Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Blog #10

Reconstruction is the era that took place for a few years after the Civil War. It is essentially what it is called - the Reconstruction. The South had been destroyed - both literally and figuratively. Buildings had to be rebuilt, government had to be reformed, and new constitutional laws had to be formed so that the Civil War wouldn't happen again. The good news is that buildings were rebuilt and we got amendments to the constitution to protect the rights of black people. But... that's about it. Leaders in the Reconstruction were anything but fit for the job, the South held a rather large grudge against the North for everything, Black Codes and Jim Crow Laws were popping up everywhere (separate but equal), the KKK was formed in that time, the Democrats of that time were basically doing whatever they wanted to, and this was pushed even further when the Republicans of that time were willing to do anything just to get Republican people in office to try and get things done. It is relevant today because people from that time managed to work their way into governmental positions, and even though they died, their ideals still live on in today's day and age - for instance, hate for people based on their race or color. In that sense, people from that part of the country might not realize that they're racist when they really are.

The Reconstruction is evident in modern society, as proved in the following article:
http://chronicle.augusta.com/stories/2009/09/28/let_549745.shtml
"And he is certainly not alone among his liberal colleagues in voicing that opinion: Conservatives are protesting Obama's policies; Obama is black; therefore, conservatives must be protesting Obama's policies because he is black."
The fact that people are automatically linking to this sort of thing simply proves the preconceived notion that a white man criticizing a black man's policies is racism. Any time a conflict arises between black man and white man, it seems that the obvious cause is racism and not personality, or actual policies. This is because of the historic factor of the way black and white people have treated each other, and because of the personality and attitude that each issue constantly receives.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Blog #9- Media Saves the Beach in the News

"Even with the recent storms, the risk of drought in Los Angeles is not over. According to the California Department of Water Resources, the water content in California’s mountain snowpack, a vital source of drinking water for the state, is at 55 percent of average for this time of year. The long-term forecast for our region is for increasing periods of dryness. At the same time, the rain that does fall is usually conveyed through storm drains out into the ocean where it creates a pollution hazard."

To go to the original article, click here.

The issue is that there is not enough water in LA and the water that does come is creating a hazard for the oceans and pollution. More information, naturally, can be found in the article, but it can also be found at TreePeople's website, the organization that is trying to provide more ways to make things more environmentally friendly for the world. The story relates to our class and Media Saves the Beach because it is essentially a project to help stop pollution and which would help with water-testing in the world.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Blog #8 - Media Saves The Beach Ideas

For Media Saves the Beach, I would definitely like to do something that involves incorporating artistic talent, and possibly work my way into how chemicals pollute the water and cause bacteria that, in turn, create illnesses. This is a field of interest to me because I once got an illness while swimming in Mission Bay and I got a staph infection after going to Sea World.

(I don't trust the water. >_>)

I would like to create something involving artwork, but I wouldn't mind doing something that has to do with writing either. I would not like to do a photo essay, though, and my opinion's split as far as a movie goes.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Blog #7 - Final Draft




Nikita Atrash

What True Friendship Is

As I opened the door and walked up the carpet stairs, the sound hit me like the blue table on my leg back in eighth grade.

That sound was silence.

There was no noise. No clickety-clacking of claws on the hardwood floor, no jingling of two collar tags hitting each other as he came down the stairs to greet us. My father was not home and my mother and I had just gotten home from dropping the noise-maker at the vet. The house was mysteriously quiet; there were no sounds to speak of. I was silent for a moment, before commenting to my mother, who had followed me in, “It’s lonely around here…”

What is it like to lose a friend? What does it take to be a friend? I find that in life, there is truly no human example of friendship. So instead of looking for something that is not there, I turn to an expression we have all heard many times – ‘Man’s best friend’. To look at the canine method of being a friend is something that I find rather incredible. A dog is always there for you, follows you around and never betrays you, and never questions you about anything. They also make incredible listeners – If you have something that you’d like to talk about, you can just sit down next to them and talk about it, and provided you’re giving them love and affection, they will sit there and listen to your problems. As a friend, I believe that being a listener is better than just constantly asking how a person is, as it does get rather annoying after some amount of time.

An eternal example of friendship is the bond that FDR shared with Murray the Outlaw of Falahill, or just plain ‘Fala’. Fala was codenamed as “The Informer” by the Secret Service because when the President went on trips, there were two things that gave away his presence in places – One was the wheelchair ramps that had to be built to accommodate his wheelchair, but these could be avoided by going in places with elevators. The other was Fala’s presence. Fala, like any dog, demanded walks after being cooped up in one place (namely trains). “The sight of a closed train standing at a siding, heavily guarded by military sentries, as a Secret Service agent walked a little Scotty dog was a dead giveaway to any American of the 1940s.”

