Difference between revisions of "Andrew Hart"

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'''Andrew Hart''' is a junior at the [[Minnesota|University of Minnesota]]. He is notable for winning the 2007 [[CBI]] National Championship. He also designed the QB Wiki logo and came up with the idea for the BeES stats program, which will be released for the Infinium Phantom in a bundle with Duke Nukem Forever.
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'''Andrew Hart''' is a first-year law student at the [[Minnesota|University of Minnesota]]. Playing for Minnesota, Andrew has won three [[ACF]] undergraduate titles, one [[NAQT]] undergraduate title, and seventeen tournaments in total. From 2008 to 2010, Andrew was a member of a Minnesota lineup that included [[Brendan Byrne]], [[Rob Carson]], and [[Gautam Kandlikar]], which is considered among the best undergraduate teams of all time. Along with those three, he was a runner up at the [[2010 ACF Nationals]], which [[Andrew Yaphe]]'s [[Stanford]] team won in a close final. With Byrne, Carson, and [[Matt Weiner]], Andrew won the [[2009 Chicago Open]]. With Rob, he holds the dubious distinction of being a [[College Bowl]] national champion.
  
==Tournament editing==
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Andrew is a member of [[ACF]] and has served as the editor in chief for both [[ACF Fall]] and [[ACF Winter]]. He was also the head editor of the 2009 [[PACE NSC]], and has played a major role in writing and editing Minnesota's house events: [[Minnesota Open]] (formerly [[Deep Bench]]) and [[MUT]]. He was a founding editor of [[HSAPQ]].
===2007-08===
 
Andrew has served as a tournament editor for [[Deep Bench]], a [[mACF]] tournament held at [[Minnesota]] and [[Brandeis]] that was won by [[Illinois]] and [[Harvard]].  He was the social science and fine arts editor for the 2007 iteration of [[ACF Fall]], which his teammates [[Rob Carson]], [[Bernadette Spencer]], and [[Gautam Kandlikar]] won in the North region. He also edited and largely wrote the [[2007 Illinois Open Literature Tournament]], a side event at the 2007 [[Illinois Open]] that was won by [[Jonathan Magin]] and [[Rom Masrour]]. These tournaments were held on October 20, November 4, and November 10, 2007.  During spring semester, he edited two high school tournaments and the [[Minnesota Undergraduate Tournament]] in March 2008.
 
  
===2008-09===
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==High school==
* [[ACF Fall]] 2008
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Andrew played for two years for [[Chaska High School]] in Minnesota. Career highlights include a 3-14-13 line at HSNCT in 2005 and a runner-up finish at [[Chip Beall]]'s 2006 national tournament. Rob Carson was one of his high school teammates.
* [[Minnesota Open]]
 
* [[Minnesota Open Literature Tournament]]
 
* [[Minnesota Undergraduate Tournament]] 2009
 
* [[PACE NSC]] 2009
 
  
==High school editing and writing==
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==College playing career==
Andrew writes for [[NAQT]], notably the [[HSNCT]], which featured several of his questions last year.  He also contributes to IS sets and has edited a few low-level sets.  In 2009, he wrote for [[PACE NSC]] and contributed to two late-season high school tournaments: the [[PACE]] [[Minnesota PACE Spring Qualifier|Spring Qualifier]], and the Minnesota [[Chitin Classic]].
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Andrew joined the University of Minnesota team during his freshman year along with Rob. Their college careers both got off to a slow start, as the Minnesota team attended few circuit events. Andrew played the [[Matt Cvijanovich]] Novice Tournament at [[Illinois]] in the spring. With teammates [[Ezra Lyon]], [[Meredith Johnson]], and [[Rita Otto]], Andrew and Rob won the 2007 [[College Bowl]] National Championship. In July, Andrew and Rob played their first circuit event together at the [[Chicago Open]].
  
In 2009, he began writing and editing for [[HSAPQ]] and is serving as [[PACE NSC]]'s head editor.
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After playing few circuit tournament during Andrew's freshman year in 2006-07, the Minnesota team became one of the most active in the country in 2007-08. Andrew served as the club's president during a year in which a new crop of Minnesota players won its first tournament ([[EFT]] at Chicago), played eleven circuit events, and won the [[ACF]] Undergraduate Championship. Regular team members [[Gautam Kandlikar]] and [[Bernadette Spencer]] both matriculated to Minnesota and became key members of the team.
  
