograph of six winkers holding their squidgers on a tiddlywinks mat
Student newspaper
Toggle showing 56 tiddlywinks references for Cornell Daily Sun.
Editor, Cornell Daily Sun:
Herewith accept the vote of one little five-thousandth part of the student body against The Ers's criticismof The Sun's policy of printing the outside news. Too few of us know, or care to know, what is going on in "France," or even In our own country. I see The Era would I maroon us as on a South Sea Island, I sic [original="wlthous" correct="without"] cable connection. Here we could remain four years at our country's expense—it costs the people about $400 per year over our return to them to educate us—and find ourselves again in the United States, with a poorer knowledge of the public duties we owe it than the day laborer. That we should know what i the world without is doing is at least i equally as important as a full daily account of this or that pink tea or intercollege game of tiddledywinks. By all means let us have the world's new, as well as our own little doings.
Tiddlede winks practice, Library, 8 P. M. Both old and new winkers report as teamwork is necessary if prospects are to pick up.
'If all that the campus has to decide at the election tomorrow is set forth in the statements presented today, the Daily suggests that the student body could better spend their holiday playing a ripping, no-keeps game of Tiddly-winks, and that the several candidates might well spend the day at tlt-tat-toe and Peter Rabbit rhymes.'
- At this time, brothers, we extend
- Congratulations without end
- To you brave sporting brothers who
- Brought honor home to Nu Nu Nu.
- The trophies which you won shall grace
- The shelf above our fireplace;
- Your pictures shall be framed and hung;
- Your praise shall be forever sung, Who won the University crown—by jinks!—
- In ping-pong, bridge, and tiddly-winks.
- —I. Pheal Phulteh
A student at the Illinois State Teachers College is going to sue one of his classmates for hitting him on the head with a yo-yo. Careful, boys; the next lawsuit will probably involve injuries received during TiddleWink games.
Albany, May 30—(AP)—Supreme Court Justice Meier Steinbrink, who spends a bit of his time in the Brooklyn subway, came up today with a constitutional convention program that would guarantee [...]te compensation for injured tiddle-dy-winks players.
This ws just one of the benefits that would accrue from his "suggested reforms," some of which he said were inspired by proposals already before the convention. Others [he] admitted, just came to him while ["]while reading the advertising [...]s in the subway."
The Brooklyn jurist put forward [...] "program" in a letter made public by James L. Dowsey, chairman of the convention's committee on counties and towns.
"Why stop at the 652 proposals submitted which would provide everything from insurance for injured student athletes to reapportionment of legislative districts," Steinbrink inferred, as he told Dowsey:
"You really ought to insist on everything going into the constitution that would affect the few [...] the many, so long as it befitted someone…"
It was that suggestion to take care of those who are hurt, as the justice said, "while fighting for 'dear old Alma Mater,'" that inspired his own ideas on sports insurance.
"When I was a kid and playing tiddle-dy-winks," he explained "I snapped one of my little chips so hard that it bounced over the table and struck my playmate in the eye."
"So let's broaden the provision for compensation for football injury by including all sports," he suggested. "I don't think this would make our youth sissies. They would just ghet the feeling that the dear old Empire State was standing behind them—whether in football, badminton or shuffleboard.
Featuring Cornell’s first tiddly winks contest, the annual Bustees Ball will be held in the Memorial Room of Willard Straight Hall from 9 to 12 o'clock this evening.
With the general theme of "Goodbye Cornell”, the dance will be decorated with enlarged final blanks vividly marked with busting grades. Programs have been printed in the form of railroad tickets which will entitle the holder to all events of the Ball.
The tiddly winks teams for tonight's clash began practice three weeks ago under the tutelage of Hjalmar Schultze who was recently proclaimed chief contender to the World's Championship Tiddly Wink title.
Probable starting line-ups for tonight’s battle as announced by Coach Schultze are: Team A —Al Van Ranst, right wink; Peter Kendzior, left wink; Bill McKeever, tiddler; Tom Farrell, left [sic original="bank" correct="back"]; and Walt Foertsch, right back. For Team B—West Hooker, right wink; Swifty Borhman, left wink; Carl Spang, tiddler; Bob Rose, left back; and John Furman, right back.
Also in the line of entertainment will be a discussion of the much debated subject, "The Scientific Method of Grading Finals” by Robert Barthomew '4l.
Bridge, tiddly winks, and penny pinching are included in the program. Co-chairmen are the Misses Eunice I. Shepard '44 and Lorraine F. Hile '45.
St. Petersburg, Fla., March 4—
Last February when the experts were handing the pennant to the Cards on a silver platter. Dyer offered a word of caution about that Brooklyn ball club.
"Mr. Rickey hasn't been playing tiddly-winks up there at Sanford.
Dyer observed a year ago when stories started to float in about the strange Rickey university for ex-Gls that the Dodgers were operation.
That particular tiddly-winks game at Sanford uncovered catcher Bruce Edwards and outfielder Carl Furillo for the Dodgers first team. Other Sanford "grads" expected to make the 1947 club are pitchers John Van Cuyk, Ed Chandler and Paul Minner.
"The Dodgers had two good ball clubs," Dyer said, "one of the best shortstops in the business in Pee Wee Reese, a great outfielder in Pete Reiser and a good pitching staff. They said that little Stanky can't throw, can't run and can't hit. Well, I put him on my all-star team.
The Card skipper, who williingly has vacated his "freshman manager" title to newcomers Billy Herman, Johnny Neun and Muddy Ruel, also expects trouble from Boston and Chicago.
Cambridge. England. Feb. 26 UPI—Tiddlywinks became an official intervarsity sport between Oxford and Cambridge today. It now takes its place beside the boat race, rugby union, track and field, soccer, boxing and other athletic activities. Cambridge tiddled the winks more skillfully and defeated Oxfoid 64-48 to takes the first official titie.
To the Editor:
The Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club, having recently become British champions, by virtue of a resounding victory over Oxford, are making preliminary plans for a tour of America in September this year.
As we wish to play a match against the [sic original="principle" correct="principal"] American universities, we feel that Cornell University would be keen to take part in what will be the most interesting sporting event for some years. It has been suggested that you might be able to raise a team to challenge us, and to organize a match in Ithaca.
I enclose a copy of the rules of tiddlywinks, and look forward to hearing from you soon. If you are unable to raise a team, perhaps you would pass this letter to someone who could?
—Frank G. Kershaw, Honorary Secretary, Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club, Christ's College, Cambridge, England
(A copy of "The International Rules of Tiddlywinks" is available at The SUN's offices.—Ed.
After having been at peace for nearly 150 years, England has once planned to invade our fair shores. In a letter addressed to the University, the Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club virtually challenged Cornell to a match in the new British rage.
In part the letter read:
"The Cambridge University Tiddlywinks Club, having recently become British champions, by virtue of a resounding victory (64-48) over Oxford, are making preliminary plans for a tour of America in September this year.
"As we wish to play a match against the principal American universities, we feel that Cornell University would be keen to take part in what will be the most interesting sporting event for some years. It has becu suggested that you might be able to raise a team to challenge us and to organize a match in Ithaca."
The University Athletic Department has not yet been notified of the challenge but it is generally believed that Cornell, which already has the biggest intercollegiate athletic program in the country, will be quite eager to add another sport to its already huge program.
The big problem confronting the University at the moment is "Who will comprise the Big Red tiddlywinks team?" Inasmuch as outstanding tiddlywinkers seem to be at a premium on the Hill, it is expected that tryouts will be conducted on a voluntary basis.
Competition for the starting team is expected to be quite rugged and only those with previous tiddlywink experience have been requested to try out.
Though no word has yet been received from the Ivy grapevine, it is a foregone conclusion that the other schools in the group have received a similar challenge from Cambridge.
Tiddlywinks is a game for four players, who happen to be found in one spot at the same moment. The game requires a tremendous adroitness enabling the competitor to flick a wink into the pot before any of his opponents.
There are special rules concerning specific dimensions of the equipment. In the first place the mat should be of a soft, felt-like material large enought to permit the winks to be placed three feet from the pot. However, in important tiddlywink engagements the contest should be held on needleloom carpets.
Next the counteres are of a definite, specified size and thickness. Each tiddler is given six "winks" to start off. These "winks" must range in size from 3/8 to 7/8 of an inch in diameter and be no more than 3/32 of an inch in thickness.
The means of flicking the wink into the pot is supplied by a squidger. This is an ex-Brooklyn ball player who couldn't leave when O'Malley exited his baseball emporium.
Now we are ready to begin the festivities, after a few shots of the required brew, an unwritten requirement of tiddlying. Each player squidges one wink at the pot and retires to a neutral corner. This continues until all have deposited their winks.
When the final wink is flipped, all tiddlyers are required to weigh in and pass the necessary saliva tests.
- Yale May Have Its Grayson But Cornell Has Had Its Kirk
- We know our alma mater, sirs, if anybody does;
- She's good of course, but never quite top drawer.
- And if she's not yet second-rate she's not quite what she was,
- But Cornell has one thing worth cheering for.
- To match your mystic ivy-ness our men find somewhat hard;
- Our party pleasures pale in Princeton's gleam.
- Our new library won t quite match old Widener-on-the-Yard;
- Cambridge, no doubt, would trounce our tiddly team.
- Our climate intellectual we'd rather not [sic original="disucss" correct="discuss"];
- Athletically we're similarly mum.
- But you disgrace your college when you try to rival us
- In the sport so dear to every new alum.
- So slander Cornell if you wish; bandy her name about.
- And smear our teams across the field and court.
- But only put your snowballs down, my boys, and cast no doubt
- Upon our prowess in our chosen sport.
- You, with your two proud sisters, hold honest claim
- To trophies and to laurels—who'd deny it?
- But you should cede to us alone the right to wear the name
- Of "All-Time Champions of Riot."
To the Editor:
Four or six members of the Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society (All-England champions and holders of the Prince Philip Inter-university Trophy) are planning a tour of the States from July to September, 1962. We are keen to accept any challege from your side of the Atlantic and would appreciate any help or publicity you can give us.
Any further information may be obtained from the Society, located in St. Hugh's College, Oxford University.
—Elizabeth King, Honorary Secretary, OUTS
Columbia has invited the University to participate in the first Seven College Conference Tiddly Winks Tournament at Columbia Dec. 8. Students interested in flipping for the title are requested to contact The SUN.
The Big Red's toughest rival in the tournamen appears to be Harvard, whose Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society (GUTS) vanquished the rugged Mount Holyoke square ealier this season.
Brown's tiddlywinks squad, however, is challenging Harvard for the Ivy League crown in tiddlywinks. The Brown Tiddlywinks Union (BTU) has declared that Brown tiddlywinks history began in 1793, when a Brown team, captained by Roger Williams Brown, defeated a Harvard team.
It appears that Cornell will have to play the role of spoilers in this clash for ivy supremacy. While the Brownies have been steadily improving their squopping since early October, the crew from Harvard was termed "the best team we've played in America" by the Oxford squad.
Willard Straight Hall will present its annual Activities Fair in the Memorial Room today and tomorrow.
Forty-three groups will take part in the affair, including such diverse groups as the Ayn Rand Club and Octagon. Someone representing the Tiddly-winks Club, which has achieved provisional recognition by the Scheduling and Coordinating Activities Review Board, also applied for a table.
The groups will set up tables where interested parties may find out exactly what each group does.
The center of an intercollegiate tiddlywinks conspiracy is developing at Cornell this fall.
Severin A. Drix '68, one of its founders, said there are two aims for the team: to play tiddlywinks and to prove an organization can exist with such minimal bureaucracy as to be not even slightly obnoxious.
The web has grown to 70 members and applicants, who have never seen an official rule-book because they can't find one. Drix and a friend, Richard [sic original="Nowagrodzki" correct="Nowogrodzki"] '69, derived the rules they use from two magazine human-interest stories and observation in the Bronx High School of Science lunchroom.
The articles, in "Time" and "Life," were written when the Oxford University tiddlywinks team visited the United States in the fall of 1962.
Harvard took the U.S. college lead. The Harvard team travels to Oxford annually for a lark tournament in which it is invariable smashed. [sic note="This is not true."]
Tiddlywinks is played on a felt, shooting winks into a cup with tiddlers.
The game's vocabulary is subject to spontaneous inventions, but certain terms are recognized. A "squop" is a shot which puts one wink over another, paralyzing the bottom wink until it is freed (unsquopped). A "[sic original="spuidge" correct="squidge"]" puts a wink into the cup.
The team has received interim SCARB [note "Student Council Activities Review Board"] recognition. Its constitution notes the "responsibility… to help imparpt… that dignity and respectability with which it must be endowed to play its intrinsic role in the development of civilization."
Team organization is a study of simplicity. Members may be voting or non-voting and may convert at any time.
Officer selection and terms are based on bi-monthly tournament results. The majority of membership may vote at any time to remove an officer.
Practice requirement is one hour every two weeks. Sessions are held in Ives 144 every second Monday and Wednesday, beginning today and in the Anabel Taylor Blue Room on alternate Tuesdays, beginning next week.
Future team plans included the formation of an intercollegiate league and the ultimate goal of a trip to England to defeat the Oxford tiddlywinks champions.
mention
Not everybody belongs on The SUN. [...] If you are afraid to print a story two weeks before the University wants it released, you might do better going out for the tiddly-winks squad, because The SUN is an independent newspaper, relying on the ability and responsibility of its undergraduates.
The Cornell tiddlywinks team dropped its first match to a strong Harvard squad last week.
The Big Red's newest team was beaten 43½-19½ by the more experienced Harvard squidgers. Only the pair of Captain Severin Drix and Richard Garson managed to win one of the nine matches for Cornell.
The Harvard team won with one man squopping (preventing one's opponent from shooting by covering his winks) and one man squidging (shooting the winks into the cup)
The Cornell tiddlywinks team defeated a squad from MIT, 37-19, winning all but one of the eight sub-matches, held in the middle of the Arts quad Saturday afternoon. THe match attracted a sparse crowd which, at its height, [sic original="number" correct="numbered"] 12 students and four dogs.
The Cornell team led by Severin Drix and Richard Nowogrodzki downed the Engineers with inspired strategy and accurate squidging. The team's record is now even at 1-1 after [sic original="and" correct="an"] early season loss to Harvard.
This Week at The Straight
ARE YOU Ready…
Tuesday, Sept. 26 and Wednesday, Sept. 27
Have you begun to experience the traditional Cornell ills? Freshman Frustration? Sophomore Slump? Bustout Blues?!
Well, the Straight Activities Fair is the perfect remedy to brighten those dreary days. You'll find everything from tiddleywink enthusiasts to bicycle racers.Here's your opportunity to become acquainted with the many and varied activities on campus.
So come to the Activities Fair tomorrow and Wednesday in the Memorial Room from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
…For The Straight Activities Fair?
What will sustain a governing structure is power. Nobody can maintain interest in a group whose major functions include allocating funds for the tiddlywinks team. Nobody can maintain interest, as we have seen at Cornell, in an oldstyle student government.
People don't pay to see Ed Marinaro sliding into the line of scrimmage on his posterior. They don't pay to see passes thrown end over end, 20 yards short of their targe—although they get those pretty often on dry days too.
If Cornell had AstroTurf, all four of those games could have been played on the same field, on the same day, rain or no rain. They could play lacrosse there, all kinds of football, soccer, tiddlywinks, rugby, polo, field hockey and all those other Big Red sports we know and love so well.
The largest field ever of North American tiddlywinks players will gather here at Cornell this Saturday and Sunday for the fifth annual Continental Championships.
A grand total of ten clubs are slated to pot, squop and walk (see Rules below) in the 16-hour marathon, with M.I.T.'s defending champions seeking their third crown in as many years.
Play will be held from roughly 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday in the third floor lounge of Noyes Center, with time out for meals and a meeting of the National Tiddlywinks Congress at which the bourgeoning organization (it has doubled in size in two years ) will organize regional qualifying tournaments for next year's championship. The finals will be played in the Straight Memorial Room from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday.
A tight championship tussel is expected, since M.I.T. lost its fine front four through graduation. "You still can't count them out," Cornell captain Severin Drix commented. "They have a big organization and lots of experienced players."
A strong bid is expected from club teams from [sic original="Sommerville" correct="Somerville"], Mass. and Philadelphia, both of which were founded this year by those graduated MIT standouts. Beyond their great All-Americans, however, these clubs are expected to have little in the way of experienced winksmen.
Other competing outfits are a club from Hartford and College contingents from Harpur, Case Western Reserve, Regis, Toronto and Ottawa.
This has been a rebuilding year for Cornell, but the Red tiddliers boast perhaps the most depth in the entire field, a big advantage over two days since 16 hours of tiddlywinks can wear down even an experienced thumb.
Drix, who tasted championship here with Cornell's victorious 1967 contingent, is the only returnee this year, but has recruited nine other enthusiasts who practice twice weekly.
Number two man Richard Nowogrodzki and sub Naomi Gusowski both played on past Red teams before leaving school, while number three seed Sid Freund is a product of that hotbed of high school tiddlywinks, the Bronx Science cafeteria.
The other—Marty Vine, Aaron Friedman, David Barbano, Lloyd Matheson and Art Rouse—all began flipping the wink this year.
The Rules
For those planning to attend this weekend's Continental Tiddlywinks Championships who are unsure of whether the tiddly is winked or the wink is tiddlied, here is a brief explanation of the rules of the game:
A team is composed of six players, two per game in a three-game match.
A game generally lasts 20 minutes of regulation time, after which each player takes five shots. At the end of these extra rounds, the player with the most winks in the cup wins.
A player may, however, win before regulation time expires if he "pots out." Potting out is a condition reached not by artificial stimulation but by flipping all six winks into the "pot" (cup). If just one player pots out, he and his teammate win.
Potting out sounds simple, since experienced players can pot a shot from just about anywhere on the table. Nevertheless, complex rules generally keep players from shooting for the cup on every shot.
A player who tries to pot out immediately is likely to have gome of his pieces "squopped." When all of your winks are either potted or squopped, you're dead.
A wink is squopped when part or all of it is covered by an opponent's wink. It cannot then be tiddled (flipped). Since you must pot all six winks to pot out, a player who rushes to pot five winks and then has his sixth squopped can only sit idly by while his foes proceed to pot out all six.
But the strategy does not stop here. All is not lost when your wink is squopped, if other winks remain free, since an experienced player can strike a squopped wink in such a manner that the foe's wink is in turn squopped, while the trapped wink is knocked free, a technique known as "walking."
Thus, the bulk of the 20--minute regulation time is usually spent squopping and walking rather than potting, in preparation for the strategy-filled five final rounds.
Tournament format calls for two round-robin pools of five teams each. Each team is then pitted against its counterpart in the finals, i.e., the winners of each pool play each other, the second place finishers play each other, and so on.
Sports gluttons rejoice! In perhaps the biggest weekend for sports- all year, you can stuff yourself on 16 thrilling hours of tiddlywinks, then top it off with a dessert of hockey. And if you're also a glutton for punishment, you can listen to the basketball team on the radio.
Such a weekend slate had Madame Sosostris nothing short of delirious. But before she could rush off to line up for the big events, she had the arduous task of picking this week's events, no easy task since the continent's best squoppers, the ECAC's finest stickers and the Ivy League's worst shooters will be going at it.
Transcending temporarality in a tantric trance, our guruess went all out for this big weekend, soaring up to the eighth level of consciousnes—and lo and behold, there was the Cornell hockey team psyched equally out of their minds.
Upon her return from the stratosphere, the good Madame declared: "Once before, I picked B.C. against Cornell, but that was in New York and even then they couldn't reach the finals to play the Red. They can't very well miss Cornell this time unless the bus driver takes a wrong turn, but at Lynah they might as well ring it up."
The reactionary element, if not already convinced that Cornell is the most seditious place between Yellow Springs, Ohio and Middlebury, Vermont, will find further support for that view as America's only good college hockey team of Americans battles those Red aliens.
But of course, those Red aliens will triumph again. The score, for those of you locked out: CORNELL, 5-3.
The object of the game of basketball is to throw the ball through an iron ring, suspended somewhere ten feet above the floor. This may sound elementary, but the way both Cornell and Harvard have been unable to find that ring, they could use a tip of the sort.
When they collide tonight at Harvard, the impact should resound all the way to maybe Radcliffe. Come to think of it, maybe the Cliffe wouldn't be an unworthy opponent for either. In the cellar battle, the Red should grub their way deeper into the bottom. HARVARD, 66-61.
Paul Erland knows only too well where that ring is, and the 6-6 forward who is outdistancing Jim McMillian, John Hummer, Jim Mogan et al in the Ivy scoring race should shoot his teammates past the Red. DARTMOUTH, 75-62.
And now, what you've all been panting for, the tiddlywinks forecast. In a mild surprise, Somerville, Mass, will win, proving to the world that a winker is not washed up at 22.
Before a few dozen bemused fans who wandered in and out of the Straight Memorial Room, a club team from Somerville, Mass. captured the fifth annual Continental Tiddlywinks Championships yesterday, downing Cornell 43-20 in the finals.
The Somerville club, founded just this year by three graduates from MIT's championship team of a year ago, thus became the first non-collegiate outfit ever to cop the coveted title.
The MIT grads were aided by a last-minute recruiting drive, which brought them Phil Villar, a 30-year-old Hartford aerospace engineer who is considered by many tiddlywinks observers to be America's top player.
The "Somervillians," as they
Continued on Page 7
Continued from Page 1
were registered on the score sheets, were strongly favored in the Eastern qualifying bracket after picking up Villar, but had trouble overcoming the two-time defending champs from MIT Saturday, squeaking into the finals by just three points scored in the final game of the day. A Philadelphia club finished a distant third.
In the Western regionals, also played Saturday at Noyes Center, Cornell brushed past the University of Toronto, Carleton University (of [sic original="Ottowa" correct="Ottawa"]) and CaseWestern Reserve with relative ease. The Red outdistanced Carleton, their nearest rival, by 37 points.
Cornell's winkers were bolstered by the addition of Lee Cousins, an ex-Secretary of the Scottish Tiddlywinks Association who learned about Cornell's team only Friday.
In the final round, Somerville's recently introduced players finally got used to playing with one another and jumped off to a 28-14 lead after the first two matches. Cousins, playing in a kilt, and teammate Naomi Gusowski registered the lone Cornell win.
The Red needed to win each of the last three games by 6-1 scores to pull out the title, but a gamble by Cornell's Marty Vine fell one wink short of potting out and Somerville's Ralph Welton then flipped all six of his plastic chips into the cup to lock up the victory.
Welton, one of two Somerville players who learned the game just three weeks ago, called the triumph "probably the only chance I'll ever get to be a Continental Champion in anything."
The Tiddlywinks Association is offering clinics and practices for people who get "bored" during the recess.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Tiddlywinks Association — Beginners taught, advanced players challenged. 8 p.m. today, Young Israel House.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Thus, Cornell students are forced to support political organizations and viewpoints with which they may not agree, and organizations they may have no use for, such as the Rugby and Tiddlywinks Clubs.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Most Cornellians think of Tiddlywinks as a game they outgrew at age five. But to about 60 undergraduates, grads and their jr. high school proteges, it is a serious and strategic game with intricacies at least as complicated as chess.
In the closest tournament of its seven year history, the MIT Zoo, and the MIT Noname teams took first and second place honors at the North American Tiddlywinks Championships held at the North Campus Union Multipurpose room this weekend.
The Cornell team came in seventh out of nine possible places.
Tiddlywinks is not the simple game most people suppose it to be. Rather, it employs strategy, planning and skill as each team tries to outsquop and outpot the other teams. Squopping is otherwise known as getting your winks on top of your opponents to immobilize them, and potting is getting your winks in the pot. All this is accomplished through the use of a squidger (a large round disk), small flip winks, and a little pot which sits in the middle of a large felt mat.
Tiddlywinks players are an unusual breed. Bill [sic original="Ranke" correct="Renke"], Secretary General of the North American Tiddlywinks Association. (NATwA). described two types of winkers. "There are the freaky people who play it because it's fun, and the status seeking people who take it seriously, but the latter are few and far between", he said.
Winkers consider themselves an elite group. There are about 100 serious winkers in the United States most of whom live in the Northeast. They tend to be very diverse in nature, ranging from MIT engineers taught by British exchange students, to junior high and high school students taught by Severin [sic original="Dricks" correct="Drix"], '70, a former Cornell winker. Many winkers are so caught up in their unusual avocation, that they continue to play for their college teams even after they have graduated.
[sic original="Ranke" correct="Renke"], an MIT player, said he became a winker because he wanted to become a world champion. His dream came true when the MIT team won the World Championship in Cambridge, England last spring.
Many players said it was a return to their childhood and one MIT Zoo team member remarked, "Tiddlywinks is fun when you're stoned." His teammate added. "It's also fun when you're tripping."
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Understandably discouraged by the rainouts of their past two outdoor fairs, Risley is sponsoring a Rain Fair Saturday and Sunday this year.
[...]
The Native American Association will have an Indian display set up, the Jordani Zoology Club is bringing their zoo, and the Tiddlywinks Club is planning an appearance.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
Tiddlywinks Association meeting listing.
For those of you who are connoisseurs of good times, patrons of the arts, or merely of the inquisitive nature, Cornell offered a weekend of fun and entertainment by hosting the North American Continental Tiddlywinks Tournament
[...]As it turns out, nobody is just an "anybody" as far as the players are concerned. Everyone is familiar with each other and the communal spirit and sense of togetherness are impressive.
[...]Stephanie Chu ’10, the creator of the “Cornell Class of 2010” Facebook group, is an Ithaca High School grad who said she’s looking forward to meeting new people, more rigorous class work, good food and independence. Chu was inspired to create the group after talking to friends in the “Cornell Class of 2009” Facebook group who said that it promoted discussion among classmates. She wants to study neurobiology and in her free time likes to play violin, badminton and tiddlywinks.
preventing students from paying the bill for the Tiddlywinks club
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Cornell Desk Book.
Photograph.
In chronology.
Photograph.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Cornell University Library, Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, News Service Records.
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Cornell University Library, Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Visual Services, Cornell Publications, Photography Records.
Black and white negatives of Cornell tiddlywinks matches.
Black and white negatives of Cornell tiddlywinks matches.
Black and white negatives of Cornell tiddlywinks matches.
Toggle showing 6 tiddlywinks references for The Cornellian.
LAWRENCE ROBERT BOGERT, Englewood, N.J. Engineering Physics. B.S. Teaneck High School. Treas., Alpha Phi Delta. Phi Eta Sigma, Sigma Xi Delta. Cornell Engineer, Cornellian, E.l. Co-op Program, Alpha Phi Omega, U.S.S.C., Cornell A.F.S., Le Cercle Francais, Cornell Tiddlywinks Team. J. McMullen Regional Scholarship.
