Monday Meditation: WFCA State Thank You

Posted on April 27, 2008 – 9:46 pm by: Nick Bubb

WFCA President Bonni Knight asked Wisconsin Forensics Daily to post this thank you letter:

Dear Fellow Coaches and Friends,

I want to take a moment to thank you all for your hard work throughout the season, and especially last weekend, to help make the 2008 WFCA State Tournament a success. Congratulations to everyone. Whether or not your students came home with trophies cannot be a true measure of what was won that day. Last Saturday was a tribute to hard work and dedication on the part of students and coaches alike. In the end, talent (and a little luck, sometimes) brought the winners to the stage, but every kid who showed up was changed by the performances they saw and the ballots they received.

As I stated in the listening sessions throughout the day, I am inspired by the dedication of the people who make the tournament possible. The list is long, but permit me to mention a few of them:

Chris Zoch – Tournament Director. This man did a superhuman job of organizing and scheduling this event, always displaying gentility and grace, even in the most stressful of moments. Without his attention to detail, the tournament could have been a disaster.

Deano Pape – Site Director. After the tournament was over, and everyone had left, I observed Deano carefully straightening the rows of chairs in the gym for an event the following morning. I cannot imagine how much work this must have been for him, but I do know this… his ability to inspire the team of cheerful college team members to get up and be there at 7 am on a Saturday is truly impressive.

Jodi Becker – Site Coordinator. It was Jodi who arranged all the coordination of details. Throughout the day, I was impressed by her ability to juggle countless details about rooms, concessions, etc, all the while smiling calmly.

Mike Traas – Tab Room Director. Wow. Data flowed through the computers, set up and managed by Mike. His staff performed effectively and cheerfully, and everything went very smoothly. This room was a sight to behold, with teams of focused professionals hunched over their computers muttering numbers to each other, allowing the tournament to conclude almost exactly on schedule.

Paul Seymour – Tournament Assistant. I met Paul at a meeting room at the Country Inn on Friday night, where he was leading a staff of volunteers in stuffing packets and organizing judges. Another detail person, his work really moved the tournament along.

Father Gary Wegner – Tournament Practices and Procedures Chair. The large number of protests and complaints brought to this committee was, I believe, unprecedented. But Gary and his team heard both sides of every story, and always made every effort to give people the opportunity to speak in defense of the protest. I was most impressed with Gary’s common sense approach to things, as well as his gentleness during conflicts. Also, hats off to Joe Meinecke for his quick use of Google to try and help people prove the validity of their cuttings.

Adam Jacobi – Congress Director: Adam’s dedication to the activity of Student Congress is legendary, as is his passion and talent. The day went smoothly, and everything was handled professionally. Adam’s decision to move the congress to earlier in the day has truly improved the event, as it allows kids to “give it their all” and still have something left for the next day.

Steve Sexton – Past President. Steve was responsible for organizing the scholarships and awards. Thanks for providing inspirational insight into all of the great winners.

I mention all of those people and their actions because I think sometimes we take for granted the generous dedication of these volunteers. It is easy to pay your dues and registration fees, and just show up without ever wondering how it all takes place. The fact that an event of this magnitude can be run completely by a group of dedicated volunteers in truly unbelievable. But many of us are nearing retirement age, and it is time for more members to step up and volunteer. Host an invitational tournament. Host a workshop. Volunteer for a committee. Run for office. Have a say in the future of this group. And think about attending the Spring Meeting in Fond du Lac on May 2 – 3. Get to know us. Let us help you. You may contact me with any questions.

Finally, as many of you may already know, my assistant coach, Steve Sparks, passed away in August at the age of 26 from a pulmonary embolism, devastating me and my students. I also lost my brother-in-law, my next-door neighbor, and several friends this year. It ended up being one of the most difficult years of my life. But it also taught me something: You can never count on someone or something to be there tomorrow. You have to live life to its fullest every second. To me that meant many things: coaching my students with every ounce of energy that I possessed, spending precious time with my beloved family traveling to Belize for Christmas, visiting a friend in Vermont, or in the hospital, shopping occasionally (or more than occasionally), and trying to lead a complex organization that, because it is composed of people, can be full of conflict. I urge all of you to move forward and work together for the good of your students, and for all Wisconsin forensicators. Life is too short to hold on to disagreements and conflict. And our students deserve our best work.

It has been a genuine honor to be president of such a dynamic, vital organization.

