| Colleagues, We are thrilled to invite you to the Pi Kappa Delta National Invitational Tournament, to be held March 9-12, 2006. Carson-Newman College will host the tournament in the scenic River Terrace Resort in Gatlinburg, TN. We welcome all members of Pi Kappa Delta, as well as other non-Pi Kappa Delta colleges and universities for an exciting forensics weekend. This tournament will be housed in the River Terrace Resort as a hotel-model tournament. Each school will be asked to reserve at least one room at the hotel that can be given to the tournament for competition during the day. This is further explained in the tournament notes. Included in the tournament’s offerings are reader’s theatre, student congress, all 11 AFA-NIET events, and multiple debate formats including CEDA/NDT, NFA-LD, NPDA, and IPDA. The tournament also offers elimination rounds in each event, along with multiple sweepstakes categories, debate speaker awards in all divisions, and pentathlon awards for excellence in a breadth of individual events. Tournament director Tom Huebner will be assisted by Scott Jensen as individual event coordinator and Glenda Treadaway as debate coordinator. Local arrangements will be headed up by Chip Hall. These individuals will be joined by a number of other host and tournament staff members, insuring a professionally and efficiently run event! Please note the important deadline of Wednesday, February 15th for making hotel reservations and entering the tournament. No guarantee of participation will be extended to schools who don’t meet the February 15th entry deadline. We hope to see you in Gatlinburg this March for what we know will be a terrific weekend of competition, education, and fun. Please note the details in the following pages that highlight the resort, as well as essential tournament information. Sincerely, Thomas Huebner Sandra Alspach Chip Hall Tournament Director President, Pi Kappa Delta Local Host 2006 PI KAPPA DELTA NATIONAL INVITATIONAL TOURNAMENT SCHEDULE Thursday, March 9 6:00 – 10:00 Tournament Registration Friday, March 10 8:00 Extemp Draw 8:15 - 9:30 Round 1, Flight B 9:30 - 10:45 Round 1, Debate and Reader’s Theatre 10:45 - 12:00 Round 1, Flight A 12:00 - 1:15 Round 2, Debate and Reader’s Theatre 1:15 - 2:30 Round 1, Flight C 2:30 - 3:45 Round 2, Flight A 3:45 - 5:00 Round 3, Debate (powered hi/hi) Round 1, Student Congress 5:00 - 6:15 Round 2, Flight C 6:30 Round 4, Debate (powered hi/low) Round 2, Student Congress Saturday, March 11 8:00 Extemp Draw 8:15 - 9:30 Round 2, Flight B 9:30 - 10:45 Round 5, Debate (powered hi/hi) Round 3, Reader’s Theatre 10:45 - 12:00 Round 3, Flight A 12:00 Extemp Draw 12:30 - 1:45 Round 3, Flight B 1:45 - 3:00 Round 6, Debate (powered hi/low) Round 3, Student Congress 3:00 - 4:15 Round 3, Flight C 4:15 Extemp Draw 4:45 - 6:15 Semifinals, Flight B + Prose 6:15 Elimination Round 1, Debate and Reader’s Theatre Sunday, March 12 8:15 - 9:45 Elimination Round 2, Debate and Reader’s Theatre 9:45 - 11:15 Semifinals, Flight C + Impromptu and Informative 11:15 Extemp Draw 11:45 - 1:15 Finals, Flight B + Prose 1:15 - 2:45 Elimination Round 3, Debate 2:45 - 4:15 Finals, Flight C + Impromptu and Informative 4:15 Elimination Round 4, Debate 7:00 Awards General Notes Entry Fees Debate Team (each team) $ 60.00 Lincoln Douglas/IPDA Entries $ 30.00 Individual Entries (per slot) $ 8.00 Reader’s Theatre (per entry) $ 60.00 Student Congress (per entry) $ 8.00 Uncovered Debate/Reader’s Theatre Entries (per entry) $100.00 Uncovered Individual Event/Student Congress Entries (per entry) $ 10.00 Uncovered Lincoln-Douglas/IPDA Entries (per entry) $ 50.00 Late Drop Fees (per drop, in addition to the above fees) After February 27th $ 10.00 After March 3rd $ 15.00 After March 7th $ 20.00 After March 8th $ 30.00 At Registration $ 40.00 Dropped judge at registration (per judge) $120.00 Eligibility All colleges and universities are invited to participate in this tournament. Deadlines and Entry Process All tournaments entries must be postmarked (if mailed) or faxed/emailed by February 15, 2006 to: Tom Huebner (865) 471-3225—office Carson-Newman College (865) 471-4817—fax 1646 Russell Avenue (865) 548-9060—mobile Jefferson City, TN 37760. thuebner@cn.edu ENTRIES MUST BE EMAILED, FAXED, OR MAILED. DO NOT ASSUME YOU ARE ENTERED UNTIL YOU RECEIVE CONFIRMATION OF YOUR ENTRY THERE IS A STRONG PREFERENCE TO ENTER THE TOURNAMENT ON THE ORIGINAL TOURNAMENT ENTRY FORM. All changes should be made by 5:00 pm Central Standard Time on February 27th to avoid drop fees. Changes can be made via telephone, fax, or email. Do not assume changes are recorded until they are confirmed. Changes on March 7th or later should be phoned to Tom Huebner at (865) 548-9060. DO NOT make changes on or after March 7th via any other method. Checks should be made payable to Pi Kappa Delta. Schools canceling entries after March 8th will be obligated for full fees! Tournament Hotel The tournament hotel will be The River Terrace. They are offering a flat rate of 63.00/night for up to four in a room. Call (800) 251-2040 to make reservations. Ask for Pi Kappa