Thứ Năm, 25 tháng 10, 2018

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South Korea has become the first country to export a hundred billion dollars' worth of

memory chips in a year.

The trade ministry says the record was set on Tuesday, October 16th.

The closest any other country got to that feat are the United States and Japan.

Each exported about sixty billion dollars in 2000 and about fifty billion dollars in

2007.

South Korea's accomplishment comes twenty-four years after its chip exports passed ten-billion

dollars in 1994.

Since 2008, the nation celebrated 'Semiconductor Day' every October to commemorate that previous

milestone.

For more infomation >> S. Korea becomes first country to export US$ 100 bil. in semiconductors - Duration: 0:35.

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Turn the caravan around — the US is not a dumping ground - Duration: 5:24.

For more infomation >> Turn the caravan around — the US is not a dumping ground - Duration: 5:24.

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Trump Admin Makes Historic Move to Boost U.S. Oil Independence - Duration: 2:10.

For more infomation >> Trump Admin Makes Historic Move to Boost U.S. Oil Independence - Duration: 2:10.

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U.S. Navy to give update on drinking water near Fentress Field - Duration: 1:54.

For more infomation >> U.S. Navy to give update on drinking water near Fentress Field - Duration: 1:54.

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Maternal mortality is dropping around the globe except in United States - Duration: 4:16.

For more infomation >> Maternal mortality is dropping around the globe except in United States - Duration: 4:16.

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U.S. Senate candidates discuss solar power - Duration: 1:45.

For more infomation >> U.S. Senate candidates discuss solar power - Duration: 1:45.

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The US Grand Prix 2005 - what actually happened? | F1 Story Time - Duration: 9:31.

For more infomation >> The US Grand Prix 2005 - what actually happened? | F1 Story Time - Duration: 9:31.

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Republicans Outpacing Dems in Early Voting in Seven Key States - Duration: 3:55.

For more infomation >> Republicans Outpacing Dems in Early Voting in Seven Key States - Duration: 3:55.

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As Midterms Loom, Trump May Have Shifted Reliably Dem States Into GOP's Column - Duration: 3:29.

For more infomation >> As Midterms Loom, Trump May Have Shifted Reliably Dem States Into GOP's Column - Duration: 3:29.

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Sing the States | 50 States Song | Jack Hartmann - Duration: 2:31.

I'm proud to work and play In the USA

I'm proud to live everyday

In the land of the free

There are 50, 50

United States in this country

50, 50 Home of the proud and the free

Sing the states with me

Alabama

Alaska

Arizona

Arkansas

California

Colorado

Connecticut

Delaware

Florida

Georgia

Hawaii Hawai'i

Idaho

Illinois

Indiana

Iowa

Kansas

Kentucky

Louisiana

Maine

Maryland

Massachusetts

Michigan

Minnesota

Mississippi

Missouri

Montana

Nebraska

Nevada

New Hampshire

New Jersey

New Mexico

New York

North Carolina

North Dakota

Ohio

Oklahoma

Oregon

Pennsylvania

Rhode Island

South Carolina

South Dakota

Tennessee

Texas

Utah

Vermont

Virginia

Washington

West Virginia

Wisconsin

Wyoming

I'm proud to work and play In the USA

I'm proud to live everyday

In the land of the free

There are 50, 50 United States in this country

50, 50 Home of the proud and the free

Home of the proud and the free

Sing the states with me

For more infomation >> Sing the States | 50 States Song | Jack Hartmann - Duration: 2:31.

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Ann Coulter: US takes in more refugees than rest of the world combined - Duration: 4:01.

For more infomation >> Ann Coulter: US takes in more refugees than rest of the world combined - Duration: 4:01.

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US stocks fall despite the release of earnings - Duration: 5:06.

For more infomation >> US stocks fall despite the release of earnings - Duration: 5:06.

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Kamala Harris Calls for U.S. to stop "Vilifying" the Caravan and be "Welcoming" - Duration: 3:39.

For more infomation >> Kamala Harris Calls for U.S. to stop "Vilifying" the Caravan and be "Welcoming" - Duration: 3:39.

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Octavio Solis on growing up a 'skinny brown kid' on the U.S.-Mexico border - Duration: 5:47.

JUDY WOODRUFF: With immigration at our southern border very much in the news, we finish tonight

with a perspective that takes a longer view.

Jeffrey Brown recently spoke with playwright Octavio Solis about a new memoir chronicling

his childhood along that border.

