Mostrando postagens com marcador William. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador William. Mostrar todas as postagens

terça-feira, 16 de agosto de 2011

CONFESSIONS OF A LATIN TEACHER, PART III



Source: Speak Up
Language level: Upper Intermediate
Standard: British accent
Speaker: Justin Ratcliffe




CONFESSION OF A LATIN TEACHER PART III BY WILLIAM SUTTON

The title of Peter Jone’s book, Vote for Caesar: How the Ancient Greeks and Romans Solved the Problems of Today, is self-explanatory. He believes that, if we study the Greeks and Romans, we can be great like them. Greek and Latin are often cited as the best languages: they are more complete and accurate than modern languages. The claims are nonsense. The Romans and Greeks had as many problems as we do. They were greedy, genocidal and cruel to animal. Perhaps that is why we like them: their errors, as well as their achievements, are familiar.

This month and next, we consider 10 unpleasant Latin legacies.

1.   EXPLOITATION

Empires come and go, but it was the Romans who developed the systematic exploitation of colonies. Their phenomenal military machine enslaves natives, extracted resources and generated taxes. The Romans gained luxuries, cheap food, wine, bathing and sanitation. Slaves provided labour, skills and entertainment (gladiatorial and sexual).

This model of empire led to European colonisation; the slave trade; exploitation of Americas; the US cotton industry and the industrial Revolution.

2.   ECO-WARRIORS

At the opening of the Colosseum, 5.000 animals were killed. In on hunting spectacle, they massacred hundred of lions, leopards and bears and thousands of ostriches, deer and wild boars. The pushed animals towards extinction. There are no elephants and lions in North Africa; there is no Syrian elephant, no Atlas bear and no hippopotamus in the Nile.

The Romans drained lakes and diverted rivers. They spread cities across Europe, causing sanitation problems that still exist today. They gave us the belief that man could dominate the environment – only now the environment is fighting back.

3.   GAMES AND GAMING

The Romans inverted sporting celebrities. We may not allow gladiatorial fights, but today’s boxing and Formula One echo that fatal thrill.

Danger was not enough. The Romans turned Greek sports into gambling extravaganzas. Fortune were won and lost at the Circus Maximus, as in horse racing today. We don’t yet kill people on TV, but Big Brother has something in common with the voyeurism of throwing Christians to the lions.

4.   DEMOCRACY (SORT OF)
The Greeks invented democracy, we are constantly told. We often forget that Athenian democracy was restricted to male citizens. This experiment led to war, plague and the collapse of Athens.

Political hypocrisy never changes. The Emperor Augustus exiled his own daughter Julia for partying and prostitution when he was passing morality laws. Tony Blair suggested fining young men who drink alcohol: a week later, his son Euan was arrested, drunk, in Leicester Square. Silvio Belusconi is mocked for appointing sexy women as ministers; but at least he hasn’t tried to make his horse a consul, like Caligula.

5.   PROGRESS

We want to believe that politics improve, moving towards justice. This is naive. The Romans threw away centuries of popular reform when they accepted emperors. Their dictatorship inspired Hitler and countless others. More Romans ruination next month!


quarta-feira, 6 de julho de 2011

CONFESSIONS OF A LATIN TEACHER PART II





WILLIAM’S WORDS



Language level: Upper Intermediate
Speaker: Justin Ratcliffe
Standard: British accent

CONFESSIONS OF A LATIN TEACHER By William Sutton

The UK government has ignored demands to offer Latin in all schools. But the ancient world still holds our imaginations, from law and politics through to films like Clash of the Titans and Percy Jackson and he Lighting Thief.

CODGITO ERGO SUM

Politically, Roman laws passed through two houses. The UK copied this arrangement. The US went further, placing the Senate and House of Representative on Capitol Hill. Money stamped with our leaders’ faces is inspired by Roman coins. The Romans gave us public and civil law. Trial by jury and the principle “innocent till proven guilty. Today’s politicians are still influenced by Cicero’s oratory. We take rhetorical devices from the classics simile metaphor metonymy. Although we may prefer films to poetry, we use their literary genres: tragedy and comedy, epic and satire.