Delta rates. The hotel is located at 240 River Road, Gatlinburg, TN 37738. Directions are available at www.riverterrace.com. Reservations should be made by February 15, 2006!!! Hotel Tournament Model—Special Considerations This tournament will follow the hotel model that is common to Phi Rho Pi Nationals and other tournaments throughout the country. As such, several sleeping rooms will be utilized as competition rooms. Additionally, the resort’s meeting rooms will be used for events such as reader’s theatre, student congress, and some debate. When possible, elimination rounds will be held in meeting rooms as opposed to sleeping rooms. To make the tournament run efficiently and fairly, the following rules will be enforced: 1. All schools must dedicate at least one room to the tournament for competition. This means the room key is made available to the ballot table no less than 30 minutes prior to the start of competition on that day. These rooms may be rooms used by a school for sleeping. If so—guests in these rooms are asked to clear off beds and floor areas of clothing, luggage and other items in order to allow for sitting and performance. 2. Room numbers must be made available to the tournament at registration. In order to schedule the tournament in a timely manner, all schools must register during the allotted registration period Thursday evening. 3. In so much as possible, rooms will be rotated and arrangements will be made with the hotel to allow for all rooms to receive housekeeping services each day. 4. Procedures will be followed that will insure that the assigned judge is the first to enter the last to leave each room. 5. Rooms given to the tournament will not be available to their residents until the key is returned from the last scheduled round in that room for that given day. Judges All schools are expected to provide qualified judges to cover their entries. A school must provide one judge for every nine individual event/student congress entries. A school must provide one judge for every two debate teams/reader’s theatre entries (IPDA and NFA LD entries count as a full entry for purposes of judge obligations due to the lack of flighting in these events). Debate judges are expected to be made available for one round beyond the point at which their teams/entries are eliminated. Individual event judges are expected to be available to judge all semifinal rounds if they have no students who advance to semifinals, and all final rounds if they have students advance to semifinal rounds. A single judge may not cover both flight A and C individual events and CEDA/NDT debate. Judges must possess a baccalaureate degree or experience commensurate to one in forensics training. Undergraduate students may not judge at this tournament unless permission is received by the tournament director. A limited number of hired judges will be available at $10.00 per uncovered individual event/student congress entry, $100.00 per uncovered debate/reader’s theatre entry, and $50.00 per LD/IPDA entry. Requests for hired judges should be made by contacting the tournament directors as soon as possible, and will be assigned on a first come, first serve basis. Schools relying heavily on hired judges will be allowed to enter students only insofar as hired judges are available. Dropped judges will result in uncovered judging fees for uncovered entries AND drop fees as outlined elsewhere in this invitation. Awards The top 30% in each event will receive awards. All students advancing to elimination rounds in debate, individual events, and reader’s theatre will receive awards in the order in which they place. Student congress entries will receive awards according to their cumulative ranking from critics in that event. Sweepstakes awards will be given to the top 10 schools in debate and the top 10 schools in individual events. Overall sweepstakes awards will be given for the top 10 schools that participate in both debate and individual events. Special awards will be given for the top three Pi Kappa Delta chapters. Pentathlon awards will be given to the top 10 students who compete in at least five events. Entries must be in at least one event from each of the three genres of competition—limited preparation, public speaking, and oral interpretation. Debate speaker awards will be given to an appropriate number of debaters in each division, as determined by the size of the respective division. Speaker places will be determined by (1) adjusted points, (2) total points, (3) double adjusted points, (4) ranks, and (5) z-scores. Sweepstakes Individual Events Sweepstakes Preliminary round points will be awarded to the top three competitors from each school in each event: Rank of 1 3 points Rank of 2 2 points Rank of 3 1 point Elimination round points will be awarded for each student a school advances: First place 6 points Second place 5 points Third place 4 points Fourth place 3 points Fifth place 2 points Sixth place 1 point Semifinals 1 point (for all students in semifinals) Student congress entries will count as individual event entries. Debate Sweepstakes The top three teams for each