Sincerely,

Bonni Knight

Spring Meeting Discussion Items

Posted on April 24, 2008 – 11:13 am by: Nick Bubb

I have submitted the following items to the WDCA for discussion at the spring meeting. The intent is to host most of our discussion online, so the meeting can focus more on action rather than discussion. (Read: I have a Brewer game to go to later that day. Tangent: Information about the Second WFD Sorta Annual Brewer Game will come at the Spring Meeting).

Items follow below the break.

1.) Best Practices Guidelines for invitational tournaments

There is often a confusion among tournament directors among how to operate their tournaments and what is the best way to handle particular situations. It would be nice to have a document that recommends how tournament directors should ideally run the different divisions. This would also make it easier for people to begin to host tournaments, because the procedures are explained in the document. For example, if tournaments use the one day switch side model for all policy divisions – should they clear to highest elimination round possible (e.g. octa finals) or rather should they clear to the lowest elimination round (finals) so that people can go home faster?

2.) 2 Day v. 1 Day tournaments

More than just our best practices guidelines on how to run these kinds of tournaments, we need to have a serious discussion about how we should design our schedule with these kinds of tournaments in mind. Should there only be three or four big two-day tournaments with more one-day competitions? Or should there be more two-day competitions?

3.) Public Forum Novice

Public Forum was the largest division at last year’s WSDT. This was the case at many invitational tournaments last year as well. At some invitational tournaments (but not the state tournament) it might make sense to split the public forum pool into a novice division and an experienced division. If tournaments do that, how do we handle those novices for the state tournament?

4.) V4 Contingency Policy

Last year at the WSDT the V4 division was the smallest division at the tournament (yes – there were more people participating in middle school policy than there were in V4). It’s the opinion of many coaches that a small division should not constitute a state championship. There was also a problem last year that in theory, the tournament could not run (3 Cedarburg + 3 other teams doesn’t make for a workable division). We need to develop a contingency plan to allow those teams to move into the V2 division should V4 become unviable. A possible solution would be to add a requirement for that division to run, something along the lines of what was needed for LD and PF to be an individual event. I suggest that there must be at least 8 teams from 6 different schools in order for the division to run.

5.) Combined WDCA/MUDI/MDL Evidence Packet

It would be sweet if the MUDI/MDL evidence would correspond to all of the Novice Topics so that kids in the MDL could have information on all of the novice topics. This would allow more MDL integration into WDCA events.

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Extemp Questions: State 2008

Posted on April 20, 2008 – 9:08 pm by: Jon Voss

For anyone who has extempers competing at nationals, the extemporaneous questions used at this weekend’s state tournament are below.

1. What, if anything, can be done to end the War Against Terrorism?
2. Will Pope Benedict XVI’s efforts to curb sexual abuse in the Catholic Church achieve success?
3. Militarily, is Iran a genuine threat?
4. Can the “grand coalition” bring stability to Kenya?
5. Can the United Nations resolve tensions between Ethiopia and Eritrea?
6. What can America’s auto industry do to combat foreign competition?
7. Why is American society infatuated with the lives of celebrities?
8. Is President Bush a lame duck?
9. Should America support free trade with Columbia?
10. What can be done to alleviate the malaria crisis in Brazil?
11. Is Hugo Chavez’ Venezuela a threat to South American stability?
12. How can America better combat drug trafficking in Central America?
13. What would Georgia’s admission to NATO mean for regional stability?
14. Can America prevent conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan?
15. How can Australia solidify its “middle power” status?
16. What can be done to offset the power of the Iran-Syria partnership?
17. Does Russia have enough leverage to prevent more violence between Israel and Palestine?
18. What can be done to curb consumer debt in America?
19. Can the stock market recover?
20. What will be the result of ceasefire negotiations between Egypt and Hamas?
21. Is China a genuine military threat?
22. What should be done to quash sectarian violence in Chad?
23. Why won’t China bend on Tibet?
24. What can be done to decrease the terrorist threat in Somalia?
25. What does the future hold for Karl Rove?
26. Is there an immigration solution?
27. How can the armed services increase recruitment and retention rates?
28. Is Canada globally relevant?
29. Has the American presence made Afghanistan safer?
30. What, if anything, can Barack Obama do to obtain more super delegates?
31. Since Katrina, has America done enough to improve disaster prevention?
32. What, if anything, can Bush do to repair America’s international image?
33. Does the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act undermine American’s civil liberties?
34. Is NATO still relevant?
35. Would a Turkish admission to the European Union improve organizational cohesion?
36. Should Musharraf relinquish power?
37. What can McCain do to increase his credibility with America’s youngest voters?
38. What should be done with A. Q. Khan?
39. What, if anything, can Pelosi do to better-utilize the democratic majority?
40. How should the international community combat the potential for an avian flu epidemic?
41. Is the Merida Initiative an effective response to narco-trafficking?
42. What can the Gulf of Guinea Guard do to resolve conflict in the Niger Delta?
43. Is the Mexico City Policy an effective solution to Africa’s population explosion?
44. Is Nigerian civil war imminent?
45. What, if anything, can Ban Ki-moon do to resolve violence in Darfur?

