Gonzaga University 2023 Conway Classic

2023 — Spokane, WA/US

Gonzaga University

Conway Classic

Speech and Debate Tournament

January 6th-7th, 2023

Please Click Here for 2023 SCHEDULE

TheGonzaga University Debate Program cordially invites your team to attend the 73rd Conway Classic. We are very excited to announce that we will be returning to an in-person format hosted on our beautiful campus in Spokane, Washington.

The Conway will be held Friday January 6th-Saturday January 7th. Depending on entry sizes it is possible we will need to finish elimination rounds of Open CX debate on Sunday morning and we will make that announcement as soon as we can estimate the size of that division. Our tournament will offer 6 preliminary rounds in Open and Novice divisions in CX/Policy, Lincoln-Douglas, Public Forum and 3 rounds in Open Congress. Wealso offer 3 preliminary rounds in an Open division of 9 individual events: humorous interpretation, extemporaneous speaking; oratory, POI; informative speaking; impromptu; duo, ed comm, and dramatic interpretation.

We are pleased to announce that we will once again serve as a Tournament of Champions (TOC) Bid Qualifying Tournament in Policy debate at the Semifinals.All teams advancing to the semifinals in our Open division will earn a bid towards TOC qualification.

Please note that this year we are returning to an in-person format. However, in CX we will accommodate online entries using the ZRM platform. All students competing in-person in Novice Open CX should be prepared to debate online teams. That means bring your laptops and whatever other gear you need for online debating. We will do our best to match modalities to maximize in-person debates for in-person teams.

Important: In order to accommodate our two day schedule students entered in CX debate will not be able to cross enter in Individual Events. LD and PF will be single flighted and run on a different schedule than CX allowing those students to cross enter in Individual Events. Congressional Debate will not conflict with Individual Events.

Entry

Online entry will be through Tabroom.com. You will need to set up your schools account if you do not already have one. http://gonzagaconway.tabroom.com

Judges, coaches and competitors will have access to the GU Guest Network. It is highly advised that if your students/judges are not familiar with tabroom and all of its online features (pairings, results, ballot pickup and turn in, etc) you give them a heads up and perhaps some training on how to access all these features.

Fees and Payment

$50 per Policy Team

$30 per Public Forum Team

$30 per LD Entry

$20 per Congress Entry

$20 per IE slot

$30 per round for uncovered judging in LD and Public Forum debate

$50 per round for uncovered judging in CX debate

$10 per slot for uncovered judging in all Individual Events

You can pay your fees online with a credit card. If you’d like to do this please visit our secure payment site athttps://commerce.cashnet.com/GUDebate2and clicking on the link for “Conway Classic”. You will be able to access your invoice in tabroom for the accurate total.

If you are paying by check please make them payable toGonzaga Debate.

You can deliver the payment at registration on or mail in advance to:

Gonzaga Debate

AD Box 20

Gonzaga University

Spokane, Washington

99258

If you are paying by PO please make every attempt to get that to us in advance (scan and email is fine) to avoid delays.

Tournament Staff

This years tournament staff will include:

Jason Regnier, CX Zoom Czar

Sam Normington, Debate Tab

Kara Smith, IE Tab

Dave Smith, Congress Tab

Hotel Information

We will not have an official “tournament hotel” this year, but there are a number of hotels close to the campus available that weekend.

Courtyard Marriott

https://www.marriott.com/en-us/hotels/gegch-courtyard-spokane-downtown-at-the-convention-center/overview/

Fairfield Inn

https://www.marriott.com/en-us/hotels/gegfi-fairfield-inn-and-suites-spokane-downtown/overview/

Ruby River Hotel (formerly the Red Lion River Inn)

https://rubyriverhotelspokane.com/

Centennial Hotel

https://www.davenporthotelcollection.com/the-centennial/?gclid=CjwKCAiAyfybBhBKEiwAgtB7fo3kvB_lQ_rOiJ6V9f_qNKT410bx6o3ZQYMh6vktV5UF70krpf-r5BoCuzAQAvD_BwE

Oxford Suites

https://www.oxfordsuitesspokane.com/

Holiday Inn

https://www.ihg.com/holidayinnexpress/hotels/us/en/spokane/skaex/hoteldetail

Deadlines

We will accept entries until we are full (which is based on available classroom space). Once we are full we will no longer accept entries but you can waitlist student. You are encouraged to enter early.

We will accept drops without payment untilJanuary 3rd. All drops after that will be charged the full entry fee.

Judging

Schools must provide 3 rounds of prelim judging for each debate team (so one judge can cover up to 6 rounds in a single event). IE judges can cover up to six individual event slots.

Please be sure all conflicts and restrictions (such as schools that the critic cannot see.) Please also indicate the times that the judge will be available, and match it to the schedule to make sure they know when rounds will begin.

Debate judges are committed one round past the round their team was eliminated in. For example, if you clear no teams in debate, you are still obligated for the first full elimination round. If your team loses in the quarters, your judges are still obligated for the semis, etc.

