domingo, 16 de outubro de 2011

Nellie Bly, 1864-1922: Newspaper Reporter Used Unusual Methods to Investigate and Write About Illegal Activities in New York City

Source: www.manythings.org/voa/people








Source: pt.wikipedia.org






I'm Shirley Griffith. And I'm Ray Freeman with the Special English program,PEOPLE IN AMERICA. Every week we tell about a person important in the

history of the United States. Today, we tell about a reporter of more than one hundred years ago.
The year was eighteen eighty-seven. The place was New York City. A young woman, Elizabeth Cochrane, wanted a job at a large newspaper. The editor agreed, if she would investigate a hospital for people who were mentally sick and then write about it.
Elizabeth Cochrane decided to become a patient in the hospital herself. She used the name Nellie Brown so no one would discover her or her purpose. Newspaper officials said they would get her released after a while.
To prepare, Nellie put on old clothes and stopped washing. She went to a temporary home for women. She acted as if she had severe mental problems. She cried and screamed and stayed awake all night. The police were called. She was examined by doctors.  Most said she was insane.
Nellie Brown was taken to the mental hospital. It was dirty. Waste material was left outside the eating room. Bugs ran across the tables. The food was terrible: hard bread and gray-colored meat.
Nurses bathed the patients in cold water and gave them only a thin piece of cloth to wear to bed.
During the day, the patients did nothing but sit quietly. They had to talk in quiet voices. Yet, Nellie got to know some of them. Some were women whose families had put them in the hospital because they had been too sick to work. Some were women who had appeared insane because they were sick with fever. Now they were well, but they could not get out.
Nellie recognized that the doctors and nurses had no interest in the patients' mental health. They were paid to keep the patients in a kind of jail. Nellie stayed in the hospital for ten days. Then a lawyer from the newspaper got her released.
Five days later, the story of Elizabeth Cochrane's experience in the hospital appeared in the New York World newspaper. Readers were shocked. They wrote to officials of the city and the hospital protesting the conditions and patient treatment. An investigation led to changes at the hospital.
Elizabeth Cochrane had made a difference in the lives of the people there. She made a difference in her own life too. She got her job at the New York World. And she wrote a book about her experience at the hospital. She did not write it as Nellie Brown, however, or as Elizabeth Cochrane. She wrote it under the name that always appeared on her newspaper stories: Nellie Bly.
The child who would grow up to become Nellie Bly was born during the Civil War, in eighteen sixty-four, in western Pennsylvania.
Her family called her Pink. Her father was a judge. He died when she was six years old. Her mother married again. But her new husband drank too much alcohol and beat her. She got a divorce in eighteen seventy-nine, when Pink was fifteen years old. Pink decided to learn to support herself so she would never need a man.
Pink, her mother, brothers and sisters moved to a town near the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Pink worked at different jobs but could not find a good one.
One day, she read something in the Pittsburgh Dispatch newspaper. The editor of the paper, Erasmus Wilson, wrote that it was wrong for women to get jobs. He said men should have them. Pink wrote the newspaper to disagree. She said she had been looking for a good job for about four years, as she had no father or husband to support her. She signed it "Orphan Girl".
The editors of the dispatch liked her letter. They put a note in the paper asking "Orphan Girl" to visit. Pink did. Mr. Wilson offered her a job.
He said she could not sign her stories with her real name, because no woman writer did that. He asked news writers for suggestions.  One was Nellie Bly, the name of a girl in a popular song. So Pink became Nellie Bly.
For nine months, she wrote stories of interest to women. Then she left the newspaper because she was not permitted to write what she wanted. She went to Mexico to find excitement. She stayed there six months, sending stories to the Dispatch to be published.  Soon after she returned to the Pittsburgh Dispatch, she decided to look for another job. Nellie Bly left for New York City and began her job at the New York World.
As a reporter for the New York World, Nellie Bly investigated and wrote about illegal activities in the city. For one story, she acted as if she was a mother willing to sell her baby. For another, she pretended to be a woman who cleaned houses so she could report about illegal activities in employment agencies.
Today, a newspaper reporter usually does not pretend to be someone else to get information for a story. Most newspapers ban such acts. But in Nellie Bly's day, reporters used any method to get information, especially if they were trying to discover people guilty of doing something wrong.
Nellie Bly's success at this led newspapers to employ more women. But she was the most popular of the women writers. History experts say Nellie Bly was special because she included her own ideas and feelings in everything she wrote. They say her own voice seemed to speak on the page.
Nellie Bly's stories always provided detailed descriptions. And her stories always tried to improve society. Critics said Nellie Bly was an example of what a reporter can do, even today. She saw every situation as a chance to make a real difference in other people's lives as well as her own.
Nellie Bly may be best remembered in history for a trip she took.
In the eighteen seventies, French writer Jules Verne wrote the book "Around the World in Eighty Days." It told of a man's attempt to travel all around the world. He succeeded. In real life, no one had tried. By eighteen eighty-eight, a number of reporters wanted to do it. Nellie Bly told her editors she would go even if they did not help her. But they did.
Nellie Bly left New York for France on November fourteenth, eighteen eighty-nine. She met Jules Verne at his home in France. She told him about her plans to travel alone by train and ship around the world.
From France she went to Italy and Egypt, through South Asia to Singapore and Japan, then to San Francisco and back to New York.  Nellie Bly's trip created more interest in Jules Verne's book. Before the trip was over, "Around the World in Eighty Days" was published again. And a theater in Paris had plans to produce a stage play of the book.
Back home in New York, the World was publishing the stories Bly wrote while travelling. On days when the mail brought no story from her, the editors still found something to write about it. They published new songs written about Bly and new games based on her trip. The newspaper announced a competition to guess how long her trip would take. The prize was a free trip to Europe. By December second, about one hundred thousand readers had sent in their estimates.
Nellie Bly arrived back where she started on January twenty-fifth, eighteen ninety. It had taken her seventy-six days, six hours, eleven minutes and fourteen seconds. She was twenty-five years old. And she was famous around the world.
Elizabeth Cochrane died in New York in nineteen twenty-two. She was fifty-eight years old. In the years since her famous trip, she had married, and headed a business. She also had helped poor and homeless children. And she had continued to write all her life for newspapers and magazines as Nellie Bly.
One newspaper official wrote this about her after her death:
"Nellie Bly was the best reporter in America. More important is the work of which the world knew nothing. She died leaving little money. What she had was promised to take care of children without homes, for whom she wished to provide. Her life was useful.  She takes with her from this Earth all that she cared about -- an honorable name, the respect and affection of her fellow workers, the memory of good fights well fought and many good deeds never to be forgotten. Happy the man or woman that can leave as good a record."
This VOA Special English program, PEOPLE IN AMERICA, was written by Nancy Steinbach. Your narrators were Shirley Griffith and Ray Freeman.

