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Listen To This3lesson 23

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News in Brief
News Item 1:
General Comprehension. Fill in the blanks to complete the following statements.
1. confirmed the sinking of a Soviet submarine.
2. US officials believed that the sub carried at least nuclear missiles.
3. The damage was serious ?? on the vessel had killed .
4. According to the Soviet officials, leaked in the air or in the ocean.
5. It is what may have caused the explosion that led to the sinking.

News Item 2:
Focusing on Details. Fill in the detailed information according to what you have heard.
1. A news agency in Beirut released today, with from held for by the Islamic Jihad.
2. The hostages, who had the impression that , criticized the government for .
3. One of them, who declared that he was , said that the government had forgotten about the after the of .
4. A total of are currently held hostage in .
5. Islamic Jihad calls on to the release of Shi'ite prisoners jailed in .

News Item 3:
True or False Questions.
1. Heavy rains have produced the "worst flooding in the history of the United States."
2. Officials began to distribute relief aids in the disastrous areas.
3. Floods have caused millions of dollars in damage.
4. Clean-up operations will start tomorrow.
5. Specific estimates of damage cannot be obtained at the moment.

News in Detail
1. General Comprehension. Choose the best answer (a, b, c, or d) to complete each of the following statements.
(1) According to the American sources, the crippled Soviet submarine went down to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean _____________.
a. 680 miles northwest of Bermuda
b. 680 miles northeast of Bermuda
c. 860 miles northwest of Bermuda
d. 860 miles northeast of Bermuda
(2) The sinking occurred at ___________.
a. 4:03 pm Greenwich time
b. 4:03 am Greenwich time
c. 4:03 pm eastern time
d. 4:03 am eastern time
(3) An explosion and a fire broke out on board the submarine _____________.
a. tonight
b. before dawn
c. after midnight
d. three days ago
(4) The Soviets refused to ask a nearby American ocean-going tugboat for help ___________.
a. probably because the Soviets decided to sink the sub themselves when there was no hope to save it
b. probably because the Soviets were afraid that the US will make an attempt to recover the Soviet sub
c. because the Soviets were busy saving the other crew members
d. because the Soviets believed that the sub was Soviet property
(5) Vice Admiral Powell Carter believed that the force of the explosion on board was enormous because ___________.
a. three crew members had been killed in the explosion
b. the sub sank as a result of the explosion
c. the missile tube door and its locking device had been twisted
d. this was obvious from preliminary tests of the air and sea in the area
(6) According to Admiral Carter, the Americans decided long ago to use solid fuel systems in their missiles because ____________.
a. the Americans realized that liquid fuel missiles were unsuitable
b. the Americans wanted to beat the Soviets in their competition of missile program
c. it was apparent to the Americans that an explosion might result from the liquid fuel system
d. it was extremely difficult to stabilize the liquid fuel system
(7) There was no immediate danger of serious radiation leakage ___________.
a. because this had been confirmed by officials in both Washington and Moscow
b. because the crippled submarine sank hundreds of miles away from any island
c. because it was deep down to the bottom of the ocean
d. because the missiles and warheads had been completely damaged in the process of sinking
(8) The US Navy did not show any interest in recovering the Soviet submarine ____________.
a. because it was already out of date
b. because the US Navy realized that the sub was Soviet property
c. because there was the danger of radiation leakage
d. because the liquid fuel missiles on the Soviet sub were very dangerous and very unstable

2. Focusing on Details. Fill in the detailed information according to what you have heard.
(1) American observed that were halted . The remaining crew members were observed ship in . The crew was rescued from by Soviet in the area. A US ocean-going was ready to assist, but the Soviets .
(2) In the opinion of James Bush, a retired US submarine captain, things worthwhile to be looked at on board the Soviet submarine are
  a. ,
  b. , and
  c. and things like that .
(3) The Soviets have to be worried about on other subs. These things are . They should all be and .

Special Report



1. General Comprehension. Choose the best answer (a, b, c, or d) to complete each of the following statements.
(1) The new discovery of Columbus' true landing spot was first announced ____________.
a. in National Geographic
b. in American history textbooks
c. on NPR
d. by Samuel Elliot Morrison
(2) In American history textbooks, the assumed landing spot of Christopher Columbus is ___________.
a. east to the Bahamas
b. Samana Cay
c. Watling Island
d. San Salvador
(3) The newly discovered landing spot of Columbus is claimed to be ___________.
a. Samana Cay in the eastern Bahamas
b. Watling Island in the eastern Bahamas
c. San Salvador
d. East to the Bahamas
(4) The new discovery was claimed by ____________.
a. Joseph Judge
b. Samuel Elliot Morrison
c. Paul Adderly
d. Frank Browning

2. Fill in the blanks to complete the following statements. Then try to provide an account of the Geographic team's discovery with the help of such these sentences.
(1) Professor Morrison's conclusion was based on of Columbus' voyage.
(2) In his calculation he overlooked the effects of .
(3) The team adjusted their route for when they took the same route.
(4) After this adjustment they arrived at to .
(5) To double-check their findings they went to and sailed also adjusting their route for .
(6) Then they also landed on .
(7) When they were on , they compared the island with .
(8) They discovered then that the island (is not at all/is exactly) what is described in the Columbus' log.

