Category Archives: Chess

Americas Top Chess Players to Compete for More Than $400,000 in 2023 U.S. Championship and U.S. Womens Chess Championship – Yahoo Finance

This years tournament fields among the strongest of all time; chess legends to be celebrated during U.S Chess Hall of Fame induction ceremony

SAINT LOUIS, September 21, 2023--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The nations top chess players are set to compete in the U.S. most prestigious events - the 2023 U.S. Chess Championship and 2023 U.S. Womens Chess Championship. Hosted by the Saint Louis Chess Club (STLCC) at the World Chess Hall of Fame, two fields of 12 players will face off over the board October 5 - October 18, 2023 as they compete for a total purse of more than $400,000.

"Being invited to participate in the U.S. and U.S. Womens Chess Championships is considered one of the ultimate goals for elite chess players in the United States," said Tony Rich, Executive Director of the Saint Louis Chess Club. "We are thrilled to announce the impressive fields for these two over the board events, who will once again compete in Saint Louis - the nations Chess Capital - for more than $400,000 in prizes."

Field of Dreams in the U.S. Championship

The U.S. Championship field boasts an impressive roster including Grandmaster (GM) Fabiano Caruana, who is currently ranked No. 2 and the returning U.S. Championship winner, three-time U.S. Chess Champion GM Wesley So and GM Sam Sevian who recently delivered an outstanding performance to win the 2023 Chess 9LX event. It will also feature debut performances by GMs Abhimanyu Mishra and Andrew Tang. The complete field includes:

2023 U.S. Chess Championship Field

Title

First

Last

Invitational Rating*

Qualification Method

GM

Fabiano

Caruana

2816

2022 US Champion

GM

Wesley

So

2806

Rating

GM

Levon

Aronian

2794

Rating

GM

Leinier

Dominguez

2779

Rating

GM

Sam

Shankland

2752

Rating

GM

Jeffery

Xiong

2734

Rating

GM

Sam

Sevian

2732

Rating

GM

Hans

Niemann

2730

Rating

GM

Ray

Robson

2725

Rating

GM

Dariusz

Swiercz

2701

Wildcard

GM

Abhimanyu

Mishra

2624

2022 US Junior Champion

GM

Andrew

Tang

2568

2022 US Open Champion

Legends and Rising Stars to Headline U.S. Womens Championship

The U.S. Womens Championship promises exhilarating matches across the board with legends like eight-time U.S. Womens Champion GM Irina Krush and returning 2022 U.S. Champion Woman Grandmaster Jennifer Yu, as well as up and coming stars like Alice Lee. The international master-elect, Lee, won the 2023 U.S. Junior Girls Championship and an individual gold medal in the FIDE Womens World Team Championship earlier this year. The Womens Championship will also feature a debut performance by WGM Atousa Pourkashiyan, who also earned an individual silver medal in the FIDE Womens World Team Championship. The complete field includes:

Story continues

2023 U.S. Women's Chess Championship Field

Title

First

Last

Invitational Rating*

Qualification Method

GM

Irina

Krush

2488

Rating

IM

Carissa

Yip

2421

Rating

FM

Alice

Lee

2419

2023 US Girls Champion

IM

Anna

Zatonskih

2402

Rating

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Americas Top Chess Players to Compete for More Than $400,000 in 2023 U.S. Championship and U.S. Womens Chess Championship - Yahoo Finance

FIDE’s chess ban reflects new levels of transphobia – The Michigan Daily

Early this month, the International Chess Federation, known as FIDE, issued a ban on transgender women competing in international womens chess competitions. The ban, which took effect on Aug. 22, 2023, has resurfaced ongoing debates about the controversial participation of transgender women in female sports competitions. With the classification of chess as an exclusively mental challenge with little physical exertion, this ban is a gateway to transgender/cisgender segregation in academic competitions.

In defense of the ban, Nigel Short, the FIDE former vice president, argued that men are hardwired to be better chess players than women. This statement implies that men and women have different forms of intelligence. To an extent this is true, but it does not warrant the division of trans and cis competitors. A paper in the National Library of Medicine shows that men have higher spatial and reasoning abilities than women. Though this study depicts an average difference in each gender population, abilities differ based on a multitude of hereditary and environmental factors gender is just one of the pack. Is FIDE suggesting that women with different upbringings cannot compete with one another because one competitor yields an unfair advantage? Simply put, no two peoples brains are the same if they were, chess competitions would cease to exist.

