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CNN STUDENT NEWS For April 30, 2002

Aired April 30, 2002 - 04:30   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
ANNOUNCER: You're watching CNN STUDENT NEWS seen in schools around the world because learning never stops and neither does the news.

MICHAEL MCMANUS, CO-HOST: CNN STUDENT NEWS starts out with a profile of Pakistan's President Musharraf. Pakistanis go to the polls today, details in our "Lead Story."

SHELLEY WALCOTT, CO-HOST: We leave the whirlwinds of politics to track a storm of another sort as tornadoes come into "Focus."

MCMANUS: We still have H2O on the brain in our "Health Report." Can fitness water really power your performance?

WALCOTT: And finally, we make our way back to politics when Student Bureau brings you the story of a sheriff wannabe.

MCMANUS: And welcome to CNN STUDENT NEWS. I'm Michael McManus.

WALCOTT: And I'm Shelley Walcott.

Voters in Pakistan head to the polls today. Their mission isn't to elect a new leader but to decide whether to extend President Pervez Musharraf's term by five years.

MCMANUS: The referendum called by President Musharraf himself is now at the heart of a huge political debate. Musharraf says it's necessary to secure a popular mandate for his economic reforms and continuing crackdown on terrorism. Opponents challenge the referendum, however, saying it's unconstitutional because the president is normally elected by parliament.

We'll have more on the controversy coming up, but first, our Joel Hochmuth reports on the referendum and the man behind all the fuss.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

JOEL HOCHMUTH, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Pakistan has all the feel of a country at the climax of a presidential political campaign but the only candidate running is Pervez Musharraf the incumbent. He's hoping to cement his power for another five years in today's special referendum.

GENERAL PERVEZ MUSHARRAF, PAKISTANI PRESIDENT: If the people don't want me, I'll go tomorrow. There's no question. Let's not live in a make-believe world. Does Pakistan want me? Do I have a role in this country? Do the people want me? That's the main question.

HOCHMUTH: As head of Pakistan's military, Musharraf seized power in a bloodless coup in 1999 and then declared himself president last year. During that time, he's tried to bring a sense of stability to a country that endured the collapse of four civilian governments in the 1990s. Respected for his honesty and reform measures, he's gained wide support among moderates in the country and earned a reputation as a benign dictator. To the Bush administration he has become a key ally in the fight against terror. When faced with Mr. Bush's now famous ultimatum, you either side with the U.S. or side with terrorists, Musharraf quickly chose the first option.

GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: Many nations are acting forcefully. Pakistan is now cracking down on terror, and I admire the strong leadership of President Musharraf.

(APPLAUSE)

HOCHMUTH: Musharraf clamped down on militants and radicals in his country and gave the U.S. permission to use some of its military bases in its fight against the Taliban in Afghanistan, but those moves haven't been popular with everyone. While they were seen as courageous by the West, they angered hard-line Islamic clerics, many of whom supported the Taliban. And the current referendum hasn't won Musharraf any friends among Pakistan's main opposition groups who have been banned from holding their own rallies. They accuse Musharraf of trying to manipulate the vote in his favor and urging Pakistanis to boycott.

NASIM ZEHRA, POLITICAL ANALYST: There is gross indifference in the political -- on the political scene here. So I don't expect any great enthusiasm and therefore, referendum is not the best barometer for Musharraf's support or lack of support.

HOCHMUTH: Musharraf's call for the referendum is largely a political move. Under a Supreme Court ruling, Pakistan is to return to civilian rule in October when a new parliament is to be elected. Musharraf needs a stamp of legitimacy before that and is hoping for a large voter turnout. Simply winning the vote as expected won't be enough.

