12/13/2010

Hotel luxury on a budget




If you're not claustrophobic, the shrinking dimensions of the latest budget hotels can deliver luxury on the cheap.

The hotel, made up of 215 shipping containers welded together over five floors, is one of a new breed of budget hotels that aim to make life easier for the 21st century traveler.

The first budget hotels, such as Yotel and easyHotel, were constructed around airports and aimed at business travelers, but they've become so popular with tourists that branches have started opening in city centers. They cater to those who travel light and don't mind forgoing a bit of space and privacy in exchange for affordable luxury in the world's most expensive cities.

"CitizenM understands that mobile citizens want luxury without unwanted extras," says its brochure."That means great locations and great showers, big beds and big towels, free films and free Wi-Fi. In other words, big expectations for not so big prices." Those prices start at €79 a night – a snip compared to other hotels.

"Over the past year, we've definitely noticed an increase both in the number of these hotels opening and also the number of bookings for them," says Andrew Warner, senior director of marketing at Expedia.

"This is the hotel equivalent of easyJet and Ryanair," says Nigel Pocklington of Hotels.com. "From what we can see, people who are staying in them are smarter and more experienced travelers because they've figured out they can pay for things that are important to them, but not necessarily everything," he adds.

citizenM has global ambitions. There are two in Amsterdam – one at Schiphol airport and the new one in the city – while Britain's first branch opened its doors in Glasgow in September, and the first London citizenM will open on the South Bank next year. Another is being built in east London in time for the Olympics. Two sites in New York and Paris are also in the pipeline.

Yotel, run by Simon Woodroffe, is also cashing in on the trend. It has been offering rooms near airports since 2007 starting at £25 for a four-hour stay. They've been so popular that Yotel is opening a branch near New York's Times Square next year, which will house nearly 700 cabins. Its rooms are styled to look like first-class airplane cabins, with the biggest just 10 square meters.



The easyHotel chain owns 13 budget hotels across Europe and one in Dubai, with five branches in central London. These are less about luxury – the cheapest rooms have a tiny six square meters of floor space and no windows – but with prices starting at £25 a night, you get what you pay for.

"It's really important that anyone who's thinking of staying in one of these hotels checks the reviews," says Warner. "In some of the chains you might have to pay extra if you want your room cleaned. Some of them charge if you want toiletries or towels in the room."

Of course, these hotels aren't going to suit everybody. If you like a human being to check you in and help with your baggage, this certainly isn't for you. You need to be happy using gadgets and obviously not prone to claustrophobia.

More than anything, you need to be sure you're very comfortable with the person who's sharing your room.

adapted from The Guardian

12/10/2010

Cancun Climate Conference (video)









After watching the video with the objective of getting the global idea and as many details as possible, provide the context for these expressions

good host
wants them to leave
upset by criticism
what led to the gripes
narrow highway
take a good part of the day
even moving
going through security
claim
tight security
undergoing
conference halls
resemble
major
unstable

And now think of a retelling including the previous words and these connectors: although, however, since and anyway


You can also watch this video by clicking HERE

12/07/2010

WikiLeaks' Assange Arrested in London

photo: Reuters Julian Assange, WikiLeaks founder






WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, a 39-year-old Australian, was arrested by officers from Scotland Yard’s extradition unit on Tuesday when he went to a central London police station by prior agreement with the authorities, the police said.

Assange is wanted for questioning in Sweden about allegations of rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion. He denies the claims.

Assange's lawyers have said he will fight extradition to Sweden, for fear he could be turned over to the United States.

US Justice Department prosecutors are trying to find a way to indict Mr. Assange. While it is clearly illegal for a government official to give a classified document to WikiLeaks, it is not clear that it is illegal for the organization to make it public.

Some lawmakers have suggested accusing WikiLeaks of receiving stolen government property, but experts said Monday that argument is not very strong either.

His British lawyer, Mark Stephens, suggested Swedish authorities could interview Mr. Assange by video-link from Stockholm or at their embassy in London .

A spokesman for WikiLeaks says the arrest of Assange does not affect plans for the release of more documents.

“Today’s actions against our editor-in-chief Julian Assange won’t affect our operations: we will release more cables tonight as normal,” a posting on the WikiLeaks Twitter account said.

“Over 100,000 people” were given the entire archive of 251,287 cables in encrypted form, Mr. Assange said on Friday in a question-and-answer session on the Web site of the British newspaper The Guardian.

