So I really wanted to get my feelings out so I decided to write on my blog cause that's what a blog is for (I think).
I am getting really upset with the Library system here in town. They have cut back hours, raised fines, and doing a lot of absurd things. For instance, a few weeks ago my dad, older sister, and I went to the library to find a good movie to watch that night. The library ladies told us that we could no longer renew movies online or by phone and we could only renew books once and we could do that by phone, online, or coming in. What really ticks me off is that we took our movies back and renewed our books. But we have now been fined for not returning our books. I know we renewed the books but we're getting fined for not returning them. This city needs to do a whole lot more in the money saving department because I will not go to the library anymore as long as the city won't fund them. I'm actually kind of glad my English teacher made us do blogs so I could get my feelings out.
PK Here I Stand
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Sunday, May 15, 2011
Blog Evaluation
So this is my last blog for school. I'm kind of sad this is the last one because that means I am closer to being a senior. SCARY!!!!! I enjoyed blogging, I liked some assignments over others but it was fun. I think my favorite blog was the 1920s music playlist. I love music from that era so the assignment was easy for me. One of my least favorite blogs was the Voki blog. One reason was because it was difficult to figure out and then it didn't turn out the way I had been hoping it would. I tried to put my best effort into my blogs but when I forgot to do some, I would write a paragraph and then move on to the next, not even really thinking about what I wrote. Doing these blogs helped teach me to be more responsible for my homework. The blogs weren't written on the assignment board because there was one every week. I forgot though that we had a blog to do that week and forget about it the next couple of weeks until I looked at my grades and wondered why I had F's. This was good though because in college I'm told that the teachers don't remind us of homework. I'm not sure if I will shut down my blog or continue blogging after this year. I definitely recommend that the juniors next year have a blogging experience. Thanks so much Mrs. Williams!!
Saturday, April 16, 2011
1920s Play list
I found this blog topic very interesting because I love this kind of music. The music of this era was very carefree, happy -go- lucky, and upbeat.
1) "Toot Toot Tootsie" - Al Jolson This song reminds me of how hard it was for Gatsby to say goodbye to Daisy as he left for the Great War. The song tells of a man who gets on his train at least seven times before getting of to kiss his sweetheart. Daisy may not have been at the trainstation to see Gatsby off, but I bet Gatsby sure felt like getting off that train and going back to Daisy.
2) "Rhapsody in Blue" - George Gershwin One of my all time favorite composers in George Gershwin. This song kind of tells the life of Gatsby almost. At the beginning the song is somewhat downtrodden here and there a little bit of excitment. That is when Gatsby was growing up. In the middle of the song, it goes off into this jazz melody and is upbeat and hectic. This reminds me of Gatsby meeting Daisy and going of to war. After that there's a hesitant part where I think Gatsby has realized he has lost Daisy and is very sad and somewhat "Blue". Then Gatsby decides he will get back Daisy. This is told by the music becoming very resolute and somber. Then the music gets crazy and hectic again. This would be Gatsby's great parties and chasing after Daisy. At the end of the song there is a big buildup and then the song ends. The buildup is when Daisy drives the car, kills Myrtle, Tom lying to Mr. Wilson, and then finally at the end, Mr. Wilson kills Gatsby.
3) "When the Red Red Robin Comes Bob Bob Bobbin' Along" - Al Jolson This song describes the senitments of the younger people in the Roaring Twenties. It says live, love, laugh, and be happy and throw your cares away. This is shown in "The Great Gatsby" in several instances. One would be when Myrtle and Tom bought a dog on the street but then didn't think of how they were going to care for it when they were not at the apartment. Another instance would be the parties at Gatsby's house. The people there didn't care how late they stayed or the consequences of partying all the time like that would be. They lived in the moment and didn't have a care in the world. My favorite word to describe this would "Happy-go-lucky."
