quarta-feira, 4 de maio de 2011

Molly Brown, 1867-1932: A Social and Political Activist Who Survived the Titanic

Source: www.voanews.com VOA Special English - Text & MP3
www.manythings.org/voa/people 

Molly Brown, 1867-1932: A Social and Political Activist Who Survived the Titanic

Welcome to THIS IS AMERICA in VOA Special English. I'm Mario Ritter. And I'm Shirley Griffith.
Margaret Brown was a social and political activist in the formative years of the modern American West. Her biggest claim to fame was surviving the Titanic. This week on our program, we tell the story of the woman remembered as "The Unsinkable Molly Brown."
Margaret Brown lived an interesting life, but not all the stories about her are true. For example, a Denver newspaper reporter named Gene Fowler wrote that she survived a tornado as a baby, refused to attend school and chewed tobacco.
Fowler wrote about Brown and others in his book "Timber Line," published after her death in 1932.
Kristen Iversen is an English professor and author of "Molly Brown: Unraveling the Myth." She says the stories did contain some truth, though, which is that Brown went West to follow a dream and that dream came true.
In the 1964 movie "The Unsinkable Molly Brown" she was played by Debbie Reynolds.
The nickname "Molly" was largely a Hollywood invention, says her biographer. Kristen Iversen says Brown did not like it. The name "Molly" was often used as an insult for an Irish girl, and nobody in her own life called her that.
She was known as Maggie in her hometown of Hannibal, Missouri. She was born Margaret Tobin in 1867, two years after the Civil War ended. Her Irish-born parents had socially progressive beliefs.
At that time, American women could not own property or vote. They did not get much education. And they rarely traveled far by themselves. But during her lifetime much of that changed.
In 1886, Maggie Tobin left home for the town of Leadville, Colorado, to join a sister and brother who already lived there. Leadville had gold, silver and copper mines. At that time it was one of the fastest growing places in the country.
She sewed carpets and curtains for a local dry goods company.
She is shown singing in a barroom in both the movie and 1960 Broadway musical "The Unsinkable Molly Brown."
(MUSIC)
Here is biographer Kristen Iversen.
KRISTEN IVERSEN: "She did have a great sense of humor. She enjoyed being around people. But she was very serious, very motivated, very hard working type of person and really a kind of good Catholic girl her entire life. And that barroom saloon girl image is pretty different from the kind of person she really was. So one thing the myth does is it really diminishes that aspect of her life."
The story of her life became linked to romantic ideas about gold mining in the American West and the dream of getting rich quick.
In 1886 Maggie Tobin married James Joseph Brown, J.J. for short. He was 31 years old; she was 19. He was a mine manager in Leadville who developed a way to safely mine for gold deeper than before.
The popular story is that J.J. got rich soon after they married. Kristen Iversen says he did become rich, but not until they had been married for seven years and had two children.
In 1894 the Browns bought a house in Denver, Colorado. The popular story is that rich families in Denver society did not accept them because they had been poor and lacked education.
Kristen Iversen says Denver's most conservative social club did exclude them for a time. But she says the Browns were a big part of Denver society. Margaret became involved in social and political events, hosting dinners to raise money for charities.
She traveled around the world and sent her children to school in France. She learned foreign languages and took college classes. She also began to speak out for progressive causes.
She worked toward social change through the womens reform movement. She raised money for schools and the poor. And she worked with a judge in Denver to establish the first court in the country to deal only with young people.
In 1912 Margaret Brown was a passenger on the Titanic on its first and only trip. The huge ship hit an iceberg and sank in the North Atlantic. More than 1,500 people died, while just over 700 survived.
Brown was played by Kathy Bates in James Cameron's "Titanic." In this scene, she tries to get the other women in her lifeboat to go back and rescue people from the water.
MOLLY BROWN: "C'mon girls, grab an oar, let's go!"
CREWMAN: "Are you out of your mind? We're in the middle of the North Atlantic. Now do you people want to live, or do you want to die?"
MOLLY BROWN: "I don't understand a one of ya. What's the matter with ya? It's your men out there. Theres plenty of room for more."
CREWMAN: "And there'll be one less on this boat if you don't shut that hole in your face."
In real life, Brown is credited with keeping people's spirits up in the lifeboat until they were rescued by another ship, the Carpathia.
Later, she raised money to help poor immigrant women who had been passengers on the lower levels of the Titanic. She also raised money for the crew of the Carpathia. She became president of the Titanic Survivors Club and helped build a memorial in Washington.
So who started calling her "unsinkable?" Some say she described herself that way after the disaster. Kristen Iversen says that is not true. She says a Denver newspaper reporter first called her the unsinkable Mrs. Brown in a story. The New York Times called her the heroine of the Titanic.
KRISTEN IVERSEN: "The thing about the Titanic experience, what happened with the Titanic experience and the recognition she got from the New York Times in particular was that it gave her a platform from which to talk about some of the political and social issues --miners rights, womens rights, the development of the juvenile court system, that sort of thing. It gave her an international platform to talk about some of those things."
She actively worked for the right of women to vote in federal elections. Colorado gave women the right to vote in 1893, but that did not happen nationally until 1920. Brown ran for Congress twice in the early 1900s but lost both times.
The popular story of Molly Brown is that she was on the Titanic returning home to a happy life with her husband. In reality, their marriage had already failed.
Kristen Iversen says one of their major problems was that Brown was socially progressive and her husband was not.
KRISTEN IVERSEN: "He felt that a womans name -- and she wrote about his -- that a womans name should appear in the newspaper when she married and when she died. And Margaret Tobin Brown liked to see her name in the newspaper for a lot of reasons."
The couple never legally divorced because of their Catholic faith, but they did sign a separation agreement. J.J. Brown died in 1922.
During World War One, Margaret Brown went to France to help with the American medical ambulance system. She earned the French Legion of Honor for her work with the American Committee of Devastated France.
In the last years of her life, she traveled and performed on the stage. She also studied and taught acting. In 1929 she received the Palm of the Academy, a French honor, in recognition of her work in dramatic arts.
Margaret Brown died in 1932 while staying at the famous Barbizon Hotel in New York City. She was sixty-five years old. The discovery of a brain cancer after her death explained the severe headaches in the final years of her life.
In 1970, the city of Denver bought the house where she had lived. Each year about 50,000 people visit the Molly Brown House. They learn how a wealthy American family lived at the start of the 20th century. And they learn about the real Molly Brown.
To biographer Kristen Iversen, Brown represents other women who also worked for social progress but whose lives "are invisible to history." So what lesson is there to learn from the myth of "The Unsinkable Molly Brown?"
KRISTEN IVERSEN: "I think the story in some ways tells us what we want to think of ourselves as an American. That is, this kind of pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps, that with enough determination and hard work that you can transcend limitations of money or class or gender. And thats part of the myth and I think thats also part of the reality of her story.
"So its a very inspirational story. There are so many aspects of the myth that are not true. Yet I think the myth story itself speaks to her spirit and speaks to some of the ways we like to think of ourselves as Americans."

