quarta-feira, 17 de agosto de 2011

American History: The Rise of US Influence After World War Two


President Harry Truman signing the European Recovery Act

Photo: americanhistory.si.edu
President Harry Truman signing the European Recovery Act

STEVE EMBER: Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION – American history in VOA Special English. I’m Steve Ember.
(MUSIC)
Britain was once the most powerful nation in the world. It ruled a wide-reaching empire. This week in our series, we look at how British power gave way to American influence after World War Two.
One can almost name the day when this happened. It was February twenty-first, nineteen forty-seven. British diplomats in Washington called the State Department. They had two messages from their government.
The first was about Greece. The situation there was critical. Greece had been occupied by Germany during the war. Now it was split by a bitter civil war. On one side of the fighting was the Greek royal family supported by Britain. On the other side were communist-led rebels supported by Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union.
British forces had helped keep Greece from becoming communist at the end of World War Two. A few years later, Britain could no longer help. It needed all its strength to rebuild after the war. So, on that February day in nineteen forty-seven, Britain told the United States it would soon end all support for Greece.
Britain's second message that day was about Turkey. Turkey was stronger than Greece. But the concern was that it, too, could become communist unless it received outside help.
Britain warned the United States that the Soviet Union would soon extend its control all the way across eastern Europe to the eastern Mediterranean. It called on President Harry Truman to provide strong American support to help Greece and Turkey resist the communist threat.
Britain, in effect, was asking the United States to take over leadership of the Western world. The United States was ready to accept this new responsibility.
For months, relations between the United States and the Soviet Union had been growing worse and worse.
(MUSIC)
The two countries had fought together as allies in the Second World War. But Soviet actions after the war shocked the American people.
The Soviet Union wanted to block western political and economic influence in central and eastern Europe. It wanted to extend its own influence instead. So, after the war, it forced a number of countries to establish communist governments.
Winston Churchill speaks at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri, on March 5, 1946
AP
WINSTON CHURCHILL: “From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic an iron curtain has descended across the Continent.”
Britain's prime minister, Winston Churchill, described the situation in a speech in March of nineteen forty-six at Westminster College in the American state of Missouri.
WINSTON CHURCHILL: “Behind that line lie all the capitals of the ancient states of Central and Eastern Europe. Warsaw, Berlin, Prague, Vienna, Budapest, Belgrade, Bucharest and Sofia, all these famous cities and the populations around them lie in what I must call the Soviet sphere, and all are subject in one form or another, not only to Soviet influence but to a very high and, in some cases, increasing measure of control from Moscow.”
Churchill warned that the Soviet Union was trying to expand its power. He described it as an "iron curtain" falling across the middle of Europe. This iron curtain divided Europe into a communist east and a democratic west.
(MUSIC)
The situation was made even more tense by news coming from China. China was a divided nation at the end of World War Two. The forces of Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek controlled the southwestern part of the country. Communist forces under Mao Zedong controlled the north.
Both the United States and the Soviet Union expected that Chiang Kai-shek would be able to unite China.
Chiang and the Nationalists won several early victories over the Communists. But Mao and his forces used a growing hatred of the Nationalist government to win support. Slowly, they began to win battles and capture arms.
Early in nineteen forty-nine, communist forces took control of Peking -- now Beijing -- and Tientsin. They captured Shanghai and Canton. By the end of the year, Chiang and his Nationalist forces had to flee to the island of Taiwan.
The fall of the Nationalist government on the mainland caused a bitter political debate in America. Some critics of the Truman administration thought the United States had not done enough to help the Nationalists.
The Truman administration rejected the charges. It said Chiang caused his own defeat by failing to reform and win the support of the Chinese people. Secretary of State Dean Acheson described the defeat this way:
"The unfortunate but inescapable fact is that the ominous result of the civil war in China was beyond the control of the government of the United States. Nothing that this country did or could have done within the reasonable limits of its capabilities could have changed that result; nothing that was left undone by this country has contributed to it. It was the product of internal Chinese forces, forces which this country tried to influence but could not. A decision was arrived at within China, if only a decision by default."
(MUSIC)
The United States was more successful in its policies toward Europe. The British warnings about the communist threat in Greece and Turkey led President Truman to speak to Congress. He said, "I believe that it must be the policy of the United States to support free peoples who are resisting attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures."
americanhistory.si.edu
American flour being unloaded in Greece
Truman called on Congress to give him four hundred million dollars in aid for Greece and Turkey. After a brief but intense national debate, Congress agreed. Truman then launched an effort to save the Greek economy and reorganize the Greek army. Soon after that, Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union ended their aid to Greek rebels. The civil war in Greece ended.
American help for Greece and Turkey was the first step in what became known as the "Truman Doctrine." The goal of this policy was to stop Soviet aggression anywhere in the world.
Truman was willing to use military force to stop the spread of communism. But he also believed it was equally important to build up western European nations so they would be strong enough to defend themselves.
Europe was suffering terribly after World War Two. There were severe shortages of food and fuel. Crops were destroyed. Many Europeans were beginning to look to the communists -- to anybody -- to save them.
This is one reason why Truman and his advisers developed a plan to rebuild the economies of Europe.
americanhistory.si.edu
Heavy machinery from the United States bound for Austria
After the war, President Truman made George Marshall his secretary of state. Marshall had led American troops as a general in World War Two. Now, as the nation's top diplomat, he proposed the idea for rebuilding Europe. This idea became known as the "Marshall Plan."
President Truman explained why there had to be a Marshall Plan. People were starving, he said. There had been food riots in France and Italy. There was not enough fuel. People were cold and sick. Tuberculosis was breaking out.
As Truman said later, "Something had to be done."
Secretary of State Marshall described the plan during a congressional hearing in Washington.
GEORGE MARSHALL: “Why must the United States carry so great a load in helping Europe? The answer is simple. The United States is the only country in the world today which has the economic power and productivity to furnish the needed assistance. The six and eight-tenths billion proposed for the first fifteen months is less than a single month’s charge of the war.
To be quite clear, this unprecedented endeavor of the new world to help the old is neither sure nor easy. It is a calculated risk. It is a difficult program. And you know, far better than I do, the political difficulties involved in this program.
But there’s no doubt whatever in my mind that, if we decide to do this thing, we can do it successfully. And there’s also no doubt in my mind that the whole world hangs in the balance as to what it is to be.”
(MUSIC)
The United States offered aid through the Marshall Plan to all countries in Europe. The Soviet Union and its allies refused help. Sixteen other countries, however, welcomed the aid.
From nineteen forty-eight to nineteen fifty-two, administrators of the Marshall Plan worked with these countries. The United States spent thirteen billion dollars.
The plan worked. Agricultural production in Marshall Plan countries increased by ten percent. Industrial production increased by thirty-five percent. Production in some industries, such as steel, increased by much more.
There were political results, as well. Stronger economies helped prevent communists from gaining control of the governments in France and Italy.
Some Europeans criticized the Marshall Plan. They said it increased tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union in the years after the war. Yet few could deny that the plan was one of the most successful international economic programs in history.
(MUSIC)
Next week, we look at another way the United States provided aid in postwar Europe -- the Berlin Airlift.
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.
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Contributing: David Jarmul
This was program #200. For earlier programs, type "Making of a Nation" in quotation marks in the search box at the top of the page
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Brazil: 20 years without the King of baião

