sexta-feira, 18 de fevereiro de 2011

American History: Stock Crash of 1929

Source: www.voanews.com

Crowds gather in the Wall Street district of Manhattan in reaction to the heavy losses on the stock market on October 24, 1929, or "Black Thursday"
Photo: AP
Crowds gather in the Wall Street district of Manhattan in reaction to the heavy losses on the stock market on October 24, 1929, or "Black Thursday

Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION – American history in VOA Special English.
The election of Herbert Hoover in nineteen twenty-eight made Americans more hopeful than ever about their future.
Hoover seemed to have just the right experience to lead the nation to more economic progress. He was an engineer and businessman who had served in the government as commerce secretary. He understood economics and had faith in the future of private business.
On a rainy day in March of nineteen twenty-nine, Hoover rode down Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington to become the new president. "I have no fears for the future of our country," he told the cheering crowd. "It is bright with hope."
This week in our series, Faith Lapidus and Bob Doughty tell more about the Republican administration of Herbert Hoover.
(MUSIC)
FAITH LAPIDUS: The clearest evidence of the public's faith in the economy is the stock market. And the New York Stock Exchange reacted to the new president with a wild increase in prices. During the months after Hoover's election, prices generally rose like a rocket. Stocks valued at one hundred dollars climbed to two hundred, then three hundred, four hundred. Men and women made huge amounts of money overnight.
Publications and economic experts advised Americans to buy stocks before prices went even higher. Time and again, people heard how rich they could become if they found and bought stocks for companies growing into industrial giants.
"Never sell the United States short," said one publication. Another just said, "Everybody ought to be rich."
BOB DOUGHTY: A number of economic experts worried about the sharp increase in stock prices that followed Hoover's election. The president himself urged stock market officials to make trading more honest and safe. And he approved a move by the Federal Reserve Board to increase the interest charged to banks.
However, both efforts failed to stop the growing number of Americans who were spending their money wildly on stocks.
Some experts pointed to danger signs in the economy during the summer of nineteen twenty-nine. The number of houses being built was dropping. Industries were reducing the amount of products that they held in their factories. The rate of growth in spending by average Americans was falling sharply. And industrial production, employment, and prices were down.
These experts warned that the American economy was just not strong enough to support such rapid growth in stock prices. They said there was no real value behind many of the high prices. They said a stock price could not increase four times while a company's sales stayed the same. They said the high prices were built on foolish dreams of wealth, not real value.
FAITH LAPIDUS: But the prices went still higher. Buyers fought with each other to pay more and more for company stocks. The average price of all stocks almost doubled in just one year.
It seemed everybody was buying stocks, even people with little money or economic training.
A clothing salesman got advice from a stock trader visiting his store and made two hundred thousand dollars. A nurse learned of a good company from someone in the hospital. She made thirty thousand dollars. There were thousands of such stories.
By early September, the stock market reached its high point of the past eighteen months. Shares of the Westinghouse company had climbed from ninety-one dollars to three hundred thirteen. The Anaconda Copper company had risen from fifty-four dollars to one hundred sixty-two. Union Carbide jumped from one hundred forty-five to four hundred thirteen.
Life was like a dream. But like any dream, it could not last forever.
(MUSIC)
BOB DOUGHTY: In September, nineteen twenty-nine, stock prices stopped rising.
During the next month and a half, stock prices fell, but only slowly. Then suddenly, at the end of October, the market crashed. Prices dropped wildly. Leading stocks fell five, ten, twenty dollars in a single day. Everyone tried to sell their stocks. But no one was buying. Fear washed across the stock market. People were losing money even faster than they had made it.
FAITH LAPIDUS: The stock market collapsed on Thursday, October twenty-fourth, nineteen twenty-nine. People remember the day as "Black Thursday," the day the dreams ended.
The day began with a wave of selling. People from across the country sent messages to their stock traders in New York. All the messages said the same thing: Sell! Sell the stocks at any price possible! But no one was buying. And so down the prices came.
The value of stock for the Montgomery Ward store dropped from eighty-three dollars to fifty in a single day. The RCA radio corporation fell from sixty-eight dollars to forty-four – down twenty-four dollars in just a few hours. Down the stocks fell, lower and lower.
Several of the country's leading bankers met to discuss ways to stop the disaster. They agreed to buy stocks in large amounts to stop the wave of selling. The bankers moved quickly. And for two days, prices held steady.
But then, like snow falling down the side of a mountain, the stocks dropped again. Prices went to amazingly low levels. One business newspaper said simply: "The present week has witnessed the greatest stock market disaster of all time."
(MUSIC)
BOB DOUGHTY: The stock market crash ruined thousands of Americans. In a few short weeks, traders lost thirty billion dollars, an amount almost as great as all the money the United States had spent in World War One.
Some businessmen could not accept what had happened. They jumped from the tops of buildings and killed themselves. In fact, one popular joke of the time said that hotel owners had to ask people if they wanted rooms for sleeping or jumping.
But the stock market crash was nothing to laugh about. It destroyed much of the money that Americans had saved. Even worse, it caused millions of people to worry and lose faith in the economy. They were not sure what to expect tomorrow. Business owners would not spend money for new factories or business operations. Instead, they decided to wait and see what would happen.
This reduced production and caused more workers to lose their jobs. Fewer workers meant fewer people with money to buy goods. And fewer people buying goods meant less need for factories to produce. So it went. In short, economic disaster.
FAITH LAPIDUS: Why did the stock market crash? One reason, people had been paying too much for stocks. Everyone believed that prices would go higher and higher forever. People paid more for stocks than the stocks were worth. They hoped to sell the stocks at even higher prices.
It was like a children's balloon that expands with air, blowing bigger and bigger until it bursts.
But there were other important reasons. Industrial profits were too high and wages too low. Five percent of the population owned one-third of all personal income. The average worker simply did not have enough money to buy enough of all the new goods that factories were producing. Another problem was that companies were not investing enough money in new factories and supplies.
There were also problems with the rules of the stock market itself. People were allowed to buy stocks when they did not have the money to do so.
BOB DOUGHTY: Several government economic policies also helped cause the stock market crash of nineteen twenty-nine. Government tax policies made the rich richer and the poor poorer. And the government did little to control the national money supply, even when the economy faced disaster.
The stock market crash marked the beginning of the Great Depression -- a long, slow, painful fall to the worst economic crisis in American history. The Depression would bring suffering to millions of people. It would cause major political changes. And it would be a major force in creating the conditions that led to World War Two.
We will look at the beginning of the Great Depression in our next program.
(MUSIC)
JIM TEDDER: Our program was written by David Jarmul. The narrators were Faith Lapidus and Bob Doughty. You can find our series online with transcripts, MP3s, podcasts and pictures 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 #17
6

