Thứ Ba, 27 tháng 5, 2014

Murals Add to Color of Los Angeles

A tourist takes a photo of a mural on the side of a building in the Hollywood section of Los Angeles



Los Angeles is famous for its murals. The artwork covers the sides of buildings and bridges over busy roadsThey add color and personality to the city.

Many people drive by a huge mural of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra every day as they go to or from work. The mural is easily seen from a major road near the city center.

Kent Twitchell created the mural in 1991. Twenty years earlier, he painted another mural on the side of a two-floor house

“I decided to paint my favorite actor -- Steve McQueenYou know, I, I didn’t fancy myself to be some heavy-duty modernist artist. I just painted what felt good to me.”
                      
Photographs of that Steve McQueen mural made Kent Twitchell famous.

His other works include a work in honor of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics and paintings of America’s founding fathersSome important murals,howeverhave been painted over or damaged.

“I was so naïve I thought I was living in Florence, and that people would just appreciate it and, and love it. But that didn’t turn out to be the case in many instances, and a lot of the, the great L.A. murals are gone now.”

Some historic art in Los Angeles has been repairedLeslie Rainer is with the Getty Conservation Institute. She says experts carefully repaired a mural from 1932 by visiting Mexican artist David Alfaro Siqueiros.

“He painted this very controversial image of a crucified central figure with aneagle looming above him, and some revolutionaries aiming their rifles at the eagle.”

She says the message of the painting is not clear. The eagle could represent the United States or MexicoEach country has chosen the bird as its national symbol. But local leaders objected to the imageso workers painted over the Siqueiros muralYet the mural served to motivate and influence other artists over the past half century.

Artist Lydia Emily uses wall art to express a social message. In one mural, she tells the story of a victim of the sex trade. The artist says her work shows the face of the young woman named Jessica and a bird that represents freedom.

“I did an interview with Jessica where I learned her entire story -- how she was kidnappedhow she was sexually trafficked for her whole lifehow she was rescuedhow she became who she is today. And then I tried to paint the narrative.”

Lydia Emily also painted a mural in Skid Row, a neighborhood where many homeless people live. It shows an African woman of the Masai tribe and native birds of Kenya. The artist says the image represents the difficult life of the world’s indigenousnativepeoples.

Los Angeles officials once opposed murals and other street art.  Now they are providing support, as long as the owner of the property gives permission.Officials recently eased rules about street murals in an effort to get more art and color in the city.

Six Researchers Who Gave Their Life for Science

Cancer researcher Anita Roberts



This is Science in the News.

I'm Shirley Griffith.
And I'm Christopher Cruise.

Today, we tell the stories of some medical heroes.

At the start of the 20th century, the United States Army had a Yellow Fever Commission. The Army wanted medical experts to study yellow fever and find a way to stop the disease. One team went to Cuba to test the idea that mosquitoes spread yellow fever. The team was led by Walter Reed, the Army doctor and scientist noted for his work on infectious diseases.
In August of 1900, the researchers began to raise mosquitoes and infect them with the virus. Nine of the Americans let the infected insects bite them. Nothing happened. Then, two more let the mosquitoes bite them. Both men developed yellow fever.

Dr. Jesse William Lazear
A doctor named Jesse William Lazear recognized that the mosquitoes that bit the last two men had been older than the others. Dr. Lazear proved that mosquitoes did carry yellow fever.

Researcher Jesse Lazear

Researcher Jesse Lazear
Dr. Lazear himself was also bitten. No one is sure how it happened. He said it happened accidentally as he treated others. But some people said he placed the mosquito on his arm as part of the experiment. Medical historians say he may have reported the bite as an accident so his family would not be denied money from his life insurance policy.

Jesse Lazear died of yellow fever. His death shocked the others on the team in Cuba. But they continued their work.
More people let themselves be bitten by mosquitoes. Others were injected with blood from the victims of yellow fever. Some people in this test group developed the disease, but all recovered to full health.
Members of the team praised the work by Jesse Lazear. They called it a sacrifice to research that led the way to one of the greatest medical discoveries of the century.

The research answered the question of how yellow fever was spread. Now the question was how to protect people. The researchers had a theory. They thought that people who were bitten by infected mosquitoes -- but recovered -- were protected in the future.

Nurse Clara Maass
To test this idea, the team in Cuba offered $100 to anyone who would agree to be bitten by infected mosquitoes. Nineteen people agreed. The only American was Clara Maass. She was a nurse who worked with yellow fever patients in Cuba.

Nurse Clara Maass

Nurse Clara Maass
Clara Maass was bitten by infected mosquitoes seven times between March and August of 1901. Only one of the nineteen people developed the disease -- until that August. Then seven people got yellow fever. Clara Maass died six days after she was bitten for the seventh time.

The experiment showed that the bite of an infected mosquito was not a safe way to protect people from yellow fever. Medical historians say the death of Clara Maass also created a public protest over the use of humans in yellow fever research. Such experiments ended.

Cuba and the United States both honored Clara Maass on postage stamps. And today a hospital in her home state of New Jersey is known as the Clara Maass Medical Center.

