STUDENT NEWS
U.S. Supreme Courts Begins Hearing Arguments Over Health Care Law; Pope Benedict Visits Mexico
Aired March 27, 2012 - 04:00:00 ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
CARL AZUZ, HOST, CNN STUDENT NEWS: From the highest
court in the United States to the lowest point on the planet, we`ve got it
covered in today`s edition of CNN Student News. I`m Carl Azuz. Let`s
go.
First up, the first arguments about President Obama`s health care
reform law. The U.S. Supreme Court started hearing the case
yesterday.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ (voice-over): While the legal
discussion was going on inside, protests were happening outside. Supporters and
critics gathered right in front of the U.S. Supreme Court and expressed their
views for and against the health care law.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ:
Cameras aren`t allowed inside the Supreme Court. But CNN`s senior legal analyst,
Jeffrey Toobin, was inside the courtroom. He talked yesterday about what was
specifically argued in front of the justices.
(BEGIN VIDEO
CLIP)
JEFFREY TOOBIN, SENIOR LEGAL ANALYST: The issue to be discussed
today was actually very discrete, very limited. It was is this whole case
premature at this point? And as many people know, the Affordable Care Act,
ObamaCare, if you prefer, doesn`t go fully into effect until 2014.
And a
couple of the judges who`ve reviewed it have said, look, because the law doesn`t
go into effect for a couple years, we don`t think we should deal with the issue.
That`s the question that was before the court. And I think through the justices`
questions, we could see clearly that they were not buying that argument.
They felt that now is the time to deal with the law, now is the time to
weigh the constitutionality. So I think that much about the argument is clear.
That just raises the stakes for tomorrow, when they will hear arguments on
whether the law is, in fact, constitutional.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ
(voice-over): While the highest part of the judicial branch of government is
hearing that case in Washington, the head of the executive branch is in South
Korea. President Obama`s there for the Nuclear Safety Conference we told you
about yesterday. But he`s also been talking about North Korea`s plan to
test-fire a rocket next month.
That rocket moved onto the launch pad
Monday. President Obama has warned North Korea not to launch it. The issue came
up during the president`s meeting with other world leaders, like Chinese
President Hu Jintao, who`s sitting across from President Obama
here.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: See if you can ID
me. My title has been given to only 265 people. I`m a religious leader who is
elected for life. I`m the head of the Roman Catholic Church, and the world`s
smallest independent country, Vatican City.
I`m the pope, and the current
pope, Benedict XVI, was elected to the office in 2005.
(END VIDEO
CLIP)
AZUZ (voice-over): This week, Pope Benedict XVI is visiting a
country that was officially atheist for a long time: Cuba.
(END VIDEO
CLIP)
AZUZ: A majority of Cuba`s population is Roman Catholic, but the
country`s Communist government restricted religious freedom there for decades.
It`s something that Pope Benedict mentioned before his visit.
Some
analysts are wondering if it`ll be part of his message when he speaks directly
to the Cuban people.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ (voice-over): Cuba is
actually the second stop on the pope`s trip, though. First, he spent time in
Mexico, another country with a large Catholic population. Rafael Romo was there
for Pope Benedict`s visit, and he filed this report.
(BEGIN VIDEO
CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: (Speaking foreign language).
RAFAEL ROMO,
CNN REPORTER (voice-over): They came from the north and from the south, waving
the Mexican colors along with the Vatican flag. It`s not every day that you get
to attend a mass celebrated by a pope, and they didn`t want to miss the
opportunity.
DAVID GUTIRREZ, MEXICO CITY RESIDENT: Looking around all the
people, it`s amazing how they come to visit the pope and to hear his message.
I`m very, very happy.
ROMO (voice-over): David Gutirrez came from Mexico
City to greet Pope Benedict XVI. He and his girlfriend, Blanca Lopez (ph), were
among the thousands who spent the night waiting at this park.
ROMO: And
this is the moment millions of Mexican Catholics have been waiting for, Pope
Benedict XVI is finally here at Guanajuato`s Bicentennial Park. And as you can
imagine, the level of excitement is very, very high.
ROMO (voice-over):
The pope, sometimes perceived as distant, wore a broad-brimmed sombrero, a
tradition in Mexico. In his sermon, he urged Mexicans to rely on their faith in
the battle to get rid of poverty and the violence caused by drug trafficking,
violence blamed for more than 47,000 deaths in the past five years.
POPE
BENEDICT XVI (through translator): It helps us as well to look inside the human
heart, especially at this moment of sorrow and also hope that the Mexican people
and other Latin American nations are going through.