quinta-feira, 17 de fevereiro de 2011

Pro-jovem, part 21, Ingles vip

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Source: www.ingvip.com
Use this material, very useful not only for Brazilian students or teachers but students worldwide can access this site. I really recommend, it worths visiting there. 
Boss:Good morning Mariana. How are you today?
Mariana: Not good. I have the flu(1)Boss: Really? How are you feeling?(2)
Mariana: 
My back hurts(3), my head(4) hurts, my nose is runny(5)Boss: Do you want to go home?
Mariana: No, I'm fine.
Boss: Well, if you need me, I'm at my office OK?

Mariana: Thanks for calling us
Workmate: Do you have the flu?
(6)Mariana: Yes, I do
Workmate: You should see a doctor(7). You can't work like that!
Mariana:  Yes
Boss: Mariana, your eyes are closing
Mariana: I don't feel good. I think I should(8) go to a doctor
Boss: I have a sister that is a doctor. Let me call her and set an appointment(9). Hello Sis! How are you? I'm fine,working a lot(10), and you? Listen, I have a friend that is not feeling good. Can she come to your office? OK, thanks Sis. She's coming over(11). OK bye bye. I'll call you later(12). All set(13) Mariana. She can see you right now(14) . You should go
Mariana: Thank you

                                      Vocabulary
 1. 
 Flu = gripe
 2. How are you feeling? = Como você está se sentindo?
 3. My back hurts = 
Minhas costas estão doendo
 4. Head = 
Cabeça
 5. My nose is runny =
 Meu nariz está escorrendo
 6. Do you have the flu?  = 
Você está gripada?
 7. You should see a doctor = 
 Você deveria ver um médico
 8. 
 I think I should = Eu acho que eu deveria
 9. Set an appointment = Marcar um horário
 10. Working a lot = 
Trabalhando muito
 11. She's coming over = 
 Ela está indo
 12. I'll call you later =
 Eu te ligo mais tarde
 13. All set = 
Tudo marcado
 14. Right now = 
Agora



Passing this information twitting for friends, thank you for your help in advance.

