Difference between revisions of "Gaius Stern"
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− | '''Gaius Stern''' ran [[Berkeley]]'s Quiz Bowl club for a while. He was a graduate of the [[University of Maryland, College Park|University of Maryland]] before becoming a graduate student at the [[University of California, Berkeley]]. | + | '''Gaius Stern''' ran [[Berkeley]]'s Quiz Bowl club for a while. He was a graduate of the [[University of Maryland, College Park|University of Maryland]] before becoming a graduate student at the [[University of California, Berkeley]]. He received the [[Carper Award]] in 2004. While at Maryland, Stern assisted [[John Nam]] and [[Ramesh Kannappan]] of the [[University of Maryland]] who co-founded a predecessor organization to the [[Academic Competition Federation]]. He also edited the West Coast ACF newsletter. [http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~quizbowl/newsarchive.html] Stern founded the (now-defunct) [[Bay Area Academic League]] (BAAL), which ran academic competitions for teams in the San Francisco Bay Area. [http://sfbaal.com/] [http://sfbaal.wordpress.com/] |
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+ | At Berkeley, Stern modeled the club's leadership structure after the Roman Republic, complete with consuls, proconsuls, and according to some sources, quaestors. His love of Rome extended even into his private life, as related in an infamous anecdote in Andrew Hart's Medium article on quiz bowl. | ||
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+ | Stern notoriously took many years to complete his Classics PhD due to his refusal to learn Greek, eventually outlasting the professors who opposed him. | ||
== External links == | == External links == |
Latest revision as of 22:43, 29 March 2020
Gaius Stern ran Berkeley's Quiz Bowl club for a while. He was a graduate of the University of Maryland before becoming a graduate student at the University of California, Berkeley. He received the Carper Award in 2004. While at Maryland, Stern assisted John Nam and Ramesh Kannappan of the University of Maryland who co-founded a predecessor organization to the Academic Competition Federation. He also edited the West Coast ACF newsletter. [1] Stern founded the (now-defunct) Bay Area Academic League (BAAL), which ran academic competitions for teams in the San Francisco Bay Area. [2] [3]
At Berkeley, Stern modeled the club's leadership structure after the Roman Republic, complete with consuls, proconsuls, and according to some sources, quaestors. His love of Rome extended even into his private life, as related in an infamous anecdote in Andrew Hart's Medium article on quiz bowl.
Stern notoriously took many years to complete his Classics PhD due to his refusal to learn Greek, eventually outlasting the professors who opposed him.
External links
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