ROMO (voice-over):
Church officials estimate as many as half a million people attended the pope`s
mass -- Rafael Romo, CNN, Silao, Mexico.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ:
Two hours and 36 minutes -- that`s how long it took award- winning movie
director James Cameron to reach the deepest point on Earth.
(BEGIN VIDEO
CLIP)
AZUZ (voice-over): We`re talking about the Challenger Deep. It`s
part of the Mariana Trench out in the Pacific Ocean. And Cameron is the first
person to go there alone. Now there were a couple problems he had with the
machinery, and he was unable to bring back samples from the bottom of the ocean,
but what you see here is file footage of Cameron and the one- man sub he
traveled in.
He described Challenger Deep as, quote, "a completely alien
world, devoid of sunlight." But Cameron also said he`s already making plan to go
back.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED
FEMALE: Time for the Shoutout. How do you spell mnemonic, which means related to
memory? Here we go. Is it A, B, C or D? You`ve got three seconds, go.
The
correct spelling is M-N-E-M-O-N-I-C. It comes from a Greek word that means "to
remember." That`s your answer, and that`s your Shoutout.
(END VIDEO
CLIP)
AZUZ: Nelson Dellis knows his way around some serious mnemonic
tricks. He`s won the USA Memory Championships for the past two years. And one of
this year`s events -- memorizing the order of two decks of cards in just five
minutes. Dellis got every single one of them. And in our next video, he explains
some of his mnemonic strategies and shares the inspiration for his memory
mastery.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Five, zero, three,
seven, nine, five, three, four, five, zero.
NELSON DELLIS, MEMORY CHAMP:
When I tell people about what I do, I get such a big shock. "Oh, you must be
some savant or something like that," and that`s not the case. It`s just a
technique that`s kind of died out because the need is not there.
I`m
Nelson Dellis, and I memorize things as a profession.
One thing that kind
of pushed me along this path is my grandmother, who had been suffering from
Alzheimer`s disease, and that`s part of the reason why I was so concerned for
myself and why I got into all of this memory training, is because I didn`t want
that to happen to me. You know, I saw what it was doing to her and our -- what
it was doing to our family. It`s tough to deal with.
One of the events I
train is focan (ph) numbers. So I`m closing my eyes, and I`m hearing these
numbers come at me one digit at a second. And what I do is I`m turning those
into pictures. I receive a few digits at a time, and I turn that into a picture,
and then receive another two and kind of make a little story, and store that
along a place.
When I`m writing it down, all I`m doing is walking back
through that place, picturing who was there and then translating that back to
the numbers that those pictures represent.
I can`t help it anymore. I
look at these numbers and they are people to me. When I see three-zero, it`s
Conan O`Brien. Same with my grandmother. She`s 175. That`s her number. So when
she pops up, it`s awesome.
Any distraction can be detrimental to, you
know, an event that you`re trying to get a good score on. So we try to minimize
those distractions. You know, I`ll go to a public place and train or, you know,
I`ll train at a high altitude in the mountains.
In my first kind of big
fundraising project was to climb Mt. Everest, and I thought it would be a great
way to kind of bring Alzheimer`s to the top of the world.
For the
competition, I actually train about four to five hours a day. That`s because I`m
trying actively hard to win these competitions. I train my brain in the same
sense that, you know, you go to the gym more to make your body stronger. I do
that for my mind, to try and develop that memory and make it
stronger.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ
(voice-over): So what are your methods for memorization? You can read about mine
and tell us about your own on our blog. You`ll find that at cnnstudentnews.com.
Maybe you make mental images, like Nelson Dellis, or maybe you have some other
mnemonic tricks. Log on, share your strategies and only your first
names.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ: The March Madness tournament lasts
for nearly three weeks, but those guys take days off.
(BEGIN VIDEO
CLIP)
AZUZ (voice-over): Not so for these hardwood heroes. They wanted to
raise money for tornado victims in Missouri. They figured a marathon basketball
game might do the trick. They tipped off at 5:00 am last Wednesday and didn`t
stop until 9:00 p.m. Sunday night. That is 112 straight hours of basketball.
They`ve raised more than $100,000 probably set some sort of world
record.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
AZUZ: So this event, you could say, was a
slam dunk, and it sounds like the net results were all positive. It`s enough to
make anyone "hoop" and holler. Enjoy the rest of your day. For CNN Student News,
I`m Carl Azuz.
END
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