A BRIGHT IDEA, SUMMER TIME

In Brazil during the period of the year the clocks forward 1 hour, it's summer time, this could save energy power, what about in your country, there is Summer time? 

Source: Speak Up

A BRIGHT IDEA

In autumn the days get much shorter. At 2 a.m. on the last Sunday October, Britain’s clocks move back by one hour, bringing an end to British Summer Time. It means darker evenings as Britain goes back to Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) until March next year, when the cycle begins again. This has been the pattern in the UK since the Summer Time Act of 1916.

LIGHTER LATER

Wouldn’t it be nice to have an extra hour of daylight in the evenings? The 10:10 Environmental coalition group certainly thinks so. In fact it has started the “Lighter Later” campaign to move Britain’s clocks forward by one hour throughout the whole year. This “Bright Idea” is an attempt to match Britain’s walking and working hours with natural daylight partners.

At present most people waste the first hours of daylight: research shows that all year round 80 per cent of Britain’s population is still asleep at 6 a.m. For farmers and other early starters, as well as people living in Scotland and then north of the country, the change of clocks would certainly mean darker mornings –but also much lighter evenings.

THE ENVIRONMENT

The proposed changes would align Britain with its major trading partners in mainland Europe and would also result in a number of significant other benefits. 10:10 has discovered that changing to the now “Single Double Summer Time” could save 447.000 tons of carbon emissions annually reduce peak power demand, road accidents and crime – and create new jobs.  This is supported by evidence from the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents and research from the University of Cambridge.

The UK Tourism Alliance believes that lighter evenings ill increase leisure activities and visitor numbers, increase earnings by £3.5bn, and create 60.000 to 80.000 new jobs. Opening hour’s cal amenities across the UK could even be adapted to suit later daylight hours. If this is the case, the country could be heading for a brighter future. 

Babel Tower and English language.

Thanks for English language we have no problem to communicate, check it out and leave a comment, please. 

The Tower of Babel


The Tower of Babel

Source: Speak Up

       A fifth of the planet speaks English competently. Another sixth is learning. 80 per cent of computer information is in English, as are Deutsche Bank board meetings.
       Yet the notion of one language for all sounds familiar. Remember Genesis, Chapter 11? Humans build the Tower of Babel up to Heaven. God doesn’t like it. He replaces the single languages that let us cooperate with today’s multilingual babble.
       Can English recapture monolingual paradise?

