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You're only a day away from Friday
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and you’re about to get up to speed on international events.
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I'm Carl Azuz.
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First up, Russia has launched its first air strikes
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in the Middle Eastern nation of Syria.
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It's a country where the U.S. has been leading air strikes for months,
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and Russia says it has the same target, the ISIS terrorist group.
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And U.S. officials said yesterday that Russia's air strikes
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appear to be in places where ISIS isn't operating
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and American leaders are concerned that
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Russia won't just be targeting ISIS
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but fighting any enemies of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
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There are several different sides to Syria's ongoing civil war.
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One is the Syrian government which Russia supports
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but the U.S. opposes.
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There are Syrian rebels who were fighting their government.
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And there are terrorists who want the land for themselves.
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As Russia joins the conflict through air strikes,
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it's telling American aircraft to avoid
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Syria's airspace while it does.
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This simply is not an area where ISIS is located,
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no matter what the Russians say.
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This is an area where anti-Assad, anti-regime militias
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have been fighting the Assad government.
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This by all indications is a military strike
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to prop up the Assad regime.
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Right now, what the Russians have done is
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it create an exquisite military problem for U.S. pilots.
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What has to happen now, officials say,
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there are going to have to be so-called rules of engagement.
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If U.S. pilots flying in Syrian airspace and they will continue to fly,
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if they encounter Russian aircraft,
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what are the rules of the road?
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If they feel threatened, even inadvertently,
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let's say the Russians are making the mistake,
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they don't understand it’s a U.S. aircraft,
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what are the rules of the road for U.S. military pilots
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encountering Russian aircraft?
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Do they have the right of self defense?
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Can they counterattack against the Russians if they feel a threat?
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These are the questions that the Pentagon wanted to sit down
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and talk to the Russians about.
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It was just earlier this week, of course,
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that President Obama and Russian President Putin said
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there would be talks between the two militaries
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to work all of this out.
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But now, the Russians have taken the first step.
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They've gone ahead and done it, and here at the Pentagon,
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a lot of unhappiness to put it mildly about
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what the Russians are doing and what may come next.
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One request a day is the way to put your school
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in the running for our "Roll Call".
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The address, CNNStudentNews.com.
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The Broncs are up first today.
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Galloping in from Billings, Montana,
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Billings Senior High School is awesome.
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Staying out in the west,
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it's great to see the Scouts scouting out a shoutout.
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Laramie Senior High School is in Laramie, Wyoming.
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And on the shores of the Persian Gulf,
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we heard from the American International School Kuwait.
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It's in the capital Kuwait City.
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Over the past few years, we've reported on global temperatures,
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how scientists say they've been some of the warmest on record.
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That's one reason why this is such a mystery to researchers.
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They're calling it a blob, a large area in the North Atlantic
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that's registering some of its coldest temperatures on record.
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Don't get this confused with the blob in the Pacific.
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There's one there, too.
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It's a warm area of that ocean blamed on El Nino,
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a natural process that extends from the Central Pacific to South America.
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Scientists don't know what’s causing the cold Atlantic blob.
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One theory is that melting ice in Greenland
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is bringing down ocean temperatures in the region around it.
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There's no scientific consensus about
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whether this blob is related to climate change.
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Researchers say it appears to be the exact opposite
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of the El Nino warming on the other side of the hemisphere.
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Another mystery in the Atlantic Ocean involves a storm named Joaquin.
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It strengthened into a category one hurricane yesterday.
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It's expected to hit the Bahamas today.
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So, preparations are being made for that.
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But where will it go afterward? Here's one forecast model.
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It shows Hurricane Joaquin spinning north,
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roughly parallel to the U.S. east coast.
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But meteorologists don't have a lot of confidence in this.
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Some say it could turn west and hit North Carolina,
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some say it could turn east and spin out to sea.
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The last major storm to make landfall in the eastern U.S.
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was Hurricane Arthur in 2014.
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Where are we getting these storm names?
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If you live in Homestead, Florida, in 1992,
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Andrew is a name you will never forget.
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Just like in 2005, if you live in New Orleans area, Katrina.
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The military started naming storms after their wives,
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their girlfriends, but none of these names were made public.
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So, 1950, everything changed.
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Several storms formed out in the Atlantic about the same time,
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it created a lot of confusion.
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So, the U.S. Weather Bureau said, OK, let's start naming storms.
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And they actually started by using the World War II alphabet,
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Able, Baker, Charlie, Dog, Easy.
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But this created confusion as well,
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because every year, the storm names were the same.
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It wasn't until 1979 that we started alternating male and female names.
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We recycle that list every six years.
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In the Atlantic Basin, we use English, Spanish and French names.
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No storms are named after a particular person.
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In fact, you can't request a storm to be named after you.
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That entire process is handled by the World Meteorological Organization.
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A storm name will be retired if it is too costly or deadly
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and it would be inappropriate to use it in future years.
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In fact, since 1950, there had been nearly 80 storm names retired.
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And what happens if we go through all of the storm names?
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Well, it happened in 2005.
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We ended up going to the Greek alphabet.
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So, that's what's in a name.
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It took a long time to get here, but just like each individual name,
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each storm tends to have its own personality.
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If you're ever investigating finger prints at a crime scene,
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you better hope there were no koala bears involved.
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Why?
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Because they have fingerprints y'all,
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and they're koala lot like ours.
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Even under a microscope, the finger prints of koala bears
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strongly resemble those of people.
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So, maybe it was Colonel Mustard in the library with the candle stick.
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Or maybe it was the koala. And that’s random!
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All right. James Langevin is one of the 435 voting members
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of the U.S. House of Representatives.
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He's one of the two representatives from Rhode Island.
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Langevin is a member of the House Armed Services Committee.
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He's prioritized issues like national security,
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cybersecurity and health care.
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But it's what he's overcome to get where he is
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that makes him today's "Character Study".
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Sixteen- year-old James Langevin was volunteering at a local police station
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when an officer's gun accidentally discharged.
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The bullet ricocheted off a locker is what I'm told,
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and the bullet went through my neck and severed my spinal cord.
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Langevin was paralyzed from the waist down
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and has limited mobility in his arms.
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The question I had right from the get-go,
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how am I going to live any kind of a meaningful life going forward?
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But Langevin did just that.
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He attended college, went on to Harvard's Kennedy School of Government,
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and was elected a Democratic congressman
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for the state of Rhode Island.
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Motivated, he says, by his own desire to prove the naysayers wrong.
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I would hear the, well, you are a nice guy,
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but this is a rough business and you're better off doing something else.
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You know, it's always when you tell me I can't do something
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that, you know, I'll find a way.
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He did find a way.
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On the 20th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act,
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Langevin made history.
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For first time in our country's history,
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a gentlemen with the challenges that Mr. Langevin faces
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is presiding as speaker of the House of Representatives.
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I hope that the people can look at me and say,
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you know, here is a guy with tremendous challenge and difficulties,
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but somehow he -- he's made it.
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Before we go, you might not think a cat and an owl
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will get along very well,
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especially because the cat is a cat and the owl is an owl.
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But believe it or not, these two are BFFs.
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They hang out. They play. They don't attack each other.
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The cat sometimes nozzles the owl,
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while the bird preens the cat.
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Who says a feline and a bird of prey can't get along?
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Now, if they can just find a way to go hunting together,
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whether they stalk or wing it, there's no food fast enough to out-fast,
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or out-last this fast-tinating friendship.
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We cat to be going, but I'll be back tomorrow
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and hope you'll hunt for us again at CNNStudentsNews.com.