Thứ Ba, 30 tháng 5, 2017

Waching daily May 31 2017

This is world news explained in 10 minutes, aka CNN 10. And I`m Carl Azuz. It`s great

to have you watching on this last

day in May.

There`s an important vote coming up in the United Kingdom next week. We mentioned it

once before. It`s an early or snap election. Though the

country`s general elections are scheduled to take place every five years, British Prime

Minister Theresa May called for a vote this June because of

divisions in parliamentary.

Here`s what`s happening: Prime Minister May is working to push through the Brexit, the

British exit from the European Union. It`s a controversial

move for the country. Britons voted for it last summer, but they`re still deeply divided

over the decision. Those disagreements are reflected in the

nation`s government.

Most British lawmakers say they`ll go through with the Brexit, but for Prime Minister May,

the process would go much more smoothly if she had more

members of her own political party, the Conservative Party, in parliament. She`s hoping the early

election will give her that.

Polls show the Conservative Party is in the lead, but there are questions about how much

so. And the future of Britain`s role in Europe hangs in the

balance.

Not caring about the British on June the 8th would be like closing your eyes at a football

match

when someone`s about to score a goal. Britain`s standing in the world rides on Brexit and

Brexit rides on this vote.

Why you should care about the U.K. election. We need a general election and we need one

now.

Prime Minister Theresa May`s gamble is she will significantly increase her conservative

majority and strengthen a hand of Brexit talks.

If she has called it wrong, she`ll be in huff to her critics, hobbled at E.U. talks, less

likely to deliver the prosperous Britain she promises.

Under such a scenario, Britain`s force for good around the world would be under threat,

less aid, less influence. However, the world should be

reassured whatever the outcome, there is no overnight shift to an obsolete U.K., but a

gradual decline and an evolving global order.

If May`s calculus is correct, she will only have to battle in Brussels and not Westminster,

one fight, not two. Overseas investors can breathe

easier. International businesses look to new and better horizons from British bases.

But if you blink and the ball misses the back of the net, though this election like so many

recently confounds the pundits, and the ball goes in

any one of a number of myriad directions, good or bad, then you`ll have taken your eye

off the most critical game play upon which the future of one

of the world`s greats depends.

Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee, these are six U.S. states that

are teaming up to address an epidemic of addiction to

prescription drugs. The U.S. government says that overdoses of opioids, manmade chemicals

that are used as painkillers, are now the leading cause

of injury death in the country. It says abuse of these drugs is taking place in every American

community.

And the states we mentioned are trying to stop the problem by sharing information on

prescriptions, tracking overdoses, allowing counselors to

practice in different places, discuss what`s working and what`s not, and try to help the

children who are being left behind by parents who are

addicted.

Don`t be a bad girl.

Good night.

Good night, nanny.

Welcome to the zoo.

It`s impossible to be quiet in the zoo.

Meet the Flynn Family. Grandma Sandra is 64 years old.

Give me a big hug.

Her husband, Michael, who everybody calls Poppy is 73.

You are now raising 5-year-old twins?

Yes, ma`am. And the other three.

They are raising five grandkids in a cramped, colorful Kentucky home that`s equal parts

chaos and love. Willa now 16 is

the oldest.

When was the last time you saw your mom, Willa? Five years ago when I was 10.

She kind of disappeared. No one knew where she was.

The she Sandy is referring to is her own daughter whose youngest children were all born addicted

to drugs.

The state came in and said she could not care for them anymore. And they called and asked

us if we would take all five and said, of course.

An estimated three million kids in America are being raised by someone other than their

mom and dad. The opioid and heroin epidemic has

hit Kentucky especially hard. More than 68,000 children there are now being taken care of

by grand parents, relatives or foster patients.

They`ve been abandoned. They`ve been forgotten in a lot of ways in preference for the drugs.

When you look at the generation of kids that`s being raised, how do you think it`s going

to turn out?

It has to impact them. There is always going to be a want, a need that something they didn`t

get from mom. Do you feel on some level that you`ve been

abandoned in some way by your mom.

I know she cared about me. She used to be a really sweet person. But now, I don`t know.