school per format will receive points: 5 points per preliminary round victory 7 points per elimination round victory through the first two elimination rounds Schools earn elimination round points for each team that advances. NFA LD and IPDA entries count as half a debate team. Reader’s theatre entries will count as debate entries. Overall Sweepstakes Sweepstakes will be determined by adding individual events and debate sweepstakes totals. A school must have both debate and individual events competing in the tournament in order to be eligible for overall sweepstakes awards. Statement on Discrimination The tournament will adhere to Pi Kappa Delta’s statement on discrimination. Cross Entering/Double Entering Every effort has been made to include a wide variety of events within a schedule that is humane and limited to three days of competition. Because of this need to balance a full slate of events within a limited schedule, limitations have been placed on the degree to which a student can cross enter between individual events and debate. We apologize for this inconvenience. Limits are as follows: 1. Students entered in CEDA/NDT may not enter Flight A or C events. 2. Students entered in any debate format may not enter reader’s theatre or student congress. 3. Students may not enter more than two individual events per flight. Students may enter two duos, but any two students may enter only one duo together. 4. Students may not enter both debate and reader’s theatre or student congress. Students may enter both reader’s theatre and student congress. General Debate Notes Divisions and Entries 1. The following formats and divisions will be offered: CEDA/NDT (open and novice), NFA-LD (open and junior), NPDA (open, junior, and novice), and IPDA (open). 2. Students may enter only one division and format of debate. 3. Any student may enter an open division. Students with less than two semesters of high school or college team debate may enter novice divisions. Students with less than four semesters of any collegiate debate may enter the junior division. 4. A school may enter any number of entries subject to meeting judging requirements. Rules 1. CEDA/NDT divisions will use the 2005-06 CEDA topic. All divisions will use the 9-3-6 format with 10 minutes preparation. 2. NFA-LD entries will use the 2005-06 topic and will adhere to NFA-LD rules. Both divisions will use a 6-3- 7-3-6-6-3 format with 4 minutes preparation. 3. NPDA divisions will use NPDA national tournament guidelines with topics announced by Speakers of the House. All divisions will use a 7-8-8-8-4-5 format with 15 minutes pre-round preparation after the topic has been announced. No written materials should be brought into the debating chambers. 4. The IPDA division will use a 6-2-7-2-3-4-3 format with 30 minutes of pre-round preparation. 5. IPDA rules can be found at IPDA@anadas.com/const.html. 6. A 15 minute forfeiture rule will be enforced, barring delays out of the control of debaters. 7. Elimination round pairings will be seeded within brackets that will not be broken. Seedings will be determined by (1) number of wins, (2) combined speaker points, (3) adjusted speaker points, (4) double adjusted speaker points, and (5) z scores. 8. A reason for decision must be written on each ballot. “Oral Critique” will not suffice as appropriate written feedback. Matching 1. Every team/entry will have six preliminary rounds with an equal number of debates on each side of the resolution. All divisions will break to appropriate elimination rounds as allowed by associate standards/constitutions. No division will break beyond octafinals. 2. The first two rounds of each division will be randomly paired. Power matching will take place at the earliest round at which entries warrant such scheduling, with every effort being made to begin such power matching in round three. 3. All judges will be randomly assigned. General Individual Events Notes Divisions and Entries 1. Open divisions will be offered in each individual event. 2. Each school may enter any number of students in each event, subject to covering judging obligations. Rules 1. Students may not use the same presentation or material in more than one event. 2. All speeches and interpretation selections/programs must be made available to the tournament director upon request. 3. Students may not use material they have entered in competition prior to September 1, 2005. 4. Except where noted, AFA-NIET rules will be enforced for each event. Matching 1. Three rounds will be held in each event. 2. A student must compete in all rounds of an event to receive a final rating in that event. 3. Events are organized into the following conflict patterns: A: impromptu speaking, informative speaking, prose interpretation B: extemporaneous speaking, duo interpretation, persuasive speaking, program oral Interpretation C: after-dinner speaking, communication analysis, dramatic interpretation, poetry Interpretation 4. Students will be randomly assigned in each panel of each event. 5. All judges will be randomly assigned. 