2008 forensicators accumulate various honors
By Jerod Barker
April 17, 2008
The Silver Lake forensics squad
has made serious strides this year. Led by Gail Naylor, head coach
for over 35 years, the returning speakers and actors improved while
helping the newcomers hone their talents.
“This year we have a very young squad,”
Naylor stated. “With only four seniors and a lot of novices, it’s
been tougher this season than in previous years, but I think we've
done fairly well as far as growing and developing as skilled
performers goes.”
Senior Jordan Lambert, fourth-year actor,
wasted no time earning medals with his prose and poetry
performances. After placing at his first tournament of the season,
it seemed Lambert had made the right choice for an event, though he
had never previously performed in prose and poetry.
Lambert and a fellow senior, Marshall
Wetta, another fourth-year actor, started off their season deciding
which piece would be best to perform for their duet
interpretation.
“I had really high expectations for this
year and wanted to make the best of my last season under the
direction of Naylor,” Wetta explained.
Along with the duet, Wetta had decided on
his humorous interpretation piece, “Removing the Glove,” a
satirical comedy about accepting yourself in an non-accepting
society. Wetta plays a confused teenager who, due to hand
dominance, is rejected by his friends and family because he is “a
sick, depraved lefty!”
Wetta has always enjoyed acting and planned
on sticking with his two usual events. Naylor, on the other hand,
had other plans for him.
Since Michelle Taylor, the only senior girl
on the squad, began her forensics career as a sophomore, she has
always steered more toward public speaking rather than acting. She
had also made a lot of headway on the editing and revising her
oration, “When the Going Gets Tough,” a persuasive speech
suggesting that sometimes it is beneficial, and even essential, to
quit certain habits, activities, or careers in life.
For Taylor's final semester, Naylor
separated the Wetta/Lambert duo to put Jordan with his younger
brother and paired up Taylor and Wetta to perform in a duet. Their
piece, entitled “Kissing Scene,” portrays the chemistry and chaos
between two ambitious actors who, while practicing a scene of their
own, learn to respect one another and fall in love.
“It was a lot of fun working on our duet,”
Taylor said. “It was my first time doing an acting event, but it
turned out to be successful, and I'm glad we did it.”
The Wetta/Taylor duet turned out to be quite successful indeed. After placing second at Topeka West and first at the Mid-East League Tournament, the arrangement proved to be a good decision on Naylor's part.
Senior Jared Wilcox actually came back to the program after competing as a sophomore and taking his junior year off. He has also had noteworthy success in prose and poetry.
Juniors Kayleen Kelley and Jay McDaniel took their prose and poetry scripts to weekend competitions while fellow juniors Trent Strunk and Steph Magee performed their informative speeches. Strunk outlined the fun facts about soda pop in his speech while Magee made funny faces in hers.
Juniors Kali Huske and JaVon Martin got emotional with their dramatic performances while Matt McClain took a more humorous approach to his portrayals. Martin placed second at the opening tournament of the season in Rossville with his dramatic interpretation and won the very next week at the Shawnee Heights Invitational Tournament.
“My piece, ‘Direct From Death Row: The Scotsboro Boys’ is about an African American who is convicted of a crime he didn't commit,” Martin explained. “I had been reading it before the forensics season started, and I wanted to turn it into a DI.”
McClain also took home a gold medal from the Royal Valley High School tournament with his HI.
Returning sophomores also experienced an excellent year. Shelby Brokaw revealed the world of competition between girls in school with her oration, “Stingdom.” Highlighting a correlation between their teenage behavior and the behavior of bees in a hive, Brokaw showed the political as well as personal sides of cliques becoming kingdoms within the walls of academia.
“I wrote this speech because I think it is a big issue for females of all ages that needed to be addressed,” Brokaw stated.
Derek Holmer and Rachel Cross returned for their second year after competing together at the 2007 CFL National Tournament in Houston, Texas the previous season. They competed at numerous varsity tournaments with their new duet piece, “Where Have All the Lightening Bugs Gone?” a story about two love-sick adolescents who grow up to be separated by a war-torn society.
Brooke Brennan and Jestina Matulka repeated their freshman year by competing with, as well as against, each other. The two girls performed their duet first, and then went their separate ways to perform their individual informative speeches.
Jerod Barker, Cameron Lambert and Cole Schwarz also showed off their humorous and dramatic sides. All three competitors performed at the 2007 state championships their freshman year and will be returning to Wichita once again to compete for a second year.
The novices were no different in their success. Emily Taylor, Chloe Austin and Christin Oyler surprised many upperclassmen with their undiscovered talents in the art of competitive speaking. All three freshmen presented very well-structured persuasive and informative speeches.
“I joined forensics because Naylor told me that I'd be good at it when I was taking her speech class,” Austin said. “I decided that if I could be really good at it, I wanted to do it competitively.”
Other successful novices included Josh Plaides and Riley Oblander in duet, Jake Maryott and Jaeton Martin in extemporaneous speaking, Tyler Roth in prose and poetry, and Jacob Lambert in IDA.
Many of the squad members’ hard work paid off when they qualified to the 2008 CFL National Forensics Tournament in Appleton, Wis. The tournament will be held on Memorial Day weekend.
Kelley teamed up with senior Colby Killinger to qualify in public forum debate while freshmen Nikki Richardson and Maryott qualified in policy debate. McClain and Magee also qualified in Lincoln-Douglas debate.
Brokaw and novice Lindsey Schroeder qualified their orations and Matulka qualified in oral declamation, an event in which she must recreate a performance by another person and perform the speech herself.
Wetta qualified in dramatic performance and Jordan and Cam Lambert qualified their duo interpretation piece.
The team will also compete at the 2008 State Championships on May 3 in Wichita. Though final entries have not yet been determined for each event, Naylor is very optimistic for the competitors.
“I'm anxious to see how each of the kids do in Wichita,” Naylor said. “They've had to work extremely hard to get qualified, and now they have the chance to compete at a state level.”
2008 forensicators accumulate various honors
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