2006-3-9 09:55
tanlaoshi
VOA Normal speed news
<P><STRONG>India, US aim to boost economic cooperation </STRONG> </P>
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<P>Economic cooperation was a major topic during the recent visit of President Bush to India, with the United States agreeing to an ambitious three-year target for doubling trade. A delegation of top American business executives also accompanied the president, keen to explore investment opportunities in one of the world's fastest-growing economies.</P>
<P>As the president visited India, U.S. Trade Representative Rob Portman accepted a challenge from his Indian counterpart (Trade Minister Kamal Nath) to push bilateral trade to $50 billion in three instead of five years, as earlier targeted. Bilateral trade stood at over $28 billion last year.
<P>The optimism is based on the growing interest among American businesses in India's vibrant economy.
<P>The head of the financial services company JP Morgan Chase, William Harrison, co-chairs a forum of 20 major American and Indian companies that is outlining a plan to boost commercial collaboration.
<P>Harrison says U.S.-based multinationals see India as an important destination as it catches up with the other booming economy in the region - China. "You can't be a global CEO (Chief Executive Officer) today, doing your job and not really focusing on how you can do business in India. You just can't be. And, by the way, a lot of people love to compare China and India. It is not an 'either-or.' I think for most big multinational companies, you have got to be looking at both of them because they are both right at the top of the list of where you have got to be to do business in the future."
<P>Dozens of U.S. businesses already have a foothold in India. Technology companies Microsoft and Cisco have invested billions of dollars developing research centers in India to use its pool of skilled talent.
<P>Other multinationals are targeting India's 300 million middle-class consumers, who buy Levis jeans, aspire to own a Ford car, and frequent McDonalds and Pizza Hot outlets.
<P>And the American defense industry wants to sell warplanes and high-tech weapons to India as the political relationship between the two nations enters a new phase.
<P>Indian Finance Minister P. Chidambaram told the visiting business executives the country wants more U.S. investment, especially to revamp its overburdened infrastructure. "For the U.S. side it means a great opportunity, an opportunity to invest in India, in our roads, our rail network, or airports and our seaports, to use your acknowledged strengths in the financial sector and invest in our insurance sector and banking sector."
<P>But American businesses say India has to liberalize more rapidly, especially in fast-growing services such as banking, insurance and retail, if U.S. investment there is to reach its potential.
<P>JP Morgan Chase Chairman Harrison identifies other factors that intimidate American businesses thinking of increasing their stake in India. "It is infrastructure first, lack of infrastructure, and secondly the perception, real or not, of the bureaucracy, of doing business here; whether that is getting permits to do business, or is getting licenses; whether it is the delay in the court system to settle contract disputes or whatever it is, there is a perception there that we think [all this] could be facilitated [speeded up]."<BR><BR>The Indian-American business forum has several recommendations for removing obstacles to cooperation. These include speeding up infrastructure development in India, making Bombay a regional hub for the financial operations of U.S. companies, and increasing cooperation between top technical institutes. </P>
2006-3-9 09:57
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>US officials stress surveillance in fight against bird flu </STRONG> </P>
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<P>U.S. officials say they are working to step up global efforts to detect and contain outbreaks of the bird flu virus as soon as they occur. The virus has so far infected 174 people and spread to birds in more than 30 countries.</P>
<P>Four of the top U.S. public health officials testified Thursday before a House Appropriations Committee subcommittee. Their basic message was the same - contain a potential human bird flu pandemic as soon as possible, before it comes to the United States.
<P>The U.S. Agency for International Development's Kent Hill said he is concerned the chances for the virus to infect humans increases as it moves around the world.
<P>"With the spread of the number of countries that have significant outbreaks of some sort, obviously there's more contacts with human beings, and that increases the likelihood, or possibility, I should put it, of something happening that we don't want to happen, which is, of course, a human global pandemic."
<P>He said accurate surveillance of bird flu outbreaks is crucial to global efforts to combat the virus. As an example, he pointed to Nigeria.
<P>"On January 10th, they reported massive bird die-offs, but they were misdiagnosed as to the cause. It was not until February that it was confirmed internationally that, indeed it was H5N1. So, several weeks had passed before they even realized what had happened. That was several weeks in which the spread could occur. It's no mystery why, this week, it appeared in Niger, just to the north. So, we think it's probably in many places in Africa already." <BR><BR>The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director Julie Gerberding told the subcommittee that her agency is among those helping other countries that need it develop a public health system able to detect bird flu.
<P>"There are a lot of black boxes out there, where something could emerge, and it's going to take us a while to find it. We'll plug them as quickly as we can, but we just don't have a seamless network yet. And we're only as strong as our weakest link."
<P>In order to mobilize a faster response, she added that her agency is in the process of building 18 regional centers around the world.
<P>"We have several of them already, including one in Kenya. And when the problems emerged in Nigeria, CDC was able to send its Kenyan response team over to Nigeria to be on the ground much more quickly than we could get people from Atlanta [CDC Headquarters], there to assist with the WHO response capability."
<P>Meanwhile, the State Department's Nancy Powell said the United States, Canada and Mexico are discussing what they will do should there be a bird flu outbreak in North America. </P>
2006-3-9 09:58
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Hollywood prepares for Oscars </STRONG></P>
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<P>Workers are putting the final touches on Hollywood's Kodak Theatre, where the motion picture industry will award the Oscars on Sunday evening. The industry's most glamorous and powerful people will be there for the presentation.</P>
<P>It is a time when actors and directors take a break from filming on movie sets, executives get a break from their rounds of deal-making, and all the glamour of Hollywood is on parade on the red carpet.
<P>George Clooney is nominated for three Oscars, as supporting actor in the thriller Syriana and as director and co-writer of Good Night, and Good Luck, a film about the legendary newsman Edward R. Murrow.
<P>This is Clooney's first time at the Oscars, but as he told reporters recently, he does not expect to win. He notes there are five nominees in each category, and those odds make the Oscars a gamble.
<P>"If you were going to [Las] Vegas, and you got percent odds, would you take that? I don't know. The truth is, realistically, it doesn't feel like I'm going to win. I like the idea of showing up. It's exciting to be nominated. It really is exciting to be nominated. And right now is sort of the golden time."
<P>This year's competition has films that touch on controversy, including several that deal with gay themes and characters. The foreign-film entry Paradise Now, which follows two suicide bombers, has been criticized by some who say it glorifies terrorism. <br>Gil Cates, who produces the Oscar show, says the entries are always topical, and sometimes controversial.
<P>"And I think that this year is a very appropriate year for the academy members to have selected these political films, cultural films because it's very much on everyone's minds."
<P>Politics always creeps into the presentation, and the Oscar show producer says that is unavoidable when winners go on stage.
<P>"You know, when someone wins an Oscar and they get their 40 seconds up there, I hope they talk about their craft and their art and I personally hope they don't talk politics, but I can do nothing about that. It's their 40 seconds basically."
<P>Critics and viewers worry less about controversy than about a telecast that is sometimes slow and uneventful. The producer says this year's host, comedian Jon Stewart, should maintain a brisk pace and introduce some topical humor for the biggest event of the year in Hollywood. </P>
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2006-3-9 10:00
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Wind power grows as alternative US energy source </STRONG> </P>
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<P>Windmills are sprouting across the United States, as Americans search for non-polluting alternative energy sources. The West Coast state of California is the U.S. leader in wind power.</P>
<P>Wind turbines dot hillsides in several parts of the state, including Tehachapi, in the desert northeast of Los Angeles.
<P>Lee Brace of G.E. Energy stands beneath a slow-spinning propeller, attached to a wind turbine that his company is testing. "The larger the blade, it seems the slower they move. You're looking at 58 meters blades, and three of them on top of the tower there, about 240 feet up in the air."
<P>The tower is 75 meters tall, and atop it is a one-point-five megawatt turbine, which provides enough power for 500 houses.
<P>More than 4,000 wind turbines dot these desert hillsides. Some date from the 1980s and are just a fraction of the size and output of this model.
<P>Down the road, Oak Creek Energy Systems operates 200 turbines, including another massive one-point-five megawatt test model. Michael Burns sits in front of a bank of computer monitors, which use color codes to track the temperature and status of the windmills. "The green ones are on line. If it's white, it means the turbine is off. Everything is all right on it but there isn't enough wind. And like a click on the turbine and find out the status survey California gives birth to the wind industry in the United States, but 16 other states, from North Dakota to Kansas, have greater potential, according to the American Wind Energy Association. Texas now ranks number two in wind production for the country.
<P>But the association says the source remains largely untapped, providing less than one percent of U.S. electrical generation. Denmark, by contrast, gets 20 percent of its power from the wind. Linda White of the Kern Wind Energy Association, based in Tehachapi, says alternative energy sources can supplement dwindling supplies of coal, oil and natural gas, which provide most U.S. electrical generation. "As long as the wind is there, the water is there or the sun is there, we will have those renewable resources. And I think if we were to have much more of a mix or put more sustainable or alternative energy sources within our current mix, it will extend the life of those finite fuels," she said.
<P>Government incentives in places like California are promoting the use of renewable energy sources. Ed Duggan of Oak Creek Energy Systems says, with better planning, utility companies can make more efficient use of available energy. "Maybe on a windy day, you hold the water behind the dam and save that energy for the days that the wind doesn't blow. Or maybe you keep your gas-fired peaking generator turned off on a windy day, but you run it on a day while it's a hot day when all the air conditioners are on in Los Angeles."
