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WEDNESDAY 30 JUNE 1965 181st day - 184 days to come


To Arthur's. Played CHAIN REACTION. He thought it was in- teresting, but not great. We each were able to run off quite a few points in one move. The player who went first was able to move up his whole (or almost all) front line up where it blocked his opponent. To avoid this I added the rule that the first move could only break one pile, the second -2, and so on until the 5th move after which each player had un- limited moves.

Arthur showed me his new game with cards which he calls THREE (He also has a board game with the same name). It is played with a 52 card deck and can be played by from two to eight players. It is a gambling game, but much more interesting than POKER - especially for 2 players.

For each hand each player antes 1 chip to the pot. Each is dealt 3 cards and 1 card is faced up on the table. The player dealt to may pass or bid bet. Bets can be from 1 to 3. Other players can see, raise, or fold. Raises also have a limit of 3. After the round of betting each player may discard one card, face down, and replace it from the deck, starting with the player who bet or raised last. If all pass, the player dealt to exchanges first. Players may stand pat if they wish, and may later change their mind and draw in later draws. The player drawing making the last draw from the deck turns up a second card on the table. A second round of betting follows, followed by a second draw and the turning up of 3rd table card. A third round of betting follows, followed by a third draw. No further card is exposed. A 4th & final round of betting follows. In each round of betting the player having made the last bet or raise bets first. The player with the highest point value [crossed out], of those remaining, wins the pot. Point value is determined as follows:- Range - If two cards are within the range of the extreme two cards of the table cards, they score 4 points. If all 3, they score 8 points. (For example, the table cards are 5, 8, J & a player has 7, J, Q - 2 cards are within the range). Suit - If two cards in the hand match they score 6 points. (There must be 1 to 1 correspondence, thus if a player has 2 hearts in his hand and there is one heart on the table, this is only one match.) Rank - If one card matches in rank a table card it scores four points. If two match they score 12. If three match they score 24. (In rank two or 3 in hand can match just one table card.) In figuring range an ace counts as 1. (cont. on 6/29)