Archive for November, 2020

Lambing List unites farmers with student vets willing to help – HeraldScotland

LOOKING ahead to lambing, the National Sheep Association has opened its popular Lambing List service for the 2020/2021 season.

The NSA Lambing List connects sheep farming members of the NSA who need assistance at lambing time with agricultural and veterinary students looking for a work experience placement as part of their studies, providing the perfect solution for both parties at what can be a very busy time of year.

Despite some uncertainties surrounding Covid-19 rules, it is expected that it will still be permissible for farmers to invite students on to farm to support work at lambing time, but to ensure both NSAs farming members and students using the Lambing List are kept as Covid safe as possible, new guidelines have been made available to users of the service to download from the NSA Next Generation website.

NSA communications officer, Katie James said: The NSA Lambing List has become the trusted method for many of our members to source extra lambing help over recent years and we are therefore pleased to be able to offer this service once again this year. Its a very simple but effective process we collate a list of NSA members looking for help at lambing time and produce an advert so students can approach them directly to ask for a placement.

NSA does recognise there may be some concerns inviting students on to farm as additional help this coming lambing season and hopes that our updated guidelines can offer some support with this, however, if members have any further concerns we would encourage them to contact us at NSA to discuss the issue.

Sheep farmers wanting to advertise on the list must complete a short application form at http://www.nationalsheep.org.uk/lambing-list providing brief details of their lambing system and the experience and position they can offer, including the provision of accommodation, meals and other details. Adverts are listed in the order they are submitted, so NSA members are encouraged to get adverts in as early as possible.

Sheep farmers who are interested in using the list but are not yet NSA members can find a membership application form at http://www.nationalsheep.org.uk/membership.

The service could not be simpler for students looking for a placement, with adverts split into regions to highlight positions available in different areas of the UK and overseas. The list can be found via the lambing and work experience pages at on the Next Generation web pages.

Ms James continued: This service is just one of the many membership benefits NSA offers as well as supporting agricultures next generation and the allied veterinary industry. Young people accessing the NSA Lambing List on the NSA Next Generation website will also find a host of online resources, packed with useful information on NSAs work to support young people.

For in-depth news and views on Scottish agriculture, see this Fridays issue of The Scottish Farmer or visit http://www.thescottishfarmer.co.uk

Read the rest here:
Lambing List unites farmers with student vets willing to help - HeraldScotland

LTTE: A response from Indigenous alumni to the Chancellor’s affirmation of Pioneer – DU Clarion

Editors Note: This letter has been republished with the permission of the Indigenous Alumni Affinity Group. It has been adjusted for formatting and readability by the editors of The Clarion. The original version can be found here.

To the Chancellor,

We are writing, as University of Denver (DU) alumni and more importantly as alumni of the Native Student Alliance (NSA) leadership, in deep concern for the Native students on DUs campus. During our time at the university, we were active members of this group and held leadership positions.

We have seen firsthand the culmination of microaggressions, macroaggressions, discrimination and inaction. This has led to NSA demanding action from DU to directly support Native students currently on campus, as well as those who come to DU in the future. That is why we are writing to you today.

We want to acknowledge the Native American graduate student experience differs drastically from that of a Native American undergraduate student who has lived on campus 24 hours a day for four years, which is why this letter was written by those who have been a part of NSA leadership. We also want to highlight that this is not a new phenomenon for Native American and Indigenous students on campus. We speak from three generations of NSA leadership and 12 years of experience and institutional knowledge.

We have been pushing this issue consistently, just to be given the same answer by the Board of Trustees (BOT) and the Chancellor since 2008. We are writing to bring attention to the continuous pattern of cyclical violence directed at Native American students on campus for the past 12 years that needs to be addressed and confronted at its core.

Chancellor Haefners email addressing the demands of Righteous Anger! Healing Resistance! (RAHR) and NSA was performative and tone-deaf. The actual demands of NSA and RAHR were not addressed clearly. This email is seemingly good-intentioned and diplomatic. But it shows the years of emotional labor students have taken to educate others were for naught, as they are not being listened to thoroughly.

It shows that the words of the Indigenous community, on a campus that stands on stolen land and has a legacy of genocide, are not being heard but instead actively ignored. It shows the interests of the university lean towards the side of money and power. It is not with marginalized students on campus who do not possess the capital to make decisions for the university.

