This Blog has now moved to idebate.org/worlddebating - all future posts will be made there!

26 February 2010

Kyiv Spring 2010 Debating Tournament‏

For the eighth year in a row, we'd like to invite you to participate in Kyiv Spring debating tournament on May 1-3, 2010!

We offer five preliminary rounds of British Parliamentary debating, semi-finals and Le Grande Finale.

The name of this year's CA will be announced very soon. In the past, we had the honour to welcome Derek Lande and Will Jones as CAs of Kyiv Spring 2008 and 2009 respectively.

The registration fee is 25 Euros per debater and 15 Euros per adjudicator. The fee covers meals and socials during the tournament.

As for accommodation, you can choose any of the two options: we will either offer you crash or assistance in booking a hostel/apartment on the first come - first serve' basis.

EU citizens don't need a visa to enter Ukraine.

Check all details here and follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/kyivspring

Registration will be opened from March 1 till April 1 on our website.

Should you have any questions regarding Kyiv Spring 2010, feel free to contact Nataliya Kulykovska, Convener, at nataliya.kulykovska@kyivspring.org.ua.

UADC adjudication subsidy announcement‏

Dear All,

I have been updated that our registration is filling up and we have a few more slots left till we reach the tournament cap of 140 teams and I would like to thank everyone for making this possible.

As for the prospective adjudication core (awaiting ratification by council), I would like to provide more information on the Adjudication Subsidies criteria andprocess for UADC 2010. The tournament will be subsidising registration fee ( 9,750 Baht ) to 15 adjudicators. ( Number is subjected to change )

Adjudication Subsidies Criteria :
Must have broken as a debater or an adjudicator in any of the following tournaments:
World Universities Debating Championship (WUDC) - Break in Main Break, ESL or EFL
Regional Championships: All-Asians, AUDC or Austral-Asian Inter- Varsity Debating Championship
Must have been active in the debating circuit ( Internationally or Domestically ) within the last 2 - 3 years as an adjudicator.
Important dates related to adjudication subsidies :

Application Submission Period : 25th February 2010 - 14th March 2010

Announce List of Subsidised Adjudicators : 18th March 2010

Application Process
Please e-mail the following details to UADC.adj.subsidies@gmail.com  :

Name - Surname :
Institution :
Debating and Adjudicating CV : ( PDF/MS Word File only )
Photo : ( so that we'll recognise you =) )
Please also answer these two questions : ( honestly )
1. Please provide the reasons why you need this subsidy?
2. Would you still be coming to the tournament even if you don't receive the subsidy? YES / NO / MAYBE

NOTE :
This is NOT the same as your normal registration process.

If you're representing a university while applying for subsidy, please ALSO go through the normal registration process ( http://www.uadc2010.au.edu/regis.asp ).

If you're an independent adjudicator, please register yourself ( http://www.uadc2010.au.edu/indepenadj.html ) AND sumbit your application to UADC.adj.subsidies@gmail.com.

Those who have registered or emailed a request for subsidy through other means before this, please resubmit your application. The application process was recently changed to provide convenience and accuracy to the adjudication core. We apologise for any inconveniences caused.

If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me at tjthai@gmail.com .

Thank you,
Thepparith (TJ) Senamngern
Prospective CA, UADC 2010

23 February 2010


IDEA Regional BP Debate Workshop and Mini-Tournament
Vilnius, 27-28th March, 2010

 
If you are a university student interested in British Parliamentary Debate, would like to improve you debating and judging skills, interact with top international trainers and judges and debaters from other countries; participate in a mini- debate competition – IDEA Regional Debate Workshop and Mini – Tournament is for you!

The workshop and all the debates will be conducted in English.
The workshop and mini tournament is open to teams as well as individuals. If you do not have a team mate – we will find one for you in Vilnius!   
Dates: 27th –28th March (arrival 26th in the evening or 27th in the early morning/ departure 28th in the evening or 29th in the morning – see the program below) 
Venue: Vilnius „Santara“ Secondary School: Juozapaviciaus Str. 12; Vilnius 
Costs: travel to and room and board in Vilnius need to be covered by participants.
IDEA will cover the costs of trainers, venue and will provide 2 lunches (Saturday and Sunday). IDEA has limited funding available for participants in need of financial assistance to cover some of their costs. If you would like to attend but lack all the resources – please contact Marcin Zaleski at mzaleski@idebate.org 

