July 16, 2005: VANCOUVER Estival Trivia Open

SEVENTH ANNUAL
VANCOUVER ESTIVAL TRIVIA OPEN
SATURDAY, JULY 16, 2005
HARBOUR CENTRE, DOWNTOWN VANCOUVER, B.C., CANADA

The Vancouver Estival Trivia Open (VETO) is the nation's
longest-running annual quiz bowl tournament. Again, a mirror in
Ontario is being planned, as well as a championship match between the
site winners. For up-to-date information, check the web page
http://caql.org/events/veto05.html

VETO will be run "guerrilla" style, meaning:
* each team must bring an original packet of questions, which will
not be edited by anyone else associated with the tournament;
* participants must moderate and keep score during rounds when they
aren't playing.

As always, this event is FREE of charge.

Links to detailed reports of VETO in previous years can be found here:
http://caql.org/results.html

=== WHO CAN PLAY ===

VETO is an "open" tournament in the sense that we don't exclude anyone
because of age, student status, degrees obtained or not obtained,
nationality, inability or unwillingness to pay us money, etc. However,
recognizing that people come to VETO with vastly different levels of
experience, we'd like to give priority to those who have a history of
providing good questions in the tossup/bonus format.

So instead of accepting teams on a "first come, first served" basis
until space fills up, this is what we'll do:
* Any team that has won VETO in a previous year has an automatic
invitation to play this year.
* Any other team must apply to the VETO Invitation Committee.
* Applications are simple: just e-mail two OLD full-length quiz bowl
packets (at least 20 tossups and 20 bonuses in each), such that the
majority of the questions in both packets were written by members of
your prospective team.
* If some of your team members have written a lot of questions
separately but you don't actually have two packets to which you've
together contributed a majority of the questions, then just send us 20
old tossups and 20 old bonuses that were all written by your members.
* Within a few days of receiving your application, the Invitation
Committee will inform you of its decision either to accept or to defer
your application. If your application is not accepted, you may appeal
by sending us more old questions that you've written.
* Teams whose applications are deferred, either because they didn't
have enough questions to show us or because their questions didn't
meet our standards, will have another chance. After July 1, deferred
teams will be allowed to play if there is still room. The Invitation
Committee will decide whether each deferred team should write
questions.

Don't feel intimidated by this application/invitation procedure. The
point is to make sure that the people who will be writing the
questions for VETO have experience writing questions. This is
important because it's a guerrilla tournament, and nobody else will be
editing. As for how high our standards are: the vast majority of the
packets in the Stanford Archive would meet our criteria for
acceptance.

Even if your team doesn't write questions, we expect you to have
enough familiarity with the quiz bowl format to be able to staff games
during your bye rounds.

A team can have any number of players, but no more than four can play
at a time. If you don't have a full team of four, we can match you up
with other players. Solo teams are OK, too: we'll set the schedule so
that other teams will have byes and you won't have to staff more than
one room by yourself.

The size of the field is capped at 8 teams. There may be room for a
9th team if it rotates players in and out so that it can supply people
to moderate games in every round.

=== WHEN ===

Saturday, July 16, 2005, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.

This date fits nicely into the North American summer quiz calendar:
* June 18:  NATSSO in Atlanta
* June 25:  MASQUE in Minneapolis
* July 1-3:  Chicago Open, and World Quizzing Championships
* July 9:  UC Irvine Open
* JULY 16:  VETO
* July 22-24:  Tournoi Paléogénies in Quebec City
* August 6-7:  Muck/Mock Masters in Chattanooga

If you would like to participate in VETO, please notify us by July 1,
2005. This date should be easy to remember because it's Canada Day, a
day when the media give us more than the usual amount of Canadian
trivia -- which may become useful question material.

=== WHERE ===

In the heart of downtown Vancouver, B.C., Canada:  Simon Fraser
University at Harbour Centre, 515 West Hastings St. This attractive,
intelligent, and extremely convenient location is directly across the
street from the Waterfront SkyTrain station, the SeaBus terminal, and,
for those who really want to arrive in style on a Sikorsky S-76, the
Harbour Heliport.

By road, Vancouver is about:
3 hours from Seattle;
9 hours from Eugene, Oregon;
18 hours from Berkeley, California;
24 hours from Irvine, California, or Las Vegas, Nevada;
39 hours from Tulsa, Oklahoma, or Chicago;
60 hours from Fairbanks.
All-day parking on Saturday runs up to about $5 at Harbour Centre.

Vancouver International Airport is a premier global gateway served by
more than 40 airlines with scheduled direct flights from 31
communities in British Columbia, another 33 locations elsewhere in
North America, 12 cities in Asia/Pacific, and 3 cities in Europe.

Devotees of Southwest Airlines or JetBlue may prefer to fly to
Seattle/Tacoma and then take the Quick Shuttle or rent a car.
Non-residents of Canada should have no problem driving an American
rental car across the border, but anyone with a Canadian driver's
licence is not permitted to do so. Also keep in mind that even if it's
cheaper to fly to Sea-Tac, if you factor in the time and money you
spend on the 3--4 hours ground transportation each way, it may work
out to be more worthwhile to take Air Canada or another airline
directly to Vancouver.

