TRY THE DOMINO CABIN-FEVER CURE
Using the domino game instead of TV to provide entertainment.
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DOMINOES November/December 1982 Issue # 078 - November/December 1982 MOTHER feels strongly that y...
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When the snow piles up to the attic window and every night
seems six weeks long, any activity—work or
play—that can be shared with someone else takes on a
special importance.
And, as most MOTHER—type people know, television
isn't the only way to fill a quiet evening (in fact, TV
rates somewhere below the bottom in most any list of
entertainment possibilities). Games, for instance, have
provided men and women with amusement—and a means of
communication— for centuries ... and dominoes is one
of the oldest table games around.
Although nearly everybody discovered and discarded some
type of domino game as a child, the speckled rectangles
(called "bones" in domino lingo) can be used in some
intricate and challenging contests. And a good domino
game—no matter how complex—will never be so
involved that it gets in the way of conversation. What more
could you ask of a game?
CHOOSING A DOMINO SET
Most any toy shop (and many department-type stores) carries
domino games. The prices of these can range from about
$2.00—for a basic set of wooden bonesup to a king's
ransom for the hand-tooled outfits made of ivory. Most of
the latter are unnecessarily fancy, but don't automatically
eliminate the slightly more expensive dominoes
when you go out to buy. The texture and weight of the
playthings—and the tiny "click" you hear as each
piece is played—are intrinsic to the mood of the
game.
Domino sets are available in three varieties: double-six,
double-nine, and double-twelve. These names indicate the
maximum number of dots on one bone. The double-six set,
with 28 pieces, is standard ... but the larger games can
make much of your playing more exciting. Start out with a
cheap box of sixes, and then—once you're
hooked-you'll be ready for the big ones.
MUGGINS, OR FIVE-POINT
Muggins is a good beginner's domino game (those who want to
get adventurous should find a copy of The Domino
Book by Fredrick Berndt, $5.95 in hard cover from
Thomas Nelson, Inc.).
In fact, most people who've been exposed to the spotted
blocks have encountered muggins in one of its many
variations. However, few people today have tried the
"formal" rules ... which make up muggins as our
grandparents might have played it.
The difference between simple dominoes and all-out
five-point shows up in the scoring. Though you do
play by matching the number of dots (also called "pips") on
a side of one of your bones to those on a domino already at
an end of the "line of play" (the arrangement—on the
playing table—of those pieces already set down),
you can only make points when the sum of the pips on
the outside ends of the series adds up to a multiple of
five.
Thus in this line of play:
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