<P>The industry still has work to convince Americans of the virtues of wind power. Some residents complain the large towers are unsightly, and environmentalists have criticized the windmills as dangerous to birds. This is more of a problem at another site in Northern California, which is on a migration route. In response to complaints, owners have agreed to a temporary shutdown of some of that area's wind turbines during this year's winter migration. </P>
2006-3-9 10:01
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>More Americans suffer from insomnia </STRONG> </P>
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<P>It is something all human beings do, regardless of where they live, how they worship, or what they believe: They sleep.</P>
<P>Except that for a growing number of Americans, sleep has become elusive.
<P>Pat Foucht is 67-year-old, and lives in upstate New York. Eight years ago, she developed breast cancer and underwent extensive medical treatments. Ever since, her life has not been the same. "I'm just wide awake all night long. And sometimes now, I'll have a wake-up and can't get back to sleep. But it's mainly falling asleep."
<P>Foucht is one of an estimated 60 million Americans who regularly suffer from insomnia, either because they are taking medication, or experiencing pain, or not eating right. Or - according to Russell Rosenberg, who directs the Sleep Medicine Institute in Atlanta, Georgia - simply because they are living in the modern world.
<P>"It's a 24/7 society now. That is, you have Internet 24 [hours], 7 [days a week], television, radio. Everything can keep you distracted from the time you need to sleep. Plus, people are working harder, working more jobs, trying to squeeze in more family-time, more leisure-time and so forth, and so there's only so much time to do all the things we want to do in one particular day."
<P>According to an annual poll conducted by the National Sleep Foundation, in 2005, 75 percent of Americans experienced sleeping problems ranging from minor and transient to severe and chronic. That is up from 62 percent in 1999, when the NSF first conducted its poll.
<P>The number of Americans turning to prescription sleep aids for help has gone up even more dramatically: nearly 60 percent over the past five years. American pharmacists filled about 42 million sleeping pill prescriptions last year, and most of them were for either Ambien or Lunesta, two recent additions to the sleep aid market.
<P>These drugs are not believed to be habit-forming, and they don't seem to have the same liver-damaging side-effects that earlier sleep aids had. For that reason, Russell Rosenberg says they can be a good option for a particular kind of patient. "For something we would consider very short-term, or even transient. That is, let's say someone had a very serious event in their life, a death of a loved one or something. In the short-run, I think most physicians are going to realize this person just needs a few tablets here and there to get them through the stress of the situation."
<P>At the same time, there is some evidence that these new sleeping pills may not be completely harmless. Some people who have taken them have reported having short-term amnesia. And Pat Foucht says she definitely feels side-effects the morning after she's taken a prescription sleep medication. "I do take something now when I have this problem, and I've found that I'm groggy in the morning when I take it. And also I may be a little bit more depressed."
<P>For that reason, sleep experts prefer to treat their patients with what is known as "cognitive behavioral therapy," or CBT. It is a form of psychotherapy that tries to change the way a patient thinks, feels, and acts about sleep.
<P>It doesn't yield immediate results, though, and in many parts of the country, it is unavailable. There are only about 200 clinicians worldwide who have extensive CBT training in the area of sleep. That is part of the reason prescription drugs have become so popular.
<P>But the biggest reason, says Gregg Jacobs, an assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, is marketing. "You'll see their ads every night on television now. They're the most frequent drug ads on TV. As a result, people around the United States - and soon around the world - are being given the message that you can take a sleeping pill, and it will cure your insomnia. And when people hear that, they rush out to buy this pill."
<P>Last year, drug companies spent more than $300 million on ads for prescription sleep aids. That is more than four times as much as they spent in 2004.
<P>But Gregg Jacobs has unveiled his own weapon in the battle against insomnia. It is an interactive website, cbtforinsomnia.com. Patients sign on and have regular telephone and Internet consultations with a trained clinician who could be two or 2,000 kilometers away. Results from a study funded by the National Institutes of Health indicate that Internet-based CBT may be more effective than prescription medication, or even face-to-face therapy when it comes to treating insomnia. </P>
2006-3-9 10:02
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Chinese freestyle aerialist makes history </STRONG> </P>
<P>[rm=300,2,0]http://language.chinadaily.com.cn/audio/normal/2006/02/0228a.rm[/rm]</P>
<P>Han Xiaopeng has made history by becoming the first Chinese skier to win an Olympic gold medal. Han's shock victory came in the men's freestyle aerials event Thursday night at Sauze d'Oulx, Italy.</P>
<P>Han went into his first-ever aerials final without ever having won a World Cup title. But that did not stop him from surprising everyone by taking the gold medal ahead of Dmitri Dashinski of Belarus and Russia's Vladimir Lebedev.The freestyle aerial event is a high-energy competition that is punctuated by the heavy beat of loud rock music. Skiers come down a steep, snow-cover ramp and go over the so-called kicker, which launches them high into the air. Once airborne, they twist, spin and somersault before coming down for their landing.The movements they make in the air are very similar to what you might see from top divers.
<P>The 12 finalists each made two jumps Thursday night, with Han in second place after the first. But his second leap, known as the back-lay-double-full-full, gave him a total of 250.77 points. The 22-year-old Han, who also became the youngest gold medalist in men's aerials, was not surprised that someone from China could win the event."The freestyle, especially for the aerial, is very fit for Chinese, and because we are very good at gymnastics and diving. [And he thinks], that Chinese can do it! " he said.
<P>Dmitri Dashinski of Belarus was the leader after the first round of jumps. But he made a small error on his second leap. He ended up with the silver medal, Belarus' first at these Games, just over two points (248.68) behind Han. Even though he was somewhat disappointed not to win the gold, Dashinski said he enjoys the growing trend of competing at night."I like it a lot more than the day because I can see the landing a lot better. I think the conditions are not too windy, not snowing at night. I don't know - more stable. Plus this season we are having more and more competitions at night. I think it is more like a show. Good for the people who are watching it," he said.Russia's Vladimir Lebedev, who failed to qualify for the finals at the 2002 Salt Lake City Games, took the bronze, less than two points behind Dashinski.
<P>Unlike other skiing disciplines, which are usually dominated by European athletes, freestyle aerialists cover a wider range. The 12 finalists Thursday night came from seven different countries.
<P>Olga Ivanova of Moscow, who is a huge sports fan and attends as many major events as she can, thinks she knows why. "I think it can be done pretty much in every country. People in this sport come from different sports beforehand, diving or like acrobatics or whatever. So they can do practice just about everywhere," she said.American Jeret Speedy Peterson was disappointed he did not place higher. Third after the first jump, he executed the Hurricane, which includes an unprecedented three flips and five twists, on his second leap. But he failed to land cleanly and ended up seventh.</P>
2006-3-9 10:03
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Cheerleaders draw attention at Turin Olympics </STRONG> </P>
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<P>The official Olympic cheerleaders are a lot different than what you would see on the sidelines at basketball or American-style football games. Cheerleader choreographer Paola Bosio says about 500 girls tried out to become Olympic cheerleaders.</P>
<P>"At the end we chose 100 girls. We have six groups, three working in ice hockey, two at speed skating and one in the mountains. So this is the first time that there is cheerleading in the Olympic Games, and we thought it was a good way to entertain the spectators."
<P>After being selected for the squad, the newly-minted cheerleaders practiced for four and a half months. But during that time, about all they learned how to do was wave their orange and gold pom-poms, dance a few synchronized steps, and jump up and down to whatever music might be playing at the venue.</P>
<P>Fans disagree on whether the cheerleaders are entertaining or just an irritating distraction. After all, they do not actually cheer and they do not wear skimpy uniforms. The all-girl squad, which ranges in age from 15 to 26, is attired in bright orange and gold uniforms that cover them almost from shoulder to toe. </P>
<P>Jacopo Divonzo lives in Turin and says he enjoyed the cheerleaders performing at a hockey game.
<P>"I think they made [did] a good job, they had no problem and I liked looking at them. It was a nice thing for me, yeah."
<P>Besides not cheering for any particular team at an event, the focus of the routines is different. It is not the loud and spirited gymnastic performance one might see at college and high school events in the United States, but is more dance-oriented.
<P>Cheerleader Camilla of Turin is 20 years old and has studied dance since she was 10. Her background includes classical dance and ballet as well as modern dance and pop. This is her first time as a cheerleader and she says she is enjoying the new experience.
<P>"There are no cheerleaders in Italy. We are the first. I like it very much. It is so <BR>fun in front of a lot of people. It is a great experience. All the people are very happy, they like [it] very much."<BR><BR>Some fans expressed the opinion that the pom-pom waving and dancing was distracting because it took the focus off the athletic event they had come to see. But Kathy Moine of Los Angeles, California had a different interpretation, as well as an interesting theory about the cheerleader's costumes.
<P>"I think that they are just supposed to be neutral and they are supposed to be the Olympic torches," she said. "Not for any country but just supporting everybody, happy to be in the Olympics."
<P>If by definition, cheerleaders should cheer for one side and make a lot of noise, then the Olympic squad still has a lot to learn. But if they are just here to look good and liven up the atmosphere during time-outs, many would agree they have been a complete success. </P>
2006-3-9 10:05
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Bush pushing alternative energy </STRONG> </P>
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<P>President Bush says it is an important national goal to lower America's reliance on foreign oil.</P>
<P>"I have spent a lot of time worrying about the national security implications of being addicted to oil, particularly from parts of the world where people may not agree with our policy or our way of life" .
