欢迎来到VOA在线收网 www.voa365.com
当前位置:VOA NEWS > CNN NEWS >

CNN Student News - Apr 12 , 2016

2016-04-12 07:13来源:未知

音频下载

CARL AZUZ, CNN STUDENT NEWS ANCHOR: Welcome back to ten minutes of international current events. From the CNN Center in Atlanta, Georgia, I`m

Carl Azuz.

We`re starting today`s coverage in the capital of Belgium, where some major arrests were made late last week. Shortly after terrorists targeted an

effort and a subway in Brussels, killing 31 people last month, Belgian authorities went on the hunt for the so-called "man in the hat". He was

seen in surveillance images at the Brussels airport, walking with two of the suicide bombers in that attack.

In police raids across Brussels Friday, Mohamed Abrini was one of six people arrested and authorities say he`s confessed to being the man in the

hat. Abrini has also been linked to last November`s terrorist attacks in Paris, France, that killed 130 people. He`s been charged with multiple

crimes related to terrorism and murder.

Also arrested Friday, Osama Kraiem. European police believe he was working with the subway suicide bomber in Brussels.

Investigators say the same ISIS terrorist network is responsible for the Paris and Brussels attacks.

U.S. government is considering how it can ramp up its military efforts against ISIS. The terrorist group`s name is an acronym for Islamic State

in Iraq and Syria -- the two countries where it`s taken over large sections of territory. The Obama administration is considering sending 250 more

U.S. Special Forces to Syria, with the mission of helping local forces retake major cities there, and in Iraq. This is in addition to the

thousands of U.S. troops currently serving in Iraq.

Though President Obama has insisted that American forces would not return to combat there, the Pentagon says some U.S. troops are fighting, but that

they don`t officially have a combat mission. They`re training in supporting Iraqi forces who are trying to take back major cities, like

Mosul.

The Iraqi Army`s latest defensive was put on hold shortly after it started. Iraqi officials say they need more help to secure territory after it`s

taken. The stakes, especially near Mosul are high.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

ARWA DAMON, CNN SENIOR INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): It has been described by some as the most dangerous dam in the world. The Mosul

Dam, the largest in Iraq which produces hydroelectricity, is built on a foundation of soft gypsum rock, making erosion a constant challenge.

We enter the underbelly of the dam to see how it is even still standing.

Completed in the mid-1980s, what keeps it all intact is a process that needs to happen daily. Workers are drilling bore holes. This one will go

down 150 meters, or around 500 feet.

(on camera): Drilling that particular distance takes about a week. And the machines go up and down along the length of the dam, breaking up and

then re-pouring cement to try to ensure the stability of the dam`s foundation.

(voice-over): It`s a process called grouting. When ISIS briefly took over the dam in 2014, this was halted for 45 days. Intense around-the-

clock grouting reversed those weaknesses.

The U.S. recently issued a stark warning, describing the potential for collapse as, quote, "serious and unprecedented", a catastrophic event that

would see Mosul, Iraq`s second largest city and under ISIS control, entirely submerged with flooding as far downstream as Baghdad.

That warning said the lives of up to 1.5 million Iraqis would be at risk.

But the dam`s manager Riyad al-Naemi insists that disaster is not imminent.

RIYAD AL-NAEMI, DAM MANAGER (through translator): If the dam were to collapse, when the water level is at 330 meter above sea water, then yes,

Mosul would be flooded. But with current levels there would be minimal damage.

DAMON: The seepage is one of the reasons why he says the U.S. is so concerned. But he claims his team has determined that it is not impacting

the dam`s foundation. Still last year, the U.S. installed an early warning system they monitor regularly. And there is an urgent need for repairs.

(on camera): Millions of Iraqis are directly reliant on the Mosul Dam in one way or the other. But years of neglect by the Iraqi government due to

politics, bureaucracy and corruption are already being felt.

(voice-over): Couple that with security concerns that for years kept international companies from taking up the job. An Italian company has

just been contracted to repair and refurbish the dam. But work is yet to begin. And in Iraq, where nothing is ever entirely predictable, it is

always the best to plan for the worst.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

AZUZ: From Hawaii to India, with the stop in Oklahoma, it`s time for the call of the roll.

Hilo Intermediate School made a request on Friday`s transcript page. The Spartans are watching from the community of Hilo, Hawaii.

In Northern Oklahoma, we arrive at the city of Pawnee at Pawnee Middle School. Welcome to the Black Bears.

And from the capital of India, it`s great to see Delhi Public School today. Hello to everyone in New Delhi.

Problems and progress in space.

First, the setback for NASA`s Kepler Space Observatory. It was launched in 2009 in a cost of $600 million. Its mission is to look for habitable

planets in outer space.

NASA engineers found out late last week that the telescope is in emergency mode. That means it`s having problems and burning through power quickly.

One challenge in repairing Kepler is the delay. It`s estimated to be about 75 million miles away from earth and it takes 13 minutes for signals to

transfer between our planet and the telescope.

Next, a SpaceX mission to the International Space Station. Dragon is an unmanned cargo capsule that was launched Friday afternoon. It`s carrying

7,000 pounds of equipment and experiments to the International Space Station, including this, the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module or BEAM

that you told you about last week.