6. Judges are asked to not reveal ranks or ratings to students. Individual Event Rules Impromptu Speaking: Speakers will draw a topic sheet with contains two topics. They will have 7 minutes to prepare and deliver a speech using one of those topics. At least 4 minutes should be spent speaking. Topics will be selected from quotations, lyrics, proverbs, or cartoons. Contestants must wait outside of the room prior to speaking. Limited notes are permitted. Judges will provide time signals. Informative Speaking: An original factual speech on a realistic subject to fulfill the general aim of enlightening an audience. Audio-visual aids may be used. Multiple sources of supporting/explanatory material should be used and cited in the development of the speech. Minimal notes are permitted. Maximum time is 10 minutes. Prose Interpretation: A selection or selections of prose material of literary merit which may be drawn from more than one source. Use of manuscripts required. Maximum time is 10 minutes including introduction. Extemporaneous Speaking: Contestants will be given three topics in the general area of current events, will choose one, and have 30 minutes to prepare a speech that is the original work of the student. Topics will be categorizes into three areas: domestic socio-political, international, and economic. One topic area will be used each preliminary round. Elimination rounds will utilize a mix of these topic areas. Maximum time is 7 minutes. Limited notes are permitted. Judges will provide time signals. Duo Interpretation: A cutting from a humorous or serious play involving the portrayal of two or more characters presented by two individuals. This material may be drawn from stage, screen, or radio. This is not an acting event. Thus, no costumes, props, lighting, etc. are to be used. Presentation is from a manuscript and the focus should be off- stage and not to each other. Maximum time limit is 10 minutes including introduction. Persuasive Speaking: An original speech to inspire, reinforce, or change beliefs, attitudes, values, or actions of the audience. Audio-visual aids may be used. Multiple sources of evidence or other supporting material should be used and cited in the development of the speech. Minimal notes are permitted. Maximum time limit is 10 minutes. Program Oral Interpretation: Selections from two or more of the established genres of interpretation (prose, poetry, drama) that develops a theme. Manuscript is required. Maximum time limit is 10 minutes including introduction. After-Dinner Speaking: An original humorous speech designed to exhibit sound speech composition, thematic coherence, public speaking skills, and good taste. The speech should not resemble a night club act, an impersonation, or a comic monologue. Audio-visual aids may be used. Minimal notes are permitted. Maximum time limit is 10 minutes. Communication Analysis: An original speech designed to offer an explanation and/or evaluation of a communication event or artifact such as a speech, speaker, film, movement, campaign, etc. through the use of rhetorical principles. Manuscripts are permitted. Maximum time limit is 10 minutes. Dramatic Interpretation: A cutting from a humorous or serious play which represents one or more characters. This material may be from stage, screen or radio. Use of manuscript is required. Maximum time limit is 10 minutes including introduction. Poetry Interpretation: A selection or selections of poetry of literary merit which may be drawn from more than one source. Use of manuscript is required. Play cuttings are prohibited. Maximum time limit is 10 minutes including introduction. Student Congress Notes Each school may enter up to five legislators in student congress. Student congress will be held concurrently with non- CEDA/NDT debate formats. Each session will be divided into houses of no more than 25 students each. An official scorer and parliamentarian will be appointed by the tournament director for each house. Timekeepers and Pages will also be provided. Parliamentary procedures, as outlined in Robert’s Rules of Order, will be followed. Speakers will be rated by the official scorer on their speaking and advocacy skills and by the parliamentarian on their understanding and use of parliamentary procedure. Six students from each house will be designated “Outstanding Legislators” based on the composite evaluation of the official scorer and the parliamentarian and will be awarded sweepstakes points in accordance with the individual events formula. Individuals wishing to submit resolutions should do so in writing to the tournament director by February 15th. Resolutions must be prepared according to the following guidelines: 1. The specific area must be typed at the top of the submitted resolution. 2. The author(s) and school affiliation must be listed. 3. The resolution must be typed, double-spaced, with each line numbers and no longer than one page. 4. Every resolution must contain a clause with begins “Be in Resolved…” 5. The “Be it Resolved…” clause must be preceded by one or more “Whereas…” clauses. 6. The introductory speaker supporting the resolution must be identified. 