Nice
guys transform into super debaters
Mar 18 2003 12:00AM
By Cathy Grimes of the Union-Bulletin

The Whitman College
students form one of the top policy debate teams in the nation.
Like comic book
superheroes, Whitman College debate partners Charles Olney and Thad Blank have
two personas.
Away from tournaments, they
are friendly, thoughtful conversationalists.
But pit them against
another debate team and a metamorphosis takes place.
The laid-back lads with
quick smiles vanish, replaced by a dynamic duo who dissect opponents' arguments
with machine-gun speed and laser-sharp focus.
This season, the two
politics majors became one of the top policy debate teams in the nation after
defeating all teams at the Dartmouth College invitational tournament. In April,
they plan to claim the championship at their final contest, the National Debate
Tournament in Atlanta.
Whitman Debate Coach Jim
Hanson believes they can take the title.
``Thad and Charles have a
great shot at doing well,'' he said. Oak Harbor's Olney and Boise native Blank
converged on Whitman after discovering debate in high school. Partners for
three years, they reign in the policy debate arena.
For those unfamiliar with
forensics, policy debaters argue the merits of a single topic or resolution
each year. The current topic is U.S ratification of one or more international
treaties. In years past, teams have locked horns over democracy in Africa,
foreign policy and renewable energy.
During competition, teams
argue for or against the resolution, regardless of personal feelings. Blank
said the Whitman team has earned a reputation for winning debates even though
``we make arguments we personally disagree with.''
``A lot of our arguments
are counterintuitive,'' Olney added. ``It's part of what makes it so much fun,
seeing things from different perspectives.''
``After a few years of
debate, you absorb critical thinking,'' Blank said. ``That makes it difficult
to be dogmatic. We question everything.''
They say their success is
based on using each other's strengths. When the two find themselves arguing for
the topic, Olney is first debater. Blank takes the lead when they are on the
defense. Olney claims Blank has ``the word magic.''
``He also has a much better
sense of the big picture,'' Olney said.
Blank calls Olney the
better technical debater.
``He doesn't let anything
slip through the cracks,'' Blank said.
``A lot of the time the
debate comes down to one last little argument,'' Olney explained.
Each debate lasts about 2
hours, but feels like 30 minutes, Blank said.
Debaters must listen to
high-speed delivery of multiple arguments for or against the topic, then must
attack with their own arsenal of arguments, each substantiated with published
evidence. Evidence documents are stored in accordion files packed tightly in
four sturdy blue plastic boxes. The debaters constantly update the files.
``It's a process of keeping
up on news and seeing what new arguments will work,'' Blank said. ``You can't
predict what someone is going to say, but you can predict the issues.''
``A lot is a matter of
preparation, having something to say in response to nearly everything,'' Olney
said.
They recounted a debate at
which their preparation strategy paid off. At a match at California State
University, Fullerton, early in the season, they found themselves against the
then-top team in the country. Olney said the opponents had shredded teams with
a single seemingly unassailable argument. Olney and Blank decided to bait a
trap. Olney spoke first, sprinkling the bait.
``After the first five
words, we knew they took the bait,'' Blank recalled.
Blank and Olney won the
debate.
The two said other
extracurricular activities and their social lives suffer during debate season,
but the work has improved their studies. Both have earned 4.0 grade point averages.
Olney said he digs deeper into subjects than he would without his debate
background. Blank agreed.
``One thing debate has
taught me is that I rarely have a full grasp of an argument,'' Blank noted.
``There's always more,''
his partner added.
``The frustrating thing is
to get to what you thought the truth was, and then find it doesn't exist,''
Blank finished as Olney nodded.
After graduating with a
bachelor's degree in May, Olney moves to Michigan State University, where he
will be an assistant debate coach.
Blank said he has not made
post-graduate plans.
``I just want to do
something nonacademic for a while,'' he said.
Reviewing their three-year
career, the two note only one regret. While they shine as speakers, humor has
not been a part of their repertoire. Judges tend to like humor, they said.
Olney heaved a mock sigh:
``I've gotten maybe two laughs in my entire career.''