T&C VIII.P.8 wrote:
There will be no less than five
computational math, not more that 1 computational
science, at least 4 computational total.
All computational toss-up questions will be
from either the math or science categories.
But what about the computation TU on the number of permutations of the letters in the Upton Sinclair work about the meat packing industry! My Toss-up is ruined!
David Garb-
Buffalo Grove High School '09
UIUC-'13
Former member of the most dysfunctional scholastic bowl team in Illinois.
(11:23:30 PM) garb: Wait, are you talking about the porn or the reeses?
Greg is correct. The rule got changed when it was transcribed from the meeting minutes to the T&C. This rule is new--the SPF computational tossup was legal under last year's rules.
DavidReinstein
Head Writer and Editor for Scobol Solo, Masonics, and IESA; TD for Scobol Solo and Reinstein Varsity; IHSSBCA Board Member; IHSSBCA Chair (2004-2014); PACE President (2016-2018)
T&C VIII.P.8 wrote:
There will be no less than five
computational math, not more that 1 computational
science, at least 4 computational total.
All computational toss-up questions will be
from either the math or science categories.
But what about the computation TU on the number of permutations of the letters in the Upton Sinclair work about the meat packing industry! My Toss-up is ruined!
181440?
Oh...you didn't actually...but I...my bad.
BJ Houlding
Winnebago '04
Saint Joseph's College '08
IHSSBCA Certified Moderator
Class AA:
Pool 1. winners of the Libertyville, Maine South, Mattoon, and Dunlap sectionals
(read: Stevenson, St. Ignatius, Carbondale, and ?)
Pool 2. winners of the Marist, WWS, Bradley-Bourbonnais, and Auburn sectionals
(read: ?, WWS, Centennial, and Auburn)
Class A:
Pool 1. winners of the Fairfield, Carlinville, Peoria Christian, and Warrensburg-Latham sectionals
Pool 2. winners of the Winnebago, Herrin, Macomb, and Dwight sectionals
Jonah Greenthal
National Academic Quiz Tournaments
Class AA:
Pool 1. winners of the Libertyville, Maine South, Mattoon, and Dunlap sectionals
(read: Stevenson, St. Ignatius, Carbondale, and ?)
Pool 2. winners of the Marist, WWS, Bradley-Bourbonnais, and Auburn sectionals
(read: ?, WWS, Centennial, and Auburn)
Class A:
Pool 1. winners of the Fairfield, Carlinville, Peoria Christian, and Warrensburg-Latham sectionals
Pool 2. winners of the Winnebago, Herrin, Macomb, and Dwight sectionals
What, no prognostication for Class A?
//it's 2005 styxman posting ITT
Brad Fischer
Head Editor, IHSA State Series
IHSSBCA Chair
Winnebago HS ('06)
Northern Illinois University ('10)
Assistant Coach, IMSA (2010-12)
Coach, Keith Country Day School (2012-16)
Class AA:
Pool 1. winners of the Libertyville, Maine South, Mattoon, and Dunlap sectionals
(read: Stevenson, St. Ignatius, Carbondale, and ?)
So, basically, of the 8 teams at IHSA state, one of the teams that deserves a trophy (Stevenson, Ig, C-Dale, Auburn) will get screwed out of it because of this pool (with the exception of Auburn).
Dan Donohue, Saint Viator ('10), Northwestern ('14), NAQT
Class AA:
Pool 1. winners of the Libertyville, Maine South, Mattoon, and Dunlap sectionals
(read: Stevenson, St. Ignatius, Carbondale, and ?)
So, basically, of the 8 teams at IHSA state, one of the teams that deserves a trophy (Stevenson, Ig, C-Dale, Auburn) will get screwed out of it because of this pool (with the exception of Auburn).
That's fair. You can't expect them to gerrymander the pools based on who's projected highest any given year.
BJ Houlding
Winnebago '04
Saint Joseph's College '08
IHSSBCA Certified Moderator
Class AA:
Pool 1. winners of the Libertyville, Maine South, Mattoon, and Dunlap sectionals
(read: Stevenson, St. Ignatius, Carbondale, and ?)
So, basically, of the 8 teams at IHSA state, one of the teams that deserves a trophy (Stevenson, Ig, C-Dale, Auburn) will get screwed out of it because of this pool (with the exception of Auburn).
That's fair. You can't expect them to gerrymander the pools based on who's projected highest any given year.
