5.21.2007

Romanians Vote Against Removal of President



20 May 2007

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Romania's suspended President Traian Basescu waves to supporters in University Sq, downtown Bucharest, 19 May 2007
Romanians have voted against the dismissal of their president, Traian Basescu, on charges of abuse of power. Official results show that about 75 percent of those participating in Saturday's referendum backed Mr. Basescu, who has pledged to stamp out corruption among politicians and other high-ranking officials. Stefan Bos reports for VOA from Budapest.

A crowd of supporters cheered as it became clear that three-fourths of the Romanians participating in the referendum voted against removing President Traian Basescu.

Parliament suspended the 55-year-old former oil-tanker captain from his presidential duties in April on charges he violated the constitution by abusing his power. Mr. Basescu allegedly ordered the secret services to spy on opposition politicians as part of his efforts to stamp out corruption.

Among his loudest critics was former President Ion Illiescu, an ex-communist who was investigated for his controversial role in calling in miners to crush a demonstration against his rule in 1990. The confrontation killed at least six people.

Speaking to supporters in Bucharest, Mr. Basescu, who won the presidency in 2004, said the outcome of Saturday's referendum showed that most people support his efforts to free his country from corrupt officials.

"I draw a single conclusion from this vote," he says, "and that is that Romanians want to change the political class." Mr. Basescu adds that Saturday's vote was "a referendum of trust" and shows that "most Romanians" support his attempts "to stamp out corruption" and that "Romanians want justice." Mr. Basescu says he wants to hit out at those who got rich at the fall of communism and allegedly frustrated his anti-corruption drive.

Mr. Basescu also told his enthusiastic supporters that he seeks "a new constitution" clarifying the balance of power between institutions, to reform the electoral system, and to clean up the administration. In addition the president pledged to fight for "a healthy education system" that gives opportunities to everyone.

But political opponents, such as Prime Minister Calin Popescu-Tariceanu, expressed doubts that many people support Mr. Basescu's initiatives because only about half of Romania's roughly 18 million voters participated in the referendum.

He says he believes the low voter turnout is very significant. It shows that the priorities of the Romanian people are very different to those of Basescu. And he adds, from tomorrow we must all concentrate on one thing, and that is on what the Romanian people want. I assure you my government will do that.

The outcome is seen as welcome news for Washington and the European Union.

Mr. Basescu is a staunch U.S. ally who Western diplomats have credited with helping implement reforms that were crucial for Romania to join the European Union on January 1, this year.

Humanitarian Situation in Sri Lanka Deteriorating



20 May 2007

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Newly arrived internally displaced ethnic Tamils prepare themselves to be registered with camp officials in Kiran, Sri Lanka (File Photo)
The World Food Program warns renewed fighting in Sri Lanka's long-running civil war is worsening the humanitarian situation for hundreds of thousands of civilians. The U.N. agency is calling for more money and better access and security for aid workers trying to help thousands of people displaced by the fighting. Lisa Schlein reports for VOA from Geneva.

The World Food Program reports about 400,000 people either displaced or affected by Sri Lanka's civil war are in need of food aid. But, reaching the victims is difficult.

WFP Spokeswoman, Christiane Bertiaume says many people have been displaced several times by the fighting.

She says they go back home to Batticaloa when things calm down, only to flee again when fighting resumes.

She says the WFP is working to increase food deliveries in Batticaloa District to make sure basic food supplies reach those people who were forced out of their homes during the past two months of fighting. She says the agency needs an additional $10.7 million in additional aid during the next six months.

"We have big problems in Sri Lanka. We have an access problem to the most vulnerable people in the north and in the east of the country," said Bertiaume. "We have got security problems for our local and international staff. Some of them have even been threatened. The distribution of food is too slow in many places. We should be able to do that more quickly. And, more particularly in the region of Jaffna where our stock are very, very low."

The U.N. food agency says it wants to ship one-thousand metric tons of food to the Jaffna Peninsula, which is cut off from the rest of the country. The town of Jaffna is under government control, but rebels operate in the area. The WFP has not been granted the necessary permission nor guarantees of security to send a relief vessel.

Renewed fighting during the past two months has displaced more than 150,000 people in the eastern part of the island country. The Sri Lankan government recently began resettling about 90,000 of these people to the homes they fled in West Batticaloa.

U.N. refugee spokeswoman, Jennifer Pagonis, says they are expected to move back to their places of origin in the coming months in a phased operation.

"UNHCR is fully involved in this process and our staff monitoring the situation on the ground are saying that the majority of people are eager to return home, that the returns are voluntary and in line with international protection standards," she said.

