segunda-feira, 23 de maio de 2011

Katharine Graham, 1917- 2001: She Was the Powerful Owner and Publisher of The Washington Post

Source: www.manythings.org/voa/people


Katharine Graham, 1917- 2001: She Was the Powerful Owner and Publisher of The Washington Post

I'm Shirley Griffith. And I'm Doug Johnson with the VOA Special English program,PEOPLE IN AMERICA.  Today we tell about Katharine Graham.  She was the owner and publisher of The Washington Post newspaper.
(MUSIC)
Katharine Meyer Graham was once described as "the most powerful woman in America."  She was not a government official or elected representative.  She owned and published The Washington Post newspaper.  Under her leadership, it became one of the most important newspapers in the country.
Katharine Meyer was born in New York City in nineteen seventeen.  She was the daughter of Eugene and Agnes Meyer.  Her father was a successful investment banker.  He became an important financial official.  Her family was very rich.
Katharine grew up in large houses in New York and Washington.  Her parents were often away from home, traveling and working.  Katharine was often lonely.
Katherine Meyer graduated from the University of Chicago in Illinois in nineteen thirty-eight.  She got a job as a reporter for a newspaper in San Francisco, California.
In nineteen thirty-three, Eugene Meyer had bought a failing newspaper, The Washington Post.  It was the least successful of five newspapers in Washington.
Katharine returned to Washington and got a job editing letters to the editor of her father's newspaper.  She married Philip Graham.  He was a lawyer and former assistant to two Supreme Court justices.  Mr. Graham soon accepted a job at his wife's father's newspaper.
In nineteen forty-six, Eugene Meyer left the newspaper to become the first president of the World Bank.  Philip Graham became publisher of The Washington Post.
Mr. Graham improved The Washington Post.  He bought Newsweek magazine and several television stations.  He also established close ties with important political leaders.  However, Mr. Graham treated his wife badly.  He made her feel unimportant. He had a sexual relationship with a young reporter.  For many years, Mr. Graham suffered from mental illness.  He killed himself in nineteen sixty-three.
Katharine Graham had four children to raise and a newspaper to operate.  At first, she was concerned only with finding a way to keep control of The Washington Post until her sons were old enough to supervise it.  She was an insecure person.
She did not think she had the ability to do an important job.
She had no training in business or experience in operating a large company.  In those days, it was unusual for a woman to be the head of a business.  Women were expected to supervise only their homes and children.
Katharine Graham met with officials of The Post.  She told them the paper would not be sold.  She said it would remain in her family.  She was elected president of The Washington Post Company.  She had no idea about how to operate a newspaper.  So she decided to learn.  She began by hiring Benjamin Bradlee.  He later became chief editor.  Mr. Bradlee improved the newspaper.  He hired excellent reporters and editors.  They began doing important investigative reporting.  In nineteen sixty-nine, Mrs. Graham became publisher as well as president of The Washington Post Company.
(MUSIC)
In the nineteen seventies, The Washington Post became famous around the world because of two major successes.  In nineteen seventy-one, The New York Times newspaper started publishing secret government documents about American involvement in the Vietnam War.
They were known as the Pentagon Papers.  The administration of President Richard Nixon appealed to the courts to stop the publication of the documents.  It said publication would endanger national security.  A temporary restraining order from a federal judge stopped The New York Times from publishing the documents.
Washington Post reporters also got a copy of the Pentagon Papers.  They also wanted to publish the documents.  Mrs. Graham had to decide if the paper would publish the stories and risk possible punishment by the government.  The newspaper's lawyers advised her not to publish them.  Yet she decided to publish the Pentagon Papers in The Washington Post.  The Supreme Court finally decided the issue.  They ruled against the judge's order restraining publication of the Pentagon Papers.  That ruling was considered a major success for freedom of the press.
(MUSIC)
The next year, in nineteen seventy-two, The Washington Post had another major success reporting on a different story.
Five men had been arrested after breaking into the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate office building.  Reporters at The Post began an intense investigation of the break-in.  The Post published a series of stories by two young reporters, Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward.
After much investigation, the reporters linked the Watergate break-in to President Nixon and his top advisers.  Their stories proved that the Nixon administration directed a plot.  Its goals were to illegally gather intelligence on the Democratic Party and dishonor opponents of the president.
Mrs. Graham supported her reporters and editors through the long Watergate investigation.  The Post published the stories even though government officials threatened Mrs. Graham and her company.  The newspaper was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for public service in nineteen seventy-three for its Watergate reporting.  The next year, President Nixon resigned from office.
(MUSIC)
Katharine Graham was recognized around the world as an important leader in newspaper publishing.  She was the first woman to head a major American company.
She successfully expanded The Washington Post Company to include newspaper, magazine, broadcast and cable companies.
Katharine Graham played an important role in supporting women in the workforce.  More women were employed at The Post and at Newsweek magazine.  Mrs. Graham also was active in groups seeking to improve public education in Washington.  She traveled around the country to make many public speeches about news media issues.  She also traveled around the world to meet with foreign leaders.
Katharine Graham was well known for having dinner parties at her home in Washington.  She invited the most important people in the city.  An invitation to one of her parties was almost as valuable as an invitation to dinner at the White House.  Mrs. Graham was a close friend of American and world leaders.  Her friends included leaders in government, media, business and entertainment.  They included presidents, prime ministers and princesses.
In nineteen ninety-one, Donald Graham replaced his mother as publisher and the chief official of The Washington Post Company.  At that time, the company was valued at almost two thousand million dollars.
(MUSIC)
When she was eighty years old, Katharine Graham wrote a book about her life.  It was called "Personal History."  She wrote about the struggles and tragedies of her life as well as the successes.  She wrote about how she battled her own insecurities to move from a traditional job as homemaker to a position of power.  Critics praised the book for its honesty.  The book won a Pulitzer Prize for biography in nineteen ninety-eight.  It was extremely popular.
Katharine Graham died of head injuries three years later after a fall.  She was eighty-four.  More than three thousand people attended her funeral.  They included many government and business leaders.  Friends of Katharine Graham said she would be remembered as a woman who had an important influence on events in the United States and the world.  They said she used her intelligence and bravery to improve the American media.  And they said everyone who cares about a free press would greatly miss her.
Katharine Graham once wrote: "A world without newspapers would not be the same kind of world."  After her death, the employees of The Washington Post wrote: "A world without Katharine Graham will not be the same at all."
(MUSIC)