“If something happens to us, the key parts will be released automatically,” Mr. Assange said

On Monday, a Swiss bank froze an account that Mr. Assange used to collect donations for WikiLeaks. Marc Andrey, a spokesman for the bank, PostFinance, an arm of the Swiss postal service, said the account was closed because Mr. Assange “gave us false information when he opened the account,” asserting inaccurately that he lived in Switzerland.

adapted from VOAnews and NYT

11/30/2010

Wikileaks: Viewing cable 09STATE132349, C/NF) ARGENTINA: KIRCHNER INTERPERSONAL

Reference ID Date Classification Origin
09STATE132349 2009-12-31 14:02 SECRET//NOFORN Secretary of State


VZCZCXYZ0010
RR RUEHWEB

DE RUEHC #2349 3651459 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 2349 3651459 end_of_the_skype_highlighting begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 2349 3651459 end_of_the_skype_highlighting
ZNY SSSSS ZZH
R 311455Z DEC 09
FM SECSTATE WASHDC
TO AMEMBASSY BUENOS AIRES 0374



Thursday, 31 December 2009, 14:55
S E C R E T STATE 132349
NOFORN
SIPDIS
EO 12958 DECL: 12/31/2034
TAGS PINR, PGOV, AR
SUBJECT: (C/NF) ARGENTINA: KIRCHNER INTERPERSONAL
DYNAMICS (C-AL9-02612)
Classified By: ELISSA G. PITTERLE, DIRECTOR, INR/OPS.
REASON: 1.4(C).

1. (S/NF) WASHINGTON ANALYSTS ARE INTERESTED IN ARGENTINE
LEADERSHIP DYNAMICS, PARTICULARLY WITH REGARDS TO CRISTINA
FERNANDEZ DE KIRCHNER AND NESTOR KIRCHNER.

DRAWING ON PREVIOUS REPORTING, AND BUILDING UPON OUR OWN
ANALYTIC ASSESSMENTS, WE ARE CURRENTLY PREPARING A WRITTEN PRODUCT EXAMINING THE INTERPERSONAL DYNAMICS BETWEEN THE GOVERNING TANDEM.

WE HAVE A MUCH MORE SOLID UNDERSTANDING OF NESTOR KIRCHNER’S STYLE AND PERSONALITY THAN WE DO OF CRISTINA FERNANDEZ DE KIRCHNER AND WE WOULD LIKE TO DEVELOP A MORE WELL-ROUNDED VIEW OF CRISTINA FERNANDEZ DE KIRCHNER’S PERSONALITY.

AS POST,S TIME AND RESOURCES ALLOW AND TO THE EXTENT POST HAS ACCESS TO THIS TYPE OF INFORMATION, WE WOULD WELCOME ANY INSIGHT INTO THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS.

MANY THANKS, AND REGARDS FROM WASHINGTON.

A. (U) MENTAL STATE AND HEALTH:
(S/NF) HOW IS CRISTINA FERNANDEZ DE KIRCHNER MANAGING HER NERVES AND ANXIETY?

HOW DOES STRESS AFFECT HER BEHAVIOR TOWARD ADVISORS AND/OR HER DECISIONMAKING?

WHAT STEPS DOES CRISTINA FERNANDEZ DE KIRCHNER OR HER
ADVISERS/HANDLERS, TAKE IN HELPING HER DEAL WITH STRESS?

IS SHE TAKING ANY MEDICATIONS?

UNDER WHAT CIRCUMSTANCES IS SHE BEST ABLE TO HANDLE STRESSES?

HOW DO CRISTINA FERNANDEZ DE KIRCHNER,S EMOTIONS AFFECT HER DECISIONMAKING AND HOW DOES SHE CALM DOWN WHEN DISTRESSED?

(S/NF) WHAT IS THE STATUS OF NESTOR KIRCHNER’S GASTROINTESTINAL
ILLNESS?

DOES IT CONTINUE TO BOTHER HIM?

IS HE TAKING ANY MEDICATIONS?

LONG KNOWN FOR HIS TEMPER, HAS NESTOR KIRCHNER DEMONSTRATED
A GREATER TENDENCY TO SHIFT BETWEEN EMOTIONAL EXTREMES?

WHAT ARE MOST COMMON TRIGGERS TO NESTOR KIRCHNER’S ANGER?

B. (U) POLITICAL VIEWS:

1) (S/NF) WHEN DEALING WITH PROBLEMS, DOES CRISTINA FERNANDEZ
DE KIRCHNER TAKE A STRATEGIC, BIG PICTURE OUTLOOK, OR
DOES SHE PREFER TO TAKE A TACTICAL VIEW?

DOES SHE VIEW CIRCUMSTANCES IN BLACK AND WHITE OR
IN NUANCED TERMS?

DOES SHE SHARE NESTOR KIRCHNER’S ADVERSARIAL VIEW OF POLITICS
OR DOES SHE ATTEMPT TO MODERATE HIS HEAVY-HANDED POLITICAL STYLE?

C. (U) ON THE JOB:
(S/NF) HOW DO CRISTINA FERNANDEZ DE KIRCHNER AND NESTOR KIRCHNER
DIVIDE UP THEIR DAY?

ON WHICH ISSUES DOES CRISTINA FERNANDEZ DE KIRCHNER TAKE THE LEAD
AND WHICH ISSUES DOES SHE LEAVE TO NESTOR KIRCHNER?

2. (U) PLEASE CITE C-AL9-02612 IN THE SUBJECT LINE OF REPORTING IN RESPONSE
TO THE ABOVE QUESTIONS. CLINTON


source: Wikileaks

11/29/2010

Hillary Clinton Condems WikiLeaks Cables (video)

Wikileak: Thousands of Classified US Documents Leaked on the Internet

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange (AP Photo)

More than a quarter of a million classified cables sent from U.S. embassies around the world to Washington have been leaked on the Internet. Despite warnings from the U.S. government that the leaks could put lives at risk, the website WikiLeaks published the files in conjunction with several major international newspapers.