<P>The president says alternative sources of energy are a national security issue at a time when 60 percent of the crude used by U.S. refineries comes from outside the country.
<P>He wants Congress to boost funding for research into cleaner-burning coal and more cost-effective solar and wind energy.
<P>Mr. Bush spoke at the federal National Renewable Energy Laboratory where 32 jobs were cut earlier this month.
<P>Five million dollars from the Energy Department restored those jobs in advance of the president's visit. He told employees there that the nation appreciates their work and their funding issues have been "cleared-up."
<P>"The issue of course is whether or not good intentions are met with actual dollars spent. Part of the issue we face, unfortunately, is that you know sometimes decisions are made, but as a result of the appropriations process, the money may not end up where it was supposed to have gone."
<P>The president says he wants to reduce U.S. oil imports from the Middle East by 75 percent during the next two decades. One of the ways to achieve that goal is for Americans to make greater use of fuels from agricultural materials, including ethanol, which is now made mostly from corn.
<P>Mr. Bush says technological advances will make it possible to produce ethanol more cheaply from grasses and agricultural waste such as stalks and leaves.
<P>He says there are also promising advances in developing more efficient batteries to power hybrid automobiles which are capable of running on either electricity or petroleum.
<P>"I want the people to know we are close. The hybrid vehicles you are buying today are an important part of making sure you save money when it comes to driving. But they are going to change with the right research and development. Technology will make it so that the hybrid vehicles are even better in getting us less addicted on oil and making it good for the consumers' pocketbook."
<P>President Bush says the government is encouraging alternative energy with a more than $3,000 tax credit for the purchase of hybrid vehicles.
<P>The president began this tour to promote his energy initiative with visits Monday to a commercial research lab in the Midwest state of Wisconsin and a solar power manufacturer in the Midwest state of Michigan. </P>
2006-3-9 10:06
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>10-year-old presidential trivia whiz publishes book </STRONG> </P>
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<P>February 20th is President's Day in the United States. Many Americans may be aware that two of the nation's best known chief executives were born in February -- Abraham Lincoln on the 12th and George Washington on the 22nd. But how many people know that George Washington preferred bowing to shaking hands, or that Abraham Lincoln's favorite sport was wrestling?</P>
<P>10 year old Noah McCullough, includes those bits of information and much more in The Essential Book of Presidential Trivia, just published by Random House. The Texas native has been hailed as America's youngest Presidential historian, and he is already planning his own bid for the nation's highest office in the year 2032.
<P>If Noah McCullough gets to fulfill his dream and run for President some day, he will already have plenty of experience with the media. At age 10, Noah has reported on politics for Scholastic Magazine, appeared on nationwide television programs like The Tonight Show, and acted as a spokesperson for Progress for America, a conservative advocacy group.<BR><BR>The staunch young Republican says his interest in politics dates back to the 2000 Presidential campaign, when his school held a mock election. "So I asked my teachers if my vote was an electoral vote or a regular vote, if I was a delegate or if I was a regular voter, and they didn't know. Then I asked my parents to give me a Presidents' book for my birthday. And so they gave me a President's book for my birthday, and I read that, and then I read more and more, and learned more along the way."
<P>Out of all that reading came The Essential Book of Presidential Trivia, in which Noah McCullough details everything from the names Presidents gave their pets to the historic milestones that took place during their terms in office.
<P>What surprised him most after all his reaserch? "The normal people that were serving in an extraordinary position. Lyndon Johnson bought his wife's wedding ring for $2.50 at Sears."<BR><BR>Among the presidents with birthdays this month, first of all we have George Washington. What did you learn about him that you included in this book? "Well, He had only one tooth at the inauguration, and I want to put to rest a myth called 'his wooden teeth' He never had wooden teeth. They were dentures, and it passed down to become made out of wood."
<P>And you write out that his was also a great dancer. "He was an excellent dancer. And decorating he was incredible. He was like an America's first Renaissance's man"
<P>And how about Abraham Lincoln? What did you learn about him? "Well, Lincoln never slept in the Lincoln Bedroom at the White House. It wasn't created by the time he was there. And Abraham Lincoln was the first President born outside of the 13 original colonies. He was born in Kentucky."
<P>So who is your favorite Presidents? "George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and George W. Bush. And George Washington because America was clay, and he made it a masterpiece;Abraham Lincoln because he withstood a war that was very hard for America. I mean It ripped it apart. It was brother against brother, but he made the best decisions that he could. He was very unpopular during that war. And (within) 20 to 40 years later he was considered a great President. So I think that George W. Bush, in 20 to 40 years, will be a very popular and great President."
<P>Have you had any chance to meet any presidents yourself?"I've met George W. Bush, Jimmy Carter, and George H.W. Bush .
<P>So what impressions did you get of them? "Well, Jimmy Carter told me that he wouldn't vote for me in 2032 on the Republican ticket which is when I'm running, He said I would have to be a Democrat and his grandkids might be running."
<P>George W. Bush with his father, George H.W. Bush <BR>"And George W. Bush -- he shook my hand, and he said that he would vote for me in 2032. And George H.W. Bush, he's funny,coz he promised me his vote, but I asked him how does it feel to be one of the few people in all the world to have spanked the current leader of the free world? He said that he didn't know the feeling because he didn't spank George W. -- Mrs. Bush did."
<P>Now you've tested your knowledge of Presidential history against some pretty tough competition on TV, including former presidential candidate Howard Deanand journalist Tim Russert. Do you remember any questions that trip them up? "Who was the first President born in a hospital? That tripped them up. The answer is Jimmy Carter."
<P>And you also got a chance to interview another presidential candidate for Scholastic Magazine John Kerry. What were you most interested in the asking him? "I just asked him for some advice how he feels and when he thinks will be the outcome of the election. And then he said 'so are you gonna be a journalist when you grow up?' And then I said, 'No, I'm gonnabe the President of the United States in 2032,' and he said 'What party?' and then my dad just picked me up and left the room."
<P>So what do you choose as the most important to you as a future presidential candidate? "Well, you know, I'm not gonna set my platform for 26 years from now, coz you don't know what's gonna be the problem then but two issues that I'm very concerned about right now is our social security and juvenile diabetes. That's why I donated part of my proceeds to Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. JDRF."
<P>"What do you learn from studying presidents, that you think will prepare you for the presidency yourself? "You know, I've learnt that you got to look at history because a lot of the answers to problems are in our past history, and also you have to stand your ground and make decisions on your own basis. You can't live by the popularity polls. You have to live by what you believe in."
<P>Noah McCullough is already getting a first hand feel for what life in the White House might be like. He has decorated his bedroom like the President's Oval Office, complete with a big flag, bookshelves and a Presidential seal. </P>
2006-3-9 10:07
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>New Orleans convention center,casino reopen </STRONG> </P>
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<P>Mardi Gras celebrations get under way in New Orleans this weekend, although on a much smaller scale than in past years. The city is still recovering from the devastation unleashed by Hurricane Katrina on August 29 of last year. Local spirits were boosted Friday by two important reopenings.</P>
<P>Crowds have returned to the slot machines and gaming tables once again at Harrah's casino in downtown New Orleans. The casino reopened Friday with full services and close to 1,300 employees. Meanwhile, a few blocks away, there was another important reopening, that of the New Orleans Convention Center, which served as a temporary shelter for hundreds of desperate people in the days following Katrina.</P>
<P>The first event at the Convention Center is a Gift and Jewelry Show featuring 600 exhibits. Some 15,000 shoppers crowded the halls on Friday and it was a happy scene for New Orleans Convention and Visitor's Bureau President Stephen Perry.</P>
<P>"It is a really powerful national signal, all over the United States but all over the world that New Orleans is back.It is already open and it is ready for business."</P>
<P>The reopening of Harrah's casino represents an important source of income for the cash-strapped city. The casino pays the city $925,000 a year to operate here and also draws tens of thousands of tourists who spend money at local hotels and restaurants.</P>
<P>Harrah's New Orleans' Senior Vice President and General Manager Jim Hoskins tells VOA that this is a new beginning for the casino in this city.</P>
<P>"It is full entertainment, I mean, We have Masquerade, which is a bar and night club, we have a theater where tonight local musician Alan Touissant is playing. Tomorrow night is rocking Dob.? We offer a full array of that type of experience. We offer all the normal experiences, whether it is night club activity and first-class entertainment. We are going to have some Broadway shows probably in the future and other types of shows."</P>
<P>Hoskins says one of the big challenges his company faced in reopening the casino was finding places where the 1,300 employees could live. Most of the residential areas in New Orleans were devastated by flooding and are still uninhabitable. Hoskins says Harrah's hired two housing coordinators to find places for employees to live.</P>
<P>"We had set up relief centers after the storm, so we knew if they needed housing help," he said. "so what these two coordinators did was go out and they are trying to facilitate with the community and find all types of housing options. They have been really successful with that and we are very happy about it."</P>
<P>Carnival parades and parties have begun in neighborhoods across New Orleans, leading up to the grand celebration on February 28, known as Mardi Gras. City leaders hope this will give New Orleans a further boost, but it may be limited in impact. Fewer than half of the city's 3,000 pre-Katrina restaurants have reopened and hotel rooms are hard to find anywhere near the city.</P>
<P>Only about a third of the city's former residents have returned and many remain in hotels all across Louisiana and other states waiting to see if it will be possible for them to return.</P>
2006-3-9 10:08
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Bush calls on congress to approve budget requests </STRONG> </P>
<P>[rm=300,2,0]http://language.chinadaily.com.cn/audio/normal/2006/02/0211b.rm[/rm]</P>
<P>President Bush says it is an exciting time for the U.S. economy which added more new jobs in the past two-and-a-half years than the European Union and Japan combined.