Just how enthusiastic are voters in Pakistan about the referendum? For some answers we go to Ash-Har Quraishi.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

ASH-HAR QURAISHI, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Lahore is arguably the heart of political activity in Pakistan. Here at the city's food street, crowds gather late into the night for a bite to eat. This spot attracts people from all over the city, one of the few places where one can truly find a broad spectrum of food, people and opinion. Today's topic, President Pervez Musharraf's decision to hold a referendum asking the people of Pakistan whether or not he should be president for another five years.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I really support him and I feel I represent a vast majority of my nation and people (UNINTELLIGIBLE) abroad in United States and U.K. and in other countries. And I feel it's the way to go. We trust him. Yes, we do (ph).

UNIDENTIFIED MALE (through translator): I tell everyone they should vote for him and I will give him my vote. I have told my whole community and my family to give him their votes.

QURAISHI: It's not all rosy for the military ruler turned self- appointed president. With the nation's long history of military leaders, many here say a referendum would be less about what's in the best interest of the country than what's in the best interest of the man himself.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE (through translator): He just wants to force his way into power for another 5 or 10 years, nothing else.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE (through translator): He is doing it to hold onto power. He is not doing this for the people.

QURAISHI (on camera): While it's obviously difficult to gauge what the outcome of the referendum will be, one thing to keep in mind is that there's only one candidate in this case, that means that President Musharraf's biggest opponent could be those people who decide not to vote at all.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE (through translator): I am very much against the referendum. Not only am I against the referendum, but I have told all my friends and colleagues not to go and vote.

QURAISHI (voice-over): Still, Musharraf has made it clear that he is confident his record stands for itself and that the majority of people do agree with what he has done and will support him.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE (through translator): There should be a referendum, and we need the president because he has led the country out of great hardships. If he hadn't made his decisions, who knows where we would be now. I hope he wins the referendum, and I think we should all support him.

QURAISHI: Success for President Musharraf isn't just a matter of getting a majority vote. Even if he wins the backing of the people, he still needs to have his presidency ratified by parliament after the scheduled October elections.

Ash-Har Quraishi, CNN, Lahore, Pakistan.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

MCMANUS: And for more on President Musharraf and an in-depth look at the history of Pakistan, head to our Web site. That's CNNstudentnews.com.

April 30, 1789, George Washington is inaugurated as the first U.S. president.

MCMANUS: A tornado's power is unpredictable. It can form within minutes and cut a destructive path for miles. That power was evident on Sunday when a series of storms struck from Missouri to Maryland. The bad weather claimed at least a half dozen lives and destroyed homes and businesses. Many towns experienced hail and severe thunderstorms which often surround tornadic activity.

Amazing pictures there. And as you can see, the storms are quick and the damage severe. A tornado can form within minutes, and meteorologists have made progress in predicting when conditions are right for tornadoes to form but remain in the dark on how violent they'll be. The residents of the Midwest and the Mid-Atlantic (ph) learned this over the weekend.

Now let's go inside the funnel cloud and see what makes up a tornado.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

MCMANUS (voice-over): Officials say the tornado that hit Maryland over the weekend was an F5 which according to the Fujita Scale is the highest and the most devastating. Winds associated with this type of tornado generally reach over 260 miles an hour.

Tornadoes are quick and unpredictable, but officials still can't predict when and where they'll develop, as residents of south Florida once found out.

(on camera): Located on the eastern tip of Florida, Miami is known for being a popular target for hurricanes. But that changed four years ago when a tornado touched down right here in the middle of one of America's most popular cities.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Now you'll start to see debris here at the base of this column that's -- it's lifting. And I guess it's also picking up a tremendous amount of water as it crosses over the Biscayne Bay area.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCMANUS: Though it looked dangerous in pictures caught by television news crews, the tornado did little more than rattle a few nerves.

DAN MCCARTHY, NATL. SEVERE STORMS LAB: A tornado is actually a small area of energy that is rotating violently out of a storm.

MCMANUS: Dan McCarthy is a forecaster at the National Severe Storm Laboratory in Norman, Oklahoma. His team is responsible for tornado warnings in twister-prone areas, like the Midwest and Central Plains of the U.S., otherwise known as Tornado Alley.

