Public Speaking Handbook

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Chapter 1 p. 1: Charles Schwab, as quoted in Brent Filson,
Executive Speeches: Tips on How to Write and Deliver Speeches
from 51 CEOs (New York: Wiley, 1994) 45; p. 3: James C.
Humes, The Sir Winston Method: Five Secrets of Speaking the
Language of Leadership (New York: Morrow, 1991) 13–14;
p. 4: Valueinvestorsportal. “Warren Buffet on Communica-
tion Skills.” YouTube. 6 December, 2010. Web. http://www
.youtube.com/watch?v=tpgcEYpLzP0 Accessed May 14,
2013; p. 4: Dee-Ann Durbin, “Study: Plenty of Jobs for
Graduates in 2000,” Austin American-Statesman 5 Dec. 1999:
A28; p. 8: L. M. Boyd, syndicated column, Austin American-
Statesman 8 Aug. 2000: E3; p. 9: Franklin D. Roosevelt,
speech before Congress, December 8, 1941; p. 9: Ronald
Reagan, June 12, 1987; p. 9: Elie Wiesel, The Perils of Indif-
ference, April 12, 1999; p. 9: Obama, Barack. “Remarks by
the President at Sandy Hook Interfaith Prayer Vigil” The
White House Briefing Room. 16 Dec 2012. Web. 05 July 2013
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2012/12/16/
remarks-president-sandy-hook-interfaith-prayer-vigil
Chapter 2 p. 15: Sheboygan Press, Sheboygan, Wisconsin,
Tuesday, September 8, 1953 by Drew Pearson; p. 16: Jerry
Seinfeld
Chapter 3 p. 29: Daniel Webster, U.S. Secretary of State,
1850–1852; p. 33: J.C. Pearson, J.T. Child, and D.H. Kahl, Jr.,
“Preparation Meeting Opportunity: How Do College
Students Prepare for Public Speeches?” Communication
Quarterly, 54:3 (Aug. 2006): 351–66; pp. 36–37: Clifford
Stoll, as cited in Kevin A. Miller, “Capture: The Essential
Survival Skill for Leaders Buckling Under Information
Overload,” Leadership (Spring 1992): 85; p. 37: Woodrow
Wilson; p. 42: Copyrighted by Pearson Education, Upper
Saddle River, NJ; p. 42: Franklin D. Roosevelt; pp. 43–45:
Reprinted by permission of Grace Hildenbrand
Chapter 4 p. 50: Jason Pontin, “Free Speech in the Era of
Its Technological Amplification,” MIT Technology Review
116.2 (March/April 2013): 62; p. 51: Quintilian; p. 51: Used
with permission from the National Communication Asso-
ciation, http://www.natcom.org; p. 52: “Obama Counter-Terrorism
Speech Interrupted by Heckler,” UPI.com. 23 May 2013;
p. 52: Samuel Walker, Hate Speech (Lincoln: U of Nebraska
P, 1994) 162; p. 52: “Libel and Slander,” The Ethical Spectacle.
1 June 1997; p. 52: “Three Decades Later, Free Speech Vets
Return to UC Berkeley,” Sacramento Bee 3 Dec. 1994: A1;
p. 52: James S. Tyre, “Legal Definition of Obscenity, Por-
nography.” 1 June 1997; p. 52: United States Constitution;
p. 53: “Supreme Court Rules: Cyberspace Will Be Free!
ACLU Hails Victory in Internet Censorship Challenge,”
American Civil Liberties Union Freedom Network, 26 June
1997, 1 June 1998 http://https://www.aclu.org/technology-
and-liberty/aclu-hails-supreme-court-victory-internet-
censorship-challenge; p. 53 Sue Anne Pressley, “Oprah

Winfrey Wins Case Filed by Cattlemen,” Washington Post
27 Feb. 1998; p. 53: Associated Press, “Free-Speech, Other
Groups File Briefs Opposing Patriot Act.” 4 Nov; p. 53:
Brian Schweitzer, “Proclamation of Clemency for Montan-
ans Convicted under the Montana Sedition Act in 1918–
1919.” 3 May 2006. (Thanks to George Moss, Vaughn
College, Flushing, NY, for providing the authors with a
copy of this document.); p. 53: Terry Phillips, “Opinion: In
Defense of Free Speech and Helen Thomas.” MercuryNews
.com. 15 June 2010; p. 54: http://www.freespeechdebate.com; p. 55:
Samuel Walker, Hate Speech (Lincoln: U of Nebraska P,
1994) 162; p. 56: Edwin R. Bayley, Joe McCarthy and the
Press (Madison: Wisconsin U P, 1981) 29; p. 57: “Spurlock
Sorry for Speech,” Austin American-Statesman 29 Mar. 2006:
A2; p. 57: Kathy Fitzpatrick, “U.S. Public Diplomacy,”
Vital Speeches of the Day (April 2004): 412–17; p. 58: Publi-
cation Manual of the American Psychological Association,
6th ed. (Washington, DC: American Psychological Asso-
ciation, 2010) 16; p. 58: Scott Jaschik, “Graduation Shame.”
Insidehighered.com. 22 Apr. 2010; p. 60: “Bed Bugs.” Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, 13 January 2013. Web.
9 June 2013
Chapter 5 p. 65: Plutarch; p. 74: K. K. Halone and L. L.
Pecchioni, “Relational Listening: A Grounded Theoretical
Model,” COMMUNICATION REPORTS 14 (2001): 59–71;
p. 80: Aristotle; p. 80: Harold Barrett, Rhetoric and Civility:
Human Development, Narcissism, and the Good Audience
(Albany: SUNY, 1991) 154; p. 81: Patricia Sullivan, “Signifi-
cation and African-American Rhetoric: A Case Study of
Jesse Jackson’s ‘Common Ground and Common Sense’
Speech,” Communication Quarterly 41.1 (1993): 11;
p. 85: Isocrates, Isocrates, Vol. II. Translated by George
Norlin (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1929).
Also see “Isocrates,” in Bizzell and Herzberg, The Rhetorical
Tradition
Chapter 6 p. 95: Aristotle, Born: 384 BC, Died: 322 BC;
p. 104: Robert H. Farrell, ed., Off the Record: The Private
Papers of Harry S Truman (New York: Harper & Row, 1980)
310; pp. 113–114; Donald E. Brown, “Human Universals
and Their Implications,” in N. Roughley, ed., Being
Humans: Anthropological Universality and Particularity in
Transdisciplinary Perspectives (New York: Walter de Gruyter,
2000); p. 120: Sweets, “Mark Twain in India,” The Fence
Painter: Bulletin of the Mark Twain Boyhood Home Associates
26 (Winter 1996): 1
Chapter 7 p. 131: Cicero, Born: January 3, 106 BC, Died:
December 7, 43 BC; p. 134: Roger Fringer, “Choosing a
Speech Topic,” in Tasha Van Horn, Lori Charron, and
Michael Charron, Allyn & Bacon Video II User’s Guide, 2002;
p. 135: Bruce Gronbeck, from his presidential address
delivered at the annual conference of the Speech Communi-
cation Association, Nov. 1994; p. 140: Monique Russo, “The
‘Starving Disease’ or Anorexia Nervosa,” student speech,

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