IME - I'd avoid giving everyone a copy of exactly what you're going to say for a no of reasons:
- they read what you're saying rather than listening - and you loose the opp to communicate your 'you-ness'
- you present to a lot of tops of heads - less engaging for you & them - if you present to faces you get 'automatic feedback' of the 'I've lost them/they like that' type
- My personal bugbear - the buggers ALWAYS flip ahead
(bit late to add this, but I HAVE done presentations with flipcharts and think they can work in a 'I'm so creative and free-thinking' kind of a way, but prob not ideal for this occassion?? Most of mine are powerpoint nowdays
Other tips:
rehearse (a million times) with a timer, in front of a mirror, ideally wearing your posh clothes/heels. Painful but v helpful.
Do a trial run to an honest listener and get them to give you 3 suggestions for improvement, and 3 compliments/things they thought were good. Limit them to 3 of each.
Make sure you've got your links clear - ie the bits when you're moving from one issue/point/page to another - if those are smooth (rather than ... 'oh, and another thing') you suddenly look way more polished
As everyone's already said, lots of signposting/telling people the structure - esp if you don't have slides for them to look at - eg I believe there are three key issues here - then count them off on your fingers.
ANd agree with whoever said it - if you go wrong, come clean about it, smile, take a deep breath and carry on.
And, best advice I was ever given on presenting was that everyone in the audience will WANT you to do well - more people are afraid of public speaking than dying (!!!) so, even if it doesn't feel like it, they will be rooting for you underneath it all
GOOD LUCK!!!