9.06.2007

8月合辑来了!


8月合辑制作完毕,包括2007年8月的全部内容,Words and Their Stories的内容也收录其中。
源的地址(需安装 eMule,复制到地址栏)是:
ed2k://|file|VOASE0708.iso|226983936|925D5E9B211279AC21DB036BF3AE1DA2|h=RIVFYU3COCDZAIZXMTQX3G4XETDNNXGJ|/

可能下载贴很快就会给VeryCD贴出来,还在老地方
http://lib.verycd.com/2007/02/07/0000138789.html

顺便提一下,现在PoEnglish使用的下载空间是mediafire
有网友反映G宝盘的下载速度及质量都不是很稳定,PoEnglish也很苦恼 -_-
在热心网友的推荐下试用了下mediafire
一段时间用下来,发现优点多多,上传下载速度还行,网站管理界面也高效稳定(这是本人喜爱的重要原因),而且是国际知名上传空间,对本站在全球拓展其知名度还是有很大好处滴(众人批:不要脸不害臊)
所以,不出意外(世事难料,说不准哪天就被和谐了),将来每日制作的资料会放在那里。欢迎大家写信给我反映在这个空间下的下载问题。

Iraqi PM Meets With Shi'ites to Quell Political Upheaval



05 September 2007

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Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki met with the country's Shi'ite religious leader Wednesday to discuss a political impasse that resulted in half of his cabinet quitting. VOA's Jim Randle reports from northern Iraq.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, center, addresses the media after meeting with Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Wednesday, 05 Sept 2007
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki traveled to the holy city of Najaf to meet with the leader of Iraq 's Shi'ite majority, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. Sistani sponsors the prime minister's ruling United Alliance.

Mr. Maliki later told reporters he sought Sistani's advice on filling empty ministerial posts and government reform.

Mr. Maliki said Sistani pushed him to solve the political, security and economic problems that plague the country.

One of the biggest groups in the United Alliance, the movement of radical Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, left the government in April protesting Mr. Maliki's refusal to set a timetable for the withdrawal of foreign troops from Iraq.

The biggest Sunni Arab bloc in parliament, the Accordance Front, also pulled out its ministers, accusing Mr. Maliki of favoritism toward Shi'ites.

The walkouts have hurt efforts to resolve tensions between Iraq's Shi'ite and Sunni Arab communities and reach agreement on laws covering oil revenue and easing restrictions on former members of Saddam Hussein' s Ba'ath Party. Reaching compromises is seen in Washington as a key step toward national reconciliation.

Some prominent Democrats in Washington have said Mr. Maliki should be replaced, and he is under growing pressure to make political progress to match security gains in some areas of Iraq.

Man injured in Sadr City blast lies in a hospital bed, 05 Sep 2007
Meanwhile, a bomb blast in Baghdad's mostly Shi'ite Sadr City district was a reminder Wednesday that the military situation continues to be difficult. The attack killed at least 11 people and wounded about 20 others.

Police say the blast occurred in a crowded square as buses gathered to pick up passengers heading to work.

APEC Ministers Push to Revive Stalled Global Trade Talks



05 September 2007

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Foreign and trade ministers from the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation members are pushing for ways to revive stalled global trade talks. In a meeting ahead of the annual APEC summit, top trade officials and diplomats also will discuss climate change, global financial markets and security. VOA's Nancy-Amelia Collins reports from Sydney where APEC officials are gathered.

Australian Trade Minister Warren Truss, front row right, and other participants to APEC ministerial meeting pose for an official photo session in Sydney, 05 Sep 2007
Trade in all forms will dominate talks by the trade and finance ministers at Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.

As the two-day meeting began in Sydney on Wednesday, outlined the agenda.

"We'll cover the multilateral trading system and contributions APEC can make to the successful conclusion of the WTO [World Trade Organization] Doha round. We'll also be looking at ways and means of promoting further regional economic integration, structural reform and behind the border issues which impact on the costs and risks of competitiveness of doing business in our region and the sorts of things that inhibit our genuine market integration," said Truss.

