Welcome to 10 minutes of commercial- free current events. I`m Carl Azuz for CNN STUDENT
NEWS. Hope your Thursday is going well.
We`re starting in Syria. The situation in this Middle Eastern country is the world`s
largest humanitarian crisis. That`s according to the U.S.
Central Intelligence Agency.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed in Syria`s ongoing civil wars, started
in 2011. More than 11 million have fled their homes. And
the ISIS terrorist group, which wants to create its own country, has taken over large parts
of Syria.
Amid everything that`s going on, ISIS is destroying historic artifacts. The Muslim militants have
taken aim at many relics that aren`t associated
with Muslim culture. They recently murdered a Syrian professor who refused to pledge to
ISIS and to tell them where certain archeological treasures
are in the Syrian city of Palmyra.
He wasn`t the only Syrian peacefully defending his county`s artifacts.
This is the centerpiece in the heart of the Syrian Antiquities Ministry`s efforts to
save this country`s cultural heritage, of course, in this time of the civil war. What
you can see here is these volunteers here are cataloguing small
pieces -- we can look at them -- of artifacts that have been found in various places here
in the country. Of course, some of them in places that
are now controlled by ISIS.
Now, all of them are going to get a number, and then afterwards, what`s going to happen
is they`re going to go to the station over here where you
can see that all these pieces are photographed.
And the folks here have already done an amazing amount of work. They`ve catalogued more than
150,000 pieces already, 35,000 of those from the
Palmyra area alone.
So, they`ve been working a lot and under very difficult conditions, because these building
here has taken mortar rounds in the past. There have been
scientists from this building that have been killed and yet the folks come here almost
every day to continue this work.
See if you can ID me. I`m a water-soluble compound found in many plants. I`m a group
of simple carbohydrates and my most common form
is sucrose.
I`m sugar, naturally extracted from sugarcane and sugar beads and I`m pretty sweet.
A controversial proposal concerning sugar. It comes from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration,
which overseas the safety and labeling of the
foods Americans eat. It wants new nutrition labels to clearly show the added sugars in
foods. We`re not talking about what`s naturally occurring
in fruits for instance, but how many grams of sugar food makers add to that.
The FDA wants the recommended value for the average adult to be 50 grams of added sugars.
The sugar associated, which represents some major U.S. sugar
producers opposes this. It says the scientific evidence used in the FAA`s dietary guidelines
is limited and weak, and that it doesn`t meet the FDA`s
own scientific standards.
The FDA recommends 300 grams of carbs a day, 2.4 of sodium and 65 for fat. But sugar? I
have no idea, and that`s
probably because the industry doesn`t want me to.
I read nutrition labels. Almost all nutrients have a percent daily value that gives consumers
a yard stick for how much they should be eating or
drinking. Sugar stands out because it doesn`t have one.
Because the food industry fought against it. The sugar industry is very good at labeling
and very, very
good at getting what it wants.
The sugar industry has spent at least $54 million lobbying since 2009. Soda and beverage
companies, well, they spent $113 million fighting
measures like sugar taxes during the same period.
Right now, the industry wants the federal Food and Drug Administration to drop proposal
for labeling sugar. The agency thinks the added information
will actually discourage the average American from eating more than 50 grams of sugar a
day.
Most Americans eat twice amount of sugar than this particular cap.
And Americans aren`t overdosing on fruit. They`re getting high on added sugar. We`re
not just talking soda and ice cream -- ketchup.
Four grams of sugar per tablespoons.
Salad dressing, tomato sauce, even cereals that are marketed as healthy.
That means this is 24 percent, a quarter, of the amount of sugar that you`re allowed
to have for an entire day.
Fruit juices.
Orange juice has as much sugar in it as a soft drink.
And how about this one? Bread.
But I look here, wheat, flour, eggs -- sugar is the third ingredient.
Is the third ingredient.
So, every one of these has 10 percent of the day`s sugar allotment. I bet they`re delicious.
Hypothetically, you can have a cup of this, a cup of this, a teaspoon of that, this, a
cup of this, and you`re maxed out for the day.
Oh, absolutely. Absolutely.
I mean, easily, right?
With no trouble at all.
So, that`s why food companies are so opposed to having this daily value on the food label
because they know that customers will be shocked when they
see how much sugar there is in products where they might have suspected.
From our "Roll Call" request page at CNNStudentNews.com -- Santa Fe Christian School is watching this
Thursday. In Solana Beach, California,
look up to the Eagles.
To the U.S. heartland, in Carthage, Missouri, the Tigers are on the prowl. Good to see Carthage
High School.
And for the first time in our "Roll Call", we`re visiting Romania, in the capital of
Bucharest. Hello to the American International School of
Bucharest.
The "Roll Call" is a chance for your school to get recognized on CNN STUDENT NEWS. There`s
one place where you look for your request. Each
day`s transcript page at CNNStudentNews.com. Just click the words that say "Roll Call".
We announced schools from all over the world, but you`ve got to be at least 13 years old
to make a request. One comment per day, keeping the spam
away, is the way to go to get in our show.
The New Horizon spacecraft has traveled for more than nine years, covering over 3 billion
miles to give us our closest view yet of
Pluto. Launched January 19th, 2006 from Cape Canaveral, the piano-sized spacecraft is the
first to visit the icy world discovered more than 80
years ago.
When astronomer Clyde Tombaugh first saw Pluto on February 18th, 1930, he only saw a pinpoint
of light. Tombaugh was using the best technology he
had -- a telescope at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona.
Flash forward to 1994, the Hubble space telescope floating high above Earth`s atmosphere snapped
this image of Pluto and its farthest moon
Charon. Then, in 1996, Hubble gave us this.
A mosaic of images snapped between 2002 and 2003 was assembled in 2010 to give us the
most detailed view of Pluto at that time.
Pluto isn`t the final destination for the New Horizon Spacecraft. The probe will keep
flying and deeper into space to explore a region scientists
think is filled with hundreds of small icy objects.
Of course, space exploration doesn`t happen cheaply. NASA says the New Horizon`s mission
costs about $700 million, which is about a middle of
the road price for missions in our solar system. What it sent back -- what appears to be a
flyover of the Pluto, formerly known as a planet.
Scientists say these are mountains that rise about as high over Pluto as the Rocky Mountains
do in the western U.S. The New Horizon spacecraft was
about 7,700 miles away from Pluto`s surface when it recorded these images. NASA says it
will take more than a year to download all the information
gathered by the spacecraft on this flyby.
One other thing NASA is assisting in, robots, and not just the kind that explore Mars, the
kind that battle on earth. One of the ones you`re seeing
here is built by MegaBots. It`s a company that makes gigantic fighting robots with formidable
weapons, like a paint ball cannon.
The company recently challenged a similar one from Japan to a giant robot fight. MegaBots
is trying to raise half a million dollars for a bigger,
badder, bolder fighting machine.
So, you can see what they`re all a-robot. Will this shift technology into an entirely
new gear, creating a machinations of fans, generating an
automaton of interest? It just depends on how many people get in the heavy metal you
all (ph).
I`m Carl Azuz of CNN STUDENT NEWS. Just getting more programming-ready for tomorrow.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét