时间:2018-12-20 作者:英语课 分类:CNN2011年(九)月


英语课

 The lights are up here on CNN Student News, but they’re out for millions of Americans on the East Coast. I’m Carl Azuz, reporting on the aftermath of Hurricane Irene. It only took a couple days for the storm to billow up the Eastern Seaboard, but it could be a long time before some places in its path get back to normal. Some hard numbers for you, 3 million, the number of Americans living without electricity; 700,000, an estimate of how many air travelers were ground because of the storm; billions, monetary estimates for the damage caused. And here’s one reason for that.Look at these floodwaters in Vermont. This is the state that really took the brunt of the storm, with virtually every waterway it has flooded. State police captain says southern Vermont is pretty much shut down. State’s under what could be its worst flooding since 1927. Authorities here and in New Jersey had warned that the flooding would get worse in the days after the storm. The problems for so many other folks, well, you can see it in these pictures. Some power lines fell in Irene’s gusty winds. Others were taken out by falling trees, some of those literally uprooted in the storm. Dozens of people died when Irene came through. Floods, falling trees, accidents, power lines, all of them to blame. Another danger in a hurricane is its storm surge. This is this wall of ocean water that a system blows in. It can affect any stretch of coastline, but it’s particularly threatening to barrier islands, like the Outer Banks of North Carolina. This is a thin strip of land, sitting between the state and the Atlantic Ocean. And because part of it was cut off, CNN’s Brian Todd had to take a helicopter to reach the area to file this report.


 
We did get some great aerial shots from our helicopter from the National Guard, as we went with them on a damage assessment mission around Hatteras Island and Ocracoke Island. And we saw flooded-out roads, entire flooded neighborhoods. One older home not only got hit with the hurricane, but caught on fire and burned down. Then we saw the reason why this place was cut off. This incredible breach on Highway 12, running north to south, that connects Hatteras Island to some of the other Outer Banks barrier islands, which then connects those islands to the mainland through causeways, but this section of Highway 12, incredible. It looked like an earthquake hit it. The road caved in, it was chopped up, there were power lines down. The Atlantic Ocean is now running over it, essentially. I asked a local resident, Matthew Williams, just what people were thinking.
 
But what’s the philosophy? Why do, why do people like you stay through this? 
 
I don’t know. I guess it’s -- I don’t know, you know, we, we were, we grew up here. The main thing is getting back. You know, when you’re gone, you know, you’re wondering what, your belongings, your property, you’re wondering how it is, you know. It’s your whole life here, so it’s kind of hard to leave. 
 
Now another resident told us that folks there have lived through stronger hurricanes, at least technically stronger, Category 2, 3 and even 4 hurricanes that they’ve stuck around for. But this same resident told us, even with that, he’s still never seen flooding like this. And they haven’t really had a breach on that highway since at least 2003, when Hurricane Isabel blew through. But that breach, we’re told, may be the most severe they’ve ever had.



学英语单词
abrupt heterojunction
alopecia
anacampsis
argue against someone on something
Asparn
Ban Sang Hom
boltholes
brain activity
brake servo piston
cercis chingii chun.
chaoticness
coastal climate
compose one's thoughts
conditioning water
contact strain meter
cover songs
Dacus oleae
dansk
darling
DCI (double cycle inverse)
derivating agent
doozen
Ectopistes migratorius
efficient accounting and record keeping
electroclinical
Ethertalk
extrapolation length
fare-beaters
farm product procurement
fast advance lever
favorable interest rate
female branch tee
fractalness
Fritillaria imperialis
hexamethylene glycol
it's not the end of the world
linen crepe
LLTD
lock-keeper
lupp
macrolecithal ovum
mail address recognizer
main axis
mangrove soil
masanori
Mexicaltzingo
miniaturation
MLAI
Morus bombycis
multi-media home platform
multiple-mirror systems
musculi glossopalatinus
mystacina tuberculata
nausea marina
nested type
niuhuang shedan chuanbei mixture
non-Riemannian geometry
not yet
nutritional content
nyct-
overgroomed
pachyserica striatipennis
Panopaea
pentasaccharide
peripheral lobe
phakia
pipe laying machine
prahuss
premelting
pulse absorption
punica nana l.
resulting moment
rohbeson
roll-form
round head buttress dam
San Miguel del Monte
serofibrinous pericarditis
seru
shear strain
shore wall
single catenary suspension
slanting cut
slimleaf fig
smudgiest
snow fleas
spare sb's feelings
speech-act
status opinion
stein-kirk
throughout life
took aim
trapezohedra
undecylic aldehyde
universal fool grinder
utlary
Villa San José
visuel
wax cake
weare
witout
Yorishima
Zvezdnyy