1970_Sackson_229_July 28.jpg
Creator
Sid Sackson
Date
1970
Format
.jpg
Source
Box 1, Object 8, Sid Sackson collection
Item sets
Rights Statement
The Strong, Rochester, New York.
Full Metadata
1970_Sackson_229_July 28.jpg
Title
1970_Sackson_229_July 28.jpg
Creator
Sid Sackson
Date
1970
Type
image
Format
.jpg
Source
Box 1, Object 8, Sid Sackson collection
Language
English
Coverage
1970
Rights
The Strong, Rochester, New York.
transcription
7/27
7/26
TUESDAY 28 JULY 1970
209th day - 156 days to come
To Felicia at lunch time. Brought her about a dozen more
report sheets and the rules for INDIAN CHESS. She thought
I did a good job on them. She'll reproduce them on her machine
and send a copy to Mr. Wei. Also gave her a repro of
my letter to Jim Kraus on SEARCH and OCTRIX. Also returned
the correspondence on Irwin Pfeffer.
Allan Turoff, who Claude had dealt with when Allan worked with
Ned Strongin [Strong?], called and wanted to meet me and to re-
turn a book of Claude's he had. I stayed around talking with
Felicia till he got there.
Allan had a puzzle-game he left with her called MAKE-A-PUZZLE GAME.
There are 2 sets of 25 square pcs. which can interlock on
any side with each other. 2 play and each takes one set and
arranges it into groups of from 3 to 5 pcs. which fit to-
gether to form a square (or either one of the two figures shown
in the variation). Then the pcs. are passed
to the opponents. When a player succeeds
in putting together his opponent's puzzle
he takes his own again and has the time
of a sand timer (with the game) to
solve it. If successful he is the winner.
(If not?)
[Drawings of two shapes comprised of squares on the left side page]
Since the idea of being able to assemble different puz-
zles was somewhat reminiscent of my new version of
FITTING & PROPER I told Felicia about it in general terms.
Alan had some other GAMES but Felicia didn't take any
of them. She will handle another PUZZLE which he had
taken back to fix.
Allan came to Felicia thru Jake Williams.
Spoke to Felicia about Lily Elkan and she wants to see
WALK, WADE, TAKE A CANOE! and CHALLENGE!
In a letter Felicia had from X they said they received
TANGLED WEB & GENIUS BLOCKS. They didn't find the latter as
difficult (challenging?) as they thought it would be from
reading the rules.
The inventor of PSYCH-OUT insisted in taking his game
back from X, which shook them up a little.
Felicia definitely thinks that we should refuse the terms 3M
offered us on SEARCH. At present she has leverage with them
since she is helping them in getting rid of the
"Edu-Play-tional" line.
Norman Monath, the inventor of BALI, only gets 1% of
the royalties from S&R for the first $80,000. (Per year
or cumulative.) After this they split even.
Felicia had lunch with Mel Taft recently. He mentioned that
my name is getting around more & more and that it is too
bad that I am tied in with 3M. Felicia told him I would
do games for anyone.
Western Printing is seriously thinking of going into adult
games. There may be a meeting on it this coming Sep-
(cont. on 7/27)
7/26
TUESDAY 28 JULY 1970
209th day - 156 days to come
To Felicia at lunch time. Brought her about a dozen more
report sheets and the rules for INDIAN CHESS. She thought
I did a good job on them. She'll reproduce them on her machine
and send a copy to Mr. Wei. Also gave her a repro of
my letter to Jim Kraus on SEARCH and OCTRIX. Also returned
the correspondence on Irwin Pfeffer.
Allan Turoff, who Claude had dealt with when Allan worked with
Ned Strongin [Strong?], called and wanted to meet me and to re-
turn a book of Claude's he had. I stayed around talking with
Felicia till he got there.
Allan had a puzzle-game he left with her called MAKE-A-PUZZLE GAME.
There are 2 sets of 25 square pcs. which can interlock on
any side with each other. 2 play and each takes one set and
arranges it into groups of from 3 to 5 pcs. which fit to-
gether to form a square (or either one of the two figures shown
in the variation). Then the pcs. are passed
to the opponents. When a player succeeds
in putting together his opponent's puzzle
he takes his own again and has the time
of a sand timer (with the game) to
solve it. If successful he is the winner.
(If not?)
[Drawings of two shapes comprised of squares on the left side page]
Since the idea of being able to assemble different puz-
zles was somewhat reminiscent of my new version of
FITTING & PROPER I told Felicia about it in general terms.
Alan had some other GAMES but Felicia didn't take any
of them. She will handle another PUZZLE which he had
taken back to fix.
Allan came to Felicia thru Jake Williams.
Spoke to Felicia about Lily Elkan and she wants to see
WALK, WADE, TAKE A CANOE! and CHALLENGE!
In a letter Felicia had from X they said they received
TANGLED WEB & GENIUS BLOCKS. They didn't find the latter as
difficult (challenging?) as they thought it would be from
reading the rules.
The inventor of PSYCH-OUT insisted in taking his game
back from X, which shook them up a little.
Felicia definitely thinks that we should refuse the terms 3M
offered us on SEARCH. At present she has leverage with them
since she is helping them in getting rid of the
"Edu-Play-tional" line.
Norman Monath, the inventor of BALI, only gets 1% of
the royalties from S&R for the first $80,000. (Per year
or cumulative.) After this they split even.
Felicia had lunch with Mel Taft recently. He mentioned that
my name is getting around more & more and that it is too
bad that I am tied in with 3M. Felicia told him I would
do games for anyone.
Western Printing is seriously thinking of going into adult
games. There may be a meeting on it this coming Sep-
(cont. on 7/27)
Item sets