MCCARTHY: As a meteorologist, to see a tornado is really beautiful, as long as you're safely away from it and you can see the whole formation. This whole interaction started to form.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Tornado on the ground.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCMANUS: The interaction Dan is talking about involves the colliding of warm, humid air with either very cold or very hot, dry air, or the dry line. In short, the air starts spinning in a vast circular motion and follows a path straight down to the ground, pulling everything around it into the vortex of air.

LEONARD: They can develop very, very quickly. You could be looking at a very nice sunny, hot day, with almost no clouds in the sky; 20 minutes later, you could have a violent thunderstorm, which could spawn a tornado out of it within minutes.

MCMANUS: This is what happened on May 3, 1999, when a family of tornadoes touched down in Oklahoma, killing 44 people.

(BEGIN AUDIO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We have a large tornado on the ground. This is tornado number six.

(END AUDIO CLIP)

(BEGIN AUDIO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Coming down right now: a major tornado.

(END AUDIO CLIP)

(BEGIN AUDIO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Coming down, another tornado to the other side of 152.

(END AUDIO CLIP)

(BEGIN AUDIO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Just south, just south. It's one-quarter mile south of us.

(END AUDIO CLIP)

MCMANUS: On this day, the highest wind speed ever recorded was clocked at 318 miles per hour. The damage was catastrophic. But word was broadcast of the impending threat. And according to McCarthy, it saved lives. MCCARTHY: If the weather service didn't have the outlook, the watches and warnings in place, a lot more people could have lost their lives.

MCMANUS: During tornadic activity, you have mere seconds to react. The best way to avoid injury is to remember two words: low and inside.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: My wife and my mother-in-law and I started down the steps. And as soon as I got to the bottom of the steps, I closed the bathroom door and the glass and everything started busting.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCMANUS: If you're at home or have access to a basement, that's the best place to go. In a school, an interior hallway on the lowest form is your best bet. In an office building, the inner-most stairwell should provide adequate protection. And if you are outside, cover your head and crouch down in the lowest area within reach.

If you still don't think tornadoes are dangerous, check this out. That's the power of a simple piece of wood in a tornado's fierce winds. And then there's this woman, who had her financial records mailed back to her after a twister from two states away. And, finally, according to Weather.com, an F-4 twister roaring through Tennessee destroyed six steel high-tension towers like these. Three of the towers were supposedly never found.

Meteorologists say the easiest way to keep safe is to stay informed. After all, isn't knowledge power, too?

With all the power behind tornadoes, meteorologists say the easiest way to keep safe is to stay informed. After all, isn't knowledge power, too?

(END VIDEOTAPE)

MCMANUS: That story was a real eye-opener for me, and it doesn't stop there. Head to the Web to see stories of survival, charts and some great weather links. It's all there at CNNstudentnews.com.

And now over to Shelley for some interesting news about road safety.

WALCOTT: That's right, Mike. Driving is serious business, and for those of you old enough to drive, you know getting your license is no easy feat. You have to study the rules of the road, practice behind the wheel and then take written and road tests, but your driving education doesn't end once you get your license. Being a good driver also entails proper car maintenance. This week is Tire Safety Week, a time experts say to check out that part of the car a lot of us seem to neglect.

Kathleen Koch has details. (BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

KATHLEEN KOCH, CNN CORRESPONDENT: When it comes to auto maintenance, most Americans stop where the rubber meets the road, rarely ever checking their tire's air pressure or tread.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Occasionally, probably maybe two or three times a year.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I know how to check the pressure, but not the treads.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Didn't know I was supposed to.

KOCH: A new survey by the Rubber Manufacturers Association of nearly 3,000 drivers found only 11 percent were correctly checking their tire pressure every month. Sixty-six percent didn't even know where to find the proper inflation number. It's a dangerous omission, 650 people die in accidents each year due to tire-related causes.

(on camera): Part of the problem can be finding somewhere to fill your tires. The Transportation Department found that one in seven gas stations doesn't even have an air pump, or if they do, it's broken.

(voice-over): Author and car care expert Mary Jackson volunteered to scrutinize my tires, untouched since November.

