Val- Debate team ranks third in nation iti 0o The Michigan Daily-Thursday, March 17, 1988-Page 5 Dems hope to avoid brokered convention By STEVEN FELDMAN Five years ago, the University of did not have a debate team. Now, Michigan debaters are ranked third in the nation. In the past years, the ten-member squad has racked up an impressive list of accomplishments, including five tournament victories and six second place finishes. In the recent 'Heart of America' national debating tournament at the University of Kansas, the University took second and third places out of a field of al- most 50 schools. The University's original debate team started in 1892, but the team lost its funding in 1979 due to the elimination of the Speech depart- ment. BUT WHEN the team's current captain Jim Speta, now an LSA se- nior, first came to the University, he took it upon himself to rebuild the team. Before that, Speta was a de- bater at Downer's Grove High in Illinois. Speta got help from Steven Mancuso, a graduate student who coached Speta the previous summer at a clinic for high school debaters at Georgetown University. Honduras Continued from Page 1 Referring to earlier reports that the Reagan administration was still considering sending military support to Honduras, Ortega said, "This is the most serious threat in recent years. We are calling on the Nicaraguan public to be alert, to be in combat readiness, ready to repel, resist, defeat whatever aggression from the United States." A Nicaraguan Defense Ministry spokesperson, Maj. Rosa Pasos, told reporters earlier, "We have never invaded Honduras and we have never invaded any neighboring country. So we totally deny those declarations made this morning by the White House." But the Honduran ambassador to the United States, Roberto Martinez, said, "There has been an invasion by thousands of Sandinista troops." A formal request by Honduran President Jose Azcona was expected late yesterday, American officials said, adding that preliminary discussions were held at a lower level earlier in the day. The officials declined to give details of the other elements in the strategy aimed at encouraging a Sandinista withdrawal. But they said Honduras is planning unilateral steps of its own and wants a show of U.S. backing for whatever actions it decides on. "Jim came up to me and said 'I think I know how to get the pro- gram started again' and asked for my help," Mancuso said. Mancuso agreed, and became the coach of the new program. After spending a year writing letters to potential debaters, securing an office at the University Activity Center, and fundraising, Speta, a sophomore, and Mancuso took their team into national competition. Success wasn't long in coming. "THE FIRST YEAR, we did just okay," Speta said. "The next year, we did very well. We qualified two teams for the national tourna- ment." And now, in the team's third year of competition, a national debating title is within striking distance. From March 25 to March 27, the team will be in Provo, Utah, for the national tournament that determines the national champion. With two top-ten seeded teams qualified for the tournament, Speta is optimistic about the University's chances. "We have a very good chance of winning the tournament, and win- ning the national title," Speta said. THE UNIVERSITY debate ,7 , es L s By The Associated Press The Democratic presidential race was as clouded as the Republican contest was clear yesterday after Sen. Paul Simon's Illinois victory en- hanced chances the Democrats would meet this summer without an obvi- ous nominee. On the Republican side, the big- gest question appeared to be merely whether - or when - George Bush's rivals, trounced in primary after primary, would drop out. Bush lunched with President Reagan and hosted a dinner for Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir while savoring his 55 percent ma- jority over Bob Dole's 36 percent and Pat Robertson's 7 percent on Tuesday's Illinois primary, the one that Dole once said would start his turnaround. Among the Democrats, the talk was of a brokered convention, where the candidates will bargain with their delegates to try to gain influence over who the party nominee will:be. Simon says it is inevitable. Demo- cratic leaders also discussed steps that some party leaders said must be taken to prevent so publicly divisive an event this summer. Simon, aglow in the winner's circle at last, said the nomination in a deadlocked convention could easily come to him because "I'm probably the second choice of as many people as anyone else." The debate among Democrats was whether they should search for a formula to avoid a deadlocked con- vention. Paul Kirk, the Democratic national chair, has proposed a meet- ing after the primaries at which party leaders and the candidates would close ranks around the front-runner. team receives no money from UAC or any other University organization. The team is completely funded by an annual clinic the University debaters hold in the summer for high school students. The students stay in resi- dence halls while attending the four week program. Last summer, stu- dents from 34 states attended the summer clinic. WEEKEND MAGAZINE Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 In addition to providing the money to cover the team's expenses, the clinic gives the University exposure to some of the country's top high school debaters. "We recruit from among the best debaters in the country, a lot of whom attend the summer camp," Speta said. I I 1 1 1 1 r1 _l L.. -7 N iJ R. C. 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