четверг, 31 марта 2011 г.

Mystery illness traced to water pollution


An illness which has affected the population of the village of Leafton was traced last week to the local water supply.
More than 50 residents have been suffering from stomach pain for over a week.  And local doctors were unable to explain the cause.  It was only when the health authorities were called in that the water supply was found to contain large amounts of mercury, which can be extremely poisonous.
 The source of the poisoning was found to be a small factory located near the river. The factory was dumping untreated waste into the river, which eventually reached the village’s water supply.
One local resident said, "It’s terrible to think that so many people can be poisoned by simple carelessness". The factory has been fined and shut for an unknown period of time.

понедельник, 28 марта 2011 г.

Daniel Boonе (the first Westerner)


Daniel Boone is such a remarkable figure in American history that he often is viewed as more of a fictional folk hero than a historical figure. In fact his exploits are even more remarkable than fictional accounts. He was born in Pennsylvania to a family of English Quakers (1734). We know very little about his early childhood. His father moved their large family to Virginian when Daniel was a teenager and then on to the Yadkin Valley of North Carolina. Still a teen ager, Daniel developed a reputation as a skilled trapper and hunter and particularly as an expert marksman. He married at age 19 to Rebecca Bryan who was 15. Rebecca is surely one of the most notable backwoods American women. The marriage resulted in a deep and lasting attachment and a number of children. Boone led the first small party through the Cumberland Gap into Kentucky (1769) at a time that the British Government was trying to restrict the colonists to the Eastern Seaboard. This is widely seen as the beginning of the American western movement. He returned with a larger party, including Rebecca. This was immortalized by George Caleb Bingham's famed painting. He led subsequently led many other parties.



 Boone is often associated with the Scotts-Irish because so many of the families he led into Kentucky were of Scotts Irish ancestry. He founded Boonesborough and helped lead the resistance to Native Americans backed by the British. Unlike many colonists, he admired the Native Americans. Despite the carnage during the Revolutionary War, he admitted to only killing one Native American. He was captured by the Shawnee (1778), but rather than being killed by them, he had an amazing rapport and was adopted by them. They named him "Big Turtle". Boone spent 4 months with them before escaping back to Boonesville. One biographer writes, "Of famous white Americans, only Sam Houston appears to have had a comparable knack for fitting in with Native peoples." A school teacher published an account of the frontier that turned Boone into an American legend. After the Revolution Boone's star faded because of a series of failed land deals. He finally moved to Missouri, complaining that Kentucky was too crowded. He lived to old age there, regaling visitors with accounts of his exploits in Kentucky. He finally passed away in Missouri (1820). Boone is undoubtedly a major figure in the building of America. He was, however, a tragic figure because it was the wild America and the untrammeled frontier he loved and not the settled territory. This in part explains his connection with Native Americans. Yet his life was spent in making settlement and the destruction of the frontier possible.

четверг, 24 марта 2011 г.

“A Walk To Remember” (book review)


“A Walk To Remember” – is an incredible love story by an author Nicholas Sparks. Sparks brings his reader into the lives of two ordinary American teenagers – Landon & Jamie and with every turn of the page the reader is lost in the world of their relations, life, their feelings. It is a bittersweet. . . A tragic yet spiritual love story.

This novel starts of with a 57 year old man Landon Carter, turning back the pages of his life to the time when he was 17 years old, in the late 1950’s and was living in Beaufort, a small town in North Carolina. He speaks of an encounter with this too-good-to-be-true girl, Jamie Sullivan. This meeting changed all his life forever.


Jamie Sullivan - the daughter of the town's Baptist minister, is a shining paragon. She is selfless, kind, tirelessly giving, and deeply spiritual. Beloved by many adults, but largely unnoticed by her peers, she is quiet and thoughtful. She's someone that Landon Carter, a popular senior at Beaufort High, never really noticed or understood. Jamie is described as a girl who carries the Bible in her bag wherever she goes. Moreover, she looked out for her widowed father, rescued hurt animals, and worked as a volunteer to help the orphaned kids.

The story starts moving ahead when Landon has no suitable option left for the school dance and asks Jamie out. Landon Carter's life from that moment on would never be the same. As he comes to know more about Jamie, he begins to develop tender feelings for her. The pace and mood of the novel is suddenly changed when a dark mystery about Jamie is revealed. She is going to die because of leucaemia... From now on the main Landon’s aim – is to make all her dreams come true and to make the last months of her life happy.
Same way Jamie gives all her love and kindness to Landon and changes his attitide to life. In her unwavering faith and uncommon generosity, she challenges his perception of his life in her strong, but gentle way. She teaches him to find forgiveness, to openly give without selfishness, and sets him on the journey to becoming a truly compassionate, good man. Amazingly, he finds love in a place he never expected, in a girl he never noticed. Being with Jamie shows him the depths of the human heart and leads him to a decision so stunning it would send him irrevocably on the road to manhood.
This book is wonderfully written and extremely emotional. The author’s language is plain and simple and it helps the reader to feel better the feeling and emotions of the main characters. The tone of the book is calm and thoughtful, which helps the reader to analyse and explore the inner world of the protagonists. The main theme of the book – is the power of all-triumphant love and changes which may be occured by it.

четверг, 17 марта 2011 г.

4 queens

The Four Queens Hotel and Casino is located in downtown Las Vegas on the Fremont Street Experience. Home to the Queen's Machine, the world's largest slot machine, the 690 room hotel and 40,000 sq ft (3,700 m2) casino is owned and operated by TLC Enterprises, which acquired the property from the Elsinore Corporation in 2003.




Construction began on November 16, 1964, opening in 1966. The casino is named after the builder Ben Goffstein's four daughters, Faith, Hope, Benita, and Michele. It originally contained only 120 rooms and a 20,000 sq ft (1,900 m2) casino.
From 1972 to 2003 the hotel/casino was owned by Elsinore Corporation. Elsinore was a wholly owned subsidiary of the Hyatt Corporation from 1972 to 1979, when it then became an independent company. At various time Elsinore also had interests in the Atlantis Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, the Hyatt Lake Tahoe, and several Native American casinos. In 1995, Elsinore filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and the investment firm Morgens, Waterfall, Vintiadis & Company obtained 99 percent ownership of the company.
In 1976 the casino expanded to 33,000 sq ft (3,100 m2) and changed decor to be warmer.


Today the casino occupies the entire block bordered by Fremont St, Casino Center, Third Street, and Carson Avenue. The Four Queens was also a partner in renovating the downtown area and creating the Fremont Street experience.
In April 2007 the Canyon Club opened at the Four Queens providing the first downtown casino club