<P>He told business leaders in the northern state of New Hampshire that the $2.7 trillion budget he sent to Congress this week will cut the federal deficit in half by 2009.
<P>And he warned them against moves by some congressional Democrats to allow parts of his record tax cuts to expire, as the president says that would hurt the economy.
<P>"You will hear the argument during the budget debates, you know all the noise coming out of Washington, that you need to raise taxes in order to balance the budget," Mr. Bush said. "I've been there long enough to tell you that's not the way Washington works. They're going to raise your taxes and they're going to find new ways to spend your money. The best way to reduce the deficit is to make sure we have pro-growth economic policies in place and be smart and wise about how we spend your money."
<P>The president also defended proposed cuts in health care and student loan programs.
<P>Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid called the budget "immoral," saying it cuts money for the poor and those least able to afford it, while favoring wealthier Americans and special interests.
<P>Despite an improving U.S. economy, recent opinion polls show the president's approval ratings are still below 50 percent. In speeches since last month's State of the Union address, the president has started speaking more directly about what he says is American anxiety about the future.
<P>"One of the interesting things we face here in America is in spite of the numbers and the economic growth, there is uncertainty," Mr. Bush said. "Some of the uncertainty comes as a result of competition from places like India and China. The temptation with [in response to] uncertainty and competition is to say, 'We can't compete. Let us kind of wall ourselves off."
<P>President Bush says he rejects protectionism and will keep America the world's economic leader not by fearing future competition but by shaping that future with good policies in Washington. </P>
2006-3-9 10:09
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Maryland's tobacco farmers struggling to survive</STRONG> </P>
<P>[rm=300,2,1]http://language.chinadaily.com.cn/audio/normal/2006/02/0209b.rm[/rm]</P>
<P>When David Cox cuts tobacco on his farm in Calvert County, Maryland, he uses a knife just like those used by farmers 300 years ago. He says this is the most efficient way of cutting tobacco because they have yet to invent a machine that can do this. <BR><BR>"Today we are harvesting tobacco. We have to manually cut the plant from the ground and then we can spear it on these sticks, which are then transferred to hang in a barn to cure."
<P>David and his crew continue to harvest tobacco despite changes that have swept through this county in recent years.
<P>Health concerns over cigarette smoking and lawsuits against tobacco companies have caused a rapid decline in the number of tobacco farms. In Maryland, the decline was accelerated by the state government, which used a portion of the funds from the tobacco industry's legal settlement to pay farmers not to grow tobacco. Many farmers took the money. <BR> <BR>But others, like Franklin Wood, refused the buyout. "It was very lucrative to people my age to take the money and go; it would have meant quite a bit of money to me. But I had a big philosophical difference with it and I didn't want to sell my freedom of choice."
<P>So farmers who took the money are prevented by law from growing tobacco or even storing a neighbor's crop in their barns, and many barns stand empty. This also means there will be fewer men like Joe Young to help harvest tobacco. "I've always been a hard worker, so the work doesn't bother me. But there aren't very many people who can even do this work anymore. We're some of the last of the breed, white and black."
<P>The younger generation doesn't want to continue tobacco farming either. Why put up with fluctuating market prices, labor shortages, and uncertain weather? Despite the hardships, Franklin Wood says it's in his blood. "It was part of our culture and our heritage. It's been part of our life. It paid the bills in my father's time and in my grandfather's time. It was the money crop, as everybody knows, back to colonial days."
<P>Mr. Cox adds, "It's been here in Southern Maryland since the settlers came and we don't know how much longer it will be here. But if the markets are acceptable to the few of us remaining, I'm sure it will stay awhile longer."
<P>On productive farms like David Cox's, tobacco returns more income per hectare than any other crop. And Calvert County, Maryland has a reputation for producing some of the finest tobacco in the world. David expects to sell his tobacco to buyers from Switzerland.</P>
2006-3-9 10:11
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>What to do about Asia's savings?</STRONG></P>
<P>[rm=300,2,0]http://language.chinadaily.com.cn/audio/normal/2006/02/0207a.rm[/rm]</P>
<P>While saving money can be a virtue, many experts warn that the vast foreign exchange reserves Asian governments have piled up could be risky. During the past few years, China and other countries in East Asia have amassed more than $3 trillion worth of foreign exchange.
<P>East Asia represents around 40 percent of the world's gross domestic product, but it controls an estimated two-thirds of the world's foreign exchange reserves. Much of this built up over the past three years and experts say if the pace continues, East Asia will have 75 percent of the world's reserves within five years.
<P>After massive currency speculation and a financial collapse depleted Asia's reserves in 1997, governments piled up savings to protect against another crisis. In 2004, South Korea's reserves were double the level in 2001. China says its reserves rose more than 34 percent in 2005 to $819 billion dollars -- nearly four times the level in 2001.
<P>Much of this money comes from export earnings and foreign investments flowing into the region. Asia's trading partners, however, argue that some of this growth is due to undervalued currencies, which make Asian exports artificially cheap.
<P>These reserves worry many economists. Professor Park Yung Chul of Seoul National University says governments have more than they need: “The accumulation of reserves by Asian countries, especially East Asian countries, is not an optimal and not very desirable development."
<P>Park says the situation could endanger global market stability. That is because most of the reserves are in U.S. assets, primarily Treasury bonds. That effectively makes Asia a major lender to the U.S. government, helping finance America's burgeoning trade and budget deficits.
<P>But economists warn if investors lose confidence in Washington's ability to deal with its deficits, they could sell their dollars -- which would weaken the currency. A particularly sudden loss of confidence in the dollar -- sparked perhaps by new terrorist attacks or a surge in oil prices -- could send financial markets into a freefall.
<P>Frank Harrigan is an economist with the Asian Development Bank, a non-profit lender in Manila. "If there were an abrupt halt in the demand for U.S. dollar assets, the dollar could then depreciate quickly and force the Federal Reserve to hike interest rates. This could push the U.S. economy toward recession and the knock-on effects on the global economy including Asia would then be serious," says Frank Harrigan.<BR> <BR>A U.S. recession would mean lower demand for Asian goods, which could drag down the region's economies. Moreover, a weak dollar would lower the value of the very reserves Asian central banks have piled up to protect themselves from market turmoil.
<P>Ideally, economists say, Asian central banks should spread their reserves into different currencies.
<P>Jan Lambregts, an economist in Singapore for the Dutch-owned Rabobank, says that would particularly cause problems for countries that limit how much their currencies move against the dollar. Countries such as China and Malaysia could be forced to buy dollars to keep their own currencies stable if the greenback is falling.
<P>"China would be facing the dilemma indeed that okay, the dollar's weakening, if we want to manage our currency we have to intervene again and accumulate even more [dollars]," says Jan Lambregest.
<P>To reduce risks, experts say Asia needs to wean itself from relying on exports for economic growth.
<P>Harrigan of the A.D.B. says Asia is not spending enough at home and should be using reserves to build infrastructure -- roads, ports, power systems, water supplies -- and to stimulate domestic consumption. That, economists say, would promote long-term growth."In Asia, low levels of domestic investment demand explain much of the current surplus we now see across the region. The types of measures that would be more suitable are structural rather than macro-economic, they would be measures aimed at improving the climate of business investment and making the operation of the financial systems more efficient and safer," says Harrigan.
<P>Many U.S. and European officials also say ending rigid exchange rate systems would help solve the problem, because stronger local currencies would cut trade surpluses. <BR> <BR>Asian governments, however, are unlikely to abandon their export-oriented economic blueprint any time soon -- simply because it is has been key to their growth. And calls for liberalizing managed exchange rate systems have yielded limited results.
<P>Some economists say foreign exchange adjustments are only one piece of a complex puzzle and may not work as well as hoped in correcting trade imbalances.
<P>A recent study by the Center for Economic Policy Research, or C.E.P.R., in London says the best way to ease imbalances would be for Asian governments, the United States and the European Union to coordinate policy.
<P>It says that while Asia needs to make changes, the U.S. also has to save more and cut spending.
<P>One example of such coordination was the Plaza Accord of 1985. An agreement by Japan, the U.S., Britain, Germany and France allowed the yen to appreciate against the dollar, helping the U.S. cut its trade deficit and begin a period of growth.
<P>But Professor Park of Seoul National University, who is one of the authors of the C.E.P.R. study, said no coordination is likely any time soon. He says that is primarily because China is wary of making drastic changes to its managed currency, and the United States feels small changes are not enough.</P>
2006-3-9 10:12
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>America's "Green Card Lottery" to be eliminated </STRONG></P>
<P>[rm=300,2,0]http://language.chinadaily.com.cn/audio/normal/2006/02/0206a.rm[/rm]</P>
<P>It is an American immigration program that is well-known everywhere in the world except the United States, and it could be eliminated before the end of the year.
