CARL AZUZ, HOST:  It`s great to see you.
Thanks for taking 10 minutes for current events sans commercials.
I`m Carl Azuz in Atlanta.
In  Sana`a, the capital of Yemen, international workers, civilians, women  and children pack the airport, exhausted from conflict and relieved to  be 
going home.  Thousands are being evacuated from the  shelling, the bombing and the gunshots.  But their flights have to be  coordinated with the 
military of neighboring Saudi Arabia  because it`s leading the airstrikes against the Houthi rebels that have  taken over Yemen`s government.
Hundreds have been killed in the  fighting.  The Houthis are allied with Iran.  Saudi Arabia and other  countries in the region want to kick out the 
rebels and reinstate Yemen`s deposed president.
The Saudis` firepower is immense.
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NIC  ROBERTSON, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over):  Saudi Arabia is the best  funded armed force in the Gulf region, with training and operational  ties 
to the U.S., U.K. and France, according to The Institute  of Strategic Studies, in 2014, the country`s defense expenditure was  $80.8 billion.  
That`s 10 percent of the country`s GDP and the third largest defense border in the world.
Its  military force is made up of 227,000 active members.  The army has  75,000 troops, but its biggest ground force is the 100,000 strong  national 
guard, made up largely of tribal-based militia.
The  primary mission of this force is to protect the royal family from  internal conflicts.  But their involvement in the liberation of Kuwait  in 
the 1990s showed that it can also be deployed as an external force when the security of the country is threatened.
(on  camera):  Saudi Arabia also boasts a 13,500 person navy and an air  force of 20,000 people.  The fleet comprises U.S.-produced F-15 fighter 
planes, European-developed Tornadoes and Eurofighter Typhoons.
The  Saudi forces are also equipped with American-made AH-64 Apache  helicopters, 315 M1A2 Abrams tanks and it has recently invested heavily  in 
anti-tank missiles.
The Royal Saudi Strategic  Missile Force has also seen heavy investment in recent years, equipped  with Chinese-made DF-21s and DF-3 delivery systems, 
built to launch long distance, high explosive warheads.
Of  all the main players in the Gulf region, the Saudi military is  considered to be the best armed, benefiting greatly from funds gained 
through the country`s vast oil wealth.
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(ON SCREEN)
Roll Call
AZUZ:   On yesterday`s transcript page at cnnstudentnews.com, we heard from  The Beaver State and The Green Mountain State.  Ashland is a city in  Oregon 
and it`s the home of The Cubs of the Ashland Middle School.  Good to see you.
Colchester is a town in Vermont.  It`s where The Lakers dive in at Colchester High School.
And from South Korea`s second largest city, that`s Busan, we welcome the students of Jangjeon Middle School.
Is the U.S. economy stalling?
It  gained momentum in 2014 and had been growing by more than 200,000 jobs  every month for a solid year.  But the latest jobs report that came out  for 
the month of March was a disappointment.  It said the U.S. added 126,000 jobs when more then 240,000 were expected.
The unemployment rate stayed the same at 5.5 percent.
The  Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta forecasts that in the first quarter of  2015, the U.S. economy grew 0 percent.  Analysts are waiting to see if  the 
March jobs report is just a hiccup or a sign that the economy could be on the slide.
Tornadoes  are the most violent storms on Earth.  Unlike the North Atlantic  hurricane season, there are no dates that define tornado season in the  US.  
Twisters can form at any time of the year and forecasters  aren`t able to predict them as far in advance as hurricanes, though  they can report when 
conditions are ripe for tornadoes.  That usually happens in the spring and summer.
Accuweather.com is forecasting a round of severe storms this week in an area stretching from Northeast Texas to Illinois.
What causes them to spin off tornadoes?
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JENNIFER  GRAY, ATS METEOROLOGIST:  Tornadoes are so powerful, they can flatten  homes to their foundation.  They can pull asphalt right off of a 
highway and they can toss around 18 wheelers like they were small toys.
(ON SCREEN)
Tornadoes:  101
GRAY:   Tornadoes can be the most deadly and destructive weather phenomenon on  Earth.  In fact, about 1,000 tornadoes occur every year in the US.  
That`s more than anywhere else on the planet.
