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    For more information on our program, in the U.S. call 1-800-344-6219.  Outside the U.S. 44-171-637-6912.
    Get set for CNN NEWSROOM WORLDVIEW.  From around the world, the recent and best reports from CNN’s globe trotting international correspondents.
    FRASSRAND: Today on NEWSROOM WORLDVIEW, a day in the life of a Russian orphanage.  What separates this church service from all others in Cuba? And, an unseen energy effects building decisions in Hong Kong.
    HENDERSON: Russia tops NEWSROOM WORLDVIEW today.  Each year, thousands of young people are released from orphanages in the former Soviet republic.  But is it a welcome change for them?  Not always, as Betsy Aaron reports.
    (BEGIN VIDEO TAPE)
    BETSY AARON, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Happiness is graduating from high school.  Friends envy you.  All of a sudden you’re a grown up.  "We’re starting a new life," he says.  That’s the good part.  The scary part is leaving home.  In this case, leaving orphanage No. 55.
    No wonder.  One day you’re eating, sleeping, studying, doing everything together.  "Orphanages treat us as a group." That’s not good, but sometimes it’s necessary.  The rules call for law and order and they always have.
    SERGEI LEVIN, RUSSIAN OFFICIAL (on-camera): Discipline means lack of choice and absence of choice results in difficulties in real life, where one is forced to make a multitude of choices every day.
    AARON: If you haven’t learned to think for yourself, you could wind up in big trouble.  Half of the 12,000 young men and women who leave Russian orphanages each year end up in prison.  Close to 70
    percent of his classmates have spent time in prison.  "My first encounters with the outside world were a shock." When Vitaly left the orphanage, he felt alone and abandoned.  He was soon behind bars.  Prison, with its rules and friendships, was home.  "Life is easier there."
    In a building on the outskirts of Moscow, orphans who have outgrown orphanages congregate for companionship, for counseling, to find themselves.  "I would like orphanages to pay more attention to the inner world of pupils, to raise ethical and moral issues." The center helped Ira find a place to live, gave Yelana (ph) a job.  Anita is studying to become a lawyer, but there is pain and there are problems.  Russian orphans feel a terrible stigma.  "People tend to think you’re mentally inferior to them.&quot,Cheap Christian Louboutin;

     March 12th, 2010  admin   No comments