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Oak Hill Club Loses Banner to Lake Travis Club
May 23rd, 2009 by Ken

Faye Crossett from the Lake Travis Toastmasters brought her President Kay McManus along with three other of their members and captured our banner. Now we have to send five of our members to their meeting to capture it back. We also had several other guest. It was the biggest meeting that we have had since I have been there.

I got to be the Toastmaster for the first time. It was a lot of fun. Our theme was putting more energy in meetings. I shared with the group a ‘Put More Energy in Your Meeting Excercise’ from a Dale Carnigie course. Just so they would not think that I was crazy I passed around my twenty year old Dale Carnigie certificate and group photo. Jimmy Longacre our Topicsmaster made us a great theme poster with Table Topics questions attached to it.

I think that with all the extra people and the theme of the meeeting we did have more energy than usual. The biggest lesson that I got out of it was that energy drives fear out of the room. I was much more relaxed than usual.

So this ‘Travlin Toastmaster’ has more travel to do. And I need four of our members to go with me to the next Lake Travis Toastmasters meeting so we can recapture our banner. If ten of us go we can also capture their banner.


Here are the Lake Travis club members that captured our banner.From left to right.
Consuelo Hartman
Kay McManus
Steve Miller
Faye Crossett
and behind the cell phone camera …
Jay Barstow.


Lake Travis Toastmasters


Travelin Toastmaster Gets In Debate
May 16th, 2009 by Ken

I traveled to another great club Wednesday The Austin Discussion and Debate club. I saw their demonstration at the conference and It made me want to see the real thing. I met three of the guys from the demonstration Paul Kaschube, Garret Onderdonk III, and Dwayne Windham along with the rest of the group. They let me participate in one of their debates. It was a lot of fun.

Paul called Jill and I to come up and debate. We did not know what the issue was or what side of it that we were on until the last minute. It was like Table Topics with a twist. I also had to represent the side that I was against. It really made me realize that in order to win a debate you need to know your opponents side as well as your own. It was a great educational experience.

If you want to improve your skills at debating this is a great place to practice them. They meet the 2nd and 4th Wednesday of ever month for details go to: Austin Discussion and Debate

Special Purpose or Specific Purpose
May 11th, 2009 by Ken

In the movie ‘The Jerk’ Steve Martin says that he found his special purpose, well I just found my specific purpose for speech 4. I am trying to learn how to use alliterations (via special purpose and specific purpose). Two experienced Toastmasters Tom Myslinski and Darrel Thurman helped me realize that it is hard to find rhetorical devices for a speech until you know what you am going to talk about.

I decided to make my speech about the four rhetorical devices in the speech manual (similes, metaphors, alliterations and triads). This will interest my Toastmaster audience and also educate me by researching it. (Is killing two birds with one stone a rhetorical device?) The general purpose of the speech will be to persuade. The specific purpose will be to get people to use rhetorical devices in their speeches. The title will be something like “Tips to Making Your Speech Memorable”

I am looking for some examples of famous rhetorical devices to illustrate the point. An example that I plan to use for triads is: (life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness). If you have any ideas please add them to my lists at Ken’s Rhetorical Device Lists or leave me a comment. Any help will be greatly appreciated.

Scotty Burch of the Austin Toastmasters Club wrote a great article Rhetoric and More Rhetoric . I really liked the way he explained the difference between the common use of the words ‘rhetorically speaking’ and the not so common use of the words ‘rhetorical devices’. It has greatly increased my understanding of rhetorical devices.

Rhetorical Devices Needed
May 9th, 2009 by Ken

To me a rhetorical device sounded like something that keeps an airplane from falling out of the sky or something that keeps an atomic reactor from blowing up. But I learned today that it is actually used in a speech to make it clearer and more memorable. I am working on my 4th Toastmaster speech and I need some of these devices. I found a website that you can put a list of words or phrases on for everybody to see or add to. Please help me put my speech together by adding a few phrases to my list at: http://wordie.org/people/lists/kknittel

More about Rhetorical Devices

Dripping Springs Toastmasters
May 6th, 2009 by Ken

Patrick Reznik
Patrick Reznik

I met Patrick Reznik at the conference in the Table Topics class. He invited me to come to the Dripping Springs Toastmaster club. I got their a little early so I could find the meeting place on time. I met Marsha Kent. She was preparing for her first speech and was very nervous about it. She was following the manual by walking around the room to get familiar with the environment. She conquered her fear and did a great job with her speech. It meant a lot to me to see her victory. This club is less than a year old and they had one of the best meetings that I have ever seen. When I was asked what I thought about the meeting I said that it was great but I could not come up with anything that could be improved. I can tell that I need to work on my evaluation skills.

Lake Travis Toastmasters
May 5th, 2009 by Ken

I met Faye Crossett at the conference and she invited me to come to Lake Travis Toastmasters club. When I got their I met Consuelo Hartman . She was very friendly and made me feel welcome. This was the first time that I have visited a different club so it meant a lot to me. It was a great experience to see more Toastmasters in a different way. I was especially impressed with the general evaluator Laura Waldo, she emphasized the point that an evaluation is just the opinion of one person not the whole group. I really enjoyed it and I plan to spend some more time with these wonderful people.

Spring Conference
May 3rd, 2009 by Ken

I went to pick the brains of the three world champion speakers that spoke there, but a lot of other people had the same idea. I got to talk briefly to David Brooks. Ed Hearn gave a great motivational speech. I was especially impressed with the way he used different ways of speaking to imitate his father, mother, a brother from the hood, and the way he speaks as a attorney in court. Vikas Jhingran really made us see how the use of emotion in a speech makes it memorable.

David Brooks
David Brooks
1990 World Champion

Ed Hearn
Ed Hearn
2006 World Champion

Vikas Jhingran
Vikas Jhingran
2007 World Champion

I met about 20 or 30 other Toastmasters. I am sure that I now have a lot of good contacts in case I need some help later.

I could see that almost every club officer there had stepped into a role that he or she could grow into and become more than they were. It was easy for me to recognize because I did the same thing in my first successful business.

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