美国国家电台 NPR 2012-09-29(在线收听) |
The presidential candidates are gearing up for their first debate in Denver next week, although the economy has topped their agendas. They have also been focusing more on foreign policy recently. President Obama spoke by telephone today with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. And NPR's Scott Horsley reports Netanyahu also spoke with the president's Republican rival Mitt Romney. President Obama decided not to meet one-on-one with Netanyahu or any other world leaders during this week's United Nations gathering in New York. But on the phone, the two men agreed on their shared goal of preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. Netanyahu welcomed Mr. Obama's U.N. speech in which he said United States would do what's necessary to prevent that from happening. Mr. Obama in turn reaffirmed this country's unshakable commitment to Israel's security. The president and Netanyahu are often described as having a frosty relationship. Though the administration insists the two men talk regularly. An ads argued that cooperation between the U.S. and Israel has never been closer. Scott Horsley. NPR News, Washington.
New intel. suggest Syria has moved some chemical weapons capability to a more secure site. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told reporters at the Pentagon today that there has been some limited movement, but he added Syria's main chemical weapon sites remain intact under government control.
President Obama is preventing a Chinese company from moving ahead with four wind farm in Oregon citing national security risks. The White House did not say what risk the rolls corporation pose but the wind turbines were being built near a naval weapon system's training site.
Higher gas prices likely figure into the latest spike in consumer spending in the United States, the Commerce Department saying today went up by 0.5%. But NPR's Dave Mattingly tells us people save less as incomes barely rose.
Americans spent more last month, but that was mainly because of higher gasoline prices, they jumped almost 50 cents a gallon in August, costing people more to fill up. And with inflation eating up the small increase and incomes. ClearView Economics President, Ken Mayland describes the numbers as awful.
We've taken a stepdown based on these results, we are flirting with zero growth or maybe even something slightly negative, the economy, pretty much contracted in August. Households saved less to pay for more expensive essentials. Dave Mattingly, NPR News, Washington.
Bank of America is agreeing to pay more than two billion dollars to settle a class action lawsuit over its takeover of Merrill Lynch. Investors accused BOA of misleading them about both company's financial health. Bank of America denies any wrongdoing.
Before the close on Wall Street, Dow was off 50 points at 13,437.
This is NPR News.
Civil rights groups in France are sounding the alarm over the latest treatment over Roma migrants that they say could set a dangerous precedent at a time of rising anti-immigrant tensions in Europe. A group of residents in a poor neighborhood in southern France evicted Roma squatters whom they accused in a series of robberies. NPR's Eleanor Beardsley reports that the citizens didn't wait for the police or courts and acted on their own.
The residents of a working class largely immigrant neighborhood of Marseille. They said the Roma had been stealing. Officials say the explosion was planned because the police were notified in advance. The Marseille say residents even burned the camp after the 35 Roma departed. A Roma advocate group said Roma are victims of stereotypes as soon as they tried to set up camps somewhere people accuse them of stealing. Officials say the confrontation is a worrying sign of rising tensions in an increasingly desperate economic climate. Successive French governments have been stumped by how to deal with a huge influx of Roma from eastern Europe since E.U. borders were opened seven years ago. Eleanor Beardsley, NPR News, Paris.
In California, Jury is recommending the death sentence for an arsonist convicted of murder for setting a wildfire nearly a decade ago that led the deaths of five men who suffered heart attacks. A judge will make the final decision and how to punish Rickie Lee Fowler.
Federal Health officials are rolling out a national awareness campaign about bogus online pharmacies. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Doctor Margaret Hamburg says they are more prevenient than many people might think, "little bit less than 3%, I think, were in fact, legitimate online pharmacies that consumers could count on." She says phony pharmacies are likely to sell counterfeit drugs that could harm customers. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/npr2012/9/218051.html |