But you can wish they would come up with a fair format.
Jonah Greenthal
National Academic Quiz Tournaments
Ike Pappas wrote:That's fair. You can't expect them to gerrymander the pools based on who's projected highest any given year.
I'm not entirely sure how the IHSA system works, but what is the difference between "gerrymandering the pools based on who's projected highest," and what we would normally call seeding a tournament to produce brackets of equal strength?
Matt Weiner
Advisor to Quizbowl at Virginia Commonwealth University / Founder of hsquizbowl.org
Ike Pappas wrote:That's fair. You can't expect them to gerrymander the pools based on who's projected highest any given year.
I'm not entirely sure how the IHSA system works, but what is the difference between "gerrymandering the pools based on who's projected highest," and what we would normally call seeding a tournament to produce brackets of equal strength?
I'm not an expert, but I believe the pools are either done randomly each year (at least this was the case in 2005 when Brad Fischer's team was sent home with third place, no?) or they are always structured geographically [with the Chicago-are sectional (St. Ignatius this year) winner always going in the same pool as the winner of the northwest suburban Chicago sectional (Libertyville this year) and the winner of the southern Illinois/Carbondale-area sectional (Mattoon, this year)].
EDIT: I just checked, it's random.
Dan Donohue, Saint Viator ('10), Northwestern ('14), NAQT
Ike Pappas wrote:That's fair. You can't expect them to gerrymander the pools based on who's projected highest any given year.
I'm not entirely sure how the IHSA system works, but what is the difference between "gerrymandering the pools based on who's projected highest," and what we would normally call seeding a tournament to produce brackets of equal strength?
This would imply some sort of fair rankings to be done. You could seed state based off of sectionals performance, but that would probably just end up favoring teams in weaker regionals. There is really no way to seed the eight teams that everyone involved would be satisfied with...hence the random seeding.
BJ Houlding
Winnebago '04
Saint Joseph's College '08
IHSSBCA Certified Moderator
Ike Pappas wrote:That's fair. You can't expect them to gerrymander the pools based on who's projected highest any given year.
I'm not entirely sure how the IHSA system works, but what is the difference between "gerrymandering the pools based on who's projected highest," and what we would normally call seeding a tournament to produce brackets of equal strength?
This would imply some sort of fair rankings to be done. You could seed state based off of sectionals performance, but that would probably just end up favoring teams in weaker regionals. There is really no way to seed the eight teams that everyone involved would be satisfied with...hence the random seeding.
How would sectionals PPB be worse than the status quo?
Ike Pappas wrote:That's fair. You can't expect them to gerrymander the pools based on who's projected highest any given year.
I'm not entirely sure how the IHSA system works, but what is the difference between "gerrymandering the pools based on who's projected highest," and what we would normally call seeding a tournament to produce brackets of equal strength?
No real difference in the way WE run tournaments, but from the IHSA perspective, there is no other activity that constructs brackets by taking into account anything other than geography, so they probably wouldn't change it for us. That we have pool play for Sectionals/State is the product of years of lobbying, and it's still flawed (only 4 teams in a pool; pool advancement based on head-to-head; no pools at Regionals). We'll keep lobbying, obviously, but uggggh.
Crazy Andy Watkins wrote:
Ike Pappas wrote:
Matt Weiner wrote:
Ike Pappas wrote:That's fair. You can't expect them to gerrymander the pools based on who's projected highest any given year.
I'm not entirely sure how the IHSA system works, but what is the difference between "gerrymandering the pools based on who's projected highest," and what we would normally call seeding a tournament to produce brackets of equal strength?
This would imply some sort of fair rankings to be done. You could seed state based off of sectionals performance, but that would probably just end up favoring teams in weaker regionals. There is really no way to seed the eight teams that everyone involved would be satisfied with...hence the random seeding.
How would sectionals PPB be worse than the status quo?
Well, first off, PPB on these questions is flawed - bonuses are paired with tossups of different category tossups, so if everyone sucks at computation (hint: they probably do) that's numerous non-computational bonuses you won't hear. Also, bonuses are either three, four, or five parts, so an individual bonus part can be worth either 4, 5, 6, or 7 points depending on the situation, so sheer "points" per bonus is problematic. Also, the writers/editors in different categories differ drastically. You might have a chemistry bonus asking for "given an element, give the atomic number" while the literature might actually be academic (hint: it probably isn't), and others could be about pasta shapes or monkey wrenches.