We cannot deny that the Pioneer nickname will hold a different meaning to those whose ancestors were not harmed by the historical definition of the word. Their ancestors were not murdered and assaulted by pioneers. However, stating the word has a dual meaning will always disunite the campus body and place Native and Indigenous students as the other side and in a position of marginalization within the conversation.

This consistent divide labels Native American students as the reasons we have to have this discussion and the reason peopledont like the term Pioneer. We argue this has and will automatically separate Native students from fully participating in their educational experience with the greater campus body.

We have outlined how we have personally been othered on campus and how being this voice of the other side has been met with trauma, brutality from campus safety, racism and campus violence. We have NSA alumni who are still paying their debt to DU. We must take a step back in advocating for Native American students to come to DU until we confront the cyclical violence within the campus environment.

Simply put, there is no way to reconcile the history of the word Pioneer. In the Chancellors email, he tried to say the way DU uses the word is separate from its historybut as a university that is founded upon the genocide of Cheyenne and Arapaho people, that is not possible. By keeping the Pioneer moniker, DU is telling its Native students, alumni, staff and faculty that they are not willing to reconcile its violent legacy and, in fact, want its legacy of genocide and harm to continue.

Pioneers killed Native people and stole Native land. That is the beginning and end of the word. It is not on non-Natives to claim that they can re-appropriate a word that continues to harm Native people. It is not their decision, so any justification for reconciling its meaning is simply not okay and continues to harm DUs Native community.

This harm against Native people is not unusual for DU. Besides their violent legacy, there is a consistent pattern of anti-Native rhetoric that has circulated within the DU culture for the past decade. The NSA co-chairs have felt the brunt of this harm and labor the most institutional trauma. We want to remind the BOT and DU community this has been a long-time conversation NSA has been laboring for the campus community by educating the other side.

Why We Stand with Current Native Students and Their Demands

We know that NSA has been met with continued hostility. Through using intellectual theory, we know settler colonialism and settler society will always see Native peoples as in the waybecause it is our land that is being sought after and desired for control (Deloria & Tuck). Our experience at DU as undergraduate students has stayed with us, and it is why we stand with Native students today. We affirm every single one of their demands, and we believe that each demand must be completed in order for DU to become a safe and healthy place for Native students and other marginalized students.

As a group, we address that the opinions on the LetsGoDU site do not speak for our stance. We completely agree that more work needs to be done beyond a name change, but considering how many years of harmful and violent encounters that surround this conversation that is supposedly occurring on an intellectual campus, we ask: how will you protect our Native students?

While we appreciate the intentions behind bringing new faculty, raising the Native American task force back up and providing full tuition to Native American students moving forward, we question if cycling colonial trauma inflicted by the campus environment is ethical. We see little recognition of past or present inaction and harm towards the Indigenous community on campus.

It is difficult to be heard in a predominately white institution that caters more to the majority as opposed to the minorities, the latter of which allows you to use inclusion and equity terminology to describe DU.

A memorial site dedicated to Sand Creek, within Pioneer Nation, will not bring justice to our community. We will continue to be reminded each day of a painful past without first allowing healing or envisioning a hopeful future. We ask that you reevaluate your dedication to upholding a violent legacy of colonialism and create true healing from past harms for your former and current Indigenous students. Most importantly, we ask that you create a safe space for Native students currently attending DU and for those to come.

Part of learning comes from activism and larger dialogues. We know realistically under the structures of capitalism and settler society, in order for the university to change the mascot name, money will have to follow. Given the structure of systemic racism and inequality, we do not possess this capital. However, it is within the constitutional rights of an individual to protest, which is fundamental within American society.

For alumniwho do not understand this is part of what conversations with different opinions looks like, it is not about bashing or condoning students for having a different opinion than you. It is not about suggesting that Dr. Ramirez or faculty who do not agree with you should be fired.

Facilitating greater conversations and educating through activism is the foundation of academic learning and the role of an educator and intellectual. Social change in America has been accomplished through movements and collective voices. Students should have the ability to learn these skills, which are imperative to the reality of todays social climate. We stand by Dr. Ramirez.

