sexta-feira, 24 de junho de 2011

American History: The War in the Pacific



Ruins left by the explosion of an atomic bomb over Hiroshima, Japan, August 6, 1945
Photo: AP
Ruins left by the explosion of an atomic bomb over Hiroshima, Japan, August 6, 1945
I have no doubt about how useful VOA NEWS is, Americans should more access this website, just because the history of US and the rich content, I use to promote daily on my blog, keep in touch through the website


Source: www.voanews.com




STEVE EMBER: Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION -- American history in VOA Special English. I'm Steve Ember.
(MUSIC)
American military planners had to make an important decision when the United States entered the Second World War at the end of nineteen forty-one.
American forces could not fight effectively in Asia and Europe at the same time. The military planners decided to use most of their forces to defeat the German troops of Adolf Hitler. Only after victory over the Nazis was clear in Europe would they use all of America's strength to fight Japan in Asia and the Pacific.
Because of this decision, Japan was able to win many of the early battles of the war in Asia. The fighting in the Pacific is the subject of program this week.
(SOUND)
Japanese planes bombed the American naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on December seventh nineteen forty-one.
BROADCASTER: "We interrupt this program to bring you a special news bulletin. The Japanese have attacked Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, by air, President Roosevelt has just announced.
"We take you now to Washington. The attack was apparently made on all naval and military activities on the principal island of Oahu.”
The surprise raid marked the first of several major victories for the Japanese.
(MUSIC)
Shortly after Pearl Harbor, imperial forces attacked American bases in the Philippines. And within days Japan captured the American island of Guam. Japanese troops landed in Thailand. They marched into Malaya, and they seized Hong Kong. The Japanese also moved into Indonesia and Burma.
Even Hitler's troops in Europe had not moved so quickly or successfully. As one American historian wrote later, the Pacific Ocean looked like a Japanese lake.
(SOUND)
The United States tried to fight back. General Jimmy Doolittle led a group of sixteen American B-25 bombers that took off from an aircraft carrier and bombed Tokyo in a surprise raid.
General Jimmy Doolittle led an air raid on Tokyo
af.mil
General Jimmy Doolittle led an air raid on Tokyo
JIMMY DOOLITTLE: "The B-25 was selected because it was small, because it had the sufficient range to carry two thousand pounds of bombs, two thousand miles, and because it took off and handled very well."
(SOUND)
STEVE EMBER: It was a bold move. The B-25 had never been launched from an aircraft carrier before. And the demands on the planes -- and the pilots -- were even greater with the weight of a full load of bombs.
Japan’s leaders believed no army could stop them. So they expanded their goals and launched new campaigns.
This was Japan's mistake. It stretched its forces too thin and too quickly. The military leaders in Tokyo believed that the United States could not resist because American forces was busy fighting the war in Europe. But no country could extend its communications and fighting ability over such a great distance and continue to win.
The turning point came in June nineteen forty-two in the central Pacific in the great battle of Midway Island.
Smoke rises from the Yorktown after a Japanese bomber hit the American aircraft carrier in the Battle of Midway in June 1942. Bursts of anti-aircraft fire fill the air.
US Navy/AP
Smoke rises from the Yorktown after a Japanese bomber hit the American aircraft carrier in the Battle of Midway in June 1942. Bursts of anti-aircraft fire fill the air.
Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto launched the battle. He wanted to meet and destroy the remaining ships in the American fleet before the United States could recover from the destruction at Pearl Harbor.
Yamamoto had one hundred sixty-two ships. The American admiral, Chester Nimitz, had just seventy-six. But the United States had discovered how to read the secret messages of the Japanese forces.
For this reason, Nimitz and the Americans knew exactly where the Japanese ships would sail. And they put their own ships in the best positions to stop them.
The fighting between the two sides was fierce. But when it ended, the Americans had won a great victory. Admiral Yamamoto was forced to call off his attack and sail home. For the first time, the Japanese navy had been defeated.
(MUSIC)
The next big battle was at Guadalcanal, one of the Solomon Islands in the southwestern Pacific. Guadalcanal's beaches were wide and flat. Japanese officers decided to build a military air base there. The United States learned of the plans. American commanders decided that they had to prevent Japan from establishing that base.
