By The Way

Thursday, 7 April 2011

1984 Winter Olympics



The first Winter Games held in a socialist country were hosted by Sarajevo, Yugoslavia (now Bosnia and Herzegovina) from Feb. 8 to Feb. 19, 1984. A record 49 countries and 1,272 athletes arrived to compete in 39 winter sports events. Vucko, a wolf cub, was chosen as the official Olympic mascot. Egypt, Monaco, Puerto Rico, Senegal and the Virgin Islands made their Winter Games debut, and the Republic of China entered the Olympics as “Chinese Taipei.”

During the peaceful and beautiful 1984 Winter Olympics, there was no indication of the tragic civil war that would engulf Yugoslavia eight years later.
The only major problem that arose was a huge snowfall during the games, which delayed the Alpine skiing events.
For the first time, disabled skiing was an Olympic demonstration sport, with 29 participants in this event. These races were held in addition to the Alpine and cross-country events at the 1984 Winter Paralympics in Innsbruck, Austria. Additionally, a 20-kilometer race was added to the women’s Nordic events.
Yugoslavia’s first Winter Olympics medal was won by Jure Franko, who placed second in the giant slalom.
The United States went home with eight medals (four gold and four silver), placing third in the medal tally.
Scott Hamilton was awarded a gold medal for the men’s singles figure skating, and Rosalynn Sumners won a silver in the ladies singles figure skating. Another silver medal went to Kitty and Peter Carruthers in the pairs figure skating, but the rest of the medals were won in Alpine skiing events.
John McMurtry, the slalom and giant slalom coach for the 1984 U.S. Women’s Ski Team, remembers Sarajevo as their best Olympics ever.
The U.S. Olympic Ski Team took five out of 18 total possible medals in Alpine skiing, more than any other country had done previously.
Bill Johnson became the first American man to win a gold medal in the downhill event. Twin brothers Phil and Steve Mahre took gold and silver in the men’s slalom, respectively. For the women, Deb Armstrong earned gold, and Christin Cooper took silver in the giant slalom.
Armstrong, as the first U.S. gold medalist in a women’s Alpine event since Andrea Mead-Lawrence in 1952, has an impressive skiing record.
She placed second in the combined event at the 1983 U.S. Nations and was third in the World Cup super-G in 1984.
After winning the 1984 women’s giant slalom in Sarajevo, Debbie placed fourth in the giant slalom at the 1985 World Championships and sixth in the super-G in 1987. With a World Cup career of 18 top-10 finishes, she retired from ski racing after the 1988 World Cup season.
Afterward, Armstrong began promoting various humanitarian causes, including the Debbie Armstrong Say No to Alcohol & Drugs Campaign, SKIFORALL Foundation, and Glocal ReLeaf Sarajevo. Today, she works at the Alpine Technical Director for Steamboat Springs Ski & Snowboard School.

Thursday, 24 March 2011


                Our is City in Danger !

Good evening, dear audience ! Our night broadcast is devoted to the latest development which has happened this morning. Yesterday five wolves escaped from their cages in Nation Zoo. Their mysterious disappearance shocked all the stuff. Nobody didn't notice the strange behavior of the animals. Mary Smith, the director of Zoo disappeared too. 

The police establishes facts that could influenced on such strange things. One townsman suspect he has seen a strange pack of dogs (or probably wolves) near his cottage recently. Please, keep the public calmness ! A search is in progress ! Don't let your children to walk alone and try to be at home before 8.00 p.m.
Watch us and follow our everyday news! Thank you for your attention, good luck !

Thursday, 17 February 2011

Nickelback - If Everyone Cared


Mark Twain

Christened as Samuel Langhorne Clemens, Mark Twain was born on November 30, 1835 in the small  town of Florida, Missouri, just 200 miles from Indian Territory. The sixth child of John Marshal Clemens and Jane Lampton, Twain live in Florida, Missoure until the age of four, at which time his family relocated to Hannibal in hopes of improving their living situation.



By lineage, Twain was a Southerner, as both his parents' families hailed from Virginia. The slaveholding community of Hannibal, a river town with a population of 2000, provided a mix of rugged frontier life and the Southern tradition, a lifestyle that influenced Twain's later writings, including the Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Few black slaves actually resided in Hannibal, and the small farms on the delta were no comparison to the typical Southern plantation. In Hannibal, blacks were mostly held as household servants rather than field workers, but were still under the obligations of slavery.

In his youth, Twain was a mischievous boy, the prototype of his character, Tom Sawyer. Though he was plagued by poor health in his early years, by age nine he had already learned to smoke, led a small band of pranksters, and had developed an aversion to school. Twain's formal schooling ended after age 12, because his father passed away in March of that year. He became an apprentice in a printer's shop and then worked under his brother, Orion, at the Hannibal Journal, where he quickly became saturated in the newspaper trade. Rising to the role of sub-editor, Twain indulged in the frontier humor that flourished in journalism at the time: tall tales, satirical pranks, and jokes.

However, over the next few years, Twain found himself unable to save any wages and grew restless. He decided to leave Hannibal in June of 1853 and accepted a position in St. Louis. Soon afterwards, rather than settling in St. Louis, Twain proceeded to travel back and forth between New York, Philadelphia, Washington, and Iowa, working as a journalist. After his wanderings, Twain ultimately switched professions, realizing an old boyhood dream of becoming a river pilot.

Under the apprenticeship of Horace Bixby, pilot of the Paul Jones, Mark Twain became a licensed river pilot at the age of 24. Earning a high salary navigating the river waters, Twain was entertained by his work, and enjoyed his traveling lifestyle. In 1861, with the beginning of the Civil War, Twain's piloting days came to an end.