We want to contextualize our timeline experiences in the following letter. There is a reason the NSA has consistently gone to the front lines of these discussions. We do not try to be confrontational, but there has been no other way we have been able to be heard by administration. Our No More Pios Campaign PowerPoint was presented in front of USG, passed along to administration and met with inaction.

We are the smallest body on campus, therefore our voices are restricted and we have consistently been told that there are not enough of us to make a difference. Higher administration always argues that Native students are a small population of the student body, and as a result, our voices dont matter. They have used this argument to weaponize their power over NSA and dismiss anything our group has to say because we are insignificant in number and money to support the university.

That argument alone shows where the power in the university lies and the value of Native students is placed. We ask that if you continue to read from here on out, be open to understanding and learning about the history of DU from an NSA perspective.

2016-2020 NSA Elk Era: #NoDALP and #NoMorePios

We were informed by former Vice-Chancellor Lili Rodriguez at one point the only thing NSA could do to change the Pioneer name was to graduate, come back as alumni, and continue this conversation where it needs to happen. We are now the recent undergraduate alumni of DU, having graduated in 2019 and 2020. We have experienced trauma after trauma our entire four years attending the university. We are here to tell those stories today.

In the same year as the protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline in Standing Rock in 2016, DU agreed to host the annualPipeline Leadership Conferenceon campus. This was a conference that included the company responsible for the Dakota Access Pipeline, Energy Transfer Partners (ETP). This was a slap in the face to Native students on DUs campus, who had to take time from their studies to quickly plan a protest against the event.

At this protest, DU Campus Safety and the Denver Police Department (DPD) threatened students with arrest and labeled the group as out of control. Community members and DU students weremet with riot gear, mace guns and other weapons used to intimidate students.

A retired Native American faculty member, Dr. Tink Tinker, was called a jerk during the protest by the DU Director of Campus Safety, Don Enloe. This was after Enloe seemed to imply that he was going to measure out the distance that was appropriate to stand in front of a DU building to protest.

A year later, during the DU Pioneer Frozen Four game, DU students lit a mattress on fire, blocked Evans Ave. and were later congratulated for their win by DPD. Pioneer Nation got to walk away with tweets of support and zero conduct cases, while Native students were met with threats from Campus Safety and members from our protest were pushed and regulated.

A few months after NSAs #NoDALP protest, in January of 2017, DUs Board of Trustees decided to continue to invest in the fossil fuel industry. To this, NSA responded with a letter about how the fossil fuel industry commits violence against Indigenous communities beyond the destruction of land. The letter emphasized that by investing in these companies, DU is complicit in violence against Native communities the university claims to be trying to heal its relationship. Neither the Board or Chancellor Chopp responded to the letter.

In the fall of 2017, NSA launched a campaign addressing DUs use of the nickname Pioneer. In March of 2018, DU Student Activists (DUSA) teamed up with NSA to host a blackout at DU Hockeys last home game of the season. Protestors dressed in all black and filled the student section of the hockey game. Every time DUs team scored, the group held up a banner that read: Pioneers stole Indian land and killed Indian people. #NoMorePios.

When we raise our voice as a campus, it is not met with dialogue and conversations. This protest consisted of students from NSA and other affinity groups, and they were faced hostility, aggression and reaction from a crowd of adults who yelled and heckled us. We were told to go back to where we came from, which would be funny to Native students whose ancestors were here long before theirs were, except for the fact that we had multiple international and immigrant students in our group.

Eventually, we left the hockey game for our health and safety. We got up, held hands and left the game together. That night, we made sure no one walked home alone. There were some folks that worried for our safety. This reaction was expected, so much so that Vice-Chancellor Lili Rodriguez and other DU staff came to chaperone the protest. DU never condemned these actions from alumni and Pioneer sports fans.

Those memories stayed with us for months after the protest, as pro-Boone and Pioneer alumni started sending threats our way and created rumors about the protest. We began to plan carefully about when and where we spoke up against the nickname, making sure we felt safe to do so. At times, we even dropped the campaign until things died down on campus and we felt safe again.

Earlier that year, NSA was asked if we felt safe attending the Homecoming Parade. We were confused as to why we wouldnt, but the Office of Campus Life and Inclusive Excellence (CLIE) offered to have additional security around our float if we chose to participate. The wording alone did not make NSA feel safe or want to be there, as staff were already thinking in that manner.