====SEMIFINALS====

1. What can be done to rekindle America’s interest in the housing market?
2. What should be done to avoid a social security crisis?
3. Should federal agents investigate JPMorgan Chase’s acquisition of Bear Stearns?
4. Economically, are America and China allies or adversaries?
5. Can Gulab Mengal successfully stabilize Afghanistan’s Helmand province?
6. What can be done to ensure passage of the US-India nuclear deal?
7. What, if anything, can Prime Minister Gillani do to return stability to Pakistan?
8. Do super delegates make Hillary’s nomination inevitable?
9. Should the democrats reform their system of nomination?
10. What can the Republican Party do to repair its’ image before November?
11. Iraq: Is there an exit strategy?
12. Does Bush’s endorsement help or harm John McCain?
13. What would be the ramifications of an Israeli-Syrian war?
14. What can America do to improve diplomatic relations with Hezbollah?
15. Does the European Union’s approach to global warming provide a model for the rest of the world?
16. What will be President Bush’s legacy?
17. Who will win the Pennsylvania primary?
18. What can be done to repair the Irish economy?
19. Is John McCain’s “pump priming” strategy a realistic solution to recession?
20. Should the United States close Guantanamo Bay?

====FINAL====

1. What, if anything, can be done to rescue America from economic recession?
2. Does China have too much control over America’s economy?
3. To what extent will rising gas prices contribute to recession?
4. What can China do to avoid Olympic boycotts?
5. To what extent, if any, is North Korea a threat to the international community?
6. What can America do to improve African opinions of AFRICOM?
7. As former prime minister, will Pervez Musharraf maintain influence over Pakistan?
8. What would a republican White House mean for America’s stance toward Iran?
9. Will an extended democratic primary harm the party’s ability to secure the Presidency?
10. Would a French-British “brotherhood” marginalize the rest of Europe?
11. What can Christofias do to successfully stabilize Cypprus?
12. Can Russian president-elect Medvedev repair Russia’s image with the rest of Europe?
13. What does the future hold for Condoleezza Rice?
14. What can Barack Obama do to increase his electability?
15. Is the War Against Terrorism an acceptable justification for extraordinary rendition?
16. Has Raul Castro increased or decreased socialism in Cuba?
17. Who should John McCain select as his Vice Presidential candidate?
18. Are Turkish bases vital to American efforts in Iraq?
19. Is the United States really “waving goodbye to hegemony”?
20. Will the latest round of economic sanctions against Iran eliminate the nuclear threat?

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James Madison Memorial Wins WFCA State Championship

Posted on April 19, 2008 – 8:29 pm by: Batterman

James Madison Memorial High School earned their fifth Wisconsin Forensic Coaches’ Association State Championship on Saturday at Ripon College. The Spartans—coached by Tom Hardin, Tim Scheffler, and Nick Bubb—had previously earned State Championships in 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2006 (shared with Appleton East). Memorial joins West Bend West High School as a five-time champion (West Bend West took home the title in 1972, 1974, 1975, 1978, and 1985); only Appleton East has earned more State Championships, bringing home the honor seven times (1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2005, and 2006). The Spartans also claimed six individual championships en route to their victory.

Additional team results are available below the fold. A complete list of results including all individual events will be posted soon.