According to The New York Times and several European newspapers, the leaked messages are described as varying between embarrassing and highly damaging, with the potential to adversely affect U.S. relations with several countries.

Among the most striking, according to the papers, are leaked cables suggesting that Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries have been pressing the U.S. government to launch a military attack on Iran to prevent the country from developing a nuclear weapon. An apparent message from April 2008 suggests that King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia called for the United States to "Cut the head off the snake."

Other documents reportedly suggest that the United States believes that Saudi Arabian donors are the chief financiers of terror groups like al-Qaida. Qatar, a U.S. ally, is accused of not doing enough to thwart terrorist groups.

It is also alleged that Iran has received sophisticated missiles from North Korea that are capable of hitting Western Europe and that it is using them to construct even bigger weapons.

According to newspaper reports, more than 4,000 files are marked "No Foreigner." These include cables alleging that the U.S. military has been conducting air strikes against al-Qaida targets in Yemen. The Yemeni government has said that its military alone has been conducting the raids.

Chinese government operatives reportedly are accused of launching cyber attacks on the United States.

The messages are also said show that U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged American diplomats to spy on other countries at the United Nations - blurring the traditional boundaries between diplomacy and espionage.

Among the more embarrassing leaks, say the newspapers, are personal analyses of world leaders. Former Russian President Vladimir Putin reportedly was called an "alpha-dog" and Afghan President Hamid Karzai is said to have been described as "driven by paranoia." The reports also say the cables noted that Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi is permanently accompanied by a "voluptuous Ukrainian nurse." One message apparently accused an unnamed member of the British royal family of "inappropriate behavior."

The Pentagon has declined to comment on the contents of the leaked documents. But it has condemned the leaks as reckless, warning that their publication would place at risk "the lives of countless innocent individuals," "ongoing military operations" and "cooperation between countries."

Speaking on the "Fox News Sunday" television program, Democratic U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill called for WikiLeaks to be prosecuted. "The people who are leaking these documents need to do a gut check about their patriotism. And I think they're enjoying the attention that they're getting. But frankly, it's coming at a very high price. I hope we can figure out where this is coming from and go after them with the force of law," she said.

Republican Representative Peter King, who is a member of the House of Representatives Committee on Homeland Security, has called for WikiLeaks to be classified as a terrorist organization.

No one has been charged with disclosing information to WikiLeaks, but news reports say a key suspect is U.S. Army private Bradley Manning, who is in custody for an earlier leak of classified documents.

The Pentagon says it is in the process of increasing security measures for its data and communications.

adapted from CNN, NYT, VOA

11/27/2010

China's packed roads

photo: David Gray/Reuters

China's rapid economic growth is causing some strains - and they are increasingly evident on the roads of the country's big cities. Traffic jams fill news headlines and create headaches for a growing number of people.

Last August thousands of trucks and cars were packed nose to tail for more than 60 miles in a 10-day traffic jam northwest of Beijing. In fact, the mega blockage was the second in two months on the same stretch of road.

China and Beijing have seen double-digit economic growth, which has taken them to a national GNP per capita of $4,000 dollars, with Beijing being maybe two and a half times that. This per capital income and this kind of double-digit growth has brought about an absolute boom in motorization.

World environmental experts say China's capital has one of the world's worst air pollution, which contributes to numerous health problems. Beijing is right behind New Delhi at No. 2. And there are five Chinese cities in the top twenty.

Chinese leaders are aware of this issue.
The government stresses rail as an environmentally cleaner, safer and more efficient urban transportation method.

Two years ago, China responded to the global financial crisis with a stimulus plan that helped fast-track projects for new roads, bridges and railways. It funded high-speed railway lines, including a new one between Shanghai and Hangzhou, which reduces the journey from two hours to about 40 minutes since the train can reach a speed of 356 kilometers an hour.

Chinese media reports say that in the country's next five-year development plan, the proportion of spending on railways will increase by a large margin, while the amount spent on roads will fall. Until 2015 the Chinese government will invest $600 billion (four trillion yuan) to develop high speed and long-distance railroads.


adapted from Reuters, CNN, VOANews, Bloomberg





11/26/2010

More Chinese Hitting the Road in Their Own Cars (video)









You can also watch the video by clicking HERE

After watching the video and getting the main ideas, let's focus on vocabulary

(a) Provide the context where these words are used

Commute time
Take me
Car dealership
Within
Afford
Own
Unbelievable
Point out

(b) Do you know the following words? Go back to the video and pick up their opposites please

Decreasing
Sell
Smallest
Much more difficult
Expensive
Foreign
Awful
Subtract

(c) How many if-sentences have you heard? Can you write down at least 2?

11/22/2010

Persecuted Journalists to Receive Awards for Their Work (video)

You can watch this video below and also by clicking HERE











After watching the video at least twice, try to get each journalist's (1) name, (2) nationality, (3) details about their job and (4) the reason for government's reaction


Then, go back to the video and get the context where the following words are used

Speak out
Prosecute
Deteriorating
Critical
Shut down
Guerilla leader
Extremist
Misunderstanding
Election violence
Even though
Encourages
Serving
Mutiny
Treatment of prisoners
Personal price
Corruption and abuse
Stop them

US Marks 47th Anniversary of Kennedy Assassination



















Please read the sentences below and choose the option that best completes the idea.