Judges will all need accounts on tabroom in order to access their online ballots. We’ll have old fashioned ballots for those who need them, but our hope is that most judges will take advantage of online balloting.

Hired Judges: If you are not in for a full commitment and would like to be hired for extra rounds please contact us at frappier@gem.gonzaga.edu

Debate Rules

CX times are 8-3-5 with 8 minutes prep

The topic for CX debates will be the the 2022-2023 NSDA resolution. Resolved: The United States federal government should substantially increase its security cooperation with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in one or more of the following areas: artificial intelligence, biotechnology, cybersecurity. (https://www.speechanddebate.org/topics/)

Lincoln Douglas and PF will use the NFLJanuary/February topics.

Washington State Novice case areas and argument restrictions DO NOT apply since this is a 2nd semester tournament.

Novice eligibility for debate divisions will be determined as follows:To be eligible for the novice division each debater on the team should be in their first year of debate.

Rounds one and two will be pre-set in all debate events. Rounds three through round six will be power matched accordingly.

We do not break brackets in elimination debates. If two teams from the same school are seeded in such a way that they meet in the elimination rounds no debate will occur. One team will advance to the next out round based on coach decision.Coaches should come to the tabroom and let us know who to advance. If you don’t we will simply advance the higher seed.

As per WSFA rules we cannot sanction a debate that occurs after 10pm on Saturday (which means quick decisions and short prep in CX elims.

All students competing at the Conway must be representing their enrolled high school. No independent entries are allowed. In Policy and Public Forum debate, both team members must be from the same school; no hybrid entries are allowed.

Competitors mayaccess the internet during debates for the purpose of transferring speech documents, accessing online files, and conducting spot research.

Other questions about debate please emailFrappier@gem.gonzaga.edu

Student Congress

We will offer an Open division of Congress. Congress will run simultaneously with debate so students may not cross enter in those events. Rules will incorporate the newly adopted NFL Congress rulings.

BestPOwill be chosen by the parliamentarian and the top speakers will be determined by adult scorers.

Legislation: The official Sprig legislation adopted by the WSFA will be the legislation used for the tournament.A copy of the legislation is available on tabroom.com.

Please have your students in Congress bring their own copies of the legislation. NO COPIES WILL BE PROVIDED.

We will follow the docket setting method suggested by the WSFA committee. Each school represented in each house will draw numbers to determine the order for a legislation draft. They will then take turns picking bills to be debated. This will determine the docket for the session. For further clarification, please refer to the first page of the packet.

Separate Legislation for Super Congress is included in the WSFA packet and will ONLY be used for Super Congress.

Scoring: The NSDA has discontinued the use of the base system, HOWEVER if chambers are small and speakers make more than five speeches, the base system may be resurrected in order to ensure that quality over quantity prevails. Speaker precedence will not be reset between the sessions. Points awarded to POs for presiding count as speeches.Each speech will be awarded up to 6 points by the judge in the round. The parliamentarian will score thePO.After each session, judges will rank the top eight speakers, including thePO.The cumulative total of these ranks in preliminary rounds will determine the students who will advance to Super Congress.The parliamentarian’s one-time ranking of the chamber at the end of preliminary rounds will be used to break any ties that result both in determining who breaks to Super Congress and in final awards.If the number of entries results in more than one chamber of Congress for a division of competition, SessionIIIwill be a Super Congress. After Session II, the top7 to 10members of each chamber (based on total judge rankings from session I and II) will advance to the Final Session. The legislation identified by the State as Super Congress Legislation will be the only legislation discussed during this round.Awards will be based on the cumulative rankings of judges during the final round.Parliamentarian ranking will be used to break ties.The top three competitors will receive Judge’s Choice Awards.There will also be a topPOaward as determined by the Parliamentarian.If there is only one chamber of Congress for a division of competition, SessionIIIwill be a regular session, and final scores for 1st place , 2nd, and 3rd, will be determined by the accumulation of judges’ rankings for all three preliminary rounds. OutstandingPOwill determined by the parliamentarian. There will be no Student Choice Award.

Additionally, the recent updates to the WSFA rules governing student congress allow the use of computers in Congressional Debate.Students will be allowed to use computers in round for flowing, note taking, the reading of speeches and looking up pre-prepared evidence. Internet use will not be allowed, and scorers will be seated in a way to catch violators of this rule. The use of computers is at the risk of the individual competitor. Power strips will not be provided for competitors and students may not rearrange the seating chart in order to allow access to power. Students are not allowed to use computers that are currently in the classroom. Competitors who unplug objects in a classroom will be disqualified from the tournament.

Sweepstakes Tabulation

We will be awarding trophies to the 1st, 2nd, and 3rdplace schools in the overall sweepstakes. These sweepstakes are for debate and individual events only. Please see Student Congress section for explanation of SC sweepstakes awards.