RICHARD JOHN GARSON, Buffalo. Arts and Sciences, English Honors. A.B. Lewis J. Bennett High School. Watermargin. Phi Eta Sigma, Alpha Epsilon Delta. Office Mgr., Cornellian; Cornell Tiddlywinks Team; Young Dem. N.Y.S. Regents Schol- arship, N.Y.S. Scholar Incentive Award, N.Y.S. Regents Scholarship at Cornell. Dean's List.
Being National Tiddlywinks Champions last year may not have had as much inherent glamour as the Hockey Championship of the year before, but it shows… it demonstrates… it is indicative of the efforts made to … well, tiddlywinks, although miles different from the rough and tumble games of academic life, is just a different shape of the sponge that is sports: a man-created plastic to absorb our frustrations and wring them out in an accepted and protected arena.
Richard Nowogrodzki, New York, N.Y. A.B., Mathematics. Tiddlywinks Team.
Stephen Michael Wallenstein, Great Neck, N.Y. A.B., Honors Government. CORNELL DAILY SUN; Dorm Pres.; INDEX; IFC Tutorial; NYCLU, Exec Board; Tiddlywinks Society; WS Fine Arts Comm. Dean's List.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Department of Mathematics Annual Report.
Each year for the past several years the Cornell Mathematics Department has awarded a prize to a senior at Ithaca High School who has demonstrated substantial interest and significant native ability in mathematics. This prize is funded substantially by contributions solicited from various faculty. Typically, the high school selects a short-list of students, whom one or two of our faculty interview. This year’s prize was awarded to Yu Gu. According to her calculus teacher, Severin Drix, Yu excelled at everything they had for her, including computer science, fractals and chaos. She authored the “Seven Gates of Nerdhood” and is reported to be a great tiddlywinks player. Yu will be attending Cornell Engineering in the fall.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Dartmouth.
[...] Maybe a new ban on Tiddlywinks will be imposed for fear of some students putting out each other's eyes.
Toggle showing 8 tiddlywinks references for Dartmouth Alumni Magazine.
Doctor Van Dyke also referred in a pleasing manner to the athletic relations betwen Dartmouth and Princeton, and stood as a stauch advocate of football as the proper outlet for the restless qualities of college men as against "tennis, rowing, checkers, and tiddledy-winks."
It's going to be pretty thin for the hatcheck girl in the Rockefeller Center Pig's Knuckles and Tiddledy Winks Club for executive committee pickled pig's feet and chocolate éclair froics in the future if the present movement keeps up.
The Invitation North and South Tournament at Pinehurst last year was not up to its usual excellence. Reason: Red Stanley went to Florida. Next year the tournament should return to normal. Reason: Red will give it a whirl. At the moment, his golf is so bad, he says, that his Aunt Emma, who prefers tiddly-winks to golf, could give him strokes and beat him.
We had dinner and spent an evening with Cece and Russ Fette in St. Louis last week. [...] Russ was in Hanover last summer en route to or from youngest son's camp and bunked one night at The Inn where he ran into Mike Ellis (Mayer Ellis Abrahamson).
Now this guy Ellis gets around. We not only get peppered with news clippings from the Alumni Records Office, but we even stumble upon vignettes in our own voracious reading such as the sports section in the Sept. 14 Time Magazine describing the victorious engagements of the British Tiddlywinks Team in their five weeks' rout of U. S. contenders this summer. From coast to coast, with their expert "squidging" they "squopped" their adversaries until (we quote Time) "Last week, when the British winkers met the likes of S. J. Perelman and Stage Director-Producer Mike Ellis in Bucks County, there was a hint of opposition. Perelman lost with a debonair, hand-in-pocket flar; Ellis' keen squidging eye and steady wrist made him one of the few Yanks who avoided a shutout."
Every imaginable sport is played, including tiddlywinks, and the delightful thing is that everybody has a chance to represent his college at something or other: some colleges have only about 200 members, and the largest only about 500.
We were all extremely pleased to have Bob and Ginnie Hill join our returning group for the first time. Bob is in the real estate business in the Bronx and lives in Irvington on Hudson. He stays in shape by keeping active in the ancient Scottish sport of curling. Curling was described to me as a game in which a 32-pount stone is slide on ice to a spot. This sounds like a granddaddy version of the shuffle game played in many a pub with little metal discs. It would take a big guy like Bob to play a game which has been likened to playing tiddlywinks with manhole covers.
But first, a few bits of news. Josh Grindlay has been appointed [sic original="preofessor" correct="professor"] of astronomy at Harvard. (We will forgive his institutional affiliation on the assumption that he still prefers beer and pretzels to tea and tiddlywinks.)
Erik and Brianne currently reside in Los Angeles with their quirky cat Tiddlywinks.
[...]
This concludes this issue’s tales of Tiddlywinks, wild bear and Coca-Cola capitalism.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Interlachen.
April 24
Dreamed in education class this morning that our varsity tiddley-winks team defeated Yale by a score of 2 for 1
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Pleiades.
Boyer, Leslie
Varsity Cross Country 1 , 2; Varsity Tennis 3. 4; Varsity Track 1.2.3; Varsity Basketball 2. 3. 4 Captain 4; Big F 3, Treas. 4; Nabisco 3. 4; Lions Club 1 . 2. 3; Biology Club I. 2; Speech Club 1.2; Clones 2, 3; Touch & Go " 1, 2. 3. 4; Varsity Tiddlywinks 3. 4; Football Announcing 2. 3. 4 " Boyish " 1, 2. 3. 4; Salt III 2. 3. 4; D.F, 1, 2, 3, 4.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Hamilton Literary Monthly.
- Some will read Shakspeare and Browning ;
- And some read the Bible, methinks;
- Some will work hard at their duties,
- The rest will play Tiddledy Winks.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for (Harvard summer school newspaper).
Coverage of Harvard-Oxford match
Independent student humor magazine; formed the Gargoyle University Tiddlywinks Society in 1962.
Toggle showing 7 tiddlywinks references for The Gargoyle.
Passing references to tiddlywinks.
Passing references to tiddlywinks.
Advertisement for ETwA-supplied tiddlywinks sets for $2.50.
Hold that Squop
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Harvard Alumni Bulletin.
IN new Harvard Athletic Association sweatshirts, seven tense but poised young men trotted into Burr "B" several weeks ago. Kneeling before their Gargoyle mascot, they offered up prayer that their efforts that afternoon would not be entirely unrewarded. Having done this, they went through some quick, intensive calesthenics, picked the four most husky of their numbers, declared they were ready, and proceeded to cries of "Desquop that wink!" and "Squidge it, harvard," to vanquish Holy Cross and win first place for Harvard in NUTS, the National Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society. Tiddlywinks, a sophisticated indoor game long recognized on the Content, had finally arrived in America after many years of slander and ridicule. The Boston Globe was enthusiastic in its sport section the next morning: "The Crimson tiddlers winked their way to a 23-12 victory over a green Purple team." All this while both the football and soccer teams were going down to defeat.
Alfred L. Goldberg '63, "Master of the Harvard Winks" and president of the nascent humor magazine Gargoyle, sees it this way: "Oxford University's team was over here touring and killing all American opposition, so we felt we had to do something for the country. Accordingly, we formed GUTS (the Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society), lost to Oxford, and now represent Harvard as the strongest team in American." The 7-21 loss to Oxford is considered locally as a moral victory, for it was the first time any American team had scored on the veteran Oxonians. Said one Britisher, "quite bad, but far and away the best team we have met here." It was not long before growing interest had prompted a letter challenging President Kennedy's touch football squad to a match. The President wrote that he was really too busy, but suggested to Mean Monro that an officially-sanctioned team be set up by the University. Goldberg says that his men, led by Captain James Parry '64, now have the sole rights to connect the Harvard name with the game of Tiddlywinks, and considers GUTS to represent the Havard community.
Admittedly, there are many n this country who do not even know the basics of the game. For their edification, and so that they may be able to follow knoledgeably, this latest manifestation of the College's sporting spirit, the following explanation is offered.
Tiddlywinks (sometimes erroneously spelled, "Tiddywinks") is a game of skill played on a green felt mat two yards by one yeard, placed either on a low table or on the floor. There are two teams of two players each attempting to place all their pieces in the centerpiece before their opponents do theirs. These pieces are called "winks," and there are twelve winks to each side. The winks are shot or "squidged" be means of a "squidger," which is really just a half-dollar-sized wink. By adjusting the angle of the squidger on the wink, and the pressure with which it is pressed, the tiddlywinker may make many types of squidges into the cup that stands in the center. When a player has succeeded in putting all his winks into the cup, he is considered to be "potted." In essence that is the offensive side of the game. However, there is a subtle defensive-strategic aspect, also. The point is, one may immobilize one's opponent's wink simply by covering it, or "squopping" it with one's own wink. The opponent may not then squidge his wink because only the top wink in a "squop-pile" may be squidged. However, he may retaliate defensively by in turn squopping the wink with which you squopped his, and this may go on until a large pile of winks sits on the board and one or another of the players must begin to "desquop" if the contest is to go on.
Obvioiusly the game is one of inches, and calls for a steady hand and quick judgment of situation. In the Holy Cross game, Crimson tiddlywinkers frequently huddled with non-player advisors to come up with plays at critical junctures of the match. But in spite of its demanding nature and its still esoteric reputation, tiddlywinks is thnking of petitioning Master Finley for recognition as a team independent from GUTS and other Houses may follow in the future. As for GUTS itself, Wink-master Goldberg has already announced an upcoming match with Mt. Holyoke. He does not want his men "to become over-confident," he says, but admits that he does not think the contest will be the closest the team will have this year. Negotiations are under way with other Ivy League colleges, and Goldberg hopes to be able to have a Grand Competition for the "John Harvard Challenge Wink" (an Oldsmobile hubcap), symbolic of American tiddlywinks supremacy, later this year.
Squidge fiercely, Harvard!
Photograph of Harvard-University of Pennsylvania match.
Paragraph about Harvard-University of Pennsylvania match.
Independent student newspaper
Toggle showing 43 tiddlywinks references for The Harvard Crimson.
To the Editors of the CRIMSON:
"It was with amazement and with a sense of incredulity" that we read yesterday's communication in the CRIMSON entitled "An Indignant Challenge." While we hold no brief for Mr. Humphries, and would oppose the introduction of Bolshevism into the country by any means, constitutional or otherwise, we feel that the framers of the Constitution of the United States, if they could have taken the communication seriously, must have had Freudian nightmares on recollecting their own insignificant words: "Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech or of press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble . . ."
Can the authors of the communication, mature graduates, seriously contend that a speaker is "insidiously subtle" who opens his address with the frank statement that he is a Bolshevist? Have the authors of the communication, when they assert that the United States is "internally and externally at war" with Russia, forgotten that power to declare war is vested only in Congress?
The writers of yesterday's communication excell Metternich in his own "rayon" in their apparent illiberalism and intolerance. In our humble opinion the College buildings should be free to lectures on tiddledy-winks or any other subject students may care to listen to, so long as open violence is not preached. If outside speakers are needed to stir the students from their lethargy into active discussion of the great problems facing the world, by all means let them come! FREDERIC K. BULLARD '20 JOHN U. NEF '20 JOSEPH L. GAVIT '21 JOHN COWLES '21 HENRY W. HARRIS, JR., '20. RICHARD P. HALLOWELL '20 ROBERT L. FINLEY '21 CHARLES F. FULLER Occ., JAMES G. KING, JR., '20 LLOYD K. GARRISON 1L. F. U. PERRY '21
Examples of foolish, needless legislation are plentiful. In South Carolina, the playing of pool or billiards has been forbidden. The prohibition of checkers, of cards, of tiddledy-winks may well follow.
Delayed when one of the Yale players who was hitch-hiking to Cambridge hurt his thumb on a telegraph pole, the annual Crimson-and-Blue tiddledy-winks contest got under way yesterday afternoon in the Tiddley-winks Room at the Indoor Athletic Building.
Following the matches, which were closely played and in which Ken I. Scutemin, belived to be a Yale ringer imported from Princeton was the winner, the Harvard captain announced he would place a petition asking that the sport be made a major.
Tiddledy-winkers went down to inglorious defeat before the Hoyden College girls, who winked their way to victory in one of the most bitterly contested tipples of the century. Crimson tiddlers were badly handicapped with the loss of Tid Fingers who recently blistered and cramped his pitching thumb from turning pages, while studying for his hour exams.
However, Harvard's wonder, the armless Joe Sockit, demonstrated the remarkable feat of running up a championship record with his toes. It was reported that Hoyden's marvel, Purple O'Malley, was a ringer, and that she arrived for the Harvard game after playing in a professional contest.
That's right. Now with deft, steady strokes, play tic, tac, toe on all the odd questions and tiddley winks on all the even ones. Who knows, you might even get the right answer, and besides, won't Dr. Tatum be surprised?
Just by way of the record, we slipped into Lieut. Montgomery's office the other day to converse about sports. Our major question concerned outside athletic participation by NSCS teams.
According to him, there's no reason why a Supply team or Supply teams cannot engage in outside games, be it basketball, softball, hardball, or tiddly-winks, just so long as regular class and study hours are maintained.
It's a little late for basketball, but come spring there may be those student officers who would like to organize a baseball team to play some of the local college or service teams. Chief Clem is willing to do the coaching, too…
There's gold in the U. S. Treasury, and with it G.I.'s can learn to fly, dance, hoe potatoes, cut out paper dolls, or play tiddledy winks, but the University Information Office within whose ken passeth all things weren't so sure they had the answer to the telephone voice which said:
"I'm a vet and I haven't enrolled in Harvard University."
Yes?
"And I'm not a resident of Cambridge, either."
Yes?
"Well, I just wondered if there was any way I could use the G.I. Bill to join the Coop."
Oh, Mister B-e-n-d-e-r-!
To the Editors of The CRIMSON:
Four or six members of the Oxford Tiddlywinks Society (All England champions and holders of the Prince Philip Interuniversity Trophy) are planning a tour of the States from July to September [sic original="1961" correct="1962"]. We are keen to accept any challenges from your side of the Ttlantic and particularly like to play a series against the Ivy League. Any help or publicity you can give us would be much appreciated. Yours faithfully, Elizabeth King (Hon. Sec. O.U.T.S.) St. Hugh's College, Oxford
Harvard and Holy Cross begin the 1962 U.S intercollegiate tiddlywink season this morning with a 10:30 a.m. contest at the official regulation-sized tables at Phillips Brooks House. Although fewer spectators can follow the match at PBH than in specious Burr B where the match was originally scheduled to take place, the more intimate atmosphere should aid to the game.
The Oxford Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society (outh) refeated Harvard, 24-4, on August 31. Despite its lopsided score, that match marked a great moral victory for the Crimson when OUTS players remarked, "Harvard is obviously the best team we played in America."
Holy Cross, on the other hand, is completely unseasoned Its team was formed last month after it read about Harvard's exploits in the Boston press.
Harvard tiddlywinkers had a new experience Saturday. They won. Encouraged by the spirited music of the Harvard band and by cries of "Squidge, Harvard, squidge" and "Hold that Squab," from a partisan audience, the Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywink Society (GUTS) defeated a novice Holy Cross team by the convincing score of 23-12.
The outcome was never in doubt as Harvard, strengthened by frequent "sherry breaks," placed first in all three matches, GUTS now considers itself champion of the National Undergraduate Tiddlywink Society (NUTS).
Gargoyle president and Master of the Winks, Fred Goldberg, claimed that the victory was especially impressive since GUTS was playing without its ace, Leon "Squidge in One" Jacobson. Apparently Leon once accepted a candy bar for winning a match in his native England, and the Eastern Collegiate Tiddleywink Society has challenged his amateur status.
As part of a lively half time show, Bill Rothman, a Gargoyle staff member, made a speech in which he tried to sound like President Kennedy and during which he broke a Phillips House chair.
In what was hailed as "the first collegiate bisexual tiddlywinks match" the men of the Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society (GUTS) defeated an impressive Mount Holyoke team (MHUTS), 31-11, here Saturday.
The Harvard winkers outsquidged and outsquopped their opponents, taking first place in each of the six matches; but the M H U T S were termed a "powerful" squad by their Harvard hosts after one Holyoke player broke a squidge by pressing too hard against a wink on her opening shot. It was the first time that a squidge had been broken during match competition.
The girls' early confidence gave way to bewilderment and some grumbling when the GUTS attempted to explain the rules of the game.
Meanwhile, in the first tiddlywinks match between Ivy League schools, James D. Parry '64 and Robert K. Whitesides '65 downed an inexperienced Columbia's twosome, 11-3 in New York.
To the Editors of the CRIMSON:
It has been rumored that the Harvard tiddlywinks team has been hiding from the Brown team. On a recent trip to Columbia University in New York City, the Cambridge club completely by-passed Providence, out of fear. As a last ditch effort, the Brown club is attempting to make contact with this elusive semi-potential foe by contacting them through the CRIMSON. We have taken this whole affair as a terrible affront, the Brown club having established Ivy Ieague tiddlywinks in 1793. In the first match, our team, led by Roger Williams Brown, easily defeated John Harvard's bastard grand-nephew, Rufus. Our predominance in the field has not been contested since.
Thus, the Brown Tiddlywinks Union challenges the Harvard club to a match on a suitable weekend date of their choosing. In keeping with our motto, "Toward a Better Union," we hope the fair name of the sport will be redressed and that we shall soon meet Harvard on the field of play. Robert Miller '63 President
The athlete's muscles rippled as he prepared to shoot the final point of the match; the tendon on his left index finger looked red and strained, but he was a true tiddlywinker and would not flinch. After a fleeting glace towards the victor's decanter of sherry, he squidged, scored, and the Gargoyles had downed Penn 26-9 in last Saturday's match.
Gargoyle captain Jim Parry described the match as a pushover, and lauded the skillful efforts of shooter John Kernochan and squopper Tom Houston, Saturday's high scorers.
Parry is delighted with the team's success, and has even gone so far as to claim that the Gargoyles could defeat Oxford's world champions in a return match.
The Gargoyie Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society extended its victorious lous season to a record 9-0 Saturday by defeating an overrated Brown team. Led by Captain Jim Parry, the Harvard group racked up as an impressive 40 points, allowing only 16 to its opponents.
Possibly it's time to stop making fun of the Gargoyle tiddlywinkers. The squoppers take themselves seriously, and they're good: undefeated this fall, they have outscored their opponents 301-111.
Today they take on Yale in Phillips Brooks House at 10 a.m. The Yale Daily News will represent the college to the south in its attempt to dislodge the John Harvard Challenge Cup—a hubcap—from the Cantabridgians.
No Wellesley cheerleaders will be on hand to root for the GUTS this time, but about ten Harvard bandsmen will be there to encourage the Crimson. In addition, Sports illustrated has sent a reporter to cover today's contest.
Jim [sic original="Perry" correct="Parry], the Gargoyle captain, is confident that the Yalies will have the honor of being the tenth consecutive team to bow to Harvard. The Elis feel that their skill as world bladder-ball champions will spill over into tiddlywinks, but Perry said that the visitors are "too inexperenced and too Yalish" to stand a chance.
Tiddlywinks
GUTS v. Assorted Yalies,
PBH, 10 a.m.
Paced by the sensational squidging of Bob Whiteside, the Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society (GUTS) stomped a pathetic Yale Daily News aggregation. Saturday, 32-10. The victory extends the GUTS winning streak to ten matches after the initial defeat at the fingertips of Oxford.
Whiteside featured the Harvard attack with two Carnovskis. (For the uninitiated, a Carnovskis, named for the man who first did it, is a hole in one, in which the wink is squidged directly into the cup from a distance of two feet.)
Eight members of the Harvard band were among the spectators who watched, consumed a half gallon, of sherry and egged GUTS on with such cheers as "Use Effective Strategy!" As is traditional since the Brown match last week, the Harvard all wore vests. Said GUTS captain Jim Parry: "It's dignified, it's British, and it keeps our ties from falling on the winks."
Several undergraduates will appear on "I've Got a Secret" on CBS-TV at 8 p.m. tonight. The group's secret: they are the national tiddlywinks champions.
"Cliffies, please help us," pleaded the captain of the tiddlywinks team last night. James D. Parry '64 explained that the team members need three or four volunteer secretaries to handle the avalanche of fan mail which is burying them. "If you're willing to help, drop in anytime," he added.
Much of the problem comes from misaddressed letters. One, which was sent to the "Harvard University Tiddley Wink Team, c/o Nathan M. Pusey," was forwarded to the Harvard Athletic Association before it finally reached the stars.
Several of the letter writers have asked for autographs. "These are obviously forged letters sent to us by our opponents," asserted Parry. "No true lover of the game would think of suggesting that we ruin our winking coordination by touching a writing instrument. Why none of us have taken lecture notes all year, and it will take us at least a month of steady training to recover from exams."
Most of the letters request a copy of the international rules or a match with the squoppers. The Green Bank, Va., Chess and Tiddlywink Society explained that they couldn't offer the visiting Harvard team room or board. However, these eighth graders would be glad to give them a tour of the naval radio observatory.
Many correspondents offer carefully thought out advice. One particularly astute fan suggested the superior parabolic trajectory followed by elliptical winks. "He was absolutely right," admits Parry. "We experimented and found that the best ratio between the major axis and the semi-minor axis is two-to-one."
The female sex has gained another victory in its fight to achieve equal partnership in the human race. A recent Associated Press bulletin advises us that the Southeastern Conference, one of the top athletic groups in collegiate competition, has decided to allow girls to participate in all intercollegiate sports. The ruling may have far-reaching effects.
While we are not opposed to the general philosophy of female emancipation, this new development is disturbing. As students in today's Gov 124 exam know, women probably should be entitled to equality before the law, voting privileges, special employment protection, and independent income, but complete lack of discrimination between the sexes in athletics seems to go too far. The Greeks, who were extremely wise in many respects, were quite rigid on this point. Any woman who even watched the Olympic Games was automatically executed. When the Romans reversed that edict, women apparently became great sports fans and were fond of spectacles such as gladiator fights and chariot races. The illusion of a tender sex has been completely shattered in modern times by the blossoming of female athletes in numerous sports. But up to this time, with the minor exceptions of mixed doubles in tennis and tiddlywinks, women have generally been restricted to competing against each other. There is great wisdom in such a policy.
Though still rather exhausted by its mighty move into tiddlywinks last year, Harvard's ever-expanding sports program will take another historic stride in the next few weeks when the Karate Club is formally organized.
The Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society met its Waterloo Saturday in the surrealistic elegance of the Quincy House dining room. It had been undefeated for three years.
A team from Waterloo Lutheran University, located near Toronto, nudged by Harvard 19 to 16 on Saturday morning, and to compound the disaster, the neighboring University of Waterloo polished off the Crimson 32 to 24 on the same battlefield that afternoon.
Four girls—three Cliffies and one first-year Ed School student—tried to shoo away the invaders after lunch Saturday when they squared off against the female contingent of the Waterloo Lutheran team. No one will ever know if they succeeded, since the forgot to keep score.
"We were out-squopped," said Michael Gottesman, president of the Gargoyle and four-year veteran of the Harvard squad.
Defensive Technique
Being squopped is the tiddlywink equivalent of drawing a go-to-jail card in Monopoly. It is a defensive move in which a team plops one of its pieces on top of one of the opposition's winks. Since only the top disc can be moved, the covered piece is frozen until someone knocks off the upper disc.
Charles McLeod, who [sic original="squopps" correct="squops"] in a kilt, was the star of the tourney. He wafted his two large (7-8 in. diameter) winks and four medium (3-8 in. diameter) winks across the three by six foot playing mat with the ripping grace that is to a tiddlywinks fan that Oscar Robertson's jump shot is to a basketball addict.
The Harvard team was defenseless against the defense. "We are more a squidging team," Gottesman said. "That means we usually just aim for the cup in the center and try to score.
Only six players turned out to compete for Harvard, and international regulations call for eight. But Gottesman maintained that the match was legal. "As far as we are concerned, we lost the international championship," he said.
In what has to be the greatest boost to U.S.-Canadian relations since the completion of the St. Lawrence Seaway, the two teams put down their winks later that day and organized the North American Tiddlywinks Association. The two Canadian teams, Radcliffe, Harvard College, and the Medical School are charter members, and Gottesman predicted that a host of other existing tiddlywinks clubs will apply for membership.
It was a grand day for Harvard tiddlywinks wonks.
The Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society, which was crushed by two Canadian teams February 26 after three years without a loss pounced on a team from Cornell Saturday and mauled them 43½ to 19½.
"We really slaughtered them," Mike Gottesman, president of the Gargoyle and captain of the team said Sunday.
The GUTS team played a wide-open brawling game. They switched from last week's squopp-squopp tactics -- where both team members try to cover the opposition's pieces with their own winks and shoot for the pot only late in the game -- to squidge-squopp. In this style of play, one man tries to neutralize the opposition by squopping, while his teammate goes for the score.
Squopp-Squopp vs. Squidge-Squopp
A squopp-squopp team plays a precise, defensive game, something like the way Floyd Patterson boxes; a squidge-squopp team uses the tactics Sonny Liston made famous in his prime -- pounding the opposition into the mat.
A last-minute snarl-up almost kept the winks grounded. The Cornell team had agreed to bring two three-by-six playing mats to the match. But according to Gottesman, "there was a misunderstanding," and the $5 mats, which can be purchased only from Marchant Games Ltd., Loughton, England, didn't arrive in time. The quick-thinking Crimson squad worked out a rotation schedule that allowed the teams to get by using only Harvard's mats.
"This is the pit," he said, gesturing in back of him. There were loads of girls. Someone was beating a big drum in time to an Indian war dance and everyone had some sort of crazy hat on. "We're going to bring the pit to cheer at tiddly-winks matches," he said.
Nathaniel A. Parker, Director of Physical Training, already allows PT credit for such "carry-over" sports as pistol and rifle, cricket and karate, and, upon application, for such other esoteric activities as Radcliffe volleyball and dancing classes, Loeb Theatre musical productions and donations to the PBH blood drive. Two freshmen received credit for SCUBA diving in the IAB pool last year, a third for his riding lessons at Beverley.
Although Parker gave PT-credit for the freshman ping-pong tournament, he refused the Gargoyle tiddly-wink team similar recognition. He also balked when a freshman expressed interest in a 100-mile run sponsored by the YMCA.
The CRIMSON decathlon team widened its lead on the Pomeroy Tiddly Winks Squad yesterday with a 23-2 victory in the 200 meter crocket event. "That game really sends me." red-ball Deac Dake said after the match.
Trailing 2-0 going into the tenth frame, the Crimson bowling team knocked down 23 pins to clobber the Pomeroy Tiddlywinks and Bowling Team, 23-2, and continue its domination of collegiate candlepin action.
For example, busing advocates have never answered questions like what right does the state have to force someone to be bused against his will, to sacrifice the interests of any individual to a vague social plan, to allocate people among schools like colored tiddlywinks to fulfill some arbitrary quota?
