quinta-feira, 2 de junho de 2011

Guiding people on tour

Today I'm going to talk about a group of tourist from Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo who recently they have visited my town (Carnaúba dos Dantas). In particular, I want to mention the will power of two women Nel and Marcia. Nel is from Holland but she lives in Brazil for about 50 years, in conclusion, she is 87, and Marcia is American but she lives here for about 50 as well. And both climbed up until the top of the walkways of both Xique-Xique I and II, that's why I want to congratulated their effortless to get their achievements. 

And of course Franklin and Ingrid from Rio de Janeiro. Ingrid is Neil's daughter and Franklin's wife I had the opportunity to guide them for two days. Absolutely, I'll not forget them and I want to share this moment with my readers worldwide. Check it out the pictures bellow. 

   Me and Franklin on Talhado do Gaviao shelter
   Talhado
  The blue blouse is Marcia (86) Nel (87) Ingrid and me (Carlos owner of English tips

Milton Hershey, 1857-1945: He Built a Successful Business and a Sweet Town

Milton Hershey, 1857-1945: He Built a Successful Business and a Sweet Town





(MUSIC)
I'm Barbara Klein. And I'm Steve Ember with the VOA Special English programPEOPLE IN AMERICA.  Today we tell about Milton Hershey.  He built one of the sweetest towns in the United States.
(MUSIC)
Milton Snavely Hershey was born in eighteen fifty-seven in central Pennsylvania.  His mother was a member of the Mennonite Church.  The religious group valued self-denial and community service.  His father worked at many different jobs.
The Hershey family moved several times during Milton's childhood.  His parents did not have a happy marriage.  They lived separately for much of their lives.  Mrs. Hershey finally rejected her husband after a daughter died in eighteen sixty-seven.
Milton Hershey stopped attending school when he was twelve years old.  He first went to work as an assistant for a man who published a German language newspaper.  Milton did not like the job.  He was dismissed after dropping his hat into a machine.
Milton then got a job with a candy and ice cream maker in the town of Lancaster.  There, he learned how to mix sugar and water to make candy products.  At the time, American candy makers used chocolate mainly to cover candies.  Reports say it was bitter tasting and not at all like the taste of chocolate today.
Milton moved to the city of Philadelphia when he was eighteen years old.  He had already learned all he could about candy production.  His mother and her family offered to help him set up a candy store.  But the business failed after six years.
Milton decided to join his father in the western state of Colorado.  The younger Hershey found a job with a candy maker in Denver.  There, he worked with a kind of sticky candy: caramel.  He also learned the importance of using fresh milk in making good caramel.
Milton later attempted candy businesses in Chicago and New York City.  But like before, each business failed.
Milton returned to Lancaster.  Most family members considered him a failure.  But he continued to receive help from his mother's sister and a man who had worked at the Philadelphia store.  Milton began making caramels his own way – with fresh milk.  His caramels were softer than others being sold and less sticky.
One day, an English importer tasted Hershey's caramels and placed a large order.  Soon the Lancaster Candy Company was a success.  Hershey became one of Pennsylvania's top businessmen.  He was selling his candies all across the United States and Europe.
Things began changing for Hershey after he visited the Chicago World's Fair in eighteen ninety-three.  At the World's Fair, he saw chocolate making machines from Germany.  He decided that chocolate was the future of the candy business, and bought the machines.  He had them moved to Pennsylvania, and sold the Lancaster Candy Company.  He was developing an unusual plan -- to build a large chocolate factory and a town to support it.
(MUSIC)
Michael D'Antonio wrote a book about Milton Hershey.  It says Hershey got the idea for his town from the Cadbury family in Britain.  The Cadburys made chocolates.  They also built a factory surrounded by a town.
The book says Hershey decided to do the same.  He paid for many buildings in his town.  He wanted to create a place where his factory's workers could own their own houses.  In this way, he prevented Hershey, Pennsylvania from becoming a factory town in which the workers were forced to pay their employers for a place to live.
Hershey's town was modern.  It had nice houses, large public buildings, and an electric railway system for easy transportation.  Nearby farms provided the chocolate factory with fresh milk for its products.