When articles were published in the DU Clarion about student support against the Pioneer nickname, there were many harmful comments. They asked why we were at the school if we didnt like it and made statements such as these students should go back to the reservation and Native Americans should have been genocided.

NSA members faced multiple instances of harassment from pro-Boone alumni during this time. One Native student, who worked at the DU Clarion, had comments cursing and harassing her specifically. A pro-Boone alumnus called her boss in an attempt to get her fired.

LetsGoDU, run by the same pro-Boone and Pioneer alumni who threatened us, made an organization chart in 2018 asking who did it? about the recently-enacted No Mask Policy. This policy was implemented by the DU administration due to safety concerns surrounding those who wear masks on campus to harm other people while remaining anonymous. The policy banned masks on campus, which included the alumni-funded Daniel Boone Mascots mask and made alumni upset. In their chart, they identified NSA as one of the causes for this change.This same website continues to put up hateful articles about our Native students, including pictures of our students and elders faces in them.

In 2018, an alumna from the Graduate School of Social WorkAlyssa Willieconducted a research paper about how the Pioneer nickname affected Native American students. She included interviews with student organizers.The paper concluded that NSA students were hypervigilant struggling with mental health effects from the Pioneer nickname such as anxiety, feeling unsafe on campus and not feeling a sense of belonging. Native students felt subjugated to microaggressions from other students, staff and faculty. They were constantly asked to be the spokesperson or interviewee for various students research papers.

2012-2015 Boone Protest Era: Continued Campus Safety Violence to NSA

In 2014, alumna Amanda Williams led the first ever No More Pioneer protest on DUs campus. The action was held during the creation of a Harlem Shake video that used Daniel Boone as the schools mascot.

Amanda Williams, Julia Bramante and Jozer Guerro held signs against the Boone character in front of Sturm Hall to demonstrate their disapproval of Daniel Boone in the Harlem Shake video. They were not there to stop the event. They wanted to show the campus was not being inclusive and the video being shot did not represent all students who attended the university.

As more people showed up, the organizer for the video called security and stated that Amanda, Jozer and Julia were being disruptive and prohibiting the video from being filmed. Campus Security came, and all three were then questioned if they had permits or authorization to be on Driscoll Green because the organizer of the video had a permit to film. Later, a letter from Campus Safety admitted this claim was false.

We were the only students asked to provide student ID to prove our identity as students. We were escorted off campus by Campus Safety because one of us did not have an ID card to prove we were DU students, even though the other two did.

We were placed on student conduct alert and were unable to register for courses until Chancellor Coombe made a phone call to the Student Conduct Office to release our records. During this time, Jozer Guerrero received threats from alumni that they would find out where he lived and harm him.

Guerrero said that while they tried to reason with the filmmakers and guards, the guards were rude and disrespectful and used excessive force on the shoulders and arms of the students during the incident. DCS Public Information officer, Sgt. Banet, said it was a use of reasonable necessary force. There were over 100 studentsapart from us there for the video, and many of them shouted racial slurs as we were forced off Driscoll Green.

During our meeting with the Chancellor after the event, we requested that the security cameras with footage of Sturm and Driscoll Green be reviewed to show what happened that day. We also requested the footage from the officers body cam. These requests were repeatedly denied.

Notably, the following year, another student organization on Driscoll Green requested to review security camera footage. Their request was immediately approved, and the footage was provided for them to review personally.

Jordan Ames, the administrative manager of the universitys marketing and communications department, lied to Westword about the event. He said the Harlem Shake group had a permit and Campus Safety was not aware of any complaints, despite the several made in writing by us.

During this time, there were efforts made to change the mascot. The university attempted to create a new mascot by forming several university mascot-focused groups (Mascot Steering Committee, Mascot Task Force, etc.). These groups were made up of alumni, undergraduate students, graduate students and faculty. The discussion within these groups, combined with the press surrounding the NSA and Harlem Shake video, led to conversations across campus regarding the controversy surrounding Boone.

It caught the attention of Facebook groups and alumni blogs. Offensive comments were made, such as: Amanda, Jozer and Julia should go fuck themselves; These students should go back to the reservation where they came from; They should go and get drunk on their reservation; Dont worry, this wont be an issue anymore once all of the Native Americans die off.

