美国国家电台 NPR 2012-08-15
时间:2013-03-07 08:17:55
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In a better-than-expected sign for the US economy, retail1 sales have risen for the first time in four months. NPR's Chris Arnold reports on the latest findings from the Commerce Department today.
It's just one-month data, but it's still encouraging
analysts2 say that
retailers3 reported the strongest sales growth since February. Sales were up 0.8% last month, and
economists5 had expected just 8.2% increase.
“I think we’re definitely going to get out of the woods.”
That's Betsey Stevenson. She is an
economist4 with the University of Michigan. She says a range of
indicators6 now show that the economy is at least very gradually continuing to recover from the recession.
“A really bad recession, and what we have is coming out of it slowly, but surely.”
Stevenson has said the recovery could pick up more steam next year. Especially of things in Europe improve, and she says politicians get passed the so-called
fiscal7 cliff. Chris Arnold, NPR News.
More
scathing8 rhetoric9 on the campaign trail today over the economy. Here's Republicans’ new
vice10 presidential candidate Paul Ryan in Colorado.
“When you take a look back four years ago, we had a really tough economy. And without a doubt, President Obama inherited a difficult situation. Here’s the problem – he made it worse.”
In Virginia, Vice President Joe Biden kept up his assault on the House Republican budget plan.
“Well, I don't get. I mean this is silly now. I don't get what's gutsy about giving millionaires another tax break.”
President Obama continues his tour of Iowa, and Republican rival
Mitt11 Romney was in Ohio, where each attacked the other on energy.
In other news, Syria's former prime minister says Bashar al-Assad's regime is
collapsing12. He calls on other political and military leaders to join the rebels. Riyad Hijab defected to Jordan recently. Dale Gavlak reports on a speech he read to journalists in the capital Amman.
In his first public comments since leaving office and fleeing with his family to Jordan last week, Hijab says the regime is on the
verge13 of
collapse14 morally, financially and militarily and only controls 30% of the Syrian territory. He calls the government spirits low after struggling for 17 months to crush the revolt against Assad's rule. He thanked Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey for their support and asked them to do more for the
opposition15. Hijab, like most of the opposition, is Sunni Muslim. But his defection is seen as a
symbolic16 blow to the mainly Alawite Assad regime's inner circle. For NPR News, I'm Dale Gavlak in Amman.
Before the close on Wall-Street, the Dow was up 3% at 13,172; NASDAQ off six at 3,017; S&P 500 down slightly.
This is NPR.
Hot weather and harsh winds are in store for parts of Idaho today. As Sadie Babits reports, that could make it hard for fire crews who continue to battle wildfires in that state.
One of those wildfires is burning in central Idaho in the
Salmon17 Challis National Forest. A red flag warning today could spell trouble for firefighters there who had a good night keeping the flames away from homes. Barbara Bosler says the smoke has been thick.
“Smog was very thick here within the river quarter and also in the town of Salmon.”
Bosler, who provides public information on the fire, says some of that smoke has cleared out today. But the fire, she says, has shut down a popular road, which is used by people who want to float the famous Salmon River. There are dozens of wildfires burning in Idaho.
Gusty18 winds and temperatures into the 90s today will continue to pose a challenge for firefighters. For NPR News, I'm Sadie Babits.
Actor Ron Palillo, who fans may know best as Arnold Horshack on the 1976
sitcom19 “Welcome Back, Kotter,” has died of an apparent heart attack, according to a family friend. Palillo played a nerdy high school student and class clown who always seemed to draw laughs during his classroom antics.
“Today we talk about anything you want to talk about.”
“Oh, oh-oh, oh.”
“Arnold, you want to say something?”
“Last night on television, I saw “The Wizard of
Odds20.”
Ron Palillo was 63 years old.
Revisiting our numbers from Wall Street, Dow Jones Industrial Average closing up three points at 13,172; NASDAQ down six at 3,017.
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