 
Offering
Participants will enjoy a mixture of group, individual and team coaching alongside a tournament within which they will get detailed feedback aimed at improving their skills. Theory and practice will be experienced side-by-side, with workshops and feedback combined to offer a fantastic learning experience. When speakers are eliminated from the competition on Sunday, they will turn into adjudicators, participating in the remainder of the tournament from a whole new angle.  
Coaches
Neill Harvey-Smith
Neill is a professional communication consultant with clients including Barclays, KPMG and BCG. From 2003-09 he was Managing Director of Debate Chamber Ltd. He has adjudicated 6 World Championship Grand Finals, is a former Chief Adjudicator of Europeans, US Nationals, the HWS Round Robin and dozens of other major tournaments. As a speaker, he won World Masters, was twice the national champion and a Worlds Grand Finalist as well as winning around 25 inter-varsity competitions. He is a former Chair of the World Debating Council. 
Beth Conner
Beth is a trainee barrister at BPP in London. She is a Diplock Scholar at Middle Temple, who also awarded her a Blackstone Entrance Exhibition. Beth read English at St Andrews, where she obtained a First-Class Masters degree and was on the Dean's List for Academic Excellence. In two years as a debater, she was a Worlds Masters finalist and reached the Mace final. She has adjudicated the finals of WUPID, US Nationals, St Andrews and broken at Worlds.  
Mihhail Jevdokimov
Mihhail has been involved in competitive debating for 4 years as a debater, judge and coach. He was twice the Baltic Debate Champion, winning the competition in 2008 and 2009. He also won Kyiv Spring 2008 tournament and made it to the English as a Second Language final at Oxford IV 2009. As an adjudicator, Mihhail broke at the European Championships 2008 in Tallinn.
Monika Bukelskyte
Monika is a homegrown Lithuanian debater and adjudicator. She was a finalist at Baltics and the Kyiv Open 2009.  

Schedule
Saturday
9 Warm-up and personal goal setting
9.30 Debate Workshop
11 Round 1
12.30 Lunch
1.30 Round 2
3.30 Debrief – review personal goals
4.00 Advanced Workshop
5.00 Close
Sunday
9 Round 3
10.30 Announce break
11.00 Semi-finals
12.30 Lunch
1.30 Final motion announced
2.00 Final 
3.30 Results, Feedback and Prize-Giving
4.00 Close 

Registration for Amsterdam EUDC

Dear debaters,

Registration for Amsterdam EUDC 2010 is quickly coming closer: one week from now (or actually 6 days, 22 hours and 30 minutes). We would like to remind you, just in case, that it is a good idea to register as early as possible and would like to ask you to spread the word to all those who might not receive this message. Below, you will find the last pieces of essential information, including the website location for registration: http://eudc.vuconnected.nl/. Please go to our website: http://www.amsterdameudc.org/ for more information on registration and payments.

With kind regards,

Anne Valkering
Convener Amsterdam EUDC 2010

Registration procedure.
The first phase of registration will take place through the website of our sponsor VUConnected: http://eudc.vuconnected.nl/ . Registration opens on Monday the first of March, at 12:00 CET. The form that you should fill in will replace a countdown clock at that exact moment.

The form will ask you to fill in seven things:
* Name of your institution (i.e. debating society),
* City of your institution,
* Country of your institution,
* Number of teams and judges you like to register (1 team + 0 judges; 1 team + 1 judge; 2 teams + 1 judge or 3 teams + 2 judges),
* Name of a contact person,
* Email address of this contact person,
* Phone number of this contact person (including the country code).

You will receive an email confirming that we have received your registration as soon as you have clicked the send button. Please check whether you have received this email (click renew in your inbox and check your spambox). The email asks you to confirm the email address you have given us by clicking on a link. Your registration is only valid once you have confirmed the email address, but the moment of registration will be the moment you send us the form.

Please note that the fact that we have received your registration application does not automatically imply that your institution will have spots at Amsterdam EUDC. There may be overregistration, in which case you may end up on the waiting list. We will distribute the 200 team places by order of registration, reserving one team spot for each country that is eligible to participate in Euros until registration closes on March 8.

We expect to send out a preliminary list of placed and waitlisted teams in the late afternoon/early evening of March 1. The final list will follow shortly after registration closes on March 8.

Payment.
We ask all institutions that get spots for Amsterdam EUDC to pay the registration fee of 250 Euros per person before March 19 or make a prepayment of 50 Euros per person before that date. We should receive the other 200 Euros of the registration fee before May 10 in case you transfer the advance.

You can pay by bank transfer or PayPal. The details for transfers are described in the payment section under registration on our website http://www.amsterdameudc.org/.

Contact.
If you have questions prior to registration or after you have registered, you will be able to contact us in a number of ways:

Email: registration@amsterdameudc.org
Skype: amsterdameudc
Phone: +31 (0)6 39 83 24 49 or +31 (0)6 42 85 07 04

We will be available through email all week before registration. We will be available by phone and Skype on the day registration opens: Monday the 1st of March. On Tuesday, we will be availabe from 12:00 until 20:00 through Skype and phone. From Wednesday the third until Monday the 8th, we will be available on Skype and by phone from 14:00 until 16:00 and 19:00 until 21:00. on each day. If you do not catch us on those times, you can always email us and we will reply as soon as possible.