Source: http://www.maganews.com.br
All credits for MAGANEWS

Tribute
Brazil: 20 years without the King of baiãoLuiz Gonzaga died in August 1989. His songs were inspired by the daily lives of people in the Northeast of Brazil

August 2nd marks 20 years since Luiz Gonzaga died. He wrote some of the biggest classics in Brazilian musical history, such as “Asa Branca” and “O Xote das Meninas”. Known as the “King of baião”, Gonzaga was chiefly responsible for promoting music from the Northeast of Brazil. For decades Brazil listened to Gonzaga playing the accordion and wearing clothes that were typical of the Northeast, such as a leather hat. His lyrics spoke of pain and love for the people in the Northeast.  Luiz Gonzaga was born in Exu, Pernambuco State, in 1912. His son, Gonzaguinha, (killed in a traffic accident in 1991) was also a very talented singer and songwriter. 


A century since the death of Euclides da Cunha 
He wrote “Os Sertões”, one of the great works in Brazilian literature

Euclides da Cunha died tragically on August 15th 1909. He was killed by his wife’s lover. This tragic story was told by Globo TV, in the miniseries Desejo, aired in 1990. Euclides  was born in 1866, in Cantagalo, Rio de Janeiro. He worked as a teacher, engineer, journalist and writer. In 1897 he travelled to Canudos, in Bahia, to cover the “Guerra dos Canudos” (1896-1897) for the newspaper O Estado de SP.  His reports formed the base of his masterpiece Os Sertões, published in1902. In the book Euclides details the everyday lives of the northeastern people, who suffer from starvation, drought, social injustice and government neglect.