I learned to accept it where I am right

now.

Not far away in another part of Lexington, Kentucky, grandmother Kathy Allen drops by

the high school to pick up

grandkids Kayla and Madison.

Did you have a nice day at school? Uh-huh.

Now 14 and 16, the sisters were small when they were initially placed in foster care.

How does your childhood compare? How do you describe it?

It was terrible.

It was terrible.

Yes. When you think about childhood, you think about happy like things. But -- there wasn`t

really any.

According to Generations United, nearly 40 percent grandparents caring for grandchildren

are over age 60. One in five lives below the

poverty line.

Foster parents can earn as much as $600 to $1,200 per month per child, whereas grandparents

aren`t even

receiving the first food stamp.

Kayla and Madison are in touch with their father who is currently in prison. They say

they have little to no contact with

their mom. Her choice, not theirs, they say.

I forgive my mom so many times. But, like, like she just keeps going back. And it`s hard

to forgive every

single time.

A generation of children who feel abandoned by parents who they believe chose drugs over

them.

Deborah Feyerick, CNN, Lexington, Kentucky.

Ten-second trivia:

What body of water is located between the Asia mainland and the Philippines?

The East China Sea, Yellow Sea, Andaman Sea, or South China Sea?

The only one of these options bordered by the Philippines is the South China Sea.

Why is China building an underwater monitoring system?

China is planning to build a massive underwater observation system across the disputed East

and South China Seas.

The monitoring network will cost an estimated two billion yuan ($290 million).

China hopes to use the system to provide long-term observational data.

Chinese researchers plan to use the system to support their maritime experiments.

But experts say it could be used to detect the movement of foreign vessels, especially

submarines.

Beijing claims almost all of the South China Sea, parts of which are also claimed by five

other countries.

China has built up and militarized many of the islands and reefs it controls in the region.

It`s an event where success is when everything comes crushing down. This is a circle field

or circle bomb of dominoes. They have to fall from

the middle of the circle toward the outside edge. And because they did, all 76,017 you

see here, they set a new Guinness World Record.

But the circle was just part of a more massive display of over 250,000 pieces. It was constructed

by a team of young builders called the

Incredible Science Machine.

Of course, the team had to block out the time to build it, to make sure they got all the

rect-angles right, and to keep any knockoffs from

resulting in total fall-ure. And even though everything fell flat, the judges fell for

it, and it easily toppled the previous record.

I`m Carl Azuz and that`s CNN 10.

For more infomation >> CNN Student News - May 31, 2017 | Britain`s Upcoming Vote | The Young Victims of U.S. Drugs Epidemic - Duration: 10:01.

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Did Kathy Griffin break the law | The world news - Duration: 2:58.

Subscribe my channel to know more!

For more infomation >> Did Kathy Griffin break the law | The world news - Duration: 2:58.

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Rugby News | Rutgers football adds graduate transfer kicker Andrew Harte - Duration: 2:47.

Rutgers football adds graduate transfer kicker Andrew Harte

Andrew Harte, who spent three seasons on the University of Minnesota roster, is coming to Rutgers as a graduate transfer, according to multiple reports. Harte didn't make an announcement on social media, but he lists "Rutgers Football" in his Twitter bio.

Harte, a preferred walk-on at Minnesota who will have one year of eligibility with the Scarlet Knights, attempted only one placement with the Golden Gophers.

As a redshirt freshman, he attempted a PAT with Minnesota ahead of rival Iowa, 48-7, on Nov. He also tried three onside kicks during his tenure at Minnesota.

Rutgers offensive coordinator Jerry Kill certainly is familiar with Harte, who was recruited by the Golden Gophers when Kill was the head coach there.

Harte will join a roster that includes incumbent David Bonagura of Franklin Lakes, who went 10-for-14 on field-goal attempts last season, but missed three of his last four tries. He also connected on 20 of 22 PATs.

MORE: See Dick Vitale at the APP Sports Awards. The other kickers are redshirt sophomore Gavin Haggerty, a preferred walk-on from St. Joseph Regional of Montvale, and incoming preferred walk-on Justin Davidovicz from Bridgewater-Raritan.