FAQ on website.
Please also check the Frequently Asked Questions on registration page on our website http://www.amsterdameudc.org/. And send us an email if your question is not on it, so we can add more questions and answers along the way.

Amsterdam EUDC 2010
http://www.amsterdameudc.org/
info@amsterdameudc.org
Vendelstraat 2
1012 XX Amsterdam
the Netherlands

IDEA International Tournament of Champions


Invitation to the 2010 IDEA International Tournament of Champions


On May 21st-23rd, the International Debate Education Association (IDEA) will host the sixth annual International Tournament of Champions in Salem, OR. Just as college students are departing from Willamette University for their summer vacation, high school debaters from around the world will arrive on campus for a weekend of debate, discussion, and fun activities.

The tournament commences with a debate workshop hosted by members of the Willamette University Debate Union. Students will then compete in Worlds-Schools debate format in three person teams. Beyond debate, participants will get a taste of college life as they stay in Willamette's dormitories and hang out in Montag Den, where students can relax and interact with each other through games and activities.

"The ideal of this tournament is to create a venue for young people to meet each other who normally wouldn't meet in other circumstances — ideally internationally, but even within the states and North America," said Robert Trapp, IDEA Executive Director and Willamette University professor and debate coach.

If you are interested in participating in the 2010 ITOC, contact IDEA Communications Director, Crystal Jeffers, at cjeffers@willamette.edu. For more information, visit the tournament event page at http://idebate.org/events . Registration ends April 22.

Here are a few comments from some coaches who attended last year’s tournament:

"Outstanding. The staff and setting was perfect. This was the most relaxed I've ever been at a tournament."


"My students keep on improving their debating skills when they participate in this tournament. And we are challenged to keep pace with other debaters in the world. The exposure helps them a lot."


"This is a very good avenue for students to hone their skills and potentials in debating and researching. The exposure even develops the interpersonal and intrapersonal skills of young people."

22 February 2010

Irish Times US tour history

As you may know the Irish Times Debating Championships (Irish National Championships) recently celebrated it's 50th year.  One of the key elements in the success of the championships is that the winners get to tour the United States.  The key driving force behind this is Professor Gary  Holdbrook. 

Gary established the US tour back in the early 1980s and has been present at most Irish Times Finals ever since.  While much of Irish University Debating has transformed to a Worlds/BP format the Irish Times remains with its unique format and remains the competition to win on the Irish circuit.  I believe the attraction of the US tour is a key factor in this.  Irish Debating owes Gary a huge debt of gratitute.  I hope this post goes some way to expressing that gratitude.

Gary recently sent me a brief history of the tour and included some articles from old newspaper reports.


 FRIENDS OF THE IRISH DEBATE SERIES
1980 – 1996
Gary H. Holbrook
Professor Emeritus
Contact Information:
February 15th – February 21
MOLESWORTH COURT SUITES
01 644 7541
Email: ghhugh@ireland.com