<P>The Diversity Visa Program - or what is sometimes called the "Green Card Lottery" - has been targeted for elimination by the United States House of Representatives. If the Senate adopts a similar move, a program that has brought more than half a million immigrants to the United States will end.
<P>Among the people who have benefited from this program is Freddy Adu, the young "DC United" soccer player whom many are hoping will finally bring international respect to America's soccer program. Adu came to the United States nine years ago from Ghana. He was just 8 years old when his mother won a visa in the Green Card lottery.
<P>The Diversity Visa Program was launched in 1995 as a way of expanding the immigrant population to include people from countries that were not strongly represented in the immigrant pool. Believe it or not, in the mid-1990s, that actually meant northern Europeans - especially the Irish -- who were given favored status in the early years of the program, since their numbers had been plummeting since the 1960s.
<P>Today, anyone from an under-represented country who has a high school diploma and access to a computer can submit his name -- and hope it is one of the 50,000 randomly selected to receive a green card, allowing him to live and work in the United States.
<P>"Overseas, it's such a positive promotional tool for living the American Dream," says California Congresswoman Linda Sanchez, who has been a staunch supporter of the program. "It gives people the chance to hope and dream about coming to the United States one day."
<P>Ms. Sanchez says the green card lottery enriches American culture by enabling people with unique talents who might not otherwise be allowed to come to the United States to get a green card. "Because most immigration is family-based petitions - that means people who have relatives currently living in the United States (are) sponsor(ed by) them, and then they come - you tend to have immigration from specific countries more than others," she says. "And the Diversity Program was created so that you would make that pool a lot more diverse, and that adds to our country, in terms of expertise that people bring from other countries, and knowledge."
<P>Unfortunately, sometimes green card winners bring more than just knowledge with them when they come to the United States - they bring angry politics and a tendency toward violence. That was the case with Hisham Hedayet, an Egyptian-born immigrant who received a green card through the Diversity Visa Program, and then, in 2002, killed and injured several people at an Israeli airline ticket counter at Los Angeles International Airport.
<P>Hedayet is part of the reason Congressman Bob Goodlatte of Virginia has campaigned heavily to eliminate the Diversity Visa Program. "The State Department has identified this program, which gives 50,000 green cards away, not based upon having a job skill that's in short supply in the United States, not based upon family re-unification, but simply based on pure luck, as an opportunity for terrorist organizations," Mr. Goodlatte says. "(These groups can) submit names of people and get permanent residence in the United States."
<P>But if a terrorist gets in, according to Linda Sanchez, it is because the screening process has failed - not because of the Diversity Visa Program itself. Green card lottery winners undergo the same background checks that all potential visa recipients receive, and Congresswoman Sanchez says that screening process is in dire need of improvement.
<P>But Bob Goodlatte says terrorists are just part of the problem. He says it is also an issue of fairness. "People who have legitimate reasons for coming to the United States," he notes, "wait in long lines, sometimes for years, while somebody who has no ties to the United States simply puts their name into this lottery program and has it drawn, and then they cut to the head of the line."
<P>It took him a few years, but in December of 2005, Congressman Goodlatte convinced a majority of his colleagues in the House to end the Diversity Visa Program. The issue now goes to the Senate, and both Mr. Goodlatte and Ms. Sanchez expect lawmakers there will vote to eliminate the program. </P>
2006-3-9 10:13
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Film festivals bring Hollywood to Park City, World </STRONG></P>
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<P><EM>This week thousands of movie directors, writers, actors and Hollywood executives are huddled together in the ski resort town of Park City, Utah attending two independent film festivals. One is the now prestigious and well-established Sundance Festival, which was started with support from actor Robert Redford 22 years ago. The other is a more free-spirited event called the Slamdance Festival, which is now in its 12th year.</EM>
<P>Independent film producers were once on the fringes of the movie industry, struggling to have their works seen in small theaters and rented halls. The Sundance Festival has helped change all that by giving independent films recognition and all-important exposure. </P>
<P>The Sundance festival and the Slamdance Festival, which takes place at the same time, have put Park City, Utah on the Hollywood map. Every January, this ski resort with a population of about 7,000 hosts more than double that number of people who come to the festivals.</P>
<P>Craig McCarthy of the Park City Chamber of Commerce says the town takes on a lot of glitter and glamour as a result. "It is a really neat change of pace to all of a sudden have over 15,000 additional people who do not come from the ski and snowboard world as our normal customers do," he said. "It makes the town quite lively and it is just a really fun time for all of us."</P>
<P>Mr. McCarthy says the festivals also bring in about $22 million to the local economy.</P>
<P>But millions of people around the world who are unable to go to Park City can also participate in the festivals, thanks to modern technology.</P>
<P>Many of the films will end up being shown on cable television channels around the world and winning films are almost assured of distribution on DVDs, which are distributed worldwide. </P>
<P>But technology has a more immediate impact through the internet. The Sundance Festival is offering free, real-time online showings of some of the films entered in this year's competition on Sundance.org. The Slamdance Festival also has free viewings of short films on its web site, Slamdance.com.</P>
<P>Slamdance co-founder and independent filmmaker Dan Mirvish, speaking to VOA by telephone from Park City, says the festival has grown into something much bigger than a ten-day event.</P>
<P>"We also have a full, year-round operation with a screenplay competition, we have a web site, Slamdance.com, where you can watch short films year round. We do screenings once a month in New York and events in L.A. [Los Angeles] We travel around the world actually. We have done events everywhere from China to Chile to Stockholm, Sweden to Cannes," said Mirvish. "So we really have a global presence one way or another now."</P>
<P>Mirvish says the internet now plays a big role in the festival. All through the year, he says, short films are shown on the web site so that online viewers can rate them.</P>
<P>"Those then actually come to Park City and then they are voted on in Park City and on our web site. So it is a separate and parallel competition," he added. "It is a nice way to have a sort of year-round competition."</P>
<P>Mirvish says technology, in the form of small digital cameras and computer editing programs has also made it possible for anyone, anywhere to make a film.</P>
<P>"It is amazing what you can do with these cameras. Every year they get a little better and fancier," he said. "There is no reason you cannot shoot a film for $5,000, $10,000, or $500 or even $50, if you have the camera. Then the editing and post production and sound work that you can do on your MacIntosh or whatever computer is amazing."</P>
<P>Dan Mirvish shot his latest film, Open House: A Real Estate Musical Comedy, with digital video cameras. The film is now out on DVD and has become a cult favorite around the country. In fact, he says, Open House has taken on a life of its own.</P>
<P>"People all around the country and it is starting to be around the world now, too, watch the film and they are throwing their own real estate open house parties, where they make finger sandwiches, which is kind of a key thing in the movie, and they are sending in home videos of them watching the film. It has become a bit of an interactive thing," said Mirvish. "Now there are high schools that actually want to do stage versions of the film, because it is a musical."</P>
<P>Both the Sundance and Slamdance festivals wrap up this weekend (Jan 29), but independent filmmakers around the world are invited to prepare submissions for next year's competitions.</P>
2006-3-9 10:15
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Mobile phone gambling on the rise in Asia </STRONG></P>
<P>[rm=300,2,0]http://language.chinadaily.com.cn/audio/normal/2006/01/0123a.rm[/rm]</P>
<P><EM>Gambling by mobile phone is on the rise worldwide and the biggest growth in the industry is expected to take place in Asia. But, an unclear legal situation in most of the region could slow the market's growth.</EM> <BR><BR>Governments from Singapore to South Korea are increasingly lifting restrictions on gambling. But gamblers do not have to wait for new casinos to open to place their bets: They can just use their mobile phones.
<P>Walter Adamson, an Australian consultant for Internet and mobile services, says the requirement for what is called mobile gambling is a phone that can connect to the Internet, where gaming operators offer special sites.
<P>"The provider of your system needs to provide a mobile Internet service and many telephone companies, particularly in Japan, [South] Korea and increasingly in China, provide Internet services on the mobile phone," said Walter Adamson. "Then they can access any Internet site that is designed for access by mobile phones."
<P>Europe is the largest market for mobile gambling, but telecommunications analysts predict that Asia will catch up soon.
<P>British Informa, a telecom and media consulting company, forecasts that close to 100 million people in the Asia-Pacific region will use mobile phones to place bets in 2010, half of the users globally.
<P>The mobile gambling market in Asia is just starting to take off. Its growth is still limited by the lack of suitable phones. Another obstacle for gaming operators is the unclear legal situation in many places.
<P>Legal gambling by phone is so far restricted to only a few countries. In Hong Kong, gamblers can use mobile phones to bet on horses and football through the city's Jockey Club, and China authorizes lotteries via mobile phone. But remote casino-style gambling is only allowed in the Philippines and Macau. In most of the region, mobile gambling remains a gray area in terms of government regulations.
<P>But Yap Wai Ming, director of the Stamford Law Corporation in Singapore, says even in those places gambling by phone is already available.
<P>"Legally it is not possible but practically speaking people are already offering it," said Yap Wai Ming. "I give you an example, the casino. There are a lot of Internet casinos that are not regulated but people are still playing on it and money is still being exchanged. Only if they are caught they will be punished."
<P>Gambling has long been a passion in much of Asia, with legal and illegal operators running lotteries, horse races, cockfights and other betting games. Some countries have expanded legal gambling in recent years, including Hong Kong, which has legalized soccer betting, and Singapore, which plans to allow its first casino to open in a few years.