In addition, Andrew hosts high school summer practices that aim to improve question writing on the Minnesota high school and college circuits.
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In 2008-09, Minnesota added [[Brendan Byrne]], who transferred from [[Drake]]. Brendan put on an impressive performance at the [[2008 Chicago Open]], leading the field in scoring and carrying a team also consisting of Rob, Andrew, and Gautam to third place; that lineup became Minnesota's regular A-team over the next two years. Andrew won nine regular events playing with various Minnesota teammates. The team took fourth place at both the [[2009 ICT]] and [[2009 ACF Nationals|ACF Nationals]], repeating as ACF undergraduate champions and taking second in the ICT undergraduate final to [[Harvard]] in a close match.
  
==High school career==
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In the 2009-10 season, Andrew won the [[2009 Chicago Open]] playing with Rob, Brendan, and [[Matt Weiner]]. After a successful regular season that included three circuit tournament victories, Andrew and his teammates repeated their fourth-place finish at [[2010 ICT|ICT]]. Minnesota defeated [[Michigan]] in the undergraduate final, 515 to 125.
Andrew played for two years for [[Chaska High School]] in Minnesota.  Chaska went to the [[HSNCT]] in 2005, where Andrew posted an astounding 3-14-13 line over 9.4 games[http://naqt.com/hsnct/2005/results/personal.html], while the team went 5-5 and missed the playoffs with its eighth-round loss to [[Brindlee Mountain]]. The Chaska program passed up on the 2006 HSNCT to attend [[Chip Beall]]'s tournament, where the team placed second.
 
  
==Tournament results==
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At the [[2010 ACF Nationals]], Minnesota was one of the two undefeated teams in the preliminary round robin, with a record of 13-0. After a loss to [[Maryland]] in the playoff round robin, Minnesota had to win its final playoff game, against defending champion [[Chicago]], to make a one-game final. Andrew had his best game of the tournament, answer six tossups to propel Minnesota into the final against [[Andrew Yaphe]]'s [[Stanford]] team. The final saw Stanford jump out to a 195-0 lead, as Andrew Yaphe answered six of the first seven tossups. Brendan answered the final three tossups of the half to draw Minnesota closer; the halftime score was 190-70. The second half saw Minnesota mount a furious comeback. All four team members scored during a six-tossup rally that spanned tossups fourteen through nineteen. Minnesota appeared to lead by forty going into the final question, which Stanford converted. After twentying the bonus, the final score was 270-260. However, a pending protest on Rob's buzz on tossup twelve was resolved in Stanford's favor. The final score was 260-225, Stanford.
===2006-07===
 
* First place at the Macalester Invite ([[NAQT]] A series!)[http://www.naqt.com/mqba/macalester/2006/2006-macalester_standings.html] (with [[Jon Martin]], [[Sean Skaar]], and [[Joyce Sun]])
 
* Tenth place at [[Drake]]'s [[Sword Bowl]] mirror[http://aco.truman.edu/OtherFiles/swordbowldrake_standings.html] (with [[Rob Carson]], [[Sean Skaar]], and [[Joyce Sun]])
 
* Second-place finish at the Canadian Division II SCT[http://www.andysthoughts.com/NAQT2007/NAQTCanada2007_Div2_standings.html] (with [[Rob Carson]], [[Sean Skaar]], and [[Joyce Sun]])
 
* 15th-place finish at D-II ICT[http://www.collegequizbowl.org/NAQT/2007_ICT/D-II/NAQTICT2007_D-2_standings.html] (with [[Rob Carson]], [[Sean Skaar]], [[Jon Martin]], and [[Joyce Sun]])
 
* Second-place finish at the Matt Cvijanovich Novice Tournament[https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/dtaylor4/MCMNT07/MCMNT07_standings.html] at [[Illinois]] (with [[Jon Martin]] and [[Sean Skaar]])
 
* Eighth place at the Elvis Presley Memorial Tournament at [[Wisconsin]][https://mywebspace.wisc.edu/glyon/Elvis%20Stats/Elvis%204-21-07_standings.html?uniq=owb0n9] (with [[Rob Carson]] and [[Sean Skaar]])
 
* [[CBI]] national championship[http://www.collegebowl.com/nct07/PlayoffTeamStandings.pdf] (with [[Ezra Lyon]], [[Andrew Bockover]], [[Meredith Johnson]], and [[Rob Carson]])
 
* Last place at the [[Chicago Open]][http://bowl.uchicago.edu/results/CO%202007_standings.html] (with [[Dan Passner]], [[Quentin Roper]], and [[Rob Carson]])
 
* Some not-very-good place at the [[Chicago Open History Tournament]][http://www.hsquizbowl.org/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=4030] (with [[Rob Carson]])
 
