It is my pleasure to officially announce the return of the longest- running independent tournament around: The 19th annual Terrapin Invitational Tournament will be held at the University of Maryland (in College Park) Saturday, October 22. This modified ACF tournament is open to all collegiate teams. Bastard and master teams may play with the consent of the tournament directors, but they will not be eligible for prizes and/or playoffs. Some basics: Base Fee: $90 Working Buzzer: -$10 (maximum of 2 per team) Experienced Modertor: -$10 Travel: -$10 per school for every 300 miles travelled (one-way, via mapquest) Novice: -$10 per school if you have not attended a TIT within the past 3 years Minimum fee: $50 Packet discounts/penalties (all times EDT): Packet in by Friday, September 23 at 11:59pm: -$25 Packet in by Friday, September 30 at 11:59pm: -$10 Packet in by Friday, October 7 at 11:59pm: $0 Packet in by Friday, October 15 at 11:59pm: +$20 Packet after Friday, October 15 at 11:59pm: +$40 If your packet is not in by Sunday, October 16 at 11:59pm, you may be subject to being scratched from the tournament. Cancellation fees: Any team that cancels within 2 days prior to the tournament or fails to show and for non-emergency reasons without notifying the tournament director will be charged $30. If anybody is interested in a packet swap for this tournament, please let us know. Packets are subject to approval by the question editor and/or tournament directors, who have the right to reject packets/questions and request rewrites. Rewrites will not be subject to late packet fines unless initial packets are flagrantly bad, which is at the discretion of the tournament directors. You must have permission to play from the tournament director if you do not submit a packet by the end of the day October 17. Science (5/5) No more than 1/1 should be written in each major science (biology, chemistry, physics). At least two of the other sciences should be represented. No more than 2/2 should be science biography. Computer programs (Windows, AIM and even Matlab) are not acceptable subjects for mathematics and computer science questions. They belong in Your Choice or Trash. History (5/5) Please write at least 1/1 on history before 500 AD, and limit questions to 2 per century. Also please write at least 1/1 on non-North American or European history. Literature (5/5) At least 1/1 should be about non-American and non-European literature. Limit 2/2 for literature biography and 2/2 for each of the major genres of literature (novels, poetry, plays, etc.). Fine Arts (2/2) No more than 1/1 should be about any major field of Fine Arts. Religion, Philosophy and Mythology (2/2) Write a maximum of 1/1 and minimum of one question about each of the three disciplines (and try to vary within each category). Social Science (2/2) Write a maximum of 1/1 about each major discipline. Geography (1/1) Do not write both questions about similar landforms like bodies of water or mountain ranges. Questions about countries should not include historical information unless it relates directly to its geography. Trash, General Knowledge and Current Events (2/2) No more than 1/1 Current Events should be written. Your Choice (1/1) Anything goes, within reason. Interdisciplinary questions are encouraged :) Formatting the Document: Packets should be submitted as one of the following, in order of decreasing preference: MS Word (.doc); Rich Text File (.rtf); and text (.txt). The following applies to the first two formats. All text should be in 12 point Times New Roman font, or the closest available equivalent. The tossup and bonus sections should be separated with a page break. Tossups: Do not number or otherwise indent tossups. Do not use tabs. Tossups should generally be between five and seven lines in length. Tossups outside of that range but close are acceptable sparingly, but do not write two-line quickies or ten-line novels. Do not abbreviate "for ten points". The answer should be on the next line, preceded with "ANSWER:" Underline the required part of the answer; if you are using a .txt file, surround the required parts with underscores. If there are two or more equivalent answers (for example, an author's pen name and real name), include both separated with "or." If there are any alternative answers or moderator notes, include them in square brackets to the right. Example: Born in Tunisia, this son of a royal fly swatter traveled to Greece at an early age to study underwater basket weaving. After exploring the ruins at Sigma Nu City, he came to America and wrote Secondhand People. A major authority on industrial organization, for ten points, name this 20th century Chinese archaeologist and astronomer who in 1968 first postulated octahedral spatial symmetries. ANSWER: _R_ichard _Wang_ Boni: Do not number or otherwise indent boni. Do not use tabs. Keep each bonus part to a maxiumum of 2 lines in length. Place the number of points a bonus part is worth in square brackets before the part. Discouraged bonus formats include anything with more than four prompts, ordering boni, list boni and 15-15. However, please use a variety of formats, as 25 10-10-10s are boring. We look forward to seeing you at another successful TIT October 22! The contacts for this tourament are co-tournament directors Brittany Clark available at: bclark3 [at] umd [dot] edu and Ali Daniels available at: danielsa [at] umd [dot] edu so let them know if you are interested in attending or want to arrange a packet swap. - Casey Retterer (crettere [at] umd [dot] edu) President, Maryland Academic Quiz Team
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