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    The Lowell Forensic Society, founded in 1892, is the oldest high school speech and debate team in the nation and also the largest organization at Lowell High School in San Francisco, California. The society occupies Room 135, also known as "Leland Room," named after former Deputy Under Secretary of the Treasury Marc E. Leland.

    With over 200 members, the team travels regularly to prestigious national invitations, including Harvard, UC Berkeley, Stanford, Long Beach, and Utah. Lowell Forensics has also competed in the National Speech and Debate Tournament under the National Forensic League for 40 years, making it one of the longest running national championship teams in the nation.

    Lowell Forensic graduates can be found today at many top international colleges such as Harvard, Cornell, Stanford, Yale, UC Berkeley, and Dartmouth.





        Lowell Forensic Society
            Recent History
            Alumni
            Former and Current Officers

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    Recent History

    In the nineties, the Forensic Society saw one of its greatest peaks under the leadership of Sandy Bird. Every year during the decade, Forensics made it to nationals while Individual Events and Congress debate saw a major comeback in the late nineties as Lowellites took greater interest in dramatic events. In 1995, Lowell Forensics received the NFL Leading Chapter Award in San Francisco Bay Area District and later for two consecutive years, in 1997 and 1998, the Lowell Forensics Society was named one of the top 5% of NFL Chapters in the nation for achieving over 200 degrees.

    The forensics teams suffered a setback in 2002 however when the Forensics team lost its longtime coach, Ms. Sandra Bird, an irreplaceable part of Lowell’s debate legacy. Ms. Bird, who brought our team from states to nationals year after year as the coach of Lowell Forensics for decades, retired after receiving her fifth diamond (the highest and rarest honor bestowed by the National Forensic League).

    In the years that followed Ms. Bird’s retirement, Mr. Christopher Newhouse, a biology teacher, took up the helm of leading the team while administrative and training duties largely fell into the hands of student leaders of the organization. The forensics team, for a short period, was also conjoined to the English department, resulting in a lack of a permanent coaching staff. In light of these changes, the society board’s officer arrangements were reformed in 2003, with the creation of the new positions of Congress Director, Policy Debate Director, and Individual Events Director.

    At the same time, despite these organizational challenges, Forensics in the new millennium has become the largest student organization on campus. In 2003-2005, forensics membership more than tripled, with 172 students; one in nine Lowell students is affiliated with the Lowell Forensic Society while 199 new NFL degrees were earned in 2005. In the same year, with generous support from the Fineman Fund and the Lowell Alumni Association, Lowell qualified for Nationals for the 39th time in addition to State Championships, Stanford, Berkeley, and Harvard national invitational tournaments. In addition, with 1518 points earned, 2-time National and state finalist Jeffrey Kwong earned the first Premier Distinction Degree from the National Forensic League, the highest distinction awarded to high school debaters in the nation.

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    Alumni

    Lowell Forensic Society alumni include Yale University President Richard Levin, Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, California Governor Edmund G. "Pat" Brown, actress Carol Channing, actor Benjamin Bratt, writer Naomi Wolf, actor Bill Bixby, PG&E CEO Frederick Mielke, and numerous academics, writers, and judges.


      Jack Anderson, 1949 Longtime Lowell H.S. Forensics coach and VPA Dept. chair
      Grant Barnes, 1950 First Forensics National Champion (Oratory); Director, Stanford Press
      Bill Bixby, 1952 Television star, My Favorite Martian and The Incredible Hulk
      Nancy Bleiweiss, 1967 Original Star of SF state comedy Beach Blanket Babylon
      Charles Breyer, 1959 U.S. District Court Judge, 9th Circuit; formerly Attorney at Coblentz, Cahen, McCabe & Breyer
      Stephen Breyer, 1955 U.S. Supreme Court associate justice; Harvard law professor
      Edmund G. Brown, 1923 California Governor, 1959-1967; State Attorney General
      Jesse Colman, 1895 President of San Francisco Board of Supervisors, 1920-1930
      Reynold Colvin, 1934 Attorney arguing Bakke V UC Regents; Member of SF School Board
      Ken Flower, 1949 University of California basketball great
      Bonnie Goldmnn, 1959 Civic leader and board member of Hillsborough Schools Foundation
      David Heilbron, 1954 Rhodes Scholar; Former president of California State Bar
      John Heilbron, 1951 Vice Chancellor and professor of History at UC Berkeley
      Louis Heilbron, 1924 President, California State Board of Education; CSU Trustee
      Lanneal Henderson, 1965 Professor and Chairman of Political Science Dept. at UT Knoxville
      Jacques Hymans, 1954 San Francisco State University Professor of History
      Marc E. Leland, 1955 U.S. Asst. Secretary of Treasury for International Affairs, 1981-1984
      Allan Lerch, 1960 Attorney; Founder of firm: Allan Lerch & Associates
      Edgar Levey, 1899 California Assembly speaker, 1927-1932; UC Regent
      Richard Levin, 1964 President, Yale University; Professor and Chairman of Economics, Yale University
      Bert Levit, 1920 President of San Francisco Board of Education
      Marvin Lewis, 1924 San Francisco Supervisor and leader for creation of BART
      Leland Levy, 1952 Mayor of Palo Alto; 3-term president of Palo Alto City Council
      Frank Mandel, 1900 Broadway playwright and producer of “No, No, Nanette”
      Kurtis Mayer, 1948 Washington state developer and businessman
      Frederick Mielke, 1938 CEO and Chairman of Pacific Gas & Electric; Stanford trustee
      Ellen M. Newman, 1945 Director of Wells Fargo Bank and owner of Ellen Newman Associates
      Larry Rhine, 1927 Emmy-nominated writer ( I Love Lucy, Bob Hope, & All in the Family)
      Sidney Rudy, 1928 Attorney; Founder of firm: Sidney Rody, Hanson, Bridget & Rudy
      Lee Sankowich, 1960 Artistic dir., Marin Theatre Co.; One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
      Edward Soares, 1929 A Stanford “Immortal 21” who recovered The Axe from Cal in 1930
      John Trasvine, 1976 Counsel to the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution
      Stanley Weigel, 1922 US. Federal District of Northern California judge
      Naomi Wolf, 1980 Rhodes Scholar; Author, The Beauty Myth

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    Former and Current Officers




     


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