* Seventh place at the [[Chicago Open Literature Tournament]][http://myweb.usf.edu/~aragab/ChicagoOpenLitSingles2007_standings.html] (with [[Gabriel Lyon]])
 
  
===2007-08===
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In fall 2010, Andrew will enter law school at Minnesota.
* First at the [[Chicago]] site of [[EFT]][http://bowl.uchicago.edu/EFT2007/EFT%202%20Prelims_standings.html][http://bowl.uchicago.edu/EFT2007/EFT%202%20Playoffs_standings.html] (with [[Rob Carson]], [[Gautam Kandlikar]], and [[Chris Bauleke]])
 
* Fourth at the [[Illinois Open]][https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/tmeade2/www/io07po_standings.html] (with [[Rob Carson]], [[Gautam Kandlikar]], and [[Bernadette Spencer]])
 
* Second at [[Ryan Westbrook]]'s Return to Lord Weary's Castle doubles[http://www.hsquizbowl.org/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=63329#63329] (with [[Matt Lafer]])
 
* Third at [[Truman State]]'s Brainal Leakage[http://aco.truman.edu/OtherFiles/bl3_standings.html] (with [[Rob Carson]] and [[Bernadette Spencer]])
 
* Fourth at [[Michigan MLK]][http://results.scobo.net/SQBS.aspx?org=MLK2008&id=1&page=standings] (with [[Rob Carson]], [[Gautam Kandlikar]], and [[Bernadette Spencer]])
 
* Second at [[Truman State]]'s mirror of [[Penn Bowl]][http://aco.truman.edu/OtherFiles/pennbowl_withplayoffs_standings.html] (with [[Rob Carson]], [[Gautam Kandlikar]], and [[Bernadette Spencer]])
 
* Fourth at [[Cardinal Classic XVII]][http://quizbowl.stanford.edu/tournaments/2008_ccxvii/ccxvii_standings.html] (with [[Jerry Vinokurov]], [[Eric Mukherjee]], and [[Dennis Jang]])
 
* Fourth at North [[NAQT SCT]][http://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=2532] (with [[Rob Carson]], [[Andrew Bockover]], and [[Matthias Hunt]])
 
* Fourth at Midwest [[ACF Regionals]][http://bowl.uchicago.edu/results/ACF%20Regionals%202008/ACF%20Regionals%202008%20prelims_standings.html][http://bowl.uchicago.edu/results/ACF%20Regionals%202008/ACF%20Regionals%202008%20playoffs_standings.html] - (with [[Rob Carson]], [[Gautam Kandlikar]], and [[Bernadette Spencer]])
 
* First at the [[St. Olaf]] mirror of the [[Matt Cvijanovich Memorial Novice Tournament]][http://results.scobo.net/SQBS.aspx?org=stolaf&id=1&page=standings] (with Matt Hart)
 
* Twelfth at the [[ICT]][http://naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=2558&playoffs=1] (with [[Rob Carson]] and [[Gautam Kandlikar]])
 
* Fifth at [[2008 ACF Nationals|ACF Nationals]] (Undergraduate and DII champions)[http://www.hsquizbowl.org/acfstats/playoffs_standings.html] (with [[Rob Carson]], [[Gautam Kandlikar]], and [[Bernadette Spencer]]
 