Truss plans to talk to other officials about reviving the World Trade Organization talks, which have been stalled by differences over agricultural trade barriers and barriers on imports of manufactured goods.

He also says the delegates at the ministerial meeting will discuss the potential for a free trade zone for the 21 economies that make up APEC. The idea, which has been discussed for several years, has been slow to progress.

One of the main topics of this year's APEC meeting is how to deal with global warming, without reducing growth and development.

After their summit ends on Sunday, the leaders of the APEC members are expected to issue a joint statement calling for members to reduce carbon emissions, which are thought to contribute to climate change.

The ministerial meeting will prepare that statement, and statements on other key issues, such as clean development.

"I think it's important that over the next few days we provide clear advice to our leaders on these key issues, that we develop an appropriate response to the matters of concern," added Truss. "It's also proposed to brief colleagues on preparations for the leaders meeting including some of the issues that will be on their agenda like climate change, energy security, clean development."

The trade minister says the gathered ministers also will discuss such issues as security, terrorism and recent financial market instability.

German Officials Arrest Three Men on Terrorism Charges



05 September 2007

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German officials say they have arrested three men on suspicion of planning a "massive" terrorist attack on U.S. facilities in the country. For VOA, Tom Rivers reports from London.

Unidentified man believed to be terror suspect, center, is led away in Karlsruhe, 05 Sep 2007

German authorities say the men are suspected Islamic militants and were arrested for allegedly planning bomb attacks targeting a number of locations including the U.S. Ramstein Air Base and Frankfurt's international airport.

German federal prosecutors say two of the three in custody are German citizens who converted to Islam. The men are believed to have received training at camps in Pakistan run by a group known as the Islamic Jihad Union. The third man being held is either Turkish or Pakistani and also allegedly received training in Pakistan.

German authorities says the men, all in their 20s, had obtained 700 kilograms of hydrogen peroxide which could have been used to produce explosive devices even larger than those used in the London and Madrid train bombings.

In Strasbourg, the European Union's top justice official, Franco Frattini, says despite the arrests, the threat level in Europe has not been reduced.

"All sources indicate that the threat of new terrorist attacks continues to be high," he said. "Our member states' authorities have been able to prevent a number of attacks, for which we must be very grateful. I am talking about Spain, Italy, Belgium, U.K. and Germany."

Officials say the suspects were under surveillance for a long time. They were arrested Tuesday at a vacation home in central Germany.

In recent months, German and U.S. officials have warned of the possibility of new attacks, and security measures have been enhanced.

VOASE0905_Education Report

05 September 2007
Virginia Tech Report Criticizes Mental Health System, School Actions

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This is the VOA Special English Education Report.

A family member of one of the Virginia Tech victims, student Daniel Alejandro Prez Cueva, after the dedication of a memorial
A committee gave its findings last week about the Virginia Tech shootings in April. The committee appointed by Virginia's governor and led by a retired state police official called for more than seventy changes. The goal is to prevent a similar tragedy in Virginia or anywhere else.

On April sixteenth Seung-Hui Cho, a student, killed thirty-two people and wounded seventeen before killing himself. Among other things, the Virginia Tech Review Panel discussed his mental health history.

In nineteen ninety-nine, he wrote in middle school about killing himself and others. This was after the Columbine High School shootings in Colorado. His teachers thought he should get treatment, which he did.

He also received services in high school. But school officials thought privacy laws prevented sharing this information with Virginia Tech.

There, he caused a number of troubling incidents. The report says the university in Blacksburg did not intervene effectively. It says no one knew all the information and no one put it all together.

The committee pointed to problems with Virginia's mental health system. It also found widespread misunderstanding about federal and state privacy laws.