United States Marines quickly landed on the island. They were joined by troops from Australia and New Zealand. But Japanese ships launched a surprise attack and destroyed many of the American ships in the harbor. Allied forces on the island were left without naval support and suffered heavy losses.
For six months, the two sides fought for control of the island. Historian and naval officer Samuel Eliot Morison described the fighting this way in his book "The Struggle for Guadalcanal":
"For us who were there, or whose friends were there, Guadalcanal is not a name but an emotion, recalling desperate fights in the air, furious night naval battles, frantic work at supply or construction, savage fighting in the sodden jungle, nights broken by screaming bombs and deafening explosions of naval shells."
The fighting continued, seemingly forever. But finally, in February, nineteen forty-three, the Japanese were forced to leave Guadalcanal.
The battle was an important defeat for Japan. It opened the door for the American and other Allied forces to go on the attack after months of defensive fighting.
But American military planners did not agree about the best way to launch such an attack. Admiral Nimitz of the Navy wanted to capture the small groups of Japanese-held islands in the Pacific, then seize Taiwan, and finally attack Japan itself. But General Douglas MacArthur of the Army thought it would be best to attack through New Guinea and the Philippines.
The American leadership finally decided to launch both attacks at once. Nimitz and MacArthur both succeeded. Nimitz and his naval forces moved quickly through the Marianas and other islands. General MacArthur's troops attacked through New Guinea and into the Philippines.
American ships defeated Japanese naval forces in the battle for Leyte Gulf.
Throughout the Pacific and East Asia, the fighting continued. Many of the fiercest battles were fought on tiny Pacific islands. Japanese troops captured the islands early in the war. And they quickly built strong defenses to prevent the Allies from invading.
Allied military leaders found a way to defeat the Japanese plan. They simply avoided the islands where the Japanese were strong and attacked other islands.
But sometimes the Allies could not avoid a battle. They had to land on some islands to seize airfields for American planes.
The names of these islands became well-known: Tarawa in the Gilbert Islands. Truk in the Marshall Islands. Saipan in the Marianas, and other islands including Guam and Tinian.
The two sides fought fiercely in the battle of Iwo Jima. And, on Okinawa, Japanese forces resisted for eighty-three days before finally being defeated by Allied troops.
After the defeat at Okinawa, many Japanese understood that the war was lost, even if Japan had not yet surrendered. Emperor Hirohito appointed a new prime minister and ordered him to explore the possibilities of peace.
But both sides still expected the Allies to launch a final invasion into Japan itself. And everyone knew that the cost in human life would be great for both sides.
But the invasion never came.
For years, American scientists had been developing a secret weapon, the atomic bomb. The code-name was the Manhattan Project. President Harry S. Truman made the decision to use it against Japan.
HARRY TRUMAN: “The world will note that the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, a military base. We won the race of discovery against the Germans. We have used it in order to shorten the agony of war, in order to save the lives of thousands and thousands of young Americans. We shall continue to use it until we completely destroy Japan's power to make war.”
(SOUND: Atomic bomb tests)
American planes dropped one of the bombs on Hiroshima on August sixth, nineteen forty-five, and another on Nagasaki three days later.
Exactly how many people in those two cities died from the force and heat of the blasts or later from radiation may never be known. The Radiation Effects Research Foundation in Japan estimates that between one hundred fifty thousand and two hundred forty-six thousand died within two to four months of the bombings.
Japan surrendered on August fifteenth, nineteen forty-five, six days after the Nagasaki bombing.
(MUSIC)
Suddenly, sooner than expected, World War Two was over. More than twenty-five million people -- soldiers and civilians -- died during the six years of fighting. Germany and Japan were defeated. The Soviet Union was strong in much of eastern Europe. But the United States found itself the strongest military, economic and political power in the world. Our story continues next week.
Our program was written by David Jarmul. You can find our series online with transcripts, MP3s, podcasts and pictures at voaspecialenglish.com. You can also follow us on Facebook and Twitter at VOA Learning English. I’m Steve Ember, inviting you to join us again next week for THE MAKING OF A NATION -- American history in VOA Special English.
___
This was program #194. For earlier programs, type "Making of a Nation" in quotation marks in the search box at the top of the page.