Even since Freud psychology has used classical words and concepts. We are aware of our ego, id and superego. We recognize narcissism, mania and the Oedipus complex. Philosophy is built upon Plato and Aristotle, giving us arguments a priori and a posteriori, syllogisms and reductio ad absurdum. Everybody knows Descartes’ phrase. “Cogito ergo sum.”

SCIENCE AND SPORT

Science is full of Latin from geometry’s humble oval to paleontology’s mighty Tyrannosaurus rex in meteorology, we have cumulo-numbus clouds, in physics, the quantum. We named the planets after roman gods. Neighbours Venous and Mars reflect the mythical enlargement of love and war.  The Pluto was dismissed to the underworld, in 2006, his planet was deplaneted’.

In sport, Romans took Greek pursuits and turned them into big business, with stadiums and gambling. Watch today’s racing, horses of Formula One, and you can’t help thinking of chariot racing in the Circus Maximus. The celebrities and hysteria in boxing, wrestling, rugby and football recall Rome’s gladiators.

LATIN ADVOCATES

Oxford classics professors recently urged the British government to give Latin the same status in schools as modern languages. The Department for Education replied: “Latin is an important subject, valuable for learning of modern languages and a useful basis for many disciplines. It is, however not classified in the curriculum as at modern language as pupils cannot interact with native Latin speakers or visit parts of the world where Latin is spoken as a native language.” A diplomatic response!

Even if few British schools teach Latin, nobody denies its influence on modern life. The little of a recent book says it all Vote for Caesar: How the Ancient Greeks and Romans Solved the Problems of Today. Next month we’ll investigate whether that’s really true. but there’s no doubt classical culture is  with us every day. Whatever the Education Secretary says. QED (Quod Erat Demostrandum). And, to prove our point, here are some Latin words and expressions used in everyday English.

LATIN WORDS

Virus
Antenna
Doctor
Facsimile
Via
Modus operandi
Per diem
Sine qua non
RIP (Resquiescat in Pace)
QED (Quod Erat)
Demonstrandum
Vice-versa
Alter ego
Alumnus
Alma mater
Post mortem
Bona fide
Tedium
Museum
Simulacrum
Agenda
De facto
Ex cathedra
Status quo
Quid pro quo
Sic
Ad hoc 

quarta-feira, 8 de junho de 2011

William Simon Jacques


Source: www.speakup.com.br
Language level: Pre-intermediate
Speaker: Jason Bermigham (American accent)
Justin Ratcliff (British)


William Simon Jacques

The Gentleman Thief is a famous figure in both fiction and reality, but Britain’s most prestigious libraries don’t like William Simon Jacques. This notorious criminal has stolen rare books from London’s British Library worth more than £1.000.000: one example is Galileo Galilei’s Sidereus Nuncius.

A GENIUS

Jacques studied at Cambridge University and he is a chartered account. He has the IQ of a genius and is a master of disguise. The English newspapers love him: They gave him the nickname “Tome Raider.” But he isn’t so intelligent after all. He was caught in 2002 and spent four years in prison. Jacques was arrested again in 2007 for stealing books from the Royal Horticulture Society valued at £40.000 was released on bail and ran. He was found and arrested at his mom’s home in 2009, and in June 2010 was convicted and sentenced to 3,5 years.

EMBARRASSING

How could Jacques steal such rare books for so many years? He uses his education to obtain librarians’ confidence, and uses false names and disguises, so that nobody can identify him. For example, at the Lindley Library he used the name Mr. Santoro instead of his real name.  Another important reason is that library curators don’t often inform the police when books are stolen. Antiquarian bookseller Jolyon Hudson explains: “Libraries are the curators of the nation’s knowledge. They’re too embarrassed to admit losing such important books.” Jacques sells the books with the help of auction houses like Christies of London and specialist book dealers. The police caught him in 1999 because a London book dealer saw that he was trying to cover library markings.

