4.26.2007

US House Passes Iraq Withdrawal Timetable



26 April 2007

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The Democratic-controlled House of Representatives has approved a war funding bill that includes a timetable for the eventual withdrawal of most U.S. troops from Iraq. VOA's Dan Robinson reports, the vote was 218 to 208. The Senate will consider it Thursday, but President Bush plans to veto the final product reaching his desk.

Debate on the conference report for the measure, containing about $95 billion for Iraq and Afghanistan military operations, featured familiar arguments from both sides of the political aisle.

Democrats said setting a specific deadline reflects American's desire to bring U.S. troops home and wind down U.S. involvement in Iraq, while asserting new controls over the president.

Republicans accused Democrats of telegraphing to al-Qaida terrorists, and those fanning sectarian strife, that the U.S. is giving up.

Congressman David Dreier asserted Democrats are also withdrawing support from the troops. "While this political charade plays out, our troops will be left waiting for the funding that they need to do their jobs, and our country trapped in a political quagmire created by the Democratic leadership in this Congress," he said.

Democrats pointed to what they call the president's failed policies in Iraq, as Congressman Jim McGovern referred to the president's veto threat. "If he does so, then this president will make perfectly clear to the American people that the only way this war is going to end, the only way our troops will every come home to their families and loved ones, the only way Iraqis will ever be held accountable for governing their own country and ending their sectarian violence, will be if Congress finds a way to end it," he said.

The measure sets a non-binding goal of withdrawing most U.S. combat forces by April of 2008, with the first movements beginning as early as October of this year. Some would remain for diplomatic protection and counter-terrorist operations.

It also contains provisions requiring that military units be fully battle-ready, and limits the duration of deployments, although the president could waive these requirements.

Nancy Pelosi
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says the legislation also contains benchmarks for the Iraqi government that the president has endorsed. "Benchmarks endorsed by the Iraqi government, and by President Bush. They are his own benchmarks," she said.

Earlier, lawmakers attended a classified briefing with Iraq commander General David Petraeus.

Democrats said it buttressed their argument that Congress must impose a timetable, while Republicans came away more convinced than ever that this would be a mistake.

General David Petraeus
General Petraeus said that while inroads have been made against al-Qaida and sectarian extremists, it's clear more work needs to be done. "We are actually ahead of where I wanted to be in some areas, and probably behind where we might have hoped to be in some other areas," he said.

House passage sets up Senate consideration on Thursday, and if approved there, the measure goes to the president.

A veto would send it back to Congress, forcing Democrats to re-craft the legislation, which would have to be voted on again in both chambers.

McCain Officially Launches Presidential Bid



25 April 2007

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Republican John McCain has officially launched his 2008 campaign for president. The Arizona senator is hoping to regain some of the political momentum he has lost in recent months to former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who leads the Republican presidential field in public-opinion polls. VOA National Correspondent Jim Malone has more from Washington.

John McCain and his wife Cindy in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, 25 Apr 2007
McCain began his second bid for the White House in the early presidential contest state of New Hampshire, the site of his primary victory over then Texas Governor George W. Bush in 2000.

McCain cast himself as the best qualified and most experienced candidate in the presidential field, noting his years of service in Congress and before that in the military, including nearly six years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam.

If elected next year, the 70-year-old McCain would be the oldest first-term president. But McCain sought to turn his age into an asset as he addressed a crowd of supporters in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.

"My friends, we face formidable challenges," said John McCain. "I am not afraid of them. I am prepared for them. I am not the youngest candidate, but I am the most experienced! I know how to fight and I know how to make peace. I know who I am and what I want to do."

McCain is a strong supporter of the war in Iraq and a leading proponent of President Bush's troop surge strategy in an effort to quell sectarian violence.

McCain acknowledged that the Bush administration has made mistakes in Iraq. But the Arizona Republican also pledged to make the overall war on terror a priority if he wins the presidency next year.

"To strengthen our military, intelligence, diplomacy and law enforcement and use the power of American ideals and commerce to win the war against violent extremists and help the majority of Muslims who believe in progress and peace to win the struggle for the soul of Islam," he said.

McCain currently runs second in public opinion polls among Republican candidates, behind former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani.

Giuliani has also been campaigning in New Hampshire and told a Republican audience that a Democratic president would go on defense in fighting the war on terror, while a Republican president would remain on offense.

"We are going to win that war whether there is a Republican president or a Democratic president or any other president," said Rudy Giuliani. "The question is going to be, how long does it take and how many losses do we have along the way? And to do that, I believe we are going to be much better off electing a Republican president, and I think we are going to be much better off electing me, and I need your support and your help. Thank you very much."