Division 1:

  1. James Madison Memorial - 331
  2. Appleton East - 314
  3. Brookfield East - 302
  4. Sun Prairie - 249
  5. Sheboygan South - 208
  6. Homestead - 207
  7. Hartford - 175
  8. Madison West - 174
  9. Sheboygan North - 156
  10. Eau Claire North - 144

Division 2:

  1. Cedarburg - 254
  2. Waupaca - 136
  3. DeForest - 133
  4. Whitefish Bay - 133
  5. Marquette - 101
  6. Milwaukee HS of Arts - 99
  7. Sussex Hamilton - 98
  8. Slinger - 97
  9. Wauwatosa East - 95
  10. New London - 88

Division 3:

  1. Algoma - 202
  2. St. Lawrence - 196
  3. Durand - 158
  4. Eau Claire Regis - 148
  5. Black Hawk - 139
  6. Lodi - 123
  7. St. Croix Falls - 113
  8. Sheboygan Christian - 91
  9. Evansville - 79
  10. Palmyra-Eagle - 66

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Sheboygan North’s Alice Zhao: WFCA Congress Champion

Posted on April 19, 2008 – 2:00 pm by: Adam Jacobi

Congratulations to the twelve 2008 WFCA State Congress Super Session participants, advancing from 60 preliminary participants.  Sheboygan North’s Alice Zhao is coached by Jon Voss.

1 (Tie Recip) - Sheboygan North - Alice Zhao
2 - Rufus King - Emily Summers
3 - New London - Travis Glynn
4 - Sheboygan North - Tim Knoedler
5 - Milwaukee HS Arts - Kirsten Wisniewski
6 - Nicolet - Brittany CoatsF - Nicolet - Gabriella Friedman
F - James Madison Mem. - Abilash “Obiwan” Seshadri
F - Rufus King - Kevin Bailey
F - Rufus King - Ashley Walton - Stamps
F - Sheboygan North - Brandon Pakkebier
F - Milwaukee HS Arts - Alyssa Ray - Alden

The finals judge panel consisted of John Knetzger (Parliamentarian and Presiding Officer), UW-Oshkosh Director of Debate Doug Roubidoux, Paul Seymour, Ripon College students (and former NFL congress competitors) Garrison McMurtrey and Sara Sisco, and UW-Oshkosh student Andrea Quenette.

Top presiding officer honors for preliminary sessions were earned by Rufus King’s Kevin Bailey and Ashley Walton-Stamps, and Nicolet’s Jason Schwartz.

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Southern WI NFL District Forensics Results

Posted on April 12, 2008 – 5:29 pm by: Batterman

The Southern Wisconsin District of the National Forensic League held its annual national qualifying tournament for speech and interpretation events on Saturday at Nicolet High School in Glendale, WI. Complete results are available below the fold.

Sweepstakes Award

  1. James Madison Memorial
  2. Marquette
  3. Brookfield Central & Nicolet (tied)

Traveling Team Trophy

James Madison Memorial

Leading Chapter Award

James Madison Memorial

Coach of the Year Award

Nancy Wisniewski, Milwaukee High School of the Arts

Student of the Year Award

Namratta Sehgal, James Madison Memorial

Dramatic Interpretation

  1. Colin Woodbury, James Madison Memorial — National Qualifier
  2. Sarah Arbeje, James Madison Memorial — National Qualifier
  3. Yvonne Luong, James Madison Memorial — 1st Alternate
  4. Maya Bates, Messmer — 2nd Alternate
  5. Ellen Disch, James Madison Memorial — Finalist

Duo Interpretation

  1. Matthew Scales & Chris Tate, James Madison Memorial — National Qualifier
  2. Alyssa Ludwig & Cody Raasch, Milwaukee HS of the Arts — National Qualifier
  3. Claire Anderson & John Weisse, Brookfield East — 1st Alternate
  4. Rosa Reinemann & Amber Scarborough, James Madison Memorial — 2nd Alternate
  5. Jaime Klump & Maise Twesme, Middleton — Finalist

Humorous Interpretation

  1. Michael Meidl, Brookfield East — National Qualifier
  2. Peter Andersen, Marquette — National Qualifier
  3. Jonathon Spence, Wauwatosa West — 1st Alternate
  4. Erik Kermani, West Bend East — 2nd Alternate
  5. Benjamin Mau, James Madison Memorial — Finalist
  6. Justin Maggiori, Brookfield East — Finalist
  7. Morgan Valley, James Madison Memorial — Finalist

Original Oratory

  1. Albert Li, James Madison Memorial — National Qualifier
  2. Kirsten Wisniewski, Milwaukee HS of the Arts — National Qualifier
  3. Heidi Wacker, Brookfield East — 1st Alternate
  4. Namratta Sehgal, James Madison Memorial — 2nd Alternate
  5. Michael Freitag, Brookfield East — Finalist
  6. Andrew Gonzales, James Madison Memorial — Finalist