Milton Hershey and his company found a way to make large amounts of milk chocolate.  The secret was using fat free milk with the seeds of cacao trees and heating them slowly.  The Hershey Candy Company was on its way to success.
Most of the company's workers loved Milton Hershey.  He made it possible for them to earn good wages and live well.  The book "Hershey" says he sometimes shared the company's financial success with them.
Yet Milton Hershey was not always fair.  Writer Michael D'Antonio says not everyone was happy living in a place where one man and his company attempted to control so much.
(MUSIC)
Milton Hershey did not marry until he was over forty years old.  He surprised his family when he married Catherine Sweeney in eighteen ninety-eight.  Some members of his family did not approve of her.  She was a Roman Catholic from New York State.  Milton called her, Kitty.  The Hersheys first lived in Lancaster.  They later moved to a large house near the factory.  The land around the house was known for its many flowers and plants.
Catherine Hershey was sick for much of her married life.  She died in nineteen fifteen at the age of forty-two.
The Hersheys were unable to have children, so they decided to help needy children by creating a school for them.  Milton Hershey said the school had been his wife's idea.  She reportedly wanted to provide a safe place for those in need of a good home and a better chance in life.
In nineteen-oh-nine, the Hersheys created the Hershey Industrial School for boys who had lost one or both parents.  They established a special legal agreement, or trust, to provide money for the school.  They gave nearly two hundred hectares of farmland to the trust.
At first, ten white boys attended the school.  But more and more boys attended as time went on.  The school provided the boys with a good education and farming skills.
After his wife died, Hershey gave Hershey Chocolate Company stock shares with a value of sixty million dollars to the trust.  This money made it possible for the school to expand.
After Hershey died, the name of the school was changed to the Milton Hershey School.  Later, the school opened its doors to boys and girls of all races and religions.
Today, the Milton Hershey School has more than one hundred student homes.  Each has the latest technological equipment, including computers.  A man and his wife live in each house.  They serve as parents to eight to ten students.
In two thousand-six, the Milton Hershey School educated about one thousand three hundred students.  And, the gift first made by Milton Hershey has grown to more than five thousand million dollars.
Many Americans experienced economic hardship during the Great Depression of the nineteen thirties.  But Milton Hershey put many people to work in the town by building a large hotel and a sports center.
He also created a not-for-profit organization to provide education and culture to the local townspeople.  This organization continues to support the Hershey Theater and other cultural centers in the area.
In the early nineteen sixties, the Milton Hershey School Trust gave money and land to the Pennsylvania State University for a medical center.  The Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center opened in nineteen sixty-seven.  Today, it has five thousand employees.
(MUSIC)
Milton Hershey died in nineteen forty-five.  He left behind the company, the town, the school and the trust that supports it.  At the time of his death, the company he built is said to have produced about ninety percent of all the milk chocolate made in the United States.
In two thousand two, officials of the Milton Hershey School Trust announced plans to sell the company.  They said they wanted to help protect the finances of the school.
Townspeople and others in Pennsylvania demonstrated against the sale.  They said it would destroy the town Hershey had worked so hard to create.  Former students at the Milton Hershey School also worked against the sale.  In the end, the sale was not completed.
Today, Hershey, Pennsylvania is unlike any other town in the United States.  The streetlights are shaped like the candy called Hershey's Kisses.  The air there often smells like chocolate.  Millions of people come every year to stop at a visitor's center near the factory, stay at the Hershey Hotel, and enjoy the Hershey Amusement Park.
Milton Hershey was not a perfect man.  But he may always seem that way to thousands of people in Pennsylvania.  They say they live in the sweetest town in the country.
This Special English program was written by Nancy Steinbach.  Lawan Davis was our producer.  I'm Steve Ember. And I'm Barbara Klein inviting you to join us next week at this time for another PEOPLE IN AMERICA program on the Voice of America. 