Villa-Lobos: from Brazil to the world



Villa-Lobos:  from Brazil to the world
For more info www.maganews.com.br

He composed over a thousand works [1],conducted [2] dozens of orchestras in Europe and the USA, and was considered to be the greatest Latin American composer in the first half of the 20th Century  

The work produced by this composer from Rio is very rich.However, at the beginning of his career there were some music critics he could not please [3]. Villa-Lobos’ music was probably too modern for them. Heitor Villa-Lobos was an erudite musician, but he believed it was possible to enrich classical music with popular influences. He was in love with Brazil’s rich culture. In his youth, he spent months, maybe years, travelling around the North and Northeast of Brazil, researching Brazilian folk [4] music. Heitor used to describe his music as “as natural as a waterfall [5]”. His best known works are “O trenzinho do Caipira” and “Bachianas no5.”

Music in school
Villa-Lobos loved the guitar and was an excellent player. He used to use the guitar to compose chorinhos. He was also a master of the cello. In addition to his beautiful compositions, Villa-Lobos made another important contribution to Brazilian culture. He was responsible for introducing music teaching and singing to schools throughout Brazil.  Villa-Lobos was born in Rio de Janeiro in 1887 and lived for some years in Paris and New York. He was married twice, but had no children. He died on November 17th 1959. In many Brazilian cities you can find squares, streets, avenues and schools called “Heitor Villa-Lobos.”