A. Forty-seven years ago Monday November 22, late American president John F. Kennedy was assassinated ……………………… in downtown Dallas, Texas.

1. By his side
2. While riding a car
3. By gunshots


B. Kennedy, who is the youngest man elected U.S. president, was killed ……………………….on November 22, 1963 as he rode in an open-top car. He was 46 years old.

1. By his side
2. While riding a car
3. By gunshots


C. His wife, Jacqueline Kennedy, was …………………………… when the bullets struck.

1. By his side
2. While riding a car
3. By gunshots


D. Kennedy was pronounced dead at a Dallas hospital, and vice president Lyndon Johnson was sworn in as president ……………………………….

1. The same day
2. Alive at the time
3. Shortly after


E. The assassination is remembered vividly by many Americans ………………………….

1. The same day
2. Alive at the time
3. Shortly after


F. Investigators have concluded Lee Harvey Oswald fired the fatal shots. He was arrested ………….…….the shooting, but never faced trial. Two days after the assassination, Dallas night club owner Jack Ruby shot and killed Oswald as he was being led through a police garage.

1. The same day
2. Alive at the time
3. Shortly after


G. Kennedy's death has spawned conspiracy theories, with many people doubting …………………………………of the president's death.

1. Subjects of public interest
2. The official explanation
3. His grave site


H. His body was returned to Washington and buried at Arlington National Cemetery, overlooking the nation's capital. An eternal flame marks …………………………….

1. Subjects of public interest
2. The official explanation
3. His grave site


I. The Kennedys, including the president's siblings and children, have remained………………………………..

1. Subjects of public interest
2. The official explanation
3. His grave site

adapted from VOAnews

11/15/2010

11/14/2010

British Couple Released by Somali Pirates

Photo: A. Wehliya - Paul and Rachel Chandler stand with Somali Prime Minister Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed shortly after their release from kidnappers.
After just more than a year spent in Somalia, British citizens Paul and Rachel Chandler are finally going home. After a stop in Mogadishu to meet with the Somali prime minister, the two arrived at Nairobi's Jomo Kenyatta International Airport en route to their final destination: London.

The Chandlers were held near Adado, a town in central Somalia along the Ethiopian border.

Somalia's newly appointed prime minister, Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, welcomed the Chandlers.
and said the couple was drained by their experience, but otherwise in good health. "They were in good spirits and they were happy to be alive and to have their freedom," he said.

The Chandlers will receive full medical examinations before returning to England.

"We are feeling very happy to be alive and happy to be here... among decent everyday people," Rachel Chandler said, adding they were "desperate to see family and friends" and thanking the Somalis who worked for their release. She explained they communicated with their captors using a Somali-English phrasebook.

Somali pirates kidnapped the couple on October 23 of last year, while they were sailing in their 38-foot yacht Lynn Revival off the coast of Seychelles.

Although no official figure has been released, the ransom paid to secure the couple's release is estimated to be nearly $1 million. It was gathered by family and friends and by members of the Somali diaspora. The British government has a strict policy of not paying any ransoms. The pirates had initially demanded seven million dollars.

The Chandlers are perhaps the highest profile hostages taken by Somali pirates in recent years. However, there are hundreds of hostages being held by Somali pirates - mainly crews of large tankers crossing the Indian Ocean. Analysts say the recent spike in ransoms paid for hijacked ships has triggered more piracy and increased the amount of time ships are being held by captors.

adapted from VOA and Yahoo News

Wasted energy (audio)

You can listen to this audio by clicking HERE or close to the arrows below

11/10/2010

Obama in Indonesia (article)

Photo AP

President Barack Obama is in Indonesia for a less than one-day stay that includes talks with President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, and a planned address to the Indonesian people.

His visit is a sweet return for the president who spent several years of his boyhood living in Indonesia.

It began amid the sound of trumpets and a military gun salute as U.S. President Barack Obama stepped out of the presidential limousine at the presidential palace, the Istana Merdeka, and received a warm welcome from President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. Mr. Obama shook hands with Cabinet ministers and other officials before beginning bilateral talks with President Yudhoyono.

In a joint news conference, Mr. Obama said he is glad to be back in Indonesia. He said he is focused not on the past, but on a future of building a comprehensive relationship with the world's largest Muslim majority nation.

"As one of the world's largest democracies, as the largest economy in Southeast Asia, and as a member of the G20, as a regional leader, as a vast archipelago on the front lines of climate change, and as a society of extraordinary diversity, Indonesia is where many of the challenges and of the opportunities of the 21st century come together," said the president.

As he did on his previous stop in India, Mr. Obama said the United States is looking to strengthen alliances, deepen relationships with Asia, and re-engage with regional organizations such as ASEAN 9 (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) which Indonesia will chair next year.

Issues in talks with President Yudhoyono include regional and global economic matters, counter-terrorism, security cooperation, and anti-piracy efforts. Later the two leaders announced an agreement to boost cooperation in trade, education, clean energy and security.

