2017年3月13日 星期一

105-02第三週--模仿遊戲

Review: The Imitation Game

Monday, December 8, 2014
by D.J. PALLADINO



Structure of the Lead
WHO - Alan Turing
WHAT - Tragedy is the point of The Imitation Game, but you’d hardly know it.
WHERE - not given
WHEN - not given
WHY - not given
HOW - not given

Keywords:
1.biopic:傳記電影
2.Enigma code:恩尼格碼密碼數
3.dorky:不善交際的
4.intricately:複雜地
5.nerd:笨蛋
6.front:態度,方面
7.Turing:圖靈機
8.unleash:釋放
9.flashback:倒敘
10.compel:強迫
11.pull off:成功完成

2017年2月24日 星期五

105-02 第二週--哈德遜奇蹟

Survivor says Miracle on the Hudson inspired him to ‘live like you’re dying’

12:23 PM, SEPTEMBER 1, 2016,
By PAIGE LESKIN, 

 It's been more than 7 years since a plane that took off from LaGuardia Airport had to make an emergency landing in the Hudson River after a flock of geese disabled its engines.
Stories of the bravery of pilot Chesley B. Sullenberger III landing Flight 1549 on the water, as well as pictures of passengers being rescued from the sinking plane's wings, have stuck with New York residents and people worldwide since the incident in January 2009.
And now the movie "Sully," based on the so-called Miracle on the Hudson, is hitting theaters Sept. 9, starring Tom Hanks as the hero pilot.
Ahead of the release, one of the survivors of that fateful flight, Barry Leonard, told PIX11 about his experience that day and how it changed his life.
Leonard, who was traveling home to Charlotte, N.C., on the 2009 flight, said the plane suddenly "headed down like a roller coaster" just three minutes into the trip.
"The plane just shook," Leonard told PIX11 Morning News. "Then there was this smell."
Leonard said that since the near-death experience, he's revised his perspective to "believe in living like you're dying." Since the crash, Leonard has went on adventures and checked items off his bucket list, including riding elephants in Africa and climbing Mount Kilimanjaro with his son.
The chance to relive the experience through the new movie is cathartic, Leonard said. He was one of the passengers to recount their story in "Brace for Impact," a collection of survivor narratives.
Leonard has led the charge in staying in contact with others that experienced firsthand what happened on that flight. Each year, he holds a party in New York and invites the flight passengers and crew members, as well as the first responders that day.
"They're my second family," Leonard said. "We laugh, we cry together. We sit down and talk about what happened that day, because nobody else can understand what happened except for us."
Structure of the Lead
WHAT-  a plane that took off from LaGuardia Airport had to make an emergency landing
WHEN- not given
WHY- a flock of geese disabled its engines
WHERE- in the Hudson River
WHO- not given
HOW- not given

Keywords:
1.bravery:勇氣
2. starring:主演(分詞構句)
3.roller coaster:雲霄飛車
4.revise:修改
5.perspective:看法.觀點
6.cathartic:淨化的
7.Brace for:做好準備
8.narrative:故事.講述
9.responder:響應者

2017年2月13日 星期一

105-02 第一週--菲國掃毒

President Duterte Changes and Defends Philippine Drug War

February 11, 2017

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is changing his deadly war on drugs.

The change came after the killing last October of a South Korean businessman by Philippine police officers working on the drug war.
The police agency blamed for killing the businessman has been suspended from anti-drug efforts.
Duterte has put the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency in charge of anti-drug efforts. Duterte said the Philippine military would also assist efforts to stop illegal drug selling and use in the Philippines.
The businessman, Jee Ick-joo, was picked up by police and quickly killed, according to news reports in the Philippines.
The news reports said police led his family to believe Jee was still alive for several weeks, as they continued to ask for ransom payments.
Police offered no evidence that the businessman had any connection to illegal drugs.
Duterte criticizes corrupt police
Duterte spoke this week to 400 police officers reportedly under investigation for corruption and other misconduct.
He said corrupt police would be sent for two years to a southern island that is a stronghold of Islamist militants.
Duterte also spoke about former Colombian President Cesar Gaviria’s recent column in the New York Times. The column was titled, “President Duterte Is Repeating My Mistakes.”
Duterte called Gaviria an “idiot” for warning that “throwing more soldiers and police at the drug users does not work.”
Gaviria wrote in the New York Times column that doing so is “not just a waste of money, but also can actually make the problem worse.”
Reuters news agency reported that Duterte said his war on drugs is different than Colombia’s because “shabu,” or methamphetamine, is the common drug choice in the Philippines. The drug damages the brain. Duterte said the effects of cocaine, the drug of choice by Colombia’s sellers and users, are not as bad.
Last week, Catholic Bishops in the Philippines wrote a letter that was read at church services. The letter called on Catholics to speak out against the violent drug war.
“Let us not allow fear to reign and keep us silent,” the bishops wrote.
Human Rights Watch has been critical of Duterte’s war on drugs. The group says that more than 7,000 Filipinos have been killed in the war on drugs since Duterte became president in June of 2016.
Human Rights Watch has asked for the United Nations to investigate.
Phelim Kine, the Asian director for Human Rights Watch said that “the Philippine police won’t seriously investigate themselves, so the UN should take the lead in conducting an investigation.”
Bruce Alpert reported on this story for VOA Learning English based on reporting by Reuters and other news sources. Ashley Thompson was the editor.
Structure of the Lead
WHAT- changing his deadly war on drugs
WHEN- not given
WHY- not given
WHERE- Philippine
WHO- Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte 
HOW- not given