OCTAVIO SOLIS, Author, "Retablos: Stories From a Life Lived Along the Border": They're

naive art painted by an artist for a specific person.

JEFFREY BROWN: They're called retablos, small, simple paintings of Mexican folk art, often

religious in nature.

OCTAVIO SOLIS: Like, in this one here, this man has been stung by a bee.

JEFFREY BROWN: Octavio Solis has collected them for years.

OCTAVIO SOLIS: Each one of these is like a flash fiction story.

JEFFREY BROWN: Flash fiction?

OCTAVIO SOLIS: Because it's all encapsulated in one image with a little writing in it.

JEFFREY BROWN: "Retablos" is also the name of Solis' latest work, a collection of stories

about his childhood along the Texas-Mexico border.

OCTAVIO SOLIS: That's what revisiting El Paso is like for me, like walking into a retablo

with a rusty surface for a sky and misremembered family and friends for saints and supplicants,

and the lost, distilled moments of my border past for miracles.

JEFFREY BROWN: Octavio Solis, author of more than 20 plays regularly performed around the

country, is one of the leading Latino voices in the theater.

We're not on the border anymore, are we?

You're not.

OCTAVIO SOLIS: Oh, no, not at all.

JEFFREY BROWN: He lives in rural Oregon now, but in "Retablos," he looks back at himself

as what he calls a skinny brown kid.

OCTAVIO SOLIS: That's what I was growing up there, and with everything that comes with

it, all the hangups that come with being a young man who's unsure of who he is and what

he is as an American growing up in El Paso, Texas.

JEFFREY BROWN: You describe a family that is in some ways living on the border of legality

as well.

OCTAVIO SOLIS: Oh, yes.

JEFFREY BROWN: You're born in the U.S., your mother not, but she becomes legal.

Your father's not at first.

OCTAVIO SOLIS: We saw people crossing all the time around our household.

They looked exactly like us, but they weren't us.

We always found a way to kind of create distance.

But we were so much like them.

And there was -- that distancing didn't work at some point, because Border Patrol would

always stop us and ask us for -- like, where do you live?

Can you recite the Pledge of Allegiance to us?

JEFFREY BROWN: So, you always felt that?

OCTAVIO SOLIS: I always felt that.

That never left me.

JEFFREY BROWN: Those tensions have often been a theme in his work, including a new version

of "Don Quixote" that was staged this summer at the California Shakespeare Theater.

ACTOR: To fight for the unemployed.

(CHEERING AND APPLAUSE)

OCTAVIO SOLIS: Using the "Quixote" spine, the spine of that story, I was able to tell

a new story about the border and about the Border Patrol and about the immigration issues

that we're dealing with today.

I feel it incumbent on me, in these times, to address the issues that I feel are endangering

Latinos in this country.

JEFFREY BROWN: So your Quixote is going through that landscape on the border?

OCTAVIO SOLIS: And instead of fighting -- tilting at windmills, he's tilting at surveillance

drones that the Border Patrol puts out around the desert there.

JEFFREY BROWN: Recently, Solis had a chance to reach and teach an audience of millions,

as part of a team of cultural consultants hired by Pixar for the blockbuster hit "Coco,"

an animated film about a boy and his family in Mexico.

OCTAVIO SOLIS: They had us look at every aspect of the film.

We became the firewall between something that could be cooked up just for sales and something

that was authentic to the culture.

JEFFREY BROWN: Authentic to the culture, meaning?

OCTAVIO SOLIS: To the culture, meaning a story that would accurately depict the Latino, the

Mexico culture in Mexico in the film.

So...

JEFFREY BROWN: Which doesn't often happen.

OCTAVIO SOLIS: Doesn't often happen at all.

And films seldom bring consultants in to say -- to check, is the dialogue sounding authentic?

Is this correct Spanish?

Would a character dress this way?

JEFFREY BROWN: Solis says he was pleased with the final result, and the popularity it enjoyed.

OCTAVIO SOLIS: It was a way also for general American audiences to relate to someone who's

colored like me in a way that is so immediate and visceral and humane.

That's what's so puzzling and so disturbing about the times that we're living in, that

a film like "Coco" can attract such a wide audience, and yet at the same time, a lot

of that audience is demonizing us.

It's really -- it's very hard.

It's very hard to sort of see that.

I don't understand.

JEFFREY BROWN: These days, with wife Jeanne and their daughter Gracie, there are chickens

and goats to tend, and also new plays on the horizon.

One is called "Mother Road," a kind of sequel to John Steinbeck's classic story of migrant

workers, "The Grapes of Wrath."