MIT is an "unknown quantity," Langton said, but based on past performance -- tiddlywinks has been the Engineers' best sport -- the Crimson booters should come away with a win.
Announcement of NATwA's Eastern Regionals tournament.
Some colleges dominate a sport for so long that the names become synonymous: like UCLA and basketball, and Alabama and football. And MIT and tiddlywinks.
MIT doesn't just have the best team in the country, it has a legend of being an awesome, almost unbeatable squad for the past 15 years.
* * *
The MIT tiddley training camp is in the Student Center at Tech Square. When I arrived the winkers—as they call themselves—were gathered around some three-by-six double-felt mats that serve as their playing fields. A jock with thumb muscles as taut as steel shot me a cold look from behind his thick glasses. There wasn't another well-toned muscle on his body, but those thumbs were the stuff of awe. Arye [sic original="Gittleman" correct="Gittelman"]'s thumbs are the biggest and most skilled in the game. For those who don't know already, [sic original="[sic original="Gittleman" correct="Gittelman"]" correct="Gittelman"]—MIT '83&mdahas a rippling dynamism on the double-felt that can only be compared to what Tony Dorsett does on the gridiron.
Welcome Wagon
"You some reporter?" "Y...Yes," I stammered.
God, he was mean.
[sic original="Gittleman" correct="Gittelman"] introduced me around camp. Winkers have nicknames, but not like Bubba or Moose or Sugar Ray. More like Blue or "L" or Moishe or Ferd. [sic original="Gittleman" correct="Gittelman"] then handed me a squidger (a large, thick chip used to flip tiddlywinks around) and said, "Kid, how'd you like to play a game with us?"
I was uncertain, I hesitated, and then I thought, "Shit, if George Plimpton can play with the pros, why not me?" I'd probably be embarrassingly bad, but the experience would be worth a Pulitzer."
I became [sic original="Gittleman" correct="Gittelman"]'s partner in a doubles game against Blue and "L". My palms sweated as I made silly errors early on, forcing [sic original="Gittleman" correct="Gittelman"] to make the tough shots. I tried to ease the champ's tension by smiling nervously and asking him why he didn't have a nickname. "My name is so weird I don't need one," he grunted.
God, he was rough.
There are two types of plays in Tiddlywinks. One is potting—what laymen usually consider the object of the game—to get the winks in the cup at the center of the playing field. But tactics depend on squopping—immobilizing other players' winks by landing on them. Points are tallied at the end to determine the winner: one point for every unsquopped wink and three for each potted one.
Harvard formed the first tiddlywinks team in the U.S. in 1962. Organized by the staff of the Harvard Gargoyle—a now-defunct humor magazine—it was a premier potting team, well-stocked with players who could are winks gracefully into the cup.
Foned
But Harvard was stopped when the squop came into vogue. In the 1966 Continentals, the hard-squopping Canadian Champion—Waterloo Lutheran University—decimated the Crimson. The team fell into depression and disrepair over the loss—its first ever—and soon disappeared.
At the end of the 25 minutes of regular play, I was totally squopped-out under a horde of other winks. A girl in the audience giggled at my haplessness. But in the decisive four final rounds, [sic original="Gittleman" correct="Gittelman"] kept the game close with an awesome display of skill, squopping, potting and squidging amazing shots.
It came down to the last tiddler. I could tie the game and save face if I could pot my only unsquopped piece. A simple five-inch pot. If I sank this one fame and fortune would be mine (sort of), but more importantly, my macho honor was on the line. Plimpton could do it. So could I.
I missed by a mile.
Choke
I put a towel over my head and walked toward the showers. "L" turned to me as I shuffled out. He was putting his prized squidgers in a felt-covered case. "Kid," he said, "You're okay, but this game isn't for you. Why don't you try something more your speed, like writing about what it's like being a boxer or something?" MIT and Cornell—the two best collegiate teams in the country—square off in a tourney November 14 in Ithaca. But if you can't wait that long, there's always the Tiddlywinks World Singles Championship on November 7 at Haverford College, near Philadelphia. Larry Kahn (MIT '75) will meet current champ Dave Lockwood (MIT '74).
Make your hotel reservations before the rush.
The Michigan-Ohio State rivalry is one of the great conference rivalries. This year is only the second time since 1968 that the game will not decide the Big Ten championship and who goes to the Rose Bowl. The rivalry is so intense "The two schools could play tiddlywinks at 30 paces and it would still draw a crowd," says one long-time Ohio State fan.
National Bocce League, United States Curling Association, Major League Tiddlywinks, you name it—Elias keeps their numbers for them.
The biggest change in toy design theory since my sandbox days seems to be the downfall of the traditional board game. Gone are such dinosaurs as "Operation!" "Tiddly-Winks" and "Chutes and Ladders."
Hockey rules are made to be broken.
Sure, fighting is prohibited. But hockey isn't tiddlywinks. Stuff happens.
So, the moral is this: Harvard fans, you have a team to get excited about this spring. Your college just knocked off the eighth-ranked team in the nation (not to mention Boston College and Penn also) and toyed with Vermont yesterday as if it were a set of Tiddlywinks.
1. The Harvard Tiddlywinks Society meets up a few times a year to work the wink and test the tiddly. According to President Frank E. Pacheco `99, the Society lies "somewhere between a club and a team, and is in a continuous battle to find intercollegiate competition." It seems that few are up to the challenge, though, and the Society's games remain confined to intra-Harvard play. Pacheco says the club welcomes newcomers and is basically just a social game that's not very strenuous. The club organizes one tournament per year and insists on using only the finest imported English winks and pots. As an aside, tiddlywink novices particularly adept at the popular yet pedestrian drinking-game "Quarters" should strongly consider hustling their way into the patrician club. E-mail htws@hcs for more info.
8. The Harvard Tiddlywinks Society and Wushu Club invite you to:
YES! We Exist
Master something obscure
The more esoteric the talent, the fewer people there are to beat you. So perfect your game of tiddlywinks, practice Irish road bowling, put in the hours on the oboe (actually though, what is an oboe?).
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Harvard Illustrated Magazine.
Military accoutrements hung on the wall. At a square table four lads in cadet uniforms were playing poker. The chips they used were very small, thin affairs, about the size of ten-cent pieces. On the table stood a little cup or bowl, about three inches across. Ford smiled as he recognized it. The fellows looked familiar all but a lanky callow youth who sat back to him. Ford decided that this must be himself. One of the players was putting up a stiff bluff and the others were evidently weighing chances very carefully. Suddenly the door at the left shook as if from a knock. Presto! Whisk went the cards into young Jennings' pocket, the bowl was moved into the centre of the table and the others began snapping the chips into it by pressing one on another. When Jennings opened the door, all that the Head Master saw was a group of fellows, laughing and excited, playing "tiddlywinks."
Independent student humor magazine
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Harvard Lampoon.
Send us a quarter in gold, and we will send to your Sammy in France
[...]
or 1 INDOOR GAMES KIT consisting of
- 3 Flinch cards
- 1 dice (loaded)
- 2 dice (unloaded)
- 1 large, and one small bean bag
- 1 set of Lotto
- 1 combination Parchesi, Ping-pong and Tiddly-winks board.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Harvard Law Library suggestion book.
Tiddlywinks question by Fred Shapiro. Response by Morris Cohen.
Toggle showing 8 tiddlywinks references for Harvard Magazine.
Announcement of forthcoming article.
Highlights from Harvard's history by year.
As Harvard's football and soccer teams go down to defeat across the Charles, members of GUTS, the College's Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society, squidge and squop their way to a 23-12 victory over Holy Cross to win first [...]
Attend a ping-pong tournament, tiddlywinks game, or croquet match
Word of Fred R. Shapiro, J.D. 77 (80), in these pages first came in 1979 after he revived tiddlywinks at Harvard. At the North American Continental Team Championship meet at MIT that year, Shapiro, president of the Harvard Tiddlywinks Society, told a magazine reporter the history of tournament tiddlywinks, which the reporter revealed in a lengthy feature, Relatively New Indoor Sport Sweeps about 125 People (May-June 1979, page 37).
Shapiro has gone on to become associate librarian and lecturer in legal research at the Yale Law School. The Yale Book of Quotations, edited by him, has just been published by Yale University Press. A dictionary of quotations is a guide to the spirit of its time. As Joseph Epstein notes in the foreword, this one shows a strong increase over its two main rivaling volumes, The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations and Bartletts Familiar Quotations, in material from American literature and journalism, popular culture, computer culture, and contemporary proverbs. Singer and songwriter Bob Dylan, for instance, gets a whopping 27 entries, plus a photograph of himself in shades.
The index lists no mots about tiddlywinks, but it does include references to Harvard and to Yale. Harvard presidents of the past century or so cited by Shapiro include Charles W. Eliot, with two entries, one being: Enter to grow in wisdom./Depart to serve better thy country and thy kind, the inscription carved in 1880 on the Dexter Gate to Harvard Yard.
As Harvard’s football and soccer teams go down to defeat across the Charles, members of GUTS, the College’s Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society, squidge and squop their way to a 23-12 victory over Holy Cross to win first place in NUTS, the National Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society. (The victors later appear on I’ve Got a Secret and stump the panel.)
Illustration in printed edition; not online.
As Harvard’s football and soccer teams go down to defeat across the Charles, members of GUTS, the College’s Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society, squidge and squop their way to a 23-12 victory over Holy Cross to win first place in NUTS, the National Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society. (The victors later appear on I’ve Got a Secret and stump the panel.)
MY WIFE, Patricia, pointed out the Yesterday’s News report (September-October, page 67) on our national Tiddlywinks championship team in 1962, and I must say Mark Steele’s wonderful illustration makes it look even more fun than it was—if that’s possible.
Basically Tom Houston and I—who were classmates, classics majors, and founding members of the short-lived Gargoyle humor magazine—followed up on some fall triumphs at several Ivy universities, and when we came home to Los Angeles at Christmas we set up a National Championship match between ourselves and some hapless local teams who arrived for the championship tournament not knowing what a Tiddlywink was, exactly.
Tom and I hijacked our girlfriends for the tournament as cheerleaders, complete with pom-poms, and we held the event on the rim of the Pacific in a park in Santa Monica, California, overlooking the ocean. It was surreal. The pom-poms were so effective we both married the girls in gratitude and are still married to these same women today. In fact, I think I can see them in Mark’s illustration and he’s got it exactly right. They look exactly the same today.
Hank Schwarz ’64
Long Beach, Calif.
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Harvard University Archives.
Author : Kimball, David, 1870-1948.
Title : David Kimball diary, 1890.
Locations/Orders : Availability
Location : Harvard University Archives HUD 893.45 Library Info
Description : 0.02 cubic feet (1 flat box)
History notes : David Kimball, playwright, was born on July 7, 1870, in Boston, Massachusetts, to David Pulsifer (Harvard College Class of 1856) and Clara (Bertram) Kimball. Kimball attended Hopkinson’s School. He received his Harvard AB in 1893, and then traveled extensively in the East, Middle East and Europe, spending two years at Oxford and one year at Cambridge studying modern languages. He then returned to the United States, pursuing graduate studies and studies at Harvard Law School, receiving his AM from Harvard in 1897. After further European travel, Kimball returned to the United States, where he studied acting and drama, and received a diploma from the Stanhope-Wheatcroft Dramatic School in New York City in 1902. He was elected a member of the Players’ Club of New York. In 1903, he married Amalia Ingeborg Gardiner, in Bath, New Hampshire. In subsequent years, Kimball spent considerable time in Europe, particularly France, for his wife’s health. Kimball wrote and adapted several plays which were produced in Europe in the early 1900s. Eventually, Kimball and his wife returned to the United States, settling permanently in Santa Barbara, California. Kimball died on June 30, 1948, in Los Angeles, California.
Scope and content : This diary chronicles Kimball’s time as an undergraduate student at Harvard from January through June and September through December of 1890. Daily entries detail his class work; books and newspapers read; social life; trips to the doctor and dentist; weather; and frequent visits to his family home at 48 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts. Kimball also describes a family trip in June to Niagara Falls, New York, with stops in New York City and the West Point area; and summering in Northeast Harbor, Maine from July through September. He provides detail about recreational activities such as horseback riding, lawn tennis, sailing with umbrellas and sunshades as sails, croquet, whist, tiddledy winks, adverbs and 20 questions; and novels he is reading and adapting into plays. At the end of the diary, Kimball lists names and addresses of several people he has met in Boston with ties to the theater, Christmas presents he has received from friends and family, lists of expenses, and French and Greek vocabulary lists.
Of particular interest in this volume are Kimball’s descriptions of his trips to and from Cambridge and Boston by electric car including fares paid, trip times, and reference to a class exercise debating whether electric cars are a necessity; train trips with his mother and sister to Springfield, Massachusetts for the Harvard -Yale game and to Wellesley College to visit friends; and transactions with the Writer’s Literary Bureau in Boston to produce manuscripts of his first plays.
Several entries in the diary end abruptly and there are a few non-chronological entries at the bottom of pages. Numbers are noted in pencil at the top of many pages. These numbers may relate to three loose pages of handwritten notes of unknown authorship listing names and some topics referenced in the diary. These notes are held in the Harvard University Archives control file for the diary.
Notes : Title supplied by cataloger. Open for research.
Cite as : Kimball, David, 1870-1948. David Kimball diary, 1890. HUD 893.45, Harvard University Archives.
Subject : Kimball, David, 1870-1948.
Subject : Harvard College (1780- ). Class of 1893. Harvard University -- Curricula -- 19th century. Harvard University -- Students -- 19th century.
Subject : Dramatists. Recreation -- New England -- 19th century. Street-railroads -- Massachusetts -- Boston. Books and reading -- Massachusetts -- History -- 19th century. College students -- Massachusetts -- Cambridge -- Social life and customs -- 19th century.
Subject : New York (State) -- Description and travel -- 19th century. New England -- Social life and customs -- 19th century. Cambridge (Mass.) -- Social life and customs -- 19th century.
Keyword Subject : Harvard University -- Student life.
Form/Genre : Diaries. Harvard students’ diaries.
Other Titles : Collections of the Harvard University Archives. Personal archives.
HOLLIS Number : 013718122
Available at Harvard University Archives Archives Stacks (HUD 3416.1000)
Title : General information by and about the Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywink Society.
Author/Creator : Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywink Society (Harvard University)
Description : 1 folder.
History note : Also known as GUTS, the Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywink Society was in existence ca. 1962-1967. This society may or may not be directly related to the Harvard Tiddlywinks Association of the 1970s (see Harvard University Archives call number: HUD 3836).
Summary : Contains a list of references to the tiddlywink team.
Subjects : Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywink Society (Harvard University); Harvard University -- Students – Societies, etc.
Creation date : 19??
HOLLIS Number : 990119917300203941
Permalink : http://id.lib.harvard.edu/alma/990119917300203941/catalog
Source : HVD - Core
Author : Harvard-Radcliffe Tiddlywinks Team.
Title : General information by and about the Harvard-Radcliffe Tiddlywinks Team, 1978.
Locations/Orders : Availability
Location : Harvard University Archives HUD 3836 Library Info
Description : 1 folder.
Summary : Flyer.
Notes : The Harvard-Radcliffe Tiddlywinks Team may or may not be related to the Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywink Society (Harvard University Archives call number: HUD 3416.1000)
Subject : Harvard-Radcliffe Tiddlywinks Team.; Harvard University -- Students -- Societies, etc.
HOLLIS Number : 012131484
Administration newspaper.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Harvard Univesity Gazette.
Student-run publication
Toggle showing 5 tiddlywinks references for The Harvard Yearbook.
The national champion Harvard Gargoyle Tiddlywinks Team had its beginnings in a wild game in Burr B complete wilh Harvard sweatshirts, waterboys and a giant Gargoyle for pre-game worship. The hastily-formed group captained by Jim Parry had challenged the tourjng Oxford Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society and, after the British spent two days teaching the Americans how to squidge (shoot), history's first international intercollegiate tiddlywinks match was finally played. Harvard lost 7-21 but, scoring more points against Oxf.ord than had any other American contingent, promptly claimed the Ivy League championship.
A month and a half later several Harvard Band tubas and 50 bewildered spectators cheered the Gargoyle team on to the first of its fourteen straight victories as it dumped Holy Cross 23-12 in the Phillips Brooks House parlor . The score was announced during the Harvard-Holy Cross football game that afternoon and provoked the largest cheer of the day (Harvard lost in football). The next Saturday the Gangoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society (GUTS) showed its depth as one team defeated Mt. Holyoke 31-11 in the parlor and another traveled to New York to beat Columbia 11-3. The day was unfortunately marred by Mt. Holyoke's theft of the John Harvard Challenge Cup—a shiny hubcap displaying the North and South American continents and emblematic, as Gargoyle President Al Goldberg said, of "hemispheric supremacy."
Dartmouth fell the next weekend 37-12 and then, in a gala Halloween eve match broadcast over WBZ-radio, Harvard won a pumpkin and a 36-13 victory from Simmons. In rapid succession toppled Penn 26-9, Boston University 51-19, and Wellesley an away game) 46-17. Life magazine sent two correspondents to cover the Harvard-Brown match and the GUTS responded by providing even more tubas, a sherry break and nine beautiful cheerleaders waving pom-poms. To the chants of "Hold that squop," and "Apply game theory" Harvard triumphed 40-16 . And next Saturday the same loyal fans flocked to the parlour to watch the Gargoyle beat hapless Yale 32-10, thereby becoming the 1962 Ivy League tiddlywinks champions. Several tiddlywinkers joumeyed to New York to appear on "I've Got A Secret" and added two victories on the trip, defeating American Airlines (stewardesses) 6- 1 and the Columbia Broadcasting System (ushers) 10-4. The same week one Volkswagen, one Radcliffe team and two Harvard teams headed to the Big City again for the Eastern lnvitatlonal. Harvard finished first and second and gained the school title; Radcliffe made a brave try. Over Christmas recess team members Tom Houston and Hank Schwarz singlehandedly won the National lnvitational in Los Angeles as Harvard beat (among others) USC and UCLA. The GUTS had become undefeated American champions.
Letters poured in to the team from all over the country as colleges, high schools and the game manufacturers, Parker Bros., tried to find out the rules of the game or to issue challenges. But since the GUTS have lost its only two players who own cars (one being '"top" Carnovsky, or "squidge-in~one" man John Kernochan) and since Harvard has already defeated or frightened every school in the Boston area, it looks as if Gargoyle tiddlywinks will lie dormant. 'Til next year.
One would think that the Harvard market for college humor magazines would have been satiated by the familiar Lampoon, But the Harvard-Radcliffe Gargoyle makes the claim, with some justice, that it is the only humor magazine to represent the personality of the two schools. This claim contains the implication that the Lampoon spends too much time putting out Mademoiselle parodies and not enough representing Harvard humor.
Unfortunately, the Gargoyle has published only two issues since last April. The rest of its time has been taken up with its well-publicized, undefeated Tiddlywinks team and other various stunts. The GUTS (Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society) team has vanquished schools from coast to coast and has appeared on the television program "lve Got a Secret".
The stunts were actually quite clever, although not nearly so impressive as a few more issues would have been. The Gargoyle's best stunt was to give a fake surprise hour exam to Chem 40a students, including a mimeographed exam, blue books, proctors, and impossible (but believable) problems.
The issues themselves have had some very high quality art work and generally competent stories. In terms of literary merit, the Lampoon's parody of Ian Fleming must be conceded the success of this year. But the Gargoyle has helped to restore genuine college humor, for better or worse, to Harvard. It has certainly held the publicity edge between the two magazines, particularly during the Tiddlywinks season.
Lowell House section
Gargoyle section
Quincy House section; personal listing
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Haverford News.
If Morley and Nason cannot keep football in its proper place and at the same time get from it for the respective institutions the best football can give them, then the two colleges should ban football forever and make tiddledy winks their major sport.
Student-run publication. Named after Ford automotive vehicles.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for The Fordian.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Echo of the Seneca.
My Career as an Athlete: With New Chapters on Marbles, Puss-in-the-Corner, and Tiddledy-Winks: By John Boswell.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Instano.
Joseph Aloysius Donnelly ..... Captain
Frank J. Myers ..... Athletic Director
Harold M. Swift ..... Custodian of the Apparatus
J. P. Wiley ..... Trainer
Sharkey Hill ..... Official Referee
John Paul Allen ..... Rubber Down
Irving M. Fennell ..... Chief Chorister
Members of the Team
J. Roland Brady ..... Lindsley M. Peelor
Substitutes
Raymond Kirkwood ..... Robert Henry
Assistant Subs.
Guy Foster ..... Alfred Quinette
"For the development of mankind from a psychological standpoint."
Many of our young, bright, slender-fingered, brilliant chaps do not wish to indulge in such brutal, rough, and ungenteel games as foot ball, boxing and baseball, but confine their extraordinary talent to the lighter and more scientific element, as lawn-tennis, checkers, wink, spin-the-pan, kiss-the-pillow, pussy-in-the-corner, button-button who's got the button, and tiddlewinks. The last named has made an especially classy showing within the past few years at Normal.
The young nimrods who indulge in this particular precarious sport hold sessions from time to time, giving exhibitions of their agility and speed; and Capt. Donnelly reports that his strenuous efforts in getting his men in shape have well-nigh been crowned with success and the work has been highly praised by the people before whom they have given exhibition and made their debut.
One thing which has proved a drawback to the captain is the fact that several of the men had sever colds from over-training and Peelor fractured his fingure in an excited four-hand match.
King Brady, will, in all probability, win his numerals, as he has shown some of the sharpest and best form of the team. He is one of the cleverest and most adept players. Alfred Quinette is also mentioned as having played in some successful matches; so, with this lively bunch of shooters, there is no reason that the students at Indiana should not turn out and cheer the boys on to victory. Capt. Donnelly and Chief Chorister Fennell wish to make an earnest appeal to the entire student body to witness these snappy contests and assure them that their team will easily "cop" the championship again this season and bring the coveted tea cup back to Indiana.
As the Annual goes to press the team has filled successful engagements at Homer City, Black Lick, Clymer, Boot Jack, Portage and Scalp Level. This team surely has our sincere wishes for a prosperous season.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Hawkeye Junior Annual.
18. T. W. V. "A strange mystery my masters." Sh--Tiddledy Wink Verein.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Ithaca High School Faculty Bulletin.
Ithaca High School Math teacher, Severin Drix, has been crowned world tiddleywink champion. Severin Drix defeated British Math teacher[,] Alan Dean 26-6. Bill Renke[,] a former Massachusetts Institute of Technology student, became the world champ in 1973. Defeating Dean, Severin Drix became the North American titl[e]ist last spring, and earned the right to play Renke. Severin will hold the crown until next summer. Congratulations, Severin!
Toggle showing 4 tiddlywinks references for The Tattler.
Black and white photograph of a teenager with glasses in profile holding a squidger on a pile with a pot nearby.
Robin Gowin was among the IHSers who tiddled their winks in the Western Regional Tiddly Winks Competition held at Cornell on November 22 and 23. The tournament was won by TKO ("The Knowledgeable Ones"!) of the Philadelphia-New Jersey ara. Photo by Dave Griffin.
Tiddlywinks is not just a game for kids anymore, for competitions involving strategy and complicated rules are now held. In fact, IHS Tiddlywinks Club advisor, Severin Drix, holds a national title in the game.
[...]
[...]
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Jayhawker.
Fraternities, too, are getting thoroughly fed up with the idea by having half their chapters playing tiddledywinks at meal or meeting time.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Crimson.
In early March of 1906 Kentucky University's Board of Curators, citing heavy financial burdens of maintaining the football program, voted to withdraw from intercollegiate athletics altogether. (At the time K.U. had poor football facilities and played most of their games away from home, including typically the games against State College.) The vote was unanimous although it was a difficult decision and it was said that "they did not altogether desire to do so."
The prohibition was set to begin at the start of the following school year. In conjunction with ending athletics, K.U. would also resign from the K.I.A.A. that June.
The upcoming baseball season would serve as the last hurrah. Noted The Transylvanian about the precarious position athletics held in relation to the coming baseball season: "When this is read, it will be but a week until the first game of the season, that with Cornell University on March 31. Much depends on this game; in fact, a successful attendance on March 31 would make sure a financially successful season. And much depends on this season. Any indifference on the part of the student body may kill Athletics so dead that it will be useless ever to try to revive him."
The decision to withdraw from intercollegiate athletics was met with great disappointment from the K.U. student body. A mock funeral was held on the K.U. athletic field, while supporters of the fallen program hoped for "a resurrection." The Crimson yearbook showed a cartoon depicting a Tiddlywinks Tournament as their only option for entertainment during the long winter months.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Diamondback.
Re Ithaca High School winker who was now a student at the University of Maryland
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Index.
Charles Gideon Mackintosh
He has an original method of keeping his physique in condition by indulging in the barbarous sport of tiddlywinks and ping-pong with an occasional scrimmage against the Tufts eleven thrown in for good measure.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Association of Student Activities Meeting Minutes.
Tiddlywinks Association
- they used to exist
Move: recognize as a fully recognized with funding restriction
Passes
Executive Board Meeting
Chess club and tiddlywinks added to strategic games' rooms (just for storage)
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Class 14.03 Problem Set.
2. The Massachusetts Institute of Tiddlywinks (the premier institution of its kind) hires Tiddlywinks Assistants (TAs) from among a pool of available applicants. Applicants vary in quality. Some are good (G); some are excellent (E); and some are stupendous (S). Unfortunately, an applicant?s types cannot be determined until approximately 1 A.M. on the morning the first problem set is due, by which time it is too late to change assistants. Applicants who are not chosen spend the semester playing in Tiddlywinks tournaments professionally. Good players earn $50 per semester; Excellent players earn $200 per semester and Stupendous players earn $400. The applicant pool is split evenly among the three types (each of whom knows her quality), and the Institute chooses randomly among those candidates who apply at the stated wage. Regardless of quality, no TA ever agrees to do it more than once.
Each Tiddlywinks class has 100 students, whose V-N-M utility depends on their wealth and their TA?s quality and is given by:
- U = W if they take a class and get a good TA;
- U = W + 5 if they take a class and get an excellent TA;
- U = W + 7 if they take a class and get a stupendous TA.
Each student takes only 1 class. There are no costs of offering courses other than hiring TAs. (The Professors, of course, work for Love of Learning.)
- Assume that the Institute maximizes expected student utility subject to the constraint that it not lose money. What wage should it offer to pay TAs, and what price should it charge for classes? What is the quality composition of the TA applicant pool (in terms of G, E, and S)?
- The new Dean has decided to do something about the quality of teaching at MIT. She has decreed that from now on, the average quality of TAs must be at least Excellent. What wage must be offered, and what price charged to students to bring this about?
- A Professor at CalTiddly (a rival institution on the West coast) has developed a test that can distinguish Good TAs from the other two types. How much should MIT be willing to pay (per course) for the right to use this test? The CalTiddly Professor also has a more advanced version of the test that distinguishes all three types, G, E, and S. How much more should MIT be willing to pay for this better test?