In two thousand five, a court judged the young man a danger to himself and ordered him to get treatment. But he was not ordered into a hospital. Still, his name should have been added to federal and state lists of people barred from buying guns.

Virginia law did not make that clear. Governor Tim Kaine has moved to deal with this. But Virginia officials found that less than half the states report any mental health information to a federal database used for gun purchases.

At Virginia Tech, emergency services reacted quickly after two people were killed early that morning. But the report says police may have been too quick to decide that a possible suspect was probably no longer in the area. And top administrators are criticized for failing to send out a warning message about the shooting for almost two hours.

Minutes after that, the shootings began in Norris Hall. Still, the committee says quickly securing all buildings would not have been possible.

Some victims' families want the university president and police chief to resign or be dismissed. The governor rejected that idea.

Virginia Tech began a new school year August twentieth, a day after a ceremony for a memorial to the thirty-two victims.

And that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach. I'm Bob Doughty.

VOASE0905_The Making of a Nation

05 September 2007
US History Series: After Attacks of 9/11, Bush Launches 'War on Terror'

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VOICE ONE:

This is Barbara Klein.

VOICE TWO:

And this is Steve Ember with THE MAKING OF A NATION, a VOA Special English program about the history of the United States. Today, we tell about the first term in office of President George W. Bush. Mister Bush dealt with the most deadly terrorist attack against the United States in history.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

George W. Bush became the nation's forty-third president on January twentieth, two thousand one. He and his vice president, Dick Cheney, were sworn in on the steps of the Capitol building. George Bush's father, George Herbert Walker Bush, had served as the forty-first president.

The inauguration marked only the second time in American history that the son of a former president also became president. More than two hundred years ago, John Adams was elected the second president of the United States. His son, John Quincy Adams, later served as the sixth president.

VOICE TWO:

President Bush at the World Trade Center with a firefighter
George W. Bush had been in office for fewer than eight months when the most important event of his first term took place on September eleventh, two thousand one. Americans call the event Nine-Eleven. On that morning, nineteen Islamic extremists hijacked four American passenger airplanes.

The planes were flying from the East Coast to California. The hijackers were from Middle Eastern countries. Each group included a trained pilot.

American Airlines Flight Eleven had left Boston, Massachusetts, when three terrorists seized control of the plane. Shortly before nine o’clock in the morning, they crashed the plane into the North Tower of the World Trade Center in New York City.

Another group seized United Airlines Flight One Seventy-Five and crashed it into the World Trade Center's South Tower a few minutes later. The two giant skyscrapers stood in the heart of America's financial center.

The planes exploded in fireballs that sent clouds of smoke pouring from the skyscrapers. Wreckage and ashes flew into the air. On that morning, each tower held between five thousand and seven thousand people. Thousands of people were able to escape from the buildings.

The South Tower of the World Trade Center fell shortly before ten o'clock. The North Tower collapsed about thirty minutes later. Within an hour the ruins of the two buildings were being called Ground Zero.

VOICE ONE:

Damage caused by a hijacked airplane that hit the Pentagon
Other hijackers on United Airlines Flight Seventy-Seven crashed the plane into the Pentagon, the Department of Defense headquarters near Washington, D.C. The plane exploded against a wall of the huge five-sided building where more than twenty thousand people worked.

The hijackers also seized United Airlines Flight Ninety-Three. Some passengers found out about the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington through cell phone calls to their families. Several passengers and crew members tried to retake control of the plane. It crashed near the small town of Shanksville, Pennsylvania. Investigators later said the hijackers probably planned to attack the Capitol building or the White House in Washington.

The terrorist attacks on Nine-Eleven were the most deadly in American history. Almost three thousand people died. Most of the victims worked in the World Trade Center. They included many citizens of other countries. The victims also included three hundred forty-three New York City firefighters and twenty-three city police officers. They died trying to save others.

