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Listen To This3lesson 4

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https://online2.tingclass.net/lesson/shi0529/0001/1698/04_4740438.mp3
https://image.tingclass.net/statics/js/2012

News in Brief
News Item 1:
1. General Comprehension. Complete the chart with what you have heard on the tape.
  Event:
  Place:
  Time:
  Name of hostage:
  Nationality:
  Age: years old
  Occupation: the of the

2. Fill in the blanks with numbers to complete the following statements.
(1) Americans have been held by the pro-Iranian group by now.
(2) Frenchmen have been held.

3. Focusing on Details. Fill in the detailed information according to what you have heard.
    Frank Reed was by . Islamic Jihad , Reed of being . Reed is a native of , Massachusetts and has lived in for .

News Item 2:
1. General comprehension. Complete the following sentence to provide a summary for this news item.
    The federal in Brooklyn, New York today a Soviet on charges of .

2. Choose the best answer (a, b, c, or d) to complete each of the following statements.
(1) The code name for the college student was ____________.
a. FBI
b. Berg
c. Zakharov
d. Bird
(2) The Soviet UN employee is _____________.
a. a college teacher
b. a medical doctor
c. a KGB officer
d. A physicist
(3) The Russian agreed to pay for information concerning _____________.
a. the UN Center for Science and Technology
b. FBI
c. the US national defense
d. CIA
(4) The young man agreed to work for the Soviet Union for a period ____________.
a. of four years
b. of ten years
c. from 1981 to 1986
d. from 1983 to 1986
(5) The two met a total of _____________.
a. thirty-nine times
b. twenty-three times
c. ten times
d. four times

3. True or False Questions.
(1) The Russian was arrested on a Queens Subway platform while buying information from a college student.
(2) The Russian is currently being held in a federal jail in Brooklyn.
(3) He faces a sentence of ten years in prison if convicted on the espionage charges.

New Item 3:
1. General Comprehension. Fill in the blanks to complete the following statements.
(1) Jose Carrasco is an of .
(2) He was found .
(3) His magazine, , has been .
(4) In Chile this weekend someone attempted to .

2. Re-arrange the following sentences according to the sequence of the events mentioned in the recording.
(1) Police have been rounding up opposition leaders.
(2) A news magazine Analisis was banned in Chile.
(3) The foreign editor of Analisis was found shot dead.
(4) President Augusto Pinochet escaped an assassination attempt.
(5) Jose Carrasco was taken from his home by armed men.

Answer: ??put type=text name=t3 value="1" width=1 >??put type=text name=t3 value="2" width=1 >??put type=text name=t3 value="5" width=1 >??put type=text name=t3 value="3" width=1 >

3. Focusing on Details. Fill in the detailed information according to what you have heard.
(1) Analisis has been banned under imposed in Chile.
(2) The men who took away Jose Carrasco claimed to be , but the police .

News in Detail
1. General Comprehension. Fill in the blanks to complete the following statements.
(1) The military government held in Chile today.
(2) The assassination attempt was made ago.
(3) The government had on its opponents.
(4) The people in the rally gathered La Moneda, .
(5) The -year-old victim's family claimed he was yesterday by .

2. Focusing on Details. Choose the best answer (a, b, c, or d) to complete each of the following statements.
(1) A demonstration was held to ______________.
a. Protest the government's crackdown on its opponents
b. Defy the attempt to assassinate President Augusto Pinochet
c. celebrate the thirteenth anniversary of the military takeover
d. support the Chilean Humman Rights Commission
(2) Heavily armed soldiers were stationed along major downtown streets ______________.
a. to safeguard the demonstrators
b. to prevent the demonstrators from marching ahead
c. to protect President Augusto Pinochet
d. to arrest members of the Chilean Human Rights Commission
(3) Here a "close call" means ______________.
a. an immediate summon
b. a secret visit
c. a narrow escape
d. a local telephone call
(4) Carrasco's wife said he was ____________ by men claiming to be police.
a. called back from his office
b. abducted on his way home
c. arrested outside their home
d. roused from bed
(5) Carrasco had been back in Chile only two years after ____________ in exile.
a. thirty-eight years
b. twenty years
c. ten years
d. eight years

3. Complete the following statements to provide a true account of today's events.
(1) The bodies of at least more were also found.
(2) Their have not yet been .
(3) continued in the of the state of siege.
(4) More leftist political figures were , bringing the total to twenty.
(5) The government has issued for a number of others, some of whom are in .