These types of comments were also made by the USG senior class president at the time, who went on to make senior t-shirts with Boone on them. A Native student had to work their way out of being in the same group project with this individual.

2008-2011 Colonial-Embedded Values of Playing Indian Era

In 2011, the DU Homecoming theme was How the West was Won, which was approved by Student Life, the Office of the Chancellor and Alumni Relations. NSA and CLIE (at the time called Center for Multicultural Excellence or CME) brought up issues with this theme and its colonial legacy. We pointed out that How the West was Won resulted in the genocide and removal of Indigenous peoples, which is directly linked to DUs history of the Sand Creek Massacre. Our complaints were ignored.

In October of 2011, right before Indigenous Peoples Day was officially recognized, the Vice President of Greek Life made racist comments about NSAs celebration of Indigenous Peoples Day during a Greek Life meeting. They stated, I just want to end our meeting by saying Columbus Day is a real holiday, which was followed by more racist remarks.

If an ally in the Multicultural Greek Life SLB had not said anything, those remarks would have been ignored. Later in November 2011, a Pilgrim and Indian Party was shut down in the Art Department when an NSA member brought up the problematic issue of Playing Indian. We are grateful to the Art Department Dean for immediately shutting down the event.

In spring of 2012, a DU fraternity and sorority held a cowboys and Indians themed party where women dressed up as Indians and men came as Cowboys.

Native women have the highest rate of sexual assault and going missing in our communities. Native and Indigenous women are vulnerable under the structure of colonialism, which we see to this day with Indigenous women in North and South America. The hypersexualization of Native women depicted through costumes and as objects by settler logic causes harm to our community.

This event resulted in a public apology by Greek Life to the Denver Native community. They were forced to do community service at the DU Pow Wow in 2012. The sorority and fraternity volunteered for a few years, but over time expressed they no longer understood why they had to attend our Pow Wow and service our community.

Their main argument was that they were not the cohort of folks who attended and held this party. This demonstrates two things: some non-Native students are not willing to learnunless they are forced to about our culture and how to respect it. They do not want to continue the process of healing from the harm their predecessors caused.

There is not a culture of learning and mutual respect from past wrongs on our campus. How can we have a dialogue on campus about the term Pioneer if there is no such facilitation or environment for such conversations to happen?

After the university publicly apologized, the conversation moved to a digital platform, where many anonymous racist remarks were made to the Native students.

In the DU Clarion, one student made note, If there were no Native students on campus, this wouldnt be an issue. Other persons added that the Native American population will eventually decrease, and when there are no longer Native Americans anymore, this will no longer be an issue. There was also an alumnus who made remarks on the comment section, stating, we didnt give out enough smallpox blankets to the Native Americans.

Since the release of your email, we have compiled these events as oral histories to remind the community where we stand and that we will continue to be here now and in the future. Oppositional thoughts and conversations have always been a part of campuss greater discourse. Yet, we want to call attention to the fact that NSA students are never safe when having these conversations that we are encouraged to participate in.

In solidarity with current Native students at DU,

Former Leadership of Undergraduate DU Native Student Alliance

Indigenous Alumni Affinity Group

Read more here:
LTTE: A response from Indigenous alumni to the Chancellor's affirmation of Pioneer - DU Clarion

Polish Player Suspected Of Cheating Gets 2-Year Ban – Chess.com

The Polish Chess Federation has banned 17-year-old WFM Patrycja Waszczuk for two years from competitive chess for allegedly using a phone during play. The father of Waszczuk has appealed the decision, claiming the evidence is circumstantial.

Waszczuk, who is the current Polish U18 Girls Champion, was removed from the Ustron Chess Festival on August 16, 2020 for possessing an electronic device. The result of her round-four game was changed from a draw to a loss. There was a strong suspicion that she used a phone during play, which has now led to the two-year ban.

The penalty by the Polish Chess Federation was announced in a document (in PDF here) by the Commission for Awards and Discipline, which is the result of an investigation over the last two months. The verdict is based on a combination of factors, summarized by IM Piotr Nguyen on the Polish chess website Infoszach and translated here:

Since the spring of 2020, several Polish players have suspected Waszczuk of receiving external help during games. WFM Michalina Rudzinska posted her thoughts on Facebook, while IM Klaudia Kulon was interviewed by Onet, a widely read news website in Poland.