(voice-over):   Some of the strongest tornadoes can pack winds of 300 miles per hour  or more.  It can be as small as a couple of hundred yards wide, 
all the way to two and a half miles wide and their path of destruction  can be a couple of hundred yards or extend out 50 miles or more.
(on  camera):  When conditions are just right, you`ll get warm, moist air  coming in from the Gulf of Mexico.  That will collide with dry, cooler  air 
from the north.  When these air masses collide, it creates  lift in the atmosphere.  And when you get those winds rotating and  increasing speed 
with height, that will create a horizontal  column of air that`s spinning.  Then you get a downdraft from a  thunderstorm and that will pull that column 
of air all the way down to the ground and then you have a tornado.
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AZUZ:   It was the shortest lunar eclipse of the century, according to NASA.   So unless you were looking for it during the five minute period it was 
visible, you probably missed Saturday morning`s celestial event.
The  sun, the Earth and the moon were lined up just right, with the Earth in  between, so that our planet`s shadow covered the moon.  It appeared to  take 
on a burnt orange color, giving it the nickname blood  moon.  Scientists say the Earth`s atmosphere filters out most of the  blue light causing the moon 
to appear red.
The next blood moon is the fourth in a series of them.  It`s expected on September 28th.
(ON SCREEN)
Shoutout
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE:   Time for the Shoutout.
What part of the human brain is the largest?
If you think you know it, shout it out.
Is it the cerebrum, cerebellum, medulla, or brain stem.
You`ve got three seconds.
Go.
(BELL RINGING)
UNIDENTIFIED  FEMALE:   If you are the cerebral type, you may already know that the  cerebrum is the biggest part of the human brain.
That`s your answer and that`s your Shoutout.
AZUZ:   How we interpret touch, how we reason, how we learn, it`s all believed  to be determined by our cerebrum and doctors say that what our 
brains encounter in the first five years we`re alive can have this tremendous impact on how we learn later on.
Research looking into babies` brain development shows one thing that can help is the element of surprise.
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DR.   SANJAY GUPTA, CNN CORRESPONDENT:  Scientists believe babies are born  with an innate knowledge about the world, with a set of expectations  about 
how the world works.
What they don`t fully understand yet is how babies will learn more.
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How Do Babies Learn?
GUPTA:   Well, there`s some new research out there that was published in the  journal "Science" that suggests babies learn best when they are  surprised.
For instance, when an object doesn`t behave in a way  the baby expects, then they`re going to focus on that object and  ultimately learn more about it.
So in this series of  experiments, researchers at Johns Hopkins University, they showed 11  month old babies something surprising and also something 
predictable.
One group of babies, for example, saw a ball like this roll down a ramp and get stopped by a wall.  That was predictable.
Another  group saw that same ball roll down the ramp and then pass through the  wall, as if by magic.  That was unexpected.  That was surprising.
Or how about a toy train?
A toy train is expected to roll on a table like this.
But what if when it got to the end of the table, it just kept going?
That would be surprising to the baby.  And scientists believe that babies` play is linked to learning.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE:   Ready?  GUPTA:  To test that theory, researchers at Johns Hopkins then gave the 
babies the objects to play with.  The babies who saw the ball pass  through the wall, they were more interested in playing with that ball  afterwards 
than the babies who saw it roll to a stop.
The  babies were also more inclined to bang the ball against their hands and  then bang the ball against the table to see if the ball was, in fact, 
solid.
Look,  whether it`s a magical ball or perhaps a flying train, provide the  unexpected and kids are going to be more likely to learn.
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(ON SCREEN)
Before We Go
AZUZ:   We wouldn`t say this last video will make your skin crawl, but thanks  to a series of photos taken by a professor at Yale University, we 
can see how a dragonfly sheds its own.
First,  it cracks its old skin and wiggles out, head first, upside down.  It  waits a while for its legs to dry, flips over and pumps up its wings  with 
air.  Its abdomen stretches out and then the insect spreads its wings and takes off, leaving the old skin behind.
It  takes about 10 hours.  But thanks to that video, the time seems to  dragon fly by, even if it looks like the insect is just winging it.   Don`t 
let our puns bug you we try to change them out to keep them fresh and we will have more for you tomorrow.
I`m Carl Azuz.