Even if gender differences in the brain were prominent enough to act as a barrier for male to female competitions, the science could not be extrapolated to discuss the brains of trans versus cis women. Researchers at the Journal of Clinical Medicine studied whether the brain anatomy of transgender people is closer in similarity to the gender with which they identify or the gender they were assigned at birth. They found that the brains of transgender women after hormone therapy are more anatomically similar to the brains of cisgender women than cisgender men. Other research has yielded the same conclusion, suggesting that it would be more just for transgender women to compete in the female category for academic competitions like chess.

For years, the participation of transgender athletes in gendered competitions has been a source of controversy and debate. To many, the issue of transgender women competing in sports represents somewhat of a gray area, especially when transgender women set unprecedented records in female athletic competitions, a result that arguably discredits the work put in by cisgender women and ignores physical sex differences that impact athletics.

However, banning transgender women from female chess competitions entertains an interesting dilemma. For the first time, all physical considerations have been removed from the debate. Chess is notoriously a mental sport, with no physical aspects aside from the meager shifting of pawns on a table. Thus, the crux of arguments that favor the division of trans/cis participation in athletic competitions is invalidated.

With a vast history of discrimination against female athletes, FIDEs prejudice against transgender women, and their lack of prejudice against transgender men, raises the question of the bans connection to sexism and misogyny.

In the official report announcing the ban, FIDE claims that If a player holds any of the women titles, but the gender has been changed to a man, the women titles are to be abolished. However, If a player has changed the gender from a man into a woman, all the previous titles remain eligible. FIDEs unequal criteria therefore places more restrictions for a person to be considered a woman than a man in chess competitions.

Female athletes have been discriminated against since the birth of womens athletics. In professional athletics, female athletes, compared to their male counterparts, are given less opportunities and funding, are subject to more sexualization and inappropriate behavior, and are exposed to more sexual harassment. Thus, it comes as no surprise that FIDE is exclusively targeting female transgender athletes. The ban is yet another example of misogyny in sports, only this time, FIDE is using transgender discrimination as a vehicle for maltreatment against female athletes.

A transgender athletics ban in chess could have scary implications beyond the sport. Due to its highly academic nature, it provides a gateway for future gender segregation in an array of academic fields and competitions. Soon, will private schools argue that women and men cannot compete against one another in a spelling bee due to their different brain structures? Will they rule that transgender women cannot compete in the female competition category? It is time that such behavior is called out and women are treated equally in all competitions before it becomes too late, which by the looks of it, it already has.

Talia Belowich is an Opinion Columnist from Westchester, New York. She writes about controversial issues in American politics and culture. She can be reached at taliabel@umich.edu.

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FIDE's chess ban reflects new levels of transphobia - The Michigan Daily

Chess star who fled Iran after shedding headscarf hails courage of protesters – The Times of Israel

PARIS (AFP) Mitra Hejazipour, one of the greatest chess players Iran has ever produced, knows what courage is after removing her headscarf in defiance of the Islamic Republics strict dress code for women at a tournament.

Now living in exile in France after being expelled from the Iranian team at the time, she says she is in awe of the bravery of Iranians who poured into the streets one year ago after the police custody death of Mahsa Amini, who had been arrested for allegedly violating the dress code.

Hejazipour, 30, who received French citizenship in March, has enjoyed immense success on the board since arriving in France. This year she won the French chess championships and helped her team to third place at the world team championships.

But she told AFP in an interview that on the first anniversary of Aminis death she cannot take her mind off the situation in her home country, caught between hope that protesters could achieve a breakthrough and fear of repression against them.

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There are many reasons for people to push and protest against this regime, even if it costs them their lives or they are imprisoned, she said.

I see the courage. I see that in fact, they are suffocating. Its about to explode. People dont think too much about the consequences.

File: Iranians protest the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini after she was detained by the morality police, in Tehran, October 1, 2022. (AP Photo/Middle East Images)

The first time that Hejazipour publicly appeared without her headscarf was in a photo taken in Germany, published on her Instagram account in February 2018, she said.

Inspired by women who were taking off their obligatory headscarves and putting them on sticks in Iran, she said she wanted to have this feeling of freedom when you can feel the wind blowing through your hair.

However, she said she had to remove the post following threatening messages sent by the Iranian regime.