All that said, PPB would be better than "random" if the IHSA had a precedent using statistics to judge quality. But as above...
Brad Fischer
Head Editor, IHSA State Series
IHSSBCA Chair
Winnebago HS ('06)
Northern Illinois University ('10)
Assistant Coach, IMSA (2010-12)
Coach, Keith Country Day School (2012-16)
Extinction threshold wrote:At Chicago (St. Ignatius College Prep)*
REGIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
Chicago (St. Ignatius College Prep) 336 F
Skokie (Niles West) 385
Holy bobcats, did this happen!?
IHSA Happened. I still can't believe it though...
Mike Perovanovic
University of Ill.-Chicago '13
Wheaton North '09
Check out the result of the Sterling regional. Keith comes in with its first quizbowl team ever and advances to sectionals. Through my cousin, who is on the team, Abid and I (I think) were able to influence Keith towards good quizbowl, and their first tournament in team history was either Loyburn or HFT. Either way, if the program continues with some commitment, Keith can go a long way towards dispelling the myth that, in order to be good, you need to be a big school or a well-funded program or a team with a long history of being good. Keith started from scratch and jumped right into the right quizbowl practices. We'll see how they turn out in the future.
(Keith Country Day is a small private school in Rockford)
Zahed Haseeb
Auburn High School 2010
University of Chicago 2014
Be prepared for people to argue back to you that the fact they are a private school basically makes them the equivalent to being a large, well funded public school.
Charlie Dees, North Kansas City HS '08
"I won't say more because I know some of you parse everything I say." - Jeremy Gibbs
"At one TJ tournament the neg prize was the Hampshire College ultimate frisbee team (nude) calender featuring one Evan Silberman. In retrospect that could have been a disaster." - Harry White
Jeremy Gibbs Freesy Does It wrote:Be prepared for people to argue back to you that the fact they are a private school basically makes them the equivalent to being a large, well funded public school.
I know a bit about their school, and while their student body is notably wealthy, the school hasn't been rolling in money of late.
EDIT: Precision.
Zahed Haseeb
Auburn High School 2010
University of Chicago 2014
Yeah, but a lot of people you're arguing against won't care. I'm just warning you, a lot of public school people look at private schools differently than they probably should in terms of resources.
Charlie Dees, North Kansas City HS '08
"I won't say more because I know some of you parse everything I say." - Jeremy Gibbs
"At one TJ tournament the neg prize was the Hampshire College ultimate frisbee team (nude) calender featuring one Evan Silberman. In retrospect that could have been a disaster." - Harry White
Quizbowl does require money. Whether that money comes from the school or from the players' pockets, tournament fees need to be paid and, especially in a region as spaced out as Illinois, transportation is a major cost too. I'd be very surprised if there are more than a handful of teams who don't fall under either the "wealthy student body" or the "well-funded program" headings. I mean, there are definitely fundraising options for economically worse-off teams, but I would be hard-pressed to think that any team would be able to fund a seasons-worth of stuff with just a bake sale or something.
I will anticipate that someone will say "but they could write their own tournament!" In order to write, you need to get good. Getting good often requires going to good tournaments to be exposed to good questions. Again, this isn't a cut and dry fact, but I think that even learning to write good requires a strong financial base.
Maybe I just feel this way because I paid out of pocket last year, but if I didn't have the financial resources to do so, I wouldn't have played good quizbowl. Period. There are definitely TDs out there who give discounts to such teams, but I don't know if a team could play for free all year.
R. Jeffrey Geringer
Saint Viator '09
Illinois '13, '14
KHAAAAN please wrote:
I will anticipate that someone will say "but they could write their own tournament!" In order to write, you need to get good. Getting good often requires going to good tournaments to be exposed to good questions. Again, this isn't a cut and dry fact, but I think that even learning to write good requires a strong financial base.
What about mirrors/buying an NAQT or HSAPQ set?
Douglas Graebner, Walt Whitman HS 10, Uchicago 14
"... imagination acts upon man as really as does gravitation, and may kill him as certainly as a dose of prussic acid."-Sir James Frazer,The Golden Bough
KHAAAAN please wrote:
I will anticipate that someone will say "but they could write their own tournament!" In order to write, you need to get good. Getting good often requires going to good tournaments to be exposed to good questions. Again, this isn't a cut and dry fact, but I think that even learning to write good requires a strong financial base.
