quinta-feira, 30 de setembro de 2010

The Remarkable legacy, Mahatma Gandhi.


Language Level: Intermediate
Standard: American Accent


WHAT WOULD GANDHI THINK?

2008 marks the 60th anniversary of the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi, the father of the Indian Nation, but also of the movement for non-violent resistance. Every year on January 30th, India stops for a two-minute silence in his memory and this year’s ceremony was particularly intense. Indian communities throughout the world also held silences. Indian has certainly changed in the 60 years since Gandhi’s death and today the country, like China, is seen as an economic powerhouse.

Speak Up asked the Indian Consul general Sarvajit Chakravarti, what Gandhi, who preached both independence and self-reliance, would make of the country’s current boom:

Servant Charkravarti
(Indian Accent)

I think he would have been quite proud, but not entirely so because he said, and his message to all of us, not only in India, but all over the world, it that our work of improvement of society is never done until we have succeeded in wiping every tear from every eye. So, as long as that does not happen, we haven’t fished. So we have to continue our efforts to improve the quality of life of our people, in a way that improves the life of the planet as a whole, as well.

INCLUSION

India’s annual economic growth rate is said to be in the region of 9 per cent, but how long will this last?

Servajit Chakravarti:

Well, we started our economic liberalization in 1991, more or less, and we expect to keep it going as long as is necessary, but to keep it going in a way that is socially inclusive, that doesn’t create even more disparities between our various economic classes. People who have should not have so much that they deny others the right to have anything at all, so the effort now of the government of India, and of the people, is to continue to move ahead, maintain the growth levels, if possible improve the growth levels, but in a socially inclusive manner which does not cause material harm to those who have not yet benefited fully from this process.

GLOBAL REFERENCE

In conclusion we asked the consul general to talk about Gandhi’s status as a global icon:

Sarvajit Chakravarti:

Well, he was, I think, a global citizen. All his idea about political change and social change evolved as a result of his experiences in India, in Britain and in South Africa. He spent 21 years of his life in Africa. And that is why he not only succeeded in creating a mass political movement that brought India her Independence, but also initiated a system, a force, a philosophy that brought freedom to much of the rest of the world, the latest example of which, politically, has been South Africa. So Gandhi to us, and in my personal belief, is a remains a global icon.

PART II American History: Foreign Events Begin to Shape Wilson’s Presidency

Source: http://www.voanews.com
Woodrow Wilson and his cabinet seated around table, 1913
Photo: loc.gov
Woodrow Wilson and his cabinet seated around table, 1913

 

Or download MP3 (Right-click or option-click and save link) 