She then removed the headscarf in competition during the Blitz Chess World Championships in Moscow in December 2019.

Hejazipour became the second Iranian player to be expelled from the team for this reason, two years after Dorsa Derakhshani, who is now competing for the United States.

It was chess, which she started at six years old with my father, that allowed me this freedom, said Hejazipour, who was considered a chess prodigy before she was even in her teens.

I was lucky because I traveled a lot and talked with people from different cultures and religions, she said.

File: Iranian chess players Mitra Hejazipour (left) and Sara Khademalsharieh play at the Chess Federation in the capital Tehran, Iran, on October 10, 2016. (ATTA KENARE/AFP)

From France, she said she wants to show Iranian women that they are not alone by participating in events and talking about the situation in Iran, saying it is the least I can do.

I think that the regime is not giving up and will never give up, because the hijab is the basis of the Iranian Islamic regime.

But women try to wear the veil less and less. When we look at images and videos from Iran, we see that there are fewer women wearing the veil. That, I think, shows that courage has developed. Its not that the regime is giving up.

On what the outcome of the protest movement could be, she added: From what I saw last year and what I know about this regime, I have fear, of course, but I have hope at the same time. Because they cant kill everyone, they cant imprison everyone.

Continued here:
Chess star who fled Iran after shedding headscarf hails courage of protesters - The Times of Israel

What’s next for Bed Bath? CEO will outline future at IHA CHESS … – HFN

ROSEMONT, Ill.Jonathan Johnson, the CEO of Overstock and Bed Bath & Beyond, will talk about the companys relaunch of Bed Bath & Beyond and his plans for expansion in home and housewares at a special fireside chat at the International Housewares Associations 2023 Chief Housewares Executive SuperSession (CHESS), Oct. 3-4.

Overstock acquired the Bed Bath & Beyond brand earlier this year and rebranded under the Bed Bath & Beyond name in August. At the keynote on Oct. 3, HomePage News Editor-in-Chief and CHESS facilitator Peter Giannetti will moderate the discussion with Johnson and the audience Q&A.

CHESS is IHAs strategic and networking event for industry leaders and this years theme is Transforming the Home + Housewares Business. Sessions will present actionable insights to encourage the next wave of change for the home and housewares business.

CHESS 2023 kicks off with the annual Housewares Hot Seat, and this year will examine how companies are identifying and executing brand and product diversification opportunities to optimize market reach, value to customers and growth prospects. Panelists include Sal Gabbay, CEO, Gibson Homewares, Evan Dash, founder and CEO, Storebound, and Bill McHenry, founder & CEO, Widgeteer.

Other CHESS sessions include:

IHA Government Affairs Update: With Craig Brightup, CEO, The Brightup Group and Rafe Morrissey, president, Morrissey Strategic Partners.

Solving the Regulatory Compliance Puzzle: A panel discussion examining surging regulatory compliance topics impacting the housewares business, including PFAS chemicals, California Prop 65 and Americans with Disability Act (ADA). Moderator: Craig Brightup, The Brightup Group. Panelists: Fran Groesbeck, managing director, Cookware & Bakeware Alliance; Thomas Lee, partner, Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP.

Retail Repositioning to Identify Growth Opportunities: Circana executives Don Unser, president, Thought Leadership, and Joe Derochowski, vice president and home industry advisor, will look at the $4 trillion-plus in global consumer spending to help identify indicators of where consumers and retailers are heading and to pinpoint growth opportunities.

Taking Control of Consumer Reviews: Laura Kegley, chief revenue officer, North America, Revuze, and David Rapps, president, Wholescale, will examine how to make consumer reviews a more influential component of housewares marketing strategies.

Critical Perspective of ESG: Benefits and Burdens of an Evolving Standard: Tom Mirabile, founder of Springboard Futures and IHAs consumer trend analyst, will discuss ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance), a three-pillar framework for measuring the sustainability and ethical impact of a companys operations, while illuminating consumer perspectives on key issues crucial to determining a suppliers position and strategic initiatives on this growing concern.

Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) Trade Agreement Update: With Rafe Morrissey, Morrissey Strategic Partners

Mastering Disruption: Funding Strategies for a Post-Pandemic World: A panel of secured finance experts will unpack recent banking events, including the Silicon Valley and Signature Bank collapse, providing data and insights to help suppliers understand what this means to their business today and going forward. Moderated by Richard Gumbrecht, CEO, Secured Finance Network (SFNet), panelists include Jenn Palmer, CEO, JPalmer Collective, and Brian Martin, regional manager, CIT Commercial Services.