Your account of the team's discovery:

 

Suggested version: The Geographic team followed the route taken by Christopher Columbus, adjusting for the effect of wind and current of the ocean. Several times they landed on Samana Cay, which also fit the description of the landing spot in Columbus' log.

3. Fill in the blanks according to what you have heard.
(1) It took for the team sent by Joseph Judge to discover the true landing spot.
(2) The team consisted of , , , and .
(3) Christopher Columbus landed in the new world in .
(4) Columbus' famous fleet was named the , the and the .
(5) It is yet to know how the Geographic team's discovery affect the literature of professional history.
(6) Some people begin to worry in an age of .
(7) Minister of Education assured those people that the island would .

1. National Geographic

    A monthly magazine published by the National Geographic Society. It contains color-illustrated articles of broad geographic interest.


2. Christopher Columbus   

Discoverer of America (1451??1506). Having come to the conclusion that Asia could be reached by sailing westward from Europe, he sought for many years for a patron to finance such a voyage. After many delays he won the support of the King of Spain and from 1492 to 1504 he made several voyages westward. His discovery of America made Spanish colonization of Latin America possible. He died in poverty in Valladolid, and lies buried in Seville Cathedral.

Soviet officials have confirmed that a crippled nuclear submarine sank in the Atlantic early today. US officials believe the sub carried at least sixteen nuclear missiles. Explosion and fire on the vessel last Friday killed three crewmen. The rest of the crew was successfully evacuated before the vessel sank. Soviet officials say no radiation leaked in the air or the ocean. It's unclear what may have caused the explosion that led to the sinking.


A news agency in Beirut released a videotape today with pleas from three Frenchmen held for more than a year by the Islamic Jihad. Each hostage called on the French government to change its policy in the Middle East. Melody Walker reports from Paris. "During the twenty-eight-minute recording, the three hostages criticized the French government for failing to gain their release, and said they had the impression they were being forgotten. Taking turns reading prepared texts, the two diplomats and one journalist looked physically exhausted and emaciated. Declaring that he was at the end of his rope, one of the hostages said that the government forgot about the remaining hostages after the release of two Frenchmen in June. A total of seven French citizens are currently held hostage in Lebanon. A communiqué from the Islamic Jihad which accompanied the video cassette calls on France to negotiate the release of seventeen Shi'ite prisoners jailed in Kuwait. The French Minister for Foreign Affairs did not comment on the content of the video cassette or the demands, but said tonight that the government was doing everything possible to free the hostages. For National Public Radio, this is Melody Walker in Paris."


Skies are clearing over Oklahoma where heavy rains have produced what's being called "the worst flooding in the history of that state." Thousands of people began returning to their homes and officials began the task of assessing the damage. Floods have caused millions of dollars in damage, but specific estimates may not come until tomorrow when clean-up operations are expected to start.


