sábado, 16 de abril de 2011

Painting Pictures of the Grand Canyon


Source: http://www.manythings.org/b/e/4713 Originally posted by VOA Special English
It is a clear morning on the south side of the Grand Canyon. This is the starting point for Linda Glover Gooch. Little by little, the image starts to form. Thousands of people take pictures of the Grand Canyon every day in hopes of capturing its beauty. Linda Glover Gooch could have stayed home and copied a photograph of the canyon. But she says that would not be the same.
LINDA GLOVER GOOCH: “Oh, there is a huge difference because you are in the atmosphere. You feel the air. Photos are nice, but they still lose some of the feeling that’s out there. And you experience it, you know, firsthand, so your emotions are there at the same time as you are doing the work.”
This is what artists call plein air painting, in which the changing light and environment affect the work. Scott Kraynak is with the National Park Service.
SCOTT KRAYNAK: “It’s painting quickly in nature to capture fleeting moments in nature of the light.”
The National Park Service invites artists to make paintings that will later be sold. The money helps to pay for the building of an art gallery. Kraynak says many people first came to know the Grand Canyon through paintings.
SCOTT KRAYNAK: “Not many people, I think, realize the importance of art in the national parks. Art first gave people a glimpse of what these areas looked like in the West, before TV and Internet. Art was a big factor in these areas being set aside. Art was big factor of popularizing national parks.”
The works of Linda Glover Gooch can be seen in places like the Lawrence Gallery in Scottsdale, Arizona. Her paintings offer images of nature and the desert to collectors who want to take some of the beauty home with them.
LINDA GLOVER GOOCH: “I want to get that light on that point because it’s only going to be there for an hour more, maybe, or a little less. It’s really bright.”
Gooch spent all day at the Grand Canyon to produce this one small painting. But she says there is nowhere else she would rather be.
LINDA GLOVER GOOCH: “Words can’t explain it. It is just a gorgeous place. It’s challenging. It’s always changing. The weather is never the same. It gives you a lot of views. You could paint the rest of your life out here and always see something different.”
In the end, her painting of this one part of the canyon is complete and ready for showing. However, the ever-changing appearance of the canyon makes her want to return and paint another day. I’m Steve Ember.

La Isla Bonita

Definitely English Exercises is one of my Favorite ESL website, and I've been promote it for students and teachers worldwide, and also is the best way to improve your English using grammar within a lyric song. I have no doubt, it's more exciting and interesting ones, have a look at, please. By the way, I love Madonna.

Author: Teacher Irina from Lativia

 


(Spoken:) 
Como puede ser verdad 

Last  I dreamt of San Pedro 
Just like I'd never gone, I knew the 
 girl with eyes like the desert 
It all seems like , not far away 

Chorus: 

Tropical the  breeze 
All of nature wild and 
This is  I long to be 
La isla bonita 
And when the samba 
The  would set so high 
Ring through my ears and sting my 
Your  lullaby 

The  island 

 in love with San Pedro 
Warm wind carried on the sea, he  to me 
Te dijo te amo 
I prayed that the  would last 
They  so fast 

He told  , "I love you" 
(chorus) 

I want to be where the  warms the sky 
When it's  for siesta you can watch them go by 
Beautiful , no cares in this world 
a girl loves a boy, and a boy loves a girl 

Last  I dreamt of San Pedro 
It all seems like , not far away 
(chorus twice) 
La la la la la la la 
Te dijo te amo 
La la la la la la la 
El dijo que te ama 
He  you, "I love you" 
He said he loves you 

My Name is Salt, Angelina Jolie

Source: Speak Up
Language level:  Advanced
Speaker: Chunk Rolando
ANGELINA JOLIE MY NAME IS SALT



Angelina Jolie is currently one of the world’s most famous people. This is partly due to her impressive movie career and partly due to her private life. She and her partner, Brad Pitt, are so well known that they are often referred to as ‘Brangelina.” Although they have only been together for five years, they already have six children, three of whom are adopted.

Brad and Angelina are not technically married, but both are divorcees. Pitt was married to Jennifer Aniston, while Jolie was married first to Jonny Lee Miller and then to Billy Bob Thornton. These are actors, as is Jolie’s father, Jon Voight.

Yet there were no questions about her private life when Angelina Jolie met with the press to talk about her most recent movie, Salt, in which she has the starring role. She plays Evelyn Salt, a CIA agent who goes on the run when she is accused of being a Russian spy. Ms. Jolie was asked what had attracted her to the role.

Angelina Jolie

(Standard American accent)

I’d done action movies before but I’d never done one based on reality. And when we started to talk about it, we realized there really hadn’t been one with a woman and that was very strange to me. And so it felt like kind of uncharted territory that would be fun to try to explore and…and a good challenge. I’d also…hadn’t worked for a year-and-a half and I’d had two babies and I felt very “mommy.” And I was sitting in my nightgown reading the script with the baby cribs and everything and I started to flip through it and read about jumping off trucks and though. “You know, that night be really good for me right now! And I think it would be a good balance. I think it would be good to…”so the physical part of it felt like a really smart thing to do, just to get out and get moving again.

