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Arago Premières LV1

Sunday, September 25, 2005

Week 3 & 4

Time flies... I'm still waiting for your comments and questions. Don't forget this blog was meant for you and requires that you interact with it! On Week 3, we concentrated on phonology and oral comprehension. We worked on page 15-16: Shaking off traditions and the divide. As for grammar, we insisted on used to/ not...anymore/ no longer. We also dealt with modals and the equivalents of must, can and may. We also revised sentences with have or have got.... Week 4 will be test week. And we’ll study documents page 26 and 27 about the divide between men and women. Have you already heard of the suffragettes? We'll discover who they were and what they achieved.

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

Week 2

Suite du texte 1 civi: news + Federal Government voc: be allowed to / it is forbidden to + used to/no longer/not anymore Gram: questionnement phonologie: prononciation voyelles brèves ou longues (VCemuet ou VCC/ VC)

Wednesday, September 07, 2005

TEXT 1

TITLE 1: Oil Spill Threatens Town TITLE 2: Katrina Stirs up Oily Nightmare. St. Bernard Parish is classic south Louisiana, with beautiful marshes and estuaries -- and oil refineries. Street after street in St. Bernard Parish is covered in oil sludge,a stinky, grotesque goo," created when heavy crude from a local refinery mixed in with the enormous storm surge from Hurricane Katrina. Everything this stuff touches is contaminated. Dr. Ryan Truxillo can't believe what's happened to his old neighborhood, calling it "surreal. This is something you see happening to other people, nameless people on TV. This doesn't happen in your neighborhood or your backyard." The contaminated area covers two-to-four square miles of residential neighborhoods in Chalmette. Benzene in the crude is a carcinogen, dangerous whether you touch it or breathe it. The toxic cocktail that drenched Chalmette means these neighborhoods will probably have to flattened. When asked what the situation was with the housing, Larry Ingargiola, who heads emergency management in the parish declares "There is no housing there anymore". "There is no housing," echoes parish president Henry Rodriguez Jr. "There's nobody who can come back here and live in their house; nowhere in this parish." "These men have a problem," Smith remarks, "and it didn't help matters much that FEMA (the Federal Emergency Management Agency) took a week to show up." What's the message Ingargiola and Rodriguez have for FEMA chief Michael Brown? Says Ingargiola: "We were left alone. We need your help now. We're not gonna bitch with you or do anything like that. We need your help. We don't bite (the hand) that's feedin' you right now." Rodriguez asserts, "Our federal government can't be incompetent and stupid all at one time," says the other. "You've got to know we got problems down here." Brown showed up Tuesday and, while there were plenty of smiles and handshakes, Rodriguez wasn't afraid to throw up a few expletives to make his point, exclaiming, "I don't want 'em hijacking none of my (beep) money. That's why I'm here." FEMA, says Smith, is a four-letter word in south Louisiana. Many folks here feel, if it didn't work, its Brown's fault. Asked pointblank by CBS correspondent Harry Smith if he "screwed this up," Brown responded, "No. No." -"And what if an investigation finds things weren't done right, who'd he accountable? -"That's what the investigation will find out. That's what the investigation will tell us." St. Bernard Parish needs some federal grease to help clean up the slick in its backyard. But, Smith adds, no one here is bad mouthing oil: Oil means jobs and frankly, the folks down here feel like they do a lot of the dirty work for a country that can't live without its products. It's summed up by Rodriguez, who says, "They're gonna come help us because of this. Oil." YOUR TURN! Make up another title. Sum up the document and get ready to talk about it. Imagine what sort of images the video showed.