The American Legion Department of California
High School Oratorical Scholarship State Winners
"A Constitutional Speech Contest"

With over 100 Legionnaires, relatives and friends assembled at the Pacific Palisades Post 283 for The American Legion High School Constitutional Speech Contest, the contest was a roaring success.

Pictured L to R - Miliza Milo, chairman and the oratorical champions from the 6 American Legion Areas of California vying to represent the Department of California in Indianapolis with Department Commander Howard Darter in the back row

Pictured L to R - Miliza Milo, chairman and the oratorical champions from the 6 American Legion Areas of California vying to represent the Department of California in Indianapolis with Department Commander Howard Darter in the back row.
Click here for the April 5-6, 2008 National Contest results

        1st Place: $1200 scholarship
         Mark Etchepare
         Central Catholic High School, Turlock, CA
         Sponsored by Modesto Post 83 - Area 3
        2nd Place: $1000 scholarship
         Lucas Duplancic
         Miramonte High School, Orinda, CA
         Sponsored by Lafayette Post 517 - Area 2
        Runner-ups: $700 scholarship for each runner-up
         Andrew Crutchfield
         Angelo Rodriquez High School, Fairfield, CA
         Sponsored by Reams Post 182 - Area 1
         Alex Meadow
         
        Pacific Palisades High School, CA
         Sponsored by Palisades Post 283 - Area 6
         Kathleen Murphy
         
        Rosary High School, Fullerton, CA
         Sponsored by Orange Post 132 – Area 5
         Jeffery Lee
         Whitney High School, Cerritos, CA
         Sponsored by Norwalk Post 359

71st annual National Finals

The 71st annual National Finals were held this past weekend, April 5-6, 2008, at the Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis Conference Center and Hotel. The 53 Department winners who entered the National Competition were all outstanding representatives of today's youth.

        The winners were:
        First Place - Spencer Harjung (MD) - $18,000
        Second Place: Virginia "Ginger" MacFarlan (AR) - $16,000
        Third Place: Christopher Pagliarella (CT) - $14,000

The National Finalists are also the recipients of a $1,500 scholarship for having participated in the quarter-final contest.

The following competed in the semi-final contest and will receive a $3,000 scholarship ($1,500 for having competed in the quarter-final contest and an additional $1,500 for competing in the semi-final contest but not advancing to the finals):

Anthony Myers (DC) - Edward James, III (FL) - Shane Rumbaugh (PA)
Meg Henrickson (SD) - Kyle Evora (TX) - Brooke Connor (VT)
 

Spencer Harjung from Elkton, Md

Spencer Harjung from Elkton, Md

INDIANAPOLIS (April 7, 2008) – A high school senior from Elkton, Md., capped a busy weekend of competition in Indianapolis by earning an $18,000 college scholarship. The title of his winning oration: “Our Fallible Framers.”

Click here to watch the video

Spencer Harjung, a student at Rising Sun High School, started the weekend as one of 53 state champions in the 71st annual American Legion National High School Oratorical Scholarship Program – “A Constitutional Speech Contest” and advanced to the top through three rounds of intense competition.

Virginia Macfarlan, a senior who is home-schooled in Siloam Springs, Ark., earned a $16,000 scholarship while Christopher Pagliarella, a senior from the Hopkins School in Seymour, Conn., earned a $14,000 college scholarship. The scholarships account for a small portion of the roughly $3.5 million in post-secondary scholarships that The American Legion, the nation’s largest veterans organization, awards annually.
In his speech Harjung spoke on how the founding fathers were good men but not perfect men.

“James Madison had stage fright. Washington’s teeth started falling out at the age of 24. Benjamin Franklin wanted to be a swim coach. These men were just that: men,” Harjung said. “ They were not ‘demi-gods,’ as Thomas Jefferson described them. They were men. Fallible, typical: men. Yet for centuries they have been carved in marble, cast in bronze, and perceived as America’s royalty, and they’ve even been compared to the mighty Greek gods. In fact, if you visit the Capitol Building in Washington, D.C., you’ll see a large painting called ‘the Apotheosis of Washington,’ which depicts George Washington ascending to heaven and becoming a god.”

Harjung concluded that the framers did not consider themselves gods or the Constitution infallible. “There is a story that upon exiting the Constitutional Convention Benjamin Franklin was approached by a group of men who asked him what sort of government the delegates had created. His answer was: ‘A republic, if you can keep it,’” Harjung said. “The citizens of the United States have kept it, and they don’t show any signs of stopping soon. But written into the Constitution is a strong message to every citizen: we are not gods. We may have one of the strongest governments in the world, but it isn’t perfect, and it requires maintenance. Patriotic rhetoric isn’t what has made this country great—and America is not inherently great. America was made great by a handful of people—just people—and America needs the help of every citizen—every person--to stay that way.” 

In each round of the weekend competition, orators delivered a rehearsed 8- to 10-minute address and a randomly assigned 3- to 5-minute oration on a constitutional topic, each without the benefit of notes and in front of a live audience, including the judges. The 2.7-million member American Legion developed the contest to encourage young people to improve their communications skills and to study the U.S. Constitution.


Questions?
David L Eby
calegion@pacific.net
State Commander 1998-99
Department Webmaster

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4-7-08

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