Search results for teacher and pupil
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8,

02:01,

2009-11-09 07:50:40
Description: Cracks Movie Trailer(INTL). In theaters TBA 2010. The hazy summer days by the lake is thrown off kilter for the six school girls by the arrival of a beautiful new Spanish student's wild (More) Cracks Movie Trailer(INTL). In theaters TBA 2010. The hazy summer days by the lake is thrown off kilter for the six school girls by the arrival of a beautiful new Spanish student's wild intriguing tales of her travels in India with her father. Miss G is captivated but it's not long before ripples appear on the surface and the cracks beneath emerge in the relationships between teacher and pupil. Release Date: Friday December 4 2009 UK; TBA 2010 CAN/US Genre: Drama Cast: Eva Green, Juno Temple ... (Less) Channel: youtube

305,

02:59,

2007-12-01 04:04:06
Description: This video is about the recent controversy in Sudan in which a British teacher, Gillian Gibbons, was jailed for 15 days due to a teddy bear incident in which she allowed her students to name the teddy (More) This video is about the recent controversy in Sudan in which a British teacher, Gillian Gibbons, was jailed for 15 days due to a teddy bear incident in which she allowed her students to name the teddy bear Muhammad...
"British teacher Gillian Gibbons has been jailed for 15 days after insulting Islam's Prophet by allowing her pupils in Sudan to name a teddy bear Muhammad.
The toy was named in September after children were asked to vote on a name for a teddy bear as part of the class's study of animals and their habitats.
One boy said: 'The teacher asked me what I wanted to call the teddy. I said Muhammad. I named it after my name.'
The boy's family said he was not thinking of the prophet when he chose the name."
- BBC
Although this incident seemed to be a simple misunderstanding to begin with but then culminated into unnecessary chaos that was blown way out of proportion, it should be noted that as Muslims, we respect all of the prophets--Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, Muhammad, and all the rest of them, peace be upon them.
Just think about how you would feel if someone tried to insult the person closest to you (your spouse, mother, father, grandparents, sibling, children, grandchildren, etc.). To Muslims, prophets are closer to us than all of those people.
Nonetheless, as this seemed to be a simple misunderstanding to begin with, they should have just simple changed the name of the teddy bear--there's no need to punish for such a simple and seemingly unintentional misunderstanding!
http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/quran/scislam.html
Background recitation by Hani ar-Rifai
http://audio.islamicnetwork.com/quran.php?reciterId=27
The following is a video transcript:
Sudan...
A British teacher asks her Sudanese students to come up with possible names for a teddy bear...
After choosing some names and voting, the students ended up with the name Muhammad.
The teacher is then "jailed for 15 days after insulting Islam's Prophet by allowing her pupils in Sudan to name a teddy bear Muhammad."
The teacher was also "suspended from her teaching post, and the school has closed until January."
I'm a Muslim.
What do I think from an Islamic perspective?
I think this is just silly.
The teacher didn't even choose the name.
Additionally, the bear wasn't named as such to offend.
"One boy said: 'The teacher asked me what I wanted to call the teddy. I said Muhammad. I named it after my name.'"
"The boy's family said he was not thinking of the prophet when he chose the name."
So do you see the silliness we are dealing with?
Why didn't they simply just change the teddy bear's name?
This silly ordeal reminded me of another silly incident that previously happened in Sudan in which a Sudanese man had "been forced to take a goat as his 'wife', after he was caught having sex with the animal."
So it seems this is just another one of Sudan's silly and ignorant non-Islamic verdicts.
However, one must keep in mind the massive underreporting and extreme bias on behalf of the media.
Although both this teddy bear and the goat incident occurred in Sudan,
Things like this are a rarity in Sudan.
Not only that, but the ones passing these verdicts are even more rare.
Most Sudanese do not agree with these two rulings.
But in the end, it was up to the ones passing the verdict.
And in these two cases, silly ignorance prevailed.
Although ignorant, the media jumps on it and passes it off as something from Islam.
But in reality, Islam is entirely free from such ignorance.
It makes one remember the hadith of the prophet Muhammad (pbuh):
"Narrated Anas:
Allah's Apostle said, 'From among the portents of the Hour are (the following):
1. Religious knowledge will be taken away (by the death of Religious learned men).
2. (Religious) ignorance will prevail.
3. Drinking of alcoholic drinks (will be very common).
4. There will be prevalence of open illegal sexual intercourse.'"
Sahih Bukhari, Volume 1, Book 3, Number 80
This teddy bear issue in Sudan is a prime example of this ignorance that was prophesied over 1400 years ago by the final messenger (pbuh).
May God rid the world of this ignorance.
And what better way to do this than to follow the advice of God, Himself?
"Read! In the Name of your Lord, Who has created (all that exists),
Has created man from a clot (a piece of thick coagulated blood).
Read! And your Lord is the Most Generous,
Who has taught (the writing) by the pen.
Has taught man that which he knew not."
Qur'an, 96:1-5 (The first verses revealed of the Qur'an)
Read!
Pupil defends Sudan row teacher
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7116401.stm
Sudan man forced to 'marry' goat
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/4748292.stm
Background nasheed is "Articles of Faith" by Talib Al Habib
http://www.nuralhabib.com/download/rahma%20tracks/6.mp3 (Less) Channel: youtube