Matéria publicada na edição de outubro / novembro da Revista Maganews (ed. número 51)
Ilustração – Calberto


Vocabulary
1 work – aqui = músicas / peças musicais
2 to conduct – conduzir / aqui = reger 
3 he could not please – ele não conseguiu agradar
4 folk - folclore
5 waterfall – cachoeira

domingo, 22 de maio de 2011

STORM BUSTERS TORNADO


Source: www.speakup.com.br
Language level: Pre-intermediate
Standard accent: American
Speaker: Chuck Rolando

STORM BUSTERS


It’s storm-chasing season in Tornado Alley, USA. Tour companies offer courageous, and possibly insane, tourists the chance to see a tornado from a distance of only 300 metres. The season runs from May 1st to June 30th.

DANGEROUS TERRITORY

Tornado Alley is famous for its thunderstorms and tornadoes. It’s located between the Rocky and the Appalachian mountain ranges hundreds of miles of flat, open plains. It runs through Northern Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and Colorado. The buildings in this region have reinforced roofs, solid foundations and storm cellars. Local people rely on storm warnings to avoid disaster.

ADRENALINE!

Tornadoes are very dangerous so why do people want to chase them? Documentary-maker Sean Casey says. “It’s addictive.” His driver Byron Turk agrees. It’s the adrenaline…the ultimate challenge! Casey built a Tornado intercept Vehicle. It weights 680 kilos and has steel-plated armour, its windows are 4 centimetres thick. Casey and his team filmed as a tornado hit the vehicle. You can see his documentaries on the Discovery Channel.

A BIG RISK

Are you still interested in storm-chasing? Well, it’s very important to find expert guides. A company like “Storm Chasing Adventure Tours” (SCAT) can guarantee tourists safety. They have years of experience, and understand how storms develop. They use advanced computer systems to predict the location of the storms. SCAT chief Todd Thorn says, however. “Guides cannot rely only on the technology. . they must have the ability to read the sky.” The SCAT team aren’t simply tourist guides. They also provide important information to National Weather Centres on the position and strength of storms. They help save lives.

UNBELIEVABLE

Storms usually occur in the late afternoon, early evening. Teams must drive hundreds of miles to arrive at storm locations. So they leave their base in Amarillo. Texas in the morning. The chase often continues until late in the evening. What is it like to chase a storm? SCAT driver Ravin Harned says. “It’s one thing to see a tornado on TV. But totally different to see it with you won eyes!

STORM BUSTERS

It’s storm-chasing season in Tornado Alley, USA. Tour companies offer courageous, and possibly insane, tourists the chance to see a tornado from a distance of only 300 metres. The season runs from May 1st to June 30th.

DANGEROUS TERRITORY

Tornado Alley is famous for its thunderstorms and tornadoes. It’s located between the Rocky and the Appalachian mountain ranges hundreds of miles of flat, open plains. It runs through Northern Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and Colorado. The buildings in this region have reinforced roofs, solid foundations and storm cellars. Local people rely on storm warnings to avoid disaster.

ADRENALINE!

Tornadoes are very dangerous so why do people want to chase them? Documentary-maker Sean Casey says. “It’s addictive.” His driver Byron Turk agrees. It’s the adrenaline…the ultimate challenge! Casey built a Tornado intercept Vehicle. It weights 680 kilos and has steel-plated armour, its windows are 4 centimetres thick. Casey and his team filmed as a tornado hit the vehicle. You can see his documentaries on the Discovery Channel.

A BIG RISK

Are you still interested in storm-chasing? Well, it’s very important to find expert guides. A company like “Storm Chasing Adventure Tours” (SCAT) can guarantee tourists safety. They have years of experience, and understand how storms develop. They use advanced computer systems to predict the location of the storms. SCAT chief Todd Thorn says, however. “Guides cannot rely only on the technology. . they must have the ability to read the sky.” The SCAT team aren’t simply tourist guides. They also provide important information to National Weather Centres on the position and strength of storms. They help save lives.

