NPR 2011-09-18
时间:2011-10-08 06:01:13
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From NPR News in Washington, I'm Nancy Lyons.
Investigators1 with the National Transportation Safety Board are in Reno, Nevada today to look into yesterday's air show crash that killed three people including the pilot and injured more than 50. Mike Houghton is the president and CEO of the Reno Air
Racing2 Association.
"There appeared to be some air flight problem with the aircraft that caused it to go out of control, and we all know what the end result was on that."
The plane was being flown by a 74-year-old veteran Hollywood
stunt3 pilot. Witnesses say the pilot pulled up at the last minute and avoided further injury with his final actions.
General Motors and the United
Auto4 Workers Union have finished working on a new four-year contract and without any strikes. The union says the deal reached last night includes improvements and profit sharing, promises of new jobs and better health care benefits. The proposal is expected to serve as a model for contracts still being negotiated with Chrysler and
Ford5.
With his country at the center of the eurozone crisis, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou has suddenly canceled a planned visit to Washington and the UN General Assembly. NPR's Sylvia Poggioli reports from Athens local media are speculating that Greece's EU partners doubt the Papandreou's government can push through drastic
fiscal7 reforms.
A government spokesman said the prime minister wants to ensure that all of Greece's commitments are fulfilled. Greek media are speculating that EU finance ministers have expressed serious doubts about the debt-ridden country's ability to meet international lenders' demands for further funding, and they may have
decided8 to hold back the sixth
installment9, eight billion of the 110-billion-euro bailout agreed to last year. The funds had been expected by the end of September. Greece has fallen back on meeting fiscal goals this year due to a much deeper-than-projected recession caused by
draconian11 austerity measures. This forced the government to further anger public opinion by slapping an emergency
levy12 on property to make up for the shortfall. Sylvia Poggioli, NPR News, Athens.
International efforts are moving forward on trying to seal the freedom for
bail10 deal for two Americans held in Iran. The two men were convicted of spying, and Iran says they will allow their release in exchange for a million dollars. The bail arrangement is still under review by Iran's powerful judiciary. Mediators from Iraq and Oman are urging Iran to release the men on
humanitarian13 grounds.
Rebels fighters in Libya with help from NATO are still trying to take control of Muammar Gaddafi's hometown of Sirte. They're engaged in street-by-street battles with Gaddafi loyalists, trying to topple the old regime stronghold. Rebel forces are refocusing their efforts in Bani Walid, where loyalists, snipers, and gunners beat them back and are holding the high ground. The staunch resistance is stalling Libya's move to a new government.
This is NPR.
The
maker14 of the Blackberry smartphone is again taking a beating from
investors15. As Dan Karpenchuk reports, Canada's Research In Motion lost 20% of its stock value after second-quarter profits dropped.
Those profits
plunged16 58% to about 330 million dollars, far below
analysts17' expectations, mainly over disappointing sales of its Blackberry smartphones and its Playbook tablet. Research In Motion also said profits were
affected18 by the 120 million dollars that had to pay to cover the cost of cutting 2,000 jobs. The co-CEO Mike Lazaridis says the numbers don't truly reflect the company's sales since the new smartphones were only on the market for a couple of weeks before the second quarter ended. But some observers say
RIM6 just hasn't been able to compete with Apple's popular iPhone and iPad and hasn't learned how to anticipate the market and respond to customers' needs. Analysts remain worried about its aging line of products, too few job cuts and the fact that it's losing market share faster than expected. For NPR News, I'm Dan Karpenchuk in Toronto.
President Obama is keeping up the pressure on Congress to quickly pass his 447-billion-dollar jobs package. In his weekly address today, he said it's what’s needed to boost the economy.
"It will create new jobs. It will cut taxes for every worker and small businesses in the country. And it will not add to the
deficit19. It will be paid for."
For the Republicans,
Congressman20 Peter Roskam from Illinois says the way to increase jobs is to eliminate all the
bureaucratic21 red tape.
"Job creators should be able to focus on their work - not on Washington's busy-work."
Roskam says the Senate needs to approve House Republican initiatives including legislation that would give Congress veto power over certain high-cost regulations.
I'm Nancy Lyons, NPR News.
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