Science

Source: Actual magazine

ICE swimming

What happens in the body?


       Blood vessels contract, blood pressure rises.
       Blood circulation increases.
       Pulse slows down.
       Skin temperature fails.
       Stress hormone level rises (noradrenalin, kortisol).
       Sympathic nerve system is activated, offering a pain-reducing effect.
      
Special effect: Person does not feel cold for some time after dip, but after 10-20 minutes, body’s resources get depleted and one starts chilling and shivering.

       Sauna use is common, cycling from sauna into water and back.
       Average duration of dip: 10 seconds to several minutes.
       Risks: Large temperatures difference may have negative impact on cardiovascular system.
       Don’t ice swim alone.

National traditions
       Ice swimming is known in Northern Europe, Russia, China, parts of North America.

Therapeutic effects

       May build resistance to diseases such as flu.
       Strong anti-depressant effect.
       May help high or low blood pressure suffers.
       May help in suffers of chronic gastrointestinal diseases.

Ice swimmers recommend swimming regularly (at least 2-3 times a week) for these effects.

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Tangled: magic hair and adventure

Source: www.maganews.com.br

Movies
Tangled: magic hair and adventure
This entertaining animated film tells the story of Rapunzel, a teenager with very long, magic hair, who lives alone in a tower

       
    Tangled [1] was the most-watched film in Brazil in the first three weeks of January. Produced by Disney, the film is inspired by the fairytale [2] 
“Rapunzel,” written in the 19th century by the Brothers Grimm.  In the original story, Rapunzel is separated from her parents as a baby and raised [3] by a witch [4] called Mother Gothel.  She is trapped [5] in a high tower for several years, unable [6]  to cut her hair, until she isrescued [7] by a prince. In the version created by Disney, Rapunzel is a beautiful teenage girl with magical, 21-meter-long, golden hair. 
There is no prince charming [8], but there is a bumbling thief[9], called Flynn Ryder. After another robbery [10], he flees [11] in search of a safe place to hide. But he chose the wrong place: the tower where Rapunzel is being kept. At first Rapunzel is suspicious [12] of the strange visitor, but after a while she sympathizes with him. She realizes [13] that the good looking [14] thief may help get her out of the tower to learn about a world that she has never known. Together they will experience great adventures and fun along with two other charming characters: a chameleon [15] and a white horse.


Matéria publicada na edição de fevereiro (número 59) da Revista Maganews.
Áudio – David Hatton

Vocabulary
 1 tangled – enrolado (to tangle = enrolar)
2 fairytale – conto de fadas
3 raised – criada
4 witch – bruxa
5 trapped – aqui = confinada
6 unable – aqui = sem poder
7 to rescue – resgatar / salvar
8 prince charming – príncipe encantado
9 bumbling thief – ladrão atrapalhado
10 robbery – roubo / furto
11 to flee – fugir
12 suspicious – suspeita / desconfia
13 to realize – perceber
14 good looking – bonito
15 chameleon – camaleão

quarta-feira, 16 de fevereiro de 2011

Dark Chocolate


Researchers found that six weeks of daily consumption of a dark chocolate cocoa mix significantly improved the blood vessel health of those who participated in the study.

The study is the latest in a growing number that link reduced heart disease risk to flavonoids in dark chocolate and other food and beverages, such as red wine, green tea and dark colored fruits and vegetables.

“There are hundreds if not thousands of flavonoids in every plant substance we eat”, said James Stein, director of preventive cardiology at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.

“This is a very hot are. This study confirms what other investigators have found”.

Flavonoids have been found to relax blood vessels and thereby improve blood flow, inhibit platelets from sticking together in the blood, and have beneficial antioxidant effect. What still is not known in whether regularly eating dark chocolate, especially with its sugar and fat content, eventually will lead to an unhealthy weight gain that would erase the beneficial effects of the flavonoids found in the cocoa.

Cocoa is one of the most concentrated sources of the flavonoids catechin and epicatechin.

Consuming foods such as dark chocolate and red wine can be a double-edged sword, Stein said.