UNBELIEVABLE

Storms usually occur in the late afternoon, early evening. Teams must drive hundreds of miles to arrive at storm locations. So they leave their base in Amarillo. Texas in the morning. The chase often continues until late in the evening. What is it like to chase a storm? SCAT driver Ravin Harned says. “It’s one thing to see a tornado on TV. But totally different to see it with you won eyes!

Source: www.speakup.com.br
Language level: Pre-intermediate
Speaker: Chuck Rolando
Standard accent: American

STORM BUSTERS

It’s storm-chasing season in Tornado Alley, USA. Tour companies offer courageous, and possibly insane, tourists the chance to see a tornado from a distance of only 300 metres. The season runs from May 1st to June 30th.

DANGEROUS TERRITORY

Tornado Alley is famous for its thunderstorms and tornadoes. It’s located between the Rocky and the Appalachian mountain ranges hundreds of miles of flat, open plains. It runs through Northern Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and Colorado. The buildings in this region have reinforced roofs, solid foundations and storm cellars. Local people rely on storm warnings to avoid disaster.

ADRENALINE!

Tornadoes are very dangerous so why do people want to chase them? Documentary-maker Sean Casey says. “It’s addictive.” His driver Byron Turk agrees. It’s the adrenaline…the ultimate challenge! Casey built a Tornado intercept Vehicle. It weights 680 kilos and has steel-plated armour, its windows are 4 centimetres thick. Casey and his team filmed as a tornado hit the vehicle. You can see his documentaries on the Discovery Channel.

A BIG RISK

Are you still interested in storm-chasing? Well, it’s very important to find expert guides. A company like “Storm Chasing Adventure Tours” (SCAT) can guarantee tourists safety. They have years of experience, and understand how storms develop. They use advanced computer systems to predict the location of the storms. SCAT chief Todd Thorn says, however. “Guides cannot rely only on the technology. . they must have the ability to read the sky.” The SCAT team aren’t simply tourist guides. They also provide important information to National Weather Centres on the position and strength of storms. They help save lives.

UNBELIEVABLE

Storms usually occur in the late afternoon, early evening. Teams must drive hundreds of miles to arrive at storm locations. So they leave their base in Amarillo. Texas in the morning. The chase often continues until late in the evening. What is it like to chase a storm? SCAT driver Ravin Harned says. “It’s one thing to see a tornado on TV. But totally different to see it with you won eyes!

sábado, 21 de maio de 2011

SANTANA ON WOMEN AND LOVE INTERVIEW, PART II

Source: Speakup


SANTANA ON WOMEN AND LOVE

Carlos Santana was interviewed by Marcel Anders. Here he talks about his views on women, men and his then fiancée (now new wife), drummer Cindy Blackman, in particular:

Q: Talking about women, you said: “There’s a big war happening right now with females and men. A lot of females seem like they have war paint on their faces. “Why?” What’s wrong?

A: That’s a good question. I think that a lot of women tend to generalize, but…just like I can’t say that all white people don’t have rhythm, you can’t say that all black people can sing and dance, it’s not good to generalize. All I know is that when we play music, women forget all about the war and they start dancing, the war paint comes off, because it’s an illusion anyway.

War paint is fear. Love is love. Fear is fear. If you have problems with one man who cheated on you or he did this or he did that, you can’t say that all men do that! I mean, we utilize music to bring a sense of unity and harmony and forgiveness. Women are like the weather you don’t know what’s going to happen. And men are like mountains, the only time something changes in a man is when there’s an earthquake. I love both of it. I love the male and the female, the female and the male energy. And the best thing that I can say about that is: “Honor me for what God made me, and I’ll honor you for what God made you. Don’t be at war with me, because you’ll be at war with yourself anyway.”

Q: Says the man who just fell in love again!

A: exactly. I totally fell in love with someone who can really, really, really play. She’s probably in the top three in the world who can play with Herbie Hancock or Wayne Shorter. Cindy (Blackman) can play. To her it’s a very profound profession: no, it’s a very profound gift, not a profession. And yes, falling in love with Cindy means when I go onstage it just feels like the 7UP has more bubbles.