Matéria publicada na edição de agosto da Revista Maganews 
Áudio – Aasita Muralikrishna

Vocabulary
chiefly (principalmente) – aqui = o maior
accordion – acordeão
leather hat – chapeu de couro
pain -dor
5 lover – amante
to cover – cobrir (reportagens)
masterpiece – obra-prima
starvation – fome
drought – seca
10 neglect - negligência

terça-feira, 16 de agosto de 2011

CONFESSIONS OF A LATIN TEACHER, PART III



Source: Speak Up
Language level: Upper Intermediate
Standard: British accent
Speaker: Justin Ratcliffe




CONFESSION OF A LATIN TEACHER PART III BY WILLIAM SUTTON

The title of Peter Jone’s book, Vote for Caesar: How the Ancient Greeks and Romans Solved the Problems of Today, is self-explanatory. He believes that, if we study the Greeks and Romans, we can be great like them. Greek and Latin are often cited as the best languages: they are more complete and accurate than modern languages. The claims are nonsense. The Romans and Greeks had as many problems as we do. They were greedy, genocidal and cruel to animal. Perhaps that is why we like them: their errors, as well as their achievements, are familiar.

This month and next, we consider 10 unpleasant Latin legacies.

1.   EXPLOITATION

Empires come and go, but it was the Romans who developed the systematic exploitation of colonies. Their phenomenal military machine enslaves natives, extracted resources and generated taxes. The Romans gained luxuries, cheap food, wine, bathing and sanitation. Slaves provided labour, skills and entertainment (gladiatorial and sexual).

This model of empire led to European colonisation; the slave trade; exploitation of Americas; the US cotton industry and the industrial Revolution.

2.   ECO-WARRIORS

At the opening of the Colosseum, 5.000 animals were killed. In on hunting spectacle, they massacred hundred of lions, leopards and bears and thousands of ostriches, deer and wild boars. The pushed animals towards extinction. There are no elephants and lions in North Africa; there is no Syrian elephant, no Atlas bear and no hippopotamus in the Nile.

The Romans drained lakes and diverted rivers. They spread cities across Europe, causing sanitation problems that still exist today. They gave us the belief that man could dominate the environment – only now the environment is fighting back.

3.   GAMES AND GAMING

The Romans inverted sporting celebrities. We may not allow gladiatorial fights, but today’s boxing and Formula One echo that fatal thrill.

Danger was not enough. The Romans turned Greek sports into gambling extravaganzas. Fortune were won and lost at the Circus Maximus, as in horse racing today. We don’t yet kill people on TV, but Big Brother has something in common with the voyeurism of throwing Christians to the lions.

4.   DEMOCRACY (SORT OF)
The Greeks invented democracy, we are constantly told. We often forget that Athenian democracy was restricted to male citizens. This experiment led to war, plague and the collapse of Athens.

Political hypocrisy never changes. The Emperor Augustus exiled his own daughter Julia for partying and prostitution when he was passing morality laws. Tony Blair suggested fining young men who drink alcohol: a week later, his son Euan was arrested, drunk, in Leicester Square. Silvio Belusconi is mocked for appointing sexy women as ministers; but at least he hasn’t tried to make his horse a consul, like Caligula.

5.   PROGRESS

We want to believe that politics improve, moving towards justice. This is naive. The Romans threw away centuries of popular reform when they accepted emperors. Their dictatorship inspired Hitler and countless others. More Romans ruination next month!


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Just to inform, I changed the blog's layout, and added the blogger's partners link on the main menu of the tool bar, check it out yours on USEFUL SITES (Educative websites and blogs), THE BEST ADDRESS, for Brazilians and foreign blogs and the same goes for BLOGROLL I and BLOGROLL II. In addition, I take care of those English tips'  bloggers as well as for those readers, teachers and students from which they visit and promote my blog around the world, many thanks for your kind support. 

Amazonia, the most precious place on the planet

I recommend a subscription of this awesome magazine for English Teachers and students, affordable price and for more info, visit. http://www.maganews.com.br/
Recomendo a assinatura desta revista maravilhosa para professores de Língua Inglesa e alunos, preços acessíveis para maiores informações visite: 
Environment
Amazonia, the most precious place on the planet
Amazonia is home to the world’s largest tropical forest and has an incredible diversity of animal, plant and tree species. Learn more about this region, which has been devastated by man in recent decades, and which is fundamental to our planet’s climate


       Amazonia is one of the largest and most important regions in the world. It stretches into nine countries:  Brazil, Venezuela, Peru, Colombia, Bolivia, Ecuador, Suriname, Guiana and French Guiana. About 60% of the total area of Amazonia is in Brazil, covering about 5.5 million square meters. Brazilian Amazonia stretches to the States of Acre, Amapá, Amazonas, Rondônia, Roraima, Pará, Maranhão, Mato Grosso and Tocantins. At least 55% of the indigenous population of Brazil lives in the Amazonian region.
     In terms of volume of water, the Amazon is the world’s largest river. The region also has other great rivers, such as the Negro. Twenty percent of all the fresh water on the planet passes through the rivers in Amazonia. The region is also home to the largest tropical forest in the world. In the rivers and undergrowth of the region live millions of fish, birds and mammals. The plant wealth of the Amazonia is awesome. There are 200 different types of tree per hectare. The region also has the biggest mineral reserves on earth.
* Source – Amazonia Surveillance System (Sivam)