The Perfect Storm
January 1979, I walked through the Front Gate of Trinity College for my first of three sabbaticals – a sabbatical that would be the beginning of the Irish Debate Series. I was attached to the Higher Diploma Program in the Education Department and I was allowed by the College Historical Society to conduct research on the early beginnings of the Society.
I attended Debates at the Hist and was quite taken by the style and quality of Parliamentary Debate. I had hosted at Metropolitan State College in Denver, the 1978 National Debate Tournament which brought the sixty-two top teams in the United States for the National title. When I started attending debates at the Hist, I had never heard such lively exchanges and heckling in a formal debate setting before. I remember an exchange where Pat Healy, a UCD L&H 1977 Times individual winner who enjoyed heckling, receive his just reward from Suzanne Kelly from the L&H who gave it back as fast as he could heckle. There was an electricity in the air when the Hist and the L&H got together to see who was the better debating society. Debate was the major entertainment of that era. I went to Bristol University in England that spring for the Final of the Observer Mace Debates. (John Smith Memorial Debates). The Irish teams finished first and second. Conor Gearty and his partner, Donal O'Donnell, won their second Observer Mace representing the UCD Law Society. Eugene McCague and Suzanne Kelly for the UCD Law Society, were runner ups. At the end of the debates, I had a general discussion to see if there was any interest in a tour of the United States of Irish Debaters.
The English Speaking Union had sponsored a yearly tour of the States since the 1920s. But to my knowledge an Irish team had never toured representing the Republic of Ireland. It was Eugene McCague who proposed that this discussion continue in Dublin. A series of meetings were held in my rooms at Trinity as described by Maeve-Ann Wren, in her chapter in the L&H 1955-2005. ―So lively is the Dublin debating scene that a visiting American academic takes an interest. Gary Holbrook invites some of us to tea in his rooms in Trinity to discuss the possibility of Irish debaters visiting the US. We find the concept exotically improbable. From this beginning opens an amazing world of debating competitions‖. (p.216)
In attendance on a regular basis were Eugene McCague, representing the UCD Law Society, Alex Owens, Auditor of the Hist, Dermot Quinn, senior member of the Hist and Maeve-Ann Wren, Auditor of the L& H. It was decided that if this tour would go forth that the winners of the Irish Times Debate would be the best representatives for the tour. I scheduled a luncheon meeting with Christiana Murphy, the Education Editor of the Irish Times and she supported the idea if sponsorship could be found. I had an idea of a potential sponsor in Golden, Colorado. On my return to Colorado in late May, I scheduled a meeting with Norm Dominguez, who was in charge of college marketing for the Adolph Coors Company. Norm had worked with me when Metro State hosted the National Debate Tournament. Coors hosted an elaborate reception at the Brewery for coaches and judges. Norm saw Coors’ potential sponsorship as a positive way of showing Coors' commitment to academic endeavors and was able to convince the company to sponsor a tour of the winners of the Irish Times Debate. I returned to Dublin in August of 1979 with sponsorship in hand and the 1980 tour of the United States became a reality. Coors underwrote the tour for three years. I was more 3

than happy for the three years of sponsorship as it gave us a national tour recognition that we could not have ever achieved otherwise.
I then formed the Friends of the Irish Debate Series which allowed fundraising, and with the support of Metro State and the participating schools, the tour continued. The Irish Times and Aer Lingus provided roundtrip flights to New York for the debaters and I arranged funding for transportation in the States. Metro State acted as the host for the first fifteen years of the tour. In 1995, The National Parliamentary Debate Association became the sponsor and host in the United States. I continued to act as the coordinator of the tour through 1996. All of the right pieces and players were in place for the beginning of this International Debate Series and now we can celebrate the 30th Anniversary.
The 1980 winners of the Irish Times Debating Competition were the first debaters to tour the United States. Thirty years later we celebrate the oldest international tour of the United States of the winners of a national debating competition. Ninety Irish Debaters will have traveled to the United States with the end of the 2010 tour, unique in many ways, from the fact that this tour was funded in the beginning by the Adolph Coors Company and subsequently the Irish Times, Aer Lingus and the Friends of the Irish Debate Series, Metropolitan State College, Denver and today, the National Parliamentary Debate Association and the Irish Times Newspaper with Aer Lingus.
The following pages will give you a brief history as how things fell into place for the first tour with photographs and articles on ―Team '80‖, Eugene McCague, Charles Meenan and Brian Havel. An article written by Christina Murphy on her visit to Denver in the 1990s and Christina's obituary gives us a clear insight as to her many important contributions to Ireland.
It is our hope to develop a dedicated webpage that will include photos and articles of the 17 years that I was a part of the series.

Gary H. Holbrook
Professor Emeritus
Founder of the USA Debate Tour



The first stop on the 1980 Debate Tour was the
University of Wyoming in Laramie. 5 6 7