Does Social networkings could help you to improve your English? Comment please



Do you really think that social networking websites (Facebook, Twitter, Orkut, Stumble Upon, etc) could provide your improvement in English? Whatsoever you practise English a lot, taking a private course, travel abroad and you have some problems to communicate, listening, writing and speaking, one of the main difficult for English Students develop abilities (skills). I’m not mention a lot of useful websites and blogs Brazilians and Foreigners ones who provide a Self-Studying.
Express your ideas and keep practising, never give up your dreams, overcome your difficulties and go ahead. You can count with me; I’ve been practising at least over 20 years as a Self-Taught. Get in touch through e-mail: carlosrn36@gmail.com or Skype ID: aventureirosdacaatinga

quarta-feira, 1 de junho de 2011

THE ART OF LANGUAGE

Source: www.speakup.com.br
Language level: Advanced
Standard: American accent
Speaker: Chuck Rolando



THE ART OF LANGUAGE

IF Mark Wagner specialises in breaking down dollar bills, then Sono Osato does the same thing with old typewriters and adding machines.

Sono Osato
(Standard American English)

There’s and underlying inspiration – I wouldn’t say so much a theme, but definitely an underlying inspiration – which has to do with the origins of writing. And I have been interested in that for a very long time, about how objects, especially old objects that have been beaten up and thrown away, and you pull them back out again, how their shape implies some kind of a sound, and it goes back to the early instincts, the human instinct of writing and language, that a picture, in some cases of a real thing, eventually became a letter, which became a sound which became an idea. So it’s that relationship between objects and thought and writing. So that is part of the inspiration. And I start out almost kind of thinking of text, so it’s a combination of that and then topography, human history, how it moves across land and water, so I’m combining both things: one is the tableau of a written text and the other is the tableau…of a natural surface, such as the surface of the ocean or a river, or mountains or that, and I put the two of them together. 

Like a Bridge over trouble water

Author: Khampeerai Kaewharn


 Listen to the song then fill in the missing word.
                    
         Bridge Over Troubled Water  -  Simon and Garfunkel


        When you're , feeling  
        When  are in your 
        I  dry them  
        I'm on your  

        When times   rough 
         friends just can't be 
         a bridge over troubled water 
        I will lay me  
        Like a bridge  troubled water 
        I will  me down 

        When you're down and  
        When you're on the  
        When  falls so 
        I will  you 
        I'll take your  
        When darkness  
         pain is all  

        Like a bridge  troubled water 
        I will lay me 
        Like a  over troubled water 
        I will  me down 

         on silver 
        Sail on  
        Your  has come to  
        All your  are on their  
         how they shine 

         you need a 
        I'm sailing right 
        Like a  over troubled water 
        I will ease your 
         a bridge over troubled water 
        I will ease your 

                  

Words and their stories, Hold on.

Source: www.voanews.com

Due some problems with the audio, please click here http://www.4shared.com/audio/cp0xZ94t/Words_and_Their_Stories-_Hold_.html?



Now, WORDS AND THEIR STORIES, a VOA Special English program about American expressions. I’m Rich Kleinfeldt with expressions made using the word hold.
“Can’t hold a candle to” is a popular expression. It is from the time before electricity, when people used candles for light. Someone who lived in a big house would have a servant light his way by holding a candle. The expression meant that the person who cannot hold a candle to you is not fit even to be your servant. Now, it means such a person cannot compare or compete.  In the following song, singer Dolly Parton tells her new love that her old flames, her old lovers, cannot compare with him.
(MUSIC)
Another expression is “hold your tongue.” It means to be still and not talk.  “Hold your tongue” is not something you would tell a friend. But a parent or teacher might use the expression to quiet a noisy child.
“Hold out” is an expression one hears often in sports reports and labor news. It means to refuse to play or work. Professional football and baseball players hold out if their team refuses to pay them what they think they are worth. Members of labor unions hold out and refuse to work until they get the work agreement they want.
The expression “hold up” has several different meanings. One is a robbery. A man with a gun may say, “This is a hold up. Give me your money.” Another meaning is to delay. A driver late for work may tell his boss, “I was held up by heavy traffic.” Someone who was robbed on the way to work might say, “Sorry, boss, I was held up by a hold up.”
Still another meaning of the expression is for a story to be considered true after an investigation. The same driver late for work could say, “My boss did not believe a hold up held me up. But the police confirmed what I said so my story held up.”
“Hold on” is another expression. Often it means wait or stop. As you leave for school, your brother may say, “Hold on, you forgot your book.”
Hold on is used to ask a telephone caller to wait and not hang up his telephone. If you call a library to ask for a book, the librarian might say, “Hold on while I look for it.”
Our final expression is “hold the line.” That means to keep a problem or situation from getting worse, to hold steady. For example, the president may say he will hold the line on taxes. He means there will be no increase in taxes. Now, I must hold the line on this program. I have no more time left today.
(MUSIC)
This VOA Special English program, WORDS AND THEIR STORIES, was written by Frank Beardsley.  I’m Rich Kleinfeldt.

terça-feira, 31 de maio de 2011

Dear Bloggers and Readers, thank you for everything


Let’s have some coffee?

Dear Bloggers...
Today’s morning I decided to talk about my bloggers partners in Brazil and overseas. I’m not mention names ‘cause I don’t want to miss anyone.
One think you can be sure of, you are important and I recognize about that, I mean, the up traffic and more visitors on my blogs depends on the partnership of yours.
In conclusion, as much as possible I visit you and desire a wonderful day for those who decide to support English Tips’ blog.
Please, if you liked my blog just promote it using the social networking’s bottom bellow. Thank you and have a wonderful day/night and afternoon all.