Long before Wake Forest College was known for her good football teams.
saying that a man was a graduate of Wake Forest was almost equivalent
to saying that he was an effective public speaker. This is a tradition
and a heritage which, it would seem, demands of the present generation
of students and teachers high endeavor and distinguished accomplishment.
The present faculty
director of this type of voluntary intercollegiate competition found
this tradition and the fine accomplishments of his predecessors both
an inspiration and a source of discouragement; it was a record of glory,
hard to equal-harder to out-shine.
During the last
five years Wake Forest men have participated in something like thirty-five
intercollegiate debates and three or four other contests each year.
It has never been the policy to schedule debates chiefly with schools
of the sort that would be expected to be easy to win from; however,
each year the Deacon speakers have won their share or more of places
in oratory, extempore speaking, and after-dinner speaking contests,
and in debate they have maintained a 60 per cent--or better--winning
record. This is true in spite of the fact that they have been through
three national tournaments and four Southern tournaments in addition
to three smaller sectional tournaments.
The record for
this year includes two third places in extempore speaking, and two firsts--Tri-state
and Southern-in after-dinner speaking. It also includes placing in the
upper half out of fifty or more colleges in men's oratory and in men's
extempore speaking at the national tournament. It includes, too, placing
in the upper eighteen men's debate teams out of one hundred and eighteen
in that tournament. Finally, it includes a schedule of 27 no-decision
debates and 30 decision debates with 73 per cent wins-a total of 57
debates.
Some of the schools
from whom Wake Forest has won this year follow: State College, University
of South Carolina, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, University of Alabama,
Louisiana State University, University of Florida, Davidson, and Bucknell.
The closing event
of this season was a debate in which Wake Forest men and a team from
the University of Florida were invited to demonstrate able and entertaining
debating before 1,500 high school students in one of the Birmingham
high schools. The -debaters, the high school pupils, and the high school
teachers agree that everyone had a great time.
Alumni may be interested
to know how the training for these contests is accomplished and how
the program is financed. The faculty director of this work has-and has
had-a full time teaching load including one three hour course in public
speaking-in which there is rarely ever more than one debater registered.
The special training for debate is done in "bull sessions"
at which any interested student is welcome-15 to 25 usually attend.
Of those who work, those who give promise of success are assigned to
debates. In the other phases of speaking, special work is done with
individuals outside of class and outside of schedule.
The college has
appropriated-on the average-something less than $250 a year to finance
this whole program; No student gets any pay or special financial consideration
for his debating ability, or any grades on his debating.
The Wake Forest
faculty director is now, and has been for two years, Governor of the
South Atlantic province of the national forensic fraternity, and was
.for the last year third Vice President of the Southern Association
of Teachers of, Speech; in charge of contests.