7. The session in which the author(s) would like the resolution considered must be indicated. Properly framed resolutions which are submitted by February 15th will be copied and mailed to each team participating in student congress two weeks prior to the tournament. Please indicate on the entry form students who are interested in serving as Presiding Officer. Procedural Rules 1. Parliamentary procedure for each House will be based on the guidelines specified in Robert’s Rules of Order. 2. All student legislators will be assigned seating and must occupy their assigned seat when requesting recognition from the Presiding Officer. 3. A student legislator may speak any number of times as long as the Presiding Officer formally recognizes him/her. In order to be recognized by the Presiding Officer, a student legislator must stand and request recognition. 4. All speeches will be limited to three minutes each. The official scorer may penalize students who exceed their allotted time for any speech. 5. The agenda will be established within each House on the basis of one vote per team represented in that House. 6. Each House will observe the following General Order of Business: a. Call to order b. Roll call of members and confirmation of seating charts c. Special orders 1. Review of special rules 2. Review of congress procedures 3. Special announcements and questions d. Consideration of the agenda e. Floor debate on resolutions f. Vote on resolutions g. Adjournment 7. During any speech a student legislator may ask for recognition and ask the speaker if s/he will yield to a question. The speaker may or may not agree to yield to any question(s). Time used to ask and answer questions will be taken from the speaker’s allotted time. 8. Any speaker may designate that s/he will not yield to questions. If the speaker makes such a designation, student legislators who interrupt the speaker before t he speech has been completed will be considered out of order. The speaker’s allotted time will not be affected by such interruptions. 9. If the speaker designates s/he will not yield to questions, student legislators may ask questions at the conclusion of the speech if any of the speaker’s allotted time remains. 10. Each House may use prescribed parliamentary procedure to suspend the rules to allow for automatic cross-examination at the conclusion of every speech. Should a House elect to make such a procedural designation, it must specify how much time will be allocated for cross-examination. The House may not elect to suspend the rules to alter the speaking time allocated to speakers. 11. The Presiding Officer will continue to recognize speakers until such time that s/he determines that debate about the resolution is no longer advancing substantive consideration of the issue(s) relevant to the resolution, or such time that the House elects, through normal parliamentary procedure, to approve any motion which limits or terminates debate about the resolution. 12. In the case of any dispute about the parliamentary procedures of the House, the Presiding Officer will consult with the parliamentarian. The ruling of the parliamentarian and the decision of the Presiding Officer will be considered final unless the House elects, through normal parliamentary procedure, to appeal that decision. Notes for Reader’s Theatre Reader’s Theatre is defined as interpretation of literature by a group of oral readers who act as a medium of expression for an audience. While reader’s theatre is both oral and visual, the emphasis is on the oral interpretation of the printed word and its resultant effects on the minds, emotions, and imaginations of the listeners/viewers. The audience should have the feeling of a unified whole in which each performer at all times contributes to the total effect desired. The time limitation for the performance is 25 minutes. An additional two minutes shall be allowed for both set-up an takedown of material. Reader’s theatre entries must include a minimum of three and a maximum of 14 participants. Students may not enter more than one reader’s theatre. Programs (handouts) are not allowed in this event. Mechanics of presentation are limited as follows: 1. The audience must have a sense of production being interpreted from a manuscript. Director, performer, and judges should be allowed freedom to exercise artistic, interpretive judgment; however, manuscripts must be interpreted from during the presentation. 2. Suggestions in contemporary or ensemble dress may be used. The literature should determine the nature of this suggestion, although costuming should not be a focus of the presentation. 3. Reading stands, chairs, stools, ladders, platforms, steps, props, and/or lighting effects may be used. However, the limitation of facilities (space, time, equipment, etc.) should govern a director’s concept. 4. Readers may sit, stand, or both and may move from one reading stand or locale to another so long as the movement is consistent with the ideas or moods of the literature and the director’s concept. 5. Music/sound effects, recorded or live, are acceptable as background accompaniment and part of the context. 