| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE | Contact: Mikhail Korenman |
| October 4, 2005 | (785) 227-2224 |
| Press Release #48 of 2005 |
mkorenman@yahoo.com |
Russian-American Chess Summit in Lindsborg
(CROSSVILLE, TN) This weekend saw the first exchange of students in
the Chess for Peace initiative. Nine students from
the Karpov School of Chess in Poikovsky, Siberia
arrived in Lindsborg, Kansas with Alexander Bah,
executive director of the Russian Chess Federation,
Alexander Andreevsky, chairman of the district sports
commission, Galina Kovaleva, director of the Karpov
School of Chess in Poikovsky, and Tatyana Danilova,
deputy commissioner of the Poikovsky district.
Grandmaster Alexander Onischuck, a veteran of
Poikovsky and Lindsborg tournaments, also accompanied
the group to Lindsborg.
Bill Hall, executive director of the U.S. Chess
Federation, came to meet with his Russian counterpart
on Friday. “We discussed many things,” said Hall.
“We talked about getting chess into schools and ways
in which we can set up a model that can be duplicated
in all states. We also talked about arranging
top-level competition between our youth and female
players,” said Hall.
Bah agreed. “Chess is part of our curriculum. We
support chess in schools and we help them with the
competitions. Schools help to select talent. If
talent arrives at a school, the Russian Federation
takes care of it,” said Bah.
Both Bah and Hall participated in a virtual online
chess class conducted by Mikhail Korenman, director of
the Karpov Chess School and the Chess for Peace
initiative. The students had a chance to interact
with the two leaders of the Russian and U.S. chess
federations.
Prior to round one on Saturday, students from the
Karpov School of Chess in Poikovsky, Siberia exchanged
gifts with the students of the Karpov School in
Lindsborg. Thus began the match between the Siberian
and Kansas students.
A casual observer remarked that the Siberian students
were sometimes hard to distinguish from their American
counterparts. Siberian team member Andre Khafizov
proudly wore a Chicago Bears jersey with quarterback
Rex Grossman’s name emblazoned across the back. The
Siberian team spoke no English and their Kansas
counterparts spoke no Russian, but through chess, an
international language in its own right, the two
student groups forged a special bond.
Kansas student Isaiah Jesch, of Conway Springs, scored
the first win in Saturday’s morning’s match when he
sacrificed his queen to defeat Dimitry Korneev.
Things were not to go that well for the Kansas team in
the first round. The Siberian team scored a 7-2
victory over the Kansas students. Only Jesch and
Blythe Buscher had won their games. The Kansas
students rallied to win the afternoon round with a 5-4
score; however, the Siberian team won the overall
match 11-6.
Blythe Buscher, of Erie, had won both of her games
against Anna Yarugina. When asked about her mental
preparedness for the games with Yarugina, Buscher
replied, “I read the paper!” Buscher was referring to
a Salina Journal article that quoted Yarugina as
saying she couldn’t lose.
On Friday night, the Siberian team went to the Smoky
Valley High School homecoming game. When Alanna
Olson, a Smoky Valley High School student, was asked
how the Siberian students enjoyed the game, she
replied, “I don’t think they were watching much of it.
We were all too busy trying to talk to each other.”
Mayor John Magnusson came by the Karpov School to
watch the two teams play. “Having grown up in the
middle of Kansas, I wouldn’t have dreamed a chess team
from Siberia would come here to play chess. I think
it’s great for us to have the opportunity to interact
and have a ‘real people’ experience,” said Magnusson.
“It’s also good they will be here during Hyllingsfest
to see how the different cultures mix here in
Lindsborg.”
Visitors to Hyllingsfest this weekend will have an
opportunity to play members of the Siberian chess team
on Friday and Saturday afternoons at the Karpov School
of Chess in Lindsborg. Korenman said everyone is
welcome and there is no charge.
Mikhail Korenman, Director of the Karpov Chess School
and the Chess for Peace initiative, said he will be
taking the visitors to see several Kansas attractions
in Wichita, Hutchinson, Salina, and Abilene. The
Siberian team will be in Lindsborg through next
weekend.
GORBACHEV ADDRESS: 7:30 p.m., Oct. 29, at Presser
Hall. Prime Seating: $53.50. General Admission $27.
KARPOV-POLGAR MATCH: 3:30 p.m., Oct. 29, at Presser
Hall. Adults: $10.50. Students: $5.50. Credit cards are
welcome. Contact: Karpov Chess School, 106 S. Main, phone
785-227-2224, Mikhail Korenman or Wes Fisk (785) 227-4121.
******************
The United States Chess Federation (USCF), founded in 1939, serves as the governing
body for chess in the United States and is now headquartered in Crossville, Tennessee.
USCF is devoted to extending the role of chess in American society. It promotes the
study and knowledge of the game of chess, for its own sake as an art and enjoyment,
and as a means for the improvement of society. The USCF is a not-for-profit membership
organization nearing 90,000 members. For additional on the USCF see:
http://www.uschess.org.
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