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和提供技术支持.(CNN Student News) -- October 10, 2016 - CNN Student News - 主播电台 - 网易云音乐
(CNN Student News) -- October 10, 2016
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介绍: SUBTITLE: After hitting Haiti and the tropics, Hurricane Matthew set its sights on Florida.
Debris covered the roads. Many residents lost power. Signs were ripped down.
Hurricane Matthew slowly made its way up Florida`s coast, causing large amounts of property damage. Also leaving behind extensive flooding....
介绍: SUBTITLE: After hitting Haiti and the tropics, Hurricane Matthew set its sights on Florida.
Debris covered the roads. Many residents lost power. Signs were ripped down.
Hurricane Matthew slowly made its way up Florida`s coast, causing large amounts of property damage. Also leaving behind extensive flooding.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
CARL AZUZ, CNN STUDENT NEWS ANCHOR: Hi. I`m Carl Azuz. Welcome to CNN STUDENT NEWS.
The day after the second U.S. presidential debate. We`ll tell you more about that in just a few minutes. But we`re starting with a quick recap of Hurricane Matthew`s effects on the U.S. Southeast.
What`s left of the storm was headed out to sea last night. It was moving east into the Atlantic and expected to die out there. But it left massive flooding behind, in Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas, and killed at least 17 people across those four states.
As a hurricane, Matthew roared up the coast of the U.S. Southeast over the weekend. Its storm surge, the rise of water a hurricane pushes ashore, turns streets into virtual rivers in Jacksonville and several other Floridian communities. Beaches were eroded. Roads were washed out. More than 2 million households lost electricity.
Flooding continues in North Carolina, which seems to have gotten the brunt of the storm in the U.S. The eastern part of the state expected to be flooded for days as rivers rise over their banks.
But the storm was especially deadly in Haiti. Officials aren`t sure yet how many people died there. Some estimates say more than 300 were killed in the storm but others put the toll at more than twice that. A lot of the nation`s agriculture has been wiped out with farmland destroyed. And a Haitian senator says the biggest concern now is cholera, an infectious disease that can be deadly and that spreads through dirty water, which is now all over the country.
All of this only adds to the struggles of the improvised Caribbean nation.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
IVAN WATSON, CNN SENIOR INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): This is what the path of a hurricane looks like from the air. The storm left trees scattered like matchsticks on the hills.
(on camera): Look at how these trees are just stripped of foliage here. You can actually see the roofs of homes on the hilltops. The roof just blown away.
(voice-over): Hurricane Matthew killed hundreds of people and left tens of thousands homeless. We are flying over Haiti`s southwestern peninsula -- one of the most isolated parts of the country.
(on camera): This is the only real way that we can get a sense of the scale of the damage caused by Hurricane Matthew, because Haiti does not have a great network of roads. And there are a series of islands of Haiti`s coast like Ile-a-Vache -- what we`re looking at right now.
(voice-over): Six years ago, this region was largely untouched by the earthquake that shattered the Haitian capital. But this time, the people here weren`t so lucky.
(on camera): How is your house?
RAOUL ROA, SURVIVOR: My house go down. Everything (INAUDIBLE).
WATSON: Everything`s gone? Yes?
ROA: All the trees were going down, electrical pole was done.
WATSON: Since the storm, residents of Port-Salut cleaned most of the debris off the roads. But at night, they sleep outside their shattered homes, in the dark.
(on camera): When do you think you`ll get electricity here again?
ROA: Nobody know when.
WATSON: This is a close up view of some of the damage that we could see from the sky, just one home that was ripped apart by the hurricane winds that made a mess of people`s meager belongings and hurt a lot of people here too who had to wait days for emergency medical care.
(voice-over): These people survived the most powerful hurricane their country has seen in a generation, a grim reminder of the fury and power of Mother Nature.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
AZUZ: OK. Last night was round two of three. At Washington University, in St. Louis, Missouri, the Democratic and Republican nominees for U.S. president had their second head to head debate.
The moderators first planned questions centered on a controversy that surfaced Friday. It involved a tape from 2005 when a microphone that was turned on recorded part of a conversation in which Donald Trump talked about how he behaved inappropriately toward women on multiple occasions.
On Saturday, the candidate apologized, admitting he`s, quote, &said some foolish things&. Trump then accused Hillary Clinton of inappropriate actions.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
DONALD TRUMP (R), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: This was locker room talk. I`m not proud of it. I apologize to my family. I apologize to the American people. Certainly, I`m not proud of it.
ANDERSON COOPER, DEBATE MODERATOR: So, Mr. Trump --
TRUMP: And we should get on to much more important things and much bigger things.