International Extemporaneous Speaking

  1. Kevin Bailey, Rufus King — National Qualifier
  2. Ben Benson, Marquette — National Qualifier
  3. Joe Balistreri, Marquette — 1st Alternate
  4. Yi Yi, James Madison Memorial — 2nd Alternate
  5. Angela Limbach, Brookfield East — Finalist

United States Extemporaneous Speaking

  1. Kevin Bailey, Rufus King — National Qualifier (will compete in IX)
  2. Valerie Shen, James Madison Memorial — National Qualifier (will compete in PF)
  3. Gabriella Friedman, Nicolet — 1st Alternate (will compete in Student Congress)
  4. Yi Yi, James Madison Memorial — 2nd Alternate
  5. Jason Schwartz, Nicolet — Finalist
  6. Andrew Shrawder, Brookfield East — Finalist

Thursday Thing to Read: WDCA 2008 Schedule

Posted on April 10, 2008 – 8:16 am by: Nick Bubb

With several tournaments having the distinct possibility of moving and the schedule conflicts that have existed over the last season, Wisconsin Forensics Daily is interested in taking the lead in a discussion about the 2008 Debate Season Schedule in hopes of resolving any potential conflicts before they arise. In case some of you haven’t heard, the Appleton East Challenge potentially will not exist next season. We are also returning to a year where there are more weekends in September than we have had in the past. Hopefully with this work we can develop a 2008 schedule that works with Milwaukee Debate League, develops three large tournament before the state tournament, and avoids regionally conflicted tournaments. (And since that I’ve been reviewing the standing rules, I know that this was supposed to be resolved by today).

What follows below is a list of next year’s dates. I’ve listed the possibilities of tournaments on a particular date as well. I’ve tried to note what is going on with the National Circuit where appropriate:

Sept 12-13: Wake Forest, WDCA Fall Meeting
Sept 19-20: Marquette
Sept 26-27: Nicolet?, Valley?
Oct 3-4: Rufus King, Merrill?, New Trier
Oct 10-11: Hortonville, West Bend
Oct 17-18: LaCrosse, South Milwaukee?
Oct 24-25: Open,
Oct 31-Nov 1: Teachers Convention, Mukwonago?, Caucus/EGR?
Nov 7-8: (Sheboygan North if can’t move), Michigan
Nov 14-15: Janesville/Madison Memorial
Nov 21-22: Sheboygan South, Glenbrooks
Dec 5-6: Sheboygan North/Appleton East, Greendale/Hale
Dec 12-13: WDCA-WHSFA State, location TBA

If the first weekend of December is open (as in Appleton East is not hosting), then Sheboygan North would like to take that weekend and continue the tradition of running the challenge.

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LaCrosse CFL Results

Posted on April 7, 2008 – 6:00 am by: Nick Bubb

Bonnie Knight has provided WFD with a summary of the individuals who have qualified for the Grand Nationals in Appleton over Memorial Day weekend. Congratulations to the following individuals and their coaches:

Results are below the break.

2008 LCCFL DRAMATIC PERFORMANCE
14 James Kust - North *1st
16 JR Smathers - Regis *2nd
11 Chris Wirz - Regis *3rd

2008 LCCFL DUO INTERPRETATION
24 Nick Anderson/*Ben Kolis - North *1st
23 Katie Burns-Penn/Michelle Peterson - St. Croix Falls *2nd
30 Rachel Preston/Kathryn West - Regis *3rd

2008 LCCFL EXTEMPORANEOUS
44 Matthew Muza - Regis *1st
41 Dan Wirz - Regis *2nd
43 Jeff Henriksen - Regis *3rd

2008 LCCFL ORAL INTERPREATATION OF LITERATURE
55 Ashley Stabenow - North *1st
50 Casey Metcalf - Memorial *2nd
51 Hayley Barrickman - North *3rd

2008 LCCFL ORATORICAL DECLAMATION
63 Meghan Marquardt - North *1st
64 Kimberly Wogahn - Memorial *2nd
61 Bethany Blount - North *3rd

2008 LCCFL ORIGINAL ORATORY
77 Melanie Walter - North *1st
73 Caitlin Pickard - Regis *2nd
78 Libby Kokemoor - Memorial *3rd

Milwaukee CFL results

Posted on April 6, 2008 – 5:46 am by: Mike Traas

Reporting from Brookfield East - Saturday April 5th, the qualifying tournament for the 2008 National tournament has concluded. The results from the Congress and IE competition are below.