16,

05:11,

2008-06-01 16:19:54
Description: Solihull College Performing Arts, UKPerforming Arts Web Site: www.solihullarts.org.ukCollege Web Site: www.solihull.ac.ukContact Number: +44 (0) 121 678 7000Website development, videos, photographs (More) Solihull College Performing Arts, UKPerforming Arts Web Site: www.solihullarts.org.ukCollege Web Site: www.solihull.ac.ukContact Number: +44 (0) 121 678 7000Website development, videos, photographs and Youtube -- Greg Marshall February 25th 2008, First Diploma My Fair Lady Synopsis:Henry Higgins, an arrogant, irascible professor of phonetics, boasts to fellow linguist Colonel Pickering that he can train any woman to speak so properly that he could pass her off as a duchess. (In the terms now used by linguists, and which did not yet exist in the period of the show, Higgins said he could take a speaker of basilect and teach her to speak acrolect.) Pickering is intrigued by Higgins's boast and wagers that Higgins cannot make good on his claim. Higgins takes on the challenge. He chooses as his subject Eliza Doolittle, a poor girl with a strong Cockney accent whom he encounters selling flowers in Covent Garden. An intensive makeover of Eliza's speech, manners, and dress begins in preparation for her appearance at the Embassy Ball.Complicating matters is Eliza's father, Alfred P. Doolittle (Stanley Holloway), a cheerfully amoral and drink-loving dustman. He shows up to extract money from Higgins, claiming that Higgins is compromising Eliza's virtue. Higgins is impressed by the man's natural gift for language and his brazen lack of moral values ("Can't afford 'em!"). So he flippantly recommends Doolittle to an American millionaire who is seeking a lecturer on moral values. In the end, Doolittle gets a surprise bequest of four thousand pounds a year from the millionaire. This raises him uncomfortably into middle-class respectability.Meanwhile, Eliza endures speech tutoring, endlessly repeating phrases like "In Hertford, Hereford and Hampshire, hurricanes hardly ever happen" (to demonstrate that "h"s must be aspirated) and "The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain" (to practice the "long a" phoneme). Just as things seem hopeless, she suddenly "gets it" after Higgins eloquently speaks of the glory of the English language. Thereafter her pronunciation is transformed into that of impeccable upper class English. For her first public tryout, Higgins takes her to Ascot Racecourse. There she makes a good impression with her polite manners but shocks everyone by her vulgar Cockney attitudes and slang (thus establishing one of the show's themes: good elocution is only "skin deep"). But she captures the heart of an eager young man named Freddy Eynsford-Hill.The final test requires Eliza to pass as a lady at the Embassy Ball. She does this admirably, even fooling a rival of Higgins, a Hungarian phonetician named Zoltan Karpathy, into believing that Eliza was "born Hungarian." After the ball, Higgins's ungrateful boasting about his triumph and his pleasure that the experiment is now over leave Eliza feeling used and abandoned. She walks out on Higgins, leaving the clueless professor mystified by her ingratitude. But Higgins soon realizes his feelings for her: he has "grown accustomed to her face." When Eliza tentatively returns to him, the musical ends on an ambiguous moment of possible reconciliation between teacher and pupil.CastMr. Henry Higgins - Daniel DaltonEliza Doolittle - Lauren CheckleyAlfred Doolittle - Adam FaridColonel Pickering - John SmithFreddy Eynsford-Hill - Eugene DoyleMrs. Higgins - Rachel Davis-SmithMrs. Pearce - Haleema AkhtarCHORUSRaji DhariwalMuzmil HussainShamilla KhaliaAlison McCoyHeather ThorpeSophie TomlinLuke WhitehouseCheyanne Brown (Less) Channel: youtube