sábado, 15 de outubro de 2011

Too Much Love Will Kill You




And all credits of this entry for Judith Jékkel 

Tick the words that you can hear.
I'm just the peaces pieces of the man I used use to be
Too many bitter better tears are training raining down on me
I'm far away a way from home
And I've been faking facing this alone
For much too long
Unscramble the lines of the second verse
 In my tangled state of mind
 I feel like no-one ever told the truth to me
 Where I went wrong
 About growing up and what a struggle it would be
 I've been looking back to find
Which words can you hear?
Too much love will kill you
If you can't  up your mind
 between the lover
And the love you leave behind
You're  for disaster
'cos you never read the 
Too much love will kill you
Every time
Image created by aj r.
Match the beginning and the end of the following lines.
I'm just the shadow of  A no way out of this for me
And it seems like there's  B the man I used to be
I used to  C do is bring you down
Now all I ever  D bring you sunshine
Write in the missing words. The images may help
How  it be if you were   in my 
Can't you  it's impossible to 
No there's no making  of it
Every way I go I have to 
Too much  will kill you
Just as sure as none at all
It'll drain the  that's in you
Make you plead and  and crawl
The pain will make you 
You're the victim of your 
Too much love will kill you
Every time
Tick the extra words. There is one in each line.
Too much love you will kill you
It'll make your friend’s life lie
Yes, too much great love will kill you
And so you won't understand why
You'd give me your life, you'd sell your soul
But here does it comes again
If too much love will kill you
In the end...
In the end.

Happy Teachers' day (Best Teacher Poem)


We share this for everyone who teaches around the globe, we should overcome the bad salaries and conditions and keep the spirit! God bless you (Allah bless you), dear teachers, today in Brazil we celebrate the Teachers' day. What about in your country?


Source of this picture: clipartoday.com


While every teacher ensures that he/she proves to be the best instructor for his/her students, the choice of that 'special teacher' becomes subjective. For students, their special teacher is the one, who cares for them, understands their limitations and of course, teaches well. Best teacher is the person, who becomes a teacher in the classroom and other circumstances, acts as a friend or a parent. To celebrate the relationship between you and your best teacher, you may dedicate few lines to him/her. Dedicating poetry is a nice idea, to express your affection and sincere gratitude to him/her. If you want some poems for your favorite teacher, then read the article.