BEAM was built with an $18 million contract from NASA and if it passes its tests before it`s detached and destroyed in earth`s atmosphere, the module

could one day become a place to stay in space.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

SUBTITLE: Future space homes.

RACHEL CRANE, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Now, this would theoretically be a space hotel. You`ve got the sleeping quarters over there. You`ve got storage

over here. You`ve got your seats over there.

There`s even a window actually. You come over here, they`ve got a telescope right here so you could look out and you would use this, because

when you`re floating in space, you`re floating and you need to be able to navigate. So, pretend like I`m flying and I`d be grabbing this to move

along.

There`d be no floor. The core system is here. You`ve got all your storage here. You have your batteries, your gloves, your wipes, your cables.

You`ve got your sleeping bag over here. So, in space, when you`re sleeping, you have to tether yourself to the wall, so you won`t go flying

around.

They actually have vegetation growing here, hydroponically. You`ve got a mockup of that. Even someone tending to it, doing the space garden.

You`re window, look out, see the stars.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

AZUZ: There`s another part of SpaceX mission that went well. Part of the rocket that carried the Dragon cargo capsule into space returned to earth

and for the first time landed intact on a drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean. Each Falcon IX rocket costs more than $60 million. So, being able to reuse

them would save a lot of money.

Several previous attempts have failed. Falcon IX rockets have exploded in flight or tip over and exploded on landing. So, last Friday`s success at

sea as historic.

(MUSIC)

AZUZ: We`re continuing the space theme for our last story of the day. This is kind of like the lost dog poster, except that the dog isn`t real

and the lost part means really lost, as in traveled at least 15 miles this way. The equipment that took it there fell back to earth and was located,

but the stuff animal seems to have vanished in thin air.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

SUBTITLE: Toy dog lost in space.

For a science project, students at Morecambe Bay Primary School sent a stuffed dog into space.

The puppy was attached to a helium balloon, tracking equipment and GoPro cameras.

The dog`s name is Sam.

He was the first toy-dog astronaut sent on a mission to reach the edge of space.

After Sam completed his mission, he was nowhere to be found.

The school is using social media to track Sam.

The hashtag #FindSam has gone global.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

AZUZ: You could say Sam`s disappearance is a beagling mystery, a true canine-drum, an atmosphere-ful event. We hope he`s hound again soon

because things just aren`t the same with him.

I`m Carl Azuz for CNN STUDENT NEWS.

(责任编辑:admin)
最新新闻
  1. 李沁《请君》横空出世!主角长得
  2. 开心麻花职场轻喜剧《开心合伙人
  3. 《一年一度喜剧大赛》第二季,终
  4. 500+分区,海信E8H XDR系列 MiniLED电
  5. 全新荣耀 MagicBook X系列产品震撼上
  6. 荣耀笔记本魔术 BookV142022上市:支
  7. 荣耀X40评测:首款 OLED硬核屏幕
  8. 荣耀X40评测:首款 OLED硬核屏幕
  9. 有消息称 快手国际化经营机构重
  10. Arm将发布下一代NeoverseV2技术,用
  11. 每日观察!观点 | 一机多用三星
  12. 头条焦点:张朝阳出物理题考网友
  13. 全球时讯:苹果占国内高端手机市
  14. 天天滚动:《羊了个羊》否认抄袭
  15. 天天热消息:华强北AirPods Pro已破解
  16. 世界快播:余承东:华为把全球设
  17. 【全球聚看点】iPhone 13降价800到手
  18. 全球观热点:小米12S假期降价600 到
  19. 全球信息:美股一夜蒸发5000亿 苹果
  20. 世界即时:雷军:37岁时就财务自由
  21. 播报:荣耀70 5G手机限时减500 到手
  22. 每日头条!华为Mate 40 Pro降2000 5G版
  23. 环球新消息丨iPhone14系列海南免税
  24. 实时:实力霸屏,轻薄长续航!荣
  25. 当前视讯!研究报告:使用表情符
  26. 环球微速讯:腾讯音乐为何选择介
  27. 当前焦点!小米集团:今日耗资约
  28. 【全球新要闻】爱奇艺龚宇:从“
  29. 天天时讯:Adobe宣布以约200亿美元收
  30. 今日看点:腾讯音乐申请储架发行
  31. 焦点精选!“羊了个羊”微信小程
  32. 环球实时:微软不妥协,英国宣布
  33. 当前时讯:腾讯游戏,海外投了1
  34. 世界热资讯!茶颜悦色,为何总在
  35. 环球观速讯丨寺库宣布与阿拉丁科
  36. 实时焦点:美前情报官员:“美国
  37. 全球信息:观点 | 英媒:美反华“
  38. 世界焦点!搜狗“断舍离”:一年
  39. 每日速讯:《羊了个羊》成新社交
  40. 全球观天下!新加坡星展集团进入
  41. 【天天播资讯】乐视30天直播14场
  42. 【新视野】以太坊8年挖矿时代结
  43. 前沿热点:阿里健康发布首份线上
  44. 世界动态:“雷军称37岁已财务自由
  45. 全球快讯:通关率不足0.1%,“羊了
  46. 环球头条:还看好吗?美团王兴抛
  47. 世界快消息!腾讯控股:回购约3
  48. 世界报道:“东南亚小腾讯”Sea继
  49. 天天热议:18个网络平台调查!超六
  50. 天天通讯!重磅