Notre Dame fire causes world-wide devastation
Carter Crookston advances to State UIL Tennis competition
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Endgame wraps up Marvel’s Avengers series pg 20
Creek advances to State at 2019 Academic UIL meet By Kadee Loyd Around Creek Editor
Creek students had a very successful 2018-2019 District Academic UIL competition in March, placing second, just under 20 points behind Springs. Seventeen of the students who participated in the wide variety of subjects moved on to the regional competition, which took place on April 13. On Friday, March 29 and Saturday, March 30, Creek teams went against other schools in the district for the first-place title in individual subjects and in the overall competition. Many Creek students secured high ranks, and individual teams took home many of the first and second place awards for overall subjects (Social Studies, Spelling and Vocabulary, Literary Criticism, Science, Math, Journalism, Current Events and Debate). “I was very proud of our sponsors and kids and the way they performed. We had good participation, which is critical in that event, and our kids were well prepared. They scored plenty points on the way, so I’m very proud of all the academic coaches and our students for all that they did to prepare,” Jamey Majewski, principal, said. The juniors on the Social Studies team swept the competition away, with Tony Dudley claiming first place, Carli Fontaine taking fourth, Anna Alves taking eighth and Brandon Doan 14. The team received first place in their branch of competition, and all four students moved on to the regional competition. The event consisted of a multiple-choice test and an essay, both of which focused on Civil Rights. To prepare, the team was given a guide and The Race Beat, by Gene Roberts, to read on their own time. It is evident the team put effort and time into these extra studies to achieve their results. “I read a lot of information surrounding the Civil Rights personally. This year’s AcaDec topic was the 1960s, which overlapped really well with Civil Rights,” Dudley said. The Spelling and Vocabulary and the Literary Criticism teams took second place at the competition. Senior Adonai Haragot, who
placed third in Spelling and Vocabulary, moved on to Regionals. Seniors Mete Karagoz and Tim Brazzel also participated in the event, placing fourth and seventh respectively. In Literary Criticism, junior Rolly Ojo took third and went to Regionals, while sophomore Noah Ellis received fourth and junior Ayan Sarkar got sixth. Junior Peyton Burlington, sophomore Helen Ding, junior Elida Met-Hoxha,
“It was great going to the competition with my friends in the science team. We’ve really grown close over the course of studying, and I just enjoy having fun with friends at these kinds of academic events,” Ding said. Senior Cameron Noorbakhsh competed in Math, Number Sense and Calculator Apps, taking fifth, third and first, respectively. He qualified for the
Photo taken by John Lewallen
junior Madelyn Skierski and sophomore Adara Toran made up the Creek Science team, which was awarded second place overall. Ding placed first in Biology and moved on to regionals. For the competition, students had to take a three-part test. Their strategy was to focus on one of the three topics, Biology, Chemistry or Physics. Over the course of the process, the team had the chance to build a sense of comraderie.
regional competition for Number Sense and Calculator Apps but was unable to attend due to a college visit to Rice. Members of the Creek HiLife staff kept the winning streak going, taking first in Journalism and second in Current Events as an overall team. Sophomore Arrington Linder and senior Sierra Dickey took first and third, respectively, in News Writing, and both moved on to Regionals.
Junior Maddie Moore placed fourth in the event, making her a first alternate. In Feature Writing, junior Morgan Severson received fifth and sophomore Leah Burnam sixth, while Severson claimed second in Editorial Writing and moved on to the next level of the UIL competition. In Headline Writing, Linder took second, Dickey took third and Burnam took fifth; Linder and Dickey moved on regionals for the subject. At the regional competition, Linder took fourth in the event. In Copy Editing, Moore placed second and Severson fourth. Moore moved on to round two, and Severson was a first alternate. Senior Grant Coburn placed sixth for Current Events. Other members of the Current Events team were Severson, Burnam and senior Riley Healy. Debate is not unfamiliar with competitions after countless tournaments throughout the year, and they once again showed off their skill at the UIL competition. Sophomore Meghan Lindquist took fifth in Poetry, sophomore Emma Tyler took fifth in Informative Extemp and senior Rachel Boyd, the 2018-2019 District Champion, took first in Lincoln-Douglas Debate and moved on to regionals, where she earned second and moved on to state. Seniors Sanjana Shah and Sunny Wang secured first place for Cross Examination Debate, and senior Jack Callahan and freshman Nathaniel Overby received second in the event. The members of Creek debate enjoyed the competition and look forward to even more success in the future. “I most enjoyed watching my friends compete and be successful in topics and events that they really care about,” Tyler said. After hours of looking through textbooks, guides and online resources, taking practice exams and studying all the required material, the Creek UIL Academic Teams’ work finally paid off, earning them silver in the competition. Although Creek did not see as much success at the regional competition, the students were proud to represent the school and prove that Creek has some of the most talented and hard-working individuals out there.
Choir and Orchestra sweep the competition at UIL By Kadee Loyd Around Creek Editor
Creek is once again filled with pride for their fine arts programs. Choir and Orchestra recently attended their UIL competitions, and both teams received Sweepstakes, the highest award in performance and sight-reading. Choir and Orchestra are both required to perform three pieces of music that they have been working on for several months. After the performance, they enter the sightreading room where they read and perform a piece of music after silently studying the notes for a short period of time. Choir sightreads on solfege, solmization syllables, while Orchestra silently plays by fingering the notes mimicking the movement of their
bowing. The Sweepstakes award is an average score of ones from the six judges – three judges for the performance and three for sight-reading. The scoring scale is from one to four for choir and from one to five for orchestra, with one being the best. On April fourth, four of Creek’s choirs bussed over to the First United Methodist Church in Dickinson eager to show the judges the work they had accomplished on their music. Bel Canto, the sub-nonvarsity treble choir, went first for Creek. Their musicality and precision in their pieces, Simple Gifts, Sing to the Lord, Alleluia and The Poet Sings, had the judges asking, “Are you sure they are subnon-varsity?” The choir of freshmen girls has less members than they have had in years, but they made up for their smaller
size with stunning voices and hard work. “We had to work a lot every single day to achieve the goals we wanted to, and we had to really work on our skills and improve; learn new things and all that type of stuff,” Ashlee Zachary, freshman Bel Canto member, said. Concordia, the non-varsity tenor-bass choir, followed Bel Canto. After last year’s disorganization and struggles for the men’s choir, their performance proved how much the team has grown. Their songs, Sing Me a Song of a Land That is Gone, Leave Her Johnny and Hey Ho, Nobody Home, showed off the boys’ rich tone. With only a few stumbles in the sight-reading room, they walked away with ones from all judges. After Concordia came Kapelle, the non-varsity treble choir. This group of
sophomore, junior and senior women has been performing at a varsity level throughout the year, and after hearing the choir’s musical performance, a few members of the audience told director Mr. Sean Stultz that they were surprised the group was not competing at that level. Their songs, Lullaby, Ich Wollt’, Miene Lieb’ and Hej, Igazitsad, were filled with passion and brought tears to eyes of the members of the audience. They breezed through sight-reading and brought home a shiny, new Sweepstakes plaque. Symphonic, the varsity mixed choir, went in the last slot of the entire competition, and they were determined to finish off the judges’ day with a bang.
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