They shouldn’t be considered healthy foods, he said. “They are treats and shouldn’t be staples in the diet.”

“If they are used to replace a high-calories food with little or no nutrition, such as soda, then they may be beneficial,” he said.

The study involved 39 people with an average age of 52 who, on average, were mildly obese.

There were three six week sessions, and each person consumed a separate preparation in each session: a Hershey dark chocolate cocoa mix with sugar (230 calories); a Hershey mix that was artificially sweetened (45 calories).

Doctors used ultrasound to measure blood flow in an artery in the arm, a test that corresponds well to heart disease risk.

The artificially sweetened cocoa mix was associated with about a 37 percent improvement in blood flow. The sugared cocoa was associated with a 23 percent improvement, suggesting that sugar actually interferes with the beneficial actions of flavonoids. The placebo mix resulted in a 12 percent reduction in blood flow.
This tells you that it (cocoa) is cardio-protective said lead author Valentine Njike, a physician and researcher at Yale University School of Medicine.

He noted that the biggest effect was found with the cocoa that did not have sugar. And he said that other research indicates that milk chocolate does not have a beneficial effect.

Rosenson also said that the beneficial blood flow effect of cocoa usually diminishes with six hours, meaning that it might have to be consumed several times a day to obtain a continuous improvement.

For that reason and due to concern about calories, the ultimate answer may come in the form of a so-called biopharmaceutical, a pill that contains concentrated amounts of the desired flavonoids and no fat or sugar, he said,AE.

Curiosities about chocolate:

Chocolate drops blood pressure

A square of dark chocolate a day reduces blood pressure in healthy people ages 56 to 63 have borderline hypertension.

How much benefit?
Average drop of 2.9 in systolic and 1,9 in diastolic blood pressure.

Why does it happen?

Cocoa contains polyphenois. which make blood vessels relax.

High-calorie?
One square (6,3g) of chocolate contains only 30 calories.

Vocabulary:

Flavonoid (s): Any of a large group of water-soluble plant pigments, including the anthocyanins, which are beneficial to health (qualquer membro do grande grupo de pigmentos de plantas solúveis em água, como as antocianina que fazem bem a saúde).

Hot area: New and exciting area or issue, of intense and immediate interest (area ou tema novo e empolgante que provoca interesse imediato e intenso).

Platelet (s): A tiny colorless disk-shaped particle found in large quantities in the blood and playing an important part in the clotting process (minuscule particular incolor em formato de disco encontrada em grandes quantidades no sangue e que desempenha um papel importante no processo de coagulação).

Double-edged sword: Something that has or can have both favorable and unfavorable consequence (algo que tem ou pode ter consequências favoráveis e desfavoráveis).

Treat (s): An especially unexpected source of joy, delight, or amusement (fonte inesperada de alegria, prazer ou diversão).

Staple (s): Basic food (alimento básico).

Whey: The watery liquid that separetes from the solid part of milk when it turns sour or when enzymes are added in cheese making (liquido aquoso que se separa da parte sólida do leite quando este azeda ou quando enzimas são adicionadas para a produção do queijo).

The lead author: The most important or main author: O autor é o mais importante ou o principal

Diminishe (s): decrease in size, extent, or range (diminue em tamanho, extensão ou alcance).

What's their real name?

So sorry dear readers, I made mistake, this text is available on audio, that's why I'm re-posting it. Liked it, please RT and promote it for friends.

Source: www.speakup.com.br
Language level: Intermediate
Standard: British accent

DYLAN MADONNA YUSUF ISLAM EMINEM SHAKIRA SADE TINA TURNER DEAN MARTIN What’s Their Real Name?

 Madonna
EMINEM


Why do stars and celebrities have such weird names? How do they choose stage names of pseudonyms? Are they conscious attempts to sound different?

SIMPLICITY AND STYLE

Some unusual names are in fact real. Madonna Ciccone decided that her first name alone made her instantly identifiable. So did Bjork Gudmundsdottir, Prince Nelson, Anastacia Newkirk and Shakira Ripoll. Cherilyn Sarkisian simplified hers to Cher. Stephen Patrick Morrissey decided his surname was enough to make him famous.

What if someone else already has your name? David Jones changed his name to David Bowie for two reasons: the first was that he liked the famous Bowie knife; the second was that the Monkees singer was called Davy Jones. The Smiths’ guitarist Johnny Marr changed his spelling to avoid confusion with The Buzzocks’ drummer, John Maher.

