HOST:
Welcome to AMERICAN MOSAIC in VOA Special English.
(MUSIC)
I'm Doug Johnson.
This week:
We
listen to a new album from Darius Rucker …
Answer
a listener question about vegetarians …
And tell about people who ride their bicycles to work.
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Biking to Work
HOST:
More Americans than ever are riding their bicycles to
work instead of driving. They are doing this because of gas prices, a slowing
economy and concerns about the environment. Faith Lapidus tells us more.
FAITH LAPIDUS:
Many Americans have been leaving their cars at home and
riding to work on bicycles. Andy Clark is the executive director of the League
of American Bicyclists. His group supports bicycling for fun, fitness and
transportation.
Mister
Clark says this is good news for the environment. He says riding a bicycle to
work does not burn fossil fuel or create dangerous pollutants. Experts
say the effects are the most important on short trips. The Department of
Transportation says fifty percent of Americans drive eight kilometers or fewer
to work. Shorter car trips release more pollution into the air for each
kilometer driven. This is because the device in a car engine that reduces the
harmfulness of emissions needs to warm up before it can work well.
Members
of Congress have supported bicycling as environmentally friendly
transportation. For example, Minnesota Representative James Oberstar is a
strong supporter of bicycle use. He says
cities, counties, state governments and state highway transportation agencies
are planning the roadways of the future.
They are creating roads and paths for bicycles in cities and between
communities.
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| Andrew Land riding his bicycle to work in Portland, Oregon |
Last
year, the Pacific Northwest city of Portland, Oregon, had the highest
percentage of bicycle commuters in the United States. Portland has been doing
progressive city planning for many years to create special paths for bike
riders.
Andrew
Land is one of Portland's citizens who bikes to work every day. Mister Land is
thirty-three years old and has never owned a car. He has biked to work for
twelve years. Before moving to Portland six years ago, he lived in Washington,
D.C. But he was hit by a car twice while biking to work there. That has not happened in Portland where there
are special roads for bicycles. Mister Land bought a house near these special
bike lanes. He rides almost five kilometers to work each day. He also uses the sixty-four kilometer bike
path around the city.
Andrew Land rides a cyclocross bike. He says it
combines the best parts of a racing bike and a mountain bike. You might say
that Andrew Land is "into bikes." He recently attended a show of
handmade bicycle frames. It was organized by thirty bicycle frame builders in
Portland. And he attended a legal rights workshop for bicyclists.
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Vegetarians in the U.S.
HOST:
Our listener question this week comes from India. K.
Jameel Ahmed wants to know about vegetarians in the United States. To answer
this question, we first have to describe several ways Americans define a
vegetarian diet.
Some
vegetarians do not eat any meat products or any food made from animal labor,
including milk products, eggs and honey. This kind of diet is called a vegan
diet. But most vegetarians include dairy products in their diet and many
vegetarians eat eggs. Some people consider themselves partial vegetarians, because
they do not eat meat or farm birds, but they do eat fish.
There are many reasons people choose to be vegetarian.
Some religions such as Hinduism observe vegetarianism as part of an effort of
nonviolence towards animals. Many other people have non-religious moral reasons
for not eating meat. They believe that killing farm animals for food is immoral
and cruel.
Other
vegetarians believe it is more healthful to eat a plant-based diet. The
American Dietetic Association says that vegetarians often have lower
cholesterol and blood pressure as well as lower rates of some kinds of cancer
and diabetes.
And
some vegetarians reject eating meat for environmental reasons. Some studies
show that the industry of raising large farm animals leads to water and air
pollution, land damage and climate change.
The
Vegetarian Resource Group in Baltimore, Maryland did a study in two thousand
six on the number of vegetarians in the United States. About two point three
percent of the adults they questioned said they were vegetarians. Six point
seven percent said that they never eat meat. This was a small study, so its
results may not be very exact. But earlier studies have also found that about
two percent of Americans say they are vegetarians.
However, the American Dietetic Association says
interest in vegetarianism is increasing. Organizations like the Vegetarian
Resource Group and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals give advice on
how to become a vegetarian on their Web sites. PETA also tells how to prepare
meat-free food. And it lists messages from famous vegetarians including the
actress Alicia Silverstone and the singer Moby.
Food
writer Michael Pollan has a more moderate suggestion than total vegetarianism.
He says Americans should eat like people did several generations ago. He says
they should eat small amounts of natural, well-grown foods that are mostly
plants.
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Darius Rucker
HOST:
Singer Darius Rucker recently released his first
country album, "Learn to Live." You
might recognize his voice. Rucker is also the lead singer of the popular band
Hootie and the Blowfish. Darius Rucker has taken time off from the band to make
his own records. Critics are praising his energetic country sound. And one of
the songs on the album has made history. Shirley Griffith tells us more.
(MUSIC)
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH:
That
was the song "Don't Think I Don't Think About It." It is the first number one country music hit
by an African American artist in about twenty-five years.
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| Darius Rucker |
Darius Rucker said it was not difficult to make country
music after years of writing rock songs. He said Hootie and the Blowfish had
always been influenced by country music. He grew up listening to country music
in his native South Carolina.
Rucker
also said that he did not want to write country songs about drinking alcohol
and chasing women. He said he is forty-two years old and his songs are about a
man thinking about his life, his relationships, his children and his goals.
Here
is the song "While I Still Got the Time."
(MUSIC)
Darius Rucker recently finished a performance tour
around the United States. He will travel again this winter to play music from
his new album. We leave you with the sharp humor of "All I Want."
(MUSIC)
HOST:
I'm Doug Johnson. I hope you enjoyed our program today.
It was written by Shelley Gollust and Dana Demange, who
was also the producer. To read the text of this program and download audio, go
to our Web site, voaspecialenglish.com.
Join
us again next week for AMERICAN MOSAIC, VOA's radio magazine in Special
English.