9,

02:32,

2008-06-01 16:16:17
Description: Solihull College Performing Arts, UKPerforming Arts Web Site: www.solihullarts.org.ukCollege Web Site: www.solihull.ac.ukContact Number: +44 (0) 121 678 7000Website development, videos, photographs (More) Solihull College Performing Arts, UKPerforming Arts Web Site: www.solihullarts.org.ukCollege Web Site: www.solihull.ac.ukContact Number: +44 (0) 121 678 7000Website development, videos, photographs and Youtube -- Greg Marshall February 25th 2008, First Diploma My Fair Lady Synopsis:Henry Higgins, an arrogant, irascible professor of phonetics, boasts to fellow linguist Colonel Pickering that he can train any woman to speak so properly that he could pass her off as a duchess. (In the terms now used by linguists, and which did not yet exist in the period of the show, Higgins said he could take a speaker of basilect and teach her to speak acrolect.) Pickering is intrigued by Higgins's boast and wagers that Higgins cannot make good on his claim. Higgins takes on the challenge. He chooses as his subject Eliza Doolittle, a poor girl with a strong Cockney accent whom he encounters selling flowers in Covent Garden. An intensive makeover of Eliza's speech, manners, and dress begins in preparation for her appearance at the Embassy Ball.Complicating matters is Eliza's father, Alfred P. Doolittle (Stanley Holloway), a cheerfully amoral and drink-loving dustman. He shows up to extract money from Higgins, claiming that Higgins is compromising Eliza's virtue. Higgins is impressed by the man's natural gift for language and his brazen lack of moral values ("Can't afford 'em!"). So he flippantly recommends Doolittle to an American millionaire who is seeking a lecturer on moral values. In the end, Doolittle gets a surprise bequest of four thousand pounds a year from the millionaire. This raises him uncomfortably into middle-class respectability.Meanwhile, Eliza endures speech tutoring, endlessly repeating phrases like "In Hertford, Hereford and Hampshire, hurricanes hardly ever happen" (to demonstrate that "h"s must be aspirated) and "The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain" (to practice the "long a" phoneme). Just as things seem hopeless, she suddenly "gets it" after Higgins eloquently speaks of the glory of the English language. Thereafter her pronunciation is transformed into that of impeccable upper class English. For her first public tryout, Higgins takes her to Ascot Racecourse. There she makes a good impression with her polite manners but shocks everyone by her vulgar Cockney attitudes and slang (thus establishing one of the show's themes: good elocution is only "skin deep"). But she captures the heart of an eager young man named Freddy Eynsford-Hill.The final test requires Eliza to pass as a lady at the Embassy Ball. She does this admirably, even fooling a rival of Higgins, a Hungarian phonetician named Zoltan Karpathy, into believing that Eliza was "born Hungarian." After the ball, Higgins's ungrateful boasting about his triumph and his pleasure that the experiment is now over leave Eliza feeling used and abandoned. She walks out on Higgins, leaving the clueless professor mystified by her ingratitude. But Higgins soon realizes his feelings for her: he has "grown accustomed to her face." When Eliza tentatively returns to him, the musical ends on an ambiguous moment of possible reconciliation between teacher and pupil.CastMr. Henry Higgins - Daniel DaltonEliza Doolittle - Lauren CheckleyAlfred Doolittle - Adam FaridColonel Pickering - John SmithFreddy Eynsford-Hill - Eugene DoyleMrs. Higgins - Rachel Davis-SmithMrs. Pearce - Haleema AkhtarCHORUSRaji DhariwalMuzmil HussainShamilla KhaliaAlison McCoyHeather ThorpeSophie TomlinLuke WhitehouseCheyanne Brown (Less) Channel: youtube