Aid workers fear some of these people may be returning home against their will. They point to reports of forced returns during a similar resettlement program further north earlier this month.

Pagonis says the U.N. agency will continue to monitor these returns to make sure they are voluntary.

VOASE0520_This Is America

20 May 2007
Washington Has Six of Top 10 of 'America's Favorite Architecture'

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VOICE ONE:

Welcome to THIS IS AMERICA in VOA Special English. I'm Steve Ember.

VOICE TWO:

And I'm Barbara Klein. What do you get when the people who design buildings ask members of the public to choose their favorites? You get the subject of our program for this week.

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VOICE ONE:

The American Institute of Architects is a professional group with close to eighty thousand members. It was formed in eighteen fifty-seven. To celebrate its one hundred fiftieth year, the AIA decided to create a list of what it calls America's Favorite Architecture.

Almost two thousand people were asked to choose from a list of about two hundred fifty structures. From their answers came a list of what the AIA calls the best of America's architectural heritage. And here now are the top ten favorites.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

Three young visitors to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial examine the names of the dead
Number ten is the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, located in the same city as five others in the top ten: Washington, D.C. Maya Lin was a twenty-one year old architecture student at Yale University when she won a competition to design the memorial.

Two walls of black stone, smooth and shiny, are set into the earth in the shape of the letter V. Carved into the stone are the names of more than fifty-eight thousand men and women. Their names are listed by the year they were killed or went missing in action.

The memorial, know simply as "the Wall," starts out low, gets taller and taller, and then shrinks again. It represents an image of the war in terms of the number of service members killed each year.

The memorial opened in nineteen eighty-two. Some people argued that the design was too simple. But the Wall has proven to be a powerful memorial, bringing more than one and a half million visitors each year.

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VOICE ONE:

Chrysler Building
Number nine of the list of America's Favorite Architecture is the Chrysler Building in New York City. It was designed by architect William Van Alen in the late nineteen twenties and went up in nineteen thirty.

The top of the Chrysler Building is easy to recognize among the tall buildings of New York. Steel arches of shiny silver hold triangular windows that light up at night. Many other decorative elements represent designs that were found on Chrysler automobiles of the same time period.

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VOICE TWO:

The Biltmore Estate in Asheville, North Carolina, comes in at number eight.

Biltmore Estate
George Washington Vanderbilt, a very wealthy man, built a house on the estate. But this was not just any home; it was the nation's largest. And the two-hundred-fifty-room Biltmore House was meant to be just a summer home.

It was built between eighty eighty-eight and eighteen ninety-five. The style is French Renaissance. The architect was Richard Morris Hunt.

The Vanderbilt family still owns the Biltmore Estate but the house is no longer used as a private home. Now visitors can pay to look around.

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VOICE ONE:

Lincoln Memorial
We go back to Washington for number seven on the list of America's Favorite Architecture: the Lincoln Memorial. It has four sides which are open except for large columns that support the roof.

In the center is a huge statue of the sixteenth president, Abraham Lincoln. He is sitting down and he faces the long reflecting pool just outside the memorial. His eyes seem to look farther, toward the Washington Monument beyond the pool.

Congress approved the building of the Lincoln Memorial in nineteen eleven. The memorial opened in nineteen twenty-two.

Ancient Greek architecture influenced the design by Henry Bacon. He used limestone and marble. He won a Gold Medal from the American Institute of Architects in nineteen twenty-three for the Lincoln Memorial.

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VOICE TWO:

United States Capitol
Number six on the list of favorites is at the other end of the National Mall from the Lincoln Memorial: the United States Capitol.

William Thorton won a competition to design the Capitol, the building where Congress meets. He proposed a central domed building with two square buildings on either side. Thorton was not even an architect. He was a doctor living in the West Indies at the time.

Work on the Capitol began in seventeen ninety-three. President George Washington laid the cornerstone. Building -- and rebuilding -- continued for more than a century under many different architects.

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VOICE ONE:

The Golden Gate Bridge
Number five on the list of America's Favorite Architecture is the Golden Gate Bridge over San Francisco Bay in California. The bright orange bridge links the city of San Francisco with Marin County.

Husband-and-wife architects Irving and Gertrude Morrow designed the Golden Gate Bridge. The chief engineer was Joseph Strauss.

Work began in nineteen thirty-three and the bridge opened four years later. The main span of nearly one thousand three hundred meters made it the world's longest suspension bridge. It held that record for almost thirty years.

Today the Golden Gate Bridge is still considered one of the most beautiful bridges in the world.

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VOICE TWO:

Jefferson Memorial
Back now to Washington for number four on the list of favorites. The American Institute of Architects says people chose the Jefferson Memorial.