COCAINE GLUE

       Automated translator, like Babel Fish (this strange name comes from Douglas Adam’s science fiction comedy, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galax) seem to offer instant solutions. But here’s a typical computer translation: “I apologize for my (bad) English: I am Brazilian and as it’s know, nobody is perfect. Kindly, is it comprehensible what do I have written?” In Brazil’s Fortaleza Airport, you’ll find Bleeding jar and Cocaine Glue on the drinks menu: meaningless translations for jar of sangria and Coca Cola. Worst still, Pepsi’s slogan, Come alive with pepsi, was translated into Chinese as “Pepsi brings dead ancestors back to life.”

FALSE FRIENDS
       It’s easy to be fooled by Portenglish Anglicism. You cannot play baske or volley; the sports are basketball and volleyballOutdoormeans outside in English; big advertisements on the street arebillboards. You don’t go to a shopping, but to a mall. Other nationalities have this problem, too. Italian speakers get confused with Britalianslip is an old-fashioned English word for a lady’s under-garment, not boy’s underpants. George Pullman gave his name to the sleeping compartments for trains, not to buses. Ashowman, once people on TV are presenters or hosts. The French love investing nouns. Un parking is a car park, un relooking a makeover, un déstockage a clearance sale. These are not English, but Franglais.

CONFUSING MIXTURES


       US immigration has created many hybrids. Hispanic communities have producer dictionaries to help your suffer the web, deletear a document and vacuumear you carpet. There’s even a Hollywood film called Spanglish.

       The Dutch learn English in elementary school and watch undubbed films. Yet even they make mistakes. “That can instead of “That’s possible.” “I hate you welcome” for “I welcome you.” A Dutch prime minister confused undertaker with entrepreneur. The University of Delft awards a large sausage for the worst Dunglisherrors. (“Worst” is Dutch for sausage.)

NEW ENGLISHES

Linguists speak of New Englishes: the healthy diversity of world English. But, as the pressure to learn English grows, these half-baked versions are proliferating. Computers can’t learn for us – not yet. With untrust worthy translation engines, dodgy internet courses, and troublesame false friends, the monolingual dream still sounds like babble of Babel.

The Tower of Babel Genesis, Charpter 11

And the whole earth was of one language, and of one speech…And they said, Let us build us a city and a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven…And the Lord said, Behold, the people have all one language; and now nothing will be restrained from them. Let us go down, and there confound their language, that they may not understand one another’s speech. So the Lord scattered them abroad: and they left off to build the city. Therefore is the name of it called Babel; confound the language of all the earth.

Happy Birthday's for Friends on Facebook

This is a single homage for my dear friends on Facebook, also most of them are readers of English Tips' blog. God bless you, everyone, for Muslims Allah bless your family and friends. I feel comfortable to desire a wonderful birthday and thanks for your support promoting by blog for friends. Arturo CastroSasa JsThuydungaof Nguyen .


21 ACCENTS, CHECK IT OUT




Source:  http://www.AmyWalkerOnline.com


The most important is communicating, actually there are a lot of Languages, dialects, regionalisms, accents, and we have to adapt and understand each other. Keep it mind that you have to choose one accent for speaking, but you need to listen to different accent, otherwise you'll have difficulties in the language. Check it out and express your viewpoint. Like this tip? Promote it for friends. 

Family album, 78

terça-feira, 3 de maio de 2011

Mr. President, take care watch your parachuter

The last laugh

Source: Speak UP
Language level: Advanced
Standard: American accent

Bs: This joke is not updated ‘cause Bush was the President of USA yet.

The last Laugh

Mr. President...

A plane is about to crash. There are five passengers on board, but there are only four parachutes. So the passengers have to make a very quick decision: which one of them will make the ultimate sacrifice?

The first passenger says:

“I am Ronaldo, the best soccer player in the world. The sporting world needs me, and I cannot die on my fans.” He grabs the first parachute and jumps out of the plane.

The second passenger, Hillary Clinton, says:

“I am the wife of the former president of the United States; I am a senator for the state of New York and I have a good chance of being the next president of the United States.”

She grabs a parachute and jumps off the plane.

The third passenger, George W. Bush, says:

“I am the current president of the United States of America, I have huge responsibilities in the world. Besides, I am the smartest president in the history of my country and I can’t shun the responsibility to my people by dying.”

He grabs a pack and jumps off the plane.

The fourth passenger, the Pop, says to the fifth passer, a young boy:

“I am old. I have lived my live as a good person, as priest should, and so I shall leave the last parachute to you; you have the rest of your life ahead of you.

To this the little boy replies:

“Don’t worry, old man, there is a parachute of each of us! The smartest president in American history took my schoolbag.”