



全文预览已结束
下载本文档
版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领
文档简介
2013届高考英语听力特训3(word文本):12 american reporter nicholas daniloff is in frankfurt, west germany, on his way home from moscow after being detained for a month on espionage charges. president reagan in kansas city on a campaign swing announced daniloffs release, denying that any trade had been agreed to in order to win his freedom. asked by reporters if he blinked in staring down soviet leader gorbachev over the daniloff affair, the president said they blinked. the agreement to release daniloff came after a three-hour meeting last night in new york between secretary of state george shultz and soviet foreign minister eduard shevardnadze. no details of the agreement have been released, and it is not known if daniloffs freedom is the first step in a trade involving accused soviet spy gennadi zakharov. when he arrived in frankfurt, daniloff thanked president reagan, secretary of state shultz, and other us officials for dotting all the is and crossing the ts that permitted him to be in frankfurt tonight. the house of representatives is expected to vote soon to override president reagans veto of a bill imposing economic sanctions against south africa. nprs cokie roberts reports that the president has promised to expand economic sanctions on his own in hopes of getting congress to sustain his veto. both houses of congress passed the economic sanctions against south africa by wide enough margins to override a presidential veto. and its expected the house will easily garner the two-thirds vote necessary for override. so its in the senate the president is concentrating his efforts. today president reagan sent a long letter to majority leader robert dole, restating his opposition to punitive sanctions that harm the victims of apartheid. the letter went on to outline an executive order the president plans to sign which would impose some but not all of the sanctions passed by congress. for example, thered be a ban on some new investments in south africa, but not all and a ban on some imports from south africa, but not as many as called for by congress. the president hopes the executive order will win over the fourteen additional senators he needs to sustain his veto. the chairman of the house foreign affairs committee said today that congress would simply come back next year with tougher sanctions if the veto is sustained. im cokie roberts at the capitol. american reporter nicholas daniloff was freed today in moscow. he flew into frankfurt, west germany this afternoon and spoke with reporters gathered at the airport. its wonderful to be back in the west. i think its obvious to everybody what has happened over this last month. i was arrested without an arrest warrant. a case was fabricated against me with a narrow political purpose of giving the soviet union some political leverage over the case of gennadi zakharov in new york. the kgb did not punish me; the kgb punished itself. i cannot tell you anything about any other arrangements. all i know is that i am free in the west, very grateful, delighted to see you. nicholas daniloff. when daniloff left the soviet union today he had been detained there for thirty-one days, facing a possible trial on espionage charges. daniloff left moscow only hours after secretary of state shultz and soviet foreign minister shevardnadze met last night in new york in the latest of four negotiating sessions concerning the fate of the american journalist. but so far no details have emerged about the arrangements that brought daniloff his freedom. nprs mike shuster has more from new york. reporters in moscow who had been staking out the american embassy there first got wind this morning that daniloff might be released, after he left the embassy in a car and flashed the v for victory sign. apparently daniloff was simply informed that he could leave, and his passport was returned to him. he was then taken to the airport along with his wife, and soon thereafter boarded a lufthansa flight to frankfurt, west germany. the official american announcement of his release came from president reagan mid-day today as he was campaigning in kansas city, missouri. i have something of a news announcement i would like to make, that in case you havent heard it already, that at twelve oclock, twelve oclock central time, a lufthansa airliner, left moscow bound for frankfurt west germany, and on board are mr. and mrs. nicholas daniloff. so far though neither the white house nor the state department has said anything about the specific agreements that ended the negotiations on daniloff. and lacking any fuller explanation from the government, many questions remain. first, what will happen to the russian scientist gennadi zakharov whose arrest last month in new york for spying led to daniloffs detention? no date has been set for zakharovs trial in brooklyn, and a representative of the justice department in brooklyn said today the us attorney there was waiting for instructions on the handling of zakharovs case. there have been suggestions that zakharov might be returned to the soviet union at a later date in exchange for one or more jailed soviet dissidents. there is also the question of the american decision to expel twenty-five soviet personnel from their united nations mission here. several have already left new york and the deadline for the expulsion of the rest is wednesday. the soviets have threatened to retaliate if the order is not rescinded. there is no word whether the agreement that freed daniloff includes anything on the twenty-five soviets, which naturally leads to the final question: has daniloffs release today brought the united states and the soviet union any closer to a summit meeting? secretaqry