The nearby Oregon Shakespeare Festival will stage it as a world premiere next summer.

For the "PBS NewsHour," I'm Jeffrey Brown in Medford, Oregon.

For more infomation >> Octavio Solis on growing up a 'skinny brown kid' on the U.S.-Mexico border - Duration: 5:47.

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US Park Police pin hopes of solving shooting on car description - Duration: 1:45.

For more infomation >> US Park Police pin hopes of solving shooting on car description - Duration: 1:45.

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Lewis Hamilton: Did you hear THIS Mercedes disagreement at US Grand Prix? - Duration: 2:41.

Lewis Hamilton: Did you hear THIS Mercedes disagreement at US Grand Prix? Hamilton needed to finish eight points above Ferrari rival Sebastian Vettel to wrap up the Drivers' Championship with three races to spare. But the Brit squandered his pole position by dropping behind Kimi Raikkonen and Max Verstappen to finish third. Hamilton must now secure five extra points than Vettel at the upcoming Mexican Grand Prix to equal Juan Manuel Fangio's world title record.

However, with the stakes so high, Hamilton occasionally clashes with his engineers while in the heat of the battle, as one conversation shows.     Hamilton criticised the team's strategy in Austin as they decided to pit twice - once more than their rivals - and he was not able to take advantage of the fresher tyres. But it was during one of those tyre changes where he refused to calm down as can be seen in the following exchange.

Mercedes conversation Mercedes engineer: "Good and calm when entering [the pit lane]." Hamilton: "You know when you tell me to go easy, I will not be calm."     Mercedes engineer: "Yes, yes, a leopard never changes its skin." Hamilton questioned his team's tactics after the race. "Naturally I thought we would be able to do better but this is the best we were able to do in the end," he said. "We just have to keep working and keep pushing for the next race.

    "After my first stop, 12 seconds was way too far to catch up. I'm not really quite sure how the strategy ended up like that. A little bit of a surprise, but you can't always get it right." And Mercedes boss Toto Wolff agreed with his driver's complaints. "We lacked the pace today, I said don't close it too early they (Ferrari) are very fast," Wolff said. "Kimi winning is great for him and Ferrari so let's go to the next race. "It was difficult to overtake but it was a worse strategy as it progressed, so we need to re-think and see what we could do better. We put on a good show all together and that's what is more important.".

For more infomation >> Lewis Hamilton: Did you hear THIS Mercedes disagreement at US Grand Prix? - Duration: 2:41.

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Tracking the migrant caravan's journey from Central America to the southern U.S. border - Duration: 1:50.

For more infomation >> Tracking the migrant caravan's journey from Central America to the southern U.S. border - Duration: 1:50.

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Bannon holds rally for Republican candidates but none show up US news - Duration: 5:26.

Bannon holds rally for Republican candidates but none show up US news

Trump's former strategist touts his role in president's success before crowd of 200 in upstate New York

Trump's former strategist touts his role in president's success before crowd of 200 in upstate New York

As Donald Trump held midterm rallies this week in front of thousands, his one-time chief strategist Steve Bannon made his own, rather more low-key return to the campaign trail.

Bannon appeared in front of 200 people at a firehouse outside Buffalo, New York, ostensibly to campaign for Republicans based in the area. But in a visceral demonstration of just how far Bannon's stock has fallen since leaving the White House 14 months ago, none of those Republicans running for office turned up.

Instead – in a move unlikely to please his former boss – Bannon spent the first part of his speech at the Jamison Road volunteer firehouse in Elma talking up his own importance in Trump's 2016 victory, in an apparent attempt to thrust himself back into the national spotlight.

"Let's go back in time," Bannon said, in a potentially revealing turn of phrase.

"When I came into the campaign as CEO in mid-August [2016], we were down, what – eight,10, 12, 16 points – double-digits down in every battleground state. Not a lot of money, not a lot of organization."

There followed a Trump-style riff – a retelling of the obstacles and hardships the Trump campaign overcame to win a thrilling victory on 8 November.

The difference is that in Bannon's version, he is very much front and centre, the power – or, as Saturday Night Live portrayed him, the grim reaper – behind Trump, whispering in the candidate's ear, guiding him to victory.

Bannon, clad in familiar green Barbour jacket, grey hair swept back, recalled what he told Trump soon after signing on to the campaign.

"I said: 'The numbers show that working class people in this country will unite around a leader who will return America to her former glory.