This is a long-awaited trip for Mr. Obama, who was forced to postpone a visit twice earlier in the year due to domestic political and other issues. He said it is his hope to return to Indonesia for a longer stay.

Wednesday he will visit the Istiqlal Mosque, the largest in Southeast Asia, and make a speech to the Indonesian people at the University of Indonesia.

White House aides say President Obama's schedule will likely be shortened because ash from Mt. Merapi in central Java threatens further disruptions to air travel.

If that turns out to be the case, the president will depart earlier for Seoul South Korea, for the G20 summit.

adapted from VOA

Obama in Indonesia (video)









You can also watch this video by clicking HERE

11/07/2010

New York Marathon



NEW YORK – A Chilean miner ……………..…… (run) and ……………………… (walk) his way to the finish line of the New York City Marathon on Sunday, showing the passion that ………………………..(help) him survive more than two months trapped underground.

Edison Pena ………………………(cross) the Central Park finish line at 3:24 p.m., with a time of 5 hours, 40 minutes, 51 seconds. He was draped in a Chilean flag as Elvis music .............................. (play) over the speakers.

The 34-year-old survivor ……………………………….(beat) his own goal — to complete the course through the city's five boroughs in six hours.

Bags of ice …………………………(cover) his swollen knees as Pena …………………………… (walk) the second half of the marathon, but he ………………………….(summon) enough energy to run the last stretch along Central Park West.

"In this marathon I ………………………….(struggle) with myself and with my own pain," he said " but I ……………………………….. (make) it to the finish line. I ………………………………………… (want) to motivate other people to also find the courage and strength to transcend their own pain."

Pena's personal victory ………………………………… (come) just weeks after he was still training in near-darkness, jogging each day 2,300 feet underground in heat and humidity.

He …………………………… (say) running was his salvation — his way of proving how much he .................................................... (want) to live.

On this sunny day in Manhattan, it …………………………………….. (not matter) to the world whether No. 7127 actually ………………………………………… (finish) the race running into Central Park. To the cheering crowds, he ……………………...... (be) already a winner among the 45,000 runners, including some of the world's best marathoners.

At a post-marathon news conference, reporters ……………………………………… (ask) Pena to compare his hours in the New York race with the days in the mines

"In the mine, I ……………………….. (run) alone," he said. He …………………………….. (call) the marathon "an incredible dream" — because of "how warm and welcoming and supportive the Americans are here," with signs along the route reading "Go, Edison!" and "Go for it!"

Pena said he also …………………….. (be) "motivated" by Chileans shouting and waving his country's flag.

Pena ………………………………….. (begin) running in Staten Island at 9:40 a.m. The trouble …………………………………. (start) about an hour into the marathon, when he …………………………………………… (slow) a bit, apparently already in pain. But surrounded by supporters , he ……………………………………… (keep) running.

Shortly after noon, "The Runner" …………………………… (make) his way into Queens, reaching the 14-mile mark of the race. Suddenly, he ………………………………………. (leave) the course, going into a medical tent for help. He ……………………………. (emerge) around 1 p.m., bags of ice tied to both his knees.

He …………………………………….. (say) later he ………………………………………… (have) a bad left knee even before the mine cave-in, which …………………………………. (worsen) it. But he …………………………… (run) anyway.

"I …………………………….. (want) to show that I …………………………… (can) do it," Pena said

NYC Marathon officials ………………………………….. (hear) about Pena's subterranean training and ………………………………………….. (plan) to invite him as an honored guest. But he ………………. (want) to actually run the race.

The miner ……………………………………… (cut) his electrician's boots down to ankle height to train each morning and afternoon along the rocky, muddy 1,000-yard corridor where the men ……………………. (be) trapped. He ………………………….. (build) up strength by dragging a large piece of wood that was attached to a cord tied to his waist.

At the news conference in Manhattan's Mandarin Oriental hotel, a very happy and tired Pena at first …………………………………….. (decline) to sing some Elvis music, but eventually …………………………………. (give in) and ……………………………. (sing) "Don't Be Cruel."

He now ……………………………………… (have) his eyes on the next prize — another marathon to "improve my time. ... I know that's a possibility."

adapted from
Yahoo News

11/03/2010

Proposition 19 Audio Follow Up


Marijuana legalization measure loses in California

LOS ANGELES – California voters declined to make their state the nation's first to legalize marijuana use and sales

"Today, Californians recognized that legalizing marijuana will not make our citizens healthier, solve California's budget crisis, or reduce drug related violence in Mexico," White House Drug Policy Director Gil Kerlikowske said.

Voters in three other states cast ballots on medical marijuana-related measures.

In South Dakota, voters rejected for the second time a measure to legalize marijuana for medical use — a step taken by California in 1996 and 13 other states since. Oregon voters refused to expand their state's medical marijuana program to create a network of state-licensed nonprofit dispensaries where patients could have purchased the drug.

California's marijuana proposal would have allowed adults 21 and over to possess up to 28 grams, consume it in nonpublic places as long as no children were present, and grow it in small private plots.

AP photo


11/02/2010

$31,000 an hour?