MARY JACKSON, AUTHOR, "CAR SMARTS": All you need, really, to make sure you're keeping up with your tire care is a tire gauge and a penny.

KOCH: A careful check finds my new tires are underinflated by four pounds, a small amount that makes a big difference in how much tire surface worn contacts the road.

JACKSON: And when tires are underinflated, or overinflated, or if they're worn, what happens is the contact patch goes from that to this, and you simply cannot grip the road as well.

COOPER: We made sure to check the tires when they were cold.

KOCH (on camera): And if it's not cold, what happens?

JACKSON: If it's not cold, what you'll start to get is an inaccurate reading, so you want to check your tires in the morning before they've been driven at all, or if the car's been sitting for at least three to four hours.

KOCH (voice-over): The next step, add just enough air.

(on camera): Now, does it make a difference, a pound or two, if we left it at 32 and it's supposed to be 30?

JACKSON: You want it exactly at what the manufacturer recommends. KOCH (voice-over): The monthly tread check is easiest of all.

JACKSON: Just take the penny, and put it in the groove, with Lincoln's head down. As you look at it from the side, if you can see the top of Lincoln's head, then you need new tires.

KOCH: The government has proposed requiring systems in cars to automatically check tires, some day taking the pressure off drivers.

Kathleen Koch, CNN, Washington.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

MCMANUS: The youngest king in the world has taken his first trip to the United States. Ten-year-old King Oyo rules the African kingdom of Toro in the country of Uganda. But this monarch's visit to Denver was no play date.

Lorie Hirose reports on how the king hopes to help his country fight a deadly disease.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

LORIE HIROSE, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): He is only 10 years old but he gets a king's welcome. King Oyo presides over Toro, a kingdom of one million in southwest Uganda.

KING OYO, KINGDOM OF TORO, UGANDA: On behalf of the children of Toro, I thank you very much.

HIROSE (on camera): A Denver-based not for profit called Christ Aid brought the king here. They want to raise $6 million to build the first children's hospital in Uganda.

(voice-over): Uganda has the highest orphan rate in the world with 1.3 million children losing their parents to AIDS. The World Health Organization reports 70 percent of the world's AIDS cases are in sub-Saharan Africa. Organizers say that's why the Denver mission is so important.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Able to prepare a future generation of Uganda by equipping them with the right resources to identify and understand this monster called AIDS.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: We have a training program here for physicians.

HIROSE: To learn how to fight AIDS, the king, his mother and the prime minister tour Denver's Children's Hospital.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: A 10-year-old king, that's the best thing in the world.

HIROSE: Nineteen-year-old Lemar Davis (ph) has lupus. A visit from the king lifts his spirits. King Oyo breaks protocol to hug Lemar's mom. The king's mother says the children here touch her heart.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: There's no difference between you and me.

HIROSE: In Denver, Lorie Hirose reporting.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

ANNOUNCER: Exploring our world, here now is CNN STUDENT NEWS "Perspectives."

WALCOTT: We continue our weeklong look at things presidential in "Perspectives." A traveling exhibit with hundreds of presidential artifacts is garnering a lot of attention and interest among Americans. Simple items like clothes and headphones appear to take on much prestige when they work their way into the White House.

CNN's Jeff Flock brings us a glimpse of some of the items on display.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

JEFF FLOCK, CNN CORRESPONDENT: This is Lincoln's blood.

LONNIE BUNCH, CHICAGO HISTORICAL SOCIETY: Yes, it is, when Lincoln's head rested on this sheet on the pillow, and you can see the remnants of his blood.

FLOCK (voice-over): The sheets Lincoln bled to death on after he was shot, the microphone FDR used for his first fireside chat, the overcoat Grover Cleveland wore to his first inauguration, the field telescope George Washington used in the Revolutionary War.

BUNCH: In some ways, these objects really make you see the presidents as what they are: average men. You know what? Let's not look at them as godlike figures, but let's look at them as men who rose to the occasion at times of extraordinary crisis or decision or leadership.