BOB DOUGHTY:  Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION -- American history in VOA Special English.
Woodrow Wilson's first year as president showed the American people that they had elected a strong and effective leader. Wilson took office in nineteen thirteen. He moved quickly to fulfill his campaign promises. He won congressional approval for lower import taxes, a new tax on earnings, and restrictions on the power of big companies.
These were some of the most important economic reforms the nation had seen in many years.
This week in our series, Larry West and Maurice Joyce continue the story of Wilson's administration.
LARRY WEST:   Most of Woodrow Wilson's political victories were on national issues. He had little experience with international issues. But foreign events soon began to demand more and more of his time. With all of his successes at home, it is a surprising fact of history that his presidency is remembered best for its foreign policy.
The story of Woodrow Wilson's foreign policy is full of high ideas and political bravery. But it also is a story of fierce struggle and lost hopes. It is a story that begins across America's southern border--in Mexico.
MAURICE JOYCE:   At that time, Mexico had been ruled for many years by Porfirio Diaz. As Diaz grew older, his power began to weaken. In nineteen eleven, a revolt broke out. It was led by Francisco Madero, the leader of a land reform movement. Diaz understood he could not win. He resigned and fled the country.
Madero declared himself president. However, powerful groups in Mexico opposed him. In a short time, one of his own generals, Victoriano Huerta, arrested him. Madero was murdered soon after Huerta seized power.
President Wilson refused to recognize Huerta's government. He believed other forces would rise up against him. Wilson was right. Another revolt began, led by General Venustiano Carranza.
LARRY WEST:  Wilson offered aid to Carranza. Carranza rejected the offer. He was afraid of American interference in Mexico. He told Wilson that Mexican troops would do all the fighting. He only wanted guns and ammunition.
American forces did, however, get involved in the conflict. President Wilson learned that a ship from Germany was bringing supplies to the Huerta government. The ship would land at the Mexican port of Vera Cruz. Wilson ordered the United States Navy to seize and occupy the port. The move started a storm of criticism in the United States and throughout Latin America.
(MUSIC)
MAURICE JOYCE:  Many people denounced President Wilson. They called him an imperialist and a fool. They asked: what right did the United States have to interfere in Mexico. Wilson finally stopped American military action in Mexico. He tried to settle the dispute at an international conference at Niagara Falls, Canada. The effort failed. The conference did not produce a settlement.
While the diplomats were talking, Carranza's revolutionary forces were fighting. They moved on Mexico City, the capital. President Huerta fled. Carranza formed a new government.
LARRY WEST:  The new government began to split apart almost immediately. Another general, Francisco "Pancho" Villa, tried to seize power. He forced Carranza out of Mexico City. Then he formed his own government. President Wilson recognized Villa and his government.
Carranza, however, refused to give up. Day by day, his army grew stronger. He forced Villa to retreat. Then President Wilson recognized Carranza's government. Like Carranza, Villa refused to give up. He decided to try to start a war between Mexico and the United States.
Pancho Villa wanted the United States to attack Carranza. Then he would step in to lead Mexican forces in battle. That would make him a hero. With this plan in mind, Pancho Villa attacked an American town across the border in Texas. He killed nineteen persons.
MAURICE JOYCE:  President Wilson immediately ordered a large American force to find and punish Villa. At first, Carranza welcomed the move. Villa was his enemy. He wanted him captured. Then Carranza began to fear that the American troops might threaten his government. He demanded the withdrawal of all American soldiers from Mexico.
Tensions increased between the two countries. Villa's forces attacked another town in Texas. President Wilson considered asking Congress to declare war. But the crisis cooled down before then. American forces were withdrawn. And the people of Mexico elected a new government. They chose Carranza as president.
(MUSIC)
LARRY WEST:  As President Wilson dealt with the situation in Mexico, trouble began to surface in another part of the world. The crisis was in Europe. Tensions were growing between several groups of nations. They were on the edge of what would become World War One.
The major powers in Europe had been threatening each other for years. But they had not fought for more than forty years. Most Americans believed there would never be another European war. Such a war would be unbelievably destructive. Millions would die. No nation would win.
MAURICE JOYCE:  Europe depended on a balance of power to keep the peace. On one side were the central powers -- Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy. On the other side were the members of the triple entente -- Britain, France, and Russia.
Each side made every effort to win the support of Europe's smaller nations. A number of nations refused to join either side. The neutrals included Switzerland, Belgium, the Netherlands, and the Scandinavian countries.
LARRY WEST:  This political balance did not prevent the major nations from competing with each other for colonies and economic power. They competed all over the world. In China, in the Middle East, in Africa -- everywhere money could be invested. Competition was especially sharp in the Balkans. This was the area of Europe between the Adriatic and Black Seas.
Many nations claimed special interests in the Balkans. And several Balkan countries were fighting each other. The whole continent seemed ready to explode.
MAURICE JOYCE:  The spark that set off the explosion came in the city of Sarajevo. The date was June twenty-eighth, nineteen fourteen. Sarajevo had been taken over by Austria. And the Archduke of Austria -- Ferdinand -- had come for a visit. Ferdinand was expected to become the next emperor of Austria.
Seven young extremists from the area decided to assassinate the Archduke to protest Austrian control. One of the extremists threw a bomb at the royal family. The bomb missed its target. But another extremist shot at the group. He killed both the Archduke and the Archduke's wife.
LARRY WEST:  The assassinations in Sarajevo started a series of events that quickly brought war to all of Europe. Soon the continent was covered with armies, battles, and death. The war in Europe forced President Wilson to face the greatest crisis of his presidency.
That will be our story next week.
(MUSIC)
BOB DOUGHTY:  Our program was written by Frank Beardsley. The narrators were Larry West and Maurice Joyce.
You can find our series online with transcripts, MP3s, podcasts and images at voaspecialenglish.com. You can also follow us on Facebook and Twitter at VOA Learning English. Join us again next week for THE MAKING OF A NATION -- an American history series in VOA Special English.
___
This is program #156 of THE MAKING OF A NATIO
N

quarta-feira, 29 de setembro de 2010

Life after Bollywood



Life after Bollywood

Source: Speak Up, Ed 260
English Level: Intermediate
British and Indian Standard Accent