Giuliani's comments drew a rebuke from two Democrats running for president, Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Obama accused Giuliani of taking what he called the politics of fear to a new low.

Senator McCain has lagged in the public opinion polls and in fundraising in recent months. Some political analysts believe his vocal support for the Iraq war may be hurting his presidential hopes, even though most Republicans remain generally supportive of the U.S. effort in Iraq.

John Fortier is a political expert at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington.

"He [McCain] is close to the president on the war strategy, which is not popular," said John Fortier. "He has really lost some of his oomph [momentum]. And Rudy Giuliani has surprisingly been high in the polls, remained high in the polls because he is not in any way a traditional Republican in terms of issues like abortion and gay marriage and gun control, which matter to social conservatives."

The latest polls indicate that former Tennessee Senator Fred Thompson and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney are the other two top contenders in the Republican field. Thompson has yet to decide on a presidential bid, as has former Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich.

Recent surveys have suggested that many Republicans are not satisfied with the current presidential field and would welcome the entrance of both Thompson and Gingrich later this year.

VOASE0425_The Making of a Nation

25 April 2007
US History: The '60s Become a Time of Social Revolution and Unrest

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VOICE ONE:

This is Rich Kleinfeldt.

VOICE TWO:

And this is Stan Busby with THE MAKING OF A NATION -- a VOA Special English program about the history of the United States.

(MUSIC)

Today, we tell about life in the United States during the nineteen sixties.

VOICE ONE:

The nineteen sixties began with the election of the first president born in the twentieth century -- John Kennedy. For many Americans, the young president was the symbol of a spirit of hope for the nation. When Kennedy was murdered in nineteen sixty-three, many felt that their hopes died, too. This was especially true of young people, and members and supporters of minority groups.

VOICE TWO:

College students protest the Vietnam War in the 1960s
A time of innocence and hope soon began to look like a time of anger and violence. More Americans protested to demand an end to the unfair treatment of black citizens. More protested to demand an end to the war in Vietnam. And more protested to demand full equality for women.

By the middle of the nineteen sixties, it had become almost impossible for President Lyndon Johnson to leave the White House without facing protesters against the war in Vietnam. In March of nineteen sixty-eight, he announced that he would not run for another term.

VOICE ONE:

In addition to President John Kennedy, two other influential leaders were murdered during the nineteen sixties. Civil rights leader Martin Luther King Junior was shot in Memphis, Tennessee in nineteen sixty-eight. Several weeks later, Robert Kennedy--John Kennedy's brother--was shot in Los Angeles, California. He was campaigning to win his party's nomination for president. Their deaths resulted in riots in cities across the country.

VOICE TWO:

The unrest and violence affected many young Americans. The effect seemed especially bad because of the time in which they had grown up. By the middle nineteen fifties, most of their parents had jobs that paid well. They expressed satisfaction with their lives. They taught their children what were called "middle class" values. These included a belief in God, hard work, and service to their country.

VOICE ONE:

Later, many young Americans began to question these beliefs. They felt that their parents' values were not enough to help them deal with the social and racial difficulties of the nineteen sixties. They rebelled by letting their hair grow long and by wearing strange clothes. Their dissatisfaction was strongly expressed in music.

Rock-and-roll music had become very popular in America in the nineteen fifties. Some people, however, did not approve of it. They thought it was too sexual. These people disliked the rock-and-roll of the nineteen sixties even more. They found the words especially unpleasant.

VOICE TWO:

Bob Dylan
The musicians themselves thought the words were extremely important. As singer and song writer Bob Dylan said, "There would be no music without the words," Bob Dylan produced many songs of social protest. He wrote anti-war songs before the war in Vietnam became a violent issue. One was called Blowin' in the Wind.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

In addition to songs of social protest, rock-and-roll music continued to be popular in America during the nineteen sixties. The most popular group, however, was not American. It was British -- the Beatles -- four rock-and-roll musicians from Liverpool.

(MUSIC)

That was the Beatles' song I Want to Hold Your Hand. It went on sale in the United States at the end of nineteen sixty-three. Within five weeks, it was the biggest-selling record in America.

VOICE TWO:

The Beatles
Other songs, including some by the Beatles, sounded more revolutionary. They spoke about drugs and sex, although not always openly. "Do your own thing" became a common expression. It meant to do whatever you wanted, without feeling guilty.

Five hundred thousand young Americans "did their own thing" at the Woodstock music festival in nineteen sixty-nine. They gathered at a farm in New York State. They listened to musicians such as Jimi Hendrix and Joan Baez, and to groups such as The Who and Jefferson Airplane. Woodstock became a symbol of the young peoples' rebellion against traditional values. The young people themselves were called "hippies." Hippies believed there should be more love and personal freedom in America.