VOICE TWO:

Search and rescue operations began immediately. Hundreds of rescue workers recovered people and bodies from the wreckage. Aid was organized for victims and their families. President Bush stood in the wreckage of the World Trade Center and promised that the attacks would be answered.

It took workers eight months to complete the cleanup of Ground Zero. Every day, thousands of people visited the area to see where the attack took place and to honor those who died there.

Near Washington, D.C., people left flowers and messages near the heavily damaged wall of the Defense Department headquarters. One hundred eighty-four military service members and civilians died there.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

New York City changed forever on that day. The attack destroyed a major part of the financial center of the city. It had a huge economic effect on the United States and world markets. The New York Stock Exchange was closed until September seventeenth. When it reopened, American stocks lost more than one trillion dollars in value for the week.

For days after the attacks, most planes stopped flying. When normal flights began again, many people were too afraid to travel by air. The airline and travel industries suffered. Thousands of hotel workers and others lost their jobs. Many other businesses suffered as well. When people started flying again, they found it much more difficult because of increased security at airports.

People across America experienced great shock, fear, sadness and loss. They could not understand why anyone would attack innocent Americans. They also felt a renewed love for their country. They put American flags on their houses, cars and businesses.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

President Bush said Osama bin Laden and terrorists linked to his al-Qaida group plotted and carried out the attacks on Nine-Eleven. On September twentieth, the president declared a War on Terror. The goals were to find and punish Osama bin Laden and to use economic and military actions to prevent the spread of terrorism.

PRESIDENT BUSH: "Our war on terror begins with al-Qaida, but it does not end there. It will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has been found, stopped and defeated."

VOICE ONE:

Osama bin Laden
American officials said the Taleban administration in Afghanistan was sheltering Osama bin Laden. They said al-Qaida terrorists operated a training camp in Afghanistan under Taleban protection. President Bush demanded that the Taleban close the training camp and surrender Osama bin Laden. The Taleban refused. American and British airplanes launched attacks against the Taleban in Afghanistan on October seventh. The goals were to oust the Taleban, capture Osama bin Laden and destroy al-Qaida.

VOICE TWO:

The bombers struck in and around the Afghan capital, Kabul. Ethnic tribal groups of the Afghan Northern Alliance then led a ground attack. By November the Taleban began to collapse in several provinces. Taleban forces fled Kabul and the city of Kandahar. The military offensive defeated the Taleban and ousted them from power. It also captured a number of Taleban fighters and al-Qaida terrorists. But the war in Afghanistan was not over. And the leader of al-Qaida, Osama bin Laden, had not been captured.

VOICE ONE:

Some enemy fighters seized in Afghanistan were sent to a United States Navy detention center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The United States government did not identify them as prisoners of war. Instead, the detainees were called "unlawful enemy combatants." As such, they lacked some of the rights provided by an international treaty on conditions for war prisoners.

The United States government also detained hundreds of foreign citizens. Most of these people had violated immigration laws. No terrorism charges were brought against them. Human rights activists and some legal experts protested the treatment of the prisoners. The activists said holding people in secret without trial violated the United States Constitution.

VOICE TWO:

In October, Congress passed the U.S.A. Patriot Act. It provided the government with more power to get information about suspected terrorists in this country. Critics said the legislation invaded citizens' rights to privacy. Civil liberties groups charged that it gave law enforcement and other agencies too much power.

After Nine-Eleven, government agencies were criticized for not cooperating to gather intelligence that might have prevented the terrorist attacks. In two thousand two, a new Department of Homeland Security was created to strengthen defenses against terrorism.

Twenty-two agencies were combined into a new department of about two hundred thousand employees. The Department of Homeland Security was one of the major changes brought about by the attacks of Nine Eleven. Many Americans believed the attacks had changed their lives, their country, and the world, forever.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

This program, The Making of a Nation, was written by Jerilyn Watson and produced by Jill Moss. This is Barbara Klein.

VOICE TWO:

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