WIM Alicja Sliwicka, who attended a training camp in July 2020 with Waszczuk and other players, provided the following comments to Chess.com via email:

"During a training session for the women's national team, we played a small tournament for all camp participants. In the first round, I played against Waszczuk, who had permission from the coach to write down her moves on her mobile phone because she claimed she did not have any piece of paper or pen. I spotted she put the moves into a chess mobile app instead of a mobile notebook. Patrycja won that game as easy as her next two games against GM Monika Socko and coach GM Marcin Dziuba.

"When I was in time trouble, I stopped writing moves down, so after the game, I asked Patrycja to show me her mobile phone because I wanted to copy the moves from her notation. First, she offered help by telling me all moves, but when I preferred to see the app, she refused to show it, claiming that some error occurred and she could not restore her notation. After three games, our coach intervened and did not allow her to use a mobile phone anymore. Then she scored only one point in the next 12 games with a much lower level of play."

Sliwicka also mentioned an experience when the players had to solve puzzles: "During the camp, the participants had to solve chess puzzles by themselves. In one of those tests, everybody used the full time (40 minutes) to solve puzzles except her, who finished them after a few minutes and had all the correct answers. Her behavior during the test was very suspicious too. While solving the next test, she was observed, so she tried to solve it without any help. She did not write any solution and left her paper empty."

Some participants in the Polish U18 Girls Championship in Szklarska Poreba in March 2020 had already suspected Waszczuk because of her frequent visits to the restroom, while showing a "super-GM level of play." Waszczuk won with 7.5/8 when the tournament had to be ended prematurely due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The analysis of Waszczuk's moves, which were an important part of the commission's verdict, included this tournament and also her games from the 2019 European U16 Girls Championship in Bratislava where she took clear first with 7.5/9.

Before the Ustron Chess Festival, in early August, Waszczuk participated in the Polish Women's Championship, where she scored 4/9. However, even from the first round, the other participants started suspecting her.

Waszczuk's move 26...Kf8, in her game with the four-time Polish women's champion WGM Jolanta Zawadzka, is well known in the Polish chess scene and has become a meme on social media. It was played after fewer than three minutes of thinking:

"During the game, I couldn't believe it is a good move," Zawadzka told Chess.com. "I was trying to find why it was wrong, why it was not stupid. After the game, I saw it's the computer's first move. Even grandmasters couldn't find it."

Zawadzka experienced more odd behavior from her opponent, such as playing the opening moves quite slow and, after returning from the restroom, quickly finding the best moves.

"All cheaters should be banned forever if there's proof without any doubt as it's too damaging for the sport," said Zawadzka. She agreed that at the women's championship there was no clear evidence of foul play: "Everybody knows it, but nobody can prove it."

Chess.com also spoke to WIM Anna Kubicka, who played Waszczuk in the third round of the championship. Like Zawadzka, Kubicka said that it was the combination of strong moves by Waszczuk and her regular visits to the restroom that raised the other players' eyebrows:

"After the opening, I decided to play quickly to not allow her to go to the toilet. Every time she made a move, she wanted to stand up, but I was blitzing. At some point, it became too much, and she went to the toilet even though it was her move. She came back, and for the next five moves, she went back to the toilet four times, in about 15-20 minutes. I didn't know what to think and tried to find moves that she couldn't have analyzed."

In subsequent rounds, Kubicka and other players started to write down the number of times Waszczuk went to the restroom during her games while afterward trying to check those moments with the evaluation of the computer. They felt that the strength of her play in the tournament corresponded with those restroom visits.

The tournament organizers did arrange for a metal detector to check whether players were carrying electronic devicesa measure that has become more and more common at chess tournaments. However, there were doubts by players about the quality of the machines and how they were used. Sometimes, the detector would make a sound, but players would still be allowed to play without further checks.

Kubicka: "Sometimes players would show their jewelry, and it was fine. But there was also one round when Patrycja didn't have an explanation as the machine went off close to her pants, and the arbiter still let her play. Admittedly, they were not using the best machines."