  
===2008-09===
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==Editing and writing==
* Third at [https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/dtaylor4/CO%202008/CO%202008_standings.html?uniq=-qxeixl Chicago Open] (with [[Brendan Byrne]], [[Rob Carson]], and [[Gautam Kandlikar]])
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Andrew has been been a central editor for thirteen collegiate events since 2007, and has been a major contributor or editor for at least as many high school tournaments in that time.
* Around twelfth at [https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/dtaylor4/CO%20History%20Doubles%202008/July%20Crisis_standings.html?uniq=-qxegxn The July Crisis:Chicago Open History] (with [[Rob Carson]])
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* Eleventh at [https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/dtaylor4/CO%20Lit%20Doubles%202008%20Overall/CO%20Lit%20Playoffs_standings.html?uniq=-qxeh4j Chicago Open Lit] (with [[Ray Luo]])
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Andrew is a voting member of [[ACF]] and has edited three ACF events: Fall 2007, Fall 2008, and Winter 2010. He served as a subject editor in fine arts and social science in his first ACF editorship, and has been the editor in chief of his most recent two events.
* Second at [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/vcuopen/vcuopen08_standings.html VCU Open] (with [[Brendan Byrne]], [[Gautam Kandlikar]], and [[Trevor Davis]])
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* First at [http://www.hsquizbowl.org/vcuopen/vcunovice08_standings.html VCU Open Sunday] (with [[Brendan Byrne]], [[Gautam Kandlikar]], and [[Trevor Davis]])
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During Andrew's time at the University of Minnesota, he has been a central editor and writer for six Minnesota events: Two iterations of [[Minnesota Open]] in 2008 and 2009, three versions of [[MUT]] from 2008-10, and [[2007 Deep Bench]].
* First at [http://www.illinoisabt.org/results/2008eftmirror/2008eftmirror_standings.html EFT 2008 at Illinois] (with [[Rob Carson]] and [[Bernadette Spencer]])
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* First at [http://www.illinoisabt.org/results/2008illinoisopen/2008illinoisopen_standings.html 2008 Illinois Open] (with [[Brendan Byrne]], [[Rob Carson]], and [[Bernadette Spencer]])
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Andrew is the head editor of the [[Early Autumn Collegiate Novice]] tournament, which will be played at eighteen sites around North America in fall 2010. He has produced three collegiate side tournaments: the [[Illinois Open Literature Tournament]] 2007, the [[Impossible Speed Check]] tournament played at the 2008 Illinois Open, and the 2008 [[Minnesota Open Literature Tournament]].
* Fourth at [http://bowl.uchicago.edu/RMP%20Fest%202008_standings.html RMP Fest at Illinois] (with [[Brendan Byrne]])
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* First at [http://results.scobo.net/SQBS.aspx?org=LUQT&id=3&page=standings T-Party at Lawrence] (with [[Brendan Byrne]], [[Joe Hansen]], and [[Tom Soderholm]])
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At the high school level, Andrew has served as the editor in chief of the [[2009 PACE NSC]], a founding editor of [[HSAPQ]], and an editor and writer for several independent high school events.
* First at [http://results.scobo.net/SQBS.aspx?org=CarletonCollege&id=5&page=standings ACF Winter North] (with [[Brendan Byrne]], [[Rob Carson]], and [[Gautam Kandlikar]])
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* First at [http://results.scobo.net/SQBS.aspx?org=UIAQC&id=2&page=standings Penn Bowl at Iowa] (with [[Brendan Byrne]], [[Rob Carson]], and [[Mike Cheyne]])
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==Miscellany==
* First at [http://www.naqt.com/stats/tournament-teams.jsp?tournament_id=2847 SCT North] (with [[Brendan Byrne]], [[Sean Skaar]], and [[Tom Soderholm]])
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* Observed a trend in NAQT packets that led to the creation of the [[BEES|BEEEES!]] meme.
* Second at [http://bowl.uchicago.edu/2009%20ACF%20Regionals%20Upper%20Midwest%20Test_standings.html ACF Regionals Midwest] [http://bowl.uchicago.edu/2009%20ACF%20Regionals%20Upper%20Midwest%20Playoff%20With%20Final_standings.html Playoff stats] (with [[Brendan Byrne]], [[Rob Carson]], and [[Gautam Kandlikar]])
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* Designed the QB Wiki logo.
* First at [http://www.illinoisabt.org/results/2009fichte/2009fichte_standings.html Illinois Fake ICT 2] (with [[Brendan Byrne]], [[Rob Carson]], and [[Gautam Kandlikar]])
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* Came up with the idea for the [[BEeS]] stats program.
* Fourth at [http://www.illinoisabt.org/results/2009theexperimentII/theexperimentII_standings.html Ryan Westbrook's Experiment] (with [[Selene Koo]], [[Michael Arnold]], and Marshall from Chicago)
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* Brother of [[Matt Hart]].
  
 
[[Category:People]]
 
[[Category:People]]
 
[[Category:Minnesota]]
 
[[Category:Minnesota]]
 
[[Category:Chaska]]
 
[[Category:Chaska]]
[[Category: HSQB Moderators]]
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[[Category:HSQB Moderators]]
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]
 

Revision as of 12:27, 25 August 2010

Andrew Hart
Andrew.jpg
Noted subjects nothing really
Current college Minnesota (2007-)
Past colleges None
High school Chaska (2005-2006)
Stats HDWhite • NAQT

Andrew Hart is a first-year law student at the University of Minnesota. Playing for Minnesota, Andrew has won three ACF undergraduate titles, one NAQT undergraduate title, and seventeen tournaments in total. From 2008 to 2010, Andrew was a member of a Minnesota lineup that included Brendan Byrne, Rob Carson, and Gautam Kandlikar, which is considered among the best undergraduate teams of all time. Along with those three, he was a runner up at the 2010 ACF Nationals, which Andrew Yaphe's Stanford team won in a close final. With Byrne, Carson, and Matt Weiner, Andrew won the 2009 Chicago Open. With Rob, he holds the dubious distinction of being a College Bowl national champion.