JAILED

“A leopard doesn’t change its spots.” The tabloid newspapers describe Jacques as a gentleman thief, but not everyone agrees. Jacques allegedly showed no remorse during this 2010 sentencing and his reputation has been damaged by his first conviction. The opposite of a gentleman is a scoundrel, and there are many people who say Jacques is exactly that: a scoundrel. His Cambridge University tutor Ian DuQuesnay angrily says: “What William Simon Jacques does is equivalent to splashing paint on the Parthenon.”

WHO EXATLY IS WILLIAM SIMON JACQUES?

He was born in 1969 in North Yorkshire. He studied economics at Cambridge University: his tutor Ian DuQuesnay remembers that he was “a competent, but not exceptional student.” He became an accountant and lived an apparently quiet life in London’s Maida Vale. Then in 1994 he obtained membership of Britain’s most prestigious libraries. In the following five years, he became the most prolific book thief in British history. The books he has stolen include Sir Isaac Newton’s Principia Mathematica (1687), Descartes’ Discourse de la Méthode por Bien Cunduire sa Reason (1637) and Kepler’s Astronomia Nova (1609).

terça-feira, 10 de maio de 2011

William Randolph Hearst, 1863-1951: He Created What Was Once the Nation's Largest Newspaper Grou

William Randolph Hearst, 1863-1951: He Created What Was Once the Nation's Largest Newspaper Group




Source: www.voanews.com 

Download MP3   (Right-click or option-click the link.)