THE IRISH TIMES, April 19, 1991
Christina Murphy, Irish Times journalist prepared the following article after travelling with the Irish Times Debate winners on their tour of US universities
The three American debaters from Metropolitan State College in
Denver Colorado, (from left) Jeff Howard, Sean Goode and
M.J. Coots; photographed with Tim O”Leary, Barren Faughnan
and Pat Treacy, the winners of the Irish Times competition,
who debated against them.
METROPOLITAN State College in Denver, Colorado, may not be the best known university in the United States, and Prof Gary Holbrook of its speech and communications department may not be the most famous academic, but both are household names among many Irish students — particularly those involved in student debating. Each year the winners of the Irish Times Debate, the main national student debating competition, go on a debating tour of US universities in the west and mid-west. The tour is organized by Holbrook and the Friends of the Irish Debate, both based in Metropolitan State College otherwise known as "Metro". This year's Irish Times winners, Pat Treacy and Tim O'Leary of the Kings Inns Debating Society (winning team) and Barra Faughnan of the L & H at University College Dublin (individual winner) has just returned from the annual three week American tour, during part of which they were accompanied by this writer. The Irish Times competition has been in existence for thirty years, with teams from all the major third level debating societies competing for the Demosthenes trophy and gold medals for the best speakers.
In 1979, Holbrook, who teaches debating skills or "forensics" as part of his speech and communications course, came to Trinity on sabbatical. Irish student debating was on a crest at the time. Two law students, Conor Gearty and Donal O'Donnell, winners of the Irish Times trophy, had just beaten every university team in Britain in two successive years. Holbrook was mesmerized. "The Irish debaters were fantastic yet nobody had heard of them in the States. The English Speaking Union brought teams from Oxford and Cambridge to tour the US campuses each year, yet here were guys who regularly beat these colleges." He conceived the idea of an Irish student debaters' tour and came to us with a proposal that the winners of the Irish Times trophy should travel to Denver each year and engage in a debating tour of US colleges organized by him. It was an attractive idea but sounded at first prohibitively expensive. But Aer Lingus liked it too and came on board as joint sponsors looking after travelling costs, and the first tour took place in 1980.
Holbrook set up a ―Friends of the Irish Debate organization — complete with leprechauns, shamrocks and shillelaghs on their logo — to raise funds and organize the debate. In reality most of the funding now comes from Metro itself, and Holbrook handles the organization. He travels to Dublin each January to adjudicate at the Irish Times debate semi-finals and assess the talent for the tour, which always takes place before St Patrick's Day, and the Irish debaters then travel to places like Laramie, and Cheyenne, Wyoming; Fort Collins, Boulder and Colorado Springs, Colorado, where they debate teams from various other universities. But Metro and Denver are the really big event. Denver may not sound like a very Irish city, but St Patrick's Day is as big there as anywhere 8

in the States. It has its quota of Irish-American politicians and to be of Irish ancestry carries the same cache as in Boston or New York. The level of interest in the debate was amazing. We arrived at midnight on Thursday night, exhausted after an l4-hour journey from Dublin — but the three debaters had to be up at the crack of dawn next day to participate in an 8 am radio chat show. Every time I looked at the television or turned on the radio all week they seemed to be talking about Ireland or St Patrick's Day on the debate.
The Metro president, Dr. Thomas Brewer, hosted a dinner in honor of the‖ Friends of the Irish Debate‖ at which a formal, framed, leprechaun-bedecked scroll was presented to yours truly in recognition of The Times' involvement, and Pat Treacy made a presentation and a lovely speech to the president from the Irish visitors. The dean of the arts faculty hosted a dinner, the women's studies department made me guest of honor at their International Women's Day reception, and the debaters sat with the mayor, Frederico Pena on the reviewing stand for the St. Patrick's Day parade and made a televised presentation to him at the end of the parade. Television producer and script writer, Gerry Stembridge (of Scrap Saturday fame), is one of the more famous tour "old boys", having travelled to Denver as a student on one of the earliest tours. He had been invited back this year to run some television production workshops for students on the Metro campus and whenever the debaters were not on the talk shows, Stembridge seemed to be there!
The big debate between the Metro team and the Irish debaters was broadcast live on the campus TV network and relayed on public television throughout Colorado the following week. And the campus television recorded a 45-minute discussion program on Ireland with Stembridge and me chaired by Prof Holbrook. This too went out first on campus and later on state-wide public television. To Stembridge's amazement, all of this filming and recording was done by students under the direction of a faculty member. He didn't think the RTE unions would take too kindly to such practices! Everywhere we were interviewed or had discussions, people wanted to talk about our new woman president. They were all fascinated by the idea that Ireland had been one of the first countries to elect a woman president and they all thought she enjoyed the same powers as
George Bush!
The motion for debate at all of the venues was That This House Favors a Palestinian State. a motion which drew quite a bit of indignant criticisms for even daring to raise the question, let alone support it. But, President George Bush had just made his New World order – Peace in the Middle East speech as we arrived, even mentioning a home for the Palestinians, so the topic became more respectable. As it happened, the Irish were drawn to speak against the motion in any case — though they had to support it on some of the other campuses. The Metro debate took place in a large hall with a big American flag on one side of the platform and the Irish flag on the other side; top-hatted leprechauns cavorted on the logo on the front of the podium. The hall was packed, with many more outside watching it on television monitors. Lots of business people, local politicians and other assorted non-campus adults turned up. The Metro team was very good. It consisted of Jeff Howard, an Afro-American studying broadcasting; Sean Gooden, a tall blond pony-tailed communications student, and M. J. Coots, a woman student also studying communications. On facts and information I thought they were better than the Irish students, but in presentation, delivery and wit the Irish had the edge. American student debaters on the whole tend to have a more plodding style, heavy on facts and weak on delivery. But Howard, in particular seemed to have mastered the technique of lively delivery, throwing his arms around the place, much body movement and lots of humor. There is no adjudication in American debates and, therefore, no winners or losers. The debate took place at lunchtime. "You wouldn't get students to come back to the campus in the evening,‖ Holbrook 9