Keywords:
1.ransom:贖金
2.misconduct :不當的行為
3.methamphetamine:【藥】甲基苯丙胺(比安非他命更強的興奮劑)
4.cocaine:【藥】古柯鹼
5.reign:統治
6.conduct:引導.帶領

2017年1月4日 星期三

第九週--里約奧運

The 24-year-old Ethiopian swimmer who took the internet by storm has a great attitude about coming in last

By Scott Davis

  • Ethiopian swimmer Robel Kiros Habte became an Olympic sensation on Tuesday for all the wrong reasons.
    Habte, a 24-year-old who qualified for the Olympics because of a special invitation from the International Swimming Federation to athletes from underrepresented countries, finished with the worst time of 59 swimmers in the 100 freestyle.
    In his three-man heat, Habte — who also gained attention for his physique — finished with a time of 1 minute 4.95 seconds, which was more than 12 seconds behind Thibaut Danho of the Ivory Coast and 13 behind Jhonny Perez Urena of the Dominican Republic. He was 17 seconds slower than Australian leader Kyle Chalmers, who finished in 47.9 seconds.
    Habte was the only swimmer to not complete the event in under a minute.
    He instantly became a fan favorite, drawing (somewhat unfair) comparisons to Eric "the Eel" Moussambani of Equatorial Guinea, who finished with a time of 1:57 in the 2000 Olympics. The crowd began cheering for Habte as he approached the finish while his competition was resting, waiting for him.
  • But if you think Habte is upset by his poor performance, you're wrong. In fact, his upbeat perspective makes the story all the better.
    "I am so happy because it is my first competition in the Olympics," Habte said (via Reuters). "So thanks for God."
    He continued, saying his goal was to stand out from his fellow countrymen.
  • "I wanted to do something different for my country. That's why I chose swimming," Habte said. "Everybody, every day you wake up in Ethiopia, you run. Not swimming. But I didn't want to run. I wanted to be a swimmer. It didn't matter where I finished."
    Habte indeed is enjoying his time in the Olympics. On what appears to be his Facebook page, Habte has been showing off his Olympic experiences, like meeting Ryan Lochte, carrying the Ethiopian flag, and rocking Rio attire in general.
    According to Reuters, Habte "has no plans on competing again, but he will always be an Olympian."

Structure of the Lead
WHAT- became an Olympic sensation
WHEN-  on Tuesday
WHY- not given
WHERE- not given
WHO-Ethiopian swimmer Robel Kiros Habte
HOW- not given

Keywords:
1.sensation:轟動
2.physique :體型.體格
3.upbeat:樂觀的
4.perspective:觀點.看法
5.rocking:震驚
6.attire:打扮

2016年12月26日 星期一

第八週--Pokemon Go

Why everyone is addicted to Pokemon Go

By Claire Williams

Since the release of Pokémon Go in early July 2016, the app has outperformed all expectations. At the time of this writing, over 7.5 million users had downloaded the game in the United States alone, sending Nintendo's stock climbing by 10% in the first week. What makes Pokémon Go so massively appealing? Let's take a look at some of the factors behind the game's success.