Grading the Housewares Retail Credit Climate: Gauging retailer credit risk is a mounting challenge in the post-pandemic housewares marketplace, which has seen some high-profile retail bankruptcies while some others confront ongoing financial uncertainty. Scott Friedman, chief credit officer of Pulse Ratings, will provide an overview of the retail business and its debt risk before taking a deep dive into credit factors affecting some key retailers.

Artificial Intelligence/Chat GPT: The Opportunity Is Real & Now: Artificial intelligence (AI) and chatbots powered by generative pre-trained transformers (GPT) are transforming the way businesses communicate and interact with their customers. In this executive leadership Q&A moderated by Aaron Conant, co-founder and chief digital strategist at BWG Connect, Jordan Brannon, president and COO of Coalition Technologies, will share his insights and expertise on how to leverage AI and chatbots for business success while avoiding the pitfalls and perils of these emerging tools.

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What's next for Bed Bath? CEO will outline future at IHA CHESS ... - HFN

NEW: All in place for National Schools Chess League Finals – sundaymail.co.zw

Online Reporter

EIGHTY-FIVE primary and secondary schools from the countrys 10 provinces are set to convergefor the inaugural edition of the Crystal Candy National Schools Chess League Finals in Harare this weekend.

Zimbabwe Chess Federation (ZCF) interim president Mucha Mkanganwi praised Crystal Candy for coming on board to support the schools chess league, which kicks off on Saturday.

The event promises to be intense and exciting, and such competitions are what our sport needs to grow, said Mkanganwi.

We are grateful to Crystal Candy Zimbabwe for their invaluable support and commitment in making this league a resounding success, as well as their determination to grow the sport in Zimbabwe.

Their commitment to nurturing young chess talent is commendable and aligns with ZCFs vision of promoting chess as a sport and educational tool, he said.

The tournament started off with over 150 schools, but that number was trimmed after provincial finals that were held between May and June.

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NEW: All in place for National Schools Chess League Finals - sundaymail.co.zw

How to get started in competitive chess – Financial Times

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How to get started in competitive chess - Financial Times

Exiled in France, Iranian chess star salutes ‘courage’ of protesters – The New Arab

Mitra Hejazipour appeared without her headscarf in a photo taken in Germany and published on her Instagram account in 2018.

Mitra Hejazipour won the French chess championships this year. (Photo by JOEL SAGET/AFP via Getty Images)

Mitra Hejazipour, one of the greatest chess players Iran has ever produced, knows what courage is after removing her headscarf in defiance of the Islamic republic's strict dress code for women at a tournament.

Now living in exile in France after being expelled from the Iranian team at the time, she says she is in awe of the bravery of Iranians who poured into the streets one year ago after the police custody death off Mahsa Amini, who had been arrested for allegedly violating the dress code.

Hejazipour, 30, who received French citizenship in March, has enjoyed immense success on the board since arriving in France. This year she won the French chess championships and helped her team to third place at the world team championships.

But she told AFP in an interview that on the first anniversary of Amini's death she cannot take her mind off the situation in her home country, caught between hope that protesters could achieve a breakthrough and fear of repression against them.

"There are many reasons for people to push and protest against this regime, even if it costs them their lives or they are imprisoned," she said.

"I see the courage. I see that in fact, they are suffocating. It's about to explode. People don't think too much about the consequences."

The first time that Hejazipour publicly appeared without her headscarf was in a photo taken in Germany, published on her Instagram account in February 2018, she said.

Inspired by women who were taking off their obligatory headscarves and putting them on sticks in Iran, she said she wanted "to have this feeling of freedom when you can feel the wind blowing through your hair".

However, she said she had to remove the post following threatening messages sent by the Iranian regime.

She then removed the headscarf in competition during the Blitz Chess World Championships in Moscow in December 2019.

Hejazipour became the second Iranian player to be expelled from the team for this reason, two years after Dorsa Derakhshani, who is now competing for the United States.

"It was chess", which she started "at six years old with my father", that "allowed me this freedom", said Hejazipour, who was considered a chess prodigy before she was even in her teens.

"I was lucky because I travelled a lot and talked with people from different cultures and religions," she said.