Haggerty took advantage of the absence of the sidelined Bonagura (back) during the spring and leapfrogged sophomore Jared Smolar, who had shared kickoff duties with Bonagura as a true freshman. Smolar announced May 7 he was transferring from Rutgers.

Haggerty made field goals of 40, 37 and 41 yards in the Scarlet-White intrasquad game on April 22.

Davidovicz made 14 of 20 field-goal attempts as a senior for the Panthers (11-1), who lost to Westfield in the North 2 Group V football championship game.

For more infomation >> Rugby News | Rutgers football adds graduate transfer kicker Andrew Harte - Duration: 2:47.

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Korean Breaking News: "무릎꿇고 열창했다"…태연, 가창력 폭발 - Duration: 1:35.

For more infomation >> Korean Breaking News: "무릎꿇고 열창했다"…태연, 가창력 폭발 - Duration: 1:35.

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Korean Breaking News: "아내, 나보다 아래라고 생각한다" - Duration: 4:25.

For more infomation >> Korean Breaking News: "아내, 나보다 아래라고 생각한다" - Duration: 4:25.

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Rugby News | Mets blow lead, fall in 10th to Pirates - Duration: 4:42.

Mets blow lead, fall in 10th to Pirates

PITTSBURGH - Terry Collins will want to forget his 68th birthday. Mets closer Addison Reed blew a one-run lead in the ninth inning and the Mets ultimately fell 5-4 to the Pirates in 10 innings on Saturday night at PNC Park.

Reed surrendered a game-tying single to John Jaso who later hit a two-out walk-off single off Josh Edgin after Tyler Pill (0-1) put three runners on base in his major league debut.

The Mets (20-27) also received bad news on the injury front as Yoenis Cespedes suffered a setback during his rehab. He has been shut down after experiencing right quad tightness, and will not accumulate any live at-bats until Tuesday.

Collins had come close to navigating his team to a win despite some unorthodox bullpen moves, but his closers rough night prevented the teams second straight win.

The Mets led 4-3 after six innings of three-run ball from Zack Wheeler when struggling righty reliever Neil Ramirez -- who was not trusted enough to pitch in a 8-1 game on Friday -- entered.

He promptly allowed a leadoff double to Jordy Mercer, and the tying run moved to third base on a groundout which ended his night after two batters.

Collins then went to his most reliable reliever Jerry Blevins, and even double switched first baseman Lucas Duda out of the game despite a 2-for-4 night with a homer.

Blevins stranded the runner at third, and then retired lefty Gregory Polanco to start the eighth. Fernando Salas proceeded to enter and gave up two bullets, but both were outs.

Neil Walker made a diving stop to rob David Freese of a hit, and Andrew McCutchens long drive to center died short of the wall to keep the Mets ahead by a run.

In the ninth, Addison Reed gave up a long drive to Francisco Cervelli that was caught at the wall, and Jordy Mercer hit a double off the right-center wall that missed being a homer by mere inches.

After a wild pitch, Reed suffered his second blown save by surrendering a single to pinch hitter John Jaso that evened the game at 4-all.

Pill allowed a single, hit a batter and walked a batter to load the bases, and Edgin allowed a sharp single to Jaso that Bruce could not run down in right to end the game.

Jaso had one hit in his last 30 at-bats vs. lefties dating to last year before the single.

Reeds blown save wasted what would have been a great win by the Mets after they pounded one of the best pitchers in the National League.

The Mets tallied the most extra-base hits (six) and homers (three) against Gerrit Cole this year, and tagged him for four runs on 10 hits in five innings.

For the second straight game, the Mets scored first when Jay Bruce deposited a hanging 86 mph change-up into the right field seats for a 1-0 lead in the first.

One inning later, Curtis Granderson led off with a triple before d'Arnaud plated him with an RBI single for a 2-0 lead. D'Arnaud later gave the Mets a 3-2 lead with a one-out homer to center in the fourth.

The homer marked d'Arnaud's fifth in 73 plate appearances this season, and he tallied just four in 276 plate appearances last year.

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