Scrabble players meet in the DeLawter Room every
Sunday, 2:00
to 5:00 p.m. Join us for friendly competition and
conversation. For more information, call Laura
Williamson 923-3228. FREE for members and $4 for
guests.
Scrabble players also meet in the DeLawter
Room every Wednesday, 1:00 to
4:00 p.m. Please come and join us. For more
information, call Laura Williamson 923-3228. FREE for
members and $4 for guests.
Join Laura Williamson for Scrabble following
regulation rules on the second
and fourth Fridays of the month at 1:30 p.m.
This word game for two players per table is both literary
and strategic to get the most points from your letter
selection.
A little history on the game by Mattel
Inc.*:
"The Scrabble game is being played in 121 countries in the
world in 29 different languages. It was invented by Alfred
Mosher Butts, an architect during the depression of 1931 . It
was then called Criss-Crosswords. The game was not welcomed at
first by the patent board and game manufacturers, even after
1938 when it has gone through many changes, names and forms as
well.
The Second World War changed all that. Butts met a couple
named Brunots and together they became partners. The Brunots
decided that the game needed a few finishing touches. They
rearranged the premium squares and simplified the rules. Then
they lodged a Copyright application, under the new modern
name, "Scrabble". The patent was granted in December 1948.
The game traveled to Australia, Europe and launched in UK
with great success. Orders reached 6,000 pieces per week. The
rights for Scrabble in the USA and Canada were purchased in
1984 by Milton Bradley, which has turned it down for 53 years.
1991 saw the first world championship take place in London.
The second was held in New York City in 1993. Mattel acquired
the rights to the world, outside of the US, Australia and
Canada, in 1994."
* This is an excerpt of an
article on www.mattelscrabble.com on the history of the game
of Scrabble.
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