Andrew is a member of ACF and has served as the editor in chief for both ACF Fall and ACF Winter. He was also the head editor of the 2009 PACE NSC, and has played a major role in writing and editing Minnesota's house events: Minnesota Open (formerly Deep Bench) and MUT. He was a founding editor of HSAPQ.

High school

Andrew played for two years for Chaska High School in Minnesota. Career highlights include a 3-14-13 line at HSNCT in 2005 and a runner-up finish at Chip Beall's 2006 national tournament. Rob Carson was one of his high school teammates.

College playing career

Andrew joined the University of Minnesota team during his freshman year along with Rob. Their college careers both got off to a slow start, as the Minnesota team attended few circuit events. Andrew played the Matt Cvijanovich Novice Tournament at Illinois in the spring. With teammates Ezra Lyon, Meredith Johnson, and Rita Otto, Andrew and Rob won the 2007 College Bowl National Championship. In July, Andrew and Rob played their first circuit event together at the Chicago Open.

After playing few circuit tournament during Andrew's freshman year in 2006-07, the Minnesota team became one of the most active in the country in 2007-08. Andrew served as the club's president during a year in which a new crop of Minnesota players won its first tournament (EFT at Chicago), played eleven circuit events, and won the ACF Undergraduate Championship. Regular team members Gautam Kandlikar and Bernadette Spencer both matriculated to Minnesota and became key members of the team.

In 2008-09, Minnesota added Brendan Byrne, who transferred from Drake. Brendan put on an impressive performance at the 2008 Chicago Open, leading the field in scoring and carrying a team also consisting of Rob, Andrew, and Gautam to third place; that lineup became Minnesota's regular A-team over the next two years. Andrew won nine regular events playing with various Minnesota teammates. The team took fourth place at both the 2009 ICT and ACF Nationals, repeating as ACF undergraduate champions and taking second in the ICT undergraduate final to Harvard in a close match.

In the 2009-10 season, Andrew won the 2009 Chicago Open playing with Rob, Brendan, and Matt Weiner. After a successful regular season that included three circuit tournament victories, Andrew and his teammates repeated their fourth-place finish at ICT. Minnesota defeated Michigan in the undergraduate final, 515 to 125.

At the 2010 ACF Nationals, Minnesota was one of the two undefeated teams in the preliminary round robin, with a record of 13-0. After a loss to Maryland in the playoff round robin, Minnesota had to win its final playoff game, against defending champion Chicago, to make a one-game final. Andrew had his best game of the tournament, answer six tossups to propel Minnesota into the final against Andrew Yaphe's Stanford team. The final saw Stanford jump out to a 195-0 lead, as Andrew Yaphe answered six of the first seven tossups. Brendan answered the final three tossups of the half to draw Minnesota closer; the halftime score was 190-70. The second half saw Minnesota mount a furious comeback. All four team members scored during a six-tossup rally that spanned tossups fourteen through nineteen. Minnesota appeared to lead by forty going into the final question, which Stanford converted. After twentying the bonus, the final score was 270-260. However, a pending protest on Rob's buzz on tossup twelve was resolved in Stanford's favor. The final score was 260-225, Stanford.

In fall 2010, Andrew will enter law school at Minnesota.

Editing and writing

Andrew has been been a central editor for thirteen collegiate events since 2007, and has been a major contributor or editor for at least as many high school tournaments in that time.

Andrew is a voting member of ACF and has edited three ACF events: Fall 2007, Fall 2008, and Winter 2010. He served as a subject editor in fine arts and social science in his first ACF editorship, and has been the editor in chief of his most recent two events.

During Andrew's time at the University of Minnesota, he has been a central editor and writer for six Minnesota events: Two iterations of Minnesota Open in 2008 and 2009, three versions of MUT from 2008-10, and 2007 Deep Bench.

Andrew is the head editor of the Early Autumn Collegiate Novice tournament, which will be played at eighteen sites around North America in fall 2010. He has produced three collegiate side tournaments: the Illinois Open Literature Tournament 2007, the Impossible Speed Check tournament played at the 2008 Illinois Open, and the 2008 Minnesota Open Literature Tournament.

At the high school level, Andrew has served as the editor in chief of the 2009 PACE NSC, a founding editor of HSAPQ, and an editor and writer for several independent high school events.

Miscellany

  • Observed a trend in NAQT packets that led to the creation of the BEEEES! meme.
  • Designed the QB Wiki logo.
  • Came up with the idea for the BEeS stats program.
  • Brother of Matt Hart.