Special Teacher Poetry

Wonderful Teacher

With a special gift for learning
And with a heart that deeply cares,
You add a lot of love
To everything you share,
And even though
You mean a lot,
You'll never know how much,
For you helped
To change the world
Through every life you touched.
You sparked the creativity
In the students whom you taught,
And helped them strive for goals
That could not be bought,
You are such a special teacher
That no words can truly tell
However much you're valued
For the work you do so well.
- Author Unknown

Oh teacher, Oh teacher!

My test isn't signed
Because somehow
My parents went blind
Now, don't say it's my fault,
They left their hands in the bank vault.

Oh teacher, Oh teacher
Do you know why
I was born without wings
And so cannot fly
Thus I am late
Didn't have breakfast,
So if you don't mind,
Pass me a plate.

Oh teacher, Oh teacher!
I've failed again
Please don't scold me,
Now you'll see why,
I was thinking about
Having an eagle's brain.
- Sharmila Saheed

Gianecchini moves Brazil


People & TV
Recommend this awesome magazine for English teachers and students, keep in touch on http://www.maganews.com.br 
Gianecchini moves [1] Brazil
Brazil follows Giane’s fight against cancer. The actor has had special support from his ex-wife, Marília Gabriela In early
    August Brazil was shocked by the news that actor Reynaldo Gianecchini has lymphoma, cancer of the lymphatic [2] system. This disease affects the immune system. It is the same type of cancer that Dilma Rousseff faced before being elected President. However, in Giane’s case the cancer is more aggressive. The actor spent several days in a São Paulo hospital before starting chemotherapy [3]. He was visited by Cláudia Raia and other celebrities. One of the people who visited and supported Giane was his ex-wife, Marilia Gabriela. On September 15 they were photographed walking together on Oscar Freire street, in São Paulo.  Giane was bald, [4]  after having gone through two rounds of chemotherapy. Reynaldo and Marilia separated in 2006 after 8 years of marriage. But even after the separation, they kept in regular touch.  
                      Sports stars ill [5]   In recent weeks other celebrities have hit the headlines because of serious health problems: the former soccer star Sócrates, who has a serious liver [6] problem, and the coach of Vasco da Gama, Ricardo Gomes, who suffered a stroke [7]. But the disease that Gianecchini is suffering from has caused the biggest shock in the country. The actor's father also has cancer. Besides being helped by doctors, Giane and his father have also sought [8] spiritual help. On the next page we give you a summary of the actor’s personal and professional life.



On September 28, Giane visited the support group for children with cancer, GACC, in São José dos Campos-SP, and spoke to several children. The actor has supported GACC since 2003.  He is going to take part in a new campaign to help the hospital GACC runs.


Áudio – Julia Constantinides
Fotos – Giane com crianças (Fábio Machado) e individual (Globo)
   Esta é primeira parte da matéria sobre Gianecchini. A edição impressa de Maganews traz um resumo da trajetória do ator, com áudio de Thiago Ribeiro. 


Vocabulary
1 to move - comover
2 lymphatic system – sistema linfático (lymphoma = linfoma)
3 chemotherapy- quiometerapia
4 bald – careca
5 ill - doença
6 liver – fígado
7 stroke – derrame cerebral / AVC
8 to seek – procurar / buscar

sexta-feira, 14 de outubro de 2011

Learning by songs...Lucky by Jason Mraz

     Lucky- By Jason Mraz
Source: http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=5009 All credits for teacher Khampeerai Kaewharn
     
          Listen to the song and do exercises A-F.
     A.Choose the right word from each box.
Do you  me?
I'm 
 to you
Across the 

Across the  blue ocean
Under the 
 sky
Oh my, baby I'm 

          B.Choose heart/hard/dreams/where/home/whisper to fill in the gaps.
Boy I hear you in my 
I feel your 
 across the sea
I keep you with me in my 

You make it easier when life gets 


Lucky I'm in love with my best 
Lucky to have been  I have been
Lucky to be coming 
 again
Ohhhohhhohhhohhohhohhhohh

C. Choose the right word from each box.They don't know how long it 
 for a love like this
Every time we 
 goodbye
I wish we 
 one more kiss
I'll wait for you, I 
 you I will

D. Unscramble the words.Lucky I'm in love with my best   (rinfde)
Lucky to have been 
 (ehwre)I have been
Lucky to be coming 
  (omhe) again
Lucky we're in love in every 
 (awy )
Lucky to have stayed where we have stayed
Lucky to be coming home 
 (odmseay)

