sábado, 11 de junho de 2011

Nuclear Power, No Thanks!

BRITAIN





Speaker: Justin Ratcliffe
Standard: British accent
Language level: Advanced
Source: www.speakup.com.br 



Nuclear Power,

Today there is considerable concern about global warming, not to mention the world’s dependence on Middle Eastern oil. For these reasons nuclear power, which was seen as the great evil a generation ago, is being re-evaluated. In July the British government announced its intention to build more nuclear power stations. In order to get an idea of public opinion, Speak Up took to the streets of Cambridge and asked people the question: “Does Britain Need More Nuclear Power? “ The first person to speak, Andy Holcombe, is a marketing director:

Andy Holcombe
(Standard British accent):

I think that’s a difficult question to answer. I do feel frustrated that the government doesn’t pay anything like the level of investment in non-nuclear, sustainable energy sources that it does in nuclear. I’d far rather see investment in wind, tidal barrage, methane, biomass-type energy than I would in sustaining something that’s just increasing the risk. If we do have to invest in nuclear, then I’d like to see more investment in things lie fusion, which is an inherently safe form of nuclear energy.

Stephen Murphy is a musician:

(Standard Northern Irish accent):

No, because it’s dirty and it’s dangerous. It’s difficult to dispose of the waste. And it involves no investment in other renewable energy sources like wind and it doesn’t encourage people to look after their own energy requirements and get insulation and things like in their houses.

Nicola Buckley is a festival organizer. She is a supporter of renewable technology. So what are her misgivings about nuclear power?

Nicola Buckley
(Standard British accent)

Maybe a threat from terrorism, attacks on nuclear power stations. And just the long time for the waste to, you know…it’s still dangerous and has to be disposed of.

Last but not least, Carol Roberts is a reception manager:

Carol Roberts
(Standard British accent):

No, I’m sure there must be some other way of…helping us to get more power than nuclear. I don’t agree with nuclear power. We’ve got a sea out there. We’ve got the windmills. America’s doing, what is it, in the desert? We must…I mean, all the sunshine we’re getting now. There must be another way that nuclear power. Look at…Chernobyl: you don’t know if that can happen. It’s like one of those things, it’s something waiting to happen. And I’d rather not go down that road, I’d rather go, you know, more natural. With all the technology we’ve got, surely we can do better than nuclear.

The Shape of Things to Come? (No audio)

The tiny village of Dunwich lies on the exposed east coast of England. From the cliff to p here you see all of nature’s natural power before you: the restless ocean, waves, tide and wind. Five miles (8km) to the south, rising large as a full moon over tranquil Minsmere Bird Reserve, is the white dome of Sizewell B nuclear power station. Sizewell B was completed in 1995 and it now produce three per cent of Britain’s total electricity needs; enough to supply 1.5 million households.

Good or Bad?

Nuclear has been making headlines ever since the first headlines ever since the first power stations opened in the 1950s. It has been celebrated as the solution to the world’s energy needs, condemned as a health risk labeled a “toxic time bomb.” Last year, for example, marked the twentieth anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster. 

No time to Lose

In Britain, as elsewhere, alternatives to fossil fuels are badly needed. By 2016, a quarter of Britain’s electricity generating capacity will need to be replaced. Tony Blair is an enthusiastic supporter of nuclear power, but its attractiveness as an alternative source of energy is undermined by the huge coast of building, supplying and maintaining nuclear power stations, not to mention extracting rare uranium and disposing of toxic waste.   

Nuclear Power, what do you think about it?



Instead of invest in Green Energy (renewable energy) world leaders invest in Nuclear Power, and one of the risk of a disaster similar to Japan's Tsunamis and other ones. That's because one of the raw material is Uranium mineral. Where I live there a lot and the incidence of Cancer has been increase, because the water table is poisoned by Uranium. And you, what do you think about the usage of Nuclear Power? It will be the next entry, please commented here and express your sincere viewpoint. 

