出国留学网

目录

CNN NEWS:日本311大地震五周年祭 阵痛仍在

字典 |

2016-03-14 15:48

|

推荐访问

CNNNEWSNEWS文章

【 liuxue86.com - 英语考试 】

  第二页:LRC同步字幕

  [by:www.tingvoa.com - VOA英语网]

  [00:00.00]如果你喜欢voa英语网(www.tingvoa.com),请介绍给更多的同学哦

  [00:11.49]Paging, Dr. Friday.

  [00:12.91]We have a case of awesome.

  [00:14.24]I'm Carl Azuz.

  [00:15.19]Thanks for spending 10 minutes of your Friday with us.

  [00:17.61]First up, a meeting between two leaders

  [00:19.66]who have more in common than a national border.

  [00:22.15]Canada and the U.S. historically have been allies.

  [00:24.94]They've cooperated on issues like trade and security.

  [00:28.06]Canadian prime ministers have been regular visitors to the White House in the past.

  [00:32.03]But Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's trip to Washington

  [00:35.23] is the first formal visit by a Canadian premier in 19 years.

  [00:39.62]And he received a very warm welcome from U.S. President Barack Obama.

  [00:45.10]The American leader discussed their common ground in terms of social,

  [00:47.77] economic, and foreign policies.

  [00:49.54]Prime Minister Trudeau has some critics in Canada,

  [00:52.04] like some of his cabinet members, he has limited political experience.

  [00:55.76]His country's budget deficit is much greater than his liberal party had predicted.

  [01:01.78]But since his election last October, he's developed a strong alliance with his American counterpart.

  [01:05.74] Justin Trudeau is a relatively new face in Canadian politics, but one with a very popular last name.

  [01:13.20]SUBTITLE: Who is Justin Trudeau?

  [01:15.53]LABOTT: With a stunning victory in Canada's recent general election.

  [01:22.27]Trudeau ended a decade of conservative rule in Canada.

  [01:25.79]He was born in 1971 while his father Pierre Trudeau was prime minister.

  [01:31.29]His popularity was so great it was dubbed "Trudeau-mania".

  [01:35.86]He was compared even to John F.Kennedy.

  [01:38.48]When Justin delivered a powerful eulogy at his father's funeral,

  [01:41.88] it sparked talk of a political dynasty.

  [01:45.32]The former school teacher took his time getting into politics,

  [01:49.31]trying his hand at acting, charity boxing, even coaching bungee jumpers.

  [01:54.56]But after his father's death,

  [01:57.31]he became more politically active, winning a seat in parliament in 2008.

  [02:01.47]Skeptics said he was too young and inexperienced to become prime minister.

  [02:06.01]But by all accounts, he ran a very impressive campaign, sweeping the liberals to victory.

  [02:11.68]For years, the conservative prime minister, Stephen Harper,

  [02:15.36] kept the economy running relatively smoothly.

  [02:18.35]Keep taxes low and he ran a very robust foreign policy aimed at taking on terrorists.

  [02:24.35]By contrast, Trudeau is promising to pull out of counter-terrorism operations in the Middle East,

  [02:30.48]restore ties with Iran, and he also wants to bring 25,000 Syrian refugees to Canada.

  [02:36.08]Back home, the father of three intends to raise taxes on the wealthy

  [02:41.01]and double spending on public infrastructure

  [02:43.44] and push a very aggressive climate change agenda.

  [02:47.04]Trudeau has shown he has the star power of his father.

  [02:50.53]Now, he has to prove he has the political chops

  [02:53.29] and ride this new wave of Trudeau-mania into opportunities for Canada.

  [02:58.13](END VIDEOTAPE)

  [02:58.70]AZUZ: It was exactly five years ago today

  [03:01.78]that a catastrophic 9.0 magnitude earthquake shook Eastern Japan.

  [03:07.13]It was the fourth largest earthquake ever recorded in the Asian country.

  [03:10.94]And it generated a tsunami, a wall of Asian water

  [03:14.92]with 30-foot waves that swept some coastal developments out to sea.

  [03:19.13]The tsunami also damaged some reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.

  [03:25.23]That led to meltdowns, contamination, and the complete evacuations of some Japanese towns.

  [03:30.19]The threat from nuclear radiation remains.

  [03:34.30]Next week, we'll show you how marine life was affected,

  [03:35.76]how seafood still has to be tested before it can be eaten.

  [03:39.37]Today, we're taking you inside one of the cities where recovery is nowhere in sight.

  [03:44.08]Whenever Suichiro Saito (ph) wants to check on his home,

  [03:49.53] he has to wear this to guard against radiation.

  [03:52.97]Saito only comes a few times a year

  [03:56.56] to the house his family has owned since before World War II.

  [03:59.71]Each visit, more difficult than the last.

  [04:02.74]Each room, devastated.

  [04:05.49]Poison does little to keep the rats away.

  [04:09.47]"It's painful," he says.

  [04:11.97]"My wife doesn't want to come here.

  [04:13.58]The house is getting more dilapidated."

  [04:15.48](on camera): This room hasn't been touched since the earthquake.

  [04:19.22]You can see the calendar, March, 2011. There's laundry hanging.

  [04:23.61]It was done right before the earthquake hit.

  [04:25.78](voice-over): The shaking lasted six minutes.

  [04:30.31](SCREAMING)

  [04:30.80]RIPLEY: Tsunami waves soon after --

  [04:41.80](SHOUTING)

  [04:42.54]RIPLEY: --

  [04:43.41]icy cold, consuming coastal towns.

  [04:46.92]Five years ago, on March 11th, 2011, almost 20,000 people died.

  [04:55.86]Many, spared by nature, would soon face a manmade disaster.

  [05:02.62]Saito's house is three kilometers,

  [05:07.61] less than two miles from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant.

  [05:10.26]His town Futaba sits empty.

  [05:13.18]More than 6,000 people once lived and worked here.

  [05:17.36]Today, they're allowed in for just five hours at a time.

  [05:22.31]Nearly 100,000 Fukushima residents are still evacuated.

  [05:27.46]Nearly 19,000 still living in what was supposed to be temporary housing.

  [05:33.20]Some choose to stay.

  [05:35.38]Others have nowhere else to go.

  [05:37.80]Setsuko Matsumoto used to live within walking distance of her children.

  [05:43.42]Now, they barely see each other.

  [05:45.98]"I had a happy life," she says.

  [05:48.72]"The disaster made a lot of families fall apart, including mine."

  [05:53.10]Saito also lived with his parents and children and grandchildren.

  [05:57.50]Now, they're in several cities.

  [06:00.47](on camera): What did you grow here?

  [06:01.65](voice-over): The soil on his farm, contaminated.

  [06:03.63]"I'm sad," he says.

  [06:05.85]"I'm empty."

  [06:07.54]A feeling shared by so many here, five years later.

  想了解更多英语考试网的资讯,请访问: 英语考试

本文来源:https://english.liuxue86.com/e/2734396.html
延伸阅读
如今的英语四级考试成绩已经不在于“过”与“不过”,而是更着重于分数的高低,所以还请广大考生注意复习和练习口语啦!因为考试通过的考生会有各口语测试也是考试中的一栏。英语四级425分算
2019-01-07
我们可以自问一下,大学生的英语水平提高是快了还是慢了?大学英语发展是快了还是慢了?下面就来看看复旦大学教授怎么说吧?想知道更多资讯,请关注网站吧!大学英语四、六级可转向社会化水平考
2019-01-07