12,

00:26,

2008-06-01 16:13:01
Description: Solihull College Performing Arts, UKPerforming Arts Web Site: www.solihullarts.org.ukCollege Web Site: www.solihull.ac.ukContact Number: +44 (0) 121 678 7000Website development, videos, photographs (More) Solihull College Performing Arts, UKPerforming Arts Web Site: www.solihullarts.org.ukCollege Web Site: www.solihull.ac.ukContact Number: +44 (0) 121 678 7000Website development, videos, photographs and Youtube -- Greg Marshall February 25th 2008, First Diploma My Fair Lady Synopsis:Henry Higgins, an arrogant, irascible professor of phonetics, boasts to fellow linguist Colonel Pickering that he can train any woman to speak so properly that he could pass her off as a duchess. (In the terms now used by linguists, and which did not yet exist in the period of the show, Higgins said he could take a speaker of basilect and teach her to speak acrolect.) Pickering is intrigued by Higgins's boast and wagers that Higgins cannot make good on his claim. Higgins takes on the challenge. He chooses as his subject Eliza Doolittle, a poor girl with a strong Cockney accent whom he encounters selling flowers in Covent Garden. An intensive makeover of Eliza's speech, manners, and dress begins in preparation for her appearance at the Embassy Ball.Complicating matters is Eliza's father, Alfred P. Doolittle (Stanley Holloway), a cheerfully amoral and drink-loving dustman. He shows up to extract money from Higgins, claiming that Higgins is compromising Eliza's virtue. Higgins is impressed by the man's natural gift for language and his brazen lack of moral values ("Can't afford 'em!"). So he flippantly recommends Doolittle to an American millionaire who is seeking a lecturer on moral values. In the end, Doolittle gets a surprise bequest of four thousand pounds a year from the millionaire. This raises him uncomfortably into middle-class respectability.Meanwhile, Eliza endures speech tutoring, endlessly repeating phrases like "In Hertford, Hereford and Hampshire, hurricanes hardly ever happen" (to demonstrate that "h"s must be aspirated) and "The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain" (to practice the "long a" phoneme). Just as things seem hopeless, she suddenly "gets it" after Higgins eloquently speaks of the glory of the English language. Thereafter her pronunciation is transformed into that of impeccable upper class English. For her first public tryout, Higgins takes her to Ascot Racecourse. There she makes a good impression with her polite manners but shocks everyone by her vulgar Cockney attitudes and slang (thus establishing one of the show's themes: good elocution is only "skin deep"). But she captures the heart of an eager young man named Freddy Eynsford-Hill.The final test requires Eliza to pass as a lady at the Embassy Ball. She does this admirably, even fooling a rival of Higgins, a Hungarian phonetician named Zoltan Karpathy, into believing that Eliza was "born Hungarian." After the ball, Higgins's ungrateful boasting about his triumph and his pleasure that the experiment is now over leave Eliza feeling used and abandoned. She walks out on Higgins, leaving the clueless professor mystified by her ingratitude. But Higgins soon realizes his feelings for her: he has "grown accustomed to her face." When Eliza tentatively returns to him, the musical ends on an ambiguous moment of possible reconciliation between teacher and pupil.CastMr. Henry Higgins - Daniel DaltonEliza Doolittle - Lauren CheckleyAlfred Doolittle - Adam FaridColonel Pickering - John SmithFreddy Eynsford-Hill - Eugene DoyleMrs. Higgins - Rachel Davis-SmithMrs. Pearce - Haleema AkhtarCHORUSRaji DhariwalMuzmil HussainShamilla KhaliaAlison McCoyHeather ThorpeSophie TomlinLuke WhitehouseCheyanne Brown (Less) Channel: youtube