- Now suppose that there is no quality test, but that TAs can go to TA school. TA school takes one semester, and TAs earn no income while in school. The probability of successfully completing it and getting a B.T. degree depends on your type: S?s graduate for sure; E?s graduates with probability 0.9 and G?s with probability 0.1. Should MIT require TAs to have a B.T. degree? What wage should it offer to TAs with a degree? What is the quality composition of the TA pool that results (in terms of G, E, and S)? (Assume that all successful graduates will get a TA job at the wage MIT announces for such candidates. Assume that TAs are risk neutral V-N-M expected utility maximizers. Ignore discounting over time.)
Parody of The Tech student newspaper at MIT by The Tech.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Daily Reamer.
A hastily assembled team from the MIT association of Squidgers and Squoppers showed unexpected strength last weekend in taking second place in a triangular Tiddleywinks meet at Cornell. Although totally outclassed by Cornell's much more experienced squopping, the Techmen managed to get enough key squidges to prevent a rout. The team of F. T. Bull '68 and J. Wieselthier '69 managed to upset the host's number two pair, 4-3, in the seventh game. Harvard, crippled by the Selective Service examination, failed to score a single point. The final standings were Cornell (37), MIT (19), and Harvard (0).
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for HoToGAMIT.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for IAP Guide.
Introduction to Tiddlywinks
Yan Wang, Greg Durrett
Wed Jan 10 thru Fri Jan 12, 04:30-06:00pm, 4-145, Introduction to Tiddlywinks
Sat Jan 13, Sun Jan 14, 09am-04:00pm, PDR #1 & #2, MITTwA IAP Tournament
No limit but advance sign up required (see contact below)
Repeating event. Participants welcome at any session
Tiddlywinks was formalized in Cambridge University in 1955. The first American teams appeared in the 1960's with MIT being the dominant force, but winking participation has diminished in the last two decades in the USA. This informal class will be led by veteran tiddlywinks players of the newly revived MIT Tiddlywinks Association (MITTwA). A two day tournament will be held on Sat/Sun for more detailed exposure and the chance to play with many MIT alumni, students from around the country, and English representative. Get the chance to learn a little more about MIT history through tiddlywinks! Visit the website to learn more.
Web: http://www.tiddlywinks.org
Contact: Yan Wang, (607) 342-3402, [email protected]
Sponsor: Yan Wang, 500 MEMORIAL DR # 439, 617 225-8839, [email protected]
Latest update: 03-Jan-2007
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Institute Guide.
2/22-23 1969 Tiddlywinks Championships
3/12 What's My Line?
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Massachusetts Institute of Technology Bulletin.
Toggle showing 13 tiddlywinks references for MIT Freshman Handbook.
(Activities Handbook)
Text description of MITTwA.
Text description of MITTwA.
Text description of MITTwA.
Text description of MITTwA.
Text description of MITTwA.
Text description of MITTwA.
Text description of MITTwA.
Text description of MITTwA.
Toggle showing 6 tiddlywinks references for MIT News Office Press Releases.
Letter by News Office Director in file of press releases
A tiddlywinks player uses a squidger to flip a wink into the cup.
Photo / Rob Ochshorn
MIT defeated Southampton University in 1972 to win the World Championship. Team members, clockwise from upper left: David Lockwood; William Renke; James Martin; Craig Sweinhart; Timothy Schiller, captain; and J. Frank Christ displayed their victory squidgers.
Photo / Margo Foote
The first thing the newly revived MIT Tiddlywinks Association wants people to know about the game of flicking small plastic discs into a cup is that it is not just a game of flicking small plastic discs into a cup.
Instead, according to the North American Tiddlywinks Association's web site, tiddlywinks is a "complex game of strategy and tactics, which involves a fascinating mixture of manual dexterity and intellectual activity as well."
Tiddlywinks started in the late 1800s in England. In 1955, it resurfaced at Cambridge University, where a group of undergraduates were looking for a game to represent their school. Tim Berners-Lee, father of the World Wide Web and recent recipient of the Draper Prize, played tiddlywinks.
The game is played with sets of small, thin discs, known as winks, which are lined up on a mat. Using the larger disc, called the squidger, players pop the smaller discs into flight by snapping one side of the smaller disc with the edge of the larger one.
There are two different versions. The first is the informal child's game in which the small discs are launched into a cup. The formal game is much more complicated with a series of rules and strategies.
Yan Wang, president of the MIT Tiddlywinks Association (MITTwA), said that adult players like to compare tiddlywinks to golf, "because it requires physical dexterity in making shots," and also to chess, "because it requires thinking in turns and trying to maximize your strategy based on what your opponent could do." MITTwA is awaiting formal recognition from MIT's Association of Student Activities.
MIT has a bright tiddlywinks history, beginning when the game spread across the Atlantic from Britain during the 1960s. "Although tiddlywinks was formalized in England, the dominant team throughout the 1960s through 1980s was MIT," said Wang. "There was much intercollegiate play with Harvard and Cornell, in addition to international trips to visit Cambridge and Oxford."
In recent years, the game had fallen out of favor at MIT because not enough effort was devoted to bringing in new players, Wang explained.
MITTwA, which was reborn this past September thanks to Wang, is hoping to change that with an Independent Activities Period (IAP) "Introduction to Tiddlywinks" that starts on Jan. 10 and ends on Jan. 12, each evening from 4:30 to 6 p.m. in Room 4-145.
Members of the MITTwA who have been playing the game for years will teach the class. On Jan. 13 and 14 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., the MITTwA will be holding a tournament for novices and more advanced players alike in the Student Center (W20).
"The tournament will hopefully attract students, staff and faculty who are eager to learn about this piece of MIT history and take part in it. There will be significant attendance by alumni from across the country who all look forward to reviving this part of their student experience," Wang said.
For more information, please visit student.mit.edu/searchiap/iap-7491.html.
A version of this article appeared in MIT Tech Talk on January 10, 2007.
Written by: Sasha Brown, News Office
Most are reprints of articles about MIT from newspapers.
Toggle showing 6 tiddlywinks references for MIT Observer.
Reprint from 2 March 1972 Christian Science Monitor, and reprint from 16 March 1972 Cambridge Chronicle
Reprint from 31 March 1972 Los Angeles Times.
Reprint from 14 February 1973 Tech Talk from MIT
Reprint from 8 April 1973 New York Times (date is correct)
Reprint from 12 February 1973 Cornell Sun
Pamphlet directed at potential students.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for MIT Today.
Listing of MITTwA in a selective list of student activities.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for MIT-Wellesley Review.
Toggle showing 4 tiddlywinks references for MIT.edu.
It's cool that you've found something you are passionate about. Your passion need not be your major. Remember that half of MIT students don't major in what they put on the application. Last year, I remember seeing (and admitting) students whose passions ranged from weightlifting to tiddlywinks. I'll be interested to read more about your passions.
Baker House has been home to MIT students who went on to become astronauts, Nobel laureates, tech giants—and the world tiddlywinks champion.
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Slice of MIT.
MIT has been called the center of a lot of things. In the 1970s, the New York Times recalled its history as a center of military research. The Chicago Tribune speculated about it being the next center of economic thought in the 80s, and in the 90s, another Times article referenced it as the center of computer science. Nobody ever mentioned that MIT was also once the center of winking, until recently.
An interview in the San Diego Reader with alumnus Rick Tucker '80 reveals that MIT was considered the center of winking, or tiddlywinking, about 35 years ago.
As Tucker tells it, "There have been a number of starts and stops, but in terms of MIT, there were two people who started tiddlywinks. One went to Cornell and one went to MIT. The Cornell player, Severin Drix, found a tiddlywinks set in a box of Trix cereal. The enduring team at MIT started in 1966 with Ferd Wulkan, who was Severin Drix's friend. They decided to form teams and compete against each other."
Maybe it sounds trite, but there is a fair amount of strategy involved in Tiddlywinks—as well as a colorful lexicon. Remember what winks, squopping, and boondocking means? (If you don't, you can look it up here.)
And if all this talk about Tiddlywinks has you itching to play some yourself, check out game prices on Amazon or eBay.
Gaming has a long and strong presence in MIT culture, but dating the beginning of the influence is difficult, says Philip Tan ‘01, SM ‘03, creative director at the Game Lab. “If we’re talking about gaming at MIT, we could start off with the history of sports or talk about MIT’s tiddlywinks team,” Tan explains. Digital gaming, however, does have a clear start at MIT. “I would argue the first digital game was made here,” Tan says of Spacewar!—a two-player game developed at MIT in 1962 by Stephen Russell ’60, SM ’62, EE ‘66 and fellow members of the Tech Model Railroad Club.
“Who knew we'd evolve from tiddlywinks to this?" says cheering section member Jonathan Lukoff '71. "It was very exciting. The course was tough and many athletes failed, but watching all of them try—fail or succeed—was thrilling."
Home pages from MIT's web site.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Spotlight.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Student Information Processing Board (SIPB) Meeting Minutes.
CBF [Charles Frankston] was in town this week. He left his tiddlywinks mat here again.
21:28-CBF [Charles Frankston] is the US tiddlywinks pairs champion, along with [sic original="Jay" correct="Joe"] Sachs.
Student newspaper
Toggle showing 66 tiddlywinks references for The Tech.
- Some will read Shakespeare and Browning;
- And some read the Bible, methinks;
- Some will hard at their duties,
- The rest will play Tiddledy Winks.
Senior.
That gives me a pain; I hate that sort of thing :- Tiddledy Winks, Progressive Euchre, Hearts, I'd almost rather dance, but on the whole This is the best; one needn't talk so much.
(Enter Bloodgood.)
Our favorite exercise is climbing stairs. Our favorite game is undecided, except with Harry Johnson, who is confident that his is Tiddledy Winks.
Always on the lookout for some new diversion or novelty, college students, along with tiddle-wink, checker, and bridge tournaments, have recognized the merits of 'Horse-shoe Throwing.'. Announcement has been recently made by the students of the Texas Technological College that a tournament in horse-shoe throwing will be held for an entire week in order to determine the supremacy of teams involved.
We, of THE TECH ENGINEERING NEWS, do hereby challenge you to football game on Tech Field any time after the Field Day corpses have been removed. We do not want the janitors to overwork themselves all at once. Of course, we know you would prefer a dandy game of tiddle-de-winks, or checkers, or drop-the-handkerchief, or postman—parlor athletes that you are. But we want to give you a chance to prove that, even though you are not the "he-men" you pretend to be to your girl subscribers, you are at least worthy of being called Tech men—capable of taking part in a real sport.
(Signed) T. E. N.
"You bunch of intel[l]ectual babies!" he roared; "so you're willing to let a crowd of humid commutors make you look like a dozen weary tiddley-winks champs !" That must have stung.
In a popularity contest, the "Susquehanna" of Susquehanna university announces its elections to the all-campus Tiddlewink team. The five positions on the team for which honors were awarded were: Right Tiddle, Left Tiddle, Center Tiddle, Right Wink, and Left Wink. A coach and substitutes were even elected, too.
But the visitor might miss a very important part of the room—a little dish on the floor surrounded with many little colored disks. … Danny Greenbaum considers his outstanding accomplishment, the Tiddle Wink Crhampionship of Monroe 508.
Tom Nicholson, of Oxford University, issued a ringing challenge to MIT in the following letter:
"The Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society hereby challenges the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to a match as part of our projected tour (mainly New England) in September of this year.
We are aware, and disturbed, that practically NO American college or University plays the game, with the notable exception of Harvard. However, in the event of a suitably spirited provisional response to our challenge—sent to a number of well known Universities—we could arrange for the distribution of the accepted rules in all their subtlety and go ahead with the detailed organization.
I would be grateful if you would combine speed with good nature in your consideration of this proposal."
At present, MIT is in the process of mustering a team in this forgotten sport. Watch for the members, captain, and coach in next Tuesday's The Tech.
The SLUTS will soon visit Harvard. In fact, according to The Sophian of the Smith College, they have already had informal praotice at Harvard.
The SLUTS are the Smith Ladies' Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society. The Society, in its forma- tion, sought the advice of the Smith president because college rules prohibit intercollegiate athletic competition.
Said President Thomas C. Mendenhall: "The great threat is overemphasis, and to prevent this we must avoid high pressure tactics in favor occasional, informal, amateurism…
"Training should be under direction of the College Librarian, not the Athletic Department; and the selection of the team should be done by thle Fire Captains and the Grass Cops…
"If any instruction is needed I am sure the Dean stands ready to appoint a committee for the purpose." The purpose, of course, is to play tiddlywinks.
SLUTS was formed initially to meet a challenge from MHUTS, the Mount Holyoke Undergraduate Tiddlywink Society. Its schedule has been expanded recently, however, to include matches with GUTS (Harvard's Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywink Society) and with a team from Simmons.The captain of the Smith team, in a telephone interview with The Tech, admitted that the nameof the club was picked to fit the initials. When asked if she thought the name would be used to characterize Smith girls, she replied hat "we don't care what reputation we have, actually."
Although dates have not been finalized, win or lose, the SLUTS will play at Harvard within the next few weeks.
MIT has gotten into one of the fastest growing intercollegiate sports in the nation—tiddlywinks. In fact, the MUTS (MIT Undergraduate Tiddlywink Society) have already played their first game. Unfortunately for the MUTS, they were on the short end of a 4-7 score in a home match against Simmons.
Captain Mike Platt '63 of the MUTS explained that his team (Seth Malin '63, Ivan Johnson '64, Alan Frey '63, and Platt) lost the match because of a lack of practice. Platt said that the MIT team was formed "in part to arnswer President Kennedy's call for physical fitness." Future MUTS tilts include a rematch with Simmons and a match against Wellesley. The team has already accepted a challenge from Harvard's GUTS (Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywink Society).
In an exclusive interview with The Tech, Captain Pat Kane of Simmons' WITS (Women's Intermediate Tiddlywink Society) said "The victory was expected. We had a little more practice." The WITS had played one previous game, losing to the GUTS. Much credit was given by the Simmons' captain to the development of a new strategy—a memorial candle to Count Karnovsky, the inventor of the sport. She explained also that the WITS used "squopping" to greater advantage than did the MIT team. To "squop" is to cover your opponent's wink so that he can't shoot at the pot. In addition, the WITS attempted to "sink winks on a squigger." This is apparently analogous to golf's "hole-in-one."
Plans for the Simmons' team, in addition to a rematch with the MUTS, include matches with Newton College of the Sacred Heart, the Wellesley WARTS and the Smith SLUTS.
Attesting to the popularity of this new intercollegiate sport, MIT now boasts a second team—the Tech Newspaper Tiddlywinkers—formed this week by The Tech. The TNT's are now accepting challenges from teams equally as unpracticed as themselves.
"In part to answer President Kennedy's call for physical fitness" was the reason given last week for the formation of a tiddlywink society at MIT. These must be very stirring words for the college student, for these same words were cited at Vassar as the reason for its new team. This team, however, is competing not in tiddlywinks, but in football. True that it's only touch football, but Vassar's not shirking rough opponents. Games have already been scheduled with Lehigh and Princeton.
The Smith Ladies Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society (SLUTS) defeated the Tech Newspaper Tiddlywinkers (TNT) in a hard fought match at Smith last Saturday. The SLUTS scored game victories of 4-3, 6-1, 6-1, and 6-1 while the TNT team had close wins of 5-2 and 4-3 for the final match total of 27-15 in favor of the SLUTS.
From the opening tiddle, the SLUTS took the initiative, as Mary-ann Unger placed four winks in the elusive cup to score 4 points for her team. However her partner, Elaine Zahos, was unable to overcome the deft thumbs and unerring aims of Jason Fane and Jerry Elder of TNT, who were the second and third to deposit four winks. They scored 2 and 1 points, respectively.
Miss Zahos, playing defense, devoted most of her game to squopping (covering) TNT winks.
The defensive tactics of the SLUTS surprised the TNT men, who had anticipated a strictly offensive game. The policy of fipping from a rug was also a blow to TNT, which had practiced only on table-tops prior to the tourney.
TNT did succeed in enforcing the use of its standard Milton Bradley tiddlywinks, as well as the smaller Donald Duck tiddlywinks customarily employed by the SLUTS. All agreed that the large winks provided a better game.
As the match proceeded, TNT captain Toby Zidle and teammate Ralph Grabowski demonstrated a fine under-the-rim form in out-duelling Kathy Hershey and Elaine Young for their 5-2 victory.
Defensive tactics employed by SLUTS captain V.C. (Burma Shev) Shevits and manager Mary Langford effectively contained long-shooting TNT manager Cliff Weinstein and teammate Richard Russell to hand the TNT men a 6-1 loss.
The rigorous practice of the SLUTS defense came to their aid in under-the-rim action, but could not forestall the shot of the day, a 2½-foot squidge (hole-in-one) fired by Grabowski in the first game.
On the whole, the match was characterized by clean play on both sides. The match leaves the SLUTS' season record at 1-0 and the TNT's at 0-1. A rematch has been scheduled for February 9 at MIT.
No word has been received at the tiddlywinks desk concerning the national invitational tournament at Columbia sponsored by the National Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society.
Elsewhere in tiddlywinks action, an intramural game took place just outside Building 10 last Sunday. In a grudge match, the pledge class of Chi Phi, accompanied by cheering section and marching band, defeated the Chi Phi sophs 12-3. All games were won by the pledges, 4-0, 4-3 and 4-0.
The pledge coach praised the fine play of the opposition and invited challenges from other groups. As yet, no other intramural entries have been noted.
The intermission at the folk sing will be occupied by a demonstration match of tiddlywinks, Tech Newspaper Tiddlywinkers vs. Senior House Order of Tiddlywinks Shooters.
To the Editor:
Your monopoly over what news filters down to the Techman does not sanction your refusal to publish the fact that the Senior House SH*TS (Senior House Intercollegiate Tiddlywinks Society) won a 13-8 tiddle triumph over TNT (Tech Newspaper Tiddlywinkers) in their Winter Weekend tiddle-tangle.
The SH*TS was patient and forgiving enough to tolerate the omission of this most important news item in the edition of The Tech which followed after Winter Weekedn, considering the abundance of political fillers which made up that issue, but your continued silence in the next edition has forced us to demand that you swallow your shame and make known the truth, including the fact that 4 of your 8 points were scored by a SH*TS-trained squidgerette, Miss Marcia Wegner of Simmons College
Stemming from articles in The Tech about our own staff tiddlywinks team of 1962, which played against squads from random schools in the area like Smith and Mt. Holyoke, the Public Relations Office has [sic original="reecntly" correct="recently"] received a challenge—issued to all of MIT—for a tiddlywinks match against the University of Waterloo, Tiddlywinks Club, Waterloo, Ontario. Anyone seriously interested can contact Charles McLed at the aforementioned address. In the future, we hope it not take three years for The Tech to cross the Canadian border.
A hastily assembled team from the MIT association of Squidgers and Squoppers showed unexpected strength last weekend in taking second place in a triangular Tiddleywinks meet at Cornell. Although totally outclassed by Cornell's much more experienced squopping, the Techmen managed to get enough key squidges to prevent a rout. The team of F. T. Bull '68 and J. Wieselthier managed to upset the host's number two pair, 4- 3, in the seventh game. Harvard, crippled by the Selective Service examination, failed to score a single point. The final standings were Corneli {37), MIT (19), and Harvard (0).
Director of Athletics K. Pup Wida Joneses announced today that the MIT Athletic program has spread to include Coed Tiddy Winking. Scholarships will be given out to those Winkers with the biggest Tiddys. Unfortunately, the scholarship committee has not been able to be chosen yet because of the great interest shown.
Our strongest team, the "D" team, will take a busty Radcliffe squad on the Rockwell Stage Sunday. The AAA squard, with their tremendous depth, take on a hard up Boys' Club crew at the Cambridge Boys' Club.
Starting times for both these games have not been announced, for it is felt that the size of the gang may overwhelm the girls.
In their first game last week they lost all they had to a top-heavy Simmons squad. From the initial bang (of the gun) the Coeds were flat on their backs. Laya Down '68, top Tiddy, pulled a surprise move by leaving her cup home.
MIT finished second in a triangular tiddly-winks match held Saturday at Burton House. Cornell won the match, which lasted seven hours, with 150½ points, to Tech's 130 and 55½ for Harvard.
Eight 30-minute games were played, but intermissions and other delays accounted for the length of the contest. The Tech pairings were: 1. Captain Ferdie the Bull and Bob Henninge '69; 2. Jeff Wieselthier '69 and David Sheinson '69; 3. Steve Robbins '68 and Mitch Wand '69; 4. Russ Molari '69 and Mark Drazen '69. Cornell dominated most of the way, not losing a game until the match was half over. However, Harvard did not win a game in approximately the same length of time. The low score of the Crimson is also partly due to the fact that most of their players left early and forfeited the closing games.
The match was considered to be better than last year's, which was held on a smaller scale at Cornell. Strategic moves were in evidence. The players tried to squop, or land their winks on top of another's, thereby freezing the opponents wink. [sic original="In this way, the opponent's wink." correct=""] In this way, the pot at the end of the half-hour time limit won the game. Plans are now in the works to hold a similar match next year.
The MIT Potheads, in the second Tiddlywinks match of the year, held Saturday afternoon in the Burton House Dirning Hall, defeated a visiting Columbia squad 90-36. After the first half, Tech squidgers were ahead by only 7 points, but, led by the pair of Dave Sheinson and Jeffrey Wiesel thier, went unbeaten in the second half with a point total of 55 to Columbia's 8. There were key squidges and squops on both sides, but the Columbia squoppers, led by Captain Bob Rosenbloom, were totally outclassed in strategy, often playing a double squidge game.
The Pothead's scores were: Sheinson and Wieselthier 39, Ferd [sic original="Sheinson and Wieselthier 39, Ferd" correct=""] [sic original="fet" correct="the"] Bull and Bob [sic original="Meminge" correct="Henninger"] 34, Steve Robbins and Pat McClure 17. The next tiddlywinks activity, still in the planning stages, is a trip to Waterloo, Ontario to play Canadian teams this spring.
To the Editor:
Can somebody please tell me how an MIT activity can become sufficently developed to warrant funds from Finboard? The MIT Tiddlywinks Association is sending a team to Waterloo, Canada at the end of October to the North American Tiddlywinks Champion- ships being held in conjunction with the Univ. of Waterloo's Tenth Anniversary Week, and we were counting on Finboard's demonstrating to us that there is an advantage to being an official MIT activity, that bureaucracy has its purpose. But no, 1½ years growing on our own, and we are not sufficiently developed, yet I know that two years ago, in order to help develop a new activity, Finboard financed the 12-man (½ our size) Debate Club to the tune of $6,000. Moreover, I know that our organization is proudly pointed to in order to show freshmen the wide variety of activities MIT has to offer and I know also that MIT is also looking for publicity which our appearance in Waterloo (which will most likely be on Canadian National TV) will certainly provide.
More than just a gripe against Finboard, this letter is a plea to the MIT Community to help us raise the $200-$250 we will need to send an 8-man team to Waterloo. I appeal to any organizations on campus with some money (like the Debate Club?), but much more to my fellow-students. Anything is welcome and will be used only towards bringing the North American title back to the US.
Thanks very much.
Peter Wulkan '68
Waterloo University in Waterloo, Ontario, was the scene for the North American Tiddlywinks Association Championships October 28-29. It what was generally regarded as the most exciting tiddlywinks match in a decade, the Tech potheads placed a close third, only 1-2/3 points behind Cornell.
Lose to Cornell
Tech lost to Cornell in the opening rounds, but managed to start a winning streak which carried them up to the semi-finals in the double elimination tournament. When Cornell crushed last place Toronto, it became apparent that the engineers had to beat Waterloo by 1-2/3 points if they were to get a second chance at Cornell.
The final round of the Waterloo match arrived with Tech one point down and a 6-1 victory needed to reach the playoffs.
Finals in overtime
Tension mounted as the final game went into overtime. As over 100 spectators crushed around the mat, balconies were created by people climbing onto the adjacent tables to get a better view. Tournament officials were quoted as saying that this was undoubtedly the most exciting situation in memory.
Wieseltheier gambles
In the last shot of the game, Jeff Wieseltheier '69 tried a desperate gamble. If he, on one shot, could free two Tech winks about two feet from his own, bounce off them, and land squarely on a Waterloo wink, the engineers would take a 6-1 victory, the match, and land in the playoffs. If he missed and landed on his own wink instead, he would lose the game and the match.
Tech ties Waterloo
As he lined up the shot, a hush fell over the crowd. The gamble, a thousand-to-one shot, did not succeed, but did not do any harm either, and Tech won the game 4-3, tying the defending champion Waterloo 56-56. That was by fifteen points the best any team had done against Waterloo in two years. However, it wasn't enough to gain the finals, in which Cornell defeated Waterloo 61-51.
Financial problems
The eight Tech squidgers were F. T. Bull '68 (captain), Bob Henninge '69, Dave Sheinson '69, Jeff Wieseltheier '69, Mitch Wand '69, Mark Oshin '71, Bob Rees '68, and Bill Stensrud '71. A number of the best Tech squidgers were unable to attend due to financial difficulties caused by Finboard's refusal to pay transportation costs.
Further plans for the Tech squad include a spring trip to Cornell and a series of intraclub competitions. Anyone interested in learning the game should contact Peter Wulkan '68 (Bexley) or Mitch Wand (Burton).
Details on page 9
MIT was awarded the 1969 Continental Championship by tlie North American Tiddlywinks Association at its annual tournament held here over the weekend.
The engineers fielded two teams against teams from Cornell, the University of Ottawa, Regis College, Harpur College, and Case Western Reserve University in the double elimination event. The Tech "A" team took first place, followed by Cornell (second) and Case (third).
This was MIT's second consecutive victory in the annual Tiddlywinks tournament. The engineers won the 1968 championship, held at Cornell last November, over teams from Toronto and Cornell.
Intercollegiate Tiddlywinks was begun by a Harvard team which has since disbanded. Tournament play is now organized by the North American Tiddlywinks Association. The only elected officer of the [sic original="NATA" correct="NATwA"] is the Captain of the MIT team, Mitch Wand '69, who holds th office office of [sic original="NATA" correct="NATwA"] Secretary.
After December 12, 1970, it appeared that Thursday was a goner. Deeply in debt, with no one at the helm, it looked to be another casualty of the lack of interest evinced during that "apathy autumn." A call for a savior or group of saviors over IAP seemed to be of no avail.
Dan Dern, Technique Literary Editor (and official photographer of the North American Tiddlywink Association) and a group of others came forward to save the paper. Armed with fris- bees, phony money, and inflatable plastic mallets that wheeze when they hit you, the unflappable imp pulled a staff together, first as editor, then as managing editor under Doug Zingale. Dern is now editor of Thursday once again.