sexta-feira, 10 de junho de 2011

Louis Khan, 1901-1974: He Helped Define Modern Architecture

Louis Khan, 1901-1974: He Helped Define Modern Architecture


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


I'm Steve Ember.  And I'm Barbara Klein with the VOA Special English program, PEOPLE IN AMERICA.
Today, we tell about Louis Kahn. He is considered one of the most important American building designers of the twentieth century.
Louis Kahn helped define modern architecture. Architecture is the art and science of designing and building structures such as houses, museums, and office buildings.  Kahn's architecture has several defining qualities.
For example, Kahn was very interested in the look and feel of the materials he used. He used brick and concrete in new and special ways.  Kahn also paid careful attention to the use of sunlight. He liked natural light to enter his buildings through interesting kinds of windows and openings. Kahn's work can also be identified by his creative use of geometric shapes. Many of his buildings use squares, circles and three sided shapes called triangles.
Louis Kahn was born in Estonia in nineteen-oh-one. When he was five years old his family moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  Even as a child, Louis Kahn showed excellence as an artist. When he was in school his pictures won several competitions organized by the city.  In high school, Kahn studied architecture briefly. He later went to the University of Pennsylvania and studied architecture full time. He graduated in nineteen twenty-four.
Louis Kahn's buildings have many influences. Some experts say his trip to Rome, Italy in nineteen fifty-one influenced him the most.  Kahn spent a few months as an architect with the American Academy in Rome. He also traveled through other parts of Italy, Greece and Egypt. There, he saw the ancient Greek and Roman ruins that also would influence his works. He was very affected by the size and design of these ruins. They helped influence him to develop an architecture that combines both modern and ancient designs.
Other experts believe Kahn was also influenced by the part of Philadelphia where he grew up.  There were many factory buildings with large windows.  These brick structures were very solid.  This industrial design is apparent in several of Kahn's early works.
Kahn's first projects involved building housing in Philadelphia. He later received government jobs to design housing during World War Two. In nineteen forty-two, he became a head architect of the Public Building Administration.  Kahn's first important project was the Yale Art Gallery in New Haven, Connecticut in the early nineteen fifties. The outside of the building is very simple.  The surface is made of brick and limestone.
The inside of the gallery shows Kahn's great artistic sense. For example, he created a triangle-shaped walkway of steps that sits inside a rounded concrete shell.  This building was very popular. Its completion represented an important step in Kahn's professional life. He was now a famous architect.
(MUSIC)
One of Kahn's other important buildings is the Salk Institute, a research center in La Jolla, California. It was built in the nineteen sixties. This structure further shows how Kahn was able to unite form and function. This means his buildings were beautiful and also useful.
The Salk Institute has two structures that surround a marble garden area or courtyard. This outdoor marble area is almost completely bare. The only detail is a small stream of water running through the middle of the square towards the Pacific Ocean. This simple design is very striking. Inside the building are many rooms for laboratories. Kahn was very careful to make sure they all received natural light and a view of the ocean.  He linked the indoor and outdoor spaces in a very beautiful way.
The Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas is another famous building by Louis Kahn. Some say it is his best. Kahn built this museum in the early nineteen seventies.  This large museum has long rooms with curved or vaulted ceilings. Inside, all of the walls can be moved to best fit the art collection. Kahn was able to make the concrete material of the building look both solid and airy. He used sunlight and bodies of water to create a truly special building.
Kahn once said this about the Kimbell Art Museum: "The building feels…that I had nothing to do with it…that some other hand did it."  The architect seems to say that he was helped by some higher influence. Many people feel that his architecture has a very spiritual and timeless quality.
Kahn mostly created public buildings such as museums and libraries. However, he also designed a few houses. His most famous home is the Fisher house near Philadelphia. It is made of several box- shaped buildings. The house is made out of glass, wood and stone. Many windows provide a view of the nearby trees.
(MUSIC)
Louis Kahn also designed buildings in other countries, including India and Bangladesh. His largest project was a series of buildings that would become the government center of Dhaka, Bangladesh. This structure includes the parliament, meeting rooms, offices, eating places and even a religious center. This series of buildings looks like an ancient home for kings.  Huge rounded and box-like buildings have windows in the shape of circles and triangles. The structure is surrounded by water. From a distance, it appears to float on a lake. Khan spent the last twelve years of his life on the project. It was completed in nineteen eighty-three, nine years after his death.  Because of Kahn, experts say, one of the poorest countries in the world has one of the most beautiful public buildings on Earth.
All of Kahn's buildings share a common solidity and heaviness. Experts say they are very different from the works of other famous architects of the period. These architects preferred light and airy buildings. Their weightless-looking structures were mostly made of glass and metal. Kahn used stone and concrete to make monumental buildings. Many of his structures look more ancient than modern.
(MUSIC)
Louis Kahn was an artist who created beautiful works.  But he was not a very good businessman. He would change his designs many times. This would make each project take a great deal of time and cost more money. The majority of the projects he designed were never built. Also, he did not like to compromise his design ideas to satisfy a buyer's wishes. For this reason and others, Kahn did not make many buildings. His design company did not always have many jobs or much money.  In fact, when Kahn died, he was in great debt. This is especially unusual since he was considered one of the most important architects in the world.
In two thousand four, Mr. Kahn's son, Nathaniel Kahn, made a film about his father's life. The film is called "My Architect".  It is interesting for many reasons. "My Architect" gives a history of Kahn's life. The film presents the architect and his buildings.  You can see Kahn working at his desk and talking with his builders. You can also see him teaching university students. You can tell that he had great energy. The film also shows a great deal about Kahn's private life.  Kahn had a wife and daughter.  But he also had two other families. Kahn had a child with each of two other women that he was not married to.  In the film, Nathaniel Kahn describes visits from his father.
He says that as a child he did not understand why his father did not live with him and his mother all of the time.
In "My Architect," Nathaniel Kahn meets his father's other children. They talk about what it was like to have such a famous and hard-working father. They also discuss what it was like having a father with so many family secrets. Many questions are left unanswered about Kahn. Yet, the film helps tell a very interesting story about a very important man. Louis Khan died in nineteen seventy-four.  Yet his influence lives on. While teaching at the University of Pennsylvania, he trained many future builders. Some students have become important architects. And Kahn's architecture has remained fresh and timeless.
This program was written by Dana Demange. It was produced by Dana Demange and Lawan Davis.  I'm Barbara Klein. And I'm Steve Ember. Join us again next week for PEOPLE IN AMERICA in VOA Special English.

