quarta-feira, 30 de março de 2011

GOD'S GASTRONOMY


Source: www.speakup.com.br
GOD’S GASTRONOMY

Brother Anselm’s golden rule for cooking at Glenstal Abbey is: variety. At dinner the monks might have Irish Stew, Hungarian goulash, Indonesian Curry –or Italian crespelle as on the evening I arrived. At Glenstal, dinner eaten in silence, only broken by the sound of the cutlery and the daily reading.

MONASTIC LIFE

Glenstal Abbey is a monastery with many faces. The exterior looks a bit like Windsor Castle. Once through the ancient gate. Hogwarts School from the Harry Potter films comes to mind though the church is modern. Glenstal is in fact also a boarding school for boys, at also a boarding school, for boys, although they seem so well-behaved that you hardly hear them. Benedictine rule teaches peace, work and prayer – the famous “Ora et Labora” – and hospitality. Visitors can come to Glenstal for retreats, to work on their own projects or just to relax for a few days.

They can take part in religious services, listen to Gregorian Chants, admire a collection of priceless Russian icons in an underground chapel and walk the beautiful  grounds with many ancient trees. The abbey’s walled 17th century garden has a Bible Garden, with biblical plant from A to Z. A short walk brings you to a Mass Rock where Mass was said in secret during the period of the anti-Catholic Penal Laws.

FRIENDS AND FAMILY

Brother Anselm’s career as a monk is as unusual as the monastery itself with its relaxed atmosphere, full o Irish banter. Anselm, who was born Michael Hurt, entered a monastery in England after 12 years, he left, married and had children, but realised that religious life was the life for him. So when Anselm officially became a member of the Glenstal community of his 65th birthday, it was in the company of his family, including his five-year-old granddaughter!

TAVEL INFO

Glenstal Abbey www.glenstalabbey.com is located in Murroe in the north-east corner of Co. Limerick, close to the Co. Tipperary border. The nearest airport is Shannon Airport www.shannonairport.com . Murroe  is a short drive from Limerick and a 3 to 4-hour drive from Dublin. There is a daily local Murroe-Limerick bus, too. Payment for the accommodation is made anonymous and by ability, but a suggested figure is € 65 per day. All meals are provided. For more information: www.discoverireland.com .

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Source: Family Album USA

terça-feira, 29 de março de 2011

My heart will go on


By: Celine Dion
Source: www.englishexercises.org

My Heart Will Go On

Every  in my dreams
I see you, I feel you
That is how I know  go on

Far across the 
And spaces between us
You have come to you go on

Near, far, wherever you are
 that the heart does go on
Once more you open the
And you're here in my heart
And my  will go on and on
 

Love can touch us one 
And last for a lifetime
And  let go till we're gone
 was when I loved you
One true time I hold to
In my  we'll always go on

Near, far, wherever you are
 that the heart does go on
Once more you open the 
And you're here in my heart
And my  will go on and on

You're here, there's  I fear
And I know that my heart will go on
We'll stay forever this 
You are safe in my heart
And my  will go on and on

Henry Ford part II

Source: www.manythings.org originally posted by http://www.voanews.com

Henry Ford Made the Automobile Industry an Important Part of the Nation's Economy