"'This whole campaign is going to be compare and contrast. She [Hillary Clinton] is the representative of a corrupt elite, and you are the voice of the working people in this country.'

This recounting is unlikely to impress Trump, who claimed Bannon had "lost his mind" after leaving the White House, but then the president is probably not following his former guru as closely as he once did.

When Bannon left his job as Trump's chief strategist in August 2017, reportedly after clashing with colleagues, he returned to Breitbart News, the organization Bannon had once declared "the platform for the alt-right".

He could be "more effective fighting from the outside for the agenda President Trump ran on" than in the White House, Bannon claimed, but the reunion proved to be short-lived. Bannon was booted from Breitbart in January of this year after saying Donald Trump Jr's meeting with a Russian lawyer was "treasonous" in Michael Wolff's book Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House. The volume prompted Trump to speculate about the state of Bannon's mind and brand him "Sloppy Steve".

The debacle left Bannon with some catching up to do to regain relevance in conservative politics. Wednesday marked a beginning of sorts – the former chief strategist drew a crowd of just 38 to an event in Staten Island, New York, on Monday – but the Elma event had got off to an inauspicious start when the original venue cancelled amid threats of violence.

Bannon had originally been slated to appear with David DiPietro, running for re-election to the New York state assembly, but after the first venue pulled out, so did DiPietro.

A couple of hours before the event, Michael Caputo – conservative strategist, organizer of the Bannon event, and DiPietro's campaign manager – still thought DiPietro might actually turn up. Caputo said he had invited all Republicans running for office in the western New York area, but had yet to receive a single reply.

"It might be no one," Caputo said.

He was right. Even Chris Collins, the US congressman for New York's 27th district who is running for re-election despite having been charged with federal securities fraud, stayed away.

But Bannon can take some encouragement from Wednesday night. There were at least some people in the crowd who were happy to spend time with him.

"If it wasn't for Bannon, believe me, Trump wouldn't have had the traction he had," said Barry Horwitz, a 76-year-old racehorse owner wearing a pair of beige, American-flag emblazoned trousers.

"Everybody talks about the dark side of him. But read his credentials. He was in the navy, he was at Goldman Sachs. He's filmed a lot of movies."

It could be that Bannon never escapes his image as a dastardly, "dark side" figure. The New York Republican stalwart Carl Paladino, who ran for governor in the state in 2010, certainly didn't help to dispel it when he introduced Bannon to the stage.

"He has been described by some as a white nationalist," Paladino told the crowd, before listing off a rogues' gallery of European far-right political parties Bannon has supported.

"Bannon has done more than anyone to introduce the alt-right into mainstream American life."

Bannon spoke for about 25 minutes, warning of the ills of the "marxist left" and eventually explicitly praising Trump on job numbers, the border, and Korea.

And as he drew to a close, the former hedge fund manager showed off the knack for appealing to the man in the street – however disingenuous that appeal may be – that brought him, and Trump, such success.

"If you gave me the choice between the first hundred people who showed up here at Jamison firehouse today, in a red ball cap, to govern the country, or the top hundred partners at Goldman Sachs, I would take these red ball caps every day," Bannon said, to whoops and whistles from the crowd.

"Think about what the country would be if we took the first hundred of you and you made the decisions," he said. "Well, that's the closest we've got with Trump."

For more infomation >> Bannon holds rally for Republican candidates but none show up US news - Duration: 5:26.

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U.S. Army facing recruitment challenges - Duration: 0:53.

For more infomation >> U.S. Army facing recruitment challenges - Duration: 0:53.

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Martial 'poised to sign new £160k-a-week deal with Man United' - Duration: 1:58.

Anthony Martial is 'ready to turn down Juventus, Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich and sign a new contract at Manchester United

'The French striker has been linked with a number of leading European clubs after his relationship with United manager Jose Mourinho became strained

Martial had left United's pre-season tour of the United States to return to Paris for the birth of his son, leading to criticism from Mourinho that he didn't return quickly enough

That came after Martial, 22, fell down the pecking order at Old Trafford following the signing of Alexis Sanchez from Arsenal last January

But despite signals that Martial was ready to leave, United are now increasingly confident he will commit to a new five-year contract, according to ESPN FC

His current contract expires in 2020 though a one-year extension would be triggered if negotiations for a new deal fail

Martial had already rejected a number of contract offers from United but has now indicated he would be open to signing one worth £160,000-a-week

He returned to form with two goals in United's 2-2 Premier League draw at Chelsea last weekend and now has four goals for the season and 40 in 146 matches for United overall

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