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[영어 오디오+비디오]에 해당되는 글 1624건
- 2012.06.05 [초보자용 VOA 30분 느린 뉴스] VOA Special English 2012-6-5
- 2012.06.05 [영어뉴스] VOA 5분 뉴스 (2012-6-5)
- 2012.06.05 [영어뉴스] NPR 5분 뉴스 (2012-6-5)
- 2012.06.05 (CNN 학습용 10분 뉴스) CNN Student News Transcript - June 5, 2012
- 2012.06.04 [초보자용 VOA 30분 느린 뉴스] VOA Special English 2012-6-4
- 2012.06.04 [영어뉴스] VOA 5분 뉴스 (2012-6-4)
- 2012.06.04 [영어뉴스] NPR 5분 뉴스 (2012-6-4)
- 2012.06.04 [VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막]Mouth X-Rays and the Brain; Infected Gums Do Not Cause Heart Attacks
- 2012.06.04 (CNN 학습용 10분 뉴스) CNN Student News Transcript - June 4, 2012
- 2012.05.31 [CNN 동영상+대본/ 북한 김정은 승계 관련] North Korea's young leader breaks the mold
- 2012.05.31 [VOA 초보용 영어/ 음성+대본] How the Erie Canal Helped America Grow
- 2012.05.31 [VOA 동영상 60초] Your World in 60 Seconds
- 2012.05.31 [VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막] Teens Get a History Lesson From History Makers
- 2012.05.31 [초보자용 VOA 30분 느린 뉴스] VOA Special English 2012-5-31
- 2012.05.31 [영어뉴스] VOA 5분 뉴스 (2012-5-31)
- 2012.05.31 [영어뉴스] NPR 5분 뉴스 (2012-5-31)
- 2012.05.31 (CNN 학습용 10분 뉴스) CNN Student News Transcript - May 31, 2012
- 2012.05.30 [VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막] The Limits to Organic Farming in Feeding the World
- 2012.05.30 [VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막] Language Has Risks for Health Translators
- 2012.05.30 [초보자용 VOA 30분 느린 뉴스] VOA Special English 2012-5-30
- 2012.05.30 [영어뉴스] VOA 5분 뉴스 (2012-5-30)
- 2012.05.30 [영어뉴스] NPR 5분 뉴스 (2012-5-30)
- 2012.05.30 (CNN 학습용 10분 뉴스) CNN Student News Transcript - May 30, 2012
- 2012.05.29 [VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막] From Ancient Farmers, Lessons for Today's Amazon
- 2012.05.29 [VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막] Teaching Coffee Farmers About the Birds and the Bees
- 2012.05.29 [VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막] US-China Meeting Starts With Call for Fair Exchange Rate
- 2012.05.29 [초보자용 VOA 30분 느린 뉴스] VOA Special English 2012-5-29
- 2012.05.29 [영어뉴스] VOA 5분 뉴스 (2012-5-29)
- 2012.05.29 [영어뉴스] NPR 5분 뉴스 (2012-5-29)
- 2012.05.29 (CNN 학습용 10분 뉴스) CNN Student News Transcript - May 29, 2012
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[초보자용 VOA 30분 느린 뉴스] VOA Special English 2012-6-5
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(CNN 학습용 10분 뉴스) CNN Student News Transcript - June 5, 2012
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[초보자용 VOA 30분 느린 뉴스] VOA Special English 2012-6-4
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[VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막]Mouth X-Rays and the Brain; Infected Gums Do Not Cause Heart Attacks
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(CNN 학습용 10분 뉴스) CNN Student News Transcript - June 4, 2012
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[CNN 동영상+대본/ 북한 김정은 승계 관련] North Korea's young leader breaks the mold
Pyongyang, North Korea (CNN) -- For just a moment we can hardly believe what is happening.
The boyish leader takes a step towards the microphone, the massed ranks of the huge army he commands poised before him. And then he speaks.