pointed out, "and in any case many of them have evening jobs." After the debate, there was a reception with more presentations and huge jugs of vivid; green fruit drink — alcohol strictly prohibited.
President Brewer and his faculty and students were all extraordinarily friendly and helpful to their Irish visitors and they put a lot of resources, both time and money, into organizing the Irish Debate series. Why, one might well wonder. Brewer speaks of "expanding our knowledge of a multicultural world", bringing a greater international dimension to the campus. Denver a most beautiful city of one million people, is a four-hour flight from New York or Washington" so, unlike Ireland is or other European countries, they don't get many foreign students visiting their campus. For the Irish students, too, the tour is an opportunity to widen their horizons and build links with young American people. Particularly valuable is that it is in a different part of the United States to the traditional Irish venues of New York, Boston or Chicago. Meanwhile, we continued on our celebrity trail, your reporter was invited to address the Denver Forum, a sort of Rotary Club of business people and public figures; Gerry Stembridge was asked to give a creative writing seminar, the debaters were invited to meet the governor of Colorado and asked to State Senator Dennis Gallagher's St Patrick's Day party, where they had to give a little demonstration of the ―gift of the gab". We were all invited down to the State House and presented on the floor of both the State Senate and the House of Representatives.
Gallagher stood up and asked to introduce a special motion. They all knew the week that was in it, he said, and St Patrick's Day was the day after tomorrow, so he would like to introduce some distinguished guests from Ireland . . . and our names were called out and we were solemnly presented. It was marvelous and for al1`l the world like Cork Co. Council; they all applauded and jumped up, shook our hands, slapped us on the back and told us their name was McCormack or Murphy and their great-granny came from Roscommon. Everyone should have the chance to be Irish and famous in Denver for a week. 10

Coors was the sponsor of the Debate Tour for the first three years, 1980 – 1982, then the Friends of the Irish Debate Series was formed. Below is an example of a topic that was debated in that series and the influence of the Friends of the Irish Debate Series logo. 11

DEBATE WINNERS AND TOPICS DEBATED 12

SCHOOLS AT WHICH THE IRISH DEBATED 1980 – 1996
In the first seventeen years of the Series, the Irish appeared in 133 debates at 46 schools
Adams State College, Alamosa, Colorado
Arizona State University
California Polytechnical State University
Cherry Creek High School, Denver, Colorado
Chico State, California
Claremont McKenna University, California
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado
Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska
George Mason University, Virginia
Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.
Gonzoga University, Washington
Harvard University
Iowa State University
Kansas State University
Kearney State College, Nebraska
Metropolitan State College of Denver
Middle Tennessee State University
Northern Arizona University
Northwest College, Powell, Wyoming
Odessa Junior College, Texas
Oregon State University
Pacific Lutheran, Washington
Portland Community College
Regis University, Denver, Colorado
Rice University Southwest Missouri State University – (1996 National Parliamentary Debate)
The Colorado College (1994 National Parliamentary Debate)
Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas
United States Air Force Academy
University of Alaska
University of Arizona
University of Arkansas
University of Colorado, Boulder
University of Denver
University of Nevada, Reno
University of New Mexico
University of Northern Colorado
University of San Francisco
University of Southern Colorado
University of Texas, El Paso
University of Wyoming (location of the first debate in 1980)
Vanderbilt University, Tennessee
Western State College, Colorado
Wichita State University, Kansas
Willamette University (1995 National Parliamentary Debate) 13

Journalist who pioneered education coverage dies in Dublin
Mon, Sep 16, 1996
THE death took place in Dublin yesterday of Irish Times journalist Christina Murphy who was a pioneer of educational coverage in the newspaper and one of the country's leading commentators on education issues.
She was a duty editor of The Irish Times, editor of the Education and Living supplement and a former education correspondent of the newspaper. She joined the staff as women's editor and before that had been the editor off Young Citizen Magazine, the Institute of Public Administration, publication.
She was a member of the interim local radio commission, An Coimisiun Raidio Aitiuil, set up in the mid 1980s to plan and organize local and community radio, and was author of two books on careers, Careers and Living 1 and 2 and another guide to the education system, School Report.
Christina Murphy had overall responsibility for the education coverage in The Irish Times. She developed the education services section, the first in any Irish newspaper, which organises the annual Higher Options careers exhibition and conference - due to begin on Wednesday in Dublin - the Music in the Classroom musical programme, the biennial Harvard The Irish Times colloquium and the Trinity College The Irish Times debate.
Born in Breaffy, near Castlebar Co Mayo, in 1941, she was educated at the local national school and the Convent of Mercy, Castlebar. After school she worked for three years in Germany and two years in Spain before returning to Ireland to take an arts degree in history and politics at University College, Dublin.
While she worked to put herself through college in a series of jobs including waitressing, she also took an active part in college life and was editor of the student newspaper, Campus.
For five years she was editor of Young Citizen, the current affairs magazine for schools, and her abiding interest in education developed at that stage. She joined The Irish Times as women's editor in 1972 and a few years later became education correspondent. During her period as women's editor she changed the whole thrust of women's page coverage, concentrating on health, rights and family issues.
As education correspondent she pioneered a new style of education coverage, delivering a much needed consumer oriented service to students and their parents, as well as writing for teachers and policy makers. Her contribution to education coverage was recognized in 1981 when she received the main award in the national press awards for her series Education for What?
She wrote widely on examinations, the points system, college entry and careers. The Points Race, column, which she started in 1983 to help students applying for college places, was so incisive and, 14