The MIT tiddlywinks team journeyed to Cornell for the continental championships on February 19-20, and came back an overwhelming victor on all fronts. The 'A' team won the A division competition by a wide margin. The 'B' and 'C' teams finished 1 and 2 in the B division. MIT also had the top pair in each division.
Tiddlywinks teams are made up of three pairs. A pair takes two different colored sets of six winks: Red-Blue- pair plays against the Yellow-Green pair. Contrary to popular belief, the main object of the game is not to put winks in the pot as fast as possible. At the beginning of the game, the object is to cover your opponents' winks. This is called squopping and goes on for a time limit of 25 minutes. After time expires, each player gets five turns in which the winkers start to pot. Each potted wink counts for three points; each unsquopped wink is one point. First place finisher gets 4 tournament points; second gets 2; third 3; and fourth none. If one player pots all his winks, everyone must shoot for the pot. In this case one point is transferred from the losing team to the winning team, making a 7-0 game possible. If one were to attempt to pot out early in the game, the likelihood is that his remaining winks would be squopped, leaving him helpless.
At the continentals, the top pair from MIT's 'A' team, Schiller and Christ, took the pair's honors in the 'A' division, while Callon and Hirsh easily walked away with the pair's honors in the 'B' division. The issue was not in doubt for long as MIT 'A' broke 40 points (of a possible 65), against all but one opponent. The 'B' team was just as devastating, finishing far ahead of the second finisher, MIT 'C'. The 'C' team was closely followed by Toronto, but clinched second place by demolishing Hyth 'B', an independent team, in their last matchup.
The MIT tiddlywinks team is going to England. The dream of every American winker since the game was first brought over here a decade ago became a reality this March 6 when Finboard, in a magnificent display of generosity and altruism, appropriated the necessary funds to send eight of MIT's finest potters and squoppers across the ocean to challenge the Southhampton University team for the world championship.
The MIT team, which recently won the North American championship, will consist of captain Tim Schiller '72, J. Christ '73, Bill Renke '73, Jim Marlin '73, Minnesota Moishe '72, Pete Copper '75, Craig Schweinhart '73, and Dave Lockwood '74. Southhampton is the holder of both the Marchant Trophy, emblematic of the English championship, and the Prince Philip Silver Wink Trophy, symbolic of supremacy throughout the British Isles.
The team will leave on the evening of March 24 and will return April 3. They will tour England, Scotland, and Wales, playing such teams as Oxford and Cambridge Universities and the euphoniously-named Aberystwyth College before the climactic match against [sic original="Southhampton" correct="Southampton"] on April 1. A match may also be arranged against an English All-Star team. The tour should engender huge amounts of publicity for the game, which, albeit more widely played in England than in the States, is still not exactly on the level of soccer, rugby, or cricket. The BBC is expected to provide extensive coverage. Supervising the entire operation' will be the legendary Alan.Dean ("The Supreme Dean"), head of the English Tiddlywinks Association. English singles champion, and captain of the [sic original="Southhampton" correct="Southampton"] team.
There has been little previous contact between the two winking nations, so it is difficult to predict the outcome of the matches. The British have played the game for a longer period of time and have a greater depth of team and players, but the feeling among the Americans is that their best players are better than the best Britons. MIT winker Marlin, while visiting England over IAP, played three games against Dean and won two of them. An additional basis of comparison is furnished by Phil Villar, a former English singles champion who moved to the United States. While Villar is among the best players in North America, there are a half-dozen or so natives who are better. Hopefully the New World will prove to be the master of yet another of our motherland's inventions.
Tim Schiller '72, president of MIT's world champion Tiddlywinks Club, concentrates on a squopped wink. Bill Renke '73, secretary of the North American [sic original="Tiddlywink Federation" correct="Tiddlywinks Association"] looks on. Winks squad has open meetings every Saturday afternoon on the 4th floor of the Student Center.
Photo by S. Hollinger
On Wednesday, March 29th, the first world championship was won by the American upstarts as Bill Renke '73, made a difficult pot from just below the rim of the cup to clinch MIT's victory over South hampton University, the European champions. The final score of the match, which took place in Southhampton, a middle-sized city on England's southern coast, was 123-101.
The top pair for MIT was Renke and Jim Marlin'73, who scored 37 ppoints, followed by Tim Schiller '72 and J. Christ '73 with 33, Craig Schweinhart '73 and Dave Lockwood '74 with 28½, and Moishe '72 and Pete [sic original="Cooper" correct="Copper"] '75 with 24½. Southhampton jumped off to an early 33½-22½ lead, but the MIT winkers showed their poise by coming back to win. Both English television stations (BBC & ITV) covered the tournament on their news shows.
The North American champions had previously defeated Queen's University of Belfast, Northern Ireland, by 82-30, a club team from Middlesex, England, by 60-24, the Southern England All-Star Team by 61-51, and Altrincham Grammar School by 63½-20½ in exhibition matches while touring England to create publicity for and interest in the game. Their sole loss came at the hands of the Northern All-Star Team by a score of 61-51.
The championship victory was the climax of a long season that began in December with the Eastern Regionals at MIT, in which the host team finished second to the HYTHNLBTWOC (Hark-Yon-Tree-Hath-No-Leaves-But-They-Will-Out-Club) squad from Philadelphia, but came out ahead of the Somerville, Massachusetts and the McGill University team from Montreal. The second place finish qualified them for the Continental championships at Cornell University in February, in which they trounced Cornell, Somerville and HYTH for the North American title.
The match with South- hampton was the first one ever sanctioned by the International Federation of Tiddlywinks Associations as a "world Championship." A trophy of some sort will now go to MIT, which will hold it until its title is taken away by some future champion. Hopefully the British winner will come to Cambridge next year to continue the international rivalry.
The MIT Tiddlywinks Association had already registered with the Association of Student Activities.
The student activities that have already refiled are: [...[
Also, [...] Tiddlywinks Association [...].
Proposed Finance Board budget for 1972/3
[...]
Student Activities | Op. Exp. | ACF* | CEF* | |
Tiddlywinks Association | 20 | 430 |
ACF is the Activities Competitior Fund
CEF is the Capital Equipment Fuad
A prominent sign announced the Tiddlywink Champions of the World. Proceeding to that table, I received a demonstration of the skill and experience that has given MIT its only international athletic title in recent memory.
The Intermediate class allows no more than three experienced oarsmen in a boat ("experienced" means anyone who has rowed for a year or more). In the Senior division, anyone is allowed to row as long as he is a member of the living group or special interest (e.g. Tiddlywinks club) group. No boat of MIT Boat Club members from different living groups will be allowed.
The competition fund is the source of funding for the activities such as Debate Society and the Tiddlywinks Club, who participate in competitions outside the Institute.
MIT's World Championship Tiddlwinks club is leaving today to try for their second straight North American Championship in the Continentals to be held at Cornell this weekend. In their bid to gain a chance to defend their world title, the MIT winkers will send two equal teams to compete in the "A" Division, plus two additional teams to play in the '"B" Division.
In the regional qualifying match held at MIT in December, the "MIT-ZOO" team placed first with 164 points and the "MIT-NO NAMES" placed a close second with 54. The Somervillisans, former MIT students who were national champions in 1970 and 1971, qualified as third with 130½ points. Also facing MfIT at Cornell will be the top three finishers in the Western Regionals: established powers HYTHNLBTWOC (Hark Yon Tree Hath No Leaves But [sic original="Them" correct="They"] Will Out Club) and Cornell, and a new team from LIake Mohegan, NY, Rivendell.
p>The MIT potheads are hoping to place their teams 1-2 in the final standings with a spirited fight between the two for the top spot. Of the twelve members of the two teams, six are veterans of the eight-man team which went to England last year. The biggest threat to MIT dominance at this year's Continentals will probably come from Philadelphia based HYTH. They have s trengthened their team by picking up Minnesota Moishe, another member of last year's MIT team, who is doing graduate work in that area now.The MIT-ZOO team, a solely owned and operated function of MacGregor's B-entry, consists of Bill Renke '73, captain and Craig Schweinhart '73, both England veterans. Filling out the team are Ross Callon '73, T.D. Indian '72, Dave Alexander '74, and Scott Hirsh, subfirosh. Playing for the MIT-NO NAMES are four world champions: Tim Schiller '72, captain, J. Christ '73, Jim Marlin '73, and Dave Lockwood '74; and two other players, Larry Kahn'75 and Sue Shrut '75.
The MIT-ZOO team, sparked by a strong performance of their third pair, won the North American Tiddlywinks Championship this past weekend at Cornell.
The MIT-NO NAMES, MIT's other "A" Division entry, completed the sweep by placing second with 111 points to the ZOO's 117 2/3 points. HYTHNLBTWOC (see The Tech, February 7) finished a distant third with 75½ and was followed closely by the Somervillains with 73 5/6. Two other "A" Division teams, Rivendell and Cornell, were eliminated on the first day of competition.
In route to the sweep, MIT also had the top three highest scoring pairs. Tied for top pair honors were Dave Alexander '74 and Scott Hirsh, subfrosh, of the ZOO, who had 58½ points with a 10-2 record, and Tim Schiller '72 and J. Christ '73 of the NO NAMES, also with 58½ points and a 9-3 record. The third pair consisted of Dave Lockwood '74 and Larry Kahn '75 of the NO NAMES with 55 points and a 9-3 won-loss total.
The ZOO's first pair going into the tournament, Bill Renke '73 and Craig Schweinhart '73 finished lower than expected because Renke, the, team captain became ill Saturday afternoon and was unable to play at all n Sunday. The other MIT pair were Ross Gallon '73 and T.D Indian '72 of the ZOO, and Jim Marlin '73 and Sue Shrut of the NO NAMES.
In the "B" Division, MIT "B' placed first, followed by Toronto, second, and MIT "C" third.
In winning its second straight Continentals, MIT received [a] new, hand-carved hardwood trophy which has been in the making for a year. Plans are now being made for MIT to defend its World Championship by meeting Quesh, the British champions later this spring. T[o] face Quesh, MIT will combine its two top teams and will use the best eight players for the match.
or learn how to play tiddlywinks from our world famous Tiddlywinks team.
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
FRIDAY, MAY 4
3:00 Tiddly-winks—Kresge Lobby
Proposed Finance Board budget for 1972/3
[...]
Organization | 1972-3 grant*. | 1973-4 request | 1973-4 budget allocation | |
Tiddlywinks Assoc. | 450 | 450 | 450 |
Thus, it is not the business of The Tech either to '"build up" or abolish the Undergraduate Association in its news pages, no more than it is this paper's business to build up or abolish the Tiddlywinks Club or the Debate Society. It is not the function of a newspaper to give endless free publicity to organizations and people who consider it their right.
The weekend of February 16 and 17 provided MIT sports with what could be considered the biggest upset of the year as neither of Tech's two first-rate tiddlywinks teams managed to win the North American Cham- pionships [sic original="hled" correct="held"] at Cornell Univer-sity in Ithaca, New York.
The MIT "ZOO" team, consisting of Bill Renke '73, Craig Schweinhart '73, Dave Alexander '75, The Dumb Indian '74, and Scott [sic original="Hirsch" correct="Hirsh"] and Dave York (non-MIT students), and the MIT "A" team, consisting of Dave Lockwood '75, Larry Kahn '75, Rick Tucker '76, Pete Copper '75, Fred Shapiro '74, and Joe Sachs '77, were first and second last year, respectively. Although the "A" team lost all its players except for Lockwood and Kahn, the "ZOO" squad had all but one winker returning from last years champs, certainly marking them as tournament favorites.
The North Americans were won this year, however by the Hark Yon Tree Hath No Leaves But They Will Out Club, a team from Philadelphia headed by an MIT grad known as Sunshine '69. The final tally showed HYTHNLBTWOC with 104 points, MIT "ZOO" 97½, Somerville 92, and MIT "A" 84½. Teams eliminated before the finals included Cornell, Toronto, Rivendell, and Ithaca High School among others.
Out of the eighteen pairs competing, the MIT "ZOO"' team finished fourth, seventh, and eighth while MIT "A" placed pairs third and fifth. Kahn and Tucker played very well to finish third and Lockweed and Sachs placed much better than expected. "A" team's Kahn has improved markedly this year and has a 14-4-1 record so far. He is rapidly becoming one of North America's finest players.MIT, holder of the World's Cup, expects a challenge from HYTHNLBTWOC to be forthcoming.
Tournaments still to be played this year include the pairs and singles championships.
The world famous MIT Tiddlywinks Team will show off their skills on Saturday–they are really terrific.
SATURDAY
More far-out examples are frisbee and tiddlywminks, in each of which MIT has held national titles in the last two years (a world title in the case of tiddlywinks)!
We have top chess and tiddlywinks teams in which you might participate, depending on where your talents lie, in your mind or your fingertips.
There are almost 120 official activities at M.I.T. Every interest is represented from tiddlywinks to science-fiction reading to newspapers to white-water canoeing.
The MIT tiddlywinks team travelled to Cornell University on February 14-15 to compete in the 1976 North American team championships. MIT, expected to finish fifth after losing former captain and member of the 1972 World Champion team, Dave Lockwood '74, surprised the field by placing a strong second in the closest finals in the history of the tournament.
MIT got off to a slow start against the six rival teams, but managed to pull into third place at the end of the first day of competition with a convincing defeat of the Ithaca team.
By the final round the MIT team had clinched second due to the consistent play of veteran winkers Larry Kahn '75 and Rick Tucker '76, who were the third place pair in the tourney, and to the superb performance of sophomores Martin Ross and Brad Schaefer. Captain Josef Sachs '77 and Charles Frankston '86 came away with reasonable results in playing the toughest schedule of the three MIT pairs.
In the final and deciding round MIT needed 14½ out of a possible 21 points to catch first-place Zoo, the 1975 winner, a team composed largely of ex-MIT players. Sachs and Frankston got three points in the opening game on a short man penalty, in the next game Ross and Schaefer collected six points after Ross potted all his winks. Kahn and Tucker then needed 5½ points to tie the Zoo. Playing the top pair in the tournament, they won the game with four points, making the final score Zoo 146½, MIT 143½. Freshman winkers Steve Crounse, Joe [sic original="O'Gare" correct="O'Gara"], and Paul Rickert put on a good showing in B-league competition.
SATURDAY
10:30-5:00 Tiddlywinks demonstrations; lobby of Kresge, MIT Tiddlywinks Association.
In less conventional sports, an Intrafraternity Council-sponsored canoeing team outpaddied both USC and UCLA in a 72-hour race in Los Angeles to finish second to Maryland, and MIT's tiddlywinkers placed second in the North American championships.
1pm Tiddlywinks demonstration in Kresge lobby.
Friday
1pm Tiddlywinks demonstration in Kresge lobby.
Cambridge is a city of many persuasions: almost any night of the week various cults are chanting, plotting or exchanging stir-fry recipes over works. But it is only on Wednesday nights that a group of men meet at MIT for two hours of squidging, squopping, potting and occasional bristoling or gramping. And they do it with the door wide open.
"Tiddlywinks is not for everyone," says MIT Tid-dlywinks Team captain Charles Frankston. "It takes a certain kind of mind to appreciate the game."
—The Boston [sic original="Pheonix" correct="Phoenix"]
Closing its season on a high note, the MIT tiddlywinks [team], ranked second in the nation, won the Beanpot Tiddlywinks Tournament, emblematic of Boston area winking supremacy. The Tech squad journeyed to Commonwealth Avenue on Sunday to defeat Boston University and Harvard in the triangular meet.
The Beavers never trailed as they amassed 38½ points against Harvard, which was captained to 27½ points by former MIT student Fred Shapiro '74, and BU, which scored 18.
Veteran winkers Charles Frankston '76 and Rick Tucker '76 looked on as graduating senior Rich Steidle and partner Ron Mabbitt '79 took high point honors with 23. B.J. Kim G and Alex Kagan '78 also gave good performances in the victory. Playing in their first tournament, they went 2-1-1, including a rare 3½-3½ tie.
A young MIT tiddlywinks team placed second in the recent North American Team Championships. Page 12
The MIT tiddlywinks dynasty, dormant for the past seven or eight years, appears to be on the way back. A young and lightly-regarded Tech team scored an impressive second-place finish in the North American Team Championships in Ithaca, NY last weekend, missing the title by one-sixth of a point, the smallest possible margin in a tiddlywinks tournament.
The "Relix" club, captained by Bill Renke '73, placed first with 90 points, followed by MIT with 89-5/6 and "Moosewinks" with 86. Although most top tiddlywinks teams are club teams, there are also collegiate teams at Cornell, Harvard, and Boston University.
The MIT team has been revitalized this year by captain Arye Gittelman '83, who is considered the best freshman player of all time, having placed sixth in the 1979 North American Singles Championship, an unprecedented finish for a high school winker. The team's top scorer at Ithaca was Rick [sic original="Tacker" correct="Tucker"] '80 with 55 individual points, followed closely by Ross Callon '73 and Fred Shapiro '74 with 54 points each. Outstanding performances were also turne in oh Gittlm tlo othr nr hm n ion [sic: ?] , David desJardins and Jim Roberts. Ed Seim '83 and Jeff Lu '83 scored strongly in B-division competition.
In view of the large number of freshman prospects, MIT is expected by some to dominate the winking scene for the next several years. After the narrow loss, the North American Tiddlywinks Association is considering designating MIT as the North American representative to compete in England against the British titleholders for the world team championship, assuming travel funds can be obtained.
In other tiddlywinks news, world singles champion Dave Lockwood '75 will give a winks exhibition on "Real People" (NBC-TV) tomorrow at 8pm.
Tiddlywinks Assoc.
Tech Photo by Jim Butler.
Arye Gittelman '83 attempts a shot during the World Pairs Tiddlywinks Championship held February 18-19 at MIT. Arye and Larry Kahn '75 defeated Charles Frankston '84 and Joe Sachs '77 by a score of 29-13.
The following student activities have not submitted the required forms and will be de-recognized at the next Association of Student Activities general assembly meeting on October 15, 1987.
[...]
If your activity is listed below and is still active, a representative of your activity must contact an ASA ExecBoard member before October 8. ExecBoard office hours will be posted on the UA office door (Student Center room 401).
[...]
Tiddlywinks Association
FEATURES Discover e-mail at MIT, and reuse your lint collection or donate tiddlywinks to [email protected].
More obscure lists cater to students with more specific interests; these include atlantic-puffins, eatyourwaythroughboston, tvtalk (not to be confused with buffy), tiddlywinks, and bcs-subjects (where you can take an MRI, look at your brain, and get paid for it).
Tiddlywinks has been a tradition at MIT since the formation of the MIT Tiddlywinks Association (MITTwA) in 1966. This past weekend MITTwA held a tournament to revive interest in the game. Tiddlywinks requires using a large plastic disc, or squidger, to knock a smaller colored disc, or wink, into a cup, or pot. Players will sometimes squop, or cover their opponent’s winks with their own, rendering the opponent’s wink uplayable. More information about the game can be found on MIT alumnus Richard Tucker’s ’80 website, http://tiddlywinks.org.
Clockwise from left:
Photography by Samuel E. Kronick
There are an awful lot of student orga- nizations available at MIT, but for a school as unusual as ours, they start to seem a little boilerplate. I suppose I’m not really an author- ity on student clubs here, since the only thing I’m a card-carrying member of is Blockbuster, but even so, I can’t help but feel like we could be weirder and more distinctive—no offense meant to the Tiddlywinks team.
Tiddlywinks Association, MIT
“I asked them to speak English, to tone down the technological talk,” Capuano said. “And then we talked about how to save it. It was very simple. My job was to get it back in... I have no idea if fusion is the real thing or un- real thing or if it will ever come to fruition. I just need to know it’s a reasonable thing to be researching, that it’s not tiddlywinks.”
Toggle showing 15 tiddlywinks references for Tech Talk.
Numerous meeting and tournament announcements in the Club Notes section
World Singles notice
March 1972 and April 1972 entries for tiddlywinks
The first thing the newly revived MIT Tiddlywinks Association wants people to know about the game of flicking small plastic discs into a cup is that it is not just a game of flicking small plastic discs into a cup.
Instead, according to the Nor th American Tiddlywinks Association’s web site, tiddlywinks is a “complex game of strategy and tactics, which involves a fascinating mixture of manual dexterity and intellectual activity as well.”
Tiddlywinks started in the late 1800s in England. In 1955, it resurfaced at Cambridge University, where a group of undergraduates were looking for a game to represent their school. Tim Berners-Lee, father of the World Wide Web and recent recipient of the Draper Prize, played tiddlywinks.
The game is played with sets of small, thin discs, known as winks, which are lined up on a mat. Using the larger disc, called the squidger, players pop the smaller discs into flight by snapping one side of the smaller disc with the edge of the larger one.
There are two dif ferent versions. The first is the informal child’s game in which the small discs are launched into a cup. The formal game is much more complicated with a series of rules and strategies.
Yan Wang, president of the MIT Tiddlywinks Association (MITTwA), said that adult players like to compare tiddlywinks to golf, “because it requires physical dexterity in making shots,” and also to chess, “because it requires thinking in turns and trying to maximize your strategy based on what your opponent could do.” MITTwA is awaiting formal recognition from MIT’s Association of Student Activities.
MIT has a bright tiddlywinks history, beginning when the game spread across the Atlantic from Britain during the 1960s. “Although tiddlywinks was formalized in England, the dominant team throughout the 1960s through 1980s was MIT,” said Wang. “There was much intercollegiate play with Harvard and Cornell, in addition to international trips to visit Cambridge and Oxford.”
In recent years, the game had fallen out of favor at MIT because not enough ef for t was devoted to bringing in new players, Wang explained.
MITTwA, which was reborn this past September thanks to Wang, is hoping to change that with an Independent Activities Period (IAP) “Introduction to Tiddlywinks” that starts on Jan. 10 and ends on Jan. 12, each evening from 4:30 to 6 p.m. in Room 4-145.
Members of the MITTwA who have been playing the game for years will teach the class. On Jan. 13 and 14 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., the MITTwA will be holding a tournament for novices and more advanced players alike in the Student Center (W20).
“The tournament will hopefully attract students, staff and faculty who are eager to learn about this piece of MIT history and take part in it. There will be significant attendance by alumni from across the countr y who all look for ward to reviv-ing this part of their student experience,” Wang said.
For more information, please visit student.mit.edu/searchiap/iap-7491.html.
PHOTO / MARGO FOOTE
MIT defeated Southampton University in 1972 to win the World Championship. Team members, clockwise from upper left: David Lockwood; William Renke; James Martin; Craig Sweinhart; Timothy Schiller, captain; and J. Frank Christ displayed their victory squidgers.
Technique photographs are also in the collections of Daniel Dern and Jim Koschella
Toggle showing 14 tiddlywinks references for Technique.
Mention in text
Names of MITTwA members.
Names of MITTwA members.
Names of MITTwA members.
Names of MITTwA members.
Names of MITTwA members.
Names of MITTwA members.
Toggle showing 16 tiddlywinks references for Technology Review.
THE renaissance of tiddlywinks in New England schools this winter prompted Nelson Lees, '53, to delve into the game's origin. "Tiddlywink," he found was once British slang for an unlicensed public house, and "tiddlywinking" meant idling, droning, and cheating. The game was invented, Mr. Lees postulates, by loafers flipping coins into an empty beer glass.
Michael E. Platt, '63, captain of the MUTS (the M.LT. Undergraduate Tiddlywink Society), admits that he thought the game was "kind of funny" at first, but now believes it really is a good game that may spread farther. "It is very social," he says. "It is often tension-packed, and to play well you really have to have the right touch."
How seriously should you take tiddlywinks at M.I.T.? Just seriously enough to note the trophy—the North American championship—defended in Cambridge in February.
To some, a green felt tablecloth brings to mind images of a gambling hall; others think of the more sedate game of bridge. But to a few select people at M.I.T., Cornell, the University of Toronto, and other schools, the green felt means [sic original="tiddliwinks" correct="tiddlywinks"].
February saw the M.I.T. team host and win the North American [sic original="Tiddliwinks" correct="Tiddlywinks"] Championship at M.I.T., and, soon, the Institute team may have the good fortune to cast its die across the Atlantic and assault the top British teams.
To we uninitiates, to [sic original="squap" correct="squap"] another player's wink with your squidger to prevent his [sic original="squapping" correct="squopping"] you first may sound a bit unusual—not like something you would do after tea or before every meal. However, in the game of [sic original="tiddliwinks" correct="tiddlywinks"] all this is a common act of ag[g]ression committed by one team's player towards a member of an opposing team. And on it can depend the fate of the match.
"What Does Harvard Have That M.I.T. Doesn't? Answer: [sic original="Tiddliwinks" correct="Tiddlywinks"]!" read the posters which originally dared students to join the team. But two years later, the successful M.I.T. team trounced Harvard royally during a three-way match with Cornell. The Harvard team dissolved soon after, having represented the only sport in which Harvard lost to M.I.T. that year. But this triumph for M.I.T. was offset by the Institute's failure to recognize the [sic original="Tiddliwinks" correct="Tiddlywinks"] Association as an official Institute activity until a year ago. For two years before, the team won glory for M.I.T. (and paid their own travel expenses) without being rec-ognized at home.
The victories were motivated, apparently, out of pure intellectual curiosity. The game involves "elements of manual dexterity and large doses of strategy," explains Mitchell Wand, '69, this year's team captain. "This raises it above the level of a child's game and makes it challenging." It takes this kind of fervor to traverse Rubicons in tiddliwinks); no wonder the M.I.T. team is out to conquer!
If ping pong can be a vehicle for international rapprochement, why not tiddly-winks?
Home in April after a one-week tour of England which included winning the world championship from Southampton University, M.I.T.'s eight-man tiddlywinks team found themselves richer by 11 pounds—their honorarium for a brief appearance on British television; they'll use it to buy a team trophy—the first World Tiddlywinks Championship Cup.
M.I.T. won both rounds of the championship match in Southampton on March 28 and 29, 65-47 and 58-54. But Timothy D. Schiller, '72, said on returning that the Southampton team was actually more skilled at the game than the M.I.T. players. The decisive difference was strateqy, he told Tech Talk: M.I.T. was more "cautious," and it paid off.
Scenes of spring at M.I.T.
[...]
Among the "hits" at a lethargic open house; tiddlywinks lessons from the world's champions, just returned from London. (Photo: Sheldon Lowenthal, '74)
Entry on Tim Schiller.
Entry on Dave Lockwood in Class of 1975 section.
Entry on Fred Shapiro in Class of 1974 section.
Entry on Dave Lockwood in Class of 1975 section.
Photograph of Activities Midway, in background.
Entry on Dave Lockwood in Class of 1975 section.
Entry on Rick Tucker in Class of 1980 section.
Entry on Larry Kahn in Class of 1975 section.