<P>Many governments are cautious about legalizing mobile betting, because it draws money away from legal domestic operators, which pay taxes, or because of social concerns about the dangers of gambling.
<P>Gambling operators hope that regulatory and technical challenges will be resolved in the next few years, because the mobile gambling market is lucrative. The Asia-Pacific region is forecast to generate revenue of nearly $3 billion in 2010. </P>
2006-3-9 10:16
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Rice reorganizing US foreign aid efforts </STRONG></P>
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<P>Secretary Rice is stopping short of folding the independent U.S. Agency for International Development, USAID, into the State Department.
<P>But she is giving the new head of that agency the concurrent title of Director of U.S. Foreign Assistance, with an office in the State Department, in an effort to end what is seen as a lack of structure and accountability in America's nearly $20 billion a year overseas aid effort.
<P>The secretary of state made the announcement in the second phase of a broad restructuring of the U.S. diplomatic corps that she has termed transformational diplomacy, emphasizing democracy building and market economics.
<P>She is naming former business executive and the outgoing chief of the Bush administration's global anti-HIV/AIDS program, Randall Tobias, to be the new foreign aid director, who will have the rank of deputy secretary of state.
<P>Rice said the move will create a more unified and rational leadership structure over U.S. aid efforts which are spread across many agencies in addition to the State Department and USAID.
<P>She said it will focus U.S. foreign assistance on promoting greater ownership and responsibility for recipient countries and their citizens.
<P>"Our foreign assistance must help people get results. The resources we commit must empower developing countries to strengthen security, to consolidate democracy, to increase trade and investment, and to improve the lives of their people," she said. "America's foreign assistance must promote responsible sovereignty, not permanent dependency."
<P>There had been reports that the secretary wanted to scrap USAID, independent since its creation 1961, and fold it into the State Department. But that would have required legislation and a possible battle with agency supporters in Congress.
<P>The foreign aid shakeup came only a day after Rice announced a redeployment of U.S. overseas diplomats from a Cold War-era focus on Europe to the developing world and emerging powers in Asia.
<P>She told the foreign aid gathering that action will require new skills and career paths for the 6,400 strong U.S. diplomatic corps.
<P>"We are forward-deploying our people to the cities and countries and regions where they are needed most. We are moving our diplomats from Europe and Washington to critical countries like China and India and South Africa and Indonesia. We are giving more of our people new training and language skills to engage directly with foreign peoples," she said. "And we are empowering our diplomats to work more jointly with America's service men and women."
<P>The secretary served notice that diplomats cannot expect to be promoted to senior levels unless they have served in hardship and dangerous posts and are fluent in two foreign languages, citing Chinese, Arabic and Urdu as preferred examples.
<P>About 100 State Department jobs in Washington and Europe are immediately being shifted to embassies in new priority countries, and officials say more than 2,000 positions will eventually be affected.<BR></P>
2006-3-9 10:17
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Europeans to call emergency IAEA meeting on Iran </STRONG>
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<P>The British Foreign Office says the meeting is being called for February 2 and 3 of the 35-nation board of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
<P>The objective is for the IAEA to refer Iran to the U.N. Security Council. The Council, in turn, could impose sanctions on Iran for restarting its nuclear program at a <FONT color=#808000>uranium enrichment</FONT> facility.
<P>The British statement comes after a close-door meeting in London of senior officials from Britain, France and Germany, along with their counterparts from the United States, Russia and China.
<P>All the countries hold permanent seats on the Security Council, except for Germany.
<P>The European countries still <FONT color=#808000>hold out hope</FONT> for a diplomatic settlement with Iran after last week declaring negotiations had hit a dead end. British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw says the Security Council does not necessarily have to impose sanctions.
<P>"There are plenty of examples where a matter is referred to the Security Council, and the Security Council takes action, and that action is followed without the need for decisions on sanctions," he said.
<P>Diplomats say the main focus of Monday's meeting in London was to convince Russia and China of the need to ratchet up pressure on Iran.
<P>Russian President Vladimir Putin says his country is moving closer to the Western position on Iran. China, which buys a considerable amount of Iranian oil, is urging restraint and more negotiations with Tehran.
<P>Iran says it wants nuclear power for peaceful, civilian purposes. But the United States and the major European Union powers suspect Iran intends to build nuclear weapons.
<P>International concern also has risen since Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad recently said Israel should be, in his words, "wiped off the map." <BR></P>
2006-3-9 10:19
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Laura Bush arrives in Africa </STRONG></P>
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<P>Traditional Ghanaian drummers welcomed Mrs. Bush to Accra. She will meet with Ghanaian President John Kufour during this visit, and announce a partnership between six American universities and six African nations to develop individual kindergarten-through-eighth-grade curriculums.
<P>She will also visit Nigeria to meet with President Olusegun Obasanjo, and speak about HIV/AIDS prevention at a hospital in the capital, Abuja.
<P>But the <FONT color=#808000>centerpiece</FONT> of this trip is Monday's inauguration of Liberian Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf as Africa's first female head of state.
<P>Speaking to reporters en route to Africa, Mrs. Bush said the Liberian president-elect is a shining example of women's empowerment.
<P>The first lady is leading a delegation that includes her daughter, Barbara, and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer says the strength of the delegation shows President Bush's commitment to Liberia and women's rights.
<P>"President Bush is sending this high-level delegation to underscore the importance of Liberia's transition from war to peace, and towards a democratic consolidation for the Liberian people, the continent of Africa and the world at large," said Frazer. "The election of Africa's first female president is an inspiration for young girls and women across the continent."
<P>The Bush administration last year contributed more than $840 million to Liberia, the bulk of which went to pay for United Nations peacekeepers. It also included $60 million to train Liberian police and $90 million to help returning refugees.
<P>Mrs. Bush said one of the biggest problems facing Liberia is massive unemployment.
<P>There is also the question of former rebel leader and head-of-state Charles Taylor, who is currently living in exile in Nigeria. Taylor started the war that ultimately toppled former military ruler Samuel Doe. Taylor is now wanted by a war crimes tribunal for his alleged support for human rights abuses in the civil war in neighboring Sierra Leone.
<P>Assistant Secretary of State Frazer says the Bush administration still wants Taylor held accountable for his actions.
<P>"Clearly, the United States continues to seek Charles Taylor having to answer, to be accountable for the atrocities he carried out in Sierra Leone, where he is indicted by the Sierra Leone special court, and throughout the Mano River states," said Frazer. "He was one of the major sources of instability in the region."
<P>During a visit to Washington after her election, Mrs. Johnson-Sirleaf asked Secretary of State Rice about Taylor. Frazer says the secretary told the president-elect that Washington will continue to pursue the matter, and was encouraged by Nigerian President Obasanjo's statement to the U.N. General Assembly that the former Liberian leader should be turned over to the special court. <BR></P>
2006-3-9 10:20
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>US supreme court nominee faces second day of </STRONG></P>
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<P>Judge Samuel Alito was asked repeatedly about statements he made as a lawyer in the Reagan administration in support of executive branch power. Some Democrats expressed concerns that Alito backed expanded powers for the Alito responded that the president does not have a "blank check" in terms of power, even in wartime. "Our Constitution applies in times of peace and in times of war, and it protects the rights of Americans under all circumstances," he said.
<P>Alito was asked about President Bush's decision to order, without warrants, <FONT color=#808000>eavesdropping</FONT> on phone calls of Americans suspected of having ties to terrorists. Some lawmakers have questioned the legality of the decision, but Alito declined to comment directly on the matter.
<P>On the issue of abortion, Alito was asked about memos he wrote during his time in the Reagan administration in support of eroding abortion rights.
<P>He responded that he was reflecting the views of the administration at the time, and vowed to approach abortion cases with an open mind.
<P>Some Democrats were not convinced, and expressed concern that Alito, if confirmed, would try to overturn the 1973 Supreme Court case known as Roe versus Wade that legalized abortion.
<P>Senator Charles Schumer is a New York Democrat. "We can only conclude that if the question came before you, it is very likely you would vote to overrule Roe v. Wade," he said.
<P>As he began his questioning of Alito, Senator John Cornyn, a Texas Republican, accused some Democrats of searching for any way to defeat his nomination. "I do think there are those who have already decided to vote against your nomination and are looking for some reason to do so," he said.
<P>For his part, Alito maintained a calm <FONT color=#808000>demeanor</FONT> throughout the long day. In response to one Senator's question, he offered an assessment of the confirmation process so far: "At times it has been a thrill, and at times it has been disorienting," he said.
<P>If confirmed, Alito would succeed retiring Justice Sandra Day O'Connor. She is considered a centrist and often cast the deciding vote in 5-4 rulings in controversial cases. Some Democrats argue Alito would shift the ideological balance of the court to the right.</P>
2006-3-9 10:21
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Sharon shows independent movement and breathing </STRONG></P>
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<P>Dr. Shlomo Mor-Yosef, the director of Jerusalem's Hadassah Hospital, says Mr. Sharon also displayed independent movement. The developments came after Mr. Sharon's doctors began reducing the amount of <FONT color=#808000>anesthetic</FONT> he is receiving, in a procedure designed to revive him from his medically induced coma. The Hadassah Hospital director says Mr. Sharon is clearly displaying brain activity.