Tonight, a Soviet nuclear submarine is on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, damaged three days ago by a fire on board. Officials in Washington and Moscow confirmed this morning's sinking. Officials in both countries also said the loss of the vessel presents no atomic threat despite the presence of both nuclear missiles and a nuclear power reactor on the submarine. NPR's Daivd Malthus has a report:
Pentagon officials say the crippled Soviet submarine, which normally carries sixteen nuclear missiles, each with two warheads, went down just before dawn six hundred and eighty miles northeast of Bermuda. The Soviets put the precise time of sinking at 4:03 am eastern time, and Moscow says there was no further loss of life aside from the three crewmen killed when a fire broke out Friday.
American surveillance planes observed that towing efforts were halted shortly after midnight. About three hours later, the remaining crew members were observed abandoning ship in an orderly and planned fashion, according to American officials. The crew was rescued from life rafts by five Soviet surface ships in the area.
Pentagon officials say a US ocean-going tugboat was nearby and ready to assist, but the Soviets refused any help. Pentagon sources do not rule out the possibility that the Soviets scuttled their sub once it became clear that leaks could not be controlled.
The Soviets have not explained the cause of the damage to the ship, but Pentagon officials say there was an explosion in one of the missile tubes that blew a big hole in the deck. Vice Admiral Powell Carter describes the damage this way:
"You're talking about a structure that's enormously strong up there. It's like, each of those missile tube doors that shuts is just like a safe vault. And then it shuts and locks with a big rotating ring, and that's been torn completely loose and bent like a pretzel back. So the force of the explosion was enormous."
While Pentagon officials say they don't know what caused the missile tube explosion, they point out that Soviet missiles use highly volatile liquid fuel, and a fuel leak could have caused the eruption. Again, Admiral Carter:
"These liquid fuel systems are very, very dangerous; they're very unstable. That's why, very early in our missile program as pushing a leading edge of technology, we moved to solid fuel missiles, early on just for that fact, because liquid fuel is extremely dangerous."
Admiral Carter said it was possible the nuclear warheads on top of the missile burned in the fire, or were thrown out into the water and sunk to the bottom 18,000 feet below. He said the other missiles and warheads might have been damaged by pressure as the sub sank, but there was no chance of a nuclear detonation or serious radiation leakage.
The submarine's nuclear reactors, officials say, are self-contained in what amounts to rust-proof metal vaults, and the Soviet say the reactors were shut down prior to sinking.
US officials say preliminary tests of the air and sea in the area have produced no signs of radioactive release. Pentagon officials say the US will not make any attempt to recover the Soviet sub. "It's Soviet property," says the Navy. Retired submarine Captain James Bush of the Center for Defense Information says a salvage effort just isn't warranted in this case with the submarine that was designed in the 1960s.
"It's an old submarine with old missiles. I don't know that we would consider it worthwhile to have them to look at for the amount of money involved. Now, it would probably be worthwhile if we could, get their communications equipment and their coding equipment, their key lists, and things like that to decode messages. But I'm sure that the Soviets, with the time that they had prior to the submarine sinking, should have gotten all of that material off."
Pentagon officials say the sub loss should not be a serious setback for the Soviets, but some analysts disagree. Pentagon consultant Norman Freedman says the Soviets have to be worried about liquid fueled missiles on other subs. "These things are time bombs," Freeman says. "They should all be called in and checked out." I'm David Malthus in Washington.


"We think that we have solved this most venerable and grand of geographic mysteries." With those words, Joseph Judge of National Geographic magazine announced a major discovery in American history—the true spot where Christopher Columbus first landed in the new world. And the Geographic 's declaration upsets the orthodox assertions of nearly every American history textbook. NPR's Frank Browning has this story.
The orthodox explanation of where Columbus first landed was carved in textbook stone more than forty years ago by the dean of Columbus historians, Samuel Elliot Morrison. Morrison declared incontrovertible the evidence that Columbus first set foot on Watling Island in the eastern Bahamas. But if the question were closed for Professor Morrison, now dead, it was not for numerous other students on nautical history.
For the last five years, the National Geographic 's Joseph Judge, has dispatched teams of historians, oceanographers, archaeologists and translators to find the true location and thereby to set straight the first footsteps of the American saga.
"The famous fleet of Columbus—the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria—made its first landfall and its landing in the new world in 1492 at a small island in the eastern Bahamas, named today, Samana Cay."
The basic problem in identifying Columbus' landing point, which he named San Salvador in 1492, is that he left no clear markings. Moreover, the log of Columbus' voyage now exists only in a transcription made by the Spaniard Bartolomay de las Casas, and many of the descriptions are either vague or use archaic terminology.
Professor Morrison had based has conclusions on a straightforward reading of the log. But he took no account of how Columbus' route would have been affected by constant ocean currents and winds. When the Geographic team took the same data and then adjusted them for the effect of wind and current, they arrived at Samana Cay, to the southeast of Watling Island. Then to collaborate their findings, they went to points further down on Columbus' voyage, then backtracked according to the log notations, and again found that they landed not on Professor Morrison's Watling Island, but on Samana Cay. Once on Samana, the team then returned to Columbus' log, to compare what they saw to Columbus' own visual description, recounted here by writer Judge in a film clip:
"You need sediments on a ridge behind the beach. Here is the beach, right here. You need a lagoon with a very narrow entrance and that you have there. You need a piece of land shaped like an island that is not, and that you have there. In other words, every piece of geography that you're seeing before your eyes in this island is described in the Columbus' log."
Moreover, Judge's team found archaeological traces of a settlement Columbus had mentioned finding on the actual island. So far, it is too early to know how the Geographic 's discoveries will affect the literature of professional history. But for those who worry about what may become of the site in an age of overnight historical theme parks, Bahamian Minister of Education, Paul Adderly, who attended the press conference, assured questioners that the island will be safe. In Washington, I'm Frank Browning reporting.
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