4) "Puttin' on the Ritz" - Irving Berlin This song tells of the mentality of the 1920s. The song tells people to dress up and spend all their money on clothes so they can brush shoulders with the elite. People in the 1920s wanted to become famous and rich. This is what Gatsby, Nick, Myrtle, and Daisy did. They tried to become part of the elite class by varying methods. Gatsby inherited the money, Nick went to work for his money, Myrtle became Tom's lover, and Daisy married into money. But having money won't always mean you're one of the elite. The actual people of the 1920s tried to become elite like the characters in "The Great Gatsby" but they were only playing parts.
1) "Toot Toot Tootsie" - Al Jolson This song reminds me of how hard it was for Gatsby to say goodbye to Daisy as he left for the Great War. The song tells of a man who gets on his train at least seven times before getting of to kiss his sweetheart. Daisy may not have been at the trainstation to see Gatsby off, but I bet Gatsby sure felt like getting off that train and going back to Daisy.
2) "Rhapsody in Blue" - George Gershwin One of my all time favorite composers in George Gershwin. This song kind of tells the life of Gatsby almost. At the beginning the song is somewhat downtrodden here and there a little bit of excitment. That is when Gatsby was growing up. In the middle of the song, it goes off into this jazz melody and is upbeat and hectic. This reminds me of Gatsby meeting Daisy and going of to war. After that there's a hesitant part where I think Gatsby has realized he has lost Daisy and is very sad and somewhat "Blue". Then Gatsby decides he will get back Daisy. This is told by the music becoming very resolute and somber. Then the music gets crazy and hectic again. This would be Gatsby's great parties and chasing after Daisy. At the end of the song there is a big buildup and then the song ends. The buildup is when Daisy drives the car, kills Myrtle, Tom lying to Mr. Wilson, and then finally at the end, Mr. Wilson kills Gatsby.
3) "When the Red Red Robin Comes Bob Bob Bobbin' Along" - Al Jolson This song describes the senitments of the younger people in the Roaring Twenties. It says live, love, laugh, and be happy and throw your cares away. This is shown in "The Great Gatsby" in several instances. One would be when Myrtle and Tom bought a dog on the street but then didn't think of how they were going to care for it when they were not at the apartment. Another instance would be the parties at Gatsby's house. The people there didn't care how late they stayed or the consequences of partying all the time like that would be. They lived in the moment and didn't have a care in the world. My favorite word to describe this would "Happy-go-lucky."
4) "Puttin' on the Ritz" - Irving Berlin This song tells of the mentality of the 1920s. The song tells people to dress up and spend all their money on clothes so they can brush shoulders with the elite. People in the 1920s wanted to become famous and rich. This is what Gatsby, Nick, Myrtle, and Daisy did. They tried to become part of the elite class by varying methods. Gatsby inherited the money, Nick went to work for his money, Myrtle became Tom's lover, and Daisy married into money. But having money won't always mean you're one of the elite. The actual people of the 1920s tried to become elite like the characters in "The Great Gatsby" but they were only playing parts.
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Stephen Crane Poetry
The ocean said to me once, "Look! Yonder on the shore Is a woman, weeping. I have watched her. Go you and tell her this -- Her lover I have laid In cool green hall. There is wealth of golden sand And pillars, coral-red; Two white fish stand guard at his bier. "Tell her this And more -- That the king of the seas Weeps too, old, helpless man. The bustling fates Heap his hands with corpses Until he stands like a child With a surplus of toys." I liked how Stephen Crane personifies the ocean in this poem. I like how the ocean tells him totell this woman that the sea has "buried" her lover. The picture of the lover's final resting place at the bottom of the ocean sounds so beautiful. Then in the second stanza he goes to say that the corpses are the toys of the "king of the seas". The last stanza sort of ruins the beautiful picture of the lover's grave saying that he is just a toy. |
Monday, April 4, 2011
Mark Twain Quotes
I found many Mark Twain quotes that I really liked. Here are two that I really liked.
"A person who won't read has no advantage over one who can't read." I like this quote because I was brought up in a family that loved to read and cherished books. I love to read and cannot understand why some people never read books but just watch the movies based off of the books or just read magazine articles and nothing else. Reading opens one's mind to new adventures and ways of thinking. I someone can't read he can always learn if he has the resources, the person who won't read will never learn anything new unlike the person who can't read.
