时间:2019-01-21 作者:英语课 分类:American Mosaic


英语课

AMERICAN MOSAIC 1 - September 6, 2002: Sept. 11 Anniversary Observances / Music from Bruce
Springsteen's ''The Rising''



HOST:
Welcome to AMERICAN MOSAIC — VOA’s radio magazine in Special English.
(THEME)
This is Doug Johnson. On our program today, we play music by Bruce Springsteen and tell how Americans plan



to remember the events of September eleventh of last year.


 


Observances in New York, Virginia and Pennsylvania


HOST:


Wednesday, September eleventh, will be the first anniversary of the terrorist 2 attacks against the United States.
Officials in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania are preparing ceremonies to remember, and to honor those
who were killed. Mary Tillotson has more.


ANNCR:


Ceremonies in New York City will begin early Wednesday morning with people playing bagpipes 3 and drums in
each of the five areas of the city. These groups will begin marching toward the attack area known as Ground
Zero. They will meet there at eight o’clock.


A service will begin forty-six minutes later, when the terrorists 4 crashed the first
hijacked 5 plane into the first building of the World Trade Center. Former New York
City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani will begin reading the names of the more than two-
thousand-eight-hundred people who died in the attack in New York. Several other
people will continue reading until all the names are read.



Ground Zero
(VOA Photo - E. Monnac)
The ceremony will end at ten-twenty-nine, the time the
second World Trade Center tower fell. City officials want all religious centers in the
city and the country to ring bells at that time.


Families of the victims will then walk into the area to place roses in a vase that will
become part of a permanent memorial.


Leaders from around the world are expected to attend other ceremonies in New
York at sunset. And candlelight ceremonies will take place in all parts of the city at
night.


President Bush is expected to visit Ground Zero during the day. He will also visit the Defense 6 Department
headquarters near Washington, D-C, which terrorists also attacked with a hijacked airplane. And he will visit the
place in Pennsylvania where the fourth hijacked plane crashed.


Officials in Arlington, Virginia are calling for people in the city to fly American
flags at nine-thirty-seven in the morning. That was when the hijacked plane hit the
Pentagon. A huge flag will be flown over the Potomac River from the Key Bridge.
And a bronze bell in Arlington’s Gateway 7 Park will ring one-hundred-eighty-four
times in honor of those who were killed at the Pentagon.


Other events will honor the police, fire and emergency medical workers who were
the first to arrive after the hijacked plane hit the Pentagon. About thirty-thousand
people are expected to attend a memorial service in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, the


Pentagon a year ago

town where the fourth hijacked plane crashed. A bell will ring forty times at the ceremony—one for each victim.


Observances Across the Nation


HOST:


Americans in other parts of the country also will be
observing the anniversary of the terrorist attacks.


The United States Conference of Mayors says more


than one-hundred-seventy cities and towns across the


country have planned official events on September


eleventh. Reports say more than one-hundred-fifty
organizations and communities asked the city of New York for pieces of the World Trade Center ruins. They
want to use pieces of the buildings during their remembrance ceremonies.


Bagpipes and church bells are expected to ring out at eight-forty-six in the morning, when the first plane hit the
World Trade Center. Officials in Houston, Texas are expecting more than five-thousand people to take part in a
ceremony at City Hall. They will place three-thousand flowers in a pool of water. The flowers represent those
who died in the attacks.


The International Association of Fire Chiefs has called for sirens 8 and church bells to ring at the times when the
two towers fell.


Officials in Elkhart, Indiana say their ceremony will take place at the same time as the one in New York.
Officials there will be reading the names of the police officers, fireman and emergency medical workers who
died.


A woman and her daughter from Denver, Colorado have created a huge flag from more than three-thousand
pieces of cloth from across the country. The flag will be shown at the United States Capitol building in
Washington, D.C. next week.


High school students in Allentown, Pennsylvania created a mosaic picture of the events. They will present it at
ceremonies in their town. The city of Anchorage, Alaska will offer free telephone calls for people to speak to
loved ones far away. And a memory wall will be built there for people to sign and leave flowers.


In Cambridge, Massachusetts, people will plant trees as remembrances that create new life. Many Americans say
it is important that the ceremonies remember the horrible events of last year and those who were killed. But they
say the ceremonies also should express the love of Americans for their country and their hope for a better, more
peaceful future.


Bruce Springsteen’s “The Rising”


HOST:


Bruce Springsteen’s new album was released July thirtieth. It is number one in record sales in more than ten
countries. Most of its songs are about the September eleventh terrorist attacks. Shep O’Neal plays some of the
songs on the album, “The Rising.


Memorial at Shanksville
United Flight 93 crashed
after passengers are
believed to have fought
with the hijackers.
ANNCR:


“You’re Missing” is probably the saddest song on “The Rising.” A woman’s
husband has died. She and her children see the many things that belonged to him
around the house, but he is gone.


(MUSIC)


“Into the Fire” is about one of the hundreds of police, firefighters and rescue
workers who died in the terrorist attacks. The song honors the love and sense of
duty he showed that day. It is also a prayer for the strength and hope that his




sacrifice represents.
(MUSIC)
Songs on “The Rising”
also express anger about the attacks. But, the anger is mostly a personal statement, not



a political one. The song “Empty Skies” describes the desire to strike back that a person feels after a senseless
loss.


