欢迎来到VOA在线收网 www.voa365.com
当前位置:VOA NEWS > CNN NEWS >

CNN Students News - Apr 24 , 2015

2015-04-24 07:18来源:未知

音频下载

CARL AZUZ, HOST: This is CNN STUDENT NEWS.

I`m Carl Azuz.

The law, the blob and fruits and vegetables are all part of today`s commercial-free coverage.

We`re starting with a look at the impact that cameras are having in U.S. law enforcement. Civilians have them on their phones. Police are

increasingly using body cameras.

The footage that these cameras capture and the public`s access to it, is having a tremendous influence in the court of public opinion.

For example, some of the massive protests in different U.S. cities that have followed the controversial deaths of suspects at the hands of

police. And some other investigations that have cleared officers of wrongdoing when body cameras confirmed they followed the law in

confrontations with suspects.

With multiple protests and investigations going on in different cities around the country, we`re taking a look today at how the use of police

force is defined by the U.S. Supreme Court.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

SUNNY HOSTIN, CNN CORRESPONDENT:

When can police shoot someone?

(ON SCREEN)

Laws for Law Enforcement

HOSTIN: The legal standard for deadly force has been in place since the 1980s, when the Supreme Court in two cases, one was "Tennessee v.

Garner," the other "Graham v. Connor," explained when cops can use deadly force.

In the "Garner" case, Memphis police shot 15-year-old Edward Garner when he was trying to climb a fence after escaping from a home burglary.

He was unarmed.

In finding that it was wrong to kill the teen, the Supreme Court said, "Where the suspect poses no immediate threat to the officer and no threat

to others, the harm resulting from failing to apprehend him does not justify the use of deadly force to do so."

So bottom line, as an officer, you don`t shoot, you apprehend, unless you believe the suspect is a danger to you or to others in the community.

In 1989, the Supreme Court further clarified the law in "Graham v. Connor." In that case, Dethorne Graham, a diabetic, went into a convenience

store to get orange juice because he felt the onset of an insulin attack. But when he got into that convenience store, he saw the long lines. He

then quickly extend. A police officer saw him, thought that his exit from that convenience store was suspicious and proceeded to follow him and stop

him.

Other backup officers arrived and slammed Graham`s head onto the police car hood. Graham received several injuries and sued, and the case

made it all the way to the Supreme Court.

There, the Supreme Court found that the officer`s actions were justified.

Why?

Because the officers reasonably believed that the force that they used was necessary to prevent or detect a crime in progress.

The law entrusted decision as to when to use deadly force on the officer and then courts determine whether or not the officer`s actions were

reasonable, right then and there at the scene, not in hindsight.

The law recognizes that cops have to make split second decisions right at the scene, with the information they have.

(END VIDEO TAPE)

(ON SCREEN)

Roll Call

AZUZ: Starting our Roll Call out West today, way out West, like the last frontier, in Venetie, Alaska, we`re happy to have The Wolf Pack

watching at John Fredson School.

I hear we have some Cougars online today. These are in The Buckeye State of Ohio. Hello to Crestview High School in Ashland.

And one state east of The Keystone State, great to see the Orioles, Rocky Grove High School in Franklin, Pennsylvania is on the Roll.

An increasing number of Americans are trading in their hybrid or electric cars for purely gas-powered vehicles, including SUVs. According

to Edmunds.com, new hybrid sales are down from last year and a minority, 45 percent of hybrid owners, are trading in for another hybrid, many opting

instead for gasoline-powered cars.

Why?

Well, carmakers have improved the gas mileage of their vehicles and gas-powered cars generally cost less than hybrids. Probably the biggest

reason, though, gas prices. AAA says the national average for a gallon is $2.47. A year ago, it was $3.66. So people are less worried about the

cost of filling up.

The biggest influence on gas prices is the cost of crude oil and OPEC historically has been a major factor in determining that.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

(ON SCREEN)

What the Heck is OPEC?

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Whenever you hear about oil, the word OPEC isn`t far behind. OPEC stands for the Organization of Petroleum Exporting

Countries. It`s a group of 12 nations that have a lot of clout in the energy market because they produce about one third of the world`s total oil

and export it around the globe. That`s about 30 million barrels of oil every single day.

It was formed in 1960. The goal -- to coordinate oil production to ensure that members are pumping enough supply to meet demand.

If all 12 countries play by the rules, it can help to regulate and stabilize global oil prices.

But there are also plenty of major oil producing nations that are not part of the OPEC club, including the United States, Canada, Mexico, Russia.

And they don`t attend OPEC meetings and as such, they`re not bound by the cartel`s decisions.

And as these nations have increased their production over the past two years, OPEC`s influence in the market has plunged.

There`s now an excess of oil supply, which has pushed down prices significantly. The price drop has caused political problems in some OPEC

countries that rely on oil sales heavily to fund their governments.

Well, OPEC`s grp on oil may be getting weaker, but it also means lower prices at pumps around the world.

(END VIDEO TAPE)

(ON SCREEN)

That`s Random

AZUZ: There are state trees, state flowers, state birds. Not a lot of states have official state vegetables. Oklahoma does, though.

Its official state vegetable is the watermelon. That`s right, a fruit.

So why don`t they just make that the official state fruit?

Well, because they already have one of those. It`s the strawberry. This is ripe for debate and it`s random.