Four years after graduating from MIT, Frank [sic correct=Frank] Shapiro had taken some time off from Harvard Law School when he rejoined the then-famous MIT Tiddlywinks Team and decided the game needed an official historian and lexicologist. Shapiro, who studied humanities and science at the Institute, assumed the position and soon discovered that the term tiddlywink had been used much earlier than the Oxford English Dictionary seemed to indicate. He wrote to the publisher and pointed out six such citations. The editors confirmed one of the examples and promised to include it in the dictionary's next revision. Something clicked.
"Everything I did with words and quotations came after that," says Shapiro, now a Yale librarian and lecturer in legal research at Yale Law School, who edited the Yale Book of Quotations. Six years in the making, the book meticulously catalogues noteworthy statements and traces their earliest uses. "This sort of work doesn't seem like the kind of thing that is 'MIT,' Shapiro says, "but actually it is—the kind of precision and resourcefulness that's necessary fits with the MIT education."
After graduating from law school in 1980, Shapiro practiced general law briefly and then earned a master's degree in library science at Catholic University in 1982. Since then, he has worked in research—and continued to contribute to the OED, as well as to the New York Times' Freakonomics blog.
"The truth is, it's changed a lot," says Shapiro of his dictionary work. "There's less a sense of discovery and accomplishment. It used to be that you'd go to a large library—you'd randomly pick up a book and open it to a random page and make a discovery. Now it's the database that is doing the work."
Shapiro and his wife, Jane, live in Bethany, CT, and have a son in college. The couple used to play a lot of word games, like Scrabble. But "I don't play too much anymore," Shapiro says, "because I had problems—I'd try to play words that weren't in the Scrabble dictionary. Also," he admits with a laugh, "I got obsessed with seven-letter words, and I would pass 10 times in a row until I could play them. That's not the best strategy."
Sent to alumni
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Technology Review reprint booklet.
Activities Midway photo from Nov 1979 Technology Review
(Same as Technology Review May 1980)
Independent student newspaper. During 1973-1974, Thursday challenged The Tech to play a tiddlywinks match.
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Thursday.
Unpublished article.
Sent to incoming MIT freshmen.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Undergraduate Residence.
MacGregor House
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Unknown - MIT-affiliated.
Leaflet by leftist MIT group denouncing MIT Finance Board support of MITTwA's England trip.
Independent student humor magazine
Toggle showing 7 tiddlywinks references for Voodoo.
And so we lift the shroud from the mystery of “that Vanderbilt woman”; globe trotter, Amazon, scientist, chief Tidl on the Tiddlywinks team, and, by unanimous vote of the Voo Doo staff, co-ed with whom we would most like to be caught in the wind tunnel.
Physical Conditioning
In tiddlywinks, as in any other major sport, enough emphasis cannot be placed on sound physical conditioning. In order to get anywhere tiddly-wise one must prepare himself by years of arduous labor until he has brought his arm, big toe, gastrocnemeus, and sphincter muscles to the peak of development, and can use them at the coordinated mass of power necessary for ,this gruelling sport. There are certain classic exercises used by champion tiddlers the world over; among them being:
- Concentration: (a) Assume the standard position and practice staring at the cup — 3 hrs minimum; (b) Try to think what it would feel like if you were a tiddle and had just been winked.
- Finger exercises: ( a) Holding your hands in front of you, palm up, curl your fingers into your palm; repeat until it begins to hurt (Note-Iet your fingers and arms do the work. If you are using your back for extra lever-age, you are not deriving full benefit from the exericse [sic correct=exercise]). As you become more proficient, you can progress to the more difficult "reverse curls". (b) Many tid-dlywinks stars carry a small ball with them at all times, which they squeeze repeatedly to build up their fingers (Fig. 1).
- Eye-hand coordination: Put an object on the table. Reach for it. Try to get it on the first shot.
- Breath control: Proper breath control is a necessary part of any good winker’s game. Since it is considered a foul to fog an opponent’s tiddle, and artificial breath control is strictly prohibited, the aspiring tiddler must achieve an even rhythm in his breathing. This natural breath control will keep him out of trouble in future matches.
Fig. 1. North American Champion Tiddler Horace “Flip” Ditwiddle demonstrates the proper thumb-and-forefinger ball squeezing technique. Tiddler DItwiddle has been tiddling around since he was nine and has developed exceptionally strong fingers for a lad of 18.
Equipment
At his local authorized N.T.D.A. (National Tiddlywinks Dealers’ Association) store the neophyte can find all the equipment necessary for a top-notch game, available in a wide range of prices. The beginner will not want to get in over his head, but should purchase a good set of domes- tic winks as a start. After he has gained more insight into the game he can begin to shop around for a matched set of professionals' winks. Remember, a good set of winks is a lifetime investment, so when the final
METHOD SWEEPS WORLD
choice is made, have your winks fitted by an expert. Official winks are made of carved aardvark tooth although substitutes of fresh dodo beak have been allowed in recent years. The standard floor covering is woven of reprocessed yak fuzz which cannot be bleached or dyed and must be green in color. The cup comes in three sizes, A, B, C, depending on the size of the tiddles. For those who do not like to carry a bulky wink when traveling, there is a special wink which breaks down for easier handling and storage. There are special women's tiddles which come in many sizes and shapes. They are often of high quality and when handled well, draw a great deal of interest from the male teams
Basic skills
Addressing the wink: Don't forget the Zipcode. When addressing the wink most players prefer a simple "Hi!" but some use the more formal, “Good day Mr. Wink.”
Grip: The most commonly used is the so-called “Polish” grip. To form the grip, grasp the wink between the thumb and ring finger of the right hand; cross the forefinger under the thumb and under the wink for support; the little finger should be tucked in against the palm.
Salute: Form the Polish grip on a wink. Holding it with the wink to ward you, gesture toward your partner.
Basic shot: With a sharp snap, arch the tiddle toward the cup.
Bank shot: Bounce the wink off your opponent‘s tiddle.
Tetanus shot: Set the jaw firmly before shooting.
TOURNAMENT RULES
- Officials: Timekeeper, Federal Mediators (2), Chairman of the Board, Secretary of the Interior, Dean of Student Affairs, Supreme Deities (2).
- Steel-toed shoes and metal spikes may be worn only by the goalies.
- No player may have a thumbnail longer than 10/16 times the wavelength of the pure line in the spectrum of three-day-old Moroccan belly-button lint.
- If, in the opinion of three-fourths of the officials present, unless the Supreme Deities are in disagreement or the Timekeeper has exercised his right of veto, or, alternatively, the officials are in unanimous agreement (the Secretary of the Interior here being exempted) the former opinion shall prevail.
- No player may at any time have three of his own tiddles in such posi- tion that they occupy the vertices of a triangle.
I have never seen a general discussion of MIT's strength in the playing of games.
Few schools have produced-as many senior masters in chess as MIT has (five). Ken Rogoff, who is probably the most talented American player since Fischer, is a graduate student. There have been some very strong bridge experts, and MIT students have held world championships in Frisbee and Table Hockey. In tiddlywinks, the Institute has completely dominated the game for the past decade, turning out a clear majority of the world's best players. The accomplishments of Ferd T. Bull '68. Sunshine '69, Bob Henninge '69, Mitch Wand '69, Tim Schiller '72, Bill Renke '73, Ross Callon '73, Dave Lockwood '75 (featured in the Nov. 27 issue of People magazine) and Larry Kahn '75 should suggest to even the most casual winks fan the magnitude of MIT's contributions. If tiddlywinks becomes America's most popular strategic sport/game, as seems likely, the great engineering school on the Charles will have had a lot to do with its success.
Z. : Aw, not now, Deadhead. They need me at the last meeting of the Tiddlywinks Club before the game
They say necessity is the mother of invention. In my mind, it has always been much more complex than this. However this is paraphrased, it sums up the birth of what we, as a group of eight to ten year olds, considered the single greatest sport in the history of Creation: Manhole Cover Tiddlywinks.
Nothing came close.
No free ball game at Fenway could drag us away from a even-odds street tournament; even-odds meaning even side of the street versus the odd side. No road race, plane show, or three-car pileup could sway us from the Big Tiddlywinks.
Just getting set up for a tournament was exciting in itself. Naturally since none of us in the neighborhood had a manhole in our house, nobody owned a manhole cover. To rectify thhis small detail, we would borrow, key word here because we always returned them, our “Chips” from the city. Most of the time this would take place at about ten o’clock y night when we should have been in bed. Three of us would be assigned to a certain manhole that we knew the location of, we would converge in you change the angle at which the cover initially leaves the ground. The harder you hit, the further your chip will go. Also, depending on the angle to the cover you deliver the blow, you can add the Tiddlywink version of "English", which doesn't do much except add a little flair and spin to your shot. Really experienced players know all the neat tricks; how to make a chip curve in the air, how to make it spin around it's vertical axis for longer time in the air and less bounce, how to make the chip roll through an exact number of turns to control direction of bounce, and so on.
Our tournaments were always on Sundays. We needed every single square foot of playing area possible, and the nearby park area didn't work so well. Not only did we make huge divots in the grass, but the noise scared the little children and their parents away. Manhole Cover Tiddlywinks was not a quiet game; think about it. During one tournament we had to abandon the pile of "chips" we had brought to the park just so the Police riot squad wouldn't catch us. Oh yeah, more than half of us had Police profiles by the time we were twelve. It was almost something to be proud of.
Sundays were the days when the space we needed was available. A level, hardtop surface protected from the traffic was what we needed, and during the school year we kept mostly to supermarket parking lots. But during the Summer, when Tiddlywinks season was at it's peak, we were able to use the ideal public space for our tournaments. Most of us lived near the river, Charles River, and we had ready access to the best Tiddlywink court around: Memorial Drive. It was always blocked off during the day for public recreation, and we all knew that that meant us. At first some people tried to revoke our rights as citizens of the People's Republic of Cambridge since we would sometimes come close to denting their cars, (especially the novice pairs), but after a while they just dealt with us and stopped calling the Police. In fact, some people even spent a little while sitting on the grass, watching the tournament progress through its elimination matches (moving back a little whenever a novice team was playing, of course). [...]
Before my days of Manhole Cover Tiddlywinks, I was, for the most part, a calm and collected child. I busied myself with normal tot sort of things; building with legos, playing tag with kids on the street (always having to come in at sundown, smelling like a wet goat sometimes), climbing around on my friend's splinter-infested jungle gym in his backyard, and imagining I was any one of a million people I kept inside my head whenever I got bored with being me. [...]
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Chronicle-Argonaut.
Proctor (determined to be severe).—What? Do you mean to deny that you have been playing poker! Here are the chips, three colors, and there is the basket to hold them. What do you claim to be playing?
'94 (in chorus).—Tiddledy Winks.
—Havard Lampoon
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Gargoyle.
Most Illustrious Editor, Friends, Romans, Countrymen, etc.:—
The Oratorical Association will hold a debate Saturday night on the subject, "Resolved, that the University should adopt Tiddledy-Winks as a collegiate indoor sport." I take this opportunity to urge that every loyal student work to this end:—"Send the band to the Oratorical Association Debate." Vox Populi.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Michiganensian.
When we got to be Sophs I guess we got even for those indignities. Oh, what we didn't do to the freshies! I guess we overdid it, because the faculty stopped the rush, and the Student Council had to substitute a daylight rush, which was as tame as tiddledy-winks.
Thronson House made its debut in South Quadrangle this year, bringing fascinating femininity to what was once a lonely Michigan men's dorm. With a philosophy of "Be social!" (at least until semester grades come out), we supported Huber, our Brother house, during Homecoming, the IQC-Assembly Sing, Michigras, and the South Quad Tiddlywinks Tournament.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Wrinkle.
Night drew on apace and with a few of those altitudinous balls conmonly known as "high" and a rollicking chorus the hour of retirement came. Each Tiddledy winked his eye and yawned and the great sanguinary encounter of the '98 team and the alumni came to an end and ossification on the pages of history.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for Cornhusker.
Tiddly winks, card games, checkers and monopoly competition attracted participants and funds to the Burr East-Burr West money-raising carnival. Benefits from the joint Friday afternoon affair were contributed to the All University Fund
Gracie Nielson rode to the intramural tiddly-wink championship with her outstanding performance Monday afternoon in the towel room of Grunt MemoriaI Hall. Neilson, who also copped the mumble-peg laurels in November, is the only double winner in the history of the university.
Displaying a developed form and polished technique, Nielson tiddled wink after wink into the scoring cup, edging out her opponent, Miriam Crick, A. W. O. L. broad prexy, with an overwhelming score of 401-2.
Nielson's sponsoring house, Gamma Flip, lost all hope of victory, Friday, when it was discovered that she had a hang nail on her tiddling thumb, but university trainer, Back Burger, shaped her up nicely and she was in excellent condition.
After receiving the round-trip to Crete or Ashland as grand prize, Miss Nielson said "I'm very glad it's over. Please hand me a Chesterfield."
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Pipe Dream.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Cauldron.
The time was in the latter part of May, 1921, and the scene was the historic Harvard Stadium. There, as the gold-plated sun sank soggily in the well-known west, a bitter struggle was taking place; one to test whether the men of the class of 1921 would graduate triumphant, buy a house and a flivver, have a garden and a cellar, and stand in the back yard able to thumb their noses at the world and points west. Everything hung on one string like a ham in a smokehouse. The football had sent West Point to a crushing defeat ably abetted by the Tech staff; Dartmouth Ouija-board team lost three guesses to two at the hands of the Northeastern engineers; and the Cornell Tiddledy-Winks warriors never had a chance. Now came the great test, the track meet with Harvard.
Literary magazine
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Purple Parrot.
But what about athletics, doesn't anybody go in for them?"
"Assuredly not. All the athletes are now in the parlor. Basketball has been supplanted by drop the handkerchief. Tiddledy-winks now thrills the red-blooded he-man instead of football.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Notre Dame Scholastic.
Have you played "Tiddledy Winks" or "Beggar your Neighbor?
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for The Oberlin Review.
Tiddledy winks is all the go.
If we can't eat we must play. So some of us indulge in the rather extravagant intellectual luxury of chess, and others rush bravely into the tiddledy wink arena, and each set thinks the other is misemploying its time.
From what sad experience we have had with either, we would be inclined to cast our vote for the latter as the better game for the average college man, and we regret the rapid decline which seems to threaten the untimely demise of that once flourishing game.
If intellectual games must be played, and some of us have so much regidity in our intellectual vertebral column that it is very difficult to stoop to anything which is not instructive as well as entertaining, let them at any rate be of a simpler nature than a complicated mathematical problem. The real student will always find his need of diversion best supplied by some speciies of the genus to which belongs the now-rapidly-approaching-extinction Tiddledy winks.
'94 (in chorus)—Tiddledy Winks.—
—Harvard Lampoon
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Yellow Jacket.
“How are you going to go about finding the guilty person?” asked the Colonel.
“In the following manner,” answered Hawkshaw. “Let us first begin by deduction. Let us say, for example, that three persons have robbed the bank. You, I, or the Khedive of Egypt. Now it is impossible that you could commit the robbery because at the time the robbery was committed you were playing a foursome of tiddledy-winks with the duke of Buckingham”
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for The Daily Pennsylvanian.
—A tiddledy winks tournament was held at Grinell University a short time ago which excited a great deal of enthusiasm. The winner was presented with a large tiddledy winks set.
Sans Drawers
“But I tell ya that drawer belongs to us,” howled the undergraduate manager of Tiddledy Winks at the assemblage of managers in a musty, dusty office in Weightman Hall.
Six stalwarts were gathered about a battered desk in one corner of the room. Each had been through the heeling period. Each recognized the seriousness of the situation.
During the course of the years, the problem had arrived at the critical stage. At first there were six sports using the same desk. That wasn’t too brutal. Versatile heelers writing in six different languages kept the reports from becoming entangled. But now it was different.
Franklin Used Drawer
The desk was an old one. Rumor had it that the bold letters B. F., carved deeply in the writing surface were left there by none other than heeler Ben Franklin when in his youth, he competed for the assistant manager post of the horse-shoe pitching team (a sport long since defunct with the advent of the automobile).
It was partly because this same horse-shoe pitching team kept its equipment in the desk drawers that the present condition existed.
Battered and banged throughout the ages, only one drawer retained its bottom. Bottomless drawers are rather inadequate, and the managers were quick to sense this fact.
“Tiddledy Winks managers have always used this drawer, and I’m here to follow up that tradition”, continued the first speaker.
“I beg to differ with you, old top”, grinned the chap who guided the destinies of the checker squad, “but my team has always called that drawer ‘home’.”
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Record.
"I tell you, Clyde, you and I always were keen for a little game, now and then. I quit to-night a winner by thirty thousand francs." "No, Pat," said the other, "we didn't belong to Ninety-three's Tiddledy Winks Club for nothing, did we?"
Student-run publication.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Daily Collegian.
It happened the other night when we were hovering over the Associated Press teletype waiting for developments in the Nixon rhubarb and in the escape of 24 miners from a flooded pit.
The long ribbon of p[a]per slowly inched its way through the top of the machine, and we could see the dateline being typed out—OXFORD, England (AP).
Not expecting any sort of story from there, we watched with increasing interest as the machine clicked away. It went on:
The Oxonion tiddlers…
(This is an education—I never knew the proper name for tiddly wink players before.)
…defeated the Cantab winkers…
(This is very possibly a sample of British sports slang.
…at tiddlywinks—or perhaps you spell it tiddlewinks— Friday and immediately claimed the world championship.
(I didn't know there was so much at stake.)
The score was nip-and-tuck 113-111 favoring the Oxonians from Oxford University over the Cantabs from Cambridge.
The teams represented the cream of the world's winkers…
(Nor did I realise the impressiveness of the event.)
…and the match, which was of varsity rating…
(What else?)
…was witnessed by several hundred fans. Tea…
(Naturally!)
…was served at half time, with the Oxonians leading 89-87.
Pat Laugharne, a shapely 19-year-old right-hander from England, was the only girl in the match. She also was the star, winking in the- decisiva button…
(Is that anything like an aspirin?)
…which gave Oxford tha lead it held until the end.
"It was a hard-fought ma,tch but it was fairly fought," she said. "There's nothing in tha world like fiddling."
(I'll say, Pat.)
A raging controversy immediately broke out among mala members of the two teams over rightful ownership of the world title.
Elliott Langford, Oxford captain, rose from his knees after the fiddling—snapping small buttons into a cup by pressing them with other buttons—and declared, "We are claiming the world title."
Cambridge captain, Peter Downes, said over his game-end-cup-of-tea:
"It was not a championship match—just an experimental game,"
Nuts to your frisbee, Penn Staters—I'm going to England to look up Pat Laugharne.
Toggle showing 24 tiddlywinks references for Daily Princetonian.
- Man with cigar in row behind, Down in front!
- Woman whose son is a Freshman. What are they doing now?
- Man, evidently not her husband. They're playing tiddledy-winks.
- Helen. What's the score, George? (But need we go on?)
Column 4Casting about for a solution of the annual problem providing an equally good seat for every football spectator, two recent communicants to the Alumni Weekly have suggested, in turn, a revolving stadium and a revolving gridiron. [...]
Column 5One communicant suggests the abolition of football and the adoption of tiddledywinks as the major intercollegiate sport.
Football brought forth 356 votes as the favorite sport to watch, hockey, basketball and baseball rating in a close position for second place—and so on down to three counts for craps and tiddledy winks, and one each for bullfighting and body-building.
Per strict orders from the Head Janitor to pack up and leave the premises, a young raccoon named Tiddleywinks bade the University and 42 Blair a fond farewell last week after having resided here for but ten days. This drastic janitorial action suspends the career of one of Blair's most original humorists and relegates Tiddlywinks to the status of ex-'42. Foster father J. G. Klemm Harvey '42 said that his protege would eventually have been taken home anyway, for, he explained, "He didn't like being left alone so often."
Others of Tiddleywinks' outstanding dislikes were women and Willkie buttons, while his chief delight was in consuming raw eggs. Bad habits included taking money out of peoples' pockets and ice cubes out of highball glasses. "Which," stated Harvey, "was very disconcerting."
Daylight Saving will replace Eastern Standard Time tomorrow morning at 2 when timepieces should be advanced one hour.
That means that participants in an after-supper tiddlywinks tourney tonight which breaks up just before the respectable hour of 2 will find it is 3 o'clock in the morning shortly after the last wink has been tiddlied.
Students who live, breathe and have their being under the guidance of timely tones from Nassau Hall need not fret, however, for the University electrician will see that Nassau's cloud-capped clock bangs out the hours in good faith.
Our sports-minded friends at Christ's College, Cambridge, Eng., airmailed us this appeal last week.
"You are no doubt aware that Tiddlywinks is becoming a world-wide sport, and naturally as in any growing and virile activity, there are several minor differences regarding the mode of play. "If this promising pastime is to progress to its rightful position as one of the world's great games we must reconcile these minor differences and formulate a standard set of rules.
"As the World Champions we, at Cambridge, feel that we should give the lead, and so we Cordially invite a member of your Tiddlywinks Club to represent your university at the First World Tiddlywinks Congress to be held here June 11-12, 1958."
The following set of rules were enclosed for study:
THE MAT: Size: 2x1 yds. (1.830 x 0.915 m.). Surface is of a felt-like, non-pile structure, or other isotropic compressible medium, eg: needle-loom.
THE CUP: Size: inverted frustrum of a cone; height 1½" (3.81 cms.), diameter 1¾" (4.45 cms.).
THE COUNTERS: Each player plays with six counters, ie: two large (approximately 22 mms. diam. and 0.9 gms. weight) and four small (approximately 16.5 mms. diam. and 0.3 gms. weight). These counters are called "tiddlywinks."
THE AIM: is to flick all one's winks into the Cup using a large counter known as a "squidger."
THE SCORE: First person to "cup" all his winks scores 5 pts, second 3 pts. third 2, fourth 1.
COVERING: Any wink covered by another wink cannot be played.
SQUOPT RULE: Team whose winks are all covered is said to be "squopt," and their opponents have three free squidges per free wink (not covered, covering or cupped), before they must uncover one of the squopt winks.
We'll be in the Orient this summer but we've wired this reply to Cambridge for consideration: "How about a SQUERGE RULE referring to that team who—when its opponents have squopted— squidges one of its winks up into the air so that it squats squarely on a squopted wink of the opposition. We suggest that the squerged team be forced to remove all its previously squidged winks from the cup, unsquopt its opponents' winks and forgo one squidging."
The CUTWC will be here next faill with a team to play a similar team from the Princeton Tiger, the campus humor magazine.
The CUTWC is the Cambridge University TiddlyWinks (I suppose in CinemaScope) Club.
C. (for "Captain") Webster Wheelock '60, the Chairman (also for "C") of the Tiger, has been named Acting Captain of the Princeton team, and says that the team is already looking quote "pretty good," unquote.
Captain Wheelock says that the team is presently working on finger push-ups.
Wheelock and the other team members were particularly happy yesterday because they have signed up Commander Edward Whitehead, the bearded president of the Schweppes Company to be both the patron and coach of the team.
The Commander said, however, that he had not played any tiddlywinks since childhood.
The Tiger team is planning its first practice session with its new coach in New York on June 11.
The Cambridge squad is planning to make a real assault on America, and has scheduled meets already with Yale, Harvard, Boston College and several California schools, as well as with Princeton.
The Princeton team is also looking for matches with other American universities.
Wheelock said that the Tiger hopes to play the match with Cambridge in the Student Center. It will be strictly a blacktie affair. He said that the visitors probably will arrive here in the latter part of September.
The Tiger has already contacted the F.A.O. Schwartz Co., and has ordered monogramed winks from them. The Princeton winks will be, naturally, orange and black.
Cambridge features blue and green colors.
The Acting Captain also said that he planned to order a special carpet from the Bigelow Co. to hold the event on.
The Tiger, incidentally, does have a title on the door.
The Tiger Magazine's tiddlywinks test with Cambridge University had to be canceled when the British couldn't get a sponsor to send them over here. So the Tiger boys are working up a match with another prominent Eastern school.
The Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society (0.U.T.S.) has challenged Princeton to a match, to be held sometime next September.
In a letter addressed to "The Student Body President," Tom Nicholson, secretary of the society, said, "Aroused to missionary zeal by the news that the game is almost unknown in the United States, except at Harvard, we hope to make as large a tour [as possible] in the short time that will be at our disposal."
Nicholson continued, "In the event of a suitably spirited provisional response to our challenge —sent to a number of well-known universities —we could arrange for distribution of the accepted rules in all their subtlety.''
Last year, a similar challenge was extended to the Tiger magazine by Cambridge University. The Tiger staff boned up on the "accepted rules in all their subtlety," but the Britishers never showed up. Tiddlywinks enthusiasts should report to Varsity 'Winks Captain Phil Bruner for pre-season training.
Bruner indicated that the Tigers were hoping to begin practice in the near future. So far as could be verified yesterday spring training would not be against the Ivy League agreement.
The exact tour schedule for the Oxford "tiddlers" has not been determined but the Tigers calculate that with the advantage of spring training they will be ready for the contest.
In an effort to boost morale at Columbia after a rather dismal sports year, a Lion undergraduate boasted to a City College coed that Columbia had at least one good team—their tiddlywinks squad. The coed replied by challenging the Light Blue to a match. The City College newspaper then announced that both schools were organizing teams. Unable to face the possibility of another losing team, Columbia refused to accept the challenge.
Roberts was three years old and pitching tiddlywinks when Columbia last beat Princeton in 1945. Thus, the psychological factor will be immense when the All-American quarterback makes his last fling at the Tigers and attempts to break the Princeton victory string at an unlucky 13.
"Navy never gives us any trouble when we play them here, but down in their own backyard they can be murder," squash coach John Conroy remarked in anticipation of tomorrow's match with the midshipmen at Annapolis.
Conroy was referring to the reputation Navy teams have for being aggressive. Navy squads, whether they play football, baseball, squash or tiddlywinks, are noted for their fierce competitive desire.
Moreover, when they play at home, they always have a partial crowd of rooters eager to razz the opponent.
Navy squads are so notorious that the Yale and Harvard squash teams used to play the midshipmen but gave up a few years ago. [...]
[...] If he is afraid that members will stop paying their dues and just go to the free speeches, he has just as little confidence in them. Besides, Whig-Clio can always have an annual tiddlywinks tournament open to members only to boost attendan[c]e by members. [...]
Don't get discouraged. Remember that—in spite of what the Admissions Office boasts—everyone in your class is not a high-powered genius designed to make you feel utterly inferior. There may not even be one. But there are people who are both interesting and interested—in flying, philosophy, frisbee, computers, bread-making, tiddly winks, international relations, all-night bull sessions, sports, sex, selling refrigerators, retarded children, yoga, theater, beer bashes, revolutionary history, poetry, swimming in fountains, harps, student government, jazz, Star Trek, journalism, quiet walks through unspoiled woods, mass transit, and much more. However far-fetched your interest, there's probably somebody around who is up for doing or discussing it with you. And your time, perhaps for the first time in your life, is your own.
