Difference between revisions of "ILLIAC"
Kevin Wang (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox question set | Name = ILLIAC | AltNames = ILLinois Academic Competition | Season = 2018-19 | School = UIUC, University Lab | HeadEd...") |
Kevin Wang (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
| Packets = https://collegiate.quizbowlpackets.com/2286/ | | Packets = https://collegiate.quizbowlpackets.com/2286/ | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | ''' | + | '''ILLinois Academic Competition''' ('''ILLIAC''') was a collegiate novice tournament of "ACF Fall plus" difficulty organized by members of the [[UIUC]] team for the spring 2019 season. The tournament was head edited by [[Mike Etzkorn]] and [[Cole Timmerwilke]], who received help on science from [[Mike Sorice]], and had an editorial team of [[Brad McLain]], [[Mitch McCullar]], [[Bryan Lu]], and [[Koby Theobald]]. [[Itamar Naveh-Benjamin]], [[John Lawrence]], and [[Tyler Vaughan]] assisted with difficulty control, copy-editing, and quality control. It featured writers from the teams of [[UIUC]], [[University Lab]] High School, and [[Centennial]] High School, as well as contributions from [[Alex Dzurick]] and [[Eric Mukherjee]]. The tournament had 6 physical mirrors in the US (many of which were open to high schoolers), as well as two online mirrors. There were also two high school only tournaments and a high school only online tournament. |
{{c|Tournaments}} | {{c|Tournaments}} | ||
{{c|2019 Tournaments}} | {{c|2019 Tournaments}} |
Latest revision as of 21:54, 30 March 2021
ILLIAC ILLinois Academic Competition | |
---|---|
Competition season | 2018-19 |
School(s) | UIUC, University Lab |
Head editor(s) | Mike Etzkorn, Cole Timmerwilke |
Difficulty | ACF Fall plus (1.5 dots) |
First mirror | May 8, 2019 |
Announcement | link |
Packets | link |
ILLinois Academic Competition (ILLIAC) was a collegiate novice tournament of "ACF Fall plus" difficulty organized by members of the UIUC team for the spring 2019 season. The tournament was head edited by Mike Etzkorn and Cole Timmerwilke, who received help on science from Mike Sorice, and had an editorial team of Brad McLain, Mitch McCullar, Bryan Lu, and Koby Theobald. Itamar Naveh-Benjamin, John Lawrence, and Tyler Vaughan assisted with difficulty control, copy-editing, and quality control. It featured writers from the teams of UIUC, University Lab High School, and Centennial High School, as well as contributions from Alex Dzurick and Eric Mukherjee. The tournament had 6 physical mirrors in the US (many of which were open to high schoolers), as well as two online mirrors. There were also two high school only tournaments and a high school only online tournament.