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Tuesday, 26 December, 2000, 03:22 GMT
Debate tribute to Dewar
![]() Donald Dewar: Students want to honour his name
Scotland's late First Minister Donald Dewar is to be remembered in a debating competition held at his old university.
A prize named after him will be awarded at the World Universities Debating Championship. The competition runs at the University of Glasgow from 27 December until 3 January. More than 900 students from 20 countries will take part. The best speaker will be honoured with a prize in his name.
As a law student at the university, he was a leading light in the debating society along with his friend John Smith, the late Labour leader, and Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesman Menzies Campbell. The organisers had asked Mr Dewar to chair the final of the championship although he had been unable to due to other commitments. Claymore sword "He was a very modest man," said debates convener Kate Bullions. "We are trying to do things in keeping with the way he was." The competition has been dominated by Glasgow University, whose debaters have lifted the prize five times.
"The best speaker will be presented with the Donald Dewar prize by the Chancellor of the university," said Miss Bullions. "They are usually one of the team of two which wins. "It is a very prestigious prize, as it shows you are at the top of debating." Memorial debate The university is also set to commemorate the anniversary of Mr Dewar's death with a debate named in his honour. Currently it holds a John Smith memorial debate each year, and it is now likely to alternate the two fixtures, with the first Donald Dewar memorial in October 2001, a year after his death. Mr Dewar had been due to unveil a bust of his late friend just days after his sudden death, which had been commissioned by a trust set up in Mr Smith's memory. The students plan to ask Menzies Campbell, a friend of both men, to carry out the ceremony at the university's student union. Part of the library in the union is likely to be named after Mr Dewar, whose love of books was legendary. The first minister suffered a brain haemorrhage after falling outside his official residence in Edinburgh. He had undergone heart surgey earlier in the year.
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