To the Chairman:
We resent your implication that we're not athletically vigorous enough to deserve Rhodes Scholarships. We both turned down tiddlywinks fellowships at other universities in order to attend Princeton.
Nick "Bubba" Ulanov '79
Dan "Monster Mash" Case '79
(This is it, my last arts calendar. When I think of how I bankrupted the Ultimate Tiddlywinks team when I dumped on their showing of The Mini-Skirt Mob, it warms my sadistic little heart. Anyway, be sure to get your notices for the calendar to 48 University Place by 2 p.m. Thursdays, if you want your event listed.)
CHEERLEADERS — We need more Cheerleaders. And pretty ones. Lots of 'em. Yeah. (36-16-36)
COACHING CLINIC — Frank Navarro Memorial Coaching Clinic will be held Fri., Jan. 24. Recommended for Coaches who feel at risk due to their team's seasonal performance. (24)
VARSITY TIDDLYWINKS — Tryouts for the Men's team will be held on Jan. 23 in Dillon Gym, starting at 4:30 p.m. Women's team tryouts have been postponed until Feb. and will be held in Jadwin. (23)
SAILING TEAM — Practice every day at 1:30 p.m. On Lake Carnegie. Bring ice skates. Thurs., Fri. practices at 2:30 p.m. Meet in front of WWS after practice to discuss where practice is the next day. (22)
That's right. Yesterday the men's squash, crew, tiddlywinks, bocceball, or maybe it was the equestrian team who won their match. Anyway it wasn't a real sport—it was one of those sports the Ivy League Schools are actually good at. The Tigers defeated Yale, no Harvard, no wait, Penn State!! NO, NO just kidding, it was an Ivy League pole-up-the-ass institution. Well congratulations, its really great, we're so so happy, rah rah rah.
The truth is the staff here at the Prince has just ran out of ways to make the above seem interesting. Its always the same thing every day, every week, every year. So the staff here at the Prince has decided to cut out the sports section until the basketball team wins an NCAA game or until hell freezes over, which is redundant, sorry. We will replace it by moving the crossword puzzle to the back page and adding a daily bridge column. This is what you all like; were not stupid You're all nerds! You don't even read the sports—admit it. You're favorite part is the crossword puzzle. You like showing off how smart you are and expanding your vocabulary. Don'teven bother writing in your letters of complaint, because we know you really like it—you pencil neck geeks.
As for freshmen, first-year women likely will get to attend these events in the arms of a dreamy — or desperate — upperclass guy, thanks to Princeton's still-skewed gender ratio. First-year guys, however, should seek other entertainment for the weekend, such as Tiddlywinks or Twister.
As for you frosh, first-year women will likely get to attend these events in the arms of a dreamy — or desperate — upperclass guy, thanks to Princeton's unbalanced gender ratio. First-year guys, however, should seek other entertainment for the weekend, like tiddlywinks or Twister.
As for you frosh, first-year women will likely get to attend these events in the arms of a dreamy — or desperate — upperclass guy, thanks to Princeton's gender ratio. First-year guys, however, should seek other entertainment tor the weekend, like tiddlywinks or Twister.
As for freshmen, first-year women likely will get to attend these events in the arms of a dreamy — or desperate — upperclass guy, thanks to Princeton's still-skewed gender ratio. First-year guys, however, should seek other entertainment for the weekend, such as Tiddlywinks or Twister.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Nassau Herald.
Somewhere up in the Pennsylvanian mountains Doc McCurdy fell in with an entertaining gentleman, Brown, I believe, he called himself. Before long Doc was graphically describing a row of brownstone fronts that he owned in Youngstown, while Brown in turn told Doc how some years ago he had seen Princeton defeat Oxford at Tiddledy Winks. This was enough to arouse anyone's suspicions; but remember that Doc was only a Freshman and besides, Brown was paying for them.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Provi.
ENTRANT [-] EVENT [-] COMMENTS
Olive Thacher [-] Tiddledy-winks [-] Won by forty winks
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Black and Gold.
Tidd L. E. Wink - Captain
Lotta Kale - Assistant Captain
Crowell - Coach
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Spectre.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Sophian.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Cactus.
6. No card playing, dancing, or other rough stuff is tolerated. Tiddledy Winks and Jack Straws may be played until 8:00 p.m. Dominoes not permitted, and each newcomer will be searched to see that she has none.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Mustang Stampede.
(see Los Angeles Times, 27 January 1994)
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Tufts College Graduate.
For him there then begins a life so strenuous that by comparison the hard fought game in which he participated when in college assumes the importance of a game of tiddledy-winks.
Toggle showing 5 tiddlywinks references for Howitzer.
At one time he threatened to get interested in life and won his "A" by being the most promising back in Eastern football—but the Tufts game broke his knee and the promise. Now Ike must content himself with tea, tiddledywinks, and talk, at all of which he excels.
And finally, of course, comes the "End Man."
JOHN STUDENT OFFICER ZOOID*
West Point, N. Y
Zooey, S. O., S. O. L.
If you would know the history of this man's Kayet days, read over the list of activities joined hereto, and note the medals on that manly chest—the Didy Pin, the Northfield medal, and the W. W. Barton Memorial, awarded each year to the most distinguished gumstick in the Corps. No wonder that when first class camp came along (which it never did) he hauled off First Captaincy without a kick even from Joe Dalbey. We might add that he and McAuliffe are still tied for the tiddlywinks title.
But it is not these material glories of life that I want to emphasize. It is the inner man, revealed to so few; the clear sense of duty; the faith in his fellows; the trust in divine inspiration. All of these go to make a side of " Zooey" known to but few men, and those who have penetrated his reserve prize highly the honor they have won. Why, "S. O." would almost rather lose a tenth than a friend.
"S. O. L." boned successively the Elite, the Field, the Coast, the Doughboys, and the Philipine Scouts. Finally he put in for Jim Europe's Jazz Band. Whatever branch he gets, will find him a live and efficient crapshooter and one of the keenest files that ever went through the shoots.
* "Zooid"—A low form of animal life. -Webster.
* * Ask Davidson
Massive biceps, huge deltoids, and tremendous torsos throb with life. [...] Basketabll, horse shoes. tiddly winks or boxing find these mighty warriors ready for instant competition with any aggregation.
An article about Dwight David Eisenhower including a replica of his page from the 1915 Howitzer yearbook from which the following appears.
At one time he threatened to get interested in life and won his "A" by being the most promising back in Eastern football—but the Tufts game broke his knee and the promise. Now Ike must content himself with tea, tiddledywinks, and talk, at all of which he excels.
The Cummings High Tiddlywinks champ traveled north to a new world and became a Fighting Cock.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for The Lucky Bag.
ROBERT KING JOHNSTON
Aberdeen, S. D.
He did not limit his activities to battering opponents around the gridiron and drowning them in the natatorium, but later became expert in tiddledy winks.
RICHARD EUGENE NICHOLS
San Bernardino, Cal.
["]WELL, I guess we sure took those guys over again."
"In what?"
"Tiddley Winks—this makes the third Sunday straight we've beat them mugs from the zero deck—are we good? Heh! Heh!"
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Commodore.
[Wm.] Dismukes and Laird Smith are better known as exponents of tidley-winks, but their entrance into the context is being received with much fervor.
Toggle showing 2 tiddlywinks references for The Vassar Chronicle.
"Dessert is soy bean cottage pudding whip with custard sauce," I suggested.
"Bring six desserts and nine apples."
I leaped away and brought back oranges.
I nuzzled up to my table. It was grand to be heart-beat-close again. They had broken all of the dishes playing tiddly-winks, so that I had only to clear the broken bifs and a few odd glasses away.
- D.A.: (to accused) Have you ever played tiddley-winks at dawn while sitting in the foyer of the Taj Mahal?
- Accused: (twitching) Noooo.
- D.A.: Obviously a neglected child.
Toggle showing 12 tiddlywinks references for The Vassar Miscellany News.
Being the letters received by Miss Mary Brown of Vassar, '9-, after a series of visits from her friends."
From the Teacher who Prepared Her for College.
Pelton Preparatory School
April 12th, 1897.
My Dear Mary:
In my day the library was a place for study and not for idle jesting. I was horrified to see the girls playing tiddledy winks across the history alcove table. But it did not seem much to disturb the other students present, for two or three were trying to see which of them could come nearest to whistling without making a noise. lean understand how the faculty might have occasion to call across the library to one another, but for the girls to make it such a sportive place is quite inexcusable. [...]
Your affectionate teacher,
Katharine Foster.
Campus Chat takes pleasure in announcing the opening of the Bide-A-Wee Day Nursery for Prom-men, (in the Eleanor Conservatory). Leave your Week-End Sunshine with us by the day or hour. Tired hostesses may run off campus for the revivifying marcel, or prepare for that post-prom written in the quid of the library, while their guests are playing happily amidst the flowers with others of their kind under our chaperonage. Maj Jong, Canfield. Jack Straws, Crap, and Tiddledy Winks will he supplied to keep our charges happy. Several picture puzzles, hard enough to be interesting, have been ordered. Crackers and milk will be served at a slightly increased rate, if desired. Terms upon application.
- Their nasty table manners
- Make everybody stare
- Play tiddly winks and jack straws
- With college silverware.
'Mid cheers of the spectators, the Tiddledy Winks Varsity camer running out on to the field for its game with the Troubadors last Friday afternoon. Rough play and constant fouling marked the game throughout, but the Varsity managed to forge ahead in the last fifth and come out victors with a hundred point lead.
Of the Varsity backwards, Houghton played the most outstanding game, for it was she who made the greatest number of fouls. Particularly effective was her left undercut that caught the umpire, Margaretta Tuttle '27, in the ear and knocked her out. Her teamwork with Nichols, last year's All-American left out, was poor, however. Both players tended to hog the wink. The scenters, Kempner and Palmer, were potent on the defense. Time and again the Troubadours would come charging down the court. But the scenters were there and the Varsity line would hold. Neville and Hooper, the waybacks, were not playing up to their usual form, though Neville was skillful at tipping the wink to her teammates.
The referees were Mack and Frey. The final score was out of sight. The battle array was
- Varsity - Master Singers
- N. Houghton - B - H. Noughton
- C. NIchols - B - N. Cichols
- C. Kempner - S - K. Cempner
- E. Palmer - S - P. Ealmer
- B. Neville - W - N. Beville
- G. Hooper - W - H. Gooper
Anything can happen in a game nf tiddleywinks with your favorite faculty! You won't want to miss the Student-Faculty showdown in the gym Thursday evening. Basketball for the more athletic —other games to suit the milder personality. Sign now on the lists in Main corridor for bridge and games.
And in Buck Roger's era, when undergraduates in spun glass tights play Blind Man's Buff with their professors, they shall no doubt remember us and the "play tiddley winks with the faculty" inaugural.
Student this week were also active in the civil rights movement. The Northern Student Movement sponsored a nationwide demonstration on election day. Student groups were placed near each polling place where they distributed information regarding SNCC. They also collected "voluntary poll taxes" to finannce [sic] SNCC.
On the light side of things, the Mount Holyoke Undergraduate Tiddlywinks Society (MHUTS) has challenged Smith College to a tiddlywinks contest. Although the rules of both colleges prohibit intercollegiate athletic competition, everyone, including Smith's President Mendenhall seems most enthusiastic.
I didn't get anything I wanted. I listened to the girl in front of me complain how she was stuck with the last card from the English class I most wanted in the world. I tried to feel sympathetic. Instead of French I could only get Ancient Zwahili and instead of Art History I am taking Basic Finger Painting 101. I had wanted a Phys. Ed class but could only get Tiddly Winks.
Other sports have room for both kinds of athletes. Inner-tube water polo, a personal favorite, has a wide range of intensity levels.
Don't see anything you like? Then start something new. All it takes is a little time, a little effort, and a little imagination. I'd like to see a Capture-the-Flag league started. I seem to remember a bowling club last year that could have done more. How about wrestling? Boxing? Archery? Tiddlywinks? Croquet? Cricket? These are just a few off the top of my head. Add to that list what you will, and then go try and start it up.
Let's just say, for argument sake, that there is not a single sport in the world that you would voluntarily take part in. The idea of exercising makes you want to faint. Believe it or not, there is still hope for you.
The Rugby team dropped a scrimmage this past Sunday against West Point. The crowd support was tremendous, despite the loss. Next week, among the residue in "Smoke From the Pipe," read about Piper's exploits in underwater tiddly winks… I know I can't wait.
Oh, Bruce. If you only knew the skill it takes to place a small, plastic tiddly wink into a cup while submerged beneath twenty feet of water. It makes my head swim just thinking about it (pun fully intended).
Tuesday. Dec.11
So, its the last day of classes. What the hell are you doing to celebrate? I highly suggest a large tournament of group tiddlywinks! The timeless classic is sure winner for any end of semester party! Just try not to loose the brightly colored plastic disks under your couch, or in your beer!
Toggle showing 3 tiddlywinks references for Vassar Quarterly.
Some enthusiastic graduates can spot a college woman in any gathering and leap upon her at once. The middle-aged athletes are best at this, and come prepared with statistics on the interclass games in basket-ball, Indian clubs, and tiddly winks.
Toggle showing 4 tiddlywinks references for The Cadet.
Johnny Davis, modest and unassuming resident of P-1, upset all the latest dope by emerging champion of Barracks' newest and most spectacular indoor sport. In wresting the Tiddledy Winks Title from "Skinny" Hanks, Davis has pulled one of the greatest upsets in the history of the tournament. ThirtyNine Suite was offering 3 to 2 odds on Hanks. Just before the final bout they had dropped to 6 to 5.
Headline: Smokes Any Old Cigarette
When interviewed by a Cadet report, Davis confidentially admitted that he would smoke any brand of "fag" that he could bum and that he wasn't at all particular what kind of soap his roommates furnished. He attributes his phenomenal rise to perserverance [sic] and the wonderful training he received shining shoes just previous to make-overs. He believes the faculty responsible for his conditioning. He "drop 'em dead" thumb was no doubt developed while acting in the capacity of First Sergeant of D Co.
"Skinny" Hanks, runner up, says, "I did my best but I'm afraid it was just another case of brain triumphing over brawn." Beamer, winner of the Booby Prize, meekly whispers, "What does that make me?"
Headline: Plans Trip To L-1.
Manager Dick Herron of the Suite T. W. A., has announced that his protege will soon prove himself a fighting champion by meeting the winner of the J. Stuart White Wink Association on his own table sometime next week. Inspector Mitchell will see that the room is put in ship-shape condition for the occasion. P. J. Hunter, who has been training secretly in the arched realms of North Barracks' Underworld, will be the probable opponent. This is almost assured since R. A. Wright, the Johnstown Terror, has withdrawn his name from the tournament. He gives as his reason the lack of time, but after watching him go through the O-P-Q-1 Tournament with only one victory, we are forced to the irresistible conclusion that Electricity formulas fail to cope with the dexterity of a natural thumb artist like our erstwhile first sergeant. "Taz" Thompson, who was awarded the consolation prize in the Suite Contests, will be on the bench. "Taz" says, "leave good enough alone, especially when a reputation is involved." When asked for his opinion on the matter, the Regimental Adjutant, said: "I may not be able to tiddledy, but I venture the assertion that "Beat 'em off with a stick" is still champion winker.
Now that the Tiddledy Winks com-plex is fast disappearing and the inteligensia no longer play chess, the up-to-the-minute Keydet dons his track pants, boxing trunks, or striped underwear and dashes out on the Parade Ground were he meets several more of his species and indulges in the ancient and honorable game of La Crosse. These scantily clad athletes rushing about with apparently unexaustible energy are getting themselves in the pink of condition for the fall Grid season. La crosse is undeniably a game that will put a man in tip-top shape for the most grueling of foot-ball schedules. Chasing the elusive pellet with webbed hock[e]y stick is no game for Algernon. However because of the splendid equipment and excellent coaching the squad has suffered no casualties.
Every year some new indoor sport comes out in our Barracks. Last year we saw the First Class hold tiddledy-winks championships, but this year the Second Class is making a substantial bid for the honors in a gum chewing contest that "Fire-top Rosy" Jimmy Martin, is planning to hold
The Irbeefian plan of deceiving innocence may have worked, it almost did, except that it was "almost" innocent in nature, and as everyone knows: "Almost" only counts in horseshoes, hand grenades, tiddlywinks with manhole covers, atom bombs, and VD.
Student-run publication
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Old Gold and Black.
Word has it on the Oxford campus that their World Champion Tiddlywink team may face defeat at the hands of the Harvard team. The Oxonians, who have been winking earnestly since 1955, defeated 25 teams including the Harvard winkers last year. Since that tourney, the Harvard team has been defeating all comers including their traditional Ivy-league rivals.
For those not in the know, tiddlywinks was originally a child[']s game which uses a large plastic disk to snap smaller disks into a cup, but in the hands of the more or less grown-up collegians, the game has become greatly complicated and has acquired a language and tradition of its own.
The major shots of tiddiywinks are the squidge and the squop. The squidge, basic winking shot in Tiddlywinks, is the tiddling of the disk into the tiddlepot. The squop is the crucial defensive maneuver which immobilizes an opponent by landing your disk on top of his.
One last note about this sport, they even have cheerleaders for the tourneys.
Can't you just Imagine cheerleaders Mary, Pam, Betsy, Kathy, Libby, and Ann jumping up and down hollering, "Tiddle the wink!"
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Record.
Published by the Senior Class
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Woodrow Wilson.
EDWARD KIMBALL CORBETT (Ed) Newscasters Club; Varsity Basketball; J.V. Basketball; Intramural Sports. A fabulous fellow… has an unusual expression—"Itcheeboo,'… not impressed by girls who think they're queens… favors basketball and tiddlywinks…, aims to be a retired millionaire with a High Fi set and a sports car… next—Brigham Young University in Utah.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Xavier University News.
Amusement for the children was provided by Rev. Frederick N. Miller, S.J., who donned the greasepaint and costume of the circus clown. Miller convulsed kiddies with laughter by allowing himself to be hit in the face with a twelve pound beef liver wielded by Louie Feldhouse, former anchor man on the Rabbit Hash tiddledy-winks team.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for The Xavier University Newswire.
At a Pentagon news conference, Rumsfeld hinted that Bush has new information that Iraq is close to developing a nuclear weapon, but the defense secretary declined to elaborate.
"Oh, I think I'll leave that for the coming days and weeks," Rumsfeld said. "We know some other things, but those are the kinds of things that would come out if and when the president decides that he thinks it's appropriate."
"To the extent that they have kept their nuclear scientists together and working on these efforts, one has to assume they have not been playing tiddly winks, that they have been focusing on nuclear weapons," he said.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Yale Alumni Magazine.
[...] How does one go from being a kid who naively enjoys leafing through Bartlett's to being the self-appointed avenger who resolves to supersede it? "When I was in my early twenties," Shapiro said, "I was on the tiddlywinks team at MIT, and wasn't very good, but I became the town historian of tiddlywinks." He smiled slightly, to acknowledge how pitch-perfectly dweeby that sounded. "At some point I found the Oxford English Dictionary, and tried to trace the word's origins. The OED said 1894. By then I was a law student at Harvard, a very indifferent one. I spent my time at Widener Library, which had a good collection of books on sports and games. I found a book with an article on tiddlywinks from 1890. Now, I had thought the OED was perfect. I didn't understand. But I sent the new information to them, and they wrote back to say thank you." He went on to find other sports and games references that were earlier than the earliest uses listed in the OED, then moved on to other subjects and other research problems, including quotations.
Toggle showing 1 tiddlywinks reference for Yale Bulletin.
While the Oxford English Dictionary dated the word to 1894, Shapiro discovered a book published in 1890 that contained an article on tiddlywinks.
Toggle showing 34 tiddlywinks references for Yale Daily News.
The following songs have been chosen for use at the remaining football games of the season:
[...]
I.
Air—"Mr. Dooley"
- When Johnny (the Tiger) was an infant in the Harvard (Princeton) nursery,
- He dreamt of what a famous name his own was sure to be;
- He'd tackle all his baby dolls and punt his tiddledy-winks,
- And tangle up his baby self into a thousand kinks!
His piece de resistance was a sweater with an enormous "A" on the front, which he had won as tiddle de winxing champion of Asheville School.
Be that as it may, it was only after a prodigious expenditure of energy that I learned from a janitor that they do have some diversions, such as tiddledy-winks, ring-around-Rosie, and a game original with them called "Throwing the sugar, or putting a dull finish on Harty's marble top," and other similar parlor tricks too numerous and monotonous to catalogue.
Unless we prepare ourselves for service in time of war, we may as well give up football, baseball, and all else and take up tiddly-winks instead, as our national pastime.
"Mercy, Percy!" exclaimed Algernon, paling. "Jerry didn't bring us our Morning Goom—and Prof. Lichnowsky insists that we come prepared for a current events paper next hour. Oh dear! What shall I do?
Algy had jumped from his cosy corner, while Bocaccio fell on the hearth unheeded.
"Oh, and gracious!" he moaned. "Your forgetfulness reminds me. I fear that I am inexpressibly culpable. I forgot to attend the meeting of the Intercollegiate Tiddledewinks Club last night—and I was to represent Yale. I'm the only heeler in the tiddledewinks competition. What shall I say?"
"Wot's all dis rumptions about, young gentlemen?" queried Jake the Janitor, poking in his head at the door.
Choking a temptuous sob, Percy told him.
Jake disappeared and presently reappeared, with a copy of the NEWS dangling in one hand, a Freshman in the other. With a scream, Percival seized the paper.
"Eureka!" he ejaculated. "I am saved."
Meanwhile, Algernon darted around him, searching.
"They have everything—everything—but not me Tiddledewinks," he moaned…
"Whatcha lookin' for?" spoke up 1923. "If it's the account of the Tiddledewinks Association meeting, there's an article I wrote up about it in the dead dope basket at the News office. I got a permission on it, but they're running so much football news and other dope the Managing Editor said there wasn't room for it. I'll get it for you. But first—come to life—why hasn't each of you a NEWS of your own?"
MORAL: DON'T AWAIT AN EMERGENCY
SUBSCRIBE NOW
YALE DAILY NEWS
Name | What Do You Think of College Men? | What Type of College Men Do You Admire Most? (If any) | What is your favorite hobby? | Why Do You Like or Dislike College Audiences? | Favorite expression (Please be conservative) | |
Elinor Banks | Lowsy | With big eyes | Tiddly-winks | Never satisfied | Let 'em sleep |
If you rely on off hand comments of a superior upperclassman, you will find that there is only one college that's worth living in, socially or intellectually or because it had the best tiddle-ly-winks team last year.
For squash, golf, tennis, baseball, swimming, polo, or tiddly-winks, try the Co-op.
He clasped the pen firmly in his hand and wrote: "Name" Alphonse… nope, van Windermeer, Alphonse G.; Education Two years at Yale; Previous work experience: Caddying for my father in the Meadowlark Club's annual Kicker's Tournament, head of refreshment committee for prep school dance, and kitchen police duty at Camp O-Watta-Watta; Any skills possessed by draftee that might aid in classification: I can play any pinball machine going for no more than a quarter a night, and was tiddly-winks champion in prep school."
He won the New England tiddlywinks championship.
[...] Their secretary prepares the minutes of the meeting for publication in the News on Wednesday, then," then review will continue, "the men will retire to the game room for a bit of ping pong or tiddly winks."
In a fiercely fought marathon Cambridge outwinked Oxford for the world tiddlywinks champinoship yesterday. The thumbs of the Cambridge warriors were insured for $700 by Lloyds of London.
Even then, however, Madison Avenue methods are sometimes required, as with the recent Class Tiddlywinks Fund. It takes a real professional shill job to get 100 contribution to a 25th Anniversary Tiddlywinks Tournament, even one with gold tiddlies.
[...]
Who's "the main who goes out and makes the contacts," (quote from high Unniversity fundraiser)? Who's made the Tiddlywinks Fund part of him (another quote) like a tumor already?
[...]
GYGES: Hi, Cratch. Curveball asked me to talk to you about joining the Tiddlywinks Team. It's really rather an exciting concept…
To the Chairman of the NEWS:
In spite of strong suspecisions that an instituttion which cannot withstand satire has an inevitable stench of phoniness, I plan to chip in on the Class Tiddlywinks fund because I see some merit independent of its "Big Sell" and the pomosity of Tuesday's letters. But as for "responsible journalism" I would maintain that "Among the Trumpets" was a service to the community, and my only fear is that with society elections imminent, your trumpets may become muted. Please, please, keep it up! There are so many more overgassed balloons to be deflated here.
I also heeled WYBC for two weeks, helped stage the recent sit-in protests at fraternity bars for the Yale chapter of the National Association of Egalitarian Weenies, and played left thumb for the Trumbull JV Tiddly-Winks squad.
All Editors and Heelers—Harvard has challenged NEWS to tiddlywinks match in Cambridge Saturday morning. All volunteers sign up on sheet on Business Office door.
All Editors and Heelers—Harvard has challenged NEWS to tiddlywinks match in Cambridge Saturday morning at 10. Sign up on sheet on business office door.
Seeking stiffer opposition after the easy bladderball victory (65-0-0-0) the white knights of the YALE DAILY NEWS will meet the Harvard Gargoyle tiddlywink contingent Saturday morning at 10.
The Gargoyle claims to be the only humor magazine at Harvard, "since the Lampoon has turned to women's fashions." According to Jim Parry, erstwhile captain of the Crimson team, the Gargoyle has a string of nine intercollegiate victories.
Sports Illustrated Attends
Squads from Cornell, Dartmouth, Columbia, Mount Holyoke, and Simmons, among others, have fallen before the Harvard thumbnail. Sports Illustrated has promised a correspondent to cover the contest. A crowd of about 50 people is expected to watch the NEWS victory in [sic original ="Philips" correct="Phillips"]-Brooks House.
Although the Lucemen have never participated in a tiddleywinks contest, heelers and editors alike have trained assiduously for the past week. The high moguls have adapted the now famous "strike low and strike often" bladderball attack to the milder game.
To Attempt Dirty Play
Reliable sources have informed the NEWS that their evil opponents will attempt to pass ringers as Gargoyle members. Needless to say such tactics are bound to prove fruitless when the humorists are squopped by the overpowering wedge plays of the valiant NEWS squad.
Truro S. Paepke, left-tiddle on the "team of the century" has reported that his squad is a sure bet to win. Affirming this opinion, the Dixwell Avenue gambling syndicate announced that they had ruled Saturday[']s game no contest. No wagers will be accepted.
At half-time, the Harvard band will entertain the spectators while both squads rest in their respective dressing rooms. The hapless Gargoyle team is expected to concede defeat at this point.