<P>"The first was a spontaneous breathing of the prime minister, even though he is still connected to a ventilator," said Dr. Mor-Yosef. "During the day until now, his response to pain that we evoked showed that he started to move minimally. His right hand and right leg moved. These signs, together with slight elevation of his blood pressure as a reaction to pain, are signs of some brain activity."
<P>Dr. Mor-Yosef says Mr. Sharon's medical diagnosis is that he remains in <FONT color=#808000>critical condition</FONT> , with some signs of brain activity.
<P>Mr. Sharon's neurosurgeon, Dr. Felix Umansky, says Mr. Sharon's reaction to pain on Monday was not a reflex. The Argentina-born doctor, one of the world's top neurosurgeons, says the recovery process for Mr. Sharon will be long and difficult.
<P>"We are just at the beginning of a long way he needs to undergo. We need to be very cautious when talking about the prognosis, but we are going to do everything we can to help him to pull through this situation," he said.
<P>Dr. Umansky's eventual assessment of Mr. Sharon's cognitive state will be sent to Israel's attorney general, who will decide whether or not to declare Mr. Sharon permanently incapacitated.
<P>Mr. Sharon's deputy, Ehud Olmert, has been declared acting prime minister for 100 days, so no quick decision is expected from the attorney general about a declaration regarding Mr. Sharon's state.
<P>If Israel's attorney general declares Ariel Sharon permanently incapacitated, then Israel's Cabinet would have to elect a new prime minister from among the five Cabinet members who belong to the Kadima Party, which Ariel Sharon founded last November to contest elections due at the end of March.</P>
2006-3-9 10:22
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>WHO says cooked poultry, eggs not bird flu risk </STRONG></P>
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<P>The World Health Organization says it is worried people may stop eating chicken because of the growing concern about bird flu. During the mad cow scare, sales of beef plummeted. WHO spokesman Ian Simpson tells VOA there is no need to panic.
<P>"At this stage, there is no evidence of anyone having become sick, anyone becoming infected with avian influenza as a result of eating properly cooked, properly prepared meat and egg from poultry," said Mr. Simpson. "So, there is no reason to stop eating chicken. There is no reason to stop eating eggs. But, there is every reason to insure that any chicken meat, any poultry meat or any eggs that are consumed are properly prepared and properly cooked."
<P>The World Health Organization says thorough cooking will kill any virus, including the deadly H5N1 strain of avian flu. Eggs from sick birds could also contain the virus. So, the World Health Organization advises people from affected areas not to eat raw, or undercooked eggs.
<P>The U.N. health agency says birds from diseased flocks should not enter the food chain, and infected birds should not be used for animal feed. But, the World Health Organization says consumers run no risk of getting the virus through handling or eating poultry in areas where there is no bird flu outbreak.
<P>Mr. Simpson says people in affected areas often are exposed to the H5N1 virus during the slaughtering and subsequent handling of diseased or dead birds. He says people can take precautionary measures.
<P>"For example, if people are preparing them, they should ideally be wearing protection of their face, and also protection of their hands," he added. "That the area where they are protecting them should be a hygienic area. It should be able to be completely cleaned, so that, at the end of the day, or at the end of the shift, when the chickens have been prepared, that all of the waste material is gotten rid of safely and hygienically, so that the waste material does not pose any risk to people coming into the area afterwards."
<P>The World Health Organization says raw meat should be separated from cooked or ready-to-eat foods to avoid contamination. It says people preparing food in areas with avian-flu outbreaks should wash hands frequently, and all surfaces and utensils that have been in contact with raw meat should be washed and disinfected. </P>
2006-3-9 11:13
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Bush discusses Iraq with former cabinet members </STRONG></P>
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<P>The president sat at a long wooden table, surrounded by current and former top foreign policy and defense officials.
<P>There were about a dozen in attendance, split evenly between members of past Republican and Democratic administrations dating back to the 1960s.
<P>President Bush said he welcomed their suggestions on the way forward in Iraq.
<P>"Not everybody around this table agreed with my decision to go into Iraq, and I fully understand that," said Mr. Bush. "But these are good solid Americans, who understand that we have got to succeed now that we are there."
<P>He said he is grateful for their ideas and promised to "take to heart" their advice. But the president made clear he does not plan any major changes in his Iraq strategy.
<P>"We have a dual track strategy for victory," he added, "On the one hand, we will work to have a political process that says to all Iraqis: 'the future belongs to you.' On the other hand, we will continue to work on the security situation there."
<P>His guests were briefed on that strategy and the current situation on the ground in Iraq by top military commanders and the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad . Current Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld were also present to help update their predecessors.
<P>After the session, Harold Brown, who served as former President Jimmy Carter's secretary of defense in the 1970s, spoke with reporters. He said the situation in Iraq is difficult, but there are signs of progress.
<P>"My own belief is that the evolution of the political situation there over the next few months is going to be crucial to how it all turns out," he said.
<P>Others attending the meeting included President Bush's first-term secretary of state, Colin Powell, and several former Clinton administration officials. They left the White House quietly, and made no public comments after the session.</P>
2006-3-9 11:15
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Lobbyist's guilty plea sends shock waves through US </STRONG></P>
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<P>As Mr. Abramoff entered guilty pleas on conspiracy, fraud and tax evasion charges in a federal court in Washington, and later in a Florida court, shockwaves were spreading through Congress.
<P>In the months leading up to Mr. Abramoff's court appearances, lawmakers were bracing for the impact, and some two dozen had returned money they had received from the former lobbyist or his clients, who included Native American groups.
<P>Among the latest to do so was Republican House Speaker, Dennis Hastert, who announced he would donate $69,000 received from Mr. Abramoff to charity.
<P>Similar announcements came from the former House Majority Leader, Tom DeLay, and Congressman Roy Blunt, the Republican acting as temporary House leader while Mr. DeLay fights criminal charges related to campaign financing.
<P>Republican Congressman Bob Ney, who is among at least half a dozen, but possibly as many as 20 members of Congress believed to be the focus of the federal corruption probe, also announced he would return funds.
<P>Also on Wednesday, President Bush's 2004 re-election campaign announced it is donating to charity $6,000 in contributions connected to Mr. Abramoff.
<P>In announcing that decision, White House Spokesman Scott McClellan stressed that Mr. Abramoff's activities touched on Democrats as well as Republicans.
<P>"I think we are taking the appropriate steps in terms of this individual, [it is] similar to what we have done with previous individuals that may have been involved in wrongdoing that have contributed money too," he said. "And I think in terms of others making those decisions, it is up to them, but there are certainly people on both sides of the [political] aisle that ought to take a look at that."
<P>The federal corruption probe involving Mr. Abramoff has sparked calls in both chambers of Congress for a new push to reform laws relating to lobbying.
<P>Efforts have been underway in the Senate and in the House to do just that. Speaking in a telephone news conference, Democratic Senator Russ Feingold says lawmakers were aware for some time that the Abramoff affair would highlight the need for changes.
<P>"It is typically the shame factor or the fear factor [when] members of Congress realize that this is hurting their reputation that often leads people to be willing to change the <FONT color=#808000>status quo</FONT>, so I think it will of course put some wind in our sails and help us get the reform that is needed," he said.
<P>In addition to the federal probe into Mr. Abramoff's activities, Senator John McCain has been leading an investigation in a Senate committee looking at activities involving Native American tribes.
<P>The Abramoff guilty pleas have re-focused attention on mechanisms Congress has to deal with corruption by lawmakers.
<P>However, the House of Representatives Ethics Committee has been virtually paralyzed over the past year amid political battles over procedures, and it is unclear how the equivalent committee in the Senate will deal with <FONT color=#808000>reverberations</FONT> from the Abramoff matter.
<P>With Republicans who control Congress worried about the longer-term effects of the scandal leading to mid-term elections next November, the biggest political impact may be felt in the House, which returns to work a few weeks from now.
<P>There, Republicans must decide whether to hold a new leadership election that would formally replace Congressman DeLay whose legal troubles in Texas, and questions raised in the Abramoff investigation, could effectively rule out his return to power in Washington.</P>
2006-3-9 11:18
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Bush seeks Patriot Act extension</STRONG></P>
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<P>President Bush says he will spend the next 30 days trying to convince Congress and the American people that the nation needs a permanent extension of the anti-terrorism laws known as the Patriot Act.
<P>"The American people expect to be protected, and the Patriot Act is a really important tool for them to stay protected," the president said.
<P>First passed following the September 2001 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, those broader police powers were due to expire at the end of 2005. Congress gave the president just a one-month extension through February 3 amidst concerns from Democrats and some Republicans that parts of the Patriot Act threaten civil liberties.
<P>The laws give investigators broader powers to seize library and medical records as well as to conduct roving <FONT color=#808000>wiretaps</FONT>. Opponents are also concerned about what they say is limited Congressional and judicial oversight.
<P>President Bush says there is plenty of oversight in the Patriot Act. He says critics are putting partisan politics ahead of national security.
<P>"There's oversight on this important program," he said. "And now when it came time to renew the act, for partisan reasons in my mind, people have not stepped up and have agreed that it is still necessary to protect the country. The enemy has not gone away. They are still there. And I expect Congress to understand that we are still at war, and they have got to give us the tools necessary to win this war."
<P>This will be the president's first legislative challenge of the new year and comes at a time of new questions about expanding executive power following the president's admission that he authorized the surveillance of telephone calls without a court warrant.
<P>President Bush says those <FONT color=#808000>intercepts</FONT> are strictly limited to communications where one of the parties is outside the United States, and then only to people with known links to terrorist groups.