4. True or False Questions.
(1) On the arrest orders there is at least one member of the Chilean Human Rights Commission.
(2) Some members were arrested when their homes were raided.
(3) All opposition magazines were ordered closed yesterday except the Christian democratic weekly, Hoy.
(4) During the last state of siege in 1984 and 1985, Hoy was allowed to continue publishing.
(5) Five foreign clergymen and one local lay worker were detained yesterday.
(6) The President warned yesterday that human rights advocates would have to be expelled.

Special Report
1. General Comprehension. Fill in the blanks with the basic facts about the Foundation.
(1) Founders of the Foundation: and his son
(2) Time of its establishment: ago
(3) Title of the Foundation:
(4) Money put in the Foundation initially: of their vast wealth
(5) Money given away every year now: more than $

2. True or False Questions.
(1) A symphony orchestra in the Midwest, an inner-city building project, a solution to Africa's chronic food shortages are all supported by the Ford Foundation.
(2) The world headquarters of the Ford Foundation is located on the Forty-second Street in New York.
(3) Robert McNamara is former Secretary of Defense, World Bank President, and Ford Board member.
(4) At the headquarters, a staff of more than three hundred people studies data from all over the country and writes recommendations.
(5) In the large board room, the directors read recommendations for individual requests and eventually decide who will get what part of the one hundred and twenty-one million dollars that is given away every year.

3. Focusing on Details. Fill in the blanks to complete following statements.
(1) Today the Foundation's endowment is about $ .
(2) Henry and Edsel Ford started their small project in .
(3) They originally contributed $ to the Foundation.
(4) The initial aim of the Foundation was to .
(5) The died before the . (father/son)
(6) A great deal of the of the was left after the of the two men and, for reasons, a large part of it had to be quickly. So the Michigan charity became the foundation in the world almost .

4. Choose the best answer (a, b, c, or d) to complete each of the following statements.
(1) The Third World development programs continue _______________.
a. to attract a lot of attention
b. to be criticized by many people
c. to be praised by many governments
d. to take up a great deal of the time of the Foundation
(2) Solution of some programs leads only to ______________.
a. new ones
b. new approaches
c. more fundings taking their place
d. more requests for money
(3) Robert McNamara defends Ford involvement in the Third World development programs because _____________.
a. he thinks that the Foundation should invest as much money as possible in these programs
b. he insists that Africa is a perfect illustration of the goals of the Foundation
c. he wishes to provide a solution to some of the problems in the Third World countries
d. he believes that the Foundation is able to offer valuable recommendations for the government's foreign aid.
(4) Despite the investment of the Foundation, ____________ per capita in the countries of sub-Saharian Africa has been negative, on average, for a decade.
a. both the state revenue and the GNP growth
b. the food production and the tax income
c. both the GNP growth and the food production
d. the state revenue and the food production
(5) _______________ formal requests for money will reach Ford Foundation this year.
a. About nine thousand
b. About ten thousand
c. A thousand
d. Several million
(6) About twelve hundred lucky projects will receive anywhere _______________.
a. from a hundred to several thousand dollars
b. from several hundred to a thousand dollars
c. from a thousand to several million dollars
d. from several thousand to a million dollars

1. Federal jury
 

    A jury of a case which arises under the Federal Constitution or under any federal law or treaty, and also cases which affect people outside the jurisdiction of a single state.

2. Massachusetts
 

    A state with an area of 8,257 square miles and a population of 5.16 million on the northeast coast of the United States, with Boston as its capital. Massachusetts was the scene of the pilgrims' landing in 1620, and it developed in the seventeenth century as a Puritan colony. One of the thirteen colonies, it became the sixth state of the United States of America in 1788.

3. Brooklyn

    Most populous borough of the New York City. Occupying the southwest end of Long Island, on New York Bay and east radius, it is connected with Manhattan Island by Brooklyn Bridge built in 1883 and others, and by the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge built in 1964 to Staten Island. It is an important commercial and industrial center; its waterfront, with many great docks and basins, extends to thirty-three miles; and at Wallabout Bay, east radius, is the important Brooklyn US Navy Yard.

4. FBI
 

    FBI stands for Federal Bureau of Investigation, an agency of the Department of Justice in the USA. It investigates those violations of federal law not specifically assigned to other agencies, being particularly concerned with internal security.

5. Manhattan
 

    An island lying between the Hudson and East rivers, and forming a borough of the New York City. The business center of the city lies in Manhattan, through which runs Broadway, a street famed for its theatre associations. It has a population of 1.7 million.