Welcome to the VOA Special English program PEOPLE IN AMERICA.  Today, Steve Ember and Rich Kleinfeldt tell about American publisher William Randolph Hearst. Mr. Hearst created what was once the nation's largest newspaper organization. He bought newspapers in many areas of the United States.  He spent millions of dollars to gain readers in sometimes shocking ways.  He forever changed the American newspaper business.
(MUSIC)
William Randolph Hearst was born in San Francisco in eighteen sixty-three.  He was the only child of George Hearst and Phoebe Apperson Hearst.  His father became rich by developing mines.   His mother was a philanthropist who gave her time and money to help others.
William Randolph Hearst had everything he wanted as a child.  But, he was a rebel.  In eighteen eighty-five, he was expelled from Harvard, one of the best universities in America, for playing a joke on a professor.
George Hearst wanted his son to take control of developing the mines or the land he owned.  But William had other desires.  He became interested in newspapers while at Harvard.  He started working as a reporter for the New York World newspaper owned by Joseph Pulitzer.
George Hearst owned the San Francisco Examiner newspaper.  But he was more interested in politics than in newspaper publishing.  In eighteen eighty-seven, George Hearst became a United States senator.  He gave control of the newspaper to his son William who was twenty-three.
William Randolph Hearst wanted to create a newspaper that people would talk about.  He worked long hours and put high energy into his newspaper.  He employed some of the best reporters and writers he could find.  And, he paid them the highest wages.  Mr. Hearst improved the appearance of his newspaper and bought modern equipment.  He also improved relations with advertisers.  Advertisers pay to have their products shown in newspapers to increase sales.  Newspapers profit from the money paid by advertisers.
News stories in the San Francisco Examiner were written with force, energy and excitement.  Some stories were written to shock readers and affect them emotionally.  However, the stories were simple and easy to read.
Mr. Hearst believed in doing whatever it took to get readers.  His newspaper policy was:  make the news complete; print all the news; shorten it if necessary, but get it in.  That became the policy in newsrooms across America.
By eighteen ninety-one, the San Francisco Examiner had three times more readers and advertisers than when Mr. Hearst took control of the newspaper.  In less than five years, William Randolph Hearst made the new San Francisco Examiner a huge success.
Mr. Hearst repeated his success in New York City. He borrowed five million dollars from his mother to purchase a second newspaper, the New York Journal.  In his first two months, he increased the number of copies sold from thirty thousand to one hundred thousand.
Joseph Pulitzer was a very successful publisher in New York.  Mr. Hearst shared Mr. Pulitzer's excitement and energy about the newspaper business.
During the eighteen nineties, Mr. Hearst and Mr. Pulitzer began a fierce newspaper war.  Mr. Hearst hired many reporters from Mr. Pulitzer's New York World newspaper.  He paid them more than two times as much as they had been earning.  He also reduced the price of his newspaper below Mr. Pulitzer's.
Mr. Hearst won readers by making the news more exciting and entertaining.  He created a kind of newspaper reporting known today as "yellow journalism."  News events were made to seem greater than they really were.  His methods went beyond what would be accepted today in major newspapers.  Critics said his newspapers were only for entertainment.  Yet many other newspapers tried to copy his methods.
Mr. Hearst attacked big businesses and dishonest politicians in his newspapers.  There were also reports about sex, murder and other crimes.  His newspapers became a voice for working people and the poor.  His influence grew across the nation through his newspapers and the magazines he bought or began.
Many experts say Mr. Hearst's reporting methods and his battle with Mr. Pulitzer for readers led to the Spanish-American War.  In eighteen ninety-eight, the United States fought Spain to help the people of Cuba gain independence from Spain.
Mr. Hearst's newspapers had accused Spain of sinking the American battleship Maine and killing two hundred fifty sailors.  This increased public support for the war.  However, it still is not known how the ship sank.
The war greatly increased readers for the Hearst publications.  Mr. Hearst's battle with competitors widened after the war.  Some newspapers blamed him when President William McKinley was murdered in nineteen-oh-one.  The assassination happened after one of the Hearst newspapers seemed to suggest killing Mr. McKinley.
 (MUSIC)
 VOICE TWO:
In the early nineteen hundreds, William Randolph Hearst became deeply involved in politics.  He represented New York in the United States House of Representatives from nineteen-oh-three to nineteen-oh-seven.  In nineteen-oh-four, he unsuccessfully sought the Democratic nomination for president.  He also failed in his campaigns to become governor of New York or mayor of New York City.
Mr. Hearst had hoped to change the way things were being done in New York City.  He hoped to defeat dishonest New York City politicians who controlled the city at the time.
Mr. Hearst also campaigned against big business.  He supported labor unions and government ownership of public utilities, railroads, and other big companies.  And, he sought political reform and the return of economic competition in the country.
Mr. Hearst's opponents accused him of being disloyal to his country because of his support for Germany during the first years of World War One.  He was opposed to American involvement in the war.
Mr. Hearst was sharply criticized for his political ideas.  Many people refused to deal with him.  Some hated him.   His newspapers were banned in many communities.
Mr. Hearst strongly supported Democrat Franklin Roosevelt for president in nineteen thirty-two.  Then he became increasingly conservative and turned against President Roosevelt.  He opposed American involvement in World War Two.  He also led a fierce campaign against communism during the nineteen thirties.
Through the years, Mr. Hearst continued to buy newspapers and magazines across the country and around the world.  He also controlled a number of radio and television stations and a movie company.
(MUSIC)
William Randolph Hearst and his wife Millicent were married in nineteen-oh-three.  They had five sons.  She remained married to him until her death.  However, Mr. Hearst spent almost thirty years of his life with Hollywood actress Marion Davies in San Simeon, California.  They met in nineteen seventeen and later lived together at San Simeon.  He started a movie company to produce movies for her.  Their relationship shocked the nation.
Mr. Hearst spent thirty years and thirty million dollars to build a huge home at San Simeon.  It has one hundred sixty-five rooms.  Mr. Hearst and Marion Davies entertained many famous people there.  He continually bought costly art objects to fill it.
By nineteen thirty-seven, Mr. Hearst's heavy spending threatened to ruin his publishing organization.  He was forced to sell much of his property and many art objects.  The economic recovery after World War Two saved what was left of his media organization.
When William Randolph Hearst died in nineteen fifty-one, he still owned what was then the largest newspaper company in America.  Today, the Hearst Corporation includes more than one hundred thirty separate businesses.  They include newspapers, magazines, radio and television stations and business media companies.  The communications business William Randolph Hearst began continues to influence and inform people around the world.
 (MUSIC)
 ANNOUNCER:
This Special English program was written by Cynthia Kirk. It was produced by Paul Thompson.   Your narrators were Steve Ember and Rich Kleinfeldt.  I'm Faith Lapidus.  Listen again next week for anotherPEOPLE IN AMERICA program on the Voice of America.