There is nothing more important to anybody than a good friend. Many times, a canine comrade, who simply sits and listens, is the best friend you can have. That is why, while they may not be famous, every dog is an American Icon in his or her own right.

Sources

Unknown, "FDR's Fala, World's Most Famous Dog". Bushy Barney. 9.3.09

Memories from 8.25.09

Thursday, September 3, 2009

American Icons Resources

Naturally, no project can be done without first doing research. Here are a few resources that I might be able to use for the American Icons project for two of the Icons in the previous blog entry.

For Murry the Outlaw of Falahill (AKA Fala):

1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gztvtSyTdY
This is a video clip of FDR's "Fala" speech, in which he addressed Republican's claims during the election that he left Fala behind on the Aleutian Islands and used millions of taxpayer dollars to send a Destroyer back for him. The full speech can be read here, and the bit about Fala is toward the end.
2. http://bushybarney.tripod.com/fala.htm
A website dedicated to Fala himself, with many excerpts from news where Fala was mentioned alongside the President - features information that names such things as Fala being known as "The Informer" (letting the American Public know where FDR would be, since he never left his side), and many other articles featuring the little dog.
3. http://www.gwu.edu/~erpapers/myday/
Eleanor Roosevelt frequently mentioned Fala in her newspaper column, "My Day". This is an archive of the entries that she made in that column (and a quick search for 'Fala' produces quite the results!).
4. http://www.thepatrioticgentleman.com/Mans-Best-Friend/FDRandFALA.html , http://animal.discovery.com/tv/a-list/creature-countdowns/presidential-pups/presidential-pups-02.html , http://gofetchgifts.com/blog/for-fun/all-the-presidents-dogs/ and many more feature photographs of Fala in all his glory.

For Lightning

1. Interview with my mom and dad
I could use this to get on a kind of personal level (even though I was his owner) about Lightning and what happened to him.
2. Photos
We have quite a few photos of Lightning laying around the household that I could use.
3. Art
I once created a painting of Thunder and Lightning that I can use in some way.
4. Memories
Because Lightning only passed away recently, I can use memories of him to fuel things.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

American Icons



















Murray the Outlaw of Falahill, AKA Fala Rooseve
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Fala represents friendship. A dog is always known to be a man's best friend, and Fala is no exception. He shared a strong bond with Franklin D. Roosevelt, often traveling with him on presidential trips. He was a true companion to the president, and was always someone that could brighten his day after a long day making big decisions.
Fala was a dog, and thus it is rather hard to get into his mind and figure out what was important to him. It is possible that his master was always in his best interest, as they were never separated, even so much as being buried together. Other pleasures in Fala's life probably involved eating, sleeping, playing games and just running around and having a good time. Dogs can tend to be simplistic creatures and Fala, despite his position of power as the First Dog, was most likely no exception.
Fala was President FDR's dog, and of course had his place as the First Dog in the White House for five years before FDR died of a stroke. He also had a section of a speech dedicated to him, where Roosevelt addressed the accusations that Republicans were making that Fala had been left behind on an Aleutian island, and Roosevelt had used billions of dollars in taxpayer money to send a battleship back to get him. Fala was essentially part of FDR's image, and even has a statue depicting his liking near the one of Roosevelt himself.
I first discovered Fala one Monday evening, somewhere between the hours of eight and nine when I was watching a program on TV about Presidential Dogs. Fala had a whole section dedicated to him, and I soon fell in love with the small, lovable dog (but had a problem getting his gender right for a little while). As I began doing research on him as a possible candidate for this project, I discovered that he actually played a substantial role in history, and I decided that he would make an incredible (and very different) subject for this project.
Fala was the inspiration for a part of one of Roosevelt's speeches; he also played a substantial role in history for the White House and army. In the war, American soldiers would ask one another for the name of the President's dog, expecting the name 'Fala', to safeguard against German infiltration. Fala was also an honorary private in the US Army for "'contributing' $1 to the war effort for every day of the year and setting an example for others on the home front." Fala also traveled with the President to many of his meetings in other places, locations including the Atlantic Charter Conference in Placentia Bay, Newfoundland (with the President and Prime Minister Winston Churchill of England), the Quebec Conferences, and many other places.
My relationship with Fala is an inspirational one. A dog is a great friend to have, and I often strive to be a good friend to other people, and I feel happy when I've helped other people. I want to be like Fala, in the sense that I can just always be there for someone when they need me, or just sit quietly (maybe not with my head on someone's lap) and let them talk to me, and I wouldn't be critical, I'd just sit there and listen, like a dog might do. I feel like I have a lot to learn about being a friend, and a dog like Fala would be able to teach me that sort of thing.


