"Against the assault of laughter nothing can stand." I like this quote because using a quote from Mary Poppins, "I love to laugh!" And from the movie of Pride and Prejudice "A family trait..." My family also loves to laugh. My dad's dad was a great storyteller and comedian. My grandpa used to say that laughing was medicine. He had an entire filing cabinet dedicated to jokes. When my whole family gets together, laughter can always be heard about a mile away. (I read the book of Pride and Prejudice before watching the movie :))
"A person who won't read has no advantage over one who can't read." I like this quote because I was brought up in a family that loved to read and cherished books. I love to read and cannot understand why some people never read books but just watch the movies based off of the books or just read magazine articles and nothing else. Reading opens one's mind to new adventures and ways of thinking. I someone can't read he can always learn if he has the resources, the person who won't read will never learn anything new unlike the person who can't read.
"Against the assault of laughter nothing can stand." I like this quote because using a quote from Mary Poppins, "I love to laugh!" And from the movie of Pride and Prejudice "A family trait..." My family also loves to laugh. My dad's dad was a great storyteller and comedian. My grandpa used to say that laughing was medicine. He had an entire filing cabinet dedicated to jokes. When my whole family gets together, laughter can always be heard about a mile away. (I read the book of Pride and Prejudice before watching the movie :))
Civil Rights Movement
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/25/us/politics/25race.html?pagewanted=1&ref=civilrights
I found this article about how some people from the black community think that Obama's presidency could be a great risk to the Civil Rights Movement. They say that electing Obama as president could mean to some black people that the civil rights movement has been won. By just having a black president does not mean the civil rights movement has been won for all people. There is still injustice and electing Obama as president is just one of the numerous steps to truly winning the civil rights movement. They have to keep working hard to win this battle for civil rights. James Baldwin told his nephew to never give and to not believe what white people or anybody said. Bessie and Sadie foretold of a black president, true they said it would be a woman but they were close. Black people like Obama help to win the civil rights movement because they have succeeded beyond what some white people thought they could do.
I found this article about how some people from the black community think that Obama's presidency could be a great risk to the Civil Rights Movement. They say that electing Obama as president could mean to some black people that the civil rights movement has been won. By just having a black president does not mean the civil rights movement has been won for all people. There is still injustice and electing Obama as president is just one of the numerous steps to truly winning the civil rights movement. They have to keep working hard to win this battle for civil rights. James Baldwin told his nephew to never give and to not believe what white people or anybody said. Bessie and Sadie foretold of a black president, true they said it would be a woman but they were close. Black people like Obama help to win the civil rights movement because they have succeeded beyond what some white people thought they could do.
Sunday, March 20, 2011
A Walk Through Harlem
Bessie and Hap's dentist office was at the corner of Seventh Avenue and 135th Street. This is very near to James Weldon Johnson's home. James Weldon Johnson grew up in Florida and became a lawyer. He moved to Harlem to practice law. While in Harlem, he became the executive director of the NAACP for 11 years. He became a famous author of many books as well as writing over 200 songs. James Weldon Johnson was a patient of Bessie's and gave her an autographed copy of one of his newly published books of poetry. Bessie and Sadie's apartment in 1926 was at 219 West 121st Street. This is near to the Mount Olivet Baptist Church. Bessie and Sadie probably walked past this church but most likely never went in because they were Episcopalian. In 1919, Bessie and Sadie were living at 2505 Seventh Avenue at the corner of 145th Street with their siblings. This apartment was about six blocks away from Striver's Row which, in 1919, became home to many wealthy African Americans. Madam C.J. Walker's Beauty Salon was located at 108 West 136th Street, about a block away from Bessie's dental office. The Delany sisters probably never bought any of Madam Walker's hair products for African American women because they liked their hair. They most likely heard of it often after Madam Walker died in 1919 and the salon became a safe place for artists and writers.
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