comprehensive that even officials of the Department of Education had to consult her on the intricacies of the recently introduced points system in the early days.
In conjunction with the series, which ran each September, she provided a telephone help line for parents and students. Her last article in this year's Points Race series appeared last Friday, exposing problems with the accreditation of third level courses in a Co Donegal college.
She was the first editor of the weekly Working and Living supplement and later became editor of the Education and Living supplement, to which she contributed a weekly advice column for students and parents.
Christina Murphy was constantly in demand as a speaker on education topics and careers and, as often as work permitted, accepted invitations to speak at parent/teacher meetings, careers con and school prizegivings.
In 1979, she wrote a booklet, The Newspaper in the Classroom, to highlight the way newspapers could be used in classroom situations. This led to the production of a regular Newspaper in the Classroom and from there developed the education services section of The Irish Times.
In 1987, she was promoted from assistant editor to duty editor in the editor's office, the first woman to hold such a senior position.
In spite of an underlying serious illness, she had lived a very full and normal life, professionally and privately, for many years.
Our everlasting appreciation to Christina Murphy and the Irish Times for making our Irish-American Debate dream come true. 15

SPECIAL THANKS TO THE FOLLOWING PEOPLE:
Janet Stafford, Marketing Education – Irish Times, for her understanding and assistance throughout this project
Sean Moran, GAA Correspondent – Irish Times and 1981 Winner of the Irish Times for his photographic memory
TEAM 80 – Eugene McCague, Chairman, Arthur Cox Solicitors; Brian Havel, Professor of Law, DePaul University, Chicago; Charles Meenan, Senior Counsel - their memories and articles from Tour 1980 made this history possible.
Frank Kennedy, Convenor of the Irish Times Debating Competition 2009-10. Frank, you put a dance in my step and brought my memories alive.
To my wife, Judy, whose professional abilities and patience with me contributed to the completion of this article.

Monash Debating Review Editor and Assistant Editor

The Monash Debating Review is looking for an Editor and Assistant Editors for their 2010 edition.  Here are the details of the roles and how to apply:


Editor-in-Chief of the Monash Debating Review: Call for Applications


DEADLINE: March 10, 2010

The Monash Association of Debaters (MAD) is currently soliciting applicants for Editor-in-Chief of Monash Debating Review (MDR).

About the MDR
First published in 2002, the MDR is an annual publication that aims to both inform readers and provide a forum for discussion of issues as they relate to debating and adjudicating. The MDR draws on the opinions and experiences of some of the best debaters, adjudicators and coaches from around the world.

The MDR is the world’s only international debating journal. It is a scholarly, interdisciplinary journal that has featured articles from Australia, Russia, New Zealand and the United States, as well as interviews with prominent public intellectuals and policy-makers.

Position Description
The Editor-in-Chief position is open to all members of the international debating community. In 2009, the MDR Editor-in-Chief was Michael Kotrly, who won the World Universities Debating Championship in 2006 representing the University of Toronto.

The Editor-in-Chief is in charge of overseeing the publication process of the Monash Debating Review.

The Editor-in-Chief will:
• Set editorial policy for the journal and provide the vision and leadership that will assure the Monash Debating Review is the pre-eminent journal in the field;
• Be responsible for maintaining the high quality and integrity of the journal; Provide general oversight of journal content, including determining the content and themes of each edition;
• Encourage the submission of manuscripts of the highest standard from the world debating community;
• Manage an international team of Associate Editors, who will edit, proofread and critically analyse submitted articles;
• Report regularly to the Executive of the Monash Association of Debaters;
• Select, supervise and delegate appropriate tasks to the Editorial Board;
• Have ultimate responsibility for the acceptance or rejection of all contributions;
• Determine which manuscripts are to be published in each issue, determine their order, and give final approval for publication;
• Maintain the production timeline of the journal (an edition is to be produced by September 2010); and
• Market the MDR to the debating community.