G.S.Rajan is an Indian musician. Earlier in his career he composed music for the Bollywood Film Industry. But he subsequently fell in love with his country’s classical musical tradition and dedicated his energies to studying and playing the work of its finest composers. A flautist, he also performs his own work. Speak Up met with him when he recently played at a special “monsoon concert”. We began by talking about the fact that monsoons are seen as a source of celebration in Indian Culture:

WATER MUSIC

G.S. Rajan

(Indian Accent)

In Indian it’s different. It’s like a celebration because a tropical climate, a lot of sun and dry climate, and when the monsoon comes, it cools down the place and the rivers gets a lot of water and it’s good for irrigation. As far as music is concerned, we have monsoon ragas, ragas means a scale, a combination of notes is raga, so special melodies for monsoons, special folk songs, even the tribal’s (tribal people) used to have songs to welcome the monsoon and they used to dance while it’s raining, so a lot of importance for monsoon.

GREAT NAMES

We then asked him to talk about India’s classical music tradition.

G.S. Rajan
One of the most respected composers, who’s treated as a saint in India, is Tyagaraja. At the moment we have more than 50.000 of his compositions available, and he was not bothered about the world, he was in a different world, singing and praying to God. He never sat and composed, it was just coming out of him. So what we have is more than 50.000 compositions are available of one composer; that is Tyagaraja.

NORTHERN SONGS

Then, we have, in the Northern side, the great composer and singer, Tanser. Tanser has created a lot of compositions, he has used ragas of the five elements, which is made of the human body, the fire, the sky, the earth, the wind, so all that has been exploited by, of course, all the composer. There are the two main important composers, one from South and one from North, worshiped like Gods in Indian classical music

The Man and his Music (No audio)

The two composers mentioned by G.S. Rajan in this interview are the Carnatic Musician Tyagaraja (1767-1847) and the Hindustani musician Tansen (1493 or 1506). In his concerts, G.S. Rajan likes to play their work, as well as some of his own “raga symphonies”. For further information, visit G.S. Rajan’s official website: http://www.malabarian.com As he explain, the site is named after the Malabar coast, the region in Southwest India (today it forms part of Kerala State) where he was born.


Moon Hoax Jonathan talks about how some people think NASA never went to the moon and his thoughts on the matter.




image
1055 Moon Hoax
Jonathan talks about how some people think NASA never went to the moon and his thoughts on the matter.

terça-feira, 28 de setembro de 2010

Business Pet shop, a great business

Business
Pet shop, a great business
Credits www.maganews.com.br
Brazilians’ love for animals is boosting the number- and profits – of pet shops 

   
According to a survey done by *Assofauna, almost two thirds
 of Brazilian families belonging to classes A, B and C have a dog at home (or other animals, such as cats or birds). They treat their animals as if they were members of the family. That is, today, Brazilians do not limit themselves just to washing, feeding, playing with and caring for their animals. They are increasingly looking for specialized pet shops to buy the best products for their animals. Furthermore, many people are taking their animals to have dental work done, to get special diets to lose weight, to have beauty treatment, and they even have acupuncture done on their animals. This love Brazilians have for their animals, mainly dogs, is boosting the number of pet shops in this country. In November 2004 there were eight thousand of them in Brazil. Today this number has reached nine thousand. Since 1995 this sector has been growing, on average, by 17% a year and turns over about US$ 1.5 billion a year, according to Assofauna data.


* Associação dos Revendedores de Produtos, Prestadores de Serviço e Defesa destinados ao Uso Animal.



Country has large dog population
Brazil is the third country in the world ranking of dog populations: 25 million, behind just the USA and China. As for cats, there are 11 million of them in the country and about 4 million pet birds.