15,

02:47,

2008-06-01 16:07:21
Description: Solihull College Performing Arts, UK
Performing Arts Web Site: www.solihullarts.org.uk
College Web Site: www.solihull.ac.uk
Contact Number: +44 (0) 121 678 7000
Website development, videos, (More) Solihull College Performing Arts, UK
Performing Arts Web Site: www.solihullarts.org.uk
College Web Site: www.solihull.ac.uk
Contact Number: +44 (0) 121 678 7000
Website development, videos, photographs and Youtube -- Greg Marshall
February 25th 2008, First Diploma
My Fair Lady
Synopsis:
Henry Higgins, an arrogant, irascible professor of phonetics, boasts to fellow linguist Colonel Pickering that he can train any woman to speak so properly that he could pass her off as a duchess. (In the terms now used by linguists, and which did not yet exist in the period of the show, Higgins said he could take a speaker of basilect and teach her to speak acrolect.) Pickering is intrigued by Higgins's boast and wagers that Higgins cannot make good on his claim. Higgins takes on the challenge. He chooses as his subject Eliza Doolittle, a poor girl with a strong Cockney accent whom he encounters selling flowers in Covent Garden. An intensive makeover of Eliza's speech, manners, and dress begins in preparation for her appearance at the Embassy Ball.
Complicating matters is Eliza's father, Alfred P. Doolittle (Stanley Holloway), a cheerfully amoral and drink-loving dustman. He shows up to extract money from Higgins, claiming that Higgins is compromising Eliza's virtue. Higgins is impressed by the man's natural gift for language and his brazen lack of moral values ("Can't afford 'em!"). So he flippantly recommends Doolittle to an American millionaire who is seeking a lecturer on moral values. In the end, Doolittle gets a surprise bequest of four thousand pounds a year from the millionaire. This raises him uncomfortably into middle-class respectability.
Meanwhile, Eliza endures speech tutoring, endlessly repeating phrases like "In Hertford, Hereford and Hampshire, hurricanes hardly ever happen" (to demonstrate that "h"s must be aspirated) and "The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain" (to practice the "long a" phoneme). Just as things seem hopeless, she suddenly "gets it" after Higgins eloquently speaks of the glory of the English language. Thereafter her pronunciation is transformed into that of impeccable upper class English. For her first public tryout, Higgins takes her to Ascot Racecourse. There she makes a good impression with her polite manners but shocks everyone by her vulgar Cockney attitudes and slang (thus establishing one of the show's themes: good elocution is only "skin deep"). But she captures the heart of an eager young man named Freddy Eynsford-Hill.
The final test requires Eliza to pass as a lady at the Embassy Ball. She does this admirably, even fooling a rival of Higgins, a Hungarian phonetician named Zoltan Karpathy, into believing that Eliza was "born Hungarian." After the ball, Higgins's ungrateful boasting about his triumph and his pleasure that the experiment is now over leave Eliza feeling used and abandoned. She walks out on Higgins, leaving the clueless professor mystified by her ingratitude. But Higgins soon realizes his feelings for her: he has "grown accustomed to her face." When Eliza tentatively returns to him, the musical ends on an ambiguous moment of possible reconciliation between teacher and pupil.
Cast
Mr. Henry Higgins - Daniel Dalton
Eliza Doolittle - Lauren Checkley
Alfred Doolittle - Adam Farid
Colonel Pickering - John Smith
Freddy Eynsford-Hill - Eugene Doyle
Mrs. Higgins - Rachel Davis-Smith
Mrs. Pearce - Haleema Akhtar
CHORUS
Raji Dhariwal
Muzmil Hussain
Shamilla Khalia
Alison McCoy
Heather Thorpe
Sophie Tomlin
Luke Whitehouse
Cheyanne Brown (Less) Channel: youtube