PEOPLE IN AMERICA -- a program in Special English on the Voice of America.  Every week at this time, we tell the story of a person important in the history of the United States. Today, Steve Ember and Frank Oliver complete the story of industrialist Henry Ford.
(MUSIC)
In nineteen-oh-three, a doctor in Detroit, Michigan, bought the first car from the Ford Motor Company. That sale was the beginning of Henry Ford's dream. He wanted to build good, low-priced cars for the general public. As he said many times: "I want to make a car that anybody can buy."  To keep prices low, Henry Ford decided that he would build just one kind of car. He called it the "Model T. "
The "Model T" was ready for sale in October, nineteen-oh-eight.  The "Model T" cost eight hundred fifty dollars. It was a simple machine that drivers could depend on. Doctors bought the "Model T. " So did farmers. Even criminals. They considered it the fastest and surest form of transportation. Americans loved the "Model T. " They wrote stories and songs about it.
Thousands of "Model T's" were built in the first few years. The public wanted the car. And Henry Ford made more and more.
To Make the "Model T,' Ford built the largest factory of its time. Inside the factory, car parts moved to the workers exactly when they needed them. Other factories moved some parts to the workers.  But Ford was the first to design his factory completely around this system. Production rose sharply.
As production rose, Ford lowered prices. By nineteen sixteen, the price had dropped to three hundred forty-five dollars.
The last step in Ford's production success was to raise his workers' pay. His workers had always earned about two dollars for ten hours of work. That was the same daily rate as at other factories.
With wages the same everywhere, factory workers often changed jobs. Henry Ford wanted loyal workers who would remain. He raised wages to five dollars a day.
That made Henry Ford popular with working men. He became popular with car buyers in nineteen thirteen when he gave back fifty dollars to each person who had bought a Ford car. Henry Ford was demonstrating his idea that if workers received good wages, they became better buyers. And if manufactures sold more products, they could lower prices and still earn money.
This system worked for Ford because people continued to demand his "Model T. " And they had the money to buy it. But what would happen when people no longer wanted the "Model T," or did not have the money?
(MUSIC)
In nineteen nineteen, Henry was involved in a dispute with the other people who owned stock in the Ford Motor Company. In the end, Henry bought the stock of the other investors. He gained complete control of the company.
The investors did not do badly, however. An investment of ten thousand dollars when the company was first established produced a return of twenty-five million dollars.
A few years later, another group of investors offered Ford one thousand million dollars for the company. But he was not interested in selling. He wanted complete control of the company that had his name. In a sense, Henry Ford was the company.
Henry's son, Edsel, was named president of the company before nineteen twenty. No one truly believed that Edsel was running the company. Whatever Edsel said, people believed he was speaking for his father.
In nineteen twenty-three, fifty-seven percent of the cars produced in America were "Model T" fords. About half the cars produced in the world were Fords. Taxicabs in Hong Kong. Most of the cars in South America. Never before -- or since -- has one car company so controlled world car production.
The success of the Ford Motor Company permitted Henry Ford to work on other projects.  He became a newspaper publisher. He bought a railway. He built airplanes. He helped build a hospital. He even ran for the United States Senate.
Some of Henry's projects were almost unbelievable. For example, he tried to end World War One by sailing to Europe with a group of peace supporters.
(MUSIC)
While Henry Ford enjoyed his success, a dangerous situation was developing. Other companies began to sell what only Ford had been selling: good, low-priced cars.  Ford's biggest competitor was the General Motors Company. General Motors produced the Chevrolet automobile.
Ford's "Model T" was still a dependable car. But it had not changed in years. People said the "Model T" engine was too loud. They said it was too slow.
The Chevrolet, however, had a different look every year. And you could pay for one over a long period of time. Ford demanded full payment at the time of sale. Ford's share of the car market began to fall.
Everyone at Ford agreed that the "Model T" must go. Henry Ford disagreed. And it was his decision that mattered. Finally, in nineteen twenty-six, even Henry admitted that the age of the "Model T" was over. A new Ford was needed. A year later, the "Model T" was gone.
Strangely enough, people mourned its end. They did not want to buy it anymore. But they recognized that the "Model T" was the last of the first cars in the brave new world of automobile development.
The success of Ford's new cars did not last long. After nineteen-thirty, Ford would always be second to General Motors.
(MUSIC)
In nineteen twenty-nine, the United States suffered a great economic recession. Many businesses failed. Millions of people lost their jobs. In nineteen thirty-one, the Ford Motor Company sold only half as many cars as it had the year before. It lost thirty-seven million dollars. Working conditions at Ford grew worse.
In nineteen thirty-two, hungry, unemployed men marched near the Ford factory. Police, firefighters and Ford security guards tried to stop them with sticks, high-pressure water and guns. Four of the marchers died, and twenty were wounded.
Newspapers all over the United States condemned the police, firefighters and security guards for attacking unarmed men. And to make a bad situation worse, Ford dismissed all workers who attended funeral services for the dead.
More violence was to come. For several years, automobile workers had been attempting to form a labor union. Union leaders negotiated first with America's two other major automobile makers: the Chrysler Company and General Motors. Those companies quickly agreed to permit a union in their factories. That left Ford alone to fight against the union. And fight he did.
In nineteen thirty-seven, union organizers were passing out pamphlets to workers at the Ford factory. Company security guards struck. They were led by the chief of security, Harry Bennett.
Harry Bennett knew nothing about cars. But he did know what Henry Ford wanted done. And he did it. Bennett's power came from Henry. The only person who might have had the power to stop Bennett was Henry's son, Edsel, who was president of the company. But Edsel himself was fighting Henry and his unwillingness to change.
Bennett's power in the company continued to grow. His violence against the union of automobile workers also grew.
The Ford Motor Company did not agree to negotiate with the union until nineteen forty-one. Henry Ford accepted an agreement. If he had not, his company would have lost millions of dollars in government business.
In nineteen forty-three, Edsel Ford died. With Edsel gone, Henry again became president of the Ford Motor Company. It was difficult to know if Henry or Harry Bennett was running the company. America was at war. And Henry was eighty years old -- too old to deal with the problems of wartime production. And Bennett knew nothing at all about production.
So Henry's grandson, also Henry Ford, was recalled from the Navy to run the company. Young Henry's first act was to dismiss Harry Bennett.
Old Henry Ford retired from business. His thoughts were in the past. He died in his sleep in nineteen forty-seven, at the age of eighty-three.
Henry Ford was not the first man whose name was given to an automobile. But his name -- more than any other -- was linked to that machine. And his dream changed the lives of millions of people.
Some still wonder if Henry Ford was a simple man who seemed difficult  -- or a difficult man who seemed simple. No one, however, questions the fact that he made the automobile industry one of the great industries in the world.
(MUSIC)
You have been listening to the Special English program PEOPLE IN AMERICA. Your narrators were Steve Ember and Frank Oliver. Our program was written by Richard Thorman. I'm Ray Freeman.

