Saturday, December 20, 2014

Word Of The Day

What is your favourite word of the day? The epitome of the ambiguity of the English language, a word the protagonist of your novel might use, when driven to extremis, meeting his nemesis. 

Reminder to myself:


  • Take to every meeting your manual and, in case you are called upon to be grammarian. Attach to the back of the manual two or three words of the day.



  • On a weekend or evening, or day, when you have no other work, create some words of the day, written in large felt tip pen, or printed large.



  • When reading newspapers and magazines note down unusual or interesting words.



  • Check new words in the dictionary.

Depending on the language abilities of the audience, you might search for three syllable words with Latin or Greek roots, explaining the word's origin.

For example:



On looking in the dictionary for extremes, I found exuberant.
Today I have found:

acme
anagram
arachnophobia - fear of spiders
bravado
caution
destitute
disinterested - contrast with uninterested
egregious
epitome
extremis
exuberant
nemesis
iconic
ode - poem of praise?
oxymoron - contradiction, sometimes for irony -
recompense

Many technical terms will be new to some in the audience, especially if you are teaching in a school:
Anthropology, anthropolgist
ode - poem of praise
sociology
sonnet - Elizabethan or Shakespearean: rhyming scheme - abab cdcd ee (Demonstrate and explain - I once gave a talk about poetry and an Indian in the audience told me he did not understand what the letters meant.)
statistician

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Friday, December 19, 2014

HOD Xmas Party Members & Guests In Party Hats And Party Mood


Coralie Frances, (left) with the yellow halo, is a member of HOD Speakers and Past President of Watford Speakers. Angela Lansbury, author, speaker, blogger, member of HOD.

Coral Dawkins - what a cracker! Member of HOD.

Ebullient Alan Mcmahon, member of Watford Speakers, current Area Governor.

Mike Freedman who assiduously chased up potential attendees with encouraging emails. Always good humoured. In this photo after other people have been photographed in pairs, he puts his arm around the imaginary person in the empty space.






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HOD Speakers' Club Xmas Party: Belly Dancer Bill, 'Xmas' theme Table Topics (Impromptu Speeches)

At the HOD Speakers' Club Xmas dinner entertainment was organised by past president Gill Ornstein who had brought along a belly dancing costume and our National UK speech winner Bill Dempster was invited, volunteered - actively not passively, to perform a non-speaking role as belly dancer. 

Bill in black paper party hat.


Bill's first thought looks like 'how am I supposed to wear this over my suit!'

'OK, we get the idea.'
















Bill gyrates.




Next volunteer is a lady, delightful Daphne Diluce dancing, TV star of Come Dining, and an HOD member who moved out of the area but comes back when she can.

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HOD Christmas Party - Why we chose Ruby's Restaurant



Ruby's Restaurant - Why We Chose It
Our venue, Ruby's Restaurant was chosen by popular vote after Peter Jacques research showed that local options included grand, historic Grimsdyke Hotel, Ruby's Restaurant, or a budget ethnic restaurant with the opportunity of eating, for example, curry. 




Ruby's which was competitively priced and could offer us exclusive use of the entire restaurant so we could put on our own entertainment, if we could fill 40 places. When our treasurers reported that we had reached 30 paid up members we confirmed the booking. The committee debated whether we were allowed to use club funds to pay for the shortfall, but two members offered to guarantee our booking by making up any shortfall. In the event we had 36 people booked, and surprisingly, given the numbers of people who have had ongoing coughs or colds, only one no show because of illness.

We had debated whether to be politically correct  and have a winter party, or a compromise, culturally inclusive Christmas Curry party!  However, our mixed religion group decided unanimously on a Christmas party with traditional food of turkey and Christmas pudding, Christmas crackers and a green tree and red Santa. 

So here it is - Ruby's restaurant in Bushey Heath.

Ruby's restaurant had a seasonal green fir tree decorated in the seasonal colours of red.

At the bar we gathered for drinks and socialised with the whole group before sitting at our tables for four. I was delighted to talk business with Steve Brewer and sort out the Club Officer Training and the subjects covered by my humorous speech.


A little Santa is on the bar.

The restaurant room with tables for four.




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Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Harrovians Christmas Party & 4 Speeches



The Christmas Party at Harrovians' Speakers' Club in Glebe Hall, Glebe Road, Stanmore, Harrow.
No expense spared, a potluck supper, mostly home-made, last year's Santa Claus outfit, a folding plastic tree from Poundland but you wouldn't believe what a wonderful time we had. Starting with all the food, piled onto paper plates, big chunks of succulent boneless bbq chicken, and potato patties, and a vegetable casserole, couscous and two sorts of rice. Or oriental vegetarian rolls, from Minh Tan, - on a separate table, attracting vegetarians and those on special diets, only oriental food! 