Congress Results
National Qualifier - Summers - Rufus King
National Qualifier - Kermani - West Bend East
National Qualifier - Tabbert - Appleton East
National Qualifier - Friedman - Nicolet
National Qualifier - Ray-Aden - Milwaukee HS Arts
1st Alternate - Schwartz - Nicolet
2nd Alternate - Coats - Nicolet

Declamation Results
National Qualifier - Caroline Klinker - Brookfield East
National Qualifier - Michael Freitag - Brookfield East
National Qualifier - Greta Brecheisen - Brookfield East
National Qualifier - Claire Palmer - Brookfield East
National Qualifier - DeShawn Smith - Bradley Tech
1st Alternate - S. T. Hentzen - Whitefish Bay
2nd Alternate - Devin Munger - Whitefish Bay

Dramatic Performance Results
National Qualifier - Jonathon Spence - Wauwatosa West
National Qualifier - Maggie Wilson - Appleton East
National Qualifier - Brandon Ponschock - Appleton East
National Qualifier - Maya Bates - Messmer
National Qualifier - Jenna Huebner - Appleton East
1st Alternate - Rachel Greenen - West Bend West

Duo Interp Results
National Qualifier - Krueger / Ehlert - Appleton East
National Qualifier - Anderson / Weisse - Brookfield East
National Qualifier - Rogers / Sheptoski - Appleton East
National Qualifier - Raasch / Ludwig - Milwaukee HS Arts
National Qualifier - Mulder / Thompson - Appleton East
1st Alternate - Vosters / Moshe - Brookfield East
2nd Alternate - Meier / Neumann - Trinity Academy

Oratory Results
National Qualifier - Kirsten Wisniewski - Milwaukee HS Arts
National Qualifier - Lai Lai Sun - Brookfield East
National Qualifier - Ruth Markwardt - Appleton East
National Qualifier - Heidi Wacker - Brookfield East
National Qualifier - Allie Busching - Appleton East
1st Alternate - Amanda Thompson - St. Joan Antida
2nd Alternate - Camille Schwartz - Whitefish Bay

Extemp Results
National Qualifier - Caitlin Peterson - Appleton East
National Qualifier - Kevin Bailey - Rufus King
National Qualifier - Cullen Munger - Whitefish Bay
National Qualifier - Jessica Stuyvenberg - Kimberly
National Qualifier - Jared Beck - Cedarburg
1st Alternate - Jason Schwartz - Nicolet
2nd Alternate - Brittany Coats - Nicolet

Oral Interp Results
National Qualifier - Sarah DeSalvo - Appleton East
National Qualifier - Alaina Sullivan - Cedarburg
National Qualifier - Angela Limbach - Brookfield East
National Qualifier - Terri Mueller - Brookfield East
National Qualifier - Olivia Wulf - Appleton East
1st Alternate - Willina McCoy - Rufus King
2nd Alternate - Jessica Miles - Bradley Tech

I do not have the debate portion of the qualifiers in front of me… if someone has them could they post them here.

If I recall correctly… (but I may be mistaken)

In Policy Debate Marquette qualified 3 teams, Cedarburg 1 team and Appleton East 1 team (Muthiah/Chen)
In PF Debate - Janesville Parker qualified a team, Cedarburg qualified a team or two and Janesville Craig qualified a team, and Brookfield East qualified a team.
In LD Debate - Marquette qualified 2, Rufus King qualified 2 and Appleton East qualified 1 (Jenny Chu)

As we get debate names, we will add them in!

Good Luck to all at the National tournament

Live From Woodward: Novice Octafinals

Posted on April 5, 2008 – 5:23 pm by: Jon Voss

After six rounds, WI has advanced two teams to the novice-division octafinals of Woodward Academy’s First and Second Year Championships.

Sheboygan North’s Nichelle Letson and Brandon Pakkebier went 4-2 in prelims, and are currently negating the resolution against a team from the Westminster School (Atlanta, GA).

Marquette University High School’s Michael Hoffman and Jack Mackay went undefeated through prelims and are currently negative against the Kinkaid School (Houston, TX). In addition, Michael was the tournament’s 3rd speaker, and Jack was 2nd.

Results from the octafinals, and hopefully a full bracket/quarters pairings will be available sometime tonight.