1898-1899 Whitman
Speech and Debate Team
The Atheneum
Society was the basis for the team and may have been helped by Rev. Austin
Rice.
We have no pictures prior to 1904.
Whitman News
I.
A.
The college added four new faculty members
1.
The college of arts and letters added Professor Jas. C.
Cooper as head of the modern languages department and Miss L. A. Loomis as an
instructor of Latin and English.
2.
Professor Lovewell was hired as
the director of the music conservatory.
3.
Mrs. W. H. Crayne was hired as the
lady principle and matron.
B.
Rev. Stephen B. L. Penrose was the college president.
C.
The debate team was coached by Rev. Austin Rice.
II.
At
A.
The art department moved downtown to the
B.
A code of intercollegiate regulations for sports teams was
agreed upon by Whitman,
C.
The Pioneer ran
advertisements for McKean’s shoe store, M.A.
Goldman’s jewelry store, and O.P. Jaycox & Co.
Speech in the
English Department News
World News
III.
In the world
A.
The Spanish-American War ended.
B.
A
little less than a year ago was the first intercollegiate debate between the
That it
is a good thing for the Colleges to come in touch with each other is not to be doubted for an instant. Before the Inter-Collegiate
Oratorical Association and the Inter-Collegiate Debate were instituted the
three institutions had little or nothing in common. They had heard of each other, and that was
all. Now they have tried each other and found that it is going to require
faithful, earnest work for either College to get at the head and stay
there. So far the honors have been quite
equally distributed.
These
annual contests are going to develop College spirit. They are going to rouse the students to make
greater efforts each year and strive hard for the first place. They are going to raise the standard both in
scholarship and in athletics. The
students will become more earnest in their work and the Colleges will send out
men and women who will be an honor to the institutions and 'to the nation.
Obituary*
It is
not often that death's silent messenger comes to call away one of our number,
but when he does come his withering hand often falls upon the brightest and
most promising one. We were, perhaps, not greatly surprised when the death of
our friend and fellow student, Seth S. Davies, was announced on February 27th,
for he had been a sufferer with that dread disease, consumption. Yet the shock was no less severe because not
unexpected. It came to all his friends
as the message of a personal loss, for by his genial ways and strong
personality he had won a permanent place in our affections. We little thought on the 27th of March,
1898, when he took part in the Whitman-Moscow debate, that on the first day of
that same month in the following year he would be laid in his final resting-
place. Yet so it was, and we who are
left to mourn his death can best pay our tribute to his memory by drawing from his life the lessons of perseverance
and singleness of aim for which he was noted. The funeral was held at the house
on
PIO
ARTICLE COMMENTING ON WHITMAN’S ORATORS
It is a
remarkable fact that all the prizes in oratory at Whitman have been taken in
and below the Sophomore year, yet we have carried off
more than our share of the honors. Our representative to the inter-collegiate
this year is a Sophomore, and we believe that we stand
as good a show as ever of winning. While
we have every reason to be proud of our orators, nevertheless it is true that
if the higher classmen were to go into these contests the College would be
represented by a maturer grade of thought. If, however, as some think, the entrance of
the higher classes would tend to keep out the younger men, the present
condition is proba- bly better so far as the students them- selves are
concerned.
As to
the local contestants, we think that
THE WHITMAN COLLEGE PIONEER.
G. W.
Wolfe closed the main argument for the negative. He sailed into the commercial argument
of the affirmative, and said that
the profits of 'commerce could not be claimed as an offset to the cost of the
war, since the merchants pocketed that and not Uncle Sam. By acquiring distant territory we have weakened rather
than strengthened our military position. Islands will be seized as
hostages in time of war. To prevent
this we must spend millions to defend our new possessions. In closing lie demanded to know what was
going to be done with the
The negative
hammered the cost of the war, the loss of life and the dangers of expansion in
a spirited manner. The increase in the
army and navy was also dwelt upon as a grave inroad upon our traditional
policy. The judges were given their innings, and while they were deliberating,
Miss Poe favored the audience with a well rendered vocal solo. The decision of
the judges was: Affirmative, two; negative, one. At great danger to their vocal
cords, the
THE
DEBATE
W M P
Whitman's
colors have still the right to wave in triumph.
The northern antagonist has been met and his batteries silenced. The trophies which he carried away on the
20th of March, 1808, have been regained, and
now we must meet his neighbor in a
similar contest which, we trust, will
have as favorable an outcome. On
the afternoon of Friday, December 16, the passengers on the train that pulled
into
On
Saturday night, the 7th, came the debate. G. A. R. Hall was taste- fully decorated for
the occasion. The debaters sat at
tables draped with the colors of their respective Colleges, and between, gavel
in hand, sat R. V. Cozier,
Class of 1899
I.
Debate at Whitman
A.
Seth Davies, a debater the previous year who was forced to
leave school due to ill health, died on February 27 from consumption.
B.
Carl Hauerbach won the annual
oratorical contest.
C.
Intercollegiate debate
1.
In December, the team traveled to the
2.
During a second tournament at