quinta-feira, 23 de junho de 2011

Decline of the Papers


image

1049 Decline of the Papers
Matt and Rachel discuss the decline of newspapers in society and how it is affecting them.


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Before travelling, I decided to talk about another social Networking site and excellent for us, blogger. StumbleUpon community www.stumbleupon.com and do a free register and keep in touch with friends around the world. Well, I'd like to thanks all who give me support on StumbleUpon, Facebook, Twitter, Bloggers Community www.bloggers.com . I'll be away for three days, but I'll miss you all. Thanks for everything, and please, you are most welcome here, but do not use to click on purpose on the AdSenses, it's very common through bloggers using this to earn money, but the Adsense's engineers will delete your account and mine. Instead, just telling for friends promoting use the social Networking bottom bellow of each entries. I can't stand it something like that..."Ki$$ my blog I'll ki$$ back, please do not use this on my Cobox I'll not return click on Adsense. Please pass it on for bloggers' this practising should be banned. Have a blessed day/night or afternoon, all.  

American History: Germans Defeated in Russia and Britain


Source: The best English content for beginners and ESL students keep in touch through www.voanews.com


German soldiers in Stalingrad, September 1942

Photo: AP
German soldiers in Stalingrad, September 1942


STEVE EMBER: Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION – American history in VOA Special English. I’m Steve Ember.
(MUSIC)ex
In December nineteen forty-one, the United States was at war.
It declared war against Japan after Japanese planes attacked the American naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. A few days later, Germany and Italy declared war against the United States.
President Franklin Roosevelt quickly decided that America could not fight major campaigns in the Pacific and in Europe at the same time. He and his advisers decided to fight first against the Germans and Italians. Then, when victory in Europe seemed sure, the United States could turn to fight the Japanese in Asia.
This left the Japanese free to extend their power throughout Asia and the western Pacific. Soon after the attack at Hawaii, Japanese forces invaded Hong Kong, Malaya and the Philippines. American forces in the Philippines suffered heavy losses. And Manila fell to Japanese troops. In February nineteen forty-two, Japan's forces won a great victory against the British in Singapore.
Japanese forces marched into Burma. They attacked Ceylon -- now Sri Lanka -- and captured the Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal. The Japanese military forces seemed too strong to stop.
President Roosevelt sent some forces to the Pacific. And he began to rebuild the American naval forces destroyed at Pearl Harbor. But he sent most of America's military strength to Europe. The United States rushed troops and war equipment to help Britain survive against Adolf Hitler's Germany.
American military leaders wanted to fight Germany quickly by launching an attack across the English Channel. But British Prime Minister Winston Churchill opposed this.
He and others feared such an invasion might fail. So, British and American forces attacked Italian and German occupation troops in North Africa. They defeated them, and then crossed the Mediterranean Sea to attack enemy forces in Sicily. Within weeks, they pushed the Germans out of Sicily to the Italian mainland. The Allied invasion of Italy followed.
Hitler could not strengthen his forces in North Africa and Italy, because Germany also was fighting hard in the Soviet Union.
Hitler's decision early in the war to attack the Soviet Union was a serious mistake. It divided his men and materials. His plan was to defeat Soviet forces quickly with one strong attack. But he failed. And his failure cost him valuable troops and supplies that might have helped him win the battles for North Africa and Italy.
(MUSIC)
Germany's attack on the Soviet Union began with great success.
In the middle of nineteen forty-one, a German force of more than three million men invaded the Soviet Union. It captured the Ukraine, took control of Kiev, and marched deep into Russia.
The situation changed the following year. Soviet forces under Marshal Georgy Zhukov won a fierce battle for the city of Stalingrad -- now Volgograd. A great many German soldiers died from cold and hunger during the bitter winter months that followed.
Captured German soldiers making their way in the cold through the ruins of Stalingrad
AP