14,

00:27,

2008-06-01 14:22:16
Description: Solihull College Performing Arts, UK
Performing Arts Web Site: www.solihullarts.org.uk
College Web Site: www.solihull.ac.uk
Contact Number: +44 (0) 121 678 7000
Website development, videos, (More) Solihull College Performing Arts, UK
Performing Arts Web Site: www.solihullarts.org.uk
College Web Site: www.solihull.ac.uk
Contact Number: +44 (0) 121 678 7000
Website development, videos, photographs and Youtube -- Greg Marshall
February 25th 2008, First Diploma
My Fair Lady
Synopsis:
Henry Higgins, an arrogant, irascible professor of phonetics, boasts to fellow linguist Colonel Pickering that he can train any woman to speak so properly that he could pass her off as a duchess. (In the terms now used by linguists, and which did not yet exist in the period of the show, Higgins said he could take a speaker of basilect and teach her to speak acrolect.) Pickering is intrigued by Higgins's boast and wagers that Higgins cannot make good on his claim. Higgins takes on the challenge. He chooses as his subject Eliza Doolittle, a poor girl with a strong Cockney accent whom he encounters selling flowers in Covent Garden. An intensive makeover of Eliza's speech, manners, and dress begins in preparation for her appearance at the Embassy Ball.
Complicating matters is Eliza's father, Alfred P. Doolittle (Stanley Holloway), a cheerfully amoral and drink-loving dustman. He shows up to extract money from Higgins, claiming that Higgins is compromising Eliza's virtue. Higgins is impressed by the man's natural gift for language and his brazen lack of moral values ("Can't afford 'em!"). So he flippantly recommends Doolittle to an American millionaire who is seeking a lecturer on moral values. In the end, Doolittle gets a surprise bequest of four thousand pounds a year from the millionaire. This raises him uncomfortably into middle-class respectability.
Meanwhile, Eliza endures speech tutoring, endlessly repeating phrases like "In Hertford, Hereford and Hampshire, hurricanes hardly ever happen" (to demonstrate that "h"s must be aspirated) and "The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain" (to practice the "long a" phoneme). Just as things seem hopeless, she suddenly "gets it" after Higgins eloquently speaks of the glory of the English language. Thereafter her pronunciation is transformed into that of impeccable upper class English. For her first public tryout, Higgins takes her to Ascot Racecourse. There she makes a good impression with her polite manners but shocks everyone by her vulgar Cockney attitudes and slang (thus establishing one of the show's themes: good elocution is only "skin deep"). But she captures the heart of an eager young man named Freddy Eynsford-Hill.
The final test requires Eliza to pass as a lady at the Embassy Ball. She does this admirably, even fooling a rival of Higgins, a Hungarian phonetician named Zoltan Karpathy, into believing that Eliza was "born Hungarian." After the ball, Higgins's ungrateful boasting about his triumph and his pleasure that the experiment is now over leave Eliza feeling used and abandoned. She walks out on Higgins, leaving the clueless professor mystified by her ingratitude. But Higgins soon realizes his feelings for her: he has "grown accustomed to her face." When Eliza tentatively returns to him, the musical ends on an ambiguous moment of possible reconciliation between teacher and pupil.
Cast
Mr. Henry Higgins - Daniel Dalton
Eliza Doolittle - Lauren Checkley
Alfred Doolittle - Adam Farid
Colonel Pickering - John Smith
Freddy Eynsford-Hill - Eugene Doyle
Mrs. Higgins - Rachel Davis-Smith
Mrs. Pearce - Haleema Akhtar
CHORUS
Raji Dhariwal
Muzmil Hussain
Shamilla Khalia
Alison McCoy
Heather Thorpe
Sophie Tomlin
Luke Whitehouse
Cheyanne Brown (Less) Channel: youtube