HILLARY CLINTON (D), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: He has said that the video doesn`t represent who he is. But I think it`s clear to anyone who heard it that it represents exactly who he is.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ: But, of course, that wasn`t the only subject discussed at the debate. As you just saw, it was in a town hall format. And while the moderators were scheduled to ask half the questions, the other half were intended for members of the audience who were described as uncommitted voters.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
QUESTION: Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, it is not affordable. Premiums have gone up. Deductibles have gone up. Copays have gone up.
Prescriptions have gone up. And the coverage has gone down.
What will you do to bring the cost down and make coverage better?
CLINTON: I`m going to fix it, because I agree with you. Premiums have gotten too high. Copays, deductibles, prescription drug costs, and I`ve laid out a series of actions that we can take to try to get those costs down.
TRUMP: We have to repeal it and replace it with something absolutely much less expensive and something that works, where your plan can actually be tailored.
QUESTION: Good evening. Perhaps the most important aspect of this election is the Supreme Court justice. What would you prioritize as the most important aspect of selecting a Supreme Court justice?
CLINTON: I want to appoint Supreme Court justices who understand the way the world really works, who have real- life experience, who have not just been in a big law firm and maybe clerked for a judge and then gotten on the bench, but, you know, maybe they tried some more cases, they actually understand what people are up against.
Because I think the current court has gone in the wrong direction.
I want a Supreme Court that will stick with Roe v. Wade and a woman`s right to choose, and I want a Supreme Court that will stick with marriage equality.
TRUMP: Justice Scalia, great judge, died recently. And we have a vacancy. I am looking to appoint judges very much in the mold of Justice Scalia.
I`m looking for judges -- and I`ve actually picked 20 of them so that people would see, highly respected, highly thought of, and actually very beautifully reviewed by just about everybody.
But people that will respect the Constitution of the United States.
MARTHA RADDATZ, DEBATE MODERATOR: Mr. Trump, in December, you said this: &Donald J. Trump is calling for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country`s representatives can figure out what`s going on.&
Your running mate said this week that the Muslim ban is no longer your position. Is that correct? And if it is, was it a mistake to have a religious test?
TRUMP: I don`t want to have, with all the problems this country has and all of the problems that you see going on, hundreds of thousands of people coming in from Syria when we know nothing about them. We know nothing about their values and we know nothing about their love for our country.
CLINTON: First of all, I will not let anyone into our country that I think poses a risk to us. But there are a lot of refugees, women and children.
And we need to do our part. We by no means are carrying anywhere near the load that Europe and others are.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
AZUZ: While presidential candidates typically go up and down in the polls, some courageous climbers clamber over each other for the title of tallest and most complex human tower. The Spanish competition dates back to the 18th century. It`s recognized as part of Catalonia`s cultural heritage.
The strongest folks are at the bottom, as you might expect and it`s usually a child who crawls to the top.
There is an element of danger here and the goal is to get everyone back down without the tower collapsing.
The climber climbs with the clamber, the attitude with the altitude, the vertical victor unveiling the unfailing victor of a towery achievement that`s ahead above the rest. To compete, you`ve got to love stories and at the top of your class, you`ve got to be sure to ac-climb-atize.
I`m Carl Azuz for CNN STUDENT NEWS.
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(CNN Student News) -- October 10, 2016
Hurricane Matthew`s Impact on the U.S. and H Clinton and Trump Face Off in Contentious 2nd Debate
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
SUBTITLE: After hitting Haiti and the tropics, Hurricane Matthew set its sights on Florida.
Debris covered the roads. Many residents lost power. Signs were ripped down.
Hurricane Matthew slowly made its way up Florida`s coast, causing large amounts of property damage. Also leaving behind extensive flooding.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
CARL AZUZ, CNN STUDENT NEWS ANCHOR: Hi. I`m Carl Azuz. Welcome to CNN STUDENT NEWS.
The day after the second U.S. presidential debate. We`ll tell you more about that in just a few minutes. But we`re starting with a quick recap of Hurricane Matthew`s effects on the U.S. Southeast.
What`s left of the storm was headed out to sea last night. It was moving east into the Atlantic and expected to die out there. But it left massive flooding behind, in Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas, and killed at least 17 people across those four states.
As a hurricane, Matthew roared up the coast of the U.S. Southeast over the weekend. Its storm surge, the rise of water a hurricane pushes ashore, turns streets into virtual rivers in Jacksonville and several other Floridian communities. Beaches were eroded. Roads were washed out. More than 2 million households lost electricity.
Flooding continues in North Carolina, which seems to have gotten the brunt of the storm in the U.S. The eastern part of the state expected to be flooded for days as rivers rise over their banks.