Take-out pizza chain hiring.
Aged over 18
No experience required.
Uniform provided.
Salary: $31,000 an hour.

TOKYO (Reuters) – As part of a series of events commemorating the 25th anniversary of its arrival in Japan, Domino's Pizza Japan will hire one lucky person at the rate of 2,500,000 yen ($31,030) for an hour's worth of work in December.

A company spokesman declined to provide further details until November 10, but the company's website said that anyone who wants the job will have to file an application. Those passing to the next stage will undergo an interview.

"Basically it's anybody over 18, no questions about education or experience," the spokesman said. "We're actually a little surprised by how much of a response it's getting."

Hourly pay for part-time jobs in Japan averages just under 1,000 yen ($12.41).

Many of the comments on a Japanese article about the offer noted that the salary was low for the probable advertising impact and that there might be better uses for the money, such as raising workers' pay overall.

In another promotion, anyone born on September 30 this year -- the actual date the first Domino's opened in Japan -- will receive a free pizza on their birthday until they turn 25.

(Reporting by Elaine Lies; editing by Paul Casciato)

adapted from NewsYahoo


Unusual hotels (video)




You can also watch this video by CLICKING HERE

11/01/2010

Ingrid Betancourt's Memoirs









You can also watch this video by clicking HERE

World s worst commute




People who live in some of the world's most economically important cities are spending more and more of their work day getting to and from work.

IBM, which has developed new technology for predicting traffic flow, has identified the cities with the worst commutes in the world and those that are successfully easing the congestion.

The IBM Commuter Pain Study surveyed 8,000 commuters in 20 cities, from Moscow to New Delhi and Los Angeles to Johannesburg. They were asked about the length of their daily commute. IBM's Naveen Lamba says researchers also wanted to know how being stuck in traffic affected their state of mind.

"Is it causing you stress?," he says. "Does that cause you anger? How is that affecting your performance at school or at work? Have you ever just given up on your trip and gone back home?"

Lamba says about one-third of the surveyed commuters reported increased stress, increased anger, and traffic so bad in the last three years that they turned around and went home. Commuters also complained about other drivers' rude and aggressive behavior when traffic started to slow or stop.

And where was commuting pain the worst?

"The worst traffic in the cities we looked at was in Beijing and Mexico City," says Lamba. "Johannesburg in South Africa was pretty close to them as well."

Getting moving

Those cities and others around the world, he says, can learn from the top-ranked city on the list: Stockholm, Sweden.

Lamba says officials there have introduced special programs to reduce traffic problems.

"One example of what they have done is what they call a Congestion Management Program where everybody driving into central city pays a congestion fee and the idea there is to discourage people from driving, but take public transportation instead," he explains. "So what this program has done is the amount of traffic is gone down by 20 to 25 percent. So, even more people switch over to public transportation. And then in terms of providing good information to travelers as to what different travel choices based on real time conditions on the roads. There are another set of solutions deployed from that perspective also."

IBM's top-ranked U.S. city is Houston - a sprawling metropolis on the Gulf Coast of Texas. Alan Clark is the region's director of Transportation Planning.

"I'm pleased that we're making some progress towards mitigating the levels of traffic congestion in our region," says Alan Clark, the region's director of transportation planning.

But fighting traffic congestion, he adds, is an on-going challenge because this urban area continues to attract more jobs and more people.

"For example, the number of hours that we consider to be congested has grown gradually over time," he says. "Now we have what we would call rush hour conditions or peak travel conditions for as much as eight hours during the day - about three to four hours in the morning and similar time in the evening."

High cost of traffic

Clark sees traffic congestion as one of the most serious problems of our time - for a variety of reasons.

"It's estimated that the average commuter in our region, congestion costs that person in excess of $1000 per year in lost time," he says. "It also adds to our problem of air pollution. The time that we spend in congested conditions significantly adds to the amount of fuel cars and trucks are burning. And that in turn leads to additional emissions of harmful pollutants and our area is very concerned about improving air quality as one of the key ways to make our communities even better places to live and work."

To ease traffic congestion, Clark says, Houston transportation officials created special safety programs to reduce the number of accidents, which tie up traffic. They also encourage people to work from home on a regular basis and use mass transit when they do commute. That's why they support a website created by private businesses called NuRide.

"At the NuRide web, we encourage those who are looking to share a ride to be able to register for carpooling, vanpooling, and other kinds of activities or to investigate the use of transit," he explains. "On that web site, we give the participants points. They can be redeemed for discounts at restaurants, for coupons at grocery stores, those sorts of things."

The long term solution to the traffic congestion problem, Clark says, is not building more roads, but changing the way we design our cities and how we live our lives.

"I think there are many communities that have done an excellent job developing or redeveloping their communities to permit new economic growth that does not generate as much additional vehicle traffic," he says. "These ideas are probably better seen in some European communities where they have a long tradition of trying to preserve their historical development identity and had, in the past, much more orientation to walking and the use of transit. In the United States, it's newer because, for example, Houston - being a relatively new city - really was developed around the automobile."

Transportation planning expert Alan Clark says traffic congestion is a complex problem whose solution calls for a comprehensive approach.