Dr. Joseph Goldberger

Joseph Goldberger was a doctor for the United States Public Health Service. In 1912, he began to study a skin disease that was killing thousands of people in the South. The disease was pellagra.
Dr. Goldberger traveled to the state of Mississippi where many people suffered from pellagra. He studied the victims and their families. Most of the people were poor. The doctor came to believe that the disease was not infectious, but instead related to diet.
He received permission from the state governor to test this idea at a prison. Prisoners were offered pardons if they took part. One group of prisoners received their usual foods -- mostly corn products. A second group ate meat, fresh vegetables and milk.
Members of the first group developed pellagra. The second group did not.

But some medical researchers refused to accept that a poor diet caused pellagra. For the South, pellagra was more than simply a medical problem -- there were other issues involved, including Southern pride.
So Dr. Goldberger had himself injected with blood from a person with pellagra. He also took liquid from the nose and throat of a pellagra patient and put them into his own nose and throat. He even swallowed pills that contained skin from pellagra patients.
An assistant also took part in the experiments. So did Dr. Goldberger's wife. None of them got sick. Later, the doctor discovered that a small amount of dried brewer's yeast each day could prevent pellagra.

Dr. Joseph Goldberger

Dr. Joseph Goldberger
Joseph Goldberger died of cancer in 1929. He was 55 years old. Several years later, researchers discovered the exact cause of pellagra -- a lack of the B vitamin known as niacin.

Matthew Lukwiya

Matthew Lukwiya was the medical administrator of Saint Mary’s Hospital in the Gulu District of northern Uganda. In 2000, the hospital was the center of treatment for an outbreak of Ebola. The virus causes severe bleeding. No cure is known. Doctors can only hope that victims are strong enough to survive.

Dr. Lukwiya acted quickly to control the spread of infection. He kept the people with Ebola separate from the other patients. He ordered hospital workers to wear protective clothing and follow other safety measures.
One day he had to deal with a patient who was dying of Ebola. The man had been acting out of control. The doctor knew him well. The patient was a nurse who worked at the hospital. The man was coughing and bleeding. Dr. Lukwiya violated one of his own rules -- he wore no protection over his eyes.
Matthew Lukwiya died from the virus in December of 2000. He was only 42 years old. Ugandans mourned his death. He was an important influence in the community. Experts say his work during the outbreak helped stop the Ebola virus from spreading out of control.

Dr. Carlo Urbani
On February 28, 2003, the Vietnam-France Hospital in Hanoi asked Carlo Urbani for help. The Italian doctor was an expert on communicable diseases. He was based in Vietnam for the World Health Organization.

The hospital asked Dr. Urbani to help identify an unusual infection. He recognized it as a new threat. He made sure other hospitals increased their infection-control measures.
On March 11th, Dr. Urbani developed signs of severe acute respiratory syndrome. Four days later, the World Health Organization declared it a worldwide health threat.
Carlo Urbani was the first doctor to warn the world of the disease that became known as SARS. He died of it on March 29, 2003. He was 46 years old.

Molecular Biologist Anita Roberts

Our final medical hero is an American: molecular biologist Anita Roberts. She was widely recognized by other researchers for her work with a protein called "transforming growth factor-beta." TGF-beta can both heal wounds and make healthy cells cancerous.
In 1976, Anita Roberts joined the National Cancer Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health. She worked for many years with another researcher -- Michael Sporn.
They found that TGF-beta helps to heal wounds and is important in the body’s defense system against disease. At the same time, though, the two scientists found that the protein can also support the growth of cancer in some cells.
Between 1983 and 2002, Anita Roberts published more than 340 research papers. Many other scientists gave credit to her published work. In fact, the publication Science Watch listed her as the 49th most-cited researcher in the world during that 20-year period. She was the third most-cited female scientist.
But in 2004, after years of studying cancer, Anita Roberts learned that she herself had the disease. She died of gastric cancer in May of 2006. She was 64 years old.

Our program was written by Nancy Steinbach and George Grow. June Simms was our producer.

I'm Christopher Cruise.
And I'm Shirley Griffith. We hope you join us again next week for more news about science on the Voice of America.

Thứ Hai, 26 tháng 5, 2014

A Love of Books Born of Writing Them

A Love of Books Born of Writing Them

Students at Taylor Elementary school in Arlington, Virginia.


Welcome to American Mosaic from VOA Learning English.  I'm Caty Weaver.Today on the show we meet some very young book writers.

Reading a book can stretch the imaginationsupport independent thinking and widen a person’s worldWriting a book can do even more.  Educators now are using book-writing to help students develop creativity and a love of reading at an early age.
 
This is a third grade classroom at Taylor Elementary school in Arlington,Virginia.  The eight and nine-year-old students are busy writingmaking pictures and talking with their teacher. And todayeach student is working on writing a story.
 
“It’s fundesigning your own book and being able to color it and being able to 
Avalon Bennett is almost finished writing her book. She has named it “Maleficent.” It is about the evil character in the 1959 Walt Disney movie, “Sleeping Beauty.”
 
