|
Tuesday, April 3, 2007
Writer: Philip Lee Williams, 706/542-8501, phil@franklin.uga.edu
Contact: Ed Panetta, 706/542-4445, epanetta@uga.edu
University of Georgia Debate Union caps successful season with Copeland Trophy for best team during year
Athens, Ga. – A debate
team from the University of Georgia has won the prestigious Copeland
Trophy, given to the best team in the U.S. during the course of the
season.
The Copeland Trophy was won by Kevin Rabinowitz and Brent Culpepper for their stellar work during the year.
The
award was given during the annual National Debate Tournament, held
March 30-April 3 in Dallas. It drew debate teams from all over America.
Culpepper
and Rabinowitz were the top-rated team in the 78-team field after the
preliminary rounds, winning seven of eight debates and accumulating 22
of 24 possible judge decisions. They lost a 3-2 decision to Harvard in
the single-elimination phase of the tournament and finished ninth
nationally. (Pictured above from left to right: Ed Panetta [director],
David Cisneros [assistant coach], Kevin Rabinowitz, Brent Culpepper,
Chris McIntosh [debate alumnus, 1999], and Jarrod Atchison [assistant
coach]).
Those who might remember the genteel days
from years past where debate was a slow, almost solemn time of
deliberate arguments might be shocked by college debate of 2007.
Students speak with extreme rapidity—sometimes approaching 400 words a
minute—as they argue pre-determined subjects. The competition is so
physically and mentally arduous that is it sometimes called “Top Gun
for geeks.” This year, for example, the debates examined both sides of
four important Supreme Court decisions.
UGA has been
fielding competitive debate teams for more than 50 years, but this is
the university’s first Copeland Trophy. The team had a national
reputation from 1964-77, continued as a regional power from 1977-87 and
has risen again since then, placing several times in the top 10 at
season’s end.
“Debate has been an incredible
training ground for developing the habits and skills that will be
essential in my early career,” said Rabinowitz, a risk management and
insurance major from Fayetteville. “I’ve learned the value of intense
preparation and thinking through both sides of an issue to understand a
variety of perspectives. Enhanced communication and research skills are
only the tip of the iceberg when considering the substantial benefits
of intercollegiate debate.”
Current members of the UGA
Debate Union are Shivan Bhatt, Brittany Cambre, Roi Ceren, Brent
Culpepper, Spencer Diamond, Adam Grellinger, Andrew Hart, Brian Leary,
Josh McLaurin, Austin McNair, Duncan Meisel, Todd Mitchell, Kevin
Rabinowitz, Adam Schmidt, Maggy Warden and Alicia Yanker.
Winning
the Copeland Trophy represents a summit of debate in the U.S.,
according to UGA’s team director, Edward Panetta, an associate
professor of speech communication in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences and director of the UGA Debate Union.
“The
students in debate at UGA are very bright and very self-motivated,” he
said. “As a teacher, I very much enjoy working with people who will
significantly impact the world in which they live.”
Preparation
is so intense that the UGA team spent spring holidays on campus
preparing for the
nationals.
“Debate has been a great compliment to my academic
studies at UGA because it combines the intellectual activities of
research and argumentation with the fun, social aspects of traveling
and competing at tournaments,” said Maggy Warden, a freshman
pre-business major from Alpharetta. “Debating is rewarding on its own,
but the teamwork and unity of the UGA squad makes the activity as a
whole that much more enjoyable.”
The program has been growing at UGA both in accomplishments and in the physical space it occupies.
“We
occupy the entire ground floor of Phi Kappa Hall, and so we therefore
have one of the largest meeting spaces of any debate program in the
country,” said Panetta. “Our travel budget allows us to travel several
teams on a complete national circuit schedule each year, as well as
sending less experienced debaters to a variety of regional and local
tournaments.”
Between 10 and 18 students attend debate
tournaments in the course of the year. Generally, the squad has between
three and five stable teams that travel consistently throughout the
year.
In January of this year, the team of Culpepper
and Rabinowitz won the select invitational tournament held at Dartmouth
College in Hanover, N.H.
Each year Dartmouth
College invites the seven best teams in the country to compete in a
rigorous weekend of debates. The UGA team was the only team in the
select event to post a winning record. Culpepper and Rabinowitz
compiled a record of five wins and one loss in the round robin event.
The UGA debaters defeated teams from Dartmouth, Emory, Harvard, Kansas
and Wayne State on the way to a first-place finish.
As
a result of that victory, Georgia is now in possession of the Herbert
L. James Trophy one of the most prized awards in debate.
##
|