But the storm was especially deadly in Haiti. Officials aren`t sure yet how many people died there. Some estimates say more than 300 were killed in the storm but others put the toll at more than twice that. A lot of the nation`s agriculture has been wiped out with farmland destroyed. And a Haitian senator says the biggest concern now is cholera, an infectious disease that can be deadly and that spreads through dirty water, which is now all over the country.
All of this only adds to the struggles of the improvised Caribbean nation.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
IVAN WATSON, CNN SENIOR INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): This is what the path of a hurricane looks like from the air. The storm left trees scattered like matchsticks on the hills.
(on camera): Look at how these trees are just stripped of foliage here. You can actually see the roofs of homes on the hilltops. The roof just blown away.
(voice-over): Hurricane Matthew killed hundreds of people and left tens of thousands homeless. We are flying over Haiti`s southwestern peninsula -- one of the most isolated parts of the country.
(on camera): This is the only real way that we can get a sense of the scale of the damage caused by Hurricane Matthew, because Haiti does not have a great network of roads. And there are a series of islands of Haiti`s coast like Ile-a-Vache -- what we`re looking at right now.
(voice-over): Six years ago, this region was largely untouched by the earthquake that shattered the Haitian capital. But this time, the people here weren`t so lucky.
(on camera): How is your house?
RAOUL ROA, SURVIVOR: My house go down. Everything (INAUDIBLE).
WATSON: Everything`s gone? Yes?
ROA: All the trees were going down, electrical pole was done.
WATSON: Since the storm, residents of Port-Salut cleaned most of the debris off the roads. But at night, they sleep outside their shattered homes, in the dark.
(on camera): When do you think you`ll get electricity here again?
ROA: Nobody know when.
WATSON: This is a close up view of some of the damage that we could see from the sky, just one home that was ripped apart by the hurricane winds that made a mess of people`s meager belongings and hurt a lot of people here too who had to wait days for emergency medical care.
(voice-over): These people survived the most powerful hurricane their country has seen in a generation, a grim reminder of the fury and power of Mother Nature.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
AZUZ: OK. Last night was round two of three. At Washington University, in St. Louis, Missouri, the Democratic and Republican nominees for U.S. president had their second head to head debate.
The moderators first planned questions centered on a controversy that surfaced Friday. It involved a tape from 2005 when a microphone that was turned on recorded part of a conversation in which Donald Trump talked about how he behaved inappropriately toward women on multiple occasions.
On Saturday, the candidate apologized, admitting he`s, quote, &said some foolish things&. Trump then accused Hillary Clinton of inappropriate actions.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
DONALD TRUMP (R), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: This was locker room talk. I`m not proud of it. I apologize to my family. I apologize to the American people. Certainly, I`m not proud of it.
ANDERSON COOPER, DEBATE MODERATOR: So, Mr. Trump --
TRUMP: And we should get on to much more important things and much bigger things.
HILLARY CLINTON (D), PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: He has said that the video doesn`t represent who he is. But I think it`s clear to anyone who heard it that it represents exactly who he is.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ: But, of course, that wasn`t the only subject discussed at the debate. As you just saw, it was in a town hall format. And while the moderators were scheduled to ask half the questions, the other half were intended for members of the audience who were described as uncommitted voters.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
QUESTION: Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, it is not affordable. Premiums have gone up. Deductibles have gone up. Copays have gone up.
Prescriptions have gone up. And the coverage has gone down.
What will you do to bring the cost down and make coverage better?
CLINTON: I`m going to fix it, because I agree with you. Premiums have gotten too high. Copays, deductibles, prescription drug costs, and I`ve laid out a series of actions that we can take to try to get those costs down.
TRUMP: We have to repeal it and replace it with something absolutely much less expensive and something that works, where your plan can actually be tailored.
QUESTION: Good evening. Perhaps the most important aspect of this election is the Supreme Court justice. What would you prioritize as the most important aspect of selecting a Supreme Court justice?
CLINTON: I want to appoint Supreme Court justices who understand the way the world really works, who have real- life experience, who have not just been in a big law firm and maybe clerked for a judge and then gotten on the bench, but, you know, maybe they tried some more cases, they actually understand what people are up against.
Because I think the current court has gone in the wrong direction.
I want a Supreme Court that will stick with Roe v. Wade and a woman`s right to choose, and I want a Supreme Court that will stick with marriage equality.
TRUMP: Justice Scalia, great judge, died recently. And we have a vacancy. I am looking to appoint judges very much in the mold of Justice Scalia.
I`m looking for judges -- and I`ve actually picked 20 of them so that people would see, highly respected, highly thought of, and actually very beautifully reviewed by just about everybody.