(MUSIC)
The album’s title song appeals to listeners to come together and heal each other. We leave you now with Bruce
Springsteen’s hopeful title song, “The Rising.



(MUSIC)
HOST:
This is Doug Johnson. I hope you enjoyed our program today. And I hope you will join us again next week for



AMERICAN MOSAIC — VOA’s radio magazine in Special English.
This AMERICAN MOSAIC program was written by Caty Weaver 9 and Nancy Steinbach. Our studio engineer
was Curtis Bynum. And our producer was Paul Thompson.


 


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n./adj.镶嵌细工的,镶嵌工艺品的,嵌花式的
  • The sky this morning is a mosaic of blue and white.今天早上的天空是幅蓝白相间的画面。
  • The image mosaic is a troublesome work.图象镶嵌是个麻烦的工作。
n.恐怖主义者,恐怖分子
  • Without the gun,I'm a sitting duck for any terrorist.没有这支枪,我就成了恐怖分子下手的目标了。
  • The district was put on red alert during a terrorist's bomb scare.这个地区在得到恐怖分子炸弹恐吓后作了应急准备。
n.风笛;风笛( bagpipe的名词复数 )
  • Yes, and I'm also learning to play the bagpipes. 是的,我也想学习吹风笛。 来自超越目标英语 第3册
  • Mr. Vinegar took the bagpipes and the piper led the cow away. 于是醋溜先生拿过了风笛,风笛手牵走了奶牛。 来自互联网
n.恐怖主义者,恐怖分子( terrorist的名词复数 )
  • The terrorists have halted their bloody campaign of violence. 恐怖分子已经停止了他们凶残的暴力活动。
  • They were finally forced to capitulate to the terrorists' demands. 他们最后被迫屈从恐怖分子的要求。
劫持( hijack的过去式和过去分词 ); 绑架; 拦路抢劫; 操纵(会议等,以推销自己的意图)
  • The plane was hijacked by two armed men on a flight from London to Rome. 飞机在从伦敦飞往罗马途中遭到两名持械男子劫持。
  • The plane was hijacked soon after it took off. 那架飞机起飞后不久被劫持了。
n.防御,保卫;[pl.]防务工事;辩护,答辩
  • The accused has the right to defense.被告人有权获得辩护。
  • The war has impacted the area with military and defense workers.战争使那个地区挤满了军队和防御工程人员。
n.大门口,出入口,途径,方法
  • Hard work is the gateway to success.努力工作是通往成功之路。
  • A man collected tolls at the gateway.一个人在大门口收通行费。
n.汽笛( siren的名词复数 );妖冶而危险的女人;危险的诱惑;塞壬(古希腊传说中半人半鸟的女海妖,惯以美妙的歌声引诱水手,使他们的船只或触礁或驶入危险水域)
  • police cars with lights flashing and sirens blaring 警灯闪烁、警笛刺耳的警车
  • In big cities you always hear sirens all the time. 在大城市里,你总能听到警笛声。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.织布工;编织者
  • She was a fast weaver and the cloth was very good.她织布织得很快,而且布的质量很好。
  • The eager weaver did not notice my confusion.热心的纺织工人没有注意到我的狼狈相。
学英语单词
absorbent cellulose
administrative controls
advective ablation
afure
Aplahoué
as of right
bi nominal distribution
bitch up
boiler full power capacity
bolten
Bom Jesus do Itabapoana
Buxus linearifolia
Cephalantheropsis longipes
Chetwode Is.
cloxyquin
Corynebacterium agropyri
data-compression protocol
dense-medium separator
Dinunisal
diplommatina tatakaensis
eathy
egg collector
eicke
elijah
Elsfleth
emergency banking act
expectation gap
flat width of inner tube
florida international university
fore and aft force
gas-vapor cycle
goin' out
grounded plate amplifier
hail fallout zone
hard-sided kernel
harrumphers
heriacium
high-temperature hot water heat-supply system
hit rock bottom
hour counter driving pinion
imidie acid
inacceptable
inventory program
ischemia of extremity end
Ivotka
jerkdom
joint planning group
karro
Laugh and the world laughs with cry and you cry alone.
low data-rate input
mathematical similarity
microphotography
MMN
moor anchors ahead
Myruiaceae
nephrodialysis
net irradiance
nongradual
noninstallment
notre-dame
oscillating pressure process
outdoor office
patronymic family
pentelics
perissodactyl
pharmaceutical phytobiology
pinkest
points of election
priming cup
proton-radioactive
reiterative behaviour
remitting funds
residual liquid junction potential
rocking ladder
scheduling salesman's calls
shelliness
show-trial
slack hour
slewth
slip rate
source group
Spanish blind
stadia wires
stamping parts
stethography
stop sign board
succinate-glycine cycle
tectonicist
temper grade
tettigoniidaes
theft of state property
toilet-train
Tolot
toluene methylbenzene
top-down implementation plan
transmissible spongiform encephalopathy
trochlea humeri
uk plug
unretire
upbrings
Uralyt
whips into