After we learned to change the point of view, and so I just made it from Maleficent’s point of view.”
 
Her teacherPaul DiBenedetto, has his students create between five and six books throughout the school year.
 
“It’s not part of the curriculumwriting is part of the curriculumYou want students to be writing, but it’s a way for them to express themselves.”
 
Creating a book begins with the children finding the ideas that interest themThen they write the first versionAfter that, they edit their workwhich means to make corrections and changes.
 
In the process, he says students learn to think like real writers.
 
They start asking the question about whether it’s going along with the topic sentenceDo I have enough detailsOnce they get to the concluding sentence or the ending of the story, ‘Oohdoes that go along with my story?Once the editing process is done then they go to their final copy which is on the computer. We try to get them on the computer so they’re using technology.”
 
Holly Karapetkova writes children’s books and teaches literature at Marymount University in Arlington.  She says she is happy that her 8-year-old son K.J. and his classmates are writing books at school.
 
“I think creating books sends them back to books. It encourages them to read moreboth the books they are creating and other books.”
 
Creating books is one of her favorite activities at home with K.J. and his 3-year-old sisterKalina.
 
“We have made books about animalsabout weather, a lot of books about letters and numbers to reinforce skillsOne of our favorite kinds of books to make is an alphabet bookjust with a simple letterthen pictureseither pictures that we print out from our real photos or pictures that the children draw to match those letters.”
 
She says the way to keep children interested in creating books is to give them freedom of choice.
 
Kalina has been more into cooking with me lately and making things in the kitchen and I asked her what do you want to make a book about, and she said, ‘I want to make a cookbookSo we made a cookbook.”
 
K.J. is into something else.
 
“I’m working on a joke book and a comic book.”
 
He has written more than 12 books on different subjects.
 
“It’s just fun to see all the different types of homemade books you can make.All the books that I create have like different texturelike made out of different thingsLike there is a bath book that we’ve madeYou make it out of plastic baggies.”
 
His mother hopes the skills he and Kalina are developing - writingreading,thinkingimagining - will help them succeed in the 21st century job market.
 
Who knows what kind of skills they’re even going to need? The technology is changing so quickly, but I know they’re going to need to know how to think.”
 
And that starts early, by making writing and reading an everyday fun activity.

Hollywood Paparazzi

Wherever there are famous people, there are “paparazzi.” That is the Italian name for photographers who chase famous people in an effort to take their picture. Their photographs and video recordings can be worth a lot of money.



Wherever there are famous peoplethere are “paparazzi.” That is the Italian name for photographers who chase famous people in an effort to take their pictureTheir photographs and video recordings can be worth a lot of money.

Paparazzi sometimes wait outside the homes of actorssports stars and other famous people. The photographers may follow them as they go eat, go for a walk and even fight among themselvesThese pictures are often found later in newspapers and magazines.

Giles Harrison owns the London Entertainment Group, a business based in Los Angeles. He sells pictures of famous people to all kinds of media organizations.

“I used to see ‘celebs’ all the time, but it never really occurred to me that I could make money off of taking photos of them. And now I know I can. I do.So…”

He says most people like seeing pictures of famous people.

What they don’t like is how they perceive that you get the photos. It’s a guilty pleasure of everybody in the world.”

One Saturday morningGiles Harrison was looking a new photo of someone famous -- someone like singer Britney Spears.

“Is she there?”
“No. Is she even in town?”
“I think she’s in town.”

MrHarrison and his team are always looking for Hollywood stars.

“That is Robert Redford…getting in the car.”

He says taking pictures of famous people lets him follow his dream of being are porter and adding a little excitement to his life.

“I’ve hung out of helicopters. I’ve hung out of airplanes. I’ve done a lot of crazy things to get a shot.”

He employs more than 30 other papparazzi around the world

You sure you’re sitting at the right housebecause apparently she got burgled yesterday.”

“I’m sitting at the right house.”

Giles Harrison likes to look for celebrities when he drives around Los Angeles. He does not like to wait near the home of a famous person.

David Faustino has been an actor since he was a boy. He is best known for his work in the television series “Married With Children.” 

David Faustino has been a target of photographers. He does not like them, but he knows he cannot escape them. He says at least they do not follow him like they do other celebrities.

They’re a necessary evil. I don’t mind them. I’ve been dealing with them since I was a little kid on ‘Married With Children.’ And, you know, it gets a little crazy. I also don’t have them chasing me around likesay, I don’t knowJustin Bieber. It’s all good. We’re in Hollywood.”

Michael Burgeno is not a Hollywood actor. But he does like to read news about celebrities and watch videos online. He believes it is wrong for the paparazzi to photograph celebrities when they are with their children.

If theyif they’re with their family -- yes, I think it should be, you know, that line right therewhere they shouldn’t kind of try to interact with them yet.”

Giles Harrison says he understands this concern. But he says many famous people cannot demand privacy and, at the same timeseek publicity.

When you have people like the Kardashians doing photo shoots with their children, and, you knowselling access to magazinesOnce they open that door you just can’t switch it off.”