Vocabulary


to boost – impulsionar / fazer aumentar
profit – lucro (s)
pet shop – loja especializada em produtos para animais domésticos
to belong – pertencer
cat - gato (a)
bird – pássaro
to treat – tratar
to feed – alimentar
to care for – tomar conta / cuidar de
increasingly – cada vez mais
furthermore – além disso
to turn over – aqui = movimentar / lucrar

Leonardo Da Vinci, part II, Ingles VIP

Leonardo da Vinci - Part II    audio        www.inglesvip.xpg.com.br


1.-Leonardo’s first known portrait now hangs in the National Gallery in Washington, D.C. He made this painting of a young woman named Ginevra de’Benci around fourteen seventy-four. The woman has a pale face with dark hair. In the distance, Leonardo painted the Italian countryside.

2. He soon received attention for his extraordinary artistic skills. Around fourteen seventy-five he was asked to draw an angel in Verrocchio’s painting “Baptism of Christ.” One story says that when Verrocchio saw Leonardo’s addition to the painting, he was so amazed by his student’s skill, that he said he would never paint again.

3. Leonardo once said the following about actively using one’s mental abilities: “Iron rusts from disuse, stagnant water loses its purity and in cold weather becomes frozen; even so does inaction sap the vigor of the mind.” His mind was so active that he did not often finish his many projects.

4. One religious painting he never finished was called “Adoration of the Magi”. He was hired to make the painting for a religious center. The complex drawing he made to prepare for the painting is very special. It shows how carefully he planned his art works. It shows his deep knowledge of geometry, volume and depth. He drew the many people in the painting without clothes so that he could make sure that their bodies would be physically correct once covered.

5. Around fourteen eighty-two, Leonardo moved to Milan. There, he worked for the city’s ruler, Ludovico Sforza. This ruler invited Leonardo to Milan not as an artist, but as a musician. Historians say Leonardo was one of the most skillful lyre players in all of Italy. But he also continued his work as a painter. He also designed everything from festivals to weapons and a sculpture for Ludovico Sforza.

6. One famous work from Leonardo’s Milan period is called “Virgin of the Rocks.”  It shows Jesus as a baby along with his mother, Mary, and John the Baptist also as a baby. They are sitting outside in anunusual environment. Leonardo used his careful observations of nature to paint many kinds of plants. In the background are a series of severe rock formations. This painting helped Leonardo make it clear to the ruler and people of Milan that he was a very inventive and skillful artist.

7. Leonardo later made his famous painting “The Last Supper” for the dining room of a religious center in Milan. He combined his studies in light, math, psychology, geometry and anatomy for this special work. He designed the painting to look like it was part of the room. The painting shows a story from the Bible in which Jesus eats a meal with his followers for the last time. Jesus announces that one of them willbetray him.

8. The work received wide praise and many artists tried to copy its beauty. One modern art expert described Leonardo’s “Last Supper” as the foundation of western art. Unfortunately, Leonardo experimented with a new painting method for this work. The paint has suffered extreme damage over the centuries.

9.  In addition to the portrait of Ginevra de’Benci that we talked about earlier, Leonardo also painted several other non-religious paintings of women. One painting of Cecilia Gallerani has come to be known as “Lady with an Ermine” because of the small white animal she is holding. This woman was the lover of Milan’s ruler, Ludovico Sforza.

10. However, Leonardo’s most famous portrait of a woman is called the “Mona Lisa.” It is now in the collection of the Louvre museum in Paris. He painted this image of Lisa Gherardini starting around fifteen-oh-three. She was the wife of a wealthy businessman from Florence named Francesco del Giocondo. It is from him that the painting takes its Italian name, “La Gioconda.”

11. Lisa Gherardini is sitting down with her hands crossed in her lap. She looks directly at the painter. She seems to be smiling ever so slightly. A great deal of mystery surrounds the painting. Experts are not sure about how or why Leonardo came to paint the work. But they do know that he never gave it to the Giocondo family. He kept the painting with him for the rest of his life, during his travels through France and Italy.

12. Leonardo da Vinci died in France in fifteen nineteen. A friend who was with him at his death said this of the great man’s life: “May God Almighty grant him eternal peace. Every one laments the loss of a man, whose like Nature cannot produce a second time.”