Selection Criteria
Applications will be judged based on the best combination of
• Previous editorial and/or publication experience;
• Debating and/or adjudicating experience;
• A cover letter detailing reasons for wanting to serve.

Compensation
The Editor-in-Chief is a volunteer position.

Application Procedure
The deadline for submitting applications is March 10, 2010. Applications should be emailed to Kiran Iyer, President, Monash Association of Debaters at monash.debaters.president@gmail.com.



Associate Editor of the Monash Debating Review: Call for Applications
DEADLINE: March 10, 2010
The Monash Association of Debaters (MAD) is seeking applications for the role of Associate Editor of Monash Debating Review (MDR).

Position Description
The Associate Editors source and edit articles for the Monash Debating Review.

There are four Associate Editor positions. In 2009, Associate Editors were appointed from Europe, North America and Australasia.

An Associate Editor will:
• Encourage the submission of manuscripts from the worldwide debating community;
• Analyse and critically evaluate each submission;
• Proofread and edit submitted articles; and
• Report regularly to the Editor-in-Chief.

Selection Criteria
Applications will be judged based on the best combination of
• Previous editorial and/or publication experience;
• Debating and/or adjudicating experience; and
• A cover letter detailing ability to effectively fulfill the position’s responsibilities

Compensation
The Associate-Editor role is a volunteer position.

Application Procedure
The deadline for submitting applications is March 10, 2010. Applications should be emailed to Kiran Iyer, President, Monash Association of Debaters at monash.debaters.president@gmail.com .

21 February 2010

Full Results from World Schools

Winners Canada
Finalists England
 
Top 10 Speakers
1. Joanna Connolly (Australia).
2. Laura Birchall (Australia)
3. Charlotte Thomas (Australia)
4. Eleanor Gordon-Smith (Australia)
5. Manasvin (Veenu) Goswami (Canada)
6. Gregory Farquhar (England)
7. Shehryar Sheikh (Pakistan)
8. Maria English (New Zealand)
9. Georgina Barker (Scotland)
10.Hasan Dindjer (England)


Best ESL Team
1 Slovenia
2 Greece
3 Sri Lanka.

Best ESL speaker
1. Shehryar Sheikh (Pakistan)
2. Filippos Lekkas (Greece)
3. Muhammed Gulzar (Pakistan)
4. Do Kwon (Korea)
5. Jeewon Yoo (Korea)

Best EFL team
1. The Netherlands
2 Romania
3 Germany.

Best EFL Speaker
1. Leonie Beyrle (Germany)
2 Zan Zveplan (Slovenia)
3 Sanjit Dias (Sri Lanka)
4 Elisabeth Van Lieshout (The Netherlands)
5 Inka Mobinger (Germany)

NEW NATION AWARD.
1 UAE
2 China
3 Sudan

Best new nation speaker is....
1. Anirudh Sivaram (UAE)
2. Raeesa Munshi (UAE)
3. Sara Smylie (UAE)
4. Calvin Cox (Sudan)
5. Jiali Li (China)

For more details and the full tab visit http://www.schoolsdebate.com/blog

United Asian Debating Championship

Dear debate community,

Assumption University of Thailand cordially invites you to attend the 1st United Asian Debating Championship. Please find the tournament information below.

Event Name : 1st United Asian Debating Championship Debate Style : Asian Parliamentary Style Date : 12th May to 19th May 2010 Venue : Assumption University, Suvarnabhumi Campus, Bangkok, Thailand Accommodation : Chaleena Hotel Tournament Cap : 140 teams Univeristy Team Cap : 3 Teams ( N=1 rule ) Registration Fees : 9,750 Baht per debater/adjudicator
13,500 Baht per observer - Paid in Thai Baht Only

Registration is divided into 3 phases :
Phase 1 : Pre-Registration ( 15 Feb - 1 March ) - Online only Phase 2 : Payment ( 4 March - 26 March ) - EFT/wire/direct bank transfer only Phase 3 : Register Participant Details ( 31 March - 8 April )

Official Invitation :
http://www.uadc2010.au.edu/doc/UADC%20official%20invitation.pdf

Tournament Schedule :
http://www.uadc2010.au.edu/doc/UADC%20schedule.pdf

Team and Observer Registration :
http://www.uadc2010.au.edu/regis.asp

Independent Adjudicators Registration :
http://www.uadc2010.au.edu/indepenadj.html

Please visit http://www.uadc2010.au.edu/ or contact us at uadc2010@gmail.com  for more information. We look forward to accommodating you in Thailand this May.

Yours sincerely,
Tanyanan Songprasit (Prae)

Tournament Director,
Assumption UADC 2010