9,

00:28,

2008-06-01 14:20:22
Description: Solihull College Performing Arts, UK
Performing Arts Web Site: www.solihullarts.org.uk
College Web Site: www.solihull.ac.uk
Contact Number: +44 (0) 121 678 7000
Website development, videos, (More) Solihull College Performing Arts, UK
Performing Arts Web Site: www.solihullarts.org.uk
College Web Site: www.solihull.ac.uk
Contact Number: +44 (0) 121 678 7000
Website development, videos, photographs and Youtube -- Greg Marshall
February 25th 2008, First Diploma
My Fair Lady
Synopsis:
Henry Higgins, an arrogant, irascible professor of phonetics, boasts to fellow linguist Colonel Pickering that he can train any woman to speak so properly that he could pass her off as a duchess. (In the terms now used by linguists, and which did not yet exist in the period of the show, Higgins said he could take a speaker of basilect and teach her to speak acrolect.) Pickering is intrigued by Higgins's boast and wagers that Higgins cannot make good on his claim. Higgins takes on the challenge. He chooses as his subject Eliza Doolittle, a poor girl with a strong Cockney accent whom he encounters selling flowers in Covent Garden. An intensive makeover of Eliza's speech, manners, and dress begins in preparation for her appearance at the Embassy Ball.
Complicating matters is Eliza's father, Alfred P. Doolittle (Stanley Holloway), a cheerfully amoral and drink-loving dustman. He shows up to extract money from Higgins, claiming that Higgins is compromising Eliza's virtue. Higgins is impressed by the man's natural gift for language and his brazen lack of moral values ("Can't afford 'em!"). So he flippantly recommends Doolittle to an American millionaire who is seeking a lecturer on moral values. In the end, Doolittle gets a surprise bequest of four thousand pounds a year from the millionaire. This raises him uncomfortably into middle-class respectability.
Meanwhile, Eliza endures speech tutoring, endlessly repeating phrases like "In Hertford, Hereford and Hampshire, hurricanes hardly ever happen" (to demonstrate that "h"s must be aspirated) and "The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain" (to practice the "long a" phoneme). Just as things seem hopeless, she suddenly "gets it" after Higgins eloquently speaks of the glory of the English language. Thereafter her pronunciation is transformed into that of impeccable upper class English. For her first public tryout, Higgins takes her to Ascot Racecourse. There she makes a good impression with her polite manners but shocks everyone by her vulgar Cockney attitudes and slang (thus establishing one of the show's themes: good elocution is only "skin deep"). But she captures the heart of an eager young man named Freddy Eynsford-Hill.
The final test requires Eliza to pass as a lady at the Embassy Ball. She does this admirably, even fooling a rival of Higgins, a Hungarian phonetician named Zoltan Karpathy, into believing that Eliza was "born Hungarian." After the ball, Higgins's ungrateful boasting about his triumph and his pleasure that the experiment is now over leave Eliza feeling used and abandoned. She walks out on Higgins, leaving the clueless professor mystified by her ingratitude. But Higgins soon realizes his feelings for her: he has "grown accustomed to her face." When Eliza tentatively returns to him, the musical ends on an ambiguous moment of possible reconciliation between teacher and pupil.
Cast
Mr. Henry Higgins - Daniel Dalton
Eliza Doolittle - Lauren Checkley
Alfred Doolittle - Adam Farid
Colonel Pickering - John Smith
Freddy Eynsford-Hill - Eugene Doyle
Mrs. Higgins - Rachel Davis-Smith
Mrs. Pearce - Haleema Akhtar
CHORUS
Raji Dhariwal
Muzmil Hussain
Shamilla Khalia
Alison McCoy
Heather Thorpe
Sophie Tomlin
Luke Whitehouse
Cheyanne Brown (Less) Channel: youtube

