[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 121 (Wednesday, July 29, 2015)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E1186-E1187]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IN RECOGNITION OF TEACHER AND MUSICIAN WILLIAM DeWITT
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HON. GREGORIO KILILI CAMACHO SABLAN
of the northern mariana islands
in the house of representatives
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Mr. SABLAN. Mr. Speaker, allow me to add to the record of the U.S.
House of Representatives the story of Mr. William DeWitt, a teacher,
who has brought the art of music in the Northern Mariana Islands to an
unprecedented level of excellence and who has given to thousands of our
young people the joy of finding within themselves their own musical
talents.
Mr. William DeWitt first came to the Northern Mariana Islands in
1993, beginning his career in middle and junior high school, teaching a
variety of subjects, including band, piano, and choir. He then accepted
an offer to teach at Marianas High School and was successful there at
reviving its band program. Enthusiasm for instrumental music education
began to crescendo, and in 2002 Mr. DeWitt was invited to join the
faculty of the newly inaugurated Saipan Southern High School, which was
designed to be a magnet school for students with an interest in the
arts and technology. He has now spent thirteen years at Saipan
Southern, helping countless students fulfill their dream to make music
and share it with the world. In doing so, Mr. DeWitt and the students
he has guided have created a legacy, the Saipan Southern High School
Manta Ray Band, that is certainly one of the greatest sources of pride
for the Northern Marianas Public School System and, indeed, for our
entire community.
When Mr. DeWitt came to Saipan 22 years ago, he could not have known
what he would accomplish. Our island community has always
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teemed with multi-generational musical talent and held a deep love for
singing. But band music and its array of instruments--the trumpet,
flute, trombone, and clarinet--were less well known. Mr. DeWitt changed
that.
Mr. DeWitt also oversaw the incorporation of a growing diversity of
students into our schools using music as a unifying influence and
adding the international flavor of this new student body to its musical
sensibility. Up to 250 students now participate in some aspect of the
Manta Ray Band program at Saipan Southern. They come from many
ethnicities and cultures--Chamorro, Carolinian, Palauan, Marshallese,
Filipino, Korean, Hawaiian, Japanese, Chinese, Indian--and William
DeWitt has helped them learn to join together as one, making music.
Perhaps, this very diversity is key to the success and world-wide
recognition the Manta Ray Band has achieved under the baton of Mr.
DeWitt. Five times in the last seven years the Manta Ray Band has
earned the Tumon Bay Music Festival Sweepstakes Award, the most wins by
any organization in the festival's history. The Manta Rays have been
invited to and performed at two Olympic Games: Beijing in 2008 and
London in 2012. The Band has showcased its talents at the Sydney Opera
House, Carnegie Hall, Westminster Abbey, and Disneyland. And just last
month, at the Los Angeles Musical Festival the Manta Ray Band earned
the Gold Award as the highest scoring ensemble in festival competition.
This Gold Award is something of a fairy-tale ending to Mr. DeWitt's
career. His band executed its performance with a new precision and
intensity. His students displayed an infectious enthusiasm and rhythmic
jaunt that gave their concert an element of variety and versatility no
other ensemble could match. But backstage after the event amidst the
triumph, while cameras clicked, tears flowed and hugs abounded, as the
Manta Rays dealt with the recognition that this pinnacle also marked
the end of an era--for Mr. William DeWitt had taken his final bow with
the band.
William DeWitt and his family will now be able to spend time with his
parents in California, where he will also pursue a post-graduate
degree. We wish him well. And we will always be grateful to him for the
way that he drew from a very small population of students their maximum
talent, so inculcating them in the fundamental elements of musicianship
that they were able to soar on international stages.
We will also remember as significant as what he gave to each
individual student is what Mr. William DeWitt gave to the larger
communities of which we are part: the pride and honor his musicians
brought to Saipan Southern High School, to the Public School System,
and to the Northern Mariana Islands as a whole. This musical venture he
has led became a partnership for all of us. Individuals and businesses
gladly supported the Manta Ray Band with contributions totaling more
than a million dollars over the course of the past decade. And, as a
community, we should honor William DeWitt's legacy by continuing to
give our young musicians the opportunity to develop, master, and
showcase their talents.
Thank you, Mr. William DeWitt. May the richness of island life always
flow in your blood, just as your accomplishments will always be
engraved into our island history.
____________________