Chess Club survives at Illinois school

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In this photo taken Jan. 10, 2012, La Salle-Peru Township High School chess club member Brianna Walter laughs along with other chess club members during practice in La Salle. Walter is one of the few girls to join the chess club, one of the few remaining high school chess clubs in the area. (AP Photo/NewsTribune, Anthony Souffle)
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LASALLE (AP) — White goes first and the game is on as two strangers face off over a rollup chessboard on a chilly afternoon in the old cafeteria at La Salle-Peru Township High School.

The competitors attempt to talk although their focus in on the 32 plastic pieces being used to attack and defend. It doesn't take long before 15-year-old Tristan Martin of La Salle has taken command of the board and the reporter, twice Martin's age, on the other side of table resigns, knocking his own king down in defeat.

"I've always loved playing chess and I love the logical skill and challenge that it gives," Martin said.

He's not alone.

Although small, L-P's chess club continues as one of the remaining few in the area.

Led by coach Bill Schulte, owner of River Valley Insurance in La Salle, the team of roughly 10 students meets weekly for practice and takes part in a handful of out-of-area competitions each year.

Since taking over for L-P's long-time teacher and chess coach Byron Pappas about 12 years ago, Schulte has worked to keep the club active through participation in the homecoming parade and promoting it to incoming students during the annual eighth-grade open house.

The game of chess has been basically the same for the past 500 years, with a history and heritage stretching even further back. In a world where those with an interest in gaming challenges can dive headlong into immersive and challenging video games, chess manages to survive.

"I think it's the live action. I think it's the over the board, man against man, woman against woman," Schulte said.

For many of Schulte's players, chess is a supplement to other forms of gaming, he said.

T.J. Despinis, a junior, of Lostant said a video game can be costly and quickly becomes outdated, whereas chess is lasting.

Additionally, with video games a player's focus is on a television or computer screen, but chess comes down to facing a live opponent and trying to evaluate him or her, Despinis said.

"It's all about posturing," Despinis said. "I've gone in there using different personas."

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