The atmosphere during the championship was very tense, and most players were constantly distracted by the suspicions. GM Monika Socko stated that she couldn't sleep the night before and after her game with Waszczuk.

The Ustron Chess Festival, where Waszczuk was banned from the tournament, started only a couple of days after the national championship. The event was played under the honorary patronage of FIDE Vice President Lukasz Turlej. He confirmed most of the facts as stated in the document by the Commission for Awards and Discipline.

Turlej told Chess.com that, apart from the phone Waszczuk handed to the organizers, she had a second one in her purse: "They caught her, and she admitted having a phone with her. When the arbiter wanted to inspect her purse, she said no. Then she said: 'Yes, I have a phone in there, but I don't want to show it.'"

Waszczuk had been asked more than once if she had another electronic device with her. After admitting she did have a phone, she left the playing hall and came back with her grandmother, says Turlej:

"The grandmother said it was not a phone but a power bank, and that she had used the word 'phone' because of stress."

Turlej added: "It is such a pity. This tournament was supposed to be famous because of the honorary patronage and visit of Anatoly Karpov and a great number of accompanying events. I have to say, it was one of the best chess events I have ever seen. But unfortunately, the wider public knows the Ustron Chess Festival because of this incident."

Chess24 revealed that the witness who saw Waszczuk using a phone in the toilet was WFM Katarzyna Dwilewicz. She said that during the fourth round, she followed Waszczuk to the restroom, chose the toilet next to hers, and then started to stand up on the toilet seat:

"My heart was beating so fast when I was climbing on the toilet! I was all shaking. Finally, when I climbed up high enough, I looked down. I saw her sitting down. She was using a phone, and I am sure of what I saw. I saw clearly the phone screen. It was exactly the same position she had had on the board a while ago. She was checking variations from a chess program."

An English version of the commission's report has been sent to FIDE. Turlej provided a statement on the legal procedures, in which he notes:

"When requested by a member federation, the Ethics and Disciplinary Commission will attribute general validity in FIDE to national decisions on violations of FIDE Ethics and Disciplinary Code, if adequately motivated and decided in compliance with the fundamental principles of law and fair trial."

FIDE Director General Emil Sutovsky confirmed that both the FIDE Fair Play Commission and the Ethics Commission will examine the report. He expects a formal decision to be taken within a few weeks.

In the case of GM Igors Rausis (now using the nameIsa Kasimi), who was caught with his phone during a tournament game, he wasstripped of his GM title and received a six-year ban from FIDE. Earlier, Georgian GM Gaioz Nigalidze also lost his GM title and was banned for three years, also for using a phone in a restroom during play.

The maximum ban from the Polish Chess Federation for offenses during open tournaments is three years but two for minors; therefore, Waszczuk was banned for two years. If she had been caught during the Women's Championship, the penalty would likely have been higher as the maximum ban for offenses at that type of tournament is 10 years.

Mariusz Waszczuk, the father of the player, has appealed the commission's decision. In an interview with Onet, he states:

"There was a hunt on my daughter. Terrible hate has been poured out on her. We're suffering terribly. People see us as cheaters, and that's not the case. There is no evidence of this. This case is a conspiracy by two direct rivals of Patrycja."

According to the father, Patrycja never admitted to having a second mobile phone with her. He also claims that the second device found in Ustron was a power bank.

Waszczuk senior, who has hired a lawyer, suggests that procedural mistakes have been made by the Polish Chess Federation. He claims that they didn't get proper access to documentation and case files. He also questions the actions of the chairman of the Commission for Awards and Discipline, who is said to have spoken about the ongoing case on Facebook.

While the Polish Chess Federation has three months to decide on the appeal, the case could end up in court. One question is how Dwilewicz's revelation that she caught Waszczuk red-handed, a testimony from just one eyewitness, will be handled.

Chess.com couldn't reach a representative of the federation for a comment. Speaking to Onet, the president of the federation, Radoslaw Jedunak, said: "This type of fraud is very difficult to detect. After all, it is difficult to say what someone could do in the toilet if they went out to it. However, if someone goes to the toilet several times during one game, and then beats one of the best players, and then beats another strong opponent, it gives food for thought."