But people that will respect the Constitution of the United States.
MARTHA RADDATZ, DEBATE MODERATOR: Mr. Trump, in December, you said this: &Donald J. Trump is calling for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country`s representatives can figure out what`s going on.&
Your running mate said this week that the Muslim ban is no longer your position. Is that correct? And if it is, was it a mistake to have a religious test?
TRUMP: I don`t want to have, with all the problems this country has and all of the problems that you see going on, hundreds of thousands of people coming in from Syria when we know nothing about them. We know nothing about their values and we know nothing about their love for our country.
CLINTON: First of all, I will not let anyone into our country that I think poses a risk to us. But there are a lot of refugees, women and children.
And we need to do our part. We by no means are carrying anywhere near the load that Europe and others are.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
AZUZ: While presidential candidates typically go up and down in the polls, some courageous climbers clamber over each other for the title of tallest and most complex human tower. The Spanish competition dates back to the 18th century. It`s recognized as part of Catalonia`s cultural heritage.
The strongest folks are at the bottom, as you might expect and it`s usually a child who crawls to the top.
There is an element of danger here and the goal is to get everyone back down without the tower collapsing.
The climber climbs with the clamber, the attitude with the altitude, the vertical victor unveiling the unfailing victor of a towery achievement that`s ahead above the rest. To compete, you`ve got to love stories and at the top of your class, you`ve got to be sure to ac-climb-atize.
I`m Carl Azuz for CNN STUDENT NEWS.
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订阅每日学英语:CNN 10:超级碗(Super Bowl)周末上演 伊朗测试中程导弹_2017年CNN News_VOA英语网
CNN 10:超级碗(Super Bowl)周末上演 伊朗测试中程导弹
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Fridays are awesome! Why? Because Super Bowl and Puppy Bowl. Those reports are minutes away on CNN 10.
First, though, tensions between the U.S. and the Middle Eastern nation of Iran. Earlier this week, Iran tested out a medium range missile, a U.S. defense official said the test failed and that there was no threat to America or its allies in the Middle East.
But do Iran's missile tests break international law? A U.N. Security Council resolution passed in 2015 tells Iran not to have anything to do with missiles that can carry nuclear weapons. Iran has tested several missiles since then, but it says the resolution does not apply because its missile program is only for defensive purposes.
The U.S. doesn't agree. On Wednesday, America's national security adviser called Iran's recent tests a provocative breach of the resolution and said the U.S. was putting Iran on notice. Iran responded that it would vigorously continue its missile activity and that it didn't need permission to do it.
Trump administration officials say they're planning to impose additional sanctions, penalties on certain people or businesses affiliated with Iran.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ (voice-over): Ten-second trivia:
What location was struck in 1960 by the most powerful earthquake ever recorded? Chile, San Francisco, Alaska, or China?
On May 22nd, 1960, a magnitude 9.5 earthquake struck near the South American nation of Chile.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ: The 1960 Chilean earthquake wasn't the most deadly ever recorded, but its affects spread far and wide. In addition to the hundreds killed in Chile, the tsunami generated by the quake killed dozens in Hawaii and as far as Japan. It also left millions homeless.
Looking at more recent seismic activity, here's a map of every quake on record, from 2001 through 2015. You can see a lot of them flashing all around or near the Pacific Ring of Fire. Some devastating quakes occurred during this time period.
One example, the 9.1 magnitude tremor that shook Sumatra, Indonesia, in 2004. More than 220,000 died in that and the tsunami that followed.
And the 8.1 magnitude quake that hit Samoa in 2009. Also an 8.8 magnitude quake in Chile in 2010, and a 9.1 jolt near Japan in 2011. That quake and tsunami killed more than 22,000.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
SUBTITLE: Five things you should know about earthquakes.
CHAD MYERS, AMS METEOROLOGIST: Number one, an earthquake occurs when two blocks of the Earth slip fast each other. Now, for most of the time, those blocks are together with friction. But they are building up energy because they are moving in different directions. When one block decides to slip, all of a sudden, that energy is released by seismic waves, kind of like ripples on a pond, creating the earthquake.
Number two, an earthquake can occur very near the surface of the Earth. Those earthquakes are typically very destructive, or as deep as 400 miles down into the crust. Now, where the shaking actually happens, that's called the hypocenter. But directly above it, on the surface, that's called the epicenter.
Number three, the power of an earthquake is called magnitude. Now, the intensity of he shaking can vary depending on the geography, the typography, or even the depth of the quake. Now, the USGS says there are 500,000 detectable quakes every year. One hundred thousand can be felt and 100 will create damage.
