1983-1984
|
Front row, from the left, Keith Wells, Paul Saxegoord,
Elaine Laromee, Mike Bennett, Hoku
Fagerroos, Kevin Loomer Second row,
from the right, Dove Bansmer, Pat Page, Leola Weimer, Paul Lucas, Aaron
Forsberg, Glenn Simshaw Third row, from the left, Lisa Olivarez, Cecily McCowen, Carla Widell, Rich Bollin, Kern Maresso, Tim Sekerak, Jan Berman, Coach Bob Withycombe The 1983-84 Forensic Team had a most successful season! About 30
students traveled to 14 tournaments in 5 states during the season, In October
the team won our own Invitational Tournament and the For the season, Whitman won every
Northwest tournament we attended; won, for the second year in a row, the
Northwest Forensic Conference Division / sweepstakes award; placed fifth in
the notion in value debate; second in the notion in individual events; and had
the outstanding speaker in the notion, Pat Page, for the second consecutive
year. Individuals won over 100 a words for speech and debate this year. No other college or university in the
country that placed in the top ten teams at the Notional Individual Events
Tournament also placed in the top ten in value debate. This indicated both
the depth and the diversity of the speech team at |
The Faculty
Bob Withycombe, Director of Forensics |
Whitman News
A. The college added seven faculty
to permanent positions.
1. The politics department got Dr. Gregory J. Kasza from
2. Drs. Lynn Dumenil and
Clarke A. Colahan, as well as Akeri
Takemoto joined the literature department.
3. Dr. R. Pete Parcells, a visiting professor the
previous year, was appointed to a permanent position as an assistant professor
of economics.
4. Carol R. Gabriel became an instructor in the
philosophy department.
B. Receiving temporary jobs at the college were Michael Baim, chemistry; Caroline Weiler
and Steven Wolfe, biology; Richard A. Burke, dramatic art; Miranda Warburton,
anthropology; Robin Peterson, French; Charles Cleveland, sociology; and Charles
Kincaid, a visiting lecturer in geology.
C. Kevin Koertje was the ASWC president.
D. Robert
A. Skotheim was the college president.
E. Russell J. Deremer was the dean of students.
F. Topics debated by
the students included the draft and the quality of Barry Manilow’s
“music.”
G.
North Hall was turned into student
housing.
H. The Fine Arts Interest House was founded.
I. Work began on the New Hall of Music.
J. The Alpha Chi sorority surrendered its charter after
failing to rush enough members.
K.
The college had 1, 230 students
enrolled, the most ever in the school’s history.
Speech Courses
Courses remain the same but the
numbers change.
Speech Department Description:
Courses treat public speaking as a liberal art, proposing that such speaking is
not a skill learned by rule but an exercise of judgment that can be no better
than the speaker's understanding of the nature of the communicative acts.
SPEECH 110. Fundamentals of Speech, 3
hours.
SPEECH
221, 222. Principles
and Practice of Forensics, 1 hours (individual events), 2 hours (debate).
SPEECH 270. Argumentation and Persuasion, 3 hours.
SPEECH
370. Seminar: Western
Rhetorical Thinking, 3 hours.
World News
A. On September 1, two Russian fighter jets shot down a
Korean passenger plane which had strayed into Russian airspace.
B. President Reagan made the decision to pull
C. In El Salvador, the
D. In the
Team Awards
A. During the year,
30 students competed.
B. Whitman attended 14 tournaments in five states.
C. In October, the team won the Whitman tournament with
154 points.
1. In junior CEDA debate, Lyanda
Haupt and Carla Widell
placed first with an 8-0 record, Brian Webb and Leola Weimer placed second with
a 6-2 record,
and Tim Sekarak and Kristin Lamp took third with a
5-2 record.
2. In open CEDA debate, David Bansmer
and Jan Berman placed second while Todd Brown and John Watrons
won third.
D. Whitman also won the
E. In January, the team won the
F. In February, the team won the Western Washington,
G. In March the team won the outstanding team award at
the NIET qualifying tournament at
H. Whitman placed fifth in the nation in CEDA debate and
second in the nation in individual events.