After that English style mince pies, Italian/Spanish/Venezuelan Panettone (a pyramid of bread with candied peel in sweet eggy dough) from Jesus, who is from Venezuela. Plus, of course, crisps, chocolates, chocolate biscuits, and the healthy option of three colours of grapes. I was just contemplating a second piece of the flan of apricots on almond tart, when we were called to hear by past president Warren Sheng. He is a stickler for time, what in Yiddish would be called a Yekke, which is German for jacket.

However, Warren, amusing us with his failed attempts to don the Santa jacket, hat and beard, which he was handed as he welcomed us, encouraged by the well-fed folks'  amicable laughter, quickly became even more jovial than President Indra, who last year was, as Warren pointed out, before the diet and swimming and slimming was, a suitably rotund Santa.


Santa Clause, past president Warren Sheng

Last year we had a speech on the origins of the symbols of Christmas such as the Christmas tree, crackers and cards.

This year we had four entertaining and informative speeches, but nothing seasonal. We started with Seema whose project was an amusing speech demonstrating gestures. She had cleverly chosen gestures as her theme, international gestures with different meanings in different countries. For example, V signs, thumbs up, thumb and forefinger making an O. 


'What does this sign mean? It doesn't mean what you think it means ...' I've never been to a non-alcoholic party where the audience was in such hysterics. Warren and Gosbert and Seema all managed to use innuendo which was much funnier than if they'd actually said anything rude.

Chinemelu Ezeh had been timer but leapt up onto the stage as he was next. He kindly told us that his name was abbreviated to Chi (pronounced chee as in cheese or cheek - by now the audience was into helpful suggestions, otherwise known as heckling or banter.)

The emotional hook of his speech was how he had come from a poor (financially poor) background, where the children had to earn their gifts, which would be given later, a lesson in 'delayed gratification'. This training helped him in his determination to study and enabled him to achieve the level of PhD. He told us he is now studying robotic medicine. 


Minh Tran started her speech by asking what was the most dangerous animal? Shouts of: lion, crocodile ....? 
No, it was mosquito, more deaths a year, millions in Africa, than any other living creature. Mosquitos are small but very dangerous. They bite. (Audience muttering. Heckling.) Females are the only ones which bite. (More hecking.) 

'At dawn or dusk,' 'needing blood for the babies which they produce after copulating. 'What did she say? Something like 'The male mosquitoes droop, drop and die after copulating - which is very sad'. (Gosbert and Warren are into a double act on this subject, variations of, 'just like us,' and, 'we know how it must feel!') Audience is off into hysterics again. 

She ended by telling us the way to stop the mosquito biting includes Deet. At the previous suggestion of her mentor Warren, she had turned her list into an acronym.

Warren, as Toastmaster of the evening linking each speaker or event with the next, commented that 'the moral is don't go to Africa'. Somebody added, 'Or India'. Another person suggested, 'Or Acton.' 



The final of the four speeches was by Shazia who told us about learning Urdu and Arabic. She had good visual aids of the letters abc in Arabic. She described how she went to practise her Arabic in a restaurant in the Edgware Road, London, but addressed the waiter with words which were female, because she had learned the female endings, but he was male and he looked offended and the restaurant was suddenly hushed. 

Speaking of food, we were all feeling hungry again. It was break time for more food. We didn't have table topics but instead broke for seconds of the food and a second lot of socialising.

The 'best speech' ribbon winners, two, were jointly Chi and Minh. 

 All the evaluations were perspicacious - enthusiastic, rewarding the speakers with appreciation, but also insightful with helpful suggestions on how to make speeches even better.

My evaluation of Seema was joint winner of the ribbon for Best Evaluation. I gestured to Veeren that he should take the ribbon and I would get another later. I forgot to ask Indra for a ribbon, so I have cut a piece of paper the size of ribbon and written on it the date and club where I won.

I went back to trying not to eat the apricot tart, which was bought from the bakery in Hatch End.

Our guest plans to become a member by the next meeting of the new year 2015. You can see Harrovians on Facebook. You might find a meeting mentioned on Meetup. Go to the Harrovians website to send a message to one of the committee if you want to come along.

The treats in store for the New Year include a visit from Hilary Briggs. The mayor of Harrow will be at the February speech contest.

From left: Indra, Veeren, Angela.

Angela Lansbury
Past president of Harrovian Speakers.
Currently member of Harrovian Speakers which meets on Mondays, and HOD which meets on Thursdays. Do come to out next meeting.

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Saturday, December 06, 2014

PR for Speakers' Clubs


Go to the club officers training to learn from PR people at other clubs. Take along cutting of places where you have been in the papers. If none, photograph or photocopy how other clubs have appeared to inspire your club members.

If your club meets in a venue with a notice board (a restaurant, YMCA or YWCA, school, civic building) ask if you can put up the article from the local paper alongside a notice for your next meeting/regular meeting date.


Note the names of your venue with postcode, the names of everybody in the photo and their club. (Yes, I'll add a caption shortly.) Include the name of the photographer so a newspaper can contact them for more photos and for copyright reasons.