After returning home to Hannibal, Twain learned that military companies were being organized to assist Governor Jackson, and he enlisted as a Confederate soldier. Within a short period, he abandoned the cause, deserted the military, and along with thousands of other men avoiding the draft, moved West. On his way to Nevada, twelve years after the Gold Rush, Twain's primary intentions were to strike it rich mining for silver and gold. After realizing the impossibility of this dream, Twain once again picked up his pen and began to write.

Twain joined the staff of the Virginia City Territorial Enterprise, and became an established reporter/humorist. In 1863, he adopted the pseudonym Mark Twain, derived from a river pilot term describing safe navigating conditions. In 1869 he published his first book of travel letters entitled Innocents Abroad. The book was criticized widely and discouraged Twain from pursuing a literary career. In the years that followed, Twain published various articles, made lecture circuits, and relocated between San Francisco, New York, and Missouri. During this time he also met Olivia Langdon, whom he married on February 2, 1870. In November of the same year, their first son, Langdon Clemens, was born prematurely.

The Clemens family quickly fell into debt. However, when over 67,000 copies of Innocents Abroad sold within its first year, the American Publishing Company asked Twain for another book. Upon Olivia's request, the couple moved to the domicile town of Hartford, Connecticut, where Twain composed Roughing It, which documented the post-Gold Rush mining epoch and was published in 1872.

In March of 1872, Twain's daughter Susan Olivia was born, and the family appeared prosperous. Unfortunately, Langdon soon came down with Diphtheria and died. Twain was torn apart by his son's death, and blamed himself. Moreover, Roughing It was only mildly successful, which added to the family's hardships.

After traveling to Europe for a lecture series, Twain experienced a turning point in his career. Twain's newest novel, The Gilded Age, written in collaboration with Charles Dudley Warner, was published in 1873. The novel is about the 1800s era of corruption and exploitation at the expense of public welfare. The Gilded Age was Twain's first extended work of fiction and marked him in the literary world as an author rather than a journalist.

After the broad success of The Gilded Age, Twain began a period of concentrated writing. In 1880, his third daughter, Jean, was born. By the time Twain reached age fifty, he was already considered a successful writer and businessman. His popularity sky-rocketed with the publications of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876), The Prince and the Pauper (1882), and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885). By 1885, Twain was considered one the greatest character writers in the literary community.

Twain died on April 21, 1910, having survived his children Langdon, Susan and Jean as well as his wife, Olivia. In his lifetime, he became a distinguished member of the literati, and was honored by Yale, the University of Missouri, and Oxford with literary degrees. With his death, many volumes of his letters, articles, and fables were published, including: The Letters of Quintas Curtius Snodgrass (1946); Simon Wheeler, Detective (1963); The Works of Mark Twain: What is Man? and Other Philosophical Writings (1973); and Mark Twain's Notebooks and Journals (1975-79). Perhaps more than any other classic American writer, Mark Twain is seen as a phenomenal author, but also as a personality that defined an era.

Saturday, 12 February 2011

Oscar Wilde

 Oscar Wilde belongs to those bourgeois writers whose literature activity, contradictory in its nature, mirrors the bourgeois ideology.
 Wilde was regarded as the leader of the England aesthetic movement, but many of his works do not follow his decadent theory of 'art for art's sake', they sometimes even contradict it. In fact, the best of them are closer to Romanticism and Realism than to decadent literature.

LIFE OF OSCAR WILDE
 Oscar Wilde was born in Dublin on October 16, 1854. His father was a famous Irish surgeon. His mother was well known in Dublin as a graceful witter of verse and prose.
 At school, and later at Oxford, Oscar displayed a considerable gift for art art the humanities. The young man received a number of classical prizes, and graduated with first-class honours.
While at the University Wilde became one of the most prominent personalities of the day; he wore his hair long, decorated his rooms with peacock's feathers, lilies, sunflowers, blue china and other beautiful things. His affected paradoxes and witty sayings were quoted on all sides.
 Under the influence of his teacher, the writer John Ruskin, Wilde joined then young Aesthetic Movement, which came into being as a protest against bourgeois hypocrisy ans bigotry, but later turned idealistic and reactionary. The future writer became a most sincere supported of this movement.
 After graduating from the University, Wilde turned his attention to writhing, traveling and lecturing. The Aesthetic Movement became popular, and Oscar Wilde earned the reputation of being the leader of the movement, and apostle of beauty.  
 In 1882 he went to America to lecture on the Aesthetic Movement in England. His lecture tours were triumphantly successful.
The next ten years saw the appearance of all his major works. The most popular of them are The Happy Prince and Other |Tales (1888), The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891) and his comedies Lady Windermere's Fan (1892), A Woman of No Importance (1893), An Ideal Husband (1895), The Importance of Being Earnest (1895). The wit and brilliance of these plays helped to keep them on the stage, and they are still occasionally revived.
 Wilde also wrote poems, essays, reviews, political tracts, letters and occasional pieces on every subject he considered worthy of attention - history, drama, painting, etc. Some of these pieces were serious, some satirical; the variety of themes reflected a personality that could never remain inactive. 


Thursday, 10 February 2011

10 Common Expressions in English

Radiohead

Radiohead was one of the few alternative bands of the early '90s to draw heavily from the grandiose arena rock that characterized U2's early albums. But the ban internalized that epic sweep, turning it inside out to tell tortured, twisted tales of angst and alienation.