The Monkees, where are they now?

WHERE ARE THEYNOW?






Source: Speak Up
Language level: Lower intermediate
Speaker: Chuck Rollando

THE MONKEES

In the 1960s The Monkees were a pop sensation. They were an American imitation of The Beatles and they were probably the “first boy band.” The group had four members: Micky Dolenz, Davey Jones, Mike Nesmith and Peter Tork. All four are till alive today, even if their lives are relatively quiet.

TELEVISION

The Monkees were originally a TV show The creators were two young producers: Bob  Rafelson and Berl Schneider. Later Bob Rafelson directed two Jack Nicholson movies: Five Easy Pieces and The Postman Always Ring Twice. Rafelson and Schneider had the idea for the Monkees TV show after they saw the Beatles film. A Hard Day’s Night. They wanted “four insane boys’ for a new group an held auditions in Los Angeles in September 1965, 400 young men went to the auditions. People say the the famous criminal Charles Manson was one of the 400, but this is an urban legend.

HIT SONG

The Monkees show  went on TV in 1966 and it was very popular with young viewers. Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart wrote the songs and one of these. “The Last Train to Clarksville, was a number one hit. Carole King and Neil Diamond also wrote songs for them. The Monkees were successful, but they didn’t like the fact that other people had creative control. The press said they were fake, they said they didn’t play their own music. In fact Nesmith and Tork were both good musicians.

BIZARRE

In TV show ended in 1968. The same year the group made a bizarre movie called Head. Rafelson wrote the screenplay with Jack Nicholson, who wasn’t famous yet Frank Zappa was also in the film. It was not a success, but today critics consider it a cult 60s movie. Peter Tork left the group in 1969 and the Monkees story officially ended in 1970.

REVIVAL

But many people still remember the Monkees and they have had many “reunion tours.” Today Peter Tork has health problems – he has cancer – but   the others are well. Davey Jones, who is English, owns racehorses. Mike Nesmith is a film producer and novelist and Micky Dolenz is an inventor. 

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Source: Family Album, USA