=== FORMAT ===

VETO 2005 will be run "guerrilla" style, without central editing and
will be staffed by players. We'll play at least a full round-robin, as
many rounds as packets from the two sites, likely ending in a site
final (which some may consider an unfair format).

Games will be conducted according to NAQT rules, except that matches
will be untimed, with 20 tossups per round, and there will be no
15-point "power" tossups.

=== ONTARIO MIRROR AND TRANS-CANADA CHAMPIONSHIP MATCH ===

As in previous years, we're planning a mirror in Ontario, and a packet
swap.  An announcement of the mirror will be forthcoming.

The climax of the day will be the fifth Trans-Canada Championship
Match at 5 p.m. (Pacific time): The winning team from VETO will
compete against the winning team from the Ontario mirror, over
(Canadian-invented) telephones.

=== QUESTION PACKETS ===

Detailed question guidelines are on a separate web page:
http://caql.org/events/veto05q.html
which includes a section with many, many useful reference links
categorized by subject.

Rounds will be untimed, with 20 tossups played in each. But you will
have to write more than 20 tossups and 20 bonuses, because you may
need tie-breaking questions, or you may end up having to throw out
some questions because of game errors or because they ask for
information that already came up in somebody else's packet.

So your packet should include (at least):
* 24 tossups, each worth 10 points -- no 15-point "powers";
* 22 bonuses, each worth 30 points -- but no single-part,
single-answer questions.

Use the following subject distribution for both tossups and bonuses:

Science, Math, Technology            3 -- 4
History                              3 -- 4
Literature                           3 -- 4
Geography                            2 -- 3
Current Events                       2 -- 3
Fine Arts                            1 -- 2
Religion, Philosophy, Mythology      1 -- 2
Social Science                       1 -- 2
Popular Culture, Games, Sports       1 -- 2
General Knowledge                    0 -- 3

Canadian content quota:
Of the first 20 tossups, at least 4 must refer to Canadian people,
places, things, events, and created works. The same goes for the first
20 bonuses. But overall, don't exceed 50% Canadian content in your
packet. Your Canadian questions should also cover diverse subject
areas and not be clustered in Geography or Literature, etc.

Tossups should include at least two separate clues, preferably at
least four. Multiple-choice bonuses should be used sparingly, if at
all, and should provide at least four choices.

In order that we can keep to a reasonable schedule, questions must not
be too long:
* No tossup question, and no part of a bonus question, should exceed
6 lines if using a fixed-width font with 79 characters per line.
* No bonus question should ever require more than four separate team
conferrals.

To promote fun and variety, teams are encouraged to bring multimedia
questions (visual, auditory, tactile, olfactory, gustatory). These
tend to work better as bonuses than as tossups. Cassette tape players
will be available for auditory questions.  Every packet must contain
at least one multimedia question: It can be as simple as presenting a
printout of a picture you found through http://images.google.com and
asking a few questions about the picture.

For our further amusement, we encourage rounds with hidden themes such
as all answers beginning with the same letter or each question being
connected to the next one.

Aim for a difficulty level approximating that of NAQT sectionals.

=== PRIZES ===

The leading individual scorer at VETO will take over the title of West
Coast Dominatrix of Relevant Knowledge (WC-DORK).

Anyone may sponsor a prize and select a winner according to any
criteria. Last year, there were 12 prizes awarded to individuals and
teams.

=== OTHER STUFF TO DO IN VANCOUVER ===

Separate studies announced in 2004 by the U.K.-based Economist
Intelligence Unit and in 2005 by the U.S.-based Mercer Human Resource
Consulting both concluded that Vancouver offers the highest quality of
life of any city in the entire world (or the world outside
Switzerland, according to Mercer). We are not exaggerating; check the
links yourself:
http://store.eiu.com/index.asp?layout=pr_story&press_id=1230000723
http://www.mercerhr.com/pressrelease/details.jhtml
/dynamic/idContent/1173105

The 28th Annual Vancouver Folk Music Festival will take place on the
same weekend as VETO. The 10-day 17th annual Dancing on the Edge
Festival ends the day after VETO.

See http://www.tourismvancouver.com for more information about
Vancouver, including links to special promotions.

While Vancouver has a reputation for heavy rainfall, it does not rain
much in the summer. Average precipitation during July is below that of
seven of the 10 largest United States cities (by 2000 census
population), the exceptions being the desert or semi-desert cities of
Los Angeles, Phoenix, and San Diego. And of course, during July,
Vancouver has more hours of daylight than any American city outside of
Alaska. On VETO day, sunset will occur at 9:11 p.m.

=== CONTACT ===

If you are interested in participating, please contact Peter by July
1, 2005, at pmcc_at_... (pmcc at alumni.sfu.ca).

Updates will be posted on the web page
http://caql.org/events/veto05.html

"A lot of Imperialist ladies asked me to tea to meet schoolmasters
from New Zealand and editors from Vancouver, and that was the
dismalest business of all."
- John Buchan, The Thirty-Nine Steps

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