1. Chile
    Situated south of Peru and west of Bolivia and Argentina, the Republic of Chile fills a narrow 1,800-mile strip between the Andes and the Pacific. Its total area is 292,132 square miles with a population of 12.4 million. Santiago is its capital and largest city. Its official language is Spanish.

2. MIR
    MIR stands for Movimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria (Movement of the Revolutionary Left). It is the extremely militant among the Marxist groups which were affiliated with the two major powers of the left in Chile. The two major powers are the Socialist Party and the Soviet-oriented Communist Party of Chile.

3. Augusto Pinochet
 

    He was Army Chief of Staff under President Salvador Allende Gossens. In 1973, heading a four-man junta he overthrew Allende's government and assumed the office of President. Embarking on a right-wing dictatorship, the junta suspended parliament, banned political activity, and broke relations with Cuba. On March 11, 1980, he was inaugurated for an eight-year term as President. In July 1986, in the face of increasing protests, Pinochet announced that he might run for another eight-year term.

4. State of Siege in Chile in 1986
    In November 1986, President Augusto Pinochet of Chile imposed a state of siege in order to quell the disturbances that had recurred from time to time throughout the year. It replaced the state of emergency previously in effect and increased the government's power to make arrests and to restrict civil liberties.

1. Henry Ford 

    Henry Ford (1863??1947) was a well-known American motorcar manufacturer. Born in Michigan, he built his first car in 1893 and ten years later founded the Ford Motor Company. His model T was the first to be constructed by purely mass-production methods, and fifteen million of these historic cars were made. A pacifist, he visited Europe from 1915 to 1916 in an attempt to end the war, and in 1936 he founded with his son Edsel B. Ford (1893??1943) the Ford Foundation, which is now the world's biggest philanthropic organization. It received the main part of the fortunes of Henry Ford, his wife and his son Edsel.

2. World Bank
    The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development founded at the Bretton Woods Conference (1944) by the Western powers and provided by them with assets, on the basis of which member nations may obtain credit for approved development and reconstruction enterprises without drawing upon national reserves, The World Bank is affiliated with the United Nations Headquarters.

3. GNP
 

    GNP stands for Gross National Product which is the most comprehensive measure of a nation's total output of goods and services. It refers to the total dollar value of all goods that have been bought for final use and services during a year.

Another American has been kidnapped in West Beirut. Fifty-three-year-old Frank Reed was abducted by four gunmen this morning. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility, accusing Reed of being a spy. The pro-Iranian group already holds at least three other Americans and three Frenchmen. Reed is the Director of the Lebanese International School. He is a native of Malden, Massachusetts and has lived in Lebanon for eight years.


A federal jury in Brooklyn, New York today indicted a Soviet UN employee on charges of spying. Gennadi Zakharov is being held without bond, Pending trial on the charges. John Kailish has more from New York. "The thirty-nine-year-old Soviet physicist worked at the UN Center for Science and Technology until August 23rd when he was arrested on a Queens Subway platform for allegedly buying military secrets from a college student. It turned out that the student worked for the FBI and was known by the code name 'Berg.' According to today's indictment, Zakharov agreed to pay Berg for information involving the national defense of the United States. Berg, in turn, agreed to work for the Soviet Union for a period of ten years. The two met a total of four times, from April 1983 to August of 1986. At their final meeting, Zakharov allegedly gave Berg a thousand dollars. Zakharov is currently being held in a federal jail in Manhattan. He faces life in prison if convicted on the espionage charges."


The foreign editor of a news magazine recently banned in Chile has been found shot dead near a cemetery in Santiago. The family of Jose Carrasco says he was taken from his home by armed men who claimed to be police. Carrasco's magazine, Analisis , has been banned under the new state of siege imposed in Chile after an attempt this weekend to assassinate President Augusto Pinochet. Since the attempt, police have been rounding up opposition leaders although they deny they arrested Carrasco.