shultz has said that a summit could not take place without daniloff gaining his freedom. that has now been removed as an impediment to a summit, but the soviets have called the zakharov case and the matter of the twenty-five soviet diplomats obstacles to a summit as well. until the details are made public of the agreement shultz and shevardnadze worked out, it will not be known what the prospects for a summit truly are. this is mike shuster in new york. one year ago this month, a powerful earthquake in mexico city killed more than nine thousand people. tens of thousands of people lost their jobs because of the massive damage. among those hardest hit by the quake were women garment workers, who worked in sweatshops concentrated in the heart of mexico city. one year after the earthquake, lucie conger reports that some of the forty thousand seamstresses who lost their jobs are changing their attitudes about work. on the fifth floor of a small office building in the heart of downtown, some thirty garment workers are back at work. just as before the earthquake theyre working on an assembly line. each woman is specialized in one operation, like sewing cuffs or putting buttonholes on a fancy cocktail dress. but there the similarities with their past work end. the women here on uruguay street are running their own cooperative with machines they got from their former employer in a settlement when he closed his factory which was damaged by the earthquake. about fifteen groups of women have former cooperatives, setting up shop with equipment they received instead of an indemnification when factory owners shut down their former places of work. running their own business has meant big changes for these women. all thirty-five women in this cooperative agree that they prefer working without a boss looking over their shoulder. for juana arias, who used to cut patterns for dresses, not having a boss has given her the chance to develop new skills. well, sometimes its my job to solve some problems. i decide when to buy things. for example, when we run out of thread and needles, thats my job to decide on things that are needed. at the same time, since they set up the cooperative five months ago, the women have had the chance to realize that the old system of working for the patron or boss man had its good points. at the cooperative, the women only get paid when they complete a factory order. last friday came and went without a pay-check. their income is low now, because theyre assembling dresses instead of earning more by producing ready-made dresses of their own design. there are other concerns as well. while the seamstresses are grateful for the loans and technical assistance that theyre getting from a catholic church foundation, they worry about repaying the loans and keeping up with operation expenses like rent and phone bills. and leaving behind the tradition of having a boss is a difficult transition for mexican women who are accustomed from childhood to responding to male authority figures. paula socer, a leader at another seamstresses cooperative. they dont like us to tell them what to do. since we are all owners, they think that we each can do what we want. other garment workers are still working under the patron. but after the earthquake, many of the women began to question their position at work when they saw some factory owners moving more quickly to salvage machinery and cash boxes than to rescue trapped workers. dramatic events like these moved some four thousand seamstresses to join the september 19th garment workers union. the women blocked traffic and marched to the presidential palace before getting official recognition as an independent union not forced to affiliate with the ruling party. through the union, the seamstresses are demanding that factory owners respect the law by giving overtime pay for extra work, allowing workers to take vacation, and providing standard benefits. so far, nine factory owners have signed agreements with the union to guarantee workers rights. but the union continues to face hurdles. maria hernandez worked in an illegal, clandestine sweatshop before the earthquake and is now press chief for the union. the bosses and the soldout unions are always pressuring the women who work here, threatening them, saying that theyre going to close down the business, but that if they continue to organize, one day something is going to happen to their family. and then they start firing people. they offer them money to turn in the ones who are organizing, to tell them who the leaders are. manuela purras is a seamstress who was fired in may for organizing the thirty-five women at the factory where she had worked for thirteen years. today shes operating a small business on the edge of the empty paved lot where the union has its offices in temporary qua
温馨提示
- 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
- 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
- 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
- 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
- 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
- 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
- 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。
最新文档
- 助跑投掷垒球教学课件
- 2025年初级水利工程管理师考试题库与答案解析
- 2025年外贸跟单员初级业务技能模拟题集
- 2025年外贸企业招聘考试模拟题及答案
- 2025年炼钢工艺深度解析高级面试题预测及答题思路
- 2025年人力资源岗位面试题解析与应对策略
- 2025年网络安全工程师中级面试技巧与模拟题答案详解
- 2025年炼钢高级工考试知识点梳理与模拟试题
- 2025年特岗教师招聘面试小学数学模拟题及答案
- 2025年新媒体运营经理专业能力面试题库
- 2025年内江市总工会公开招聘工会社会工作者(14人)笔试模拟试题及答案解析
- 2025云南辅警笔试题目及答案
- 2025四川内江市总工会招聘工会社会工作者14人笔试备考试题及答案解析
- 2025年三支扶陕西试题及答案
- 2025年行政执法证考试必刷题库与答案
- 基孔肯雅热防控知识考试试题含答案
- 低钾血症护理常规业务学习
- 2025年职业指导师(四级)考试模拟试题汇编与模拟试题解析
- 口部运动功能评估分级标准
- 《汉服发展史》PPT课件
- 新编物理基础学王少杰(上、(下册))课后习题答案
评论
0/150
提交评论