Poetry Out Loud
And The Winner Is…
By Karilea Rilling Jungel
On March 1, 2015 in the Sunflower Theater at the Salina
Community Theater there was a gathering of some 75 students, parents,
observers; judges, tallying clerks, directors and assistants. All were in
attendance for the first State Regional Poetry Out Loud Competition to be held
in Salina, Kansas. Although this was the 10th anniversary of the POL
National Scholarship event, the previous state regional competitions had been
held in the eastern part of the state. From the seven regions, this year’s
line-up and poems chosen to be read included:
REGION 1 - Hannah Parks, Baldwin HS
“What Lips My Lips Have Kissed,
and Where, and Why” by Edna St. Vincent Millay
“Sonnet 18--Shall I Compare
. . .” by William Shakespeare
“Duende” by Tracy K. Smith
“Duende” by Tracy K. Smith
Hannah
Janzen, reciting “I Wandered…”
Photo
by Aaron Anders
|
REGION 2 - Hannah Janzen, Salina Central HS
“I Wandered Lonely as A Cloud”
by William Wordsworth
“Baudelaire” by Delmore
Schwartz
“Their Bodies” by David Wagoner
REGION 3 - Ashley Miller,
Quinter High School
“Let the Light Enter” by Frances
Ellen Watkins
“The Ocean” by Nathaniel
Hawthorne
“I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud” by William
Wordsworth
REGION 4 - Addisohn Jones, Ft. Scott HS
“A Fit of Rhyme Against Rhyme”
by Ben Jonson
“The Table’s Turned” by William
Wordsworth
“I’m Learning to Abandon the
World” by Linda Pastan
REGION 5 - Scarlet Green, Northeast
Magnet High School
“Before the Birth of One of Her
Children” by Anne Bradstreet
“A Celebration of Charis: I.
His Excuse for Loving” by Ben Jonson
“A Certain Kind of Eden” by Kay
Ryan
REGION 6 - Jessica Fabin, Garden City High School
“The Arrow and the Song” by Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow
“Ode to the Midwest” by Kevin
Young
“On the Existence of the Soul” by
Pattiann Rogers
REGION 7 - Leanne Chun, Olathe South HS
“The Good Morrow” by John Donne
“For the Young Who Want to” by Marge
Piercy
“And Soul” by Eavan Boland
Google the above poems to
understand the poems’ various complexities the students had to study, comprehend
and convey.
For the festivities, those
present included Peter Jasso, Director of the Kansas Creative Arts Industries
Commission; Justine Haka, Program Associate for the Poetry Foundation; Senator
Tom Arpke, Brad Anderson of the Salina Arts and Humanities and members of Friends
of the Library, and Deb Kohn, Kansas State Poetry Out Loud Coordinator. Emceeing
the event was cashhollistah.
The four
judges for the State Competition who were in attendance were: Wyatt Townley,
current Kansas Poet Laureate; Andy Anderson, Vice President for Academic
Affairs, Johnson County Community College; Suzanne E. Myers-Ortel, Kansas State
Dept. of Education Literary Consultant; and Ruth Moritz, KSU-Salina, Salina
Public Library Spring Poetry Series Director.
L-R Ruth Moritz, Tina Akers, Suzanne Myers,
Andy Anderson, Wyatt Townley & Justine Haka
|
Ignoring
their personal jitters and nerves, all of the students gave admirable
recitations. While the ballots were tallied and finalized, Cash Hollistah gave
his presentation of “Fresh Air”, a very upbeat, positive hip-hop piece of his
written work.
cash
hollistah, reciting
“Fresh
Air” with the requisite “fist pump”
Photo
by Aaron Anders
|
Scarlet
Green (center) 2nd Place
Photo
by Aaron Anders
|
Kansas
State Second Place runner up is Scarlet Green, Northeast Magnet High School,
who commented “The winner was amazing! I’m a sophomore this year, so I’m
definitely looking forward to trying this again. Being in (The Salina Community
Theater’s) black box theater was a very intimate and awesome experience!”
Kansas
state champion is Leanne Chun. Her school, Olathe South, will receive
$500 to purchase poetry resources for their school library. Leanne received
$200 and will also receive an all-expense paid trip for herself and a chaperone
to Washington, D.C. to attend the Nationals Finals and compete for the grand
title of National Champion on April 27-29, 2015.
Leanne summed up her experience well: “It was all so
fantastic; it’s hard for me to decide the best part of it, but I think it is
that we were all rooting for one another; everyone is being very amiable and (those
who are not seniors) are looking forward to next year.”
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