Millions of fellow trainers
As previously mentioned, millions of people joined up as Pokémon trainers within the first week—according to some estimates, the game has been installed on 1 in every 20 Android devices in the U.S. That huge and immediate fan base means the app is not just a game, but a social experience. Players have organized huge Pokémon Go outings, including a Poké-walk in Australia that drew over 2,000 people for a day of catching and camaraderie. Trainers marched single-file through the park like leaf-cutter ants, only pausing to hit up Pokéstops or pursue a Pikachu.
An excuse to explore
Pokémon Go is an augmented-reality game utilizing real-world locations and points of interest as a focus within the app. In order to fully experience everything it has to offer, you must venture out into the community to explore Pokéstops and Gyms, usually located at public buildings, historic sites and other landmarks. By playing the game, you also get a chance to learn more about your neighborhood and city—enjoying sights you might not otherwise have seen.
Family friendly
Pokémon Go is one of those games that unites family members of all ages. Schoolkids and millennials alike are familiar with the franchise via Nintendo's games and the television series, which first premiered in 1997. Older generations will appreciate the lack of squeaky character voices in the app. We've seen grandparents walking with their grandkids, enjoying the game together. It's also a great way to get your children off the couch and active—not always an easy task in the digital age. A walk through your local downtown, park, or botanical garden is a great way to have fun and experience nature together.
Collecting is fun
Since time immemorial, humans have enjoyed collecting things. From rocks to coins, the tradition of collecting goes way back. This tendency has not lessened in the digital age, as illustrated by the success of games such as Neko Atsume, Dragonvale, and Pokémon Go. Once you get started, you don't want to stop until you "catch 'em all."
Friendly competition
Pokémon Go has an element of competitive gameplay adding to the fun. Gyms in the game are not held by fictional characters, but by other trainers. Join one of three teams, and use your Pokémon to attack a Gym in a hostile takeover, or defend it on behalf of your team. Gyms in populated areas may change hands multiple times per day, and everyone understands that's the way things are. Battles are conducted between trainers and the game's AI, and there's no in-game communication system—which means there's very little chance to have hard feelings if your Pokémon is defeated.
No entry fee
Pokémon Go, like its augmented-reality predecessor Ingress, is free to play. Where there is an in-game store allowing the purchase of additional items, it's completely optional. If you are consistently visiting Pokéstops to collect items, you should have no problem keeping your bag overflowing with Pokéballs, incense, potions, and other goodies.
Replay value
On average, Pokémon Go trainers have been using the app for 43 minutes a day—longer than the average user's daily Twitter time. Unlike many collecting games which involve only a few minutes a day to check in on your creatures and care for them, Pokémon Go can be played for as long as you have the will or stamina to keep going. There's always the possibility of a new Pokémon just around the corner. You don't ever "win" the game, and even if you manage to collect all of the original 151 Pokémon, it's likely that future updates will expand the Pokédex to include later generations.
Accessible to everyone
Perhaps the most brilliant thing about Pokémon Go is there's very little knowledge barrier for those new to the genre. You don't need to know the name of every Pokémon in the Pokédex, you don't need to know much about battle strategy (although a little primer on which types are weakest against each other would be helpful), and you don't need to  know the lore and history of Ash and the other characters found in the television series or previous games. The story of the game is simple—the world around us is filled with mystical creatures, and it's your mission to catch them, befriend them, and train them to be stronger. That's a mission we can all get behind.

http://www.looper.com/18330/everyone-addicted-pokemon-go/

Structure of the Lead
WHAT-the release of Pokémon Go  
WHEN-  in early July 2016
WHY- not given
WHERE- not given
WHO- not given
HOW- has outperformed all expectations
Keywords:
1.fan base:粉絲
2. camaraderie:友誼
3.utilizing:利用
4.millennials:千禧世代(出生於1980至2000年的人)
5.franchise:授權
6. hostile:敵對的
7.predecessor Ingress:先前的版本
8.stamina:精力.活力
9.genre:類型
10.lore:知識.學問

2016年12月13日 星期二

第七週:尼斯恐攻

Nice attack: truck driver named as France mourns 84 killed in Bastille Day atrocity – as it happened

By The GUARDIAN
16 Jul 2016

Nearly 24 hours after a Bastille Day celebration was transformed into a nightmare, “locals and visitors returned to the Promenade des Anglais to lay flowers for the dead and to wonder exactly how, and why, the unthinkable had come to pass,” my colleague Sam Jones reports from the city.