From France, she said she wants to "show Iranian women that they are not alone" by participating in events and talking about "the situation in Iran", saying it is "the least I can do".

"I think that the regime is not giving up and will never give up, because the hijab is the basis of the Iranian Islamic regime.

"But women try to wear the veil less and less. When we look at images and videos from Iran, we see that there are fewer women wearing the veil. That, I think, shows that courage has developed. It's not that the regime is giving up."

On what the outcome of the protest movement could be, she added: "From what I saw last year and what I know about this regime, I have fear, of course, but I have hope at the same time. Because they can't kill everyone, they can't imprison everyone."

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Exiled in France, Iranian chess star salutes 'courage' of protesters - The New Arab

Project CHESS empowers Latinx and minority students – The Echo

The Center for Hispanic Excellence and Student Success is a grant from the U.S. Department of Education that California Lutheran University received along with Moorpark College. The grant has turned into a program called Project CHESS, which aims to serve historically marginalized, Latinx students who want an opportunity to build leadership skills and connections.

According to the programs website, its goal is to make students feel academically capable and engaged in their classroom, while also focusing on their careers, and serving as a tool to help them connect to their peers and campus.

Part of the grant is for it to become a mentorship, Ruben Alcala, program counselor of Project CHESS said. We provide that mentorship guidance on them, and how to speak to the students, provide empathy, support, [and] check with them throughout the semester.

According to Silvia Neves, director of Project CHESS, there are two main programs, one that works with faculty training and another that works with male students of color. The Faculty Learning Community helps the professional development of faculty members, and their core mission is to learn and develop the Culturally Inclusive & Responsive Curricula for Learning Equity.

Neves said there are currently about 17 faculty members participating in this year-long program. In this part of the program, the faculty learns how to incorporate culturally relevant issues into their classes. This is done through a series of activities that they have to complete, one being revising one of the courses that they teach.

According to Neves, the program now not only focuses on Hispanic students, but also works to serve all students who are underserved, minorities, or first generation.

The other main program that Project CHESS runs is the Male Mentorship program, which Neves said helps connect minority men on campus seeking higher education. Alcala said students who are part of this program have the opportunity to experience a peer mentorship program.

Part of the program, you know, is for them to meet with their counselor two to three times per semester, Alcala said. The students also participate in weekly class sessions, learn about careers, and how to be a better leader.

Project CHESS had a Male Initiative Summer Retreat, where Alcala said participants had the opportunity to get to know each other and create a mentor-mentee relationship. In addition, Alcala said the summer retreat informed participants about how the program works, and how it creates a sense of belonging and brotherhood on campus.

Junior Diego Rosas, who has been a member of the Male Mentorship program for a year and a half, said that he wants to help new students from Cal Lutheran, Oxnard College and Moorpark transition to college from high school.

Rosas had the opportunity to attend this event, and said he had a fun time and learned to be a better leader of all sorts.

Project CHESS started the semester with events for each of their programs. On Tuesday, Sept. 19, the EDUCAL 2023 Annual Symposium was held featuring Tara Yosso, a professor in the Graduate School of Education at the University of California, Riverside, as guest speaker.

The Male Mentorship program had their first meeting of the semester on Thursday, Sept. 14. CHESS mentors and mentees from the Oxnard Male Educational Goal Achievement Initiative met virtuallyto connect with each other before they get an opportunity to meet in person later in the semester.

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Project CHESS empowers Latinx and minority students - The Echo

Bloomingtons annexation attempts lead to legal chess … – Indiana Lawyer

Monroe County Courthouse (IL file photo)

The city of Bloomington is still attempting to expand its borders to the displeasure of a significant amount of the Monroe County residents who stand to be annexed.

Eight lawsuits on the matter are active in the states legal system at the moment. The chess match of motions and appeals could lead to years of litigation, momentum swinging in either direction and residents becoming more befuddled by the ever-growing and exceedingly denseMyCase pages. The court drama boils down to two matters: the constitutionality of a state law and signatures.

A recent development by the city looks to accelerate the annexations of two areas after a decision in early September slowing down the case.

How it started

In 2017, the city of Bloomington announced plans to annex several areas around the perimeter of the city as the city hoped to bring more land into the fold as the city grew. A2021 interaction mapshows the scale of the proposed annexation.

We are one community, and these annexations will make that official, Mayor John Hamilton said in a2017 news release. The property taxes from the annexations will support the neighborhoods and communities that we are committed to serving as we work to provide better and more efficient services to the areas affected.