The adoring crowd who have been chanting his name falls silent.
Kim Jong Un, not yet 30 years old, appears slightly nervous. His voice doesn't waver but his body moves back and forth restlessly and his eyes dart around. If his nerves betray him slightly, his words stay strong.
He stands atop the shoulders of the men who have gone before him, his grandfather and father. Directly below him hang the huge portraits of the man North Koreans call the Great Leader, Kim il Sung, and his son the so-called Dear Leader, Kim Jong Il.
North Korea marks founder's 100th birthday
The third generation of the Kim dynasty pledges to build on his family's legacy. But already, just with this speech, he is veering from their path. It is something his father never did. North Koreans I speak to say they can't recall ever hearing his voice.
To be here now is "the greatest gift I have received in my life," one man says.
Kim Jong Un is speaking to two audiences: his people and the outside world he stands apart from. The newly-crowned Supreme Leader has a vowed to try to unite the fractured Korean nation, still separated after more than half a century.
"We have suffered the pain of separation for nearly 70 years," he declares. "We have lived as one people on the same land for thousands of years to suffer like this is heartbreaking.
"Our party and our government will work with anyone who truly wants reunification."
But this is not a day for talk of peace. This is a military parade with all the menace this isolated nation can muster. To North Koreans this says they can defend themselves.
To their enemies, especially the United States, there is a deadly message.
"Our military has become a powerful military able to handle any kind of modern warfare, with complete offensive and defensive capabilities," Kim says.
Kim Jong Un
"The foreign powers are not the only ones with monopoly on military supremacy, and the days of their threatening and lying to us with atomic weapons is forever gone."
It is 100 years since the birth of the founding father of the nation, Kim il Sung. Installed as leader by Russia in 1945 after the liberation and the separation of North and South Korea, he is still revered as a freedom fighter and hero.
To honor his birthday, the military, one of the largest on earth, shows off its arsenal. Soldiers -- men and women -- goose step with precision, while columns of tanks bearing the message "we will smash the United States imperialists" roll across the great parade square.
The latest hi-tech weapons then follow, including drones and missiles that could potentially strike targets thousands of miles away.
This is an army battle ready, a country still technically at war and soldiers determined to follow any order.
"With the strategy of the Great Leader Kim Il Sung, the dear Kim Jong il and Kim Jong Un, and with our bombs and weapons, we will destroy them," a group of soldiers tells me.
In North Korea the army comes first, no expense spared. While it shows off its guns to the world, many people go hungry. The military is well fed, but aid agencies say the country's rural population suffers from chronic malnutrition and stunted growth as they scrounge for food.
In a rare concession, Kim says this regime will not allow people to suffer any more -- as close as he could get to admitting the government had failed the people in the past.
"Our fellow citizens, who are the best citizens in the world, who have overcome countless struggles and hardships, it is our party's firmest resolve not to let our citizens go hungry again," he says.
Across the capital, people watching on are alive to this moment. When I approach one group and merely mention the name Kim Jong Un they explode into chants and loud clapping.
One man beaming at our camera says, "we want to tell the world how proud we are to have such a man to lead us."
Kim has inherited the power, adulation and responsibility few people could possibly be prepared for.
The world is watching and wondering if he will be different from his forefathers and whether he will even survive.
When the parade passes, Kim will face the reality of ruling this poverty-stricken, pariah state.
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[VOA 초보용 영어/ 음성+대본] How the Erie Canal Helped America Grow
05/29/2012
MARIO RITTER: And I’m Mario Ritter with EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English. In the early eighteen hundreds, traveling in the United States was dangerous. Business and trading were limited. Then came the waterway called the Erie Canal. It helped build America.
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BOB DOUGHTY: Two adventurers recently traveled the more than five hundred eighty kilometers of America’s Erie Canal in kayaks. Then the two, Richard Harpham of Britain and Glenn Charles of the United States, paddled into the Hudson River to complete their trip to the Statue of Liberty in New York City.