Thunder-Plant

The rare Thunder-Plant, only found in one location on the entire planet, is a living creature who displays bravery, perseverance, and stalker-like traits. The object on his head, a semi-opaque cone with a black outline, is there in order to keep him from clawing at the stitches on his eye. But does he care? I say nay! He stands strong throughout having to wear the cone on his head! He continually takes on the challenges of life while wearing this semi-opaque cone with a black outline. He perseveres when he has to do the daily ordeals such as drink from his water bowl or walk around the house! And he still follows his one and only master, Delalle Atrash, everywhere she goes around the house! He is truly a being to look up to, with how strong his willpower is.
Thunder-Plant's life revolves around eating, walking around, laying around, and following Del around. He is a dog and enjoys the simple things in life, often longingly staring at the Atrash Family as they gather around the dinner table and eat their meal in the evening. He also enjoys Del's company, and will come down the stairs to greet her every day when she comes home, be it from a short trip or from a long day at work. Thunder-Plant also enjoys the company of other dogs, but not outside his own domain, where he is the king of the castle, as far as he's concerned.
Thunder-Plant is a natural example of the man (or woman's!) best friend 'dog stereotype'. He is a true companion, often coming into a room where a lonely person is and coming to keep him or her company. He is an example of, no matter how much bad a person or being does, they can always be forgiven if they are either adorable enough or do something to make up for it. It is also showing how you can be rewarded for a bad thing, be it through getting played with or simply knowing that you got that food out of the trash bin.
As a pet, Thunder-Plant has been in my life since I was a child of six or seven years. He has been in my life for a long time and is what you might call family, and is always someone who's there. It was recently observed when he was at the vet and Del and I came home from taking him there, and Frank was absent and Marc was at college, that the house was empty and there was no clacking of claws on the floor or jingling of collar tags indicating that Thunder-Plant was coming to say hello to his master(s). It is a sad state of affairs when you witness what will be when you no longer have a friendly face around the household, and naturally it is a lonely experience when he is not there to cuddle and love.
Thunder-Plant has inspired the family to train dogs better and make them more obedient. He has also inspired outside visitors to play with him when they see him, because he is just so gosh darn adorable. Thunder-Plant is the type of dog who gets what he wants by staring at people and begging for it, and is ever so adorable while doing it. He was the inspiration for a painting of him and his brother, created by Nikita Atrash.
Thunder-Plant is a loved member of our family, because he is a dog and all dogs deserve to be loved. He is always around us, be it watching from outside or sneaking up on us and begging for food (although, his plant extension makes it hard for him to sneak up on people). He also makes for a fun time, bonking into everything as he tries to greet us around the house.















Lightning

Lightning represents the struggle between life and death; how pain is hard to deal with but at the same time it can be dealt with and how when you are in pain it feels like nothing matters anymore, but everyone surrounds you with love and care when you are. This is because Lightning was dying; he had a cancer in his leg that, despite the medicine he was taking, could not help him deal with the pain that he was feeling.
Lightning cared for those around him, namely his brother and his owners. As time went on, he was in so much pain that he tried to push people away, but to no avail, because of their perseverance. Time was cruel to him and eventually the cancer and pain got so bad that he felt as if he had nothing important to him anymore, and he wouldn't even get up to greet his owners when they returned from a place they had been to - so for his sake, they put him down so he wouldn't be in pain any longer.
Lightning is important to American culture because so many people struggle to fight illnesses that hurt them everyday, and sometimes they are in so much pain that nothing matters to them anymore. It is a battle that is hard to watch but yet so few people know about, and he represents the awareness of that battle that everyday people have to deal with throughout their lives.
Lightning was a pet, and a member of our family. He was the brother to the rare Thunder-Plant, the older of the two, and was often around us all in the way that only a dog could be. He fought valiantly against illness, and this was inspiring to me that, despite being a dog, he could deal with that sort of thing, even if it wasn't very well.
When I first found out about his cancer, Lightning inspired me to create a fictional 'memorial' character, if you will, named Lightning Atto (aka Atto). He also inspired the family, in a way, because it's strange to come into the house and to not see him around after him being a pet for 10 or so years. Lightning was brave, and he fought valiantly against his cancer, but unfortunately he could not hold out any longer and the family decided that it was time to put him down.
Lightning was a pet, a brother to Thunder-Plant, and a close held family member. He has a special place in my heart because, while my brother picked Thunder-Plant, I picked Lightning. Lightning was, in that sense, my dog, and it was hard to know that he was in so much pain and there was really nothing I could do. He was not only a pet, but also a friend, who could just sit quietly and listen to you if you had troubles that you wanted to talk about.