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Played two games of <u>ORIGINS OF WORLD WAR II</u>. Played Russia  <br>
Played two games of <u>ORIGINS OF WORLD WAR II</u>. Played Russia  <br>
in first game and came in third (I think). Played  <br>
in first game and came in third (I think). Played  <br>
Great Britain in second and came in tied for first. The  <br>
U.S. has very little chance of winning with the "historical  <br>
scenario" but, I was told, can win with some of the "what  <br>
if" scenarios. (<u>Al Nofi</u> was one of the players in the game.)  <br>
Mentioned <u>U-BOAT</u> and one of the fellows told me that the  <br>
addition of the extra cardboard gadgets. I saw last time  <br>
didn't change the game, the rules still being the same.
During day called <u>Mickey Mackay</u>. The games, <u>SUMMIT</u>, etc.,  <br>
just came in today. She put aside a set for me. I'll  <br>
pick them up Monday after my stint at Brentano's.
<s>Earl Perel called. He was thinking of making up an  <br>
insurance <u>GAME</u>. What started him on this was a  <br>
simple gadget that averaged a series of numbers.</s>
I asked <u>Jim Dunnigan</u> if he had followed thru on asking  <br>
<u>Tom Shaw</u> to send a copy of <u>ORIGINS OF WORLD WAR II</u> to  <br>
<u>Pierre Berloquin</u>. He said it might be better if I did it. I  <br>
said I would.  <br>
<u>Jim</u> showed me an ad for ''<u>S & T</u>'' in ''<u>BOOK WORLD</u>''.
<u>Jack Davis</u> mentioned that he rcd. a <u>BOOK-OF-THE-MONTH-CLUB</u>  <br>
mailing with games. <u>THE NEXT PRESIDENT</u> seemed somewhat  <br>
like <u>MR. PRESIDENT</u>. I told him I'd compare the two and  <br>
let him know.