2016年12月12日 星期一

白頭盔 (27)

Syria’s White Helmets Didn’t Get the Nobel. But Their Rescue Work Continues

The group was considered a top candidate for the prize

Jared Malsin/Istanbul @jmalsin  
Oct. 7, 2016

The girl comes screaming out of the rubble, pulled by her purple shirt from the wreckage of the house, destroyed by