In celebration of National Chess Day last semester, people from ages 10 to 75 gathered in the Lavin-Bernick Center for University Life for a chess tournament. It was the largest all-ages United States Chess Federation tournament in Louisiana since 2018, with 100 total participants coming from as far as Alabama.
This tournament, the first Tulane Quick Chess Tournament, was jointly hosted by the Downriver Chess Club and the Tulane Chess Club.
“Tulane has a really good setup for tournament chess,” said Andrew Squitiro, staff advisor to the Tulane Chess Club and president of Downriver Chess Club. The tournament itself took place in the Kendall Cram Lecture Hall, where tables were set up for games and announcements were made from the stage. “Kendall Cram is large, spacious, well lit, and has tall ceilings. It really added an aura of prestige to the tournament,” said Squitiro.
The 1834 Club was set up as a “skittles room,” a place where participants could relax between games and spectators could play pickup games. Couches on the mezzanine were available for people to socialize.