IN THE NAME OF ART

IN THE NAME OF ART


By William Sutton

Source: www.speakup.com.br
Language level: B1 Lower Intermediate
Speaker: Rachel Roberts


Artists sometimes adopt names for simplicity, sometimes to add mystique. Often, they are given nicknames by accident.

PLAYING WITH NAMES

Diminutives: Antonio Canal, famous for paintings of Venice and London, was known as Canaletto (you can read entertaining stories about his activities in England in Janet Laurence’s novels, such as Canaletto and the Case of Westminster Bridge). His nephew, Bernardo Bellotto, found success by borrowing his uncle’s pseudonym.

Donato di Nicollo di Betto Bardi is known for sculptures such as the David in the Bargello Museum, Florence, under the name Donatello.

English graffiti artist Banksy keeps his real identity secret, partly to avoid arrest for his guerrilla artistic activities. The pseudonym may be based on his real name possibly Robert Banks or Edwards Banks. This uncertainty mirrors public reaction to his work. Some criticize it was vandalism. But his distinctive paintings, appearing on walls around the world as if by magic, use dark humour to generate debate. One example is an image of two policemen kissing; another is a Guantanamo Bay prisoner on a Disneyland ride.

A SENSE OF PLACE

El Greco found fame in Spain, working for the Church. The Spanish found his name hard to pronounce, but his paintings are signed Domenikos Theotokopoulos.

Controversial artist Michelangelo Merisi is known by the name of his hometown. Caravaggio. He developed chiaroscuro, the melodramatic contrast of light and dark, and shocked society by using a prostitute as his model for the Virgin Mary.

THAT ARTY FEELING

Sometimes a name sounds more artistic. Emmanuel Radnitzky began using the abbreviated name Man Ray to avoid anti-Semitism, but this strange pseudonym suited his modernist ethic. Polish-French modernist Balthasar Klossowski de Rola chose the memorable name Balthus.

Arhitect Charles-Édouard Jeanneret Gris believed that artists, and cities, could reinvent themselves. He chose to be called Le Corbusier, perhaps connected to the word for crow, but similar to his grandfather’s name, Lecorbésier.

Hilaire-Germanin-Edgar De Gas chose a less pretentious spelling of his name Degas. And Andrew Warhola, the son of Czech immigrants, removed a letter to become Andy Warhot.

MEANING AND SIMPLICITY

Because Jacopo Comin’s father was a dyer or “tintore,” he became known as Tintoretto. (His real surname, which translated as the spice “cumin,” was discovered only recently by the curator of the Prado).

Nicknames have also been attached to modern artists. Picasso was the Bull and Salvador Dali The Magician, while Jackson Pollock was known in London as Jack the Dripper.

POLITICS AND MANIFESTOES

The Futurists used pseudonyms to reflect their modern ideas: Volt (Vincenzo Ciotti), Fillia (Luigi Colombo) and Luciano Folgore (Omero Vecchi).

Radical feminism produced the Guerrilla Girls, a New York collective who promote egalitarian ideas. The members use disguises during interviews, naming themselves after dead female artists, such as Frida Kahlo and Sonia Delaunay.

For Bloggers and Facebook Friends

Today I'm going to talk about my Facebook's friends and bloggers, I'd like to thank you so much for your kind deserve promoting my blog for friends. Also I recommend for my readers visit my bloggers' friends just go to the blogroll bar you'll see my readers' partners as well as visit my favorite links and useful sites and blogs. One of my recent partner is Aristofanes from Greece have a look at there. See you later. 