They piloted their light, small boats more than eight hundred kilometers in about twenty-one days. That time also included stops for cultural and historic activities along the way.
The event was called "the New York State Spare Seat Expedition." Harpham and Charles invited others to join them for parts of their travels. The “guests” rode in the additional seat in the boats. Many kayaks have a single seat.
MARIO RITTER: The two men call themselves “expeditionary kayakers” – explorers on the water. One goal of their trip was to honor the struggles that built the Erie Canal. It became America’s first national waterway in eighteen twenty five.
At that time, the Erie Canal crossed the state of New York from the city of Buffalo on Lake Erie to Albany and Troy on the Hudson River. The Hudson River flowed into the Atlantic Ocean at New York City. So the canal joined the Great Lakes with the Atlantic Ocean. The canal made New York City a major port.
The difficulty of traveling through the Appalachian Mountains had kept many people from going West. The mountains also prevented people in the West from sending their wood and farm products east. But the canal overcame the natural barrier of those mountains. It helped open the American West. The Erie Canal made the United States a richer and stronger young nation.
BOB DOUGHTY: Politicians, businessmen, farmers and traders had talked about creating a canal connecting the Great Lakes with the Atlantic Ocean for one hundred years. A lawyer and politician named De Witt Clinton finally succeeded in getting the canal built.
As early as eighteen nine, Clinton saw the need for the canal. Then he had to defend his idea against people who laughed at him. Some critics called the canal “Clinton’s Folly” -- a stupid project. In eighteen twelve, the federal government rejected a proposal to provide money for the canal.
But five years later, the New York State legislature provided more than seven million dollars for the project. The lawmakers named Clinton to head a committee to supervise the development of the canal. De Witt Clinton was elected governor of New York that same year.
MARIO RITTER: The Erie Canal was five hundred eighty-four kilometers long, more than eight meters wide and one and one-half meters deep. It could not have been completed without the hard and dangerous labor of many workers. Historians say about one-third of the workers had recently moved to the United States from Ireland. They received about fifty cents a day for building the Erie Canal.
The men used explosives to break the rocky earth. Many workers were injured. Many were infected with the disease malaria. Twenty-six workers died of smallpox. Some were buried in unmarked graves along the canal.
(MUSIC)
BOB DOUGHTY: Big guns were fired in October, eighteen twenty-five in Buffalo, New York. The cannons were part of a celebration to observe the completion of the Erie Canal. Governor De Witt Clinton and his wife left Buffalo on a barge called the Seneca Chief. The boat moved at the rate of less than five kilometers per hour. It reached the Hudson River nine days later. To mark the arrival, Governor Clinton dropped some water from Lake Erie into the Hudson River.
MARIO RITTER: Within ten years, the Erie Canal had repaid the cost of building it. Transportation of products by canal was less costly than other methods.The waterway carried barges. Most of these boats had flat bottoms for carrying goods. The barges measured up to twenty-four meters long and about four and a-half meters wide.
Mules and horses on land pulled the barges through the canal using ropes. Eighty-three devices called locks raised the barges on the canal by more than one hundred seventy meters from the Hudson River to Lake Erie. Men and animals worked hard to pull the barges.
BOB DOUGHTY: Over time, the canal grew. Many improvements were made between eighteen thirty-five and eighteen sixty-two. But a few years later, the canal began to lose importance. Trains were becoming an easier and more profitable way to transport goods.
As the Erie Canal was losing business, some of its levees began to break. Levees normally hold back the water, preventing floods. The breaks damaged the towpaths next to the canal and stopped travel.
Age or heavy rains often caused the levees to break. But the breaks were not always an accident. Forestport, New York, had been suffering from the closing of businesses. Then, in the last years of the eighteen hundreds, several area levees broke under suspicious conditions.