Throughout Friday, impromptu shrines had sprung up along the metal barriers that closed off the promenade. From one hung a tricolor with a black ribbon sewn on to the white central stripe. At another, a picture of Buddha watched over a dozen small candles. Someone had left a cigarette lighter and more nightlights on the ground so others could light candles and offer prayers.
Madame Bourmault, who lives two minutes from the promenade, came to one of the shrines with a bunch of flowers in her hand and tears in her eyes.
“I can’t sleep and I can’t breathe. It’s just horrible,” she said.
“What else can you say?” She had been down by the firework display on Thursday night, and seen a sudden tide of people screaming and running away. “In a fraction of a second, the music stopped and there was a lot of screaming. Everyone was running and no one was helping.”
On Bormault’s mind was a question that many around the world are asking: how had the truck managed to get on to the promenade? “It’s normally closed to traffic,” she said. However, she did not blame the police. “I don’t know what else the police could have done, but I don’t understand how the truck got in.”
She added: “You can’t put a policeman behind everyone - and there area lot of crazy people in this world.”
Leila Pasini, an Italian tourist from Milan on holiday in Nice, had been on the promenade before the attack but had returned to the flat where she was staying to make sure her dog was OK.
“We left just before the truck came and then I looked out of the window and saw a river of people running and crying. It looked like the apocalypse but I didn’t know what was going on.”
Pasini said she had heard that the truck had been close to the promenade for a long time and that the driver had explained that he was delivering ice.
“I don’t know whether that’s true or not,” she said. “But if it is true, then that’s very serious. Why would a truck be there for so long?”
By nine o’clock last night, life on the Rue de France, which runs close to the promenade, was slowly returning to normal. A few hundred yards from the scene of the atrocity, people walked their dogs and sat eating on restaurant terraces. Past them walked couples carrying flowers and clutching each other’s hands tightly.
Ita Murray and her friend Jackie Ellis, had arrived in Nice from London a few hours before the attack. They had intended to go and watch the fireworks but the day’s traveling had got the better of them and they chose to stay on their balcony.
“About 11, we saw all these youngsters running and screaming,” said Murray. “They were tearing around and we thought it was a prank.”
It wasn’t until nine on Friday morning, when they were awoken by phone calls from their anxious families, that they understood what all the shouting and running had been about. And that their fatigue had been a blessing.
“We were just too tired,” said Ellis. “Otherwise we would have been up
there because there’s always something going on.”


https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2016/jul/14/nice-bastille-day-france-attack-promenade-des-anglais-vehicle?page=with:block-5789464de4b033b610b6e3e7#block-5789464de4b033b610b6e3e7



Structure of the Lead
WHAT- celebration was transformed into a nightmare
WHEN- Nearly 24 hours after a Bastille Day celebration
WHY- not given
WHERE- Promenade des Anglais
WHO- not given
HOW- not given

Keywords:
1.impromptu:事先無準備的
2. sprung up:突然出現.湧現
3.promenade :海濱人行道
4.tricolor:法國國旗(大寫)
5.fraction:片段
6.apocalypse:世界末日.大災難
7.atrocity:暴行
8.clutch:握住.抓取
9.fatigue:疲勞

2016年12月5日 星期一

第六週--熊本地震

Japan earthquake: Powerful new tremor in Kumamoto


16 April 2016
By BBC News

A more powerful earthquake has rocked the southern Japanese city of Kumamoto in the middle of the night, a day after an earlier tremor killed nine people.

The magnitude-7.3 quake hit at a depth of 10km (six miles) at 01:25 on Saturday (15:25 GMT on Friday) in Kyushu region. At least three people died and hundreds were injured.
A village has been evacuated after a dam collapsed, media reports say.
A tsunami warning was issued, and lifted some 50 minutes later.
Japan is regularly hit by earthquakes but stringent building codes mean that they rarely cause significant damage.
This new earthquake in Kyushu was much bigger and hit a wider area than the one that struck Kumamoto on Thursday night, says the BBC's Rupert Wingfield-Hayes in Tokyo.
In one town near the coast, the city hall has been so badly damaged there are fears it could collapse. A hospital has been evacuated because it is no longer safe.
Thousands of people have fled on to the streets and into parks - where they are huddled under blankets looking dazed and afraid, our correspondent says.
But there are numerous reports of people trapped inside buildings, including at least 60 inside an old people's home.
Public broadcaster NHK says the dam collapsed in the Nishihara village.
elevision pictures showed thousands of people filling streets and parks, looking dazed across the region.
NHK had warned of sea waves of up to 1m (3ft).
Japan's nuclear authority said the Sendai nuclear plant was not damaged.
The quake was originally assessed as magnitude 7.1 but revised upwards to 7.3 later.
Gavin Hayes, a research geophysicist with the US Geological Survey (USGS) in Colorado, told the BBC that the latest earthquake would hamper the earlier rescue operation that was already under way.
He said more damage could be expected as the earthquake had been shallower and the fault-line had been much longer.
"The ground surface would have moved in the region of 4-5m. So, you are talking very intense shaking over quite a large area. And that's why we'll probably see a significant impact from this event."
The Associated Press news agency said guests at the Ark Hotel near the Kumamoto Castle, which was damaged, woke up and gathered in the lobby for safety.

Structure of the Lead
WHAT- A more powerful earthquake has rocked
WHEN- in the middle of the night, a day after an earlier tremor killed nine people
WHY- not given
WHERE- the southern Japanese city of Kumamoto
WHO- not given
HOW- not given

Keywords:
1.magnitude:震度
2. evacuated:疏散.撤離
3.fled on:逃跑
4.huddled:混亂.擁擠
5.correspondent:記者.特派員