Points for Sweepstakes will be awarded as follows:

Place I.E.’sDebate/Congress

First 15 25

Second 10 20

Individual Events

We will offer an open division in the following individual events: humorous interpretation, extemporaneous speaking, oratory, POI, expository, impromptu, duo interpretation, ed comm, and dramatic interpretation.

We do not use conflict patterns in individual events. All 9 events will occur simultaneously

Students will be limited to entering a maximum of 4 individual events.Students and coaches

triple and quadruple enter students at their own risk.Students entered in extemp should not

triple or quadruple enter.There is no time in the schedule to rerun portions of an event for

students who do not arrive before the end of the scheduled round.

Students entered in CX will not be able to enter individual events due to time constraints

Timing rules: All events allow a 30-second grace period past the maximum time limit without a penalty (exception: Ed Comm). Speakers that exceed the grace period may not receive first in the round. No other penalties will be assessed for over time. Exception: Ed Comm has both a minimum and maximum time limit that must be met without a grace period. Speakers who do not meet the time limit 1:45-2:00, may not receive first in the round. No other penalties will be

Extemporaneous: Thirty minutes of prep with 7 minutes of speaking time. A preparation room and official will be provided. No prepared material will be permitted in the prep room. Judges are required to give time signals.

Original Oratory: No more than 150 words of quoted material. A manuscript should be available upon the judge’s request. Memorized delivery for both open and novice. Ten minutes speaking time. No time signals.

Informative Speaking: Can be delivered with or without notes. Visual aids are a speaker option, usually preferred by most judges. Ten minutes speaking time. No time signals.

Humorous Interpretation: The program presented must be of humorous nature. Program must be a selection of published prose, poetry, or drama. The program must be memorized by for both open and novice. Titles and authors must be identified during the program. Ten minutes speaking time.

Dramatic Interpretation: The program must be dramatic in nature. All other rules from HI apply. Ten minutes speaking time. No time signals.

POI: Using selections from Prose, Poetry and Drama students create a 10 minute performance around a central theme. Program Oral Interpretation is designed to test a student’s ability to intersplice multiple types of literature into a single, cohesive performance. A manuscript is required and may be used as a prop within the performance if the performer maintains control of the manuscript at all times. Performances should also include an introduction written by the student to contextualize the performance and state the title and the author of each selection.

Dual Interpretation: The program presented may be serious or humorous in nature. Program must be a selection of published prose, poetry, or drama. The program must be memorized with off-stage focus for both junior and varsity. Ten minutes. time signals. Impromptu: The contestant has six minutes in which to choose one of three topics, to prepare and organize thoughts, and to speak. The speaker must state the topic as part of the introduction. Judges are required to provide time signals.

Editorial Commentary: The contestant will give a scripted speech that is intended to be an analysis of a news event rather than a running synopsis of the news. The script should be timed to be between 1:45-2:00 minutes with no grace period. Any speech under or over time must be ranked one score lower than it would normally have received and cannot receive first. Students may time themselves.

Impromptu Speaking: Impromptu is intended to judge the speaker's ability to discuss the chosen topic. In this event, the speaker will be given a choice of three topics. The three topics shall include a word, a quotation, and a social comment. A good impromptu speaker will discuss the ideas presented in the topic intelligently and with adequate speaking skills. Each contestant will have a different choice of topics.

1. Contestants have six (6) minutes to choose one of the three topics, organize thoughts, and speak on the chosen topic. The topic the speaker chooses must be stated as part of the introduction.

2. Students may not use or prepare any notes during preparation or speaking time.

3. Time limit: Preparation time and speaking time shall be a total of six (6) minutes. Time signals must be given by the judge. If the speaker goes over a 30-second grace period a judge may not award that contestant first place in the round. No minimum time limit.

Further event rules and explanations can be found at:http://www.wiaa.com/ardisplay.aspx?ID=1153

All other questions regarding individual event procedure or rules should be sent to Kara Smith. kara.l.smith16@gmail.com

Gonzaga COVID Protocols

The tournament will follow all University rules and guidelines for COVID-19.At this timemasks are optional but recommended for indoor groups where social distancing is not possible.It is common practice for speakers on campus to remove their masks when they are standing at the podium.Students, faculty, and staff are all required to be vaccinated at Gonzaga, but there are no requirements for visitors to be vaccinated.We strongly encourage tournament participants to be vaccinated and boosted.We will not require proof of negative covid test but we strongly encourage everyone to test prior to travelilng to the tournament. As a matter of decency we would ask you to mask up if a judge or competitor makes that request in a round (excluding when you are giving a speech).

We are looking forward to welcoming many of you to Spokane in October. We sincerely hope you and your team can make the trip, but even if you cannot we look forward to hosting you for a weekend of competitive debates. Please feel free to contact us with any questions you may have.

Go Zags!

Glen Frappier, Tournament Director

Jason Regnier, On-site Tabroom Director