Q: Does that mean she’s part of your band now?

A: maybe in the future, but right now I have learned not to mix domestic rhythm with the stage, because it’s very difficult to say: ‘Hey what were you doing with that beat? And then come home and: “Hey, can we make love? “So it’s not wise to mix business, music and profession with romance. It’s a recipe for disaster. Maybe in the future when we’re a little bit more mature in spirit…I would like to have a separate band with her and approach different music, not the Santana music.

Q: What made your propose on stage in front of all these people?

A: It was spontaneous. I saw her play and there is something about her, it excites me to believe that I can wake up with her every morning. We can talk for hours about Mikes Davis and Tony Williams and Wayne Shorter. And then we can talk about children, we can talk about flowers – or we cannot talk and just drink from each other’s eyes. I know that in the future we will write an album together, but right now the best way to describe Cindy is: she’s an angel sent from heaven to me. 

INTER TV CABUGI, MINHA CIDADE



This is an off-topic of course, but I'd say to you how much my town is important, we were interviewed by Inter TV Cabugi, Affiliated to one of the biggest TV Channel of the world, Globo TV. The programme is about the touristic and economic potential from the towns located in the countryside of Rio Grande do Norte. Check it out and watching carefully the video, and so sorry because the content is in Portuguese, but enjoy the landscapes

t.com

Speak Up - Issue 281 – WHERE ARE THEY NOW? – PATTY HEARST (A2)

Patty Hearst



Before you listen to the podcast do the Speakup lessons please. 



WORKSHEETS
2011

A – Before you start

Answer the questions with a partner.
1. Many people consider the Orson Welles film Citizen Kane (Quarto Potere) to be the best film of all time. What do you know about the story and characters? Have you seen it?
2. What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of belonging to a very rich and famous family?
3. Can you name any past or present terrorist organisations?
4. What kinds of crimes do terrorists often commit?

B – Listen and answer

Read these statements. Then listen (without reading) and write T (true) or F (false).
1. The film Citizen Kane was based on the life of William Randolph Hearst.
2. W. R. Hearst was a rich banker.
3. He was Patty Hearst’s great-grandfather.
4. Patty was kidnapped by terrorists while she was walking along the street.
5. She became a member of the terrorist group.
6. After her arrest, she spent many years in prison.
7. Life is difficult for her now and she lives in poverty.
8. She doesn’t like talking about her past.

C – Read and answer

Read the article and answer the questions.
1. What did the SLA want Patty’s family to do?
2. Why weren’t the terrorists happy with the result?
3. What did Patty do after she was kidnapped?
4. What was her defence?
5. Did the jury believe Patty’s story?
6. What is Patty interested in now?

D – Learn it! Use it!

Find words in the text for these definitions.
1. A person who has been kidnapped.          h _ _ _ _ _ _
2. The time when you are a child.                 c _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
3. A group a criminals working together.      g _ _ _
4. Another word for “film”.                          m _ _ _ _
5. Stole money using force.                           r _ _ _ _ _
6. A formal court process to decide
whether a person is innocent or guilty.          t _ _ _ _



E – Ready for KET? (Paper 1, Part 5)

Choose the best word for each space.

It was 9.40 am on 15th April 1974 and the Hibernia Bank in San Francisco was very busy 1________ (why/because/while) 15th April is tax day, so a lot of people 2________ (is/was/were) going into the bank 3________ (and/to/for) pay their taxes. Suddenly, four white women and a black man ran in and started shouting at 4________ (somebody/anybody/everybody) to lie down on the floor. In less 5________ (than/that/of) four minutes, the robbers took over 10,000 dollars and escaped 6________ (in/by/with) a car that was waiting outside for them. When the police looked at the videotape of the robbery, they 7________ (founded/found/find), to their great surprise, that one of the women was Patty Hearst, a member of one of the richest families in the USA. She was 8________ (holding/taking/bringing) a gun and acting just like one of the robbers.