The memorial to the nation's third president is a round, open structure supported by columns. Steps go all the way around the base. In the center is a statue of a standing Thomas Jefferson.

The architect John Russell Pope designed the memorial in the neoclassical style. It was completed in nineteen forty-three, after the death of the famous architect and after years of dispute about his design.

Thomas Jefferson himself was an architect. His designs included his home at Monticello and parts of the University of Virginia.

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VOICE ONE:

National Cathedral
Third on the list of America's Favorite Architecture is the National Cathedral in Washington. This house of worship is open to all religions. It was completed in nineteen ninety -- eighty-three years after the first stone was laid. George Bodley and Henry Vaughn designed the building.

The cathedral, one of the largest in the world, is made of limestone. In the center is a bell tower ninety-one meters high. The building is in the style of many of the great cathedrals built in Europe about eight hundred years ago.

There are one hundred ten gargoyles on the National Cathedral. The small sculptures can look scary, but they have a job to do. They help keep rainwater away from the building.

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VOICE TWO:

White House
Two more to go. Number two on the list of America's Favorite Architecture is the building where the president lives and works -- the White House.

An architect named James Hoban won a competition called by George Washington to design a presidential home. Hoban was an immigrant from Ireland. He was influenced by the design of Leinster House, the parliament building in Dublin.

Work on the White House began in seventeen ninety-two. Its whitish gray sandstone walls were finished with a mixture of surface materials including rice, lime and lead.

George Washington never lived in the White House. America's second president was the first to live there. John Adams and his wife, Abigail, moved into the White House in eighteen hundred.

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VOICE ONE:

Empire State Building
Finally, we come to number one on the list of America’s Favorite Architecture. It is one of the tallest, most photographed and most recognized buildings in the world. Any ideas? The Empire State Building in New York City.

It opened in nineteen thirty-one and was designed by the architectural firm of Shreve Lamb and Harmon. There are one hundred three floors. The name comes from the fact that the state of New York is called the Empire State.

But the building does more than just help define a city, and a state. It stands as a powerful symbol of one of the most public of all art forms -- architecture.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

Our program was written and produced by Caty Weaver. I’m Barbara Klein.

VOICE ONE:

And I'm Steve Ember. You can find a link to the America's Favorite Architecture Web site at our Web site, voaspecialenglish.com. You can also download transcripts and audio archives of our programs. And be sure to join us again next week for THIS IS AMERICA in VOA Special English.

VOASE0520_Development Report

20 May 2007
Bringing Color to Life With Natural Dyes

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This is the VOA Special English Development Report.

Dye can bring a little color to life. Most clothing is colored with dyes. Modern, manufactured dyes can be costly. Natural dyes from plant and animal products have been used since ancient times. So this week, we describe a natural way to dye wool.

The advice comes from information written by Jenny Dean of the Intermediate Technology Development Group in Britain. This anti-poverty group is now called Practical Action.

There are several methods to put dye onto material. The vat method, for example, can be used to dye wool with onionskins. For this example, use one hundred grams of natural wool. The wool must be clean. Leave it overnight in water and liquid soap. Then wash it with clean water that is a little warm. Gently squeeze out the extra water.

A solution called a mordant is used in the dying process. A mordant helps fix the dye to the material. Traditionally, mordants were found in nature. Wood ash is one example. But chemical mordants such as alum are popular today. Alum is sold in many stores. It is often mixed with cream of tartar, a fine powder commonly used in cooking.

Mix eight grams of alum with seven grams of cream of tartar in a small amount of hot water. Add the solution to a metal pan of cool water. Next, add the wool and place the mixture over heat. Slowly bring the liquid to eighty-two degrees Celsius. Heat the mixture for forty-five minutes. After it cools, remove the wool and wash it.

To prepare the dye solution, cover thirty grams of onionskins with water. Use only the dry, brown outer skins. Boil the liquid until the onionskins lose their color, about forty-five minutes,. Remove the skins after the dye cools.

Now it is time to dye the wool. Place the wool into the dye and heat the mixture. Bring it to a boil, then immediately reduce the heat to eighty-two degrees. Now heat the dye for about forty-five minutes or until the wool is the desired color. Keep in mind that wet wool looks darker than it is.

Once the dye cools, remove the wool and wash it. Now the wool is orange or yellow. Or at least it should be.

Internet users can get the full details at practicalaction, one word, dot o-r-g. Again, the address is practicalaction dot org. And enter the word "dye," d-y-e, in the search box. We will post a link to the site at voaspecialenglish.com.

And that's the VOA Special English Development Report, written by Jill Moss. I'm Steve Ember.