MARIO RITTER: Breaks in the levees should have been bad news for Forestport. Difficult repairs were needed. But few people in the town seemed sad about the breaks. Instead, many were pleased. Almost two thousand men were brought in to repair the damage. That was more than the normal population of Forestport.
People crowded into places to eat, drink and play games of chance. The town had money again. Life became as profitable and wild as it had been during the best days of trade on the canal.
BOB DOUGHTY: The administration of New York Governor Theodore Roosevelt grew suspicious. Officials investigated. State officials charged several men from Forestport with plotting to damage canal property.
Michael Doyle is a newspaper reporter who writes about legal issues for California newspapers. In two thousand four, he published a book called “The Forestport Breaks.” For the book, he did research about his ancestors who had lived in Forestport. Mr. Doyle said he learned that his great-grandfather took part in the wrongdoing.
At the beginning of the story, a farmer sees water flooding over a levee in Forestport. He warns local officials. His warning prevents more severe damage. But some of the townspeople give no praise to the farmer for his action. Instead, Mister Doyle writes that they want to kill him.
(MUSIC)
MARIO RITTER: By nineteen-oh-three, some businesses were pressuring New York to build a whole system of canals. These people did not want the railroads to completely control the transport of goods. So the state formed the New York State Barge Canal System in nineteen eighteen. The Erie Canal became the largest part, linked to three shorter canals.
The canal system stayed busy until nineteen fifty-nine. At that time, the United States and Canada opened the Saint Lawrence Seaway. This waterway permitted ocean ships to sail up the Saint Lawrence River and through the Great Lakes. The Erie Canal lost a lot of its business.
BOB DOUGHTY: But the Erie Canal and the other parts of the New York canal system got help. In nineteen ninety-one, people who cared about the historic canal held a big public event. The group is called Erie’s Restoration Interests Everyone. It made the same trip that had celebrated completion of the Erie Canal in eighteen twenty-five.
As Governor and Missus Clinton had done, the group traveled from Buffalo, New York to the Hudson River. A man playing the part of De Witt Clinton dropped water from Lake Erie into New York Harbor.
A few days later, citizens voted to take measures to re-develop the canal system. Today, barges still use the system to transport heavy goods. One estimate says the canal system carries more than four hundred thousand tons of goods each year. More than one hundred fifty thousand pleasure boats also use the system each year.
MARIO RITTER: Today, an area called the Canalway National Heritage Corridor contains parts of the Erie Canal of the eighteen hundreds. You can walk, run or ride a bicycle in this area.
You may want to be adventuresome and paddle along in a small boat, like Harpham and Charles. Or, you can take a historic Erie Canal boat trip. Thousands of people do this every year.
The boat moves slowly along the water. You listen to guides tell about the animals and the men who pulled the barges. And, musicians play songs of the days when the Erie Canal was helping a young nation grow.
(MUSIC)
BOB DOUGHTY: This program was written by Jerilyn Watson and produced by Mario Ritter. I’m Bob Dougthy.
MARIO RITTER: Join us again next week for EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English.
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[VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막] Teens Get a History Lesson From History Makers
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[초보자용 VOA 30분 느린 뉴스] VOA Special English 2012-5-31
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(CNN 학습용 10분 뉴스) CNN Student News Transcript - May 31, 2012
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[VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막] The Limits to Organic Farming in Feeding the World
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[VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막] Language Has Risks for Health Translators
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[초보자용 VOA 30분 느린 뉴스] VOA Special English 2012-5-30
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(CNN 학습용 10분 뉴스) CNN Student News Transcript - May 30, 2012
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[VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막] From Ancient Farmers, Lessons for Today's Amazon
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[VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막] Teaching Coffee Farmers About the Birds and the Bees
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[VOA 초보용 동영상 + 자막] US-China Meeting Starts With Call for Fair Exchange Rate
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[초보자용 VOA 30분 느린 뉴스] VOA Special English 2012-5-29
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(CNN 학습용 10분 뉴스) CNN Student News Transcript - May 29, 2012