The annexation was paused after the state intervened and suspended the process, and the Indiana Supreme Court later decided that intervention was unconstitutional.The city continued forward in the second half of 2021.

The Bloomington City Council later narrowed the annexation to seven areas, amounting to about 8,155 acres and around 15,000 residents. The city is still pursuing annexation in Areas 1A, 1B,1C, 2, 3, 4 and 5.

In several town halls and in the public comment of city meetings after the push continued, county residents expressed their outright anger, confusion and discontent at the attempt to annex their area. Many said they are elderly, on fixed incomes and moved outside the city for financial reasons. They said they are unsure if they will have to move again if the influx of taxes proves to be too much.

The city said those county residents will become a part of the city, meaning they will receive more services such as increased policing, sewer service and trash pickup.

It also means those new residents would be subject to city taxes a major reason for pushback. Property owners could see their property taxes increase by an average of $513 per year with a homestead deduction.

Many said that they dont think the life of their neighborhoods and rural roads reflect the city and that there could be difficulties assimilating into city code. They talked about how they dont want the citys services and would prefer to continue contracting their own.

The voracity and the number of county residents opposing the annexation were significant in number resulting in organization and leading to new legal challenges for the city. One leading group isCounty Residents Against Annexation, a not-for-profit, nonpartisan organization that says it is educating about involuntary annexation and fighting against the citys attempts in court. Its a group known for its lawn signs with a cartoon head of lettuce and a bumble bee, symbolizing Let us be.

This may be the largest grassroots movement that Monroe County has ever experienced, CRAA President Margaret Clements said. We have the supermajority of people signed, who were property owners signed against annexation in all of the annexation areas.

Clements said undergoing the cumbersome process, which required notarized petitions, was a testament to how opposed the remonstrators were to annexation. Indiana isone of three stateswhere a town or city can annex land into its borders without consent.

She said one woman in her 80s told her she stood to lose her home if her area was annexed because she would be responsible for an extra $2,000 per year in taxes. Clements brings up that other neighborhoods that are already paying city taxes dont have the services the city promises.

We feel that the people have spoken that they have demonstrated that they do not want to be annexed. Its their right to do that, she said. Their request should be honored.

In aFAQ last updated in April,the city said it has spent about $1.35 million on annexation with $800,000 of it focused on communications, surveying and externally-created fiscal plan development. The city said it would continue to spend more money on the matter if court matters are halted.

In the courts

The city of Bloomington filed a lawsuitin 2022 to challenge a 2019 Indiana law having bearing on the validity of its annexation attempts. The law says to void sewer contacts over 15 years old that allow non-municipal residents to connect to those systems in exchange for not protesting if their area was annexed in the future.

The county auditor, who is the defendant in the case, allowed for petition waivers to be signed and submitted by those covered under such contracts because she was following the current state law, which retroactively nullified those contracts. Why are those waivers important? Those landowners are remonstrators, meaning they oppose the annexation of the land they live on. If enough are received in a 90-day period, the annexation attempt could be squashed or hashed out in court.

If the state law holds up in court, Bloomington will fail to annex those areas. However, if the city wins its case and the law is declared unconstitutional, the annexation of those areas is back on.

The city then said Friday it would drop two areas from its court push in light of the potential years-long constitutional litigation involved and in order to facilitate a more timely resolution of that annexation. The city filed seven lawsuits against the state, one for each area they are attempting to annex; with this move, they are dropping two of those suits.

Uncertainty and delayed annexation is disruptive to all concerned. We have long sought a timely annexation to right-size our city, consistent with state law and despite repeated illegal interventions from the state government, Hamilton said ina Friday news release. Now is the time to get this major component resolved.

Beth Cate, who serves as corporation counsel for the city, told Inside INdiana Business the city plans to move forward with the other five areas, hoping this decision will allow the recently-paused case to continue.

We concluded that the best way to proceed with a timely annexation really its been much delayed, Cate said, but to go ahead and go forward on annexation was to then dismiss the claims.

That decision comes after a development in a different pending lawsuit one filed by CRAA and legally required based on the number of petition signatures collected.