F – Check your pronunciation

One of the four words in each group has a different vowel sound. Which one?
1. gang  bank  change  bad
2. born  worth  first  work
3. quality  rob  hostage  other
4. go  movie  own  show
5. food  poor  who  few

G – Talk about it

In pairs or groups.
1. Why do some rich people become terrorists, in your opinion?
2. Do you believe that Patty Hearst was brainwashed?
3. Was President Carter right to release her after only two years?

American History: Japanese Attack on Pearl Harbor Pulls US Into War


Source: www.voanews.com 


The USS California after being struck by a torpedo and a  bomb during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941
Photo: AP
The USS California after being struck by a torpedo and a bomb during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941


STEVE EMBER: Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION – American history in VOA Special English. I’m Steve Ember.
(MUSIC)
History is usually a process of slow change. However, certain events also can change the course of history. Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo was such an event. So was the first airplane flight by the Wright brothers. Or the meeting between the Spanish explorer Cortez and the Aztec king Montezuma.
All these events were moments that changed history. And so it was, too, with the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December seventh, nineteen forty-one.
(SOUND)
NEWS BULLETIN: "We interrupt this program to bring you a special news bulletin. The Japanese have attacked Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, by air, President Roosevelt has just announced. The attack also was made on all naval and military facilities on the principal island of Oahu.
"We take you now to Washington. The details are not available. They will be in a few minutes. The White house is now giving out a statement. The attack was apparently made on all naval and military activities on the principal island of Oahu.
"The president’s brief statement was read to reporters by Stephen Early, the president’s secretary. A Japanese attack upon Pearl Harbor naturally would mean war. Such an attack would naturally bring a counterattack. And hostilities of this kind would naturally mean that the president would ask Congress for a declaration of war."
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER:The surprise attack on America's large naval base in Hawaii was a great military success for Japan. However, the attack on Pearl Harbor had more than a military meaning.
The attack would force Americans to enter World War Two. More importantly, it would also make them better recognize their position as one of the most powerful nations in the world.
In future weeks, we will discuss the military and political events of World War Two. But today, we look back at the years before the United States entered that war.
The period between the end of World War One and the attack on Pearl Harbor lasted only twenty-three years, from nineteen eighteen to nineteen forty-one. But those years were filled with important changes in American politics, culture and traditions.
We start our review of these years with politics.
(MUSIC)
In nineteen twenty, Americans elected Republican Warren Harding to the presidency. The voters were tired of the progressive policies of Democratic president Woodrow Wilson. They were especially tired of Wilson's desire for the United States to play an active role in the new League of Nations.
Harding was a conservative Republican. And so were the two presidents who followed him, Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover.
All three of these presidents generally followed conservative economic policies. And they did not take an active part in world affairs.
Americans turned away from Republican rule in the election of nineteen thirty-two. They elected the Democratic presidential candidate, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. And they continued to re-elect him. In this way, the conservative Republican policies of the nineteen twenties changed to the more progressive policies of Roosevelt in the nineteen thirties.
This change happened mainly because of economic troubles.
(MUSIC)
The nineteen twenties were a time of growth and business strength.
President Calvin Coolidge said during his term that the "chief business of the American people is business." This generally was the same belief of the other Republican presidents during the period, Warren Harding and Herbert Hoover.
There was a good reason for this. The economy expanded greatly during the nineteen twenties. Many Americans made a great deal of money on the stock market. And wages for workers increased as well.
(MUSIC)
However, economic growth ended suddenly with the stock market crash of October nineteen twenty-nine.
In that month, the stocks for many leading companies fell sharply. And they continued to fall in the months that followed. Many Americans lost great amounts of money. And the public at large lost faith in the economy. Soon, the economy was in ruins, and businesses were closing their doors.
President Hoover tried to solve the crisis. But he was not willing to take the strong actions that were needed to end it. As time passed, many Americans began to blame Hoover for the terrible economic depression.
Democrat Franklin Roosevelt was elected mainly because he promised to try new solutions to end the Great Depression.
FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT: "This great Nation will endure as it has endured, will revive and will prosper. So, first of all, let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself — nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance."
STEVE EMBER:Soon after he was elected, Roosevelt launched a number of imaginative economic policies to solve the crisis.
FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT: "Our greatest primary task is to put people to work. This is no unsolvable problem if we face it wisely and courageously. It can be accomplished in part by direct recruiting by the Government itself, treating the task as we would treat the emergency of a war, but at the same time, through this employment, accomplishing greatly needed projects to stimulate and reorganize the use of our great natural resources.
"Hand in hand with that, we must frankly recognize the overbalance of population in our industrial centers. And by engaging, on a national scale, in a redistribution, endeavor to provide a better use of the land for those best fitted for the land. Yes, the task can be helped by definite efforts to raise the values of agricultural products, and with this, the power to purchase the output of our cities.
"It can be helped by preventing realistically the tragedy of the growing loss through foreclosure of our small homes and our farms. It can be helped by insistence that the federal, the state, and the local governments act forthwith on the demands that their costs be drastically reduced."
STEVE EMBER: Roosevelt's policies helped to reduce the amount of human suffering. But the Great Depression finally ended only with America's entry into World War Two.
Roosevelt's victory in nineteen thirty-two also helped change the balance of power in American politics. Roosevelt brought new kinds of Americans to positions of power: Labor union leaders. Roman Catholics. Jews. Blacks. Americans from families that had come from places such as Italy, Ireland and Russia.
These Americans repaid Roosevelt by giving the Democratic Party their votes.
The nineteen twenties and thirties also brought basic changes in how Americans dealt with many of their social and economic problems.
The nineteen twenties generally were a period of economic growth with little government intervention in the day-to-day lives of the people. But the terrible conditions of the Great Depression during the nineteen thirties forced Roosevelt and the federal government to experiment with new policies.
The government began to take an active role in offering relief to the poor. It started programs to give food and money to poor people. And it created jobs for workers.
The government grew in other ways. It created major programs for farmers. It set regulations for the stock market. It built dams, roads and airports.
American government looked much different at the end of this period between the world wars than it did at the beginning. Government had become larger and more important. It dealt with many more issues in people's lives than it ever had before.
(MUSIC)
Social protest increased during the nineteen twenties and thirties. Some black Americans began to speak out more actively about unfair laws and customs. Blacks in great numbers moved from the southern part of the country to northern and central cities.
The nineteen twenties and thirties also were a time of change for women. Women began to wear less conservative kinds of clothes. Washing machines and other inventions allowed them to spend less time doing housework. Women could smoke or drink in public, at least in large cities. And many women held jobs.
Of course, the women's movement was not new. Long years of work by such women's leaders as Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony had helped women win the constitutional right to vote in nineteen twenty.
(MUSIC)
The nineteen twenties and thirties also were important periods in the arts.
George Gershwin wrote his “Rhapsody in Blue” originally for piano and jazz band. It later went on to become a symphony concert favorite.
George Gershwin
loc.gov
George Gershwin
Writers such as Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner, Eugene O'Neill and others made this what many called the "Golden Age" of American writing. Frank Lloyd Wright and other architects designed great buildings. Film actors like Clark Gable, and radio entertainers like Jack Benny did more than make Americans laugh or cry. They also helped unite the country. Millions of Americans could watch or listen to the same show at the same time.
Politics. The economy. Social traditions. Art. All these changed for Americans during the nineteen twenties and thirties. And many of these changes also had effects in countries beyond America's borders.
However, the change that had the most meaning for the rest of the world was the change produced by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
America's modern history as a great superpower begins with its reaction to that attack. It was a sudden event in the flow of history. It was a day on which a young land suddenly became fully grown.
Our story continues next week.
Our program was written by David Jarmul. 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. I’m Steve Ember inviting you to join us again next week for THE MAKING OF A NATION – American history in VOA Special English.
___
This was program #18
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