Você pode ler a matéria completa sobre a Amazônia na edição de número 35 da Revista Maganews

Vocabulary
forest – floresta
tree - árvore
to stretch into – se estender por
mammal – mamífero

Words and their Stories Great Scott




Source: http://www.voanews.com/learningenglish/home/Words-and-Their-Stories-Great-Scott-127652058.html

Now, the VOA Special English program WORDS AND THEIR STORIES.
Every language has its ways of expressing strong emotions -- surprise, shock, anger.
The expressions range from mild to strong, from exclamations and oaths, to curses and swear words. The ones that are accepted in public speech change through the years as social rules change.
At times, only very mild expressions are socially accepted.
Some of the most popular expressions are those that are guaranteed not to offend anyone. Most of these exclamations have survived from earlier days. And their original meanings are long since forgotten.
Great Scott! is a good example. It expresses surprise or shock. You might say to someone, "Great Scott! I did not know she was married!"
Language expert Webb Garrison tells an interesting story about the expression.
Just before the Civil War, the Whig political party was making a last effort to remain a part of American political life. For the election of eighteen fifty-two, the Whigs wanted to offer a colorful candidate for president.
They thought that Winfield Scott would be the right candidate.
In his thirty years as a general, Winfield Scott had become one of the best-known military leaders in the country. During the war with Mexico, he had captured Vera Cruz and occupied Mexico City.
So, party leaders thought that if any Whig could be elected president, it was Winfield Scott.
General Scott quickly accepted the nomination and began campaigning. It did not take long for the public to realize that General Scott really liked General Scott!
His speeches were full of praise for himself. It was evident that he thought he was the greatest candidate who had ever lived. Soon his political opponents began to make fun of him. They called him, Great Scott.
General Scott did not come close to winning the presidency. But his name still lives as part of the English language.
Other popular exclamations combine holy with other words.
Holy Mackerel! is one that expresses surprise or wonder. It comes from earlier days when the Roman Catholic Church ruled that Catholics must not eat meat on Fridays. Since mackerel was a common and cheap fish in the United States, it was often eaten for dinner on Friday.
Then there is Holy Toledo! It is another expression of surprise. It refers to the city of Toledo, Spain, an important religious center in medieval times. Toledo was a holy city for both the Roman Catholics and the Muslim Moors of Spain.
(MUSIC)
This VOA Special English program WORDS AND THEIR STORIES was written by Marilyn Christiano. Maurice Joyce was the narrator. I'm Warren Scheer. 

segunda-feira, 15 de agosto de 2011

A beautiful couple - in fiction and in real life




Source: This is the best Brazilian magazine for more info contact the website http://www.maganews.com.br/





Celebrities and TV
A beautiful couple - in fiction and in real life
The young actors Marina and Klebber stand out[1] in the soap opera Morde e Assopra ,  playingtroubled [2]  characters


   Alice is a spoiled [3] and arrogant little girl. She is the daughter of the mayor of Preciosa and has a nasty [4]  habit of calling poor people “mutts.” [5]  Guilherme is the son of ahousemaid [6], but to impress the beautiful Alice he lies [7], and tells her he is a doctor and that his (rich) parents live far away. They begin dating, but when Alice discovers that Guilherme is lying, she ends the relationship,though [8] she is still in love with him. This is a summary of the lives of the characters Alice and Guilherme in the soap opera Morde e Assopra (Globo, 7.30 PM).  During the course of the soap opera these flawed [9] characters will face some unexpected problems. But their suffering will help them become better people. In real life, Marina Ruy Barbosa and Klebber Toledo began dating during the filming of the soap opera. He is 25 years old and made his TV debut in 2007, working onthe show Malhação. Before becoming an actor, Toledo played volleyball from 15 to 17 years of age, and then worked as a waiter [10], salesman [11] and even a dance teacher. Marina is much younger, at only 16, but she has more TV experience than her boyfriend. She made her debut on Globo at nine years of age and was in four soap operas before Morde e Assopra.


Matéria publicada na edição de número 62 da revista Maganews.
Áudio – Aasita Muralikrishna
Foto – TV Globo / João Miguel Jr


Vocabulary1 to stand out – se destacar
2 troubled – problemático
3 spoiled – mimada
4 nasty habit – péssimo hábito
5 mutt – vira-lata
6 housemaid – faxineira
7 to lie – mentir
8 though – embora
9 flawed characters – personagens com defeitos
10 waiter – garçom
11 salesman - vendedor