<P>He says media reports that uncovered the operation have helped America's enemies by revealing U.S. intelligence techniques. The Justice Department is investigating how reporters learned of the program.
<P>Congress will investigate the intercepts themselves and whether the president exceeded his power by authorizing them without a court order.</P>
2006-3-9 11:19
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Ivory coast transitional government draws mixed </STRONG></P>
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<P>Angry supporters of Ivory Coast's president, Laurent Gbagbo, took to the streets in Abidjan Wednesday, as government radio broadcast the list of ministers in the new Cabinet.
<P>Hundreds of militants, known as Young Patriots, threw up <FONT color=#808000>barricades</FONT> and burned tires in a part of the city considered a pro-Gbagbo <FONT color=#808000>stronghold</FONT>. Security forces dispersed the crowd, firing shots in the air. The head of the army, General Philippe Mangou, called for calm.
<P>A militant supporter of the president, Patricia Hamza, says the youths were protesting the presence of two rebel leaders in the new Cabinet.
<P>"We can't accept these men in the government," said Ms. Hamza. "Normally, they must have nothing in the government. Because they [took up] arms, we are in this situation today. The future is not good, and I'm very pessimistic for the future."
<P>Prime Minister Charles Konan Banny will, himself, take over the position of finance minister. The post had previously been held by a supporter of the president.<BR><BR>A member of Ivory Coast's former ruling party, which is now in opposition, Claude Ahobaut, like many political leaders, has hope for Mr. Banny's Cabinet.
<P>He blames the Young Patriots for trying to block a peace process aimed at ending the country's three-year-old civil war. He says the new government must now adhere to a United Nations roadmap for peace that calls for disarmament and presidential elections in 2006.
<P>The leader of the New Forces rebels, Guillaume Soro, and the Number two in the movement, Louis Dakoury Tabley, both have positions in the Cabinet. <BR><BR>But a rebel spokesman, Cisse Sindou, says supporters of Mr. Gbagbo have too much power in the new body. And, he says, the prime minister must now be allowed to do his job.
<P>"No, we are not satisfied with the new composition, but we are giving the benefit of the doubt to the prime minister," said Mr. Sindou. "We are waiting to see how the prime minister is going to have the full power that the resolution 1633 says that he has to have."
<P>Civil war broke out in Ivory Coast in late 2002. A 2003 French-brokered peace deal created a buffer zone separating rebels in the north from government troops in the south.</P>
2006-3-9 11:20
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>US General in Iraq gives hopeful security assessment</STRONG></P>
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<P>Brigadier General Donald Alston says Iraqi security forces have made great strides in numbers and capabilities. Speaking with reporters Thursday, the lead communications officer for the multinational force in Iraq said conditions in many parts of the country remain <FONT color=#808000>perilous</FONT>, but are markedly improved from a year ago.
<P>"The calculus has changed, because we have 223,000 Iraqi security forces that are in the fight," General Alston said. "The calculus has changed because Iraqi security forces are now deployed throughout the country. The calculus has changed because the Iraqi security forces are doing a better job manning and securing their borders, which is denying and disrupting the flow of the critical sustenance that comes from outside the country to support Zarqawi's efforts."
<P>General Alston said insurgents and terrorists, led by Jordanian-born Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, have shown themselves unable to sustain the massive, spectacular bombing attacks that were all too common last year, despite surges in post-balloting violence, most recently after Iraq's national elections earlier this month.
<P>"Just as we expected and saw for the [constitutional] referendum [earlier this year], once elections security measures were lifted, attacks increased," continued General Alston. "We are seeing that now, as well. However, the insurgency is showing little capacity to sustain numerous and persistent elevated attack levels."
<P>The general said insurgents have increasingly turned to smaller-scale attacks, and that even these less-lethal incidents should diminish over time. He gave credit to Iraqi security forces, but said political participation by Iraq's <FONT color=#808000>disgruntled</FONT> Sunni minority has also been helpful, saying, "the choice of ballots over bullets was a very positive development."
<P>Thursday, a suicide bomber killed four police officers in Baghdad, while gunmen killed at least 11 people in Latifiyah.
<P>Critics of the war in Iraq have alleged that the pace of training Iraqi security forces has been too slow, and that disbanding the country's army after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion was a mistake.</P>
2006-3-9 11:26
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Thailand and India mark tsunami </STRONG></P>
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<P>In Thailand, Buddhist monks <FONT color=#808000>chant</FONT> a prayer for those who died in the tsunami.
<P>In Indonesia's Aceh Province, officials sound a new tsunami-warning siren as part of the memorial ceremonies for the more than 169,000 who died there.
<P>In the Sri Lankan town of Galle, people pause as a clock tower counts down the moments before 9:26 a.m., the exact time a year ago the tsunami struck the country.
<P>Mourners gathered also in India, Malaysia and even in Sweden, which lost more than 500 citizens in the tsunami. They were among the thousands of Europeans who were visiting the region's warm beaches for the Christmas holidays when the tsunami struck. More than 2,500 tourists from around the world were among those lost.
<P>The massive earthquake and the tsunami it triggered on December 26 last year swept across the Indian Ocean, and wiped out more than a quarter million lives. Entire communities were swept away. In what was in many ways a global tragedy, hundreds-of-thousands of people were left homeless, jobless, without schools or hospitals.
<P>And around the globe, people rose to help the devastated communities. More than $13.5 billion were raised to rebuild the region. Volunteer aid workers and military missions from many countries took up the task of bringing food, water, medicine and shelter to the victims.
<P>Leaders from around the world joined in the memorial observances Monday. In a recorded message to the people of Aceh, Kofi Annan, the secretary-general of the United Nations, said that, despite the record outpouring of aid and a massive rebuilding effort, the suffering continues for many.
<P>"Yet in some ways, the most challenging days lie ahead," he said. "Bread-winners desperately need to regain secure livelihoods. Hundreds-of-thousands of families need to re-establish themselves in permanent homes, and communities need to rebuild." <BR><BR>In his video message to Aceh, President Bush praised the strength and resilience of the survivors who are rebuilding their lives and communities.
<P>"One year after the tsunami, Americans of all faiths join nations around the world in the spirit of unity, remembrance and resolve. May Almighty God comfort all those affected by the tsunami, and give them strength," said Mr. Bush.
<P>Among the many tasks that remain for those involved in the reconstruction is finding ways to prevent another such tragedy. Indian Ocean nations are trying to develop a regional system to warn of possible tsunamis. And Mr. Annan says that the United Nations is working to learn from the tsunami, to find ways to speed aid around the world the next time disaster strikes. </P>
2006-3-9 11:27
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Bush steps up appeal to congress to extend anti-terror </STRONG></P>
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<P>The group of senators who blocked the bill renewing the Patriot Act from coming to a vote last week do not want provisions of the law to expire, as they are set to do on December 31.
<P>Instead, the senators - mostly minority Democrats, but some majority Republicans - want to extend the current law by three months to allow lawmakers to strengthen civil liberties' protections in the legislation. <BR><BR>They released a letter sent to Majority Leader Bill Frist signed by 52 senators who support such an extension in the 100-member senate.
<P>Senator Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat, is leading the effort.
<P>"What we are trying to do is achieve a balanced and effective Patriot Act, one that promotes our security and preserves our freedom," he said.
<P>Senator John Sununu, a New Hampshire Republican, is also behind the effort.
<P>"There is no reason why we need to leave here without keeping elements of the Patriot Act in place," he said.
<P>But Majority Leader Frist dismissed the idea, saying the proposed legislation to renew the Patriot Act is an improvement over the current law.<BR><BR>"It is a better bill," he said. "Everybody agrees that the current bill that is on the floor is a better bill."
<P>President Bush also opposes any extension of the current law, and repeated his call on the Senate to end delays and renew the Patriot Act.
<P>"This obstruction is <FONT color=#808000>inexcusable</FONT>," he said. "The Senators obstructing the Patriot Act need to understand that the expiration of this vital law will endanger America and will leave us in a weaker position in the fight against brutal killers."
<P>At issue are provisions up for renewal that include those dealing with wiretapping and access to library and business records that critics say give too much power to the government.
<P>Attorney General Alberto Gonzales argues otherwise. He says there are civil liberties' protections in the legislation, and any changes to the bill could hamper law enforcement efforts. </P>
2006-3-9 11:29
tanlaoshi
<P><STRONG>Saddam back in court as trial resumes in Baghdad</STRONG></P>
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<P>Witness Ali al-Haidari told the court of murder and torture at the hands of Saddam's security forces, after the assassination attempt in 1982. Mr. al-Haidari told the court he was imprisoned for four years, beginning at the age of 14, with the rest of his family.
<P>He also told the court that Saddam was responsible for the murder of his seven brothers, as revenge for the assassination attempt.
<P>Wednesday's testimony comes on the first day of the trial since the court broke for the Iraqi parliament elections, December 15.
<P>Saddam had refused to attend the last session, December 7. The previous day he told the court to go to hell and challenged its legitimacy. <BR><BR>The trial is taking place in Baghdad's American protected Green Zone, amidst tight security. Two defense lawyers for the eight defendants have been murdered in Baghdad. Former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark - one of Saddam's attorneys - did not attend Wednesday's tribunal, because of security concerns.
<P>The trial is set to continue Thursday and is expected to last for months.</P>
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