VOICE ONE:

Allen Ginsberg
In nineteen sixty-seven, poet Allen Ginsberg helped lead a gathering of hippies in San Francisco. No one knows exactly how many people considered themselves hippies. But twenty thousand attended the gathering.

Another leader of the event was Timothy Leary. He was a former university professor and researcher. Leary urged the crowd in San Francisco to "tune in and drop out". This meant they should use drugs and leave school or their job. One drug that was used in the nineteen sixties was lysergic acid diethylamide, or L-S-D. L-S-D causes the brain to see strange, colorful images. It also can cause brain damage. Some people say the Beatles' song Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds was about L-S-D.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

As many Americans were listening to songs about drugs and sex, many others were watching television programs with traditional family values. These included The Andy Griffith Show and The Beverly Hillbillies. At the movies, some films captured the rebellious spirit of the times. These included Doctor Strangelove and The Graduate. Others offered escape through spy adventures, like the James Bond films.

VOICE ONE:

Many Americans refused to tune in and drop out in the nineteen sixties. They took no part in the social revolution. Instead, they continued leading normal lives of work, family, and home. Others, the activists of American society, were busy fighting for peace, and racial and social justice. Women's groups, for example, were seeking equality with men. They wanted the same chances as men to get a good education and a good job. They also demanded equal pay for equal work.

VOICE TWO:

A widely popular book on women in modern America was called The Feminine Mystique. It was written by Betty Friedan and published in nineteen sixty-three. The idea known as the feminine mystique was the traditional idea that women have only one part to play in society. They are to have children and stay at home to raise them. In her book, Mizz Friedan urged women to establish professional lives of their own.

VOICE ONE:

That same year, a committee was appointed to investigate the condition of women. It was led by Eleanor Roosevelt. She was a former first lady. The committee's findings helped lead to new rules and laws. The nineteen sixty-four civil rights act guaranteed equal treatment for all groups. This included women. After the law went into effect, however, many activists said it was not being enforced. The National Organization for Women -- NOW -- was started in an effort to correct the problem.

VOICE TWO:

The movement for women's equality was known as the women's liberation movement. Activists were called "women's libbers." They called each other "sisters." Early activists were usually rich, liberal, white women. Later activists included women of all ages, women of color, rich and poor, educated and uneducated. They acted together to win recognition for the work done by all women in America.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

This program of THE MAKING OF A NATION was written by Jeri Watson and produced by Paul Thompson. This is Rich Kleinfeldt.

VOICE TWO:

And this is Stan Busby. Join us again next week for another VOA Special English program about the history of the United States.

VOASE0425_Education Report

25 April 2007
Virginia Tech: 'As Strong a Place as It Has Always Been'

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This is the VOA Special English Education Report.

A moment of silence was observed Monday for each of the 32 shooting victims at Virginia Tech
Classes began again at Virginia Tech on Monday, one week after the shootings by a student. Seung-Hui Cho, an English major in his final year of college, killed thirty-two people. He also took his own life.

University officials were criticized for not acting more quickly to warn of the danger of a gunman. School administrators across the country are re-examining their security policies and communications systems. But they say privacy laws restrict how they can deal with mentally troubled people, even if there are warning signs of possible violence.

Virginia Tech, in Blacksburg, is a public university that has gained greater recognition in recent years. Its engineering and computer science programs, for example, are known internationally.

Seven percent of the students at Virginia Tech are international students. The Cranwell International Center at the university says there are about two thousand foreign students this year. They come from more than one hundred countries. But most are graduate students from India, China and South Korea.

Jacqueline Nottingham is the Graduate School director of admissions and academic progress. She says more than four thousand foreign students applied to the Graduate School for the term beginning in August. More than three thousand of those applications were for the College of Engineering.

She says she has not seen any evidence that foreign students are rejecting admission offers because of the tragedy. She says Virginia Tech is, in her words, "as strong a place as it has always been."

Graduate applications are accepted until May fifteenth. As of Wednesday, Jacqueline Nottingham said six hundred sixty-nine international students had been offered admission. Just over forty percent of them have already accepted the offers.

Norrine Bailey Spencer is the associate provost and director of undergraduate admissions. She says she has received e-mails and notes from some students who say they want to be part of Virginia Tech now more than ever.

More than three hundred international students have been offered undergraduate admission this coming fall. In the United States, undergraduates traditionally have until May first to accept or reject an offer from a college.

And that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach. This and other reports in our Foreign Student Series can be found online at voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Steve Ember.