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Dana had a catalog from "Miles Kimball" (borrowed from Maureen).
Dana had a catalog from "Miles Kimball" (borrowed from Maureen).
Among other things, had <u>THERMOPYLAE</u>. (For picture of board see
<u>PLAYTHINGS</u> Directory Issue - May 30, 1972.) "The battle rages between two
crafty opponents and the first to capture all the enemy's men or to control
the famous pass of Thermopylae will be the winner. This has all the
thrills and intrigue of checkers except that it is played on an 11"
square metal board with 18 magnetic pieces." ($1.89.)
<br><u>STRETCH-A-WORD</u>. "One self-contained gameboard provides a wealth of
excitement and mental combat! The first player sets the computer-type
dials to give you a letter. You add another, trying to form a word.
By adding a letter on each successive play, the players stretch the
existing word and score points. Sturdy 3 1/8x11" plastic case has easy-
to-read magnifying window. Tots work with simple words, adults
engage in mental jousts with up to ten letters. Has many game
variations." ($2.79.) (For picture see <u>TOYS</u>, Feb. '72. [February 1972]
<br><u>TAROT</u> cards - 78 card deck 7/8"x1 3/8" ($1.19.)
<br><u>THREE DIMENSIONAL DOMINOES</u>. "Combine the stimulating fun of crossword puzzles
with the challenging fun of dominoes! The set includes 80 interlocking
plastic dominoes, each with a letter of the alphabet. Snap them
together as you spell words, earn bonuses, and draw new letters.
Directions include several versions for 2 to 5 players. ($1.00)
<br>[there is a drawing of a puzzle piece with the letter C to the left of the last two lines of text]
Called <u>Sanda Garson</u> (see 3/31/72). Not in and left word on her
machine to have her call me.
Call from <u>Claude</u>. He got together with <u>Strangin</u> and <u>Wexler</u>. The latter
has three <u>GAMES</u> for Claude to test. At first he said five
but Strangin said that would overload Claude. Claude asked for
$100 to look at them. One is a take-off on <u>BRIDG-IT</u> (which
Claude mentioned and Wexler didn't seem to care much), the second
which I don't remember, and the third a rather interesting
version of <u>TIC-TAC-TOE</u> with sliding panels. Claude still thinks they
would like to suck the rest of us into the project.
<br>(cont. on 1/3)