FLOCK: Like World War I: This is the pen Woodrow Wilson used to sign the declaration of war, the inkwell Lincoln used to draft the Emancipation Proclamation, the headphones the House Judiciary Committee used to listen to Nixon's Watergate tapes.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: If you like Nixon, you see there is a nice photo of Nixon. If you don't like Nixon, you can see the smile that sort of stops right about here.

FLOCK: Politics and presidency without the spin: nearly 400 pieces in the traveling exhibit, though some of the most compelling, like the cloak Mary Todd Lincoln wore to Ford's Theater, come from the Chicago Historical Society's own rarely-shown collection, which also includes the bed Lincoln died on, as well as the pillow and sheet. It is all a reminder of how history somehow fits together: passes to Andrew Johnson's impeachment trial, the gavel from Clinton's. And there is a voting machine last used in the 1984 Reagan/Mondale race. Look closely at line 41 and you'll see a hanging chad. (END VIDEOTAPE)

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

AMANDA GRIFFIN, WOODSTOCK, GEORGIA: Hello, my name is Amanda Griffin. I am from Woodstock, Georgia. And my question is: How do braces straighten your teeth?

DR. MELISA RATHBURN, ORTHODONTIST: As you all know, there are many specialized cells of the body and this is a very important part when we come to moving teeth with braces. The way that we move people's braces is to cause some bone remodeling. When we use braces, we often put pressure on the teeth. We put pressure on one side of the tooth but we also pull the tooth from another area.

When we put pressure on the teeth, it causes the stimulation of certain bone cells to come to that area to remodel or eat the bone on that side. On the (INAUDIBLE) side, from which the tooth is being moved, it stimulates cells to make new bone, therefore, creating a new cell on that side. This is called bone remodeling, and this is how braces are able to translate teeth through bone.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

WALCOTT: Some players on the New York Jets football team are doing it, there are some world class tennis players, you know what it is? Well they're drinking fitness water, growing in popularity among those who like to take their sports life seriously.

Liz Weiss pours through the facts to see if fitness waters really work.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

LIZ WEISS, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): What's the best way to quench your thirst?

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Normally I just go for the regular water.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I go for the free stuff, convenient.

WEISS: But despite the fact that water flows freely, fitness waters have sprung up, and there's no shortage. This one promises power and endurance, while waters with added oxygen claim everything from extra energy to stamina and rapid hydration.

Deanna Conte is a dietitian at Sports Club L.A. in Boston.

DEANNE CONTE, THE SPORTS CLUB L.A.: It's more of an alternative approach to hydration. If it tastes good and it makes you feel better, certainly it's a good option to regular water. However, there is no research that indicates that there's a benefit.

WEISS: And while all the added oxygen and antioxidants are calorie-free, that's not always the case with some designer waters. CONTE: Well, there are 50 calories per serving in this particular water, and there are 2.5 servings. So that would be 125 calories. For someone that is looking to lose weight and/or maintain their weight, this may not be the best place to get your calories.

WEISS: Adults need about 64 ounces of fluid a day, more if they're exercising. So if a fitness water is your cup of tea, Conte says drink up, but don't expect any big surge of energy.

For "Feeling Fit," I'm Liz Weiss.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

WALCOTT: They're everywhere, on every bottle, box and every bundle in every store we patronize. They are labels. And in this consumer conscious age, many of us fancy ourselves fairly educated label readers, but are we as savvy as we like to think?

Bruce Burkhardt breaks it down one label at a time.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

BRUCE BURKHARDT, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): So many labels, so many claims, so many questions.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: He only eats organic food, right buddy?

BURKHARDT: Well it depends on what your definition of organic is. Environmental labels are everywhere claiming products are organic or hypoallergenic. Labels we use to try and make the right choice for our health, for the environment, but do these labels always tell the truth?

URVASHI RANGRYS (ph), CONSUMERS UNION: We have come across a number of labels that have very few, if any, standards behind them.

