10A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 Chess: In its second year, program is still gaining traction Continued from Page 1A For a few months, Rouse has held club meetings during lunch periods and after school on Mondays and Fridays. He hopes giving students different times to meet will spark more interest and increase participation. The school administration supports the program. Even if only a handful of kids attend the club, Principal John McAn- drews said, “It’s important to provide an opportunity they’re engaged in.” Gearhart’s second year Dan King is leading Gear- hart Elementary School’s chess club into its second year, but the program still is gaining traction. King started a chess club at Seaside Heights Elementary School in 1980. The club lasted about 20 years and took part in the state chess tournament about a dozen of those years. King took a hiatus until about six years ago, when a former chess club member approached him at Costco and told him the impact the club had on him. “At that point, I knew in my heart, even though I was burned out from going to state tour- naments, I could still do chess club, so I started up again,” he said. He left Seaside Heights about a year and a half ago and went to Gearhart, where he reignited the chess club that had been there in the 1980s. The club started its second season in early Novem- ber with Friday afternoon meet- ings. In addition to about 15 stu- dent participants, King has help from several parent volunteers, some of whom were on his team at Seaside Heights. The club is targeted toward fourth- and ¿IWKJUDGHUVEXW.LQJLVRSHQWR having younger students partici- pate, as well. Opportunity for advancement At Seaside High School, senior Kris Booth tried to get a chess program started this year IRU KLV 3DFL¿FD 3URMHFW EXW KH was not able to garner the at- tention and interest he needed, said Booth’s mentor Eddie Park, Sage Park’s grandfather. “The inertia was just too great for him to overcome,” he said. “But, we will try again next year.” The goal is to spread the word about chess in the commu- nity, give students the opportu- nity to play and, eventually, start a competition team. Another as- pect of the club will be interact- ing with elementary and middle school students. The players Sometimes people underes- timate the ability of children to grasp the technical nuances of FKHVV EXW HYHQ ¿UVWJUDGHUV RU younger students can start learn- ing the game, King said. He and David Rouse be- OLHYH WKH EHQH¿WV RI SOD\LQJ are numerous: improved prob- pete in two qualifying events and establish a Northwest Scho- lastic Rating System or United States Chess Federation rating. Even though the state tourna- ment is held in Seaside, Sage 3DUN ZLOO EH WKH ¿UVW VWXGHQW from Clatsop County to partici- pate when she attends the tour- nament this April. Park also wants to make Sea- side the site of qualifying tour- naments in the future, which is a possibility, according to Jeff Dobbins, an Oregon Scholastic Chess Federation board mem- ber. “The great thing about the Oregon Scholastic Chess Feder- DWLRQLVWKDWZH¶UHYHU\ÀH[LEOH´ he said, adding a parent volun- teer or teacher can put on a qual- ifying tournament. “The goal of the organization was to get more people to set up tournaments and run them on their own.” The state tournament is open for students ages 5 through 19, or kindergartners through high school seniors. It also offers a separate section, called the Friends and Family Section, for KATHERINE LACAZE — EO Media Group adults and other students who Broadway Middle School chess club leader David Rouse, left, and sixth-grader Sage Park wait to make their chess KDYHQ¶W TXDOL¿HG 7KH VWXGHQWV moves during a club meeting . The middle school is getting a new chess club program under instruction of Rouse, a in that section get to play four student’s grandfather and the former Lady Seagulls soccer team coach. games and get a sense of the event, Dobbins said. By participating in tour- naments, he said, competitors become “very aware of the con- sequences of their actions” in a controlled setting. “You know, at the end of the game, how well you do and whether you win or lose is really up to you and the choices you made,” he said. They also have the oppor- tunity to meet and play against people from all over the state who share a common interest. The federation’s state tour- KATHERINE LACAZE — EO Media Group nament is not a qualifying event The Gearhart Elementary School chess club started its second for a national competition, but year a few weeks ago, under the guidance of Dan King. The the winners of the high school club, which is open to all students, has garnered the interest and middle school divisions are about 15 students and a few parent volunteers so far this year. nominated to represent the state at the national Denker Tourna- ment of High School Cham- pions and the Dewain Barber Tournament of K–8 Champions tournaments, respectively. The top-rated girls also are nomi- nated to play in national wom- en-only events. David Rouse said he is wait- ing to see if attending tourna- ments will be feasible for the club. For now, he wants to focus KATHERINE LACAZE — EO Media Group on instruction and practice, and Alicia Gagnon, second grade, considers her next move in he believes eventually the pro- a chess game against fellow student Maddy Wrege during gram will attract students who a chess club meeting at Gearhart Elementary School. want to compete. KATHERINE LACAZE — EO Media Group Gearhart Elementary