FEMININITY

In the past a CIA agent on the run would probably have been played by a man. Did the fact that it was played by a woman add to the excitement?

Angelina Jolie

I don’t know. I think because it’s new, it’s going to be exciting. If it was the first time it was a man, it would have been exciting, maybe. We made a point not to use her sexuality, or her femininity, in the film, in ways that are usually, you know, that is usually done in films with women, especially in this kind of genre. And I don’t think the film’s lacking in any way for it. So, I think that was a conscious choice we made, to not let it become anything other than a really good spy movie with a tough spy, who happens to be a woman!

THE REAL THING

As part of her research for the role. Ms. Jolie spent some time with a real female. CIA agent. Presumably this had helped.

Angelina Jolie

A lot. Part of it was just meeting her. You know, this idea of, I think, in movies we think we’re going to play a tough CIA girl: what’s it going to be?And what’s she going to look like? And then you meet her and she’s so lovely and she's so elegant and she's against any stereotype of some obvious tough woman. So that immediately helped me kind of…transitioned into what I was allowed to do. We had long talks about the inability to talk to anybody in your family about what your daily life was and what your job was and how isolating that was and how lonely that was. And only when you’re retired are you able to really discuss your life and what a huge relief that is. The idea that it would take you 20 years until you’re able to have a real conversation with your husband over dinner, you know, and not lie and not hide something – is an extraordinary sacrifice that all these people make. And it makes for a very specific type of personality. So I drew mostly from that.

CROSS-DRESSING

At one stage the fugitive Evelyn Salt even dresses up as a man. This was certainly a challenge.

Angelina Jolie

It was a lot of fun. I’ve never done that before. It’s always fun to do things you’ve never done. You know, it’s this odd…cause then you actually start to really think about what is my man what is my internal man? You start to get really particular about know he does his hair, or what kind of an outfit he would wear, or this…it’s just bizarre, and then, when I dressed up and when I walked on set for the first time, the crew was so uncomfortable, so uncomfortable! The guys didn’t want to stand near me, you know, just kept staring at me, but like…you know, stayed away from me. The girls kind of…some of them, I think, thought I was cute! But, you know, kind of also didn’t know what to do, like it was just it was just the most unusual feeling, but the only thing to do was to just kind of really get into it and enjoy it, or else you’d feel awkward. So I just got fully into it and…and loved hanging out as him.

Glasgow Around and About


image

1048 Glasgow Around and About
Rachel talks a little about lodging and transportation in her 
homtown city.






Source: www.elllo.org



Family album USA, 69



Source: FAMILY ALBUM USA

sexta-feira, 15 de abril de 2011

I was Born to Love you

A song definitely can teach much, so this is the best way to improve your English listening and grammar. 
Author: Teacher Vanessa
Source: http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=2094


 
                                  QUEEN
                    I was born to love you
Put these phrases in order.
chorusWith every single beat of my heart
I was born to love you Every single day of my life
Yes, I was born to take care of you
 
Put these verbs in the correct tense and the yellow words in order.
You   (be PRESENT SIMPLE) the one for me
(be PRESENT SIMPLE)the man for you
You were made for me
You're my 

If I was given every 
I'd for your love                                             
chance    kill      opportunity       dream
                                                                           amazing         romance         ecstasy  
So take a 
 with me
Let me 
 with you
I'm caught in a 

And my dream's come true
It's so hard to believe
This 
 (happen PRESENT CONTINUOUS) to me
An 
 feeling
Comin' through

chorus

I wanna love you
I love every little 
 about you
I wanna love you, love you, love you
Born - to love you
Born - to love you
Yes I was born to love you
Born - to love you
Born - to love you
Every 
 day - of my life