Get a VIP to present prizes. You could pick the head of a local company, the president of another club in the area such as a sports club, historical society, school, university, or the mayor. A picture of the mayor and winners will usually get you into your local paper.

No VIP? How about checking all your members. Look for an extreme or contrasts. The oldest member? The youngest? The youngest and oldest? An 18 year old student and an 80 year old?
Or three the same? Three students? Three pensioners? Three grooms, brides? A bride and groom? Three grandfathers or grandmothers? Three teachers? Three tennis players? 

What about people who have been helped? Somebody unemployed who hopes to get a job as a result of entering a contest? Somebody who was unemployed and now has a job and thinks the club helped him achieve his aim, or at a bad time helped him or her remain happy? 

Photos
Anybody with a visual novelty or emotional appeal? A club member with twins, six children, three dogs. A member with a walking stick, wheelchair or white cane for the blind? A leg in plaster from a skiing accident? A new member with a new home, new job, new wife, new car, new club and new year's resolution? Photograph them with one or more of these in the picture. 

Get your group to all adopt the same pose and hold the same object, champagne flute glasses held forward, certificates at waist level, pens in right hands, manuals on chest, or just dancing or holding hands up to wave, or right legs forward as if dancing.





How about three tips from the winner? With bullet points in a box with a border, for your next leaflet to houses or businesses or university colleges around the club venue.

A word of praise for the club winner from the national champion?

Check the deadline for the newspaper. You could send in your article and after the contest simply phone or email the name of the contest winner or the order of the top three winners as a one-line footnote or headline or caption.

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PR for clubs - about contestants for contests, winners, and good losers

You don't plan to fail, you fail to plan. Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone, said, Preparation is the key to success.

PR like speeches is much easier if planned in advance. Surely planned means in advance? Yes, but I was going to say well in advance. However, speakers are often not finalised until the day of the contest - sometimes even in the last few minutes. So how can you plan?

Start by working out who are your contestants. Usually fewer then ten, because in a two or three hour contest you don't have time for more.

When you are running a contest, the speakers will all be from your club. Make a list of members of your club. How many are eligible?

Most clubs have between 15 and 45 members, the majority having 15-25. But in some contests, only those who have completed six speeches will be eligible. Those who have just joined and not yet given two or three speeches are unlikely to want to enter. So you have perhaps a maximum of ten speakers. The people who are judges cannot also be contestants. One or two people will have warned you that they cannot attend. They may be on holiday or overseas working, in hospital, or away because of a birthday or bereavement.

You can then prepare a press release about the winning speech and speaker in advance. In Toastmasters international the speakers are asked to fill in a form giving the title of their speech, and another about themselves listing their local or nation newspapers.

If they do not supply this, twenty minutes research on the internet will find the speaker's current home, their workplace, their country of origin of different. That will supply ideas for local and national newspapers who can be contacted.

Check the length of article published about events in local and national papers. Some newspapers might simply include a photo of the speakers and the name of the contest they won.

You can take a photo at the speech rehearsal at your club, or another club in the centre of the city. Or at the speaker's home. Or in the centre of the city. Or a well-known coffee shop or pub before the contest.

Check the newspaper deadlines. Send advance notice of the club contest to the paper. Follow up by  phone and ask if your local paper wants to send a reporter or photographer - or to present the prizes!

In advance prepare a set or questions and email them to the speakers so they have time to find interesting, detailed, coherent, original answers.

Photograph the speaker with their main prop or some item of interest. For example a local landmark in good weather, perhaps with an animal such as their cat or dog or pet, or in their their garden. At their home or workplace or club pick an item showing their hobby or favourite sport or club such as tennis racquet, dictionary, golf club, football supporters shirt, previous certificate or award, or pretty tree or flower such as an orchid, their toastmasters manual or club banner.

You can ask every speaker, what will you say if you win? What will you say if you lose? What will you say to the other speakers? What will you say to other speakers? What do you think of  ... (place where the contest is held). What do you think of ... (the company they work for/the club they represent/their mentor).  Who has helped you? Who has inspired you?

Ask: 'How will you celebrate your win?' If they don't have an interesting answer, suggest: Pub, restaurant, drink, food, phone family overseas, tell boss, tell employees, thank mentor, tell club, thank God, watch your video, make notes for your next speech, at the club or at next level?

How do they cope with fear, with losing? Is this a one-off or 3rd or 25th attempt, despite never winning?

What they won't do, if they don't drink, or don't take time of work, can be equally interesting.

End with a call to action for the reader, such as links to your club website, and the speaker's contacts or business if relevant.

You might need short and long versions for different papers, such as under 200 words for your local paper, or 500 or 1000 or even 2000 for a magazine national paper doing a double page spread.

Take photos of all members of the club and (if they give permission) put them on your club website and on the social media such as Facebook. If local media need photos in a hurry they can take the photo from the public source or use the profile to fill out their own article and research it.




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