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RHMS mathletes take the stage at the
MATHCOUNTS tournament
Submitted by Ayanna Cudennec, RHMS student; photo courtesy of ??????????
School District, Littleton School District, and Douglas County School District proudly participated, ready to win for their schools.
The RHMS team consisted of ten mathletes: eighth-graders Anthony Chui, Aditi Jegannath, Jamie Kim, Alan Wang, Jessica Wang, Max Xu, and Tin Tin Zhang; seventh-graders Lee Guiberson and Ty Sloan; and sixth-grader Shiv Mereddy. All of these students competed individually and four of them also participated as a core team: Jaime Kim, Anthony Chui, Max Xu and Alan Wang. This core team placed fourth overall.
In the individual competition, Max Xu came in eighth place, Jessica Wang came in second place, and Anthony Chui took rst place.
Following the day of hard work, the RHMS mathletes began preparation for the state championships. They go back
to racing against the clock and solving their math problems on March 23, ready to dominate and represent RHMS the best they can.
On February 2, Rocky Heights
Middle School (RHMS) took over the MATHCOUNTS tournament. Throughout this tournament, the mathletes raced against the clock to solve math problems that ranged from algebra to geometry
to logic questions. Chris Gowing, the MATHCOUNTS coach stated, “I was very proud of how they performed. They
worked hard for this competition and they did really well. Good job representing Rocky Heights Middle School!”
MATHCOUNTS is a national organization promoting math in middle schools. This competition was a chapter competition with teams from all over the South Metro area of Colorado. Teams from Cherry Creek
RCHS theatre program has 34 national qualifiers
By Lisa Nicklanovich; photo courtesy of Cindy Baker
The Rock Canyon High School theatre program has grown from one National Quali er in 2013 to a record 34 individual quali cations this year. 80108 thespians in the program include Lucy Meisel, Kaelyn New, Logan McDonnell, Briana Zappavigna, Brittlyn Stibley, Lily Schmoker, Valerie Thomas, Carson Carnes, Sophia Badia, Cameron Warlow, Tim Merkle and Olivia Critchley.
2018 National Conference. Baker added, “We were honored to present “The Women of Lockerbie” on the main stage in front
of 5,000 people at Nationals in 2016 (see related story May 2016) and were one of just eight high school improv troupes to be selected to the Denver Improv Festival in both 2017 and 2018.”
Baker called going to Nationals this summer her “swan song” because the event is being moved to Indiana, and she said she “needs to step back and evaluate the added expense and not leave the practice of going as a burden to whomever my replacement will be in a few years. They can make a fresh decision without pressure.” Baker has been teaching at RCHS since 2005 and has been teaching theatre since 1986.
Valerie Thomas, a senior at RCHS and an 80108 resident who has quali ed for nationals twice, when she was a junior, and now as a senior said, “Nationals is really fun and is held at the University of Nebraska over the summer. We used all of their classrooms and even slept
in the dorms. It lasts a week and apart
from performing, we go to shows put
on by other high schools in the country
and go to sessions put on by teachers, actors, singers, and choreographers from around the country. I also did college auditions there and found the schools I am applying to from that event. Overall, it’s extremely exciting to be in a place of fellow performers who think the same as you and learn from people with your interests.”
“This is my ‘swan song’ attending Nationals and I'm just so proud of what we accomplished in the last seven years!” said Cindy Baker, Rock Canyon High School’s (RCHS) theatre director, who has taken the program from one National Quali er in 2013 to a record 34 individual quali cations to Nationals this year.
To qualify for Nationals requires an overall score of “superior” from the two judges
at the state level. Students are ranked according to four levels in categories such as professionalism, tactics, risks, discovery, relationships, vocal technique, movement and focus. Many students in the program quali ed twice.
Over the past seven years, the program has had many impressive accomplishments; they attended the state conference, had
75 students invited to Nationals, and one winning improv team. Not just actors
have excelled; four students were chosen to run various tech theater jobs at national premiere performances sponsored by the International Thespian Society, having won in speci c technical skills categories and in the Tech Olympics.
The program was the only selected one- act to represent Colorado at the 2014 and 2015 National Conferences and the only Colorado school to place in the individual tech challenge events at the