And since it's a global problem, he adds, it will always be helpful for cities around the world to exchange ideas and experiences to benefit from each other's innovative solutions.

adapted VOA

10/27/2010

Obituaries: Former Argentine President Nestor Kirchner Dies

Former Argentine president Nestor Kirchner, the husband of the nation's current president, Cristina Kirchner, died suddenly October 27th after suffering a heart attack. He was 60 years old.

Mr. Kirchner died at a hospital in the southern city of El Calafate.

The former president had suffered heart problems in the past and had surgery just last month to treat a blocked artery.

Mr. Kirchner served as president of Argentina from 2003 to 2007, when his wife succeeded him. He was credited with leading the country out of a severe financial crisis while in office, and many expected him to run for president again in next year's elections.

Mr. Kirchner stayed active in politics after leaving office, serving in the Argentine congress and as leader of the country's Peronist party.

A lawyer by training, Mr. Kirchner was first elected to public office as mayor of the southern city of Rio Gallegos, his hometown. He later became governor of the province of Santa Cruz.

As secretary general of the Union of South American Republics, or Unasur, Kirchner mediated one of the many border disputes between Venezuela and Colombia. Both countries' leaders mourned his loss on Wednesday.

"Oh my dear Cristina...how sad! What a huge loss suffered by Argentina and our America! May Kirchner live forever!" Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez tweeted.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos asked for a moment of silence in Bogota in Kirchner's honor.

"It's a great loss for Argentina and a great loss for the continent," he said, adding that he would try to reach Fernandez to share his condolences.

U.S. President Barack Obama also praised Kirchner's significant roles in Argentina and Unasur. "Michelle's and my thoughts and prayers are with President Fernandez de Kirchner and their children," he said.

adapted from The New York Times and VOANews

10/25/2010

Miscellaneous Quiz!


If you click HERE you will get a 20-sentence self-access quiz.
You will be asked to choose the right option. In case you make a mistake, you will get the right answer. And you can get new questions, by clicking the reload button




10/24/2010

French Senate Passes Controversial Retirement Bill (video)









You can also watch this video by clicking HERE

After watching the video at least twice, provide the context in which the following words are used:

(1) targeted
(2) widespread gas shortages
(3)
break up
(4) keep debating
(5)
strikes
(6)
called for more days
(7)
vowed to continue public disruptions
(8)
pose a problem
(9)
want support to grow
(10)
peaceful
(11) just over half
(12) discuss how to ease the problems
(13) little by little
(14)
progressive improvement
(15)
however
(16)
garbage collectors
(17)
reduce the pool
(16)
depend on

Cholera Spreading Through Vulnerable Haiti

Health officials warn that an outbreak of cholera spreading through rural Haiti is worsening.

The disease has already killed about 200 people, and has sickened at least 2,000.

The outbreak has been centered mostly in the rural Artibonite region of the country, and many believe a contaminated river is the source.

Officials fear it will soon reach the capital, Port-au-Prince. Once there, it will easily spread through the unsanitary camps housing hundreds of thousands of people left homeless by an earthquake in January.

Reporters visiting medical centers and the main hospital in the town of St. Marc say patients are lining the floors and courtyard.

The United Nations says humanitarian agencies, rushing to contain the outbreak, are distributing 10,000 boxes of water purification tablets and hygiene kits in affected areas.

Cholera is a bacterial infection that is typically spread by contaminated water or food. Symptoms include fever, severe diarrhea, and vomiting. The disease is treatable, but without attention, it can kill within hours.

International health experts say this is the first cholera outbreak to hit Haiti in decades.









You can also watch the video by clicking HERE

The Girl Effect Initiative

World Bank, Nike Team Up for 'The Girl Effect' Initiative











You can also watch this video by clicking HERE

iPad Prices

The price of Apple's tablet computer, before sales tax, varies significantly between countries

An iPad with Wi-Fi and 16 gigabytes of memory costs $200 less in Hong Kong, the former British colony than in Germany and France. Given the risk of having to pay extra duty (and the price of the flight) potential iPad buyers in Frankfurt or Paris should consider a trip to nearby Luxembourg, where Apple's popular device is $35 cheaper.

The sales tax is only one reason for such differences in price. Consumers in Hong Kong also get a better deal because iPads are assembled in mainland China. Buyers in Switzerland have to pay more because there is less competition between retailers. In China and Mexico, the device may be cheaper because people are poorer.

Incidentally, if income is taken into account, consumers in Luxembourg get the best deal: they only have to spend about 0.8% of the city-state's GDP per person on an iPad.

California elections: Proposition 19 (audio)



adapted from VOA

10/19/2010

Protests to continue in France


Oil refinery workers, high school students, rail workers and other protesters sought to maintain pressure on French President Nicolas Sarkozy's reforms, which face a key Senate vote expected Wednesday. Truck drivers used vans to slow traffic on highways around Paris and cities like Lille, Rennes and Lyon, but they did not use fleets of large trucks to block roads.

Wider strikes will hit everything from air travel to mail on Tuesday when unions opposed to President Nicolas Sarkozy will start a massive street protest against the unpopular pension bill. The proposed reforms include provisions to raise the French retirement age from age 60 to 62.