Captured German soldiers making their way in the cold through the ruins of Stalingrad
(MUSIC)
Zhukov's forces attacked the German troops and pushed back the invaders. Other Soviet troops forced the Germans away from the city of Leningrad -- now St. Petersburg.
By the middle of nineteen forty-four, German forces throughout the Soviet Union were retreating. And Soviet forces were preparing to push them over the border and invade Germany themselves. The fighting came at a terrible cost. Huge numbers of soldiers and civilians were killed.
(MUSIC)
The fighting in World War Two was not limited to land. Battles were also being fought on the sea. The main goal of the German navy during the war was to prevent the United States from sending ships to Britain with war materials, food and troops. At first, the Germans were very successful. There was hunger in Britain in nineteen forty-one because so few ships could cross the North Atlantic with food.
(MUSIC)
German submarines were the greatest danger to ships crossing the Atlantic. These U-boats, as the Germans called them, could hide below the surface and attack without warning.
The threat from German submarines did not ease until new technology was developed in nineteen forty-three. Allied scientists improved sonar and radar systems that helped find submarines on the surface and underwater. More of the enemy submarines were found and destroyed. The Allies slowly gained control of the Atlantic.
(MUSIC)
Allied and German warships fought a number of traditional naval battles. But airplanes came to play an increasingly important part in the fighting at sea. British ships, with the help of planes launched from an aircraft carrier, destroyed a powerful German battleship, the Bismarck on May 27, 1941.
(MUSIC)
The most famous air battle of the war in Europe took place during the summer and autumn of the previous year. It was known as the Battle of Britain. It got its name from a speech to Parliament by Prime Minister Churchill following the evacuation of British and French forces from Dunkirk.
BBC: "This is the BBC Home Service. Here is the news. In the House of Commons this afternoon, the prime minister, Mr. Churchill, said: 'What General Weygand called the Battle of France is over. The Battle of Britain is about to begin.'"
STEVE EMBER: It was the most extensive aerial bombing yet in the war.  It was also the first battle to be fought entirely in the air.
(SOUND)
German Stuka dive-bombers attacked shipping centers, areas of political importance, airfields, and airplane factories.
Two American pilots prepare to fly a British Spitfire
loc.gov

Two American pilots prepare to fly a British Spitfire
Luftwaffe pilots in their Messerschmidts battled the Hurricanes and Spitfires of the Royal Air Force. While the flying skills of the German and British pilots were well matched, it was ultimately the greater maneuverability of the British Spitfire that won the long months of battle over the English Channel.
(MUSIC)
The British victory in the air helped prevent “Operation Sea Lion,” a planned German invasion of Britain.
In May of nineteen forty-two, Britain's Royal Air Force carried out an attack on Germany with one thousand bombers. It was just the first of many bombing runs over Germany and German-occupied areas by the air forces of Britain and the United States.
The planes bombed German military and industrial centers. They also bombed civilian targets in an effort to demonstrate to the German people the price of Germany's aggression. The German cities of Cologne, Dresden and Hamburg suffered widespread destruction. The Allied bombing attacks continued until the war's end in nineteen forty-five.
Hitler's victories in the early months of the war had struck fear in the hearts of people throughout the world.
Hitler and his Axis allies had won battle after battle. They had captured most of western Europe and invaded the Soviet Union. They had seized North Africa. And their submarines controlled the Atlantic.
A German submarine in June 1943
AP

A German submarine in June 1943
Germany continued to seem strong during the first months after the United States entered the war in Europe. But the situation began to change. German strength and control were greatest in November of nineteen forty-two. After then, the mighty German military machine began to slow down.
Germany and its Axis partner Italy suffered serious losses in the first six months of nineteen forty-three.
German losses were extremely heavy in the Soviet Union. One hundred sixty thousand German troops died at Stalingrad, and more than one hundred ten thousand surrendered.
American and British forces captured two hundred fifty thousand German and Italian troops in North Africa. Many more thousands were killed or captured in Sicily and the Italian mainland. German submarines were being destroyed in the North Atlantic, allowing more Allied troops and supplies to reach Britain.
By the end of nineteen forty-three, Hitler and his armies no longer seemed so strong. But German forces continued to occupy France, Belgium and much of the rest of western Europe. Now, the time had come for the Allies to invade German-held Europe from Britain.
Allied forces planned the greatest military invasion in history to break the German control of Europe and win the war.
US GENERAL DWIGHT EISENHOWER: "People of Western Europe: A landing was made this morning on the coast of France by troops of the Allied Expeditionary Force. This landing is part of a concerted United Nations plan for the liberation of Europe. Although the initial assault may not have been made in your own country, the hour of your liberation is approaching."
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER: That invasion -- the famous D-Day landing on the beaches of Normandy -- will be our story next week.
Our program was written by David Jarmul. You can find our series online with transcripts, MP3s, podcasts and pictures at voaspecialenglish.com. You can also follow us on Facebook and Twitter at VOA Learning English. I’m Steve Ember, inviting you to join us again next week for THE MAKING OF A NATION – American history in VOA Special English.
___
This was program #192. For earlier programs, type "Making of a Nation" in quotation marks in the search box at the top of the page
.