6. A performer whose sole function is to play a musical instrument on or off stage will be counted in the total number of performers. 2006 Pi Kappa Delta National Invitational Tournament Registration Form (Please provide ALL information below) School________________________________________ Office Phone______________________ Director_______________________________________ Email___________________________ Address_______________________________________ Fax Number______________________ ______________________________________________ School President/Address __________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________ School Dean/Address __________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________ Department Chair/Address _________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________ Student Congress Entries 1. ______________________________ 2. ______________________________ 3. ______________________________ 4. ______________________________ 5. ______________________________ 6. ______________________________ Student Congress Judges—should be versed in parliamentary procedure 1. ______________________________ 2. ______________________________ Reader’s Theatre Entries—Provide the title of the program. A list of participants for each program can be provided with this entry form, or at registration. 1. ______________________________________________________________________________ 2. ______________________________________________________________________________ Reader’s Theatre Judges 1. ______________________________ 2. ______________________________ FAX/EMAIL/MAIL ENTRIES & RESERVE HOTEL BY FEBRUARY 15TH! Debate Entries School__________________________________________________________ Provide first and last names for each entry and check the format/division in which they are entered. Entries (first and last name) Open CEDA Novice CEDA Open NPDA Junior NPDA Novice NPDA Open LD Junior LD IPDA Judges Provide schools each should not judge & circle formats each prefers NOT to judge. 1. ______________________________ ______________________________ ceda npda ld ipda 2. ______________________________ ______________________________ ceda npda ld ipda 3. ______________________________ ______________________________ ceda npda ld ipda 4. ______________________________ ______________________________ ceda npda ld ipda 5. ______________________________ ______________________________ ceda npda ld ipda 6. ______________________________ ______________________________ ceda npda ld ipda MAIL/FAX/EMAIL ENTRIES & RESERVE HOTEL BY FEBRUAR 15TH! Individual Event Entries School__________________________________________________________ Provide first and last names for each student. Check each event in which the student is entered. **Limit of two events per flight*** AAAAAAAAAAAA BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC Student (first and last name) Inf Imp Pro Duo Ext Per POI ADS CA DI Poe Pent Duo Pairings 1.__________________________________ 2.___________________________________ 3.__________________________________ 4.___________________________________ 5.__________________________________ 6.___________________________________ Judges List schools each should not judge and events each prefers to NOT judge. 1.______________________________ ____________________________________________________ 2.______________________________ ____________________________________________________ 3.______________________________ ____________________________________________________ 4.______________________________ ____________________________________________________ 5.______________________________ ____________________________________________________ 6.______________________________ ____________________________________________________ MAIL/FAX/EMAIL ENTRIES & RESERVE HOTEL BY FEBRUARY 15TH! Fees Calculation 2006 National Collegiate Honorary Tournament School__________________________________________________________ _____ Individual Event entries @ $8 each __________ _____ Student Congress entries @ $ each __________ _____ Reader’s Theatre entries @ $ each __________ _____ Debate teams @ $ each __________ _____ IPDA @ NFA-LD entries @ $ each __________ _____ Uncovered Individual Event entries @ $ each __________ _____ Uncovered Debate teams @ $ each __________ _____ Uncovered NFA-LD @ IPDA entries @ $ each __________ _____ Uncovered Student Congress entries @ $ each __________ _____ Uncovered Reader’s Theatre entries @ $ each __________ Subtotal for fees as of February 22nd __________ Late drop fees are in addition to the above original fees: _____ After February 23rd @ $10.00 per drop __________ _____ After March 3rd @ $15.00 per drop __________ _____ After March 7th @ $20.00 per drop __________ _____ After March 8th @ $30.00 per drop __________ _____ At registration @ $40.00 per drop __________ _____ Dropped judges at registration @ $120.00 per drop __________ Total fees due………………………………………………………………….…$__________ ***Make checks payable to Pi Kappa Delta*** MAIL/FAX/EMAIL ENTRIES BY FEBRUARY 15TH! |
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