YALE DAILY NEWS—65
Harvard Crimson—0
[Note: this is a fictitious result. The Yale Daily News played Harvard's Gargoyle and lost 10-32.]The YALE DAILY NEWS once again proved its long-established superiority in the publishing field this weekend by scooping the Harvard Crimson with a post-game extra. The NEWSmen were foiled, however, in an attempt to crack into intercollegiate athletic competition, falling before the Harvard Gargoyle 21-7 is tiddlywinks Saturday morning.
The special edition was published during the fourth quarter and carried a short story on The Game with the final score. The extra was prepared in advance, except for the last-minute items which were printed in red ink with a Chandler and Price pilot letterpress in a station wagon outside the Stadium.
Secret Plans
Although it had kept plans for the extra secret for weeks, the NEWS found itself in a race with the Crimson, which independently employed NEWS strategy. All week the Harvard paper had warned its Cambridge subscribers of an alleged NEWS parody of the Crimson. But the Harvard staff had no inkling of the real NEWS plans.
Distribution began when the final gun sounded. Heelers and editors were stationed at the main bridge over the Charles. The departing crowds received copies of the NEWS extra 20 minutes before tardy Crimson newsboys arrived on the scene.
Some 500 issues were printed and handed out in the half hour following the game when the crowds were thickest. The Crimson eventually published over 4,000 copies, but distribution occurred mainly in Cambridge an hour later.
Saturday morning, Frederic L. Ballard Jr., president of the Crimson>, revealed the complete plans for his afternoon publishing venture to NEWS editors. At the time, Ballard still suspected a Yale parody of his paper. He congratulated the NEWS after the game, commenting, "It was a fine job; you really fooled us."
The idea for an away-game special edition originated with Franklin D. Roosevelt, president of the Crimson in 1903. In that year, according to the New York Times, President Roosevelt carried a handpress into the Yale Bowl and published an edition of the Crimson "nine seconds before copies of the YALE DAILY NEWS arrived on the scene."
Copies of the NEWS extra were given to reporters in the Stadium press box. The professionals were confused by the lightning-like efficiency of the NEWS staff; WBZ (Boston) attributed the NEWS feat to the Crimson, and the Boston Herald ascribed it to the Yale Record.
Daily Practices
In the tiddlywinks match, the NEWSmen were overpowered by the skillful shooting of the Gargoyle squad. Gargoyle members admitted that daily practices had been held at Soldiers Field since early September. In contrast to the crass professionalism of their opponents, the four members of the Blue team had never touched a squidger before Saturday morning.
Two rounds were played, the two two-man NEWS teams facing different opponents each time. Scoring was four points for first place, two for second, and one for third.
Gargoyle rooters were taken aback in the first round as the Blue jumped into a 4-3 lead. The Harvard magazine had previously won nine straight contests without being seriously threatened.
The NEWS squidgers were unable to maintain their advantage, however. Harvard's greater experience enabled them to outplay the Blue tactically. Despite several spectacular long distance scores which evoked cheers even from the partisan crowd, the NEWS could not match the Gargoyle in the short game. Harvard gained first and second in the next three rounds to take a 21-7 decision.
The NEWS regrets to announce a slight error in the account of the tiddlywinks contest between the Harvard Gargoyle and the Yale Daily News in yesterday's issue. The final score was 32-10 in favor of the Gargoyle rather than the 21-7 score announced previously. The score stood at 21-7 when sherry was served to the players and spectators; after this point many persons seemed to lose interest.
To the Chairman of the NEWS:
In recognition of the growing popularity of the game of Tiddly Winks, the Ferris Booth Hall Board of Managers is sponsoring the first Ivy League - Seven College Conference Tiddly Winks Tournament. The Tournament will be help in Ferris Booth Hall on Saturday afternoon, December 8, 1962.
Each school may enter no more than two teams, two members comprising a team. The entrance fee for each team, $3, is payable on arrival and will cover the costs of equipment and prizes. A prompt entry will facilitate our plans for an exciting afternoon.
- Respectfully,
- Alan Charney
- Intercollegiate Affairs
- Board of Managers
- 209 Ferris Booth Hall
- Columbia College
- New York 22, NY.
The Yale Daily NEWS puts two unbeaten records on the line tomorrow as it meets underdog Harvard rivals in tiddlywinks and touch football.
The NEWS winkers will clash with the Harvard Gargoyle squad in Phillips House at 10.
At the same time, touch football legions from the NEWS and the Harvard Crimson will wend their way from the Crimson building at 14 Plympton Street to an undisclosed destination for the game.
Because of traditional drubbings in both sports at the hands of the NEWS, the Harvard contingents reportedly hesitated before throwing down the glove (winks) and garter (football).
As it turned out, the NEWS did receive the traditional challenges, both on the same day. They were surreptitiously concealed in a copy of Redbook magazine mailed from Wholyoke Center in Cambridge. The package was marked "Please do not open until Sunday, November 22."
Despite the Harvard Gargoyle's allegedly unblemished record, the NEWS will field a winks team as strong as any in the world. The names of the starting four have not been release by captain and trow-back David "Whizzer" Narot, but word has leaked out from 202 York Street that this is because it is feared the Gargoyle might rescind the invitation.
The controversial new substitution rule has forced the NEWS to abandon the two-platoon system which wore down all its pre- vious tiddlywinks foes. To compensate for this loss, the Elis have developed a small but speedy squad headed by quarterback Y. A. Tiddly, who is famous for bootlegging the tiddlywink and flipping game winning passes to flakkerback Myron "Move" Wink. All-Ivy off-tackle Perry Winkstrom will not participate.
On the griddlyiron, the Crimson forces are expected to put up a brave front for the first three plays from scrimmage, until quickback Al "Sharpie" Sharp can duck around the Crimson bench and balance their unbalanced line. Meanwhile flailerback Mark "The Hammer" Foster is expected to be making passes at the Crimson's second team.
Fresh from an 18-12 rout of the Daily Princetonian last Saturday, the NEWS griddrs are riding hight atop Ivy League standings. The Crimson, which is recovering from a bad issue Dartmouth weekend, seems likely to fold soon after the NEWS racks up its seventeenth tally at the toes of kickback Bain "Ballyhoo" Cowell.
However, as rock-ribbed center Zick "Rock" Rubin said of the NEWS team late Thursday night, "We are not overconfident."
CAMBRIDGE, MASS., Nov. 21—
It has been observed that the annual tiddlywinks affair between the Yale Daily NEWS and the Harvard Gargoyle is rivaled for color, pageantry, and high adventure only by the Monaco Grand Prix, the Winter Olympics, and the Billy Goat Hollow One-Legged Rooster Race.
Today's confrontation at Phillips Brooks House lived up to its reputation.
The NEWS squad, forced at the last minute to play without its first-string line, sent the partisan crowed into a frenzy as it withstood barrage after barrage before succumbing to the Harvards.
The final score was 33 to 9.
Delicate Squops
In 1962, the NEWS lost 21 to 10. "Even back then it ws fun," said an old NEWS squidger.
Today's NEWS squad repeatedly brought the crowd screaming to its feet with its hammer squidgers, its delicate squops, and its throw-back offense.
One Radcliffe cheerleader fainted as she chanted with fists clenched the Gargoyl cheer:
"Block that squop! Block that squop!
It was infinitely more exciting that I thought it would be," breathed a Smithie named June. "Best thing I've seen since our soccer team downed Amherst."
Creeping Professionalism
NEWS Chairman Alexander E. Sharp II assailed the Gargoylr for creeping professionalism and promised that the result of the match would be appealed to the US Track and Field Federation.
Said Sharp:
"They are a fine tiddlywinks team which just happens to put out a lousy humor magazine on the side.
The pattern of the match was decided early, as the well-practiced Harvards easily defeated the NEWS's second team.
But the NEWS, led by star defenseman George Brown, nearly squopped its way to victory on Table No. 1.
Superior bench strength on the part of the Crimson, however, made the difference.
"The Gargoyle? Gargoyle? said John Adler, Harvard, 1961. "What's that?"
This is the time of the year for Worry.
[...]
These types of worry, however, are known as Non-Essential Worry. To facilitate the growth of truly essential worry on campus during this merriest of all seasons, we herewith present the 1964 Christmas list of Suggested Essential Worries:
[...]
- Is intercollegiate tiddlywinks losing favor with the masses?
"With 21,000 University of Massachusetts students so close by, I could turn out more people than this for a game of tiddlywinks," he said.
Tanner has conceived a triumphant surprise, a sophisticated political film with verve and optimism. Rarely has a director played ideological tiddly-winks with such glee.
Chen said that "we don't feel we should be in the CUO [Committee on Undergraduate Organizations] pool. There is a difference between tiddlywinks organizations and minority groups. There is a serious misplacing of priorities."
In a park at the city's center, Kagan took copious notes on what would someday be Greek history. In a nearby villa, Blum and Morgan played tiddlywinks as they waited for America to be discovered.
I don’t know about you, but to me, nothing screams America like a waif, uneducated late-teen Czech model standing bravely in the wind, wrapped in old glory, just long enough to be captured on camera before the acute pang of heroin addiction beckons her back to her opium den, where the rest of her overpaid, vain, honky model friends are languidly ensconced playing tiddlywinks with pills of ecstasy.
And on a night when Gravel’s rival for the Democratic nomination, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, wrapped up key victories in the mid-Atlantic primaries, Gravel took aim at Obama’s campaign mantra.
“From the other candidates you hear a lot of fluff, a lot of tiddlywinks. They don’t take names and kick butt,” Gravel said in his speech, which was delivered without notes. “Here comes a politician running a campaign for president saying he is going to heal the country — we’re going to have blue skies and everyone is going to hold hands. That is unadulterated bullshit.”
Andre Schiffrin ’57 was one of the 14 seniors. He stood on the steps of Sterling Memorial Library — in the middle of a tiddlywinks tournamen—when he turned down a Skull and Bones tap. He was not happy with the state of the University.
“When I arrived at Yale in September of 195… it was hardly an exciting place intellectually,” Schiffrin wrote later in his autobiography. “Many of the students were interested mostly in drinking and fraternity life, and they worked just hard enough to obtain George W. Bush-style ‘gentleman’s C’s.’ ”
The following songs have been chosen for use at the remaining football games of the season:
[...]
I.
Air—"Mr. Dooley"
- When Johnny (the Tiger) was an infant in the Harvard (Princeton) nursery,
- He dreamt of what a famous name his own was sure to be;
- He'd tackle all his baby dolls and punt his tiddledy-winks,
- And tangle up his baby self into a thousand kinks!
His piece de resistance was a sweater with an enormous "A" on the front, which he had won as tiddle de winxing champion of Asheville School.
Be that as it may, it was only after a prodigious expenditure of energy that I learned from a janitor that they do have some diversions, such as tiddledy-winks, ring-around-Rosie, and a game original with them called "Throwing the sugar, or putting a dull finish on Harty's marble top," and other similar parlor tricks too numerous and monotonous to catalogue.
Unless we prepare ourselves for service in time of war, we may as well give up football, baseball, and all else and take up tiddly-winks instead, as our national pastime.
"Mercy, Percy!" exclaimed Algernon, paling. "Jerry didn't bring us our Morning Goom—and Prof. Lichnowsky insists that we come prepared for a current events paper next hour. Oh dear! What shall I do?
Algy had jumped from his cosy corner, while Bocaccio fell on the hearth unheeded.
"Oh, and gracious!" he moaned. "Your forgetfulness reminds me. I fear that I am inexpressibly culpable. I forgot to attend the meeting of the Intercollegiate Tiddledewinks Club last night—and I was to represent Yale. I'm the only heeler in the tiddledewinks competition. What shall I say?"
"Wot's all dis rumptions about, young gentlemen?" queried Jake the Janitor, poking in his head at the door.
Choking a temptuous sob, Percy told him.
Jake disappeared and presently reappeared, with a copy of the NEWS dangling in one hand, a Freshman in the other. With a scream, Percival seized the paper.
"Eureka!" he ejaculated. "I am saved."
Meanwhile, Algernon darted around him, searching.
"They have everything—everything—but not me Tiddledewinks," he moaned…
"Whatcha lookin' for?" spoke up 1923. "If it's the account of the Tiddledewinks Association meeting, there's an article I wrote up about it in the dead dope basket at the News office. I got a permission on it, but they're running so much football news and other dope the Managing Editor said there wasn't room for it. I'll get it for you. But first—come to life—why hasn't each of you a NEWS of your own?"
MORAL: DON'T AWAIT AN EMERGENCY
SUBSCRIBE NOW
YALE DAILY NEWS
Name | What Do You Think of College Men? | What Type of College Men Do You Admire Most? (If any) | What is your favorite hobby? | Why Do You Like or Dislike College Audiences? | Favorite expression (Please be conservative) | |
Elinor Banks | Lowsy | With big eyes | Tiddly-winks | Never satisfied | Let 'em sleep |
If you rely on off hand comments of a superior upperclassman, you will find that there is only one college that's worth living in, socially or intellectually or because it had the best tiddle-ly-winks team last year.
For squash, golf, tennis, baseball, swimming, polo, or tiddly-winks, try the Co-op.
He clasped the pen firmly in his hand and wrote: "Name" Alphonse… nope, van Windermeer, Alphonse G.; Education Two years at Yale; Previous work experience: Caddying for my father in the Meadowlark Club's annual Kicker's Tournament, head of refreshment committee for prep school dance, and kitchen police duty at Camp O-Watta-Watta; Any skills possessed by draftee that might aid in classification: I can play any pinball machine going for no more than a quarter a night, and was tiddly-winks champion in prep school."
He won the New England tiddlywinks championship.
[...] Their secretary prepares the minutes of the meeting for publication in the News on Wednesday, then," then review will continue, "the men will retire to the game room for a bit of ping pong or tiddly winks."
In a fiercely fought marathon Cambridge outwinked Oxford for the world tiddlywinks champinoship yesterday. The thumbs of the Cambridge warriors were insured for $700 by Lloyds of London.
Even then, however, Madison Avenue methods are sometimes required, as with the recent Class Tiddlywinks Fund. It takes a real professional shill job to get 100 contribution to a 25th Anniversary Tiddlywinks Tournament, even one with gold tiddlies.
[...]
Who's "the main who goes out and makes the contacts," (quote from high Unniversity fundraiser)? Who's made the Tiddlywinks Fund part of him (another quote) like a tumor already?
[...]
GYGES: Hi, Cratch. Curveball asked me to talk to you about joining the Tiddlywinks Team. It's really rather an exciting concept…
To the Chairman of the NEWS:
In spite of strong suspecisions that an instituttion which cannot withstand satire has an inevitable stench of phoniness, I plan to chip in on the Class Tiddlywinks fund because I see some merit independent of its "Big Sell" and the pomosity of Tuesday's letters. But as for "responsible journalism" I would maintain that "Among the Trumpets" was a service to the community, and my only fear is that with society elections imminent, your trumpets may become muted. Please, please, keep it up! There are so many more overgassed balloons to be deflated here.
I also heeled WYBC for two weeks, helped stage the recent sit-in protests at fraternity bars for the Yale chapter of the National Association of Egalitarian Weenies, and played left thumb for the Trumbull JV Tiddly-Winks squad.
All Editors and Heelers—Harvard has challenged NEWS to tiddlywinks match in Cambridge Saturday morning. All volunteers sign up on sheet on Business Office door.
All Editors and Heelers—Harvard has challenged NEWS to tiddlywinks match in Cambridge Saturday morning at 10. Sign up on sheet on business office door.
Seeking stiffer opposition after the easy bladderball victory (65-0-0-0) the white knights of the YALE DAILY NEWS will meet the Harvard Gargoyle tiddlywink contingent Saturday morning at 10.
The Gargoyle claims to be the only humor magazine at Harvard, "since the Lampoon has turned to women's fashions." According to Jim Parry, erstwhile captain of the Crimson team, the Gargoyle has a string of nine intercollegiate victories.
Sports Illustrated Attends
Squads from Cornell, Dartmouth, Columbia, Mount Holyoke, and Simmons, among others, have fallen before the Harvard thumbnail. Sports Illustrated has promised a correspondent to cover the contest. A crowd of about 50 people is expected to watch the NEWS victory in [sic original ="Philips" correct="Phillips"]-Brooks House.
Although the Lucemen have never participated in a tiddleywinks contest, heelers and editors alike have trained assiduously for the past week. The high moguls have adapted the now famous "strike low and strike often" bladderball attack to the milder game.
To Attempt Dirty Play
Reliable sources have informed the NEWS that their evil opponents will attempt to pass ringers as Gargoyle members. Needless to say such tactics are bound to prove fruitless when the humorists are squopped by the overpowering wedge plays of the valiant NEWS squad.
Truro S. Paepke, left-tiddle on the "team of the century" has reported that his squad is a sure bet to win. Affirming this opinion, the Dixwell Avenue gambling syndicate announced that they had ruled Saturday[']s game no contest. No wagers will be accepted.
At half-time, the Harvard band will entertain the spectators while both squads rest in their respective dressing rooms. The hapless Gargoyle team is expected to concede defeat at this point.
YALE DAILY NEWS—65
Harvard Crimson—0
[Note: this is a fictitious result. The Yale Daily News played Harvard's Gargoyle and lost 10-32.]The YALE DAILY NEWS once again proved its long-established superiority in the publishing field this weekend by scooping the Harvard Crimson with a post-game extra. The NEWSmen were foiled, however, in an attempt to crack into intercollegiate athletic competition, falling before the Harvard Gargoyle 21-7 is tiddlywinks Saturday morning.
The special edition was published during the fourth quarter and carried a short story on The Game with the final score. The extra was prepared in advance, except for the last-minute items which were printed in red ink with a Chandler and Price pilot letterpress in a station wagon outside the Stadium.
Secret Plans
Although it had kept plans for the extra secret for weeks, the NEWS found itself in a race with the Crimson, which independently employed NEWS strategy. All week the Harvard paper had warned its Cambridge subscribers of an alleged NEWS parody of the Crimson. But the Harvard staff had no inkling of the real NEWS plans.
Distribution began when the final gun sounded. Heelers and editors were stationed at the main bridge over the Charles. The departing crowds received copies of the NEWS extra 20 minutes before tardy Crimson newsboys arrived on the scene.
Some 500 issues were printed and handed out in the half hour following the game when the crowds were thickest. The Crimson eventually published over 4,000 copies, but distribution occurred mainly in Cambridge an hour later.
Saturday morning, Frederic L. Ballard Jr., president of the Crimson>, revealed the complete plans for his afternoon publishing venture to NEWS editors. At the time, Ballard still suspected a Yale parody of his paper. He congratulated the NEWS after the game, commenting, "It was a fine job; you really fooled us."
The idea for an away-game special edition originated with Franklin D. Roosevelt, president of the Crimson in 1903. In that year, according to the New York Times, President Roosevelt carried a handpress into the Yale Bowl and published an edition of the Crimson "nine seconds before copies of the YALE DAILY NEWS arrived on the scene."
Copies of the NEWS extra were given to reporters in the Stadium press box. The professionals were confused by the lightning-like efficiency of the NEWS staff; WBZ (Boston) attributed the NEWS feat to the Crimson, and the Boston Herald ascribed it to the Yale Record.
Daily Practices
In the tiddlywinks match, the NEWSmen were overpowered by the skillful shooting of the Gargoyle squad. Gargoyle members admitted that daily practices had been held at Soldiers Field since early September. In contrast to the crass professionalism of their opponents, the four members of the Blue team had never touched a squidger before Saturday morning.
Two rounds were played, the two two-man NEWS teams facing different opponents each time. Scoring was four points for first place, two for second, and one for third.
Gargoyle rooters were taken aback in the first round as the Blue jumped into a 4-3 lead. The Harvard magazine had previously won nine straight contests without being seriously threatened.
The NEWS squidgers were unable to maintain their advantage, however. Harvard's greater experience enabled them to outplay the Blue tactically. Despite several spectacular long distance scores which evoked cheers even from the partisan crowd, the NEWS could not match the Gargoyle in the short game. Harvard gained first and second in the next three rounds to take a 21-7 decision.
The NEWS regrets to announce a slight error in the account of the tiddlywinks contest between the Harvard Gargoyle and the Yale Daily News in yesterday's issue. The final score was 32-10 in favor of the Gargoyle rather than the 21-7 score announced previously. The score stood at 21-7 when sherry was served to the players and spectators; after this point many persons seemed to lose interest.
To the Chairman of the NEWS:
In recognition of the growing popularity of the game of Tiddly Winks, the Ferris Booth Hall Board of Managers is sponsoring the first Ivy League - Seven College Conference Tiddly Winks Tournament. The Tournament will be help in Ferris Booth Hall on Saturday afternoon, December 8, 1962.
Each school may enter no more than two teams, two members comprising a team. The entrance fee for each team, $3, is payable on arrival and will cover the costs of equipment and prizes. A prompt entry will facilitate our plans for an exciting afternoon.
- Respectfully,
- Alan Charney
- Intercollegiate Affairs
- Board of Managers
- 209 Ferris Booth Hall
- Columbia College
- New York 22, NY.
The Yale Daily NEWS puts two unbeaten records on the line tomorrow as it meets underdog Harvard rivals in tiddlywinks and touch football.
The NEWS winkers will clash with the Harvard Gargoyle squad in Phillips House at 10.
At the same time, touch football legions from the NEWS and the Harvard Crimson will wend their way from the Crimson building at 14 Plympton Street to an undisclosed destination for the game.
Because of traditional drubbings in both sports at the hands of the NEWS, the Harvard contingents reportedly hesitated before throwing down the glove (winks) and garter (football).
As it turned out, the NEWS did receive the traditional challenges, both on the same day. They were surreptitiously concealed in a copy of Redbook magazine mailed from Wholyoke Center in Cambridge. The package was marked "Please do not open until Sunday, November 22."
Despite the Harvard Gargoyle's allegedly unblemished record, the NEWS will field a winks team as strong as any in the world. The names of the starting four have not been release by captain and trow-back David "Whizzer" Narot, but word has leaked out from 202 York Street that this is because it is feared the Gargoyle might rescind the invitation.
The controversial new substitution rule has forced the NEWS to abandon the two-platoon system which wore down all its pre- vious tiddlywinks foes. To compensate for this loss, the Elis have developed a small but speedy squad headed by quarterback Y. A. Tiddly, who is famous for bootlegging the tiddlywink and flipping game winning passes to flakkerback Myron "Move" Wink. All-Ivy off-tackle Perry Winkstrom will not participate.
On the griddlyiron, the Crimson forces are expected to put up a brave front for the first three plays from scrimmage, until quickback Al "Sharpie" Sharp can duck around the Crimson bench and balance their unbalanced line. Meanwhile flailerback Mark "The Hammer" Foster is expected to be making passes at the Crimson's second team.
Fresh from an 18-12 rout of the Daily Princetonian last Saturday, the NEWS griddrs are riding hight atop Ivy League standings. The Crimson, which is recovering from a bad issue Dartmouth weekend, seems likely to fold soon after the NEWS racks up its seventeenth tally at the toes of kickback Bain "Ballyhoo" Cowell.
However, as rock-ribbed center Zick "Rock" Rubin said of the NEWS team late Thursday night, "We are not overconfident."
CAMBRIDGE, MASS., Nov. 21—
It has been observed that the annual tiddlywinks affair between the Yale Daily NEWS and the Harvard Gargoyle is rivaled for color, pageantry, and high adventure only by the Monaco Grand Prix, the Winter Olympics, and the Billy Goat Hollow One-Legged Rooster Race.
Today's confrontation at Phillips Brooks House lived up to its reputation.
The NEWS squad, forced at the last minute to play without its first-string line, sent the partisan crowed into a frenzy as it withstood barrage after barrage before succumbing to the Harvards.
The final score was 33 to 9.
Delicate Squops
In 1962, the NEWS lost 21 to 10. "Even back then it ws fun," said an old NEWS squidger.
Today's NEWS squad repeatedly brought the crowd screaming to its feet with its hammer squidgers, its delicate squops, and its throw-back offense.
One Radcliffe cheerleader fainted as she chanted with fists clenched the Gargoyl cheer:
"Block that squop! Block that squop!
It was infinitely more exciting that I thought it would be," breathed a Smithie named June. "Best thing I've seen since our soccer team downed Amherst."
Creeping Professionalism
NEWS Chairman Alexander E. Sharp II assailed the Gargoylr for creeping professionalism and promised that the result of the match would be appealed to the US Track and Field Federation.
Said Sharp:
"They are a fine tiddlywinks team which just happens to put out a lousy humor magazine on the side.
The pattern of the match was decided early, as the well-practiced Harvards easily defeated the NEWS's second team.
But the NEWS, led by star defenseman George Brown, nearly squopped its way to victory on Table No. 1.
Superior bench strength on the part of the Crimson, however, made the difference.
"The Gargoyle? Gargoyle? said John Adler, Harvard, 1961. "What's that?"
This is the time of the year for Worry.
[...]
These types of worry, however, are known as Non-Essential Worry. To facilitate the growth of truly essential worry on campus during this merriest of all seasons, we herewith present the 1964 Christmas list of Suggested Essential Worries:
[...]
- Is intercollegiate tiddlywinks losing favor with the masses?
"With 21,000 University of Massachusetts students so close by, I could turn out more people than this for a game of tiddlywinks," he said.
Tanner has conceived a triumphant surprise, a sophisticated political film with verve and optimism. Rarely has a director played ideological tiddly-winks with such glee.
Chen said that "we don't feel we should be in the CUO [Committee on Undergraduate Organizations] pool. There is a difference between tiddlywinks organizations and minority groups. There is a serious misplacing of priorities."
In a park at the city's center, Kagan took copious notes on what would someday be Greek history. In a nearby villa, Blum and Morgan played tiddlywinks as they waited for America to be discovered.
I don’t know about you, but to me, nothing screams America like a waif, uneducated late-teen Czech model standing bravely in the wind, wrapped in old glory, just long enough to be captured on camera before the acute pang of heroin addiction beckons her back to her opium den, where the rest of her overpaid, vain, honky model friends are languidly ensconced playing tiddlywinks with pills of ecstasy.
And on a night when Gravel’s rival for the Democratic nomination, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, wrapped up key victories in the mid-Atlantic primaries, Gravel took aim at Obama’s campaign mantra.
“From the other candidates you hear a lot of fluff, a lot of tiddlywinks. They don’t take names and kick butt,” Gravel said in his speech, which was delivered without notes. “Here comes a politician running a campaign for president saying he is going to heal the country — we’re going to have blue skies and everyone is going to hold hands. That is unadulterated bullshit.”
Andre Schiffrin ’57 was one of the 14 seniors. He stood on the steps of Sterling Memorial Library — in the middle of a tiddlywinks tournamen—when he turned down a Skull and Bones tap. He was not happy with the state of the University.
“When I arrived at Yale in September of 195… it was hardly an exciting place intellectually,” Schiffrin wrote later in his autobiography. “Many of the students were interested mostly in drinking and fraternity life, and they worked just hard enough to obtain George W. Bush-style ‘gentleman’s C’s.’ ”