What about mirrors/buying an NAQT or HSAPQ set?
It's a possibility, but it sometimes is difficult to find a good set produced before March that is not already used by the interested teams in Illinois. It is difficult to run a tournament during March because of Masonics/IHSA/Spring Break. After March, it traditionally has been difficult to run a tournament because most teams fold up shop, though we are getting to the point where it is possible to run a small tournament.
DavidReinstein
Head Writer and Editor for Scobol Solo, Masonics, and IESA; TD for Scobol Solo and Reinstein Varsity; IHSSBCA Board Member; IHSSBCA Chair (2004-2014); PACE President (2016-2018)
KHAAAAN please wrote:
I will anticipate that someone will say "but they could write their own tournament!" In order to write, you need to get good. Getting good often requires going to good tournaments to be exposed to good questions. Again, this isn't a cut and dry fact, but I think that even learning to write good requires a strong financial base.
What about mirrors/buying an NAQT or HSAPQ set?
It's a possibility, but it sometimes is difficult to find a good set produced before March that is not already used by the interested teams in Illinois. It is difficult to run a tournament during March because of Masonics/IHSA/Spring Break. After March, it traditionally has been difficult to run a tournament because most teams fold up shop, though we are getting to the point where it is possible to run a small tournament.
Small nothing - ATROPHY's looking to get more teams than Decemberist 3 did! Sign up today, everybody!
Brad Fischer
Head Editor, IHSA State Series
IHSSBCA Chair
Winnebago HS ('06)
Northern Illinois University ('10)
Assistant Coach, IMSA (2010-12)
Coach, Keith Country Day School (2012-16)
I want to post to say that, despite only going to two HS tournaments this year, I realize that my summer-thesis of "this year's teams will not surpass last year's teams" was thankfully super, super wrong. That there's interest in (multiple!) post-state series/pre-nationals tournaments is awesome. That teams (player?) like OPRF actually care about getting good at pyramidal quizbowl is awesome. That Stevenson is relevant amongst the usual powers is awesome. For the most part, that more non-Chicagoland people participate on these boards is awesome. That two Auburn sophomores are writing a side event for CO is awesome. Most importantly, that seemingly all of the good players have one or two years left is awesome.
This kind of exponential growth totally came out of left field for me and I hope it snowballs. And by that, I hope that:
1. Internally, Illinois can break the chains that bind us to the old guard
2. Externally, Illinois schools can break into the "power elite" that consistently vie for a national championship
The former will take a hell of a lot longer, but I think both are possible.
1. Internally, Illinois can break the chains that bind us to the old guard
2. Externally, Illinois schools can break into the "power elite" that consistently vie for a national championship
The former will take a hell of a lot longer, but I think both are possible.
Your Greencastle observer,
Jack
I am not afraid to say this out loud, but there is one thing and one thing only that is going to fix #1; that is the retirement of some of the "old guard" coaches who do not recognize good quiz bowl for what it is. I have a junior student on my team who played quiz bowl for the first time this year and within five events he was able to differentiate between good questions and bad (his definition of good and bad questions is in line with the generally accepted definitions by members of this community).
I am disappointed in the lack of desire among my colleagues to change things for the better with our conference. Now, I have to start evaluating my options on what's best for our students and our team based on their lack of action.
I can't answer to #2 because I have not seen a national event yet; that's next on my "Scholastic Bowl Bucket List."
Jay Winter
Greenville HS (IL) Scholastic Bowl Coach and Chief UN Translator for Math
Decatur MacArthur Class of 1990 - Illinois State Class of 1994 - MS Ed SIU Edwardsville 2010
Harley-Davidson owner since 2009
Fan of Good Questions
CometCoach72 wrote:within five events he was able to differentiate between good questions and bad (his definition of good and bad questions is in line with the generally accepted definitions by members of this community).
You've hit the nail on the head. A big part of the problem is that a lot of teams are unable (for whatever reason; in my experience it's often a financial issue or a mistaken perception that they can't compete) to attend five events a year and get the direct experience needed to make an informed decision about question quality.
Kristin Strey
SCOP
Head Coach, Winnebago High School (2014-)
Head Coach, Thurgood Marshall School (Rockford) (2022-)
Assistant Coach, IMSA (2010-2012)
Northern Illinois University Quiz Bowl Association founder
Another solution is that IHSSBCA Grants are now available. If Illinois teams need money to go to tournaments next year, they should ask for it.