There`s an area of unusually warm water in the Pacific Ocean. The scientist who named it the blob says it was 1,000 miles long, 1,000 mills

wide and 100 yards deep last year, but that it`s grown this year.

Scientists say its warmer temperatures aren`t the result of heating, they`re the result of less cooling. They think a high pressure ridge over

the West Coast has kept ocean waters calmer than usual and that with fewer storms cooling the surface, they believe more heat has stayed in the water.

There isn`t only one blob in the Pacific.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

JENNIFER GRAY, ATS METEOROLOGIST:

There are certain areas in the Pacific Ocean that scientists are calling "the blob." And it may be a little bit more serious than its name

implies.

It`s actually three different areas. One is in the Gulf of Alaska. Another one in the Bering Sea. And then another one off the coast of

Southern California.

What scientists are finding is over the last year and a half, the ocean waters have been warmer by about 5.5 degrees Fahrenheit. When you`re

talking about sea surface temperatures, that`s a big deal. Some scientists are saying that "the blob" may be having an import on thunderstorms in

California, and when you get lightning, we`ve seen an increase in forest fires, and we`re also seeing a huge import on marine life.

"the blob" could have the biggest import on our salmon industry, believe it or not. Salmon live in cooler waters and their food source is

leaving. They`re going in search of cooler waters and so the salmon have nothing to eat.

Scientists have also found tropical sharks in northern latitudes. They`ve swam anywhere from a couple hundred miles to up to 1,000 miles or

so off of their normal migratory patterns and have scientists scratching their heads.

Some scientists are saying could this be the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, which is basically a long-lived el nino?

We`ve had cooler waters since the `90s, and now they`re wondering if the waters are shifting to more of a warmer pattern.

But other scientists are saying it`s more than that.

(END VIDEO TAPE)

Before We Go

AZUZ: Robots -- they`re great at clean floors or helping build vehicles or moving stuff around. They`re terrible at dodge ball. Just

look at this thing. No catching, no throwing back, just getting out over and over again.

Don`t overlook its strength, though. This bipedal robot at Oregon State University isn`t stopping or falling over like a human would. Its

suspension system, a unique way to store mechanical energy, keeps it on all twos.

So don`t let it robot-her you that it doesn`t look like it`s having a ball. That`s no knock on it. It`s got a leg up on lesser machines that

would shut down on the dodge ball circuit.

We always aim for balanced coverage on CNN STUDENT NEWS.

Come on back Friday.

(责任编辑:admin)
最新新闻
  1. 李沁《请君》横空出世!主角长得
  2. 开心麻花职场轻喜剧《开心合伙人
  3. 《一年一度喜剧大赛》第二季,终
  4. 500+分区,海信E8H XDR系列 MiniLED电
  5. 全新荣耀 MagicBook X系列产品震撼上
  6. 荣耀笔记本魔术 BookV142022上市:支
  7. 荣耀X40评测:首款 OLED硬核屏幕
  8. 荣耀X40评测:首款 OLED硬核屏幕
  9. 有消息称 快手国际化经营机构重
  10. Arm将发布下一代NeoverseV2技术,用
  11. 每日观察!观点 | 一机多用三星
  12. 头条焦点:张朝阳出物理题考网友
  13. 全球时讯:苹果占国内高端手机市
  14. 天天滚动:《羊了个羊》否认抄袭
  15. 天天热消息:华强北AirPods Pro已破解
  16. 世界快播:余承东:华为把全球设
  17. 【全球聚看点】iPhone 13降价800到手
  18. 全球观热点:小米12S假期降价600 到
  19. 全球信息:美股一夜蒸发5000亿 苹果
  20. 世界即时:雷军:37岁时就财务自由
  21. 播报:荣耀70 5G手机限时减500 到手
  22. 每日头条!华为Mate 40 Pro降2000 5G版
  23. 环球新消息丨iPhone14系列海南免税
  24. 实时:实力霸屏,轻薄长续航!荣
  25. 当前视讯!研究报告:使用表情符
  26. 环球微速讯:腾讯音乐为何选择介
  27. 当前焦点!小米集团:今日耗资约
  28. 【全球新要闻】爱奇艺龚宇:从“
  29. 天天时讯:Adobe宣布以约200亿美元收
  30. 今日看点:腾讯音乐申请储架发行
  31. 焦点精选!“羊了个羊”微信小程
  32. 环球实时:微软不妥协,英国宣布
  33. 当前时讯:腾讯游戏,海外投了1
  34. 世界热资讯!茶颜悦色,为何总在
  35. 环球观速讯丨寺库宣布与阿拉丁科
  36. 实时焦点:美前情报官员:“美国
  37. 全球信息:观点 | 英媒:美反华“
  38. 世界焦点!搜狗“断舍离”:一年
  39. 每日速讯:《羊了个羊》成新社交
  40. 全球观天下!新加坡星展集团进入
  41. 【天天播资讯】乐视30天直播14场
  42. 【新视野】以太坊8年挖矿时代结
  43. 前沿热点:阿里健康发布首份线上
  44. 世界动态:“雷军称37岁已财务自由
  45. 全球快讯:通关率不足0.1%,“羊了
  46. 环球头条:还看好吗?美团王兴抛
  47. 世界快消息!腾讯控股:回购约3
  48. 世界报道:“东南亚小腾讯”Sea继
  49. 天天热议:18个网络平台调查!超六
  50. 天天通讯!重磅