Difference between revisions of "Stephen Eltinge"

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{{Infobox|Name = Stephen Eltinge
 
{{Infobox|Name = Stephen Eltinge
|Image = eltinge.jpg
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|schoolpast = [[MIT]] (2011–2015), [[Yale]] (2015–2021)
|Subjects = Physics, Chemistry, Other Science, History, Current Events, Generalist
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|highschool = [[Thomas Jefferson (VA)]] (2008–2011)
|schoolcur = [[Yale]] (2015-present)
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|firstname = Stephen
|schoolpast = [[MIT]] (2011-2015)
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|lastname = Eltinge
|highschool = [[Thomas Jefferson (VA)]] (2008-2011)
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}}
| }}
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'''Stephen Eltinge''' (pronounced /ˈɛl.tɪŋ/) played quizbowl at [[Thomas Jefferson (VA)]], [[MIT]], and [[Yale]]. While at Yale, he played on teams that won the [[2018 ICT]] and [[2019 ICT]].
  
'''Stephen Eltinge''' ''("EL-ting")'' is a player at [[Yale]] and alumnus of [[MIT]] and [[Thomas Jefferson (VA)]]. He was dubbed a "tresure" by [[Andrew Wang]].
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Stephen wrote and edited for 2010 [[Fall Novice Tournament]] II, 2011 [[OLEFIN]], [[2013 ACF Fall]], 2015 [[George Oppen]], 2016 [[MYSTERIUM]], 2017 [[SCT]], [[2018 ACF Regionals]], [[2021 ACF Regionals]], [[2022 ACF Nationals]], and 2016–2021 [[BHSAT]]. He had smaller writing roles on various [[HSAPQ]] sets, the 2013–2015 [[National Scholastic Championship|NSC]]s, [[2018 Chicago Open]], and 2019 [[PIANO]].
  
Stephen's deep science, history, current events, trash, and geography knowledge made him the second scorer on the Yale team that won the [[2019 ICT]], coming on the heels of a strong performance on the title-winning squad at the [[2018 ICT]].
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At MIT, his [[outreach]] work helped build the then-moribund [[Massachusetts]] high school quizbowl circuit. He directed the first annual [[MIT Fall Tournament]], which included several new-to-quizbowl teams.
  
Widely regarded as one of the best active physics players, writers, and editors, Stephen's achievements include writing/editing for [[Fall Novice Tournament]] II, [[OLEFIN]], the [[2013 NSC]], 2015's [[George Oppen]], 2016's [[MYSTERIUM]], the 2017 [[SCT]], and [[2018 ACF Regionals]].  
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Stephen served as the Vice President of Technology of [[PACE]] from 2013–2015, and as the Communications Officer of [[ACF]] from 2014–2017.
  
He is also well-known for his outreach work in building the Massachusetts high school quizbowl circuit; his directorship of the first annual [[MIT Fall Tournament]] included reaching out to many high schools in the Boston area that were completely new to quizbowl to build a 28-team field.
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Stephen is married to [[Olivia Murton]].
 
 
Stephen served as the Vice President of Technology of [[PACE]] from 2013-2015, and as the Communications Officer of [[ACF]] from 2014-2017.
 
  
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[[Category:Thomas Jefferson (VA)]]
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[[Category:MIT]]
 
[[Category:Yale]]
 
[[Category:Yale]]
 
 
[[Category: Players on ICT Division I championship teams]]
 
[[Category: Players on ICT Division I championship teams]]
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[[Category:High school players active in 2009]]
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[[Category:High school players active in 2010]]
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[[Category:High school players active in 2011]]
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[[Category:Players active in 2012]]
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[[Category:Players active in 2013]]
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[[Category:Players active in 2014]]
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[[Category:Players active in 2015]]
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[[Category:Players active in 2016]]
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[[Category:Players active in 2017]]
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[[Category:Players active in 2018]]
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[[Category:Players active in 2019]]
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[[Category:Players active in 2020]]
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[[Category:Players active in 2021]]
 
[[Category:Question writers]]
 
[[Category:Question writers]]
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[[Category:Current ACF Members]]

Latest revision as of 08:59, 24 July 2022

Stephen Eltinge
Past colleges MIT (2011–2015), Yale (2015–2021)
High school Thomas Jefferson (VA) (2008–2011)
Stats HDWhite • NAQT

Stephen Eltinge (pronounced /ˈɛl.tɪŋ/) played quizbowl at Thomas Jefferson (VA), MIT, and Yale. While at Yale, he played on teams that won the 2018 ICT and 2019 ICT.

Stephen wrote and edited for 2010 Fall Novice Tournament II, 2011 OLEFIN, 2013 ACF Fall, 2015 George Oppen, 2016 MYSTERIUM, 2017 SCT, 2018 ACF Regionals, 2021 ACF Regionals, 2022 ACF Nationals, and 2016–2021 BHSAT. He had smaller writing roles on various HSAPQ sets, the 2013–2015 NSCs, 2018 Chicago Open, and 2019 PIANO.

At MIT, his outreach work helped build the then-moribund Massachusetts high school quizbowl circuit. He directed the first annual MIT Fall Tournament, which included several new-to-quizbowl teams.

Stephen served as the Vice President of Technology of PACE from 2013–2015, and as the Communications Officer of ACF from 2014–2017.

Stephen is married to Olivia Murton.