40,

00:00,

2009-08-12 20:59:04
Description: Teachers and pupils have are called sex.
Channel: slutload

2,

01:03,

2009-12-29 19:30:16
Description: When a pole appears out comes the teacher and pupil
Channel: vsocial

6,

03:32,

2008-12-23 16:50:57
Description: A panel of teachers, led by Every Child Matters expert Moyra Healy, analyses a scenario in which the relationship between teacher and pupil comes under strain.
http://www.teachers.tv/video/22048 (More) A panel of teachers, led by Every Child Matters expert Moyra Healy, analyses a scenario in which the relationship between teacher and pupil comes under strain.
http://www.teachers.tv/video/22048 (Less) Channel: youtube

1,

02:52,

2009-07-09 11:47:02
Description: An epic battle between teacher (engineer) and pupil (heavy). Ein epischer Kampf zwischen Lehrer und Schüler.
Channel: youtube

5,

00:13,

2008-04-18 14:40:36
Description: Our teacher and pupil having an arm wrestle
Channel: myspace

0,

06:54,

2008-04-17 11:41:36
Description: Making sure the teacher is right
Channel: metacafe

14,

08:45,

2007-11-23 19:31:09
Description: This video is about 2 great peeps in naruto but other wise i want to tell you my thiughts on art and god as both off them belive in them
ART
The man who can but sketch his purpose beforehand in (More) This video is about 2 great peeps in naruto but other wise i want to tell you my thiughts on art and god as both off them belive in them
ART
The man who can but sketch his purpose beforehand in words is regarded as a wonder, and every artist and writer possesses that faculty. But gestation, fruition, the laborious rearing of the offspring, putting it to bed every night full fed with milk, embracing it anew every morning with the inexhaustible affection of a mother's heart, licking it clean, dressing it a hundred times in the richest garb only to be instantly destroyed; then never to be cast down at the convulsions of this headlong life till the living masterpiece is perfected which in sculpture speaks to every eye, in literature to every intellect, in painting to every memory, in music to every heart! --this is the task of execution. The hand must be ready at every moment to work in obedience to the mind.
GOD
God is the Unique, and he is so perfect that he does not resemble any of the things that exist or any of the things that do not; you cannot describe him using your human intelligence, as if he were someone who becomes angry if you are bad or worries about you out of goodness, someone who has a mouth, ears, face, wings, or that is spirit, father or son, not even of himself. Of the Unique you cannot say he is or is not, he embraces all but is nothing; you can name him only through dissimilarity, because it is futile to call him Goodness, Beauty, Wisdom, Amiability, Power, Justice, it would be like calling him Bear, Panther, Serpent, Dragon, or Gryphon, because whatever you say of him you will never express him. God is not body, is not figure, is not form; he does not see, does not hear, does not know disorder and perturbation; he is not soul, intelligence, imagination, opinion, thought, word, number, order, size; he is not equality and is not inequality, is not time and is not eternity; he is a will without purpose. Try to understand, Baudolino: God is a lamp without flame, a flame without fire, a fire without heat, a dark light, a silent rumble, a blind flash, a luminous soot, a ray of his own darkness, a circle that expands concentrating on its own center, a solitary simplicity; he is...is..." She paused, seeking an example that would convince them both, she the teacher and he the pupil. "He is a space that is not, in which you and I are the same thing, as we are today in this time that doesn't flow.
so other than that seat back and enjoy this shit lmfao (Less) Channel: youtube
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