Piadas em Inglês: PROFICIENCY


Source: 

http://www.teclasap.com.br/blog/tag/piadas-em-ingles/page/2/


Piadas em Inglês: PROFICIENCY


What were you thinking?
.
There was this Asian lady married to an English gentleman and they lived in London. The poor lady was not very proficient in English, but managed to communicate with her husband. The real problem arose whenever she had to shop for groceries [fazer compras; ir ao supermercado]. One day, she went to the butcher [açougue; (lit.) açougueiro] and wanted to buy chicken legs. She didn’t know how to put forward her request, and in desperation, lifted up [levantou] her skirt [saia] to show her thighs[coxas]. The butcher got the message and the lady went home with chicken legs. The next day, she needed to get chicken breast [peito de frango]. Again, she didn’t know how say it, and so she unbuttoned [desabotoou] her blouse to show the butcher her breast. The lady got what she wanted. The 3rd day, the poor lady needed to buy sausages [salsicha; linguiça]. Unable to find a way to communicate this, she brought her husband to the store… (Please scroll the page down)
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Hellooooooo, her husband speaks a very fluent English!!!
CfVocabulário: Calabresa e Pochete
.
CfComo se diz “picanha” em inglês?
CfFalsos Cognatos: BEEF
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quinta-feira, 9 de junho de 2011

CREATIVITY WORK

 Creativity at Work


Source: www.speakup.com.br I also recommend you keep in touch and take out a subscription, excellent magazine.

BY LORENZA CERBINI
Language level: B2 UPPER INTERMEDIATE



It is said that New York has been the center of the art world since the end of the Second World War, when it effectively replaced Paris. Over the last seven decades it has continuously given us exciting new forms of art and that is still the case today.

Let’s take the examples of these contemporary artists, all of whom moved to “the Big Apple, all of whom moved so “the Big Apple” in order to further their careers. The first thing that strikes an observer is their unusual choice of materials, which include leather, one dollar bills and the components of old typewriters.

CONCEPTUAL ART

Mark Evans ( www.markevansart.com ), a young Welsh artist, and Mark Wagner ( www.pavelzoubok.com ), who is from Wisconsin, are two artists whose work requires the patience, attention to detail and skill of a craftsman. Evans engraves in leather and has a collection of knives that would be the envy of any butcher. Yet he makes sure that his incisions are only a tenth of a millimeter deep. Wagner, on the other hand, uses razors, scissors and penknives to transform dollar bills into highly complicated collages. If Evans and Wagner are both conceptual artists, then Californian Sono Osato ( www.sonoosato.com ) belongs to a different category. She has been creating art for some 20 years and her work has been exhibited in such institutions as il DeYounf Fine Art Museum DeYoung in San Francisco (http://www.famsf.org/deyoung/), the Laguna Art Museum

Osato’s enormous sculpture paintings, which can weigh as much as 220 pounds (100 kilos), are made up of colors snake bones, teeth and typewriter parts. In her collages, Osato takes a look at human history and her work could be described as a tribute to anthropology and the development of language.

MARK EVANS

Mark Evans is 34 years old. He grew up on  farm in the Welsh mountains, prior to heading to London, where he studied Fine Art ant Middlesex University. He doesn’t draw or paint; instead he creates portraits by scratching and engraving large pieces of leather. He has been interested in creating art with knives ever since the age of seven, when his grandfather gave him a small pocket knife. This he would use for carving images on trees around the farm.

And another present, which he received in his early 20s, would also change his life. One Christmas he was given a new leather jacket, but disaster struck! As he helped prepare Christmas dinner in the kitchen a spot of blood accidentally ended up on the jacket. He tried to scratch it off with a knife, but he scratched too hard. Instead of get angry, he decided to use the surface of the jacket to draw a to-tone rendering of Jimi-Hendrix.

MY EUREKA MOMENT

“It was,” He says, “my own private Archimedes ‘Eureka’ moment. It was as if an explosion went off in my mind. I then spent the next few years focused on developing this technique at my studio. I was living as part artist and part mad scientist, trying to perfect the process which I’d accidentally discovered.”

Today Mark works with animal hides from around the world. His subjects often include cultural icons, like reggae star Bob Marley and boxing legend Muhammad Ali, Evans also likes bulls: one piece featuring these animals recently sold for £70.000. His work is collected connoisseurs, it can be found in British stately homes, Los Angeles penthouses and Saud Royal Palaces.