DavidReinstein
Head Writer and Editor for Scobol Solo, Masonics, and IESA; TD for Scobol Solo and Reinstein Varsity; IHSSBCA Board Member; IHSSBCA Chair (2004-2014); PACE President (2016-2018)
This is in its infancy stages, but I'm also going to try to fund a couple of nationals bids next year from proceeds from Trashtastrothree. I funded one entry this year, and next year I'm sure I can graduate to two.
R. Jeffrey Geringer
Saint Viator '09
Illinois '13, '14
CometCoach72 wrote:I am not afraid to say this out loud, but there is one thing and one thing only that is going to fix #1; that is the retirement of some of the "old guard" coaches who do not recognize good quiz bowl for what it is.
That's probably about right. Fortunately, it's hugely easier to get good even at IHSA stuff by practicing good questions, so hopefully year after year of consistent failure against teams preparing on the good stuff will hasten those unwilling to listen out the door. Also, the recent flood of "WAH NOT ENOUGH IHSA FORMAT TOURNAMENT!" arguments from such coaches isn't a fight they can win, given that there are dozens of good sets produced each year and it costs nothing to have them mirrored in Illinois, so that'll keep happening.
M
Mike Sorice
Former Coach, Centennial High School of Champaign, IL (2014-2020) & Team Illinois (2016-2018)
Alumnus, Illinois ABT (2000-2002; 2003-2009) & Fenwick Scholastic Bowl (1999-2000)
Member, ACF (Emeritus), IHSSBCA, & PACE
Captain Sinico wrote: Also, the recent flood of "WAH NOT ENOUGH IHSA FORMAT TOURNAMENT!" arguments from such coaches isn't a fight they can win, given that there are dozens of good sets produced each year and it costs nothing to have them mirrored in Illinois, so that'll keep happening.
Of course they can't win the argument.
I'm sorry, did you say "costs nothing?" Free is good...wish it could be done for conference play, but the coaches in my conference would rather play in IHSA format and use a question provider that is dreadful at best.
Jay Winter
Greenville HS (IL) Scholastic Bowl Coach and Chief UN Translator for Math
Decatur MacArthur Class of 1990 - Illinois State Class of 1994 - MS Ed SIU Edwardsville 2010
Harley-Davidson owner since 2009
Fan of Good Questions
Sure, but they're going to just keep getting screwed. There are going to be fewer and fewer IHSA tournaments for people to play; people who insist on playing those are therefore going to keep preparing less and less and losing more and more.
I should be more precise: mirrors do cost mirror fees, but these are in all cases small compared with the cost of commissioning an IHSA-style set and scale with field size. Some people have even been willing to let some tournaments have questions literally for free in the past, but this is not the usual state of affairs. My point is: the questions are going to be there, sitting around, and everyone on both sides of the transaction has every incentive to get them mirrored in Illinois. That will continue happening and people who refuse to adapt will continue getting beaten by those who do.
MaS
Mike Sorice
Former Coach, Centennial High School of Champaign, IL (2014-2020) & Team Illinois (2016-2018)
Alumnus, Illinois ABT (2000-2002; 2003-2009) & Fenwick Scholastic Bowl (1999-2000)
Member, ACF (Emeritus), IHSSBCA, & PACE
IHSSBCA All-State Teams are here. This was voted on by people across the state. The statistics used for this included IHSA-format tournaments as well as traditional quizbowl. Really, nominators could put whatever they wanted on there as long as it wasn't from a solo or subject-specific (e.g. Science Bowl) tournament.