A majority of French people -- 71 percent in one poll -- back protests over the plan to raise the minimum and the full retirement ages by two years to 62 and 67 respectively, a move the government says is vital to stem a soaring pension deficit.

This could be a make-or-break week for Sarkozy. The center-right government assured the public infrastructure will not freeze up despite a week-long strike at refineries that has dried up supplies at hundreds of France's roughly 12,500 gas stations.

"The situation is critical," a spokeswoman at Exxon Mobil said. "Anyone looking for diesel in the Paris and Nantes (Western France) regions will have problems."

Sarkozy, in the northern seaside town of Deauville for talks with the leaders of Germany and Russia, said he will not back down. "The reform is essential and France is committed to it and will go ahead with it just as our German partners did," he told reporters after meeting German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Only 13 percent of rail workers kept up a week long strike on Monday but workers at France's 12 refineries were in their seventh day of a strike and protesters blocked access at many fuel distribution depots around the country.

The UFIP oil industry lobby has said France will probably see serious fuel supply problems by mid-week-The DGAC aviation authority asked airlines to reduce flights to Paris's Orly airport by 50 percent and to all other airports by 30 percent on Tuesday.

Government ministers stressed the country has plenty of fuel and that airports in particular have ample supply. "The government is in control," Industry Minister Christian Estrosi said.

As many as 1,800 service stations have run short of fuel in recent days. A body representing supermarket fuel stations said 500-1,000 were hit on Monday. Total said 400 of its stations had been affected and Esso reported a similar toll.

At an empty station on Paris's Champs Elysees avenue, manager Paula said she spent much of her morning trying to stop drivers unhooking fuel pumps. "It's madness, we're submerged," she said.

The International Energy Agency, which overlooks strategic oil supplies in OECD countries, said that France as of Friday had 98 days of fuel between industry reserves and government reserves.

Prime Minister Francois Fillon has warned that people blocking fuel depots were breaking the law.

Riot police used teargas and rubber pellet guns in the Paris suburb of Nanterre to break up a crowd of youths who set fire to cars near an anti-reform protest by secondary school students. They intervened for similar reasons in the city of Lyon.

adapted from Reuters and VOANews

10/18/2010

Innovative Technology Monitors Teenage Drivers (Video)









You can also watch the video by clicking HERE

A? An? The?

Please click HERE to make your choice and don't forget that time counts. Good luck!

10/14/2010

Chile Completes Rescue of All 33 Miners (Fill in)

How about filling in the gaps with the correct tense?

Chilean rescuers ………………………… (end) a marathon operation Tuesday and ……………………………………. (free) all 33 miners trapped underground for more than two months. All of the rescued miners …………………………….. (send) for medical treatment and several of them ………………………….. (undergo) surgery in the coming days.

Chilean officials …………………………….. (say) the rescue operation at the San Jose mine in northern Chile …………………………………………. (advance) more quickly than expected.

Rescue crews ……………………………….(pull) each miner to the surface in about 15 minutes.

Rescue crews and officials ……………………….. (cheer) and ………………………(clap) as each miner……………………………..(arrive) at the surface, where family members ………………………………………. (wait) for him. Medical teams ………………………………… (rush) each man to a hospital in nearby Copiapó for a thorough examination.

Chile's President Sebastián Piñera ………………………………….. (be) at the site to greet each rescued miner.

The rescue ………………………………….(end) a two-month-long ordeal for the men, who …………………………………………… (trap) by a cave-in at the gold and copper mine on August 5. The men ………………………(cut off) from the surface for 17 days, until a drilling crew ……………..……………..(locate) them.

Chilean Mining Minister Laurence Golborne …………………………………. (thank) scores of experts and others who ………………………………… (help) carry out the rescue operation. But he ………………………………..(caution) that the job ………………………..(be) over yet.

Health Minister Jaime Mañalich ………………………….. (say) many of the miners ………………………………….(appear) to be in better health than expected. He ……………………………….. (add) that each miner ………………………………………... (undergo) a series of tests, including a lung x-ray and heart monitoring, and that some ………………………………………….(receive) psychiatric treatment, if needed.

A few miners …………………………………………(receive) dental surgery in the coming days to treat abscesses and other conditions.

Mañalich …………………………………………..(say) the most serious case ……..……………………………… (be) a miner with pneumonia, who …………………..………………….(remain) in intensive care for some days to receive oxygen and other treatments.

More than 1,000 journalists …………………………………….. (cover) the rescue operation at the remote San Jose mine in the Atacama desert. During the past two months, relatives of the miners and rescue crews …………………………… (gather) outside the mine and ………………………………………… (form) a community they …………………………………….. (call) Camp Hope.

Millions of people around the world ………………………………….(watch) the rescue operation unfold on television.

In Washington, U.S. President Barack Obama ……………………………. (say) he ……………………………………..(watch) the first miner being freed, adding that it ……………………………………(be) a tribute to the hard work of the rescue workers and the Chilean people. He …………………………………. (thank) people from around the world who…………………………………. (contribute) to the operation, including a U.S.-based drilling team and experts from the U.S. space agency, NASA.

adapted from VOAnews