Reginald Kenneth Dwight sounds boring and old-fashioned, so Elton John created his glamorous moniker from blues musicians, Elton Dean and Long John Baldry.

Thomas Jones woodward’s manager simply renamed him Tom Jones emphasizing his Welsh background and recalling the sex main character in the 1963 Oscar-winning film of the same name.

Others make their names less exotic. Dino Crocetti tried being Dino Martini but later settled on the more American-sounding Dean Martin. Robert Zimmerman invoked Wild West character, Matt Dillon, and Welsh poet, Dylan Thomas, by renaming himself Bob Dylan.

Farrokh Bulsara, renamed Freddie by English schoolfriends, chose Mercury (the planet and metal) to represent his shimmering rock star image. Steve Demetre Georgiou hid Greek origins with the name Cat Stevens; now he prefers Yusuf Islam. John Deutschendorf doesn’t sound like a country singer: John Denver does. Georgios Kyriacos Panayiotou is difficult to remember, but George Michael sounds like a star.

NICKNAMES & HANDLES

Some mistakes simply “stick.” Did Gordon Summer choose the name Sting because of his spiky politics? No, his old jazz band leader re-christened him because of his black and yellow stripe sweater.

Paul Hewson was nicknamed Bono Vox (good voice) after a Dublin hearing-aid shop, as his voice seemed so loud, even deaf people would hear it. Bono in turn re-baptized Dave Evans, U2’s guitarist, The Edge because of his sharp features and outsiders viewpoint.

Rap artists use nicknames or “handles” to describe their opportunity. O’Shea Jackson is cool as an Ice Cube.  Marshall Mathers pronounced his real initials like M&Ms (the chocolates), to invent the name Eminem; he is a.k.a (as known as) Slim Shady, slang for a whit person who acts as though he is black. Some names invoke feelings or attitudes. Declan MacManus joined the king of rock’n’ roll’s first name with his mother’s Irish surname, to make Elvis Costello.  Richard Starkey wore rings and liked the Ringo Kid in John Wayne’s western, Stagecoach, so he became Ringo Starr.

ATTITUDE PROBLEM

Rock stars love alternative names, Vincent Damon Furrier may be the reincarnation of a 17th century witch named Alice Cooper; or did he adopt this girlish name to clash with his controversial gothic style? James Osterberg, formerly of The Iguanas, borrowed his surname form his friend, Popp, who lost his eyebrows, after chemotherapy: perhaps this inspired Iggy Pop’s lam rock look.   Guns’n’Roses singer William Rose changed his name to Axl Rose, an unusual name, but not shocking – until you realize it’s an anagram of Oral Sex. Sex Pistol John Lydon earned the name Johnny Rotten from his bad teeth and bad attitude. When Rotten’s hamster bit John Simon Ritchie, he earned the ironic name, Sid Vicious. Although the drug-addicted bass player was later arrested for his girlfriend’s murder, Rotten Claimed that Sid “couldn’t punch his way out of a paper bag.”

Punks also change their names for more practical reasons. Joe Strummer of The Clash and Rat Scabies of The Damned couldn’t use their real names (John Gordon Mellor and Christopher Miller), in case they lost their unemployment benefit.

More Pseudonymous Pop Stars (no audio)

Rick Martin             Enrique Martins Morales
Tina Turner             Annie Mae Bullock
Dido                       Dido Florian Cloud de Bounevialle Armstrong
Sade                      Helen Folasade Adu
Pink (or Plnk)          Alecia Moore
Syd Barrett             Roger Barrett
Michael Bolton         Michael Bolotin
Fatboy Slim            Quetin Cook (a.k.a Norman Cook)
Moby                     Richard Melville Hall
Shoggy                  Orville Richard Burrell
Snoop Dogg            Cordazer Calvin Broadus
LL Cool J                James Todd Smith
Grandmaster Flash   Joseph Saddler
Vanilla Ice              Robert Van Winkie
Pluff Daddy             Sean John Combs
Marilyn Manson               Brian Warner
Shania Twain          Elleen Regina Edwards
Dusty Springfield             Mary O’Brien
Joni Mitchell            Roberta Joan Anderson
Lou reed                Louis Firbank