Read the rest here:
Polish Player Suspected Of Cheating Gets 2-Year Ban - Chess.com

Chess: Find the move that defeated a world champion – Financial Times

Last weeks $150,000 US Championship, played online and organised by Americas chess centre at St Louis, ended with its winner, Wesley So, harking back to Bobby Fischersbrilliant performances in the 1960s. However, Sos achievement was slightly diminished by an artificial final round game that the legend would never have allowed.

The 27-year-old ex-Filipino world No9 won the $40,000 first prize with an unbeaten 9/11, a points total only Fischer has equalled or surpassed, notably in his 11/11 sweep of 1963-64.

Half a point behind So was the rising star of US chess Jeffery Xiong, who turned 20 on October 30.

At the start of the final round So led Xiong by a one-point margin, though seemingly with the harder pairing against the out of form defending champion Hikaru Nakamura.

So v Nakamura repeated their final round draw in the 2018 championship for 25 moves, then halved out The game, played at blitz speed, was over in under a quarter of an hour. It was the antithesis of Fischer, who in the 1963-64 final round patiently ground down Anthony Saidy from a level endgame to ensure his 100 per cent total.

Puzzle 2392

Santosh Vidit v Vlad Kramnik, Leiden 2019. White (to play) is a pawn down with his f7 rook attacked. What was his winning move which defeated Russia's ex-world champion?

Click here for solution

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Chess: Find the move that defeated a world champion - Financial Times

‘The Queen’s Gambit’ and more chess films worth checking out – Minneapolis Star Tribune

If theres a nail-biting thriller about Chinese checkers, I havent seen it. Chess, on the other hand, continues to provide high drama.

Look no further than Netflixs The Queens Gambit, a riveting new miniseries about an orphan (Anya Taylor-Joy) who conquers the gaming world with relentless ambition and a steady supply of little green pills. Director Scott Frank breaks up the board action with long tracking shots and a toe-tapping soundtrack that makes you feel like youre watching a new installment of Oceans 11.

Gambit joins a roster of other chess movies and specials that are worth streaming:

Critical Thinking (2020)

John Leguizamo makes an impressive feature directorial debut in this underdog film about a scrappy Florida high school team that took home a national championship in 1998. Leguizamo, who also stars as the teens determined coach, does a superb job of capturing urban life and the struggles his heroes face when theyre not capturing pawns. Amazon

Bobby Fischer Against the World (2011)

You dont need to know the difference between a bishop and a knight to be sucked into this fascinating documentary about one of Americas greatest mad geniuses. Director Liz Garbus deserves an honorary chess master title for making us feel like we know Fischer whether we want to or not. YouTube

Chess in Concert (2009)

Not everything that ABBA touched turned to gold. This musical collaboration between Tim Rice and ABBA members Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus never really got off the board (exception: the hit single One Night in Bangkok). But its amusing to see Idina Menzel and Josh Groban interpret songs from this London stage production. YouTube

Searching for Bobby Fischer (1993)

Quite simply, one of the most feel-good movies ever made. Joe Mantegna, Joan Allen, Ben Kingsley and Laurence Fishburne are among the grown-ups who support a prodigy as he tries to balance childhood with championships. Tubi

The Coldest Game (2019)

The Cold War gets played out in a sweaty-palm showdown between a Russian grandmaster and an American professor who cant move a pawn without being drunk. Bill Pullman pulls out all the stops as the troubled teacher who reluctantly steps into the role of hero. Its far from a classic, but its a kick to watch the Independence Day president pretend that hes starring in a remake of Barfly. Netflix

A West Wing Special to Benefit When We All Vote (2020)

This stage version of a 2002 episode of the Emmy-winning series uses President Bartlets mastery of the game as an analogy to how he deals with a growing crisis with China. The special was previously exclusive to HBO Max, but is now free for nonsubscribers through the end of the year. hbomax.com/votebecause

Queen of Katwe (2016)

Chess gets the Disney treatment in this family treat about a 10-year-old Ugandan girl who pulls her family out of poverty through her chess skills. Lupita Nyongo and David Oyelowo are both terrific as the adults who cheer her on. Disney+

Njustin@startribune.com Twitter: @nealjustin

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'The Queen's Gambit' and more chess films worth checking out - Minneapolis Star Tribune