In that case, which is separate but related to the constitutionality question, the court was heading to trial in November, athe outcome of which would be whether the areas would become part of the city. However, CRAA made a motion to hold off on trial until the constitutionality of the annexation is first decided meaning they want to wait until the seven other legal matters all dealing with that subject are settled because it could have an impact on this case. Special Judge Nathan Nikirk, who serves in Lawrence Circuit Court, ruled in their favor on Sept. 5 and handed down a ruling stalling the case.

I dont see that as a win at all, Clements said. In terms of steps toward a right decision, its a necessary component.

What makes Areas 1A and 1B different is the percentage of landowner signatures collected to oppose annexation. In those two areas, they sit in a purgatory of sorts: not enough signatures to outright vote down the annexation attempt and too many to be ignored. They sit between 50% and 65% opposition, meaning the matter heads before a judge to be decided.

The city filed an appeal last Wednesday to the decision with the move to drop the two constitutionality suits directly dealing with the two areas as a reason to move forward with the case. The judge has not yet released a decision.

Whats to come

Depending on whats likely the next decision to come out of either case, the issue could be elongated or expedited, with potentially the former if the judge shoots down the citys appeal.

Bloomingtons next mayor may also throw a wrench in the current, but soon-to-be-former, administrations plans. The de facto candidate is Kerry Thomson, the former CEO ofHabitat for Humanity of Monroe County, whotold the Herald-Timesin March she wants to halt annexation to allow for more communication but could continue the attempt without changing in scope and size.

Thompson won the Democratic primary in May and is on the ballot this November. At this time, there is no Republican challenger.

Clements said she feels strongly about the remonstrators legal challenges. The county is well-represented legally for the constitutionality cases, she said, and the Attorney Generals Office has had good arguments in her opinion.

Her organization, CRAA, is still raising money to pay for legal fees and other costs incurring from their lawsuit to avoid placing that burden on homeowners. Its important they continue to pursue this legal battle, she said.

Its the right to the property owners, Clements said. These residents have said, No, its not in their best interest. They do not want to be annexed, and we would like to have helped them have their voices heard.

However, she said those whose houses and properties are being fought over are stressed. They arent as connected because many are older and were disadvantaged when the pandemic had many key meetings and opportunities for speaking up moved to online venues. Many of them though have kept up with the updates.

Its a very stressful time for them because they see the very affordability of where they live in question, she said.

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Bloomingtons annexation attempts lead to legal chess ... - Indiana Lawyer

There was a bank row? – ChessBase

Recently I had one of my favourite guests over. Leon Mendonca (pronounced Men-don-SA, incidentally) and his father Lyndon stayed with usfor a week, and we had such a great time playing Wordle, Geoguessr, with the kid joining basketball matches at the local school. During such visits we have long and interesting non-chess conversations, and Leon, like many other super-talents, has been confronted with a large number of my logical pranks. But this time I had a different kind of puzzle for him.

Leon knows that I spent part of my early childhood in a hill station resort in Lonavala, India (my German father had set up a herpetological research laboratoryin the jungles surrounding the town). Many British families lived in the villas in Lonavala, and we had friends close by the family O'Connell.

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Here's the puzzle I gave Leon and his father.

My English aunt Rosie O'Connell, livingin the villa in Lonavala, often used tosay "There was a bank row". To whom and why?

Leon and Lyndon could not work it out, and after a few days gave up. So I told them the solution, and had the boy rolling on the floor in laughter. After that, I said "There was a bank row" a number of times to him, and he complied! That's a hint.

Naturally I gave the problem to my usual customers, 2600+ and stronger super-talents. One was Gukesh, who to my delight has now, at the age of 17,climbed into the world's top ten bracket. He could not solve it, so I instructed Leon to give him the puzzle again while they were playing in the Turkish League. And he could give him the solution under one condition: he mustfilm Gukesh's reaction. With a little help, Gukesh actually solved the puzzle in their hotel room. The front page thumbnail is from Leon's video of him doing so.

Okay, what is the solution already? Well, I'm not going to tell you now. I will do it in a few days.Mind you, the vast majority of our readers doesn't have the slightest chance to work it out! There is, however, one group of readers that could,and they will probably react the same way Leon and Gukesh did.

I am switching comments on but please do not reveal the solution, if you know it, to other readers. I will do that with a wonderful 2700+ video very soon.

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In this Fritztrainer: Attack like a Super GM with Gukesh we touch upon all aspects of his play, with special emphasis on how you can become a better attacking player.

The rest is here:
There was a bank row? - ChessBase