THE BODY SHOP




Source: Rachel Roberts
Standard Accent: British
Speaker: Rachel Roberts
Language level: Basic


THE BODY SHOP





Anita Roddick

Anita Roddick is a unique woman: she is both the founder of the multi-national chain the Body Shop and an activist for a thousand causes. She has also worked for the United Nations, lived with tribes in Africa, edited several books, and brought up two daughters.

ON SALE

Why is Roddick still a controversial personality? She recently sold The Body Shop to the French multi-national L’Oréal, for £650 million, or € 950 million. This angered many fellow activists because LÓréal is partly owned by Nestlé, a company that is boycotted around the world for its animal testing and its marketing of baby milk substitutes. Roddick admits that it’s true, she has sold her company to the enemy, but she says The Body Shop is now a Trojan horse that will change LÓréal from within.

How did it all begin? Back in 1976, Anita Roddick’s husband, poet Gordon Roddick, left the family and their small hotel business and set off on a two-year quest: he rode a horse across South America to raise money for charity. Anita was left with their two children to support, so she decided to open a small cosmetics shop in Brighton. Ironically, she painted the shop’s walls green to cover marks caused by damp, and used small recyclable bottles because her mother had taught the family the importance of recycling. The rest in history: The Body Shop now has over 2.000 shops in 52 countries. Roddick says, “Success is more than a good idea. It’s timing, too. The Body Shop arrived just when Europe was going green.”

POLITICAL ACTIVIST

Roddick campaigned through her shops all over the world: she supported Amnesty International, environmentalist groups and the fair trade movement. She fought against cruelty to animals, especially animal testing in the cosmetics business.

Today Roddick is still very active: she’s calling for the release of the Angola 3 – three American prisoners who have spent 34 years in solitary confinement for a murder they didn’t commit. “Get informed, get angry, get inspired, get active!” shouts Ruddick. Visit her website ( www.anitaroddick.com ) and discover the many issues that interested this tireless campaigner.
  
Roddick on Roddick

Anita Roddick speaks about cosmetic and The Body Shop: “Running a shop is about creating a product that’s so good, people will pray for it.” “Anti-ageing creams are a nonsense. The only real way to get rid of wrinkles is surgery.” “The end result of kindness is that it attracts people to you.” Roddick’s favourite quote: “If you think you’re too small to have an impact, try going to sleep with a mosquito.” (Phillip Elmer-DeWitt).

quarta-feira, 22 de junho de 2011

The way I are.



 A song can teach us so much, a great teacher as Judite Jekkel can provide a self-studying and a great effortless and useful English material like this all credits for her http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=518 

Source: English Exericses.org. 
                                                                         
 
Watch the video and do the following exercises.

Write in the missing words. The images may help.
 


I ain't got no I ain't got no  to take you on a I can't even buy you But together we could be the perfect soul Talk to me girlOh

Unscramble the following lines
                                           If we go touch
                                           Thug it out til' we get it right
                                           Baby, it's alright now
   We can work without the perks just you and me
                                           You ain't gotta flaunt for me
                                           You can still touch my love, it's free

Choose the correct words in the chorus

~ Chorus ~ 
Baby if you , you can get a 'Cause I like you just the  you areI'm about to strip and I'm well Can you  me the way I are? I don't  the G's or the car Boy I like you just the way you areLet me  ya strip, you can get a tip'Cause I like, I like, I like... 
Unscramble the words in brackets.

I ain't got no (AIVS)
I ain't got no Red American (Eerxsps)
We can't go (hronwee) exotic
It don't (etmrta) 'cause I'm the one that loves you best
Talk to me girl

Write in the missing prepositions.
OhBaby, it's alright nowYou ain't gotta flaunt  meIf we go touchy you can still touch my love, it's freeWe can work  the perks just you and meThug it  til' we get it right~ Chorus ~ Write in or choose the missing words. The images may help.