E. Choose the right word from each box.*    And so I'm   through the sea
      To an island where we'll 

      You'll 
 the music fill the air
      I'll  
 a flower in your hair

      Though the breezes through the 

      Move so pretty, you're all I 

      As the world keeps spinning 

      You hold me right here right  

F. Fill in the missing words.
      Lucky I'm in love with my best 
      Lucky to have been  I have been
      Lucky to be coming 
 again
      Lucky we're in love in every 

      Lucky to have stayed 
 we have stayed
      Lucky to be coming home 

      Ohhhohhhohhhohhohhohhhohh
      Ohhhohhhohhhohhohhohhhohhohhohhohh
  ( repeat *)
 

STRANGE STORIES THE ECONOMIC NATURALIST

THE ECONOMIC NATURALIST

 source of the picture: presstv.ir

Language level: A2 PRE-INTERMEDIATE
Standard: British and American accent
Speaker: Rachel Robert and Chuck Rolando

BY JOHN RIGG

Economics professor Robert H. Frank of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York wanted to demonstrate the practical uses of economics, so he asked his students to discover and explain strange contradictions in modern life.

Their answers were so impressive he decided to publish them in his book The Economic Naturalist: Why Economics Explains Almost Everything. Let’s look at some examples:

WEDDING BELLS

Student Jennifer Dulski asked why brides spend so much money on a wedding dress that they only wear once, a while grooms usually rent their suits. Dulski says each bride wants a unique dress and so a hire company would need at least 40 alternatives in each size, whereas men accept at standard style and the hire company can regularly rent out the same two or three suits in each size.

Dulski says this results in a low fee for grooms suits, but very high fees for brides dresses.

DRINKS?

Another student asked why soft drinks, like Coca Cola, are sold in cylindrical cans or bottles, while milk is usually sold in square cartoons.

The student had two answers. First, we often drink soft drinks directly from the container, and cylindrical containers are easier to hold, on the other hand, we rarely drink milk from the cartoon. Second, soft drinks sit happily on ordinary shelves, but milk needs expensive refrigerated storage.

Milk therefore comes in square containers as they need less storage space. 

quinta-feira, 13 de outubro de 2011

Rock’n Roll Poet Renato Russo’s fiftieth birthday


Rock’n Roll Poet

Source: All credits of this entry for Maganews, a Brazilian magazine. I recommend it for English teachers and students, it's a great English resource and for more info, visit the website 

Renato Russo’s fiftieth birthday 
Former [1] leader of Legiăo Urbana would have turned 50 at the end of March, had he been alive [2]. Today, 14 years after his death, he is still remembered as one of the greatest pop rock legends in Brazil


People say that a rocker [3] who dies young becomes a legend. Renato Russo died of AIDS when he was only 36 years old.  Had he been alive, he would have celebrated his 50th  birthday on March 27th. But it would be unfair [4] to say that he became a legend for dying [5] so soon. Renato became a legend basically by being the leader of the most influential band in the history of Brazil’s pop rock:   Legiăo Urbana.  He became a myth by writing  (together with Dado Villa-Lobos and Marcelo Bonfá) some of the classics of Brazil’s pop music history.  Classics such as Pais e Filhos,Eduardo e Mônica and Que País é EsteLegiăo Urbana was created in Brasília, in 1982, and split up in 96, soon after Russo’s death.  It is estimated that, over this period, the band sold more than 20 million albums. Even after the end of the band, Legiăo’s albums continued with high sales, just like Renato Russo’s solo albums. The power of the band’s legacy (and the “rock n’ roll poet”) can also be measured [6] on the Internet.  There are more than 500 communities on Orkut dedicated to Legiăo Urbana (the largest one has more than 500,000 members) and other hundreds of communities dedicated to  Renato Russo. The figures [7] are higher than any other band or singer in the Brazilian music.

English teacher
Renato Manfredini Júnior was born in Rio de Janeiro in 1960. From 1967 to 1970 he lived in New York.  But he lived most of his young life in Brasília. At the age of 15, he started teaching English and it was then when he lived one of his life’s worst [8] dramas. A severe [9] disease left him in awheelchair [10] for months. After overcoming [11] the disease, Renato was more focused on music. His first band was Abortos Elétricos. It was formed in 1978 and went on for 4 years. After that Legiăo Urbana was created and the rest is the story everyone knows.  

Vocabulary
1 had he been alive – se ele estivesse vivo
2 former – ex
3 rocker – roqueiro
4 unfair – injusto
5 dying (the same as “to die”) – morrer
6 to be measured – ser medido
7 figures - números
8 worst – pior / piores
9 severe - grave
10 wheelchair – cadeira de rodas
11 overcoming - superar


Matéria publicada na ediçăo de número 54 da Revista Maganews
Áudio – Alline de Paula
Foto – Cris Bierrenback – Folha Imagem