Fourth-grader Samuel Taylor makes a move in a chess as they used to be, he suggested. Crystal Rouse said she’d be School’s program is strictly rec- game during a chess club meeting at Gearhart Elemen- “There were a lot more kids interested in competing, as well, reational at this point, King said, tary School. The club was started last year and has about playing chess with their parents EXWVKH¿UVWZDQWVWRJHW³ZD\ and he prefers to keep it that 15 students this year. in the 1980s and 1990s than more practice.” Luckily for her, way. He said he wants “students there are today,” he said, adding her father and grandfather are to be proud that they know how lem-solving skills, strategic clubs, either. that, in his experience, “the kids available to give her that prac- to play chess, and to continue to play chess through their adult WKLQNLQJFRQ¿GHQFHZRUNHWKLF If students had more oppor- who were really successful were tice. lives.” and creativity. tunities to play during or after also playing at home.” In the future He has taught more than Despite what the activity has school, King believes their inter- For instance, Sage Park has Eddie Park hopes the clubs’ 1,000 people to play chess in his to offer, scholastic chess is not est in the game would increase been playing since she was 4 widely promoted in the school in turn. Instruction at home also years old under her grandfa- long-term goal is to help stu- life, and some of his proudest GLVWULFWWKHUHLVQRWDFKHVVFOXE can affect the activity’s presence ther’s guidance. Now she is dents qualify for the Oregon moments are when those people at Seaside Heights Elementary in the community. one of only a few local students Scholastic Chess Federation tell him they still play the game. “That’s what will melt my School. The Knappa and Jewell Students probably are not as seeking out competitions to at- State Tournament in April. To DWWHQGVWXGHQWVPXVW¿UVWFRP- heart,” he said. school districts don’t have chess exposed to chess in their homes tend. Corps: Audubon Sociey of Portland announced it will sue the Corps if the depredation permit is approved Continued from Page 1A Depending on the year, the double-crested cormorants’ Daniel Roby, unit lead- diet could be as little as two er-wildlife with the U.S. percent salmonids or as much Geological Survey-Oregon as 20 percent. Cooperative Fish and Wildlife “The results of this Research Unit at OSU, has Corps-funded study were ig- been on and off the island for nored in setting or interpreting decades. In a letter he submit- WKH VSHFL¿F PDQDJHPHQW RE- ted during a public comment jective,” Roby continues. “... period on the Corps’ plan, he instead one average per-cor- said the Corps exaggerated morant smolt consumption the risks of using non-lethal rate was assumed for setting management techniques — management objectives.” limiting nesting areas, hazing The management plan calls birds off the island, attracting for the killing of 5,380 to 5,939 them to other locations — and breeding pairs of double-crest- downplayed the risk and un- ed cormorants that nest sea- certainty of the lethal option. sonally on East Sand Island Supporters of the plan have at the mouth of the Columbia pointed to the need to protect River over the next four years, salmon runs, and certainly a move that could result in the the cormorants as well as the potential loss of 72.5 percent Caspian terns that nest on the RI WKH QHVWV LQ WKH ¿UVW WKUHH LVODQGHDWWKHLU¿OORIVDOPRQ years, according to the Corps. upwards of 20 million juvenile In addition to shooting birds salmonids each year between with shotguns, contractors the bird species, according to would also prevent a number of the Corps. But those numbers eggs from hatching through a can vary greatly from year to process called egg oiling. year, Roby wrote. OSU researchers will no “...the Corps funded our longer be on the island. Mon- research team to investigate itoring will be done by other the factors that are respon- contractors — likely people sible for the large inter-an- with federal Wildlife Services nual variation in cormorant — if a the lethal take is ap- predation rates on salmonid proved. The Corps estimates smolts,” he said. it will cost the agency approx- imately $685,000 to $905,000 to monitor the colony during the nesting season. It could take about 30 days to get a depredation permit approved for this year and there is still a chance it won’t be approved. But if the Corps does land the permit, lawsuits are also on the horizon. The Audubon Society of Portland announced it will sue the Corps if the permit is approved. “We are deeply disap- pointed that despite more than 145,000 comments op- posing this decision, the fed- eral government has chosen to move forward with the wanton slaughter of thou- sands of protected birds,” said Audubon Society of Portland conservation di- rector Bob Sallinger in a statement. “Rather than ad- dressing the primary cause of salmon decline, the man- ner in which the Corps op- erates the Columbia River Hydropower System, the Corps has instead decided to scapegoat wild birds and pursue a slaughter of historic proportions. Sadly this will do little or nothing to protect wild salmon but it will put Double-crested Cormorant populations in real jeopardy.” “It’s a complex issue,” said Corps spokesperson Di- ana Fredlund. There are salmon, cor- morants, tribes, commercial ¿VKHUPHQUHFUHDWLRQDO¿VKHU- men, the hydropower system: ³:H¶UHWU\LQJWR¿QGZLWKWKH help of our partner agencies, the best ways of making that balance,” Fredlund said.