 amazing feeling
Coming through

chorus                  

Jesse Owens, 1913- 1980: He Was Once the World's Fastest Runne

Source: Voice of America Special English www.manythings.org/voa/people 


This is Gwen Outen. And this is Steve Ember with PEOPLE IN AMERICA in VOA Special English. Every week we tell about a person who was important in the history of the United States. Today we tell the story of athlete Jesse Owens. He once was the fastest runner in the world.
(MUSIC)
In the summer of nineteen thirty-six, people all over the world heard the name of Jesse Owens. That summer, Owens joined the best athletes from fifty nations to compete in the Olympic games. They met in Berlin, Germany. There was special interest in the Olympic games that year.
Adolf Hitler was the leader of Germany. Hitler and his Nazi party believed that white people -- especially German people – were the best race of people on Earth. They believed that other races of people -- especially those with dark skin -- were almost less than human.
In the summer of nineteen thirty-six, Hitler wanted to prove his beliefs to the world. He wanted to show that German athletes could win every important competition. After all, only a few weeks before the Olympics, German boxer Max Schmeling had defeated the great American heavyweight Joe Louis, a black man.
Jesse Owens was black, too. Until nineteen thirty-six, very few black athletes had competed in the Olympics for the United States. Owens was proud to be on the team. He was very sure of his ability.
Owens spent one week competing in four different Olympic track and field events in Berlin. During that time, he did not think much about the color of his skin, or about Adolf Hitler.
Owens said later: "I was looking only at the finish line. I thought of all the years of practice and competition, and of all who believed in me."
We do not know what Hitler thought of Jesse Owens. No one recorded what he said about this black man who ran faster and jumped farther than any man of any color at the Olympic games. But we can still see Jesse Owens as Hitler saw him. For at Hitler's request, motion pictures were made of the Berlin Olympic games.
The films show Jesse Owens as a thin, but powerfully-built young man with smooth brown skin and short hair. When he ran, he seemed to move without effort. When he jumped, as one observer said, he seemed to jump clear out of Germany.
Jesse Owens won the highest award -- the Gold Medal -- in all four of the Olympic competitions he entered. In the one-hundred meter run, he equaled the fastest time ever run in that Olympic event. In the long jump and the two-hundred meter run, he set new Olympic records. And as part of a four-man team, he helped set a new world record for the four-hundred meter relay race. He was the first American in the history of Olympic track and field events to win four Gold Medals in a single Olympics.
Owens's Olympic victories made him a hero. He returned home to parades in New York City and Columbus, Ohio, where he attended the state university. Businessmen paid him for the right to use his name on their stores. No one, however, offered him a permanent job.
For many years after the nineteen thirty-six Olympic games, Jesse Owens survived as best he could. He worked at small jobs. He even used his athletic abilities, but in a sad way. He earned money by running races against people, motorcycles and horses. He and his wife and three daughters saw both good times and bad times.
(MUSIC)
Poverty was not new to James Cleveland Owens. He was born in nineteen thirteen on a farm in the southern state of Alabama. He was the youngest of thirteen children. His parents did not own the farm, and earned little money. Jesse remembered that there was rarely enough food to eat. And there was not enough fuel to heat the house in winter.
Some of Jesse's brothers and sisters died while still young. Jesse was a sickly child. Partly because of this, and partly because of the racial hatred they saw around them, Jesse's parents decided to leave the South. They moved north, to Cleveland, Ohio, when Jesse was eight years old. The large family lived in a few small rooms in a part of the city that was neither friendly nor pleasant to look at.
Jesse's father was no longer young or strong. He was unable to find a good job. Most of the time, no one would give him any work at all. But Jesse's older brothers were able to get jobs in factories. So life was a little better than it had been in the South.
Jesse, especially, was lucky. He entered a school where one white teacher, Charles Riley, took a special interest in him. Jesse looked thin and unhealthy, and Riley wanted to make him stronger. Through the years that Jesse was in school, Riley brought him food in the morning. Riley often invited the boy to eat with his family in the evening. And every day before school, he taught Owens how to run like an athlete.
At first, the idea was only to make the boy stronger. But soon Riley saw that Jesse was a champion. By the time Jesse had completed high school, his name was known across the nation. Ohio State University wanted him to attend college there. While at Ohio State, he set new world records in several track and field events. And he was accepted as a member of the United States Olympic team.
(MUSIC)
Owens always remembered the white man who helped change his life. Charles Riley did not seem to care what color a person's skin was. Owens learned to think the same way.
Later in life, Owens put all his energy into working with young people. He wanted to tell them some of the things he had
learned about life, work and success: That it is important to choose a goal and always work toward it. That there are good people in the world who will help you to reach your goal. That if you try again and again, you will succeed.
People who heard Owens's speeches said he spoke almost as well as he ran. Owens received awards for his work with boys and girls. The United States government sent him around the world as a kind of sports ambassador. The International Olympic Committee asked for his advice.
In about nineteen seventy, Jesse Owens wrote a book in which he told about his life. It was called "Blackthink." In the book, Owens denounced young black militants who blamed society for their troubles. He said young black people had the same chance to succeed in the United States as white people. Many black civil rights activists reacted angrily to these statements. They said what Owens had written was not true for everyone.
Owens later admitted that he had been wrong. He saw that not all blacks were given the same chances and help that he had been given. In a second book, Owens tried to explain what he had meant in his first book. He called it "I Have Changed." Owens said that, in his earlier book, he did not write about life as it was for everyone, but about life as it was for him.
He said he truly wanted to believe that if you think you can succeed--- and you really try -- then you have a chance. If you do not think you have a chance, then you probably will fail. He said these beliefs had worked for him. And he wanted all young people to believe them, too.
These were the same beliefs he tried to express when he spoke around the world about being an Olympic athlete. "The road to the Olympics," he said, "leads to no city, no country. It goes far beyond New York or Moscow, ancient Greece or Nazi Germany. The road to the Olympics leads -- in the end -- to the best within us."
In nineteen seventy-six, President Gerald Ford awarded Jesse Owens the Medal of Freedom. This is the highest honor an American civilian can receive. Jesse Owens died of cancer in nineteen eighty. His family members operate the Jesse Owens Foundation. It provides financial aid and support for young people to help them reach their goals in life.
(MUSIC)
This program was written by Barbara Dash. It was produced by Lawan Davis. This is Steve Ember.
And this is Gwen Outen. Listen again next week for PEOPLE IN AMERICA in VOA Special English.