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Movie star honors debaters

Sara Sunshine

Issue date: 3/20/08 Section: Campus News
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Not long into the evening, the organizers behind the Rhode Island Urban Debate League's annual year-end banquet realized they would need more chairs. The room was quickly filling with about 200 laughing and chattering high school debaters along with their families and coaches, leaving some guests without a seat as the program started.

More fold-out chairs were quickly supplied and the event, designed to celebrate the students' achievements during the debate season, continued.

RIUDL is run by the Swearer Center for Public Service, which works with community directors to establish debate programs at high schools in the area.

About 140 students from eleven different schools participated this year, said Morgan Whitworth '09, a RIUDL student coordinator.

The large number of students and schools participating in RIUDL reflects an "upward slope" in the size and capacity of the program, Whitworth said. More than 30 Brown students have volunteered this year to coach the high schoolers, conduct forums about debate, chaperone trips and host and judge local debates.

The RIUDL banquet took place in the Westin Providence, and featured speeches by Mayor David Cicilline '83 and actor Nate Parker, who is featured in the 2007 motion picture "The Great Debaters."

A screening of the film, which chronicles the ground-breaking success of an all-black debate team in the 1930s, followed the banquet.

"Although 'The Great Debaters' is a Hollywood movie, it really is a Rhode Island story," Will Tucker '04, director of RIUDL and the assistant director of the Swearer Center, said in the opening speech. In the speech, Tucker also said he wanted the night to celebrate nine years of partnership between the Swearer Center and RIUDL.

Tucker was followed by Cicilline, who gave a brief speech emphasizing the importance of recovering the "lost art" of debate.

"This is one of the most important times in our country and your voices need to be heard," Cicilline said. RIUDL "reinforces the power of words" and enables students to develop the skills that allow them to "contribute to democracy," he said.
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