You know
Baby girl, I don't got a  ol' I rent a  in a houseListen baby girlI ain't got a But I can  your boatSo listen, baby girlOnce you get a  of D.O.EYou gon' want  mo'So listen, baby girlWhen I'm naked I want you Want you there, yeah.Yeah my  and me loof like feel me them, And it's really not  Louis Allason, Your  ain't Pamela Anderson, It's a struggle just to get you in the But listen  girl, Before I let you  a  I'll buy a bigger car, So listen baby girl, I love you just the way ya are, the way ya are
Find the extra words in each line and write them in the boxes.
OhBaby girl, it's alright now                                              You ain't gotta flaunt it for me                                        If we go touchy then you can still touch my love, it's freeWe can work without the hard perks just you and me       Thug it out please til' we get it right                            

An American in St Peter

For An American in St Peter’s




Language level: Advanced
Source: www.speakup.com.br
Speaker: Trisha Thomas
Standard: American accent



I was looking down at the top of President Bush’s head as i filed my live report the beginning of Pope John Paul II’s funeral, April 8, 2005.

I was on the Braccio di Carlo Magno, the enormous colonnade that spreads out like two arms from St. Peter’s Basilica. A group of journalists had been permitted to watch the funeral from the bird’s eye view above. Down bellow me the US president, Kofi Annan, Jacques Chirac, Nelson Mandela, Prince Charles, royalty from Spain and Jordan, and the Presidents of Iran and Afghanistan were among the dignitaries wishing farewell to the Pope.

Further down the row of onlookers, I noticed a Swiss Guard friend of mine dressed in a suit. He smiled and waved. Below I saw the book of Gospels  open on top of the Pope’s coffin. The pages fluttered and flipped in the wind.

A NATURAL

I would miss the man I had covered for 12 years. Covering him and the Vatican has been a challenge for me as a mother, but in this way, John Paul II made it easier, opening the Vatican up to television and being receptive to journalists. Right up until his death he was a natural on television. He knew how to use it. Back in 1993, for my first interview, inside the Vatican, I dressed in black form head to toe. I looked like a nun. At the Bronze Door, I told a Swiss Guard, in blue and yellow bloomers with a spear-length battle-axe, that I had appointment.

He pointed me to a wide staircase. Eventually I was ushered into a darkly furnished room after a while, the priest entered. He gave me a wet fish handshake, and look at something above my head. I began asking questions. His answers were short and vague. I gave up on acquiring information and just tried to get him to look at me, gesticulating and waving my hands about. He switched his gaze from the ceiling to the table. I gave up, fish-shaked, and left.

Later I learned about “custody of the eyes” according to the Encyclopedia for Catholicism, it is “the practice of diverting one’s gaze to protect the imagination…from sights that might tempt one to greed, lust of idle curiosity.” Certain priests believe that looking a woman in the eyes can be risky.

But it is not always like that. Before my first interview with a Cardinal at the Vatican. I became agitated over how I should address him –should I use “your Eminence,” and should I kiss his ring?  I wondered if I was going to ruin my chances of getting any information by not kissing his ring. While I was fretting, in marched the Cardinal, hand out stretched, “I’m Cardinal O’Connor, how ya’ doin?” Whoops, I had forgotten he was from New York City.

WORKING MUM

The Vatican is an easier assignment than others for a mother. Fortunately even when I was pregnant, I was able to travel on Papal trips. I was six months pregnant with my third child, Chiara, in the spring of 2000 when I traveled with the Pope to Cairo at Mt. Sinai.
And I was pregnant with my middle child, Caterina, on one of the Poland trips. But it was my oldest, nine-year-old Nicoló, who witnessed history. On April 19th, the second day of the Conclave, I felt sick. I had been working non-stop for months starting in February waiting under John Paul II’s window at the hospital. I decided to run home for a rest.

WHITE SMOKE

At home my children were giving the baby-sitter a hard time. My son begged me t take him to the Vatican. In the taxi I explained how a Conclave works, white smoke if the cardinals have chosen a pope, black smoke if the vote was inconclusive. I said that we would be seeing some black smoke. As we arrived on Via della Conciliazione, a shout went up from the crowd, “Fumo!” I grabbed Nico’s hand and started to run. We couldn’t tell what color the smoke was. White, gray, dark gray, not black. The crowd was confused.

“Giornalista, giornalista!” I shouted waving my press pass as I climbed over wooden barriers in the square. We made it to the obelisk where my colleague was filming the smoke. A few big puffs burst out, clearly “white.” The bells began to toll. The crowd roared.

Ten minutes later we saw the cardinals in their red robes lining up at the windows of St. Peter’s Basilica, and then out he came, the new Pope, Benedict XVI.