BURKHARDT: Consumers Union, publishers of "Consumer Reports," help shoppers sort out the wheat from the chaff on their Web site, eco-labels.org.

RANGRYS: With that growing number of labels comes a growing amount of concern on the part of consumers. It's hard for consumers to tell exactly what the label means, and this site takes consumers behind the label and explains to them which labels actually mean something and which ones are just marketing hype.

BURKHARDT: With the site, consumers can compare products and print a report card to take along when they go shopping. Eco Labels has done the research to see which claims are real.

RANGRYS: Consumers can be assured that when they do see the organic label, especially after October 2002 when the USDA program will be fully implemented, organic will mean the same thing from product to product and consumers can trust that label.

BURKHARDT: But as Eco Labels tells you, don't trust everything you read.

RANGRYS: Hypoallergenic is a claim that is used on several cosmetic products which basically has very little meaning. Hypoallergenic can mean anything that a manufacturer wants it to mean.

BURKHARDT: A watchdog like Eco Labels helps, but in the end, making sure that product claims are responsible is up to the consumer, en educated consumer.

Bruce Burkhardt, CNN, Atlanta.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

MCMANUS: Many people who are registered to vote aren't making their way to the polls. Fewer and fewer people in the U.S. are voting in primary elections, many young people don't vote at all.

CNN Student Bureau reporter Dustin Grove tells us about one Indiana teenager who is trying to change all that. Will he earn a gold star for his efforts, he actually could. Let's find out how.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

DUSTIN GROVE, CNN STUDENT BUREAU (voice-over): At first glance Justin Ruetz is just like any other high school senior.

JUSTIN RUETZ, AGE 18: What up, Jackie (ph)?

GROVE: Looking forward to graduation.

RUETZ: I'm headed to Milligan College in Tennessee.

GROVE: Looking forward to the future.

RUETZ: I'm hoping to play soccer there.

GROVE (on camera): But before all of that, if all goes to plan, Justin's future might involve time here at the Hamilton County Sheriff's office, only not necessarily behind the bars.

RUETZ: I'm running for Hamilton County Sheriff basically just because I really want to raise voter awareness.

GROVE (voice-over): Barely 18, no law enforcement experience, not even a high school graduate yet and Justin Ruetz is on the ballot for sheriff of one of Indiana's fastest growing counties.

RUETZ: Hopefully the young voters will take interest and actually care about the candidates and come out and vote.

GROVE: Election administrators say they're happy to see young people get involved, but running for sheriff should be left to the pros.

LYNN RICHARDSON, ELECTION ADMINISTRATOR: And there are various other ways by helping campaigns, helping candidates, helping at the polls.

RUETZ: I thought that this would be a way in which other 18 year olds and first-time voters would actually just pay attention to the election.

GROVE: Voter turnout has been down lately.

RICHARDSON: Countywide it was 18 percent.

GROVE (on camera) (?): That's pretty low.

RICHARDSON: That's pretty low.

GROVE: Do you think it's going to work?

RUETZ: So far it has. So far I've gotten a great response from everybody here at the high school at least.

Did you register yet?

GROVE (voice-over): But from the public?

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I'm not sure he realizes what all he would be getting in to.

GROVE (on camera): Do you think you have a chance of winning?

RUETZ: You know I almost hope to a certain extent I don't have a chance of winning just because I hope that the other kids will take an interest in it and vote for the candidate that they think is best qualified.

GROVE (voice-over): And if Justin does become the new sheriff in town...

RUETZ: If I were to win, I think I'd have to deal with it then. I'm not prepared for that right now. I don't know what I would do exactly, but if and when that time comes,...

GROVE: Either way, it's one for the record books.

Dustin Grove, CNN Student Bureau, Carmel, Indiana.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

"Where in the World" Kampala is the capital and largest city, about 70 percent of the people speak one of the Bantu languages, governed by a president and a unicameral 265-seat legislature? Can you name this country? Uganda.

WALCOTT: Have a good one everyone.

MCMANUS: Bye-bye.

WALCOTT: Bye-bye.

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