First Team All-State Class AA:
Ben Carbery, Oak Park-River Forest
Ben Chametzky, Carbondale
Andrew Deveau, Chicago (St. Ignatius)
Zahed Haseeb, Rockford (Auburn)
Kevin Malis, Lincolnshire (Stevenson)
Quinn Rosenthal, Wheaton Warrenville (South)
Steve Server, Winnetka (New Trier)
Lloyd Sy, Rockford (Auburn)
Nolan Winkler, Wilmette (Loyola Academy)
Marcel Youkhna, Wilmette (Loyola Academy)
Second Team All-State Class AA:
Zach Blumenfeld, Lincolnshire (Stevenson)
Dan Donohue
Danny Hannan, Rockford (Boylan)
Jessamyn Lockard, Moline
Jeremiah Monk, Carbondale
Chris Olsen, Champaign (Centennial)
Gabe Orlet, Althoff Catholic
Mike Penicnak, Bensenville (Fenton)
Arjun Puranik, Palatine Fremd
Mark Taylor, St. Charles East
First Team All-State Class A:
Chris Adams, Tuscola
Justin Brooks, Petersburg (PORTA)
Evan Daigle, Litchfield
Greg Dzuricsko, Lisle
Aaron Mitchell, Winnebago
A.J. Sclove, Roycemore
Aaron Staley, New Berlin
Robert Volgman, Chicago (Latin School)
Tristan Willey, Macomb
Peter York, Litchfield
Second Team All-State Class A:
Alex Bauer, St. Anthony
Kevin Davis, Farmington
Jeremy Edison, Newman Central Catholic
Dan Johnson, Durand
Beau Manuel, Farina South Central
Eric Mason, Warrensburg-Latham
Donnie McClarey, Dwight
Stephen Ragain, Reed-Custer
Roy Slick, Byron
Sam Stowell, New Berlin
mlaird wrote: Really, nominators could put whatever they wanted on there as long as it wasn't from a solo or subject-specific (e.g. Science Bowl) tournament.
For those who didn't see it, the form specifically mentioned that you couldn't count results from Trashtastrophe, which I found hilrious. Next year, T3 should soooo be counted.
Dan Donohue, Saint Viator ('10), Northwestern ('14), NAQT
mlaird wrote: Really, nominators could put whatever they wanted on there as long as it wasn't from a solo or subject-specific (e.g. Science Bowl) tournament.
For those who didn't see it, the form specifically mentioned that you couldn't count results from Trashtastrophe, which I found hilrious. Next year, T3 should soooo be counted.
There were totally at least two tossups that could be considered academic...
R. Jeffrey Geringer
Saint Viator '09
Illinois '13, '14
mlaird wrote:IHSSBCA All-State Teams are here. This was voted on by people across the state. The statistics used for this included IHSA-format tournaments as well as traditional quizbowl. Really, nominators could put whatever they wanted on there as long as it wasn't from a solo or subject-specific (e.g. Science Bowl) tournament.
First Team All-State Class AA:
Ben Carbery, Oak Park-River Forest
Ben Chametzky, Carbondale
Andrew Deveau, Chicago (St. Ignatius)
Zahed Haseeb, Rockford (Auburn)
Kevin Malis, Lincolnshire (Stevenson)
Quinn Rosenthal, Wheaton Warrenville (South)
Steve Server, Winnetka (New Trier)
Lloyd Sy, Rockford (Auburn)
Nolan Winkler, Wilmette (Loyola Academy)
Marcel Youkhna, Wilmette (Loyola Academy)
Second Team All-State Class AA:
Zach Blumenfeld, Lincolnshire (Stevenson)
Dan Donohue
Danny Hannan, Rockford (Boylan)
Jessamyn Lockard, Moline
Jeremiah Monk, Carbondale
Chris Olsen, Champaign (Centennial)
Gabe Orlet, Althoff Catholic
Mike Penicnak, Bensenville (Fenton)
Arjun Puranik, Palatine Fremd
Mark Taylor, St. Charles East
First Team All-State Class A:
Chris Adams, Tuscola
Justin Brooks, Petersburg (PORTA)
Evan Daigle, Litchfield
Greg Dzuricsko, Lisle
Aaron Mitchell, Winnebago
A.J. Sclove, Roycemore
Aaron Staley, New Berlin
Robert Volgman, Chicago (Latin School)
Tristan Willey, Macomb
Peter York, Litchfield
Second Team All-State Class A:
Alex Bauer, St. Anthony
Kevin Davis, Farmington
Jeremy Edison, Newman Central Catholic
Dan Johnson, Durand
Beau Manuel, Farina South Central
Eric Mason, Warrensburg-Latham
Donnie McClarey, Dwight
Stephen Ragain, Reed-Custer
Roy Slick, Byron
Sam Stowell, New Berlin
DavidReinstein
Head Writer and Editor for Scobol Solo, Masonics, and IESA; TD for Scobol Solo and Reinstein Varsity; IHSSBCA Board Member; IHSSBCA Chair (2004-2014); PACE President (2016-2018)
And the food isn't bad, but please bring back the red velvet cake!
Seriously, though, this is one of the few opportunities to celebrate students in our activity. I can only speak for class AA, but I didn't notice any glaring omissionos (given the criteria).