Number four, earthquake themselves actually don't kill that many people. It's the natural and manmade structures that fall to the ground during the shaking that injure and kill.
Number five, the majority of all earthquakes and volcanoes happen along plate boundaries. The largest is the Pacific plate and its series of boundaries all along the Pacific Ocean known as the Ring of Fire.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
AZUZ: Big game this weekend in the U.S. Pro-football is the most popular sport in the country and its championship game, the Super Bowl, kicks off at 6:30 p.m. on Sunday. Why this gets so much attention? For one thing, it's routinely viewed by more than one third of the entire country.
Nielsen ratings indicated last year's game averaged almost 112 million viewers. That only counts people who watched in a home, not restaurants. Advertisers paid $5 million for each 30-second spot. And this was for a game that came in at number three in terms of viewership. The all-time TV record was set in 2015 when Super Bowl 49 got more than 114 million viewers.
Will this year's Super Bowl 15 break that record? We'll know after the Atlanta Falcons play the New England Patriots in Houston, Texas.
And while all the players in this game are men, that's not the case across the sport.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
PHOEBE SCHECTER, BIRMINGHAM LIONS, LINEBACKER: I'll get shouts like, &Number 2, you look like a girl.& And I was like, well, I am a girl. If you can take your helmet off around somebody who doesn't, is not expecting it, you can kind of seem squint, the reaction is like, well, that was football. What do you think I'm doing three days a week my entire life? Power fluff, you think we're just prancing around? I think they picture like lingerie or whatever.
SUBTITLE: Inside the world of women's tackle football.
ALLYSON HAMLIN, DC DIVAS, QUARTERBACK & COACH: I'm a catcher at Maryland. And I had a teammate who said, you know what? You probably be a good quarterback and I kind of laugh at it and the league started and honestly, I didn't take it seriously and I went out to a game and realize I was missing out. And it's all she wrote, here I am.
SCHECHTER: I've moved over to England for this job with horses and I'd seen an ad on Facebook and thought, I needed to do it, I could get a bit of American culture in, make friends that way. I haven't looked back since and that was four years ago.
LAURA BRADEN, PITTSBURGH PASSION, TIGHT END: Some girls that I played basketball back in college, I saw it being posted on their Facebook, and said, well, that's really cool. When I'm done with college sports, maybe I'll give it a shot.
HAMLIN: Each player has to pay about $500 to $1,000 a season. That doesn't mean you can't go out and get sponsorships, ticket sales help, things like that. Fields alone, these days, it's $200 an hour. We all personally insured. So, you have to have insurance to play in this league for obvious reasons. So, it's an expensive sport.
BRADEN: Every year, it's close to $1,000 just for fees. You're not counting equipment. You're not counting accessories, medical bills, anything like that. So, it's upwards to tens of thousands of dollars.
I'm an athlete trainer.
HAMLIN: I'm a homicide detective for the Prince Georges County Police Department in Maryland.
SCHECHTER: I'm a personal trainer.
HAMLIN: It's three times, you know, a week for eight months.
SCHECHTER: I play Saturdays. I coach Sundays. I've got Thursdays.
And then you get your international games. And I actually play on a men's team as well. I play middle linebacker and I'm actually quite small for that role. But I'm very effective at what I do and I want to be look at as an athlete, just like the other girls here.
BRADEN: The chance to play football now that I have it is almost everything. It changed in my life in more ways that you can imagine. And the people that you meet and the avenues that it's opened for me, the places that it's taken me. I ended up in Pittsburgh moving out of New York City because of Pittsburgh Passion. So, it's like at some point, you have to consider those decisions were made because of football.
HAMLIN: When I started playing, we would literally find a patch of grass. We would use our headlights for practice.
Hopefully, you know, 10 years from now, this is, you know, just the started and the mindsets changed. The best comment I ever had was I would never know you were a woman until you took your helmet off, which tells me we're playing the sport right, we're doing it right and we're building it.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
AZUZ: So, men, women, and some children play football. Who says it should limited to humans? For the 13th year, puppies will be taking the field for the annual Puppy Bowl. It's more a competition of cuteness. The game, which airs at 3:00 p.m. on Super Bowl Sunday, helps some of these pups get adopted. They come from shelters across the country. They're all between about 12 and 20 weeks old. They are mixed of breeds, including mixed breeds and the ref says he's bitten, chewed, scratched and needs to avoid stepping on tails.
So, there are a couple of things to watch out for. The players are all scrappy and though victory is pup for grabs, it's still a sport with fight, though its bark is probably worse, at least the winning threats could make for a Super Bowl.
I'm Carl Azuz, dogging you with puns for CNN 10.
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