In Chile, the military government held a rally today in support of President Augusto Pinochet, who escaped an assassination attempt two days ago. A crackdown on opponents of his government continued in response to that attack. A journalist for an opposition magazine was found dead. His family and colleagues charge he had been kidnapped yesterday by police. Tim Fosca reports now from Santiago.
Several thousand people gathered in front of La Moneda, the presidential palace, for a rally in support General Augusto Pinochet this afternoon. Heavily armed soldiers were stationed along major downtown streets for the demonstration, which is celebrating the thirteenth anniversary this week of the military takeover. Hundreds of members of women's charity groups passed in review before General Pinochet and his wife Lucia. The head of state appeared physically unaffected by his close call Sunday when he narrowly escaped assassination. Hours before the rally, Jose Carrasco, a thirty-eight-year-old editor at the opposition magazine Analisis was found dead in a Santiago cemetery. He had been shot ten times. Carrasco's wife said he was roused from bed early Monday morning by men claiming to be police. But authorities officially denied his arrest. Carrasco, a member of MIR, the revolutionary left movement, had been back in Chile only two years after eight years in exile. The bodies of at least two more murdered victims were also found today, but their identities have not yet been established. Arrests continued in the second day of the state of siege. More leftist political figures were rounded up, bringing the total number of detentions to twenty. The government has issued arrest orders for a number others, some of whom are in hiding. On the list is at least one member of the Chilean Human Rights Commission. A spokesman said the homes of Commission members in the provincial city of San Fernando were also raided, but no members were at home. All opposition magazines were ordered closed yesterday, including the Christian democratic weekly, Hoy . Under the last state of siege in 1984 and 85, Hoy was allowed to continue publishing. The situation of five foreign priests and one local lay worker detained yesterday remains unresolved. The clergymen were accused of attacking police officers and carrying instructions on how to make home-made bombs. General Pinochet warned yesterday that human rights advocates would have to be expelled. For National Public Radio, this is Tim Fosca in Santiago.


Fifty years ago, Henry Ford and his son Edsel, placed a modest amount of their vast wealth into a charitable foundation. That was the common practice then and is now for wealthy Americans. The once modest foundation has grown into the largest general purpose charitable organization in the world. The Ford Foundation has given away more than six billion dollars. Its money has touched every aspect of American life, touched the arts, science and even public radio. Warren Kozak has this report.
A symphony orchestra in the Midwest, an inner-city building project, Africa's chronic food shortages. These varied activities have one thing in common: all have received money from the Ford Foundation. Just off New York's Forty-second Street, in the shadow of the United Nations, a modern building with a huge glass wall serves as the world headquarters of the Ford Foundation. Besides giving away money, the Foundation has always attracted some of the country's best minds.
"Well, I should tell you that I do not join any organization, including Ford Foundation, unless it can satisfy two criteria."
Former Secretary of Defense, World Bank President, and Ford Board member, Robert McNamara.
"One, I insist that it be an organization I feel some capability of contributing to. And, secondly, I insist it be an organization that can contribute to me, that can stimulate my interest, enlarge my understanding of the world. I should say that it has been, I think the most interesting association of my life."
At the Foundation's headquarters, a staff of more than three hundred people studies data from all over the world, spots trends and writes recommendations. In the large board room, the directors argue the merits of individual requests and eventually decide who will get what part of the one hundred and twenty-five million dollars that goes out every year. If you think giving away that kind of money is easy, you're wrong.
There is no question that today's Ford Foundation with a four and a half billion-dollar endowment is a force of its own. But is wasn't always that way. You see, back in 1936, there were just a few large foundations when Henry and Edsel started their small project. Their original contribution was only twenty-five thousand dollars and its main function was to help local charities in Michigan. Then in 1943, son Edsel died unexpectedly, followed four years later by his father. And the family lawyers had a huge problem on their hands. At the time of their deaths, the Ford Motor Company was not a public corporation. These two men owned most of the stock and, for tax reasons, a great deal of it had to be disposed of and quickly. There was only one logical recipient of the windfall. So, in the late forties, the sleepy Michigan charity became, almost overnight, the largest foundation in the world.
The Third World development programs also continue to take a lot of heat from time to time. Millions of dollars have been poured into what seems to be a bottomless pit. Some problems have been solved only to find new ones taking their place. Robert McNamara defends Ford's involvement there. He thinks Foundations offer something that no one else is able to do, because without their research the government's foreign aid would be wasted.
"It's insane to put as much money, invest as much money, per year with as inadequate an intellectual foundation of how to maximize the efficiency of those investments. And Africa is a perfect illustration of the problem. Tens of billions of dollars are being invested in Africa today. They need more. But, despite that investment, the GNP growth per capita in the countries of sub-Saharian Africa has been negative, on average, for a decade. The food production per capita has been negative, per capita, for over a decade. Why? Who knows? Nobody knows. And governments are too large; they're too rigid; they're too inflexible; they're too insensitive, really, unable to move as rapidly, and in some ways, as radically as is necessary to find the answer to that question."
This year the Ford Foundation will receive about nine thousand formal requests for money. All of the letters and forms will be looked at; some will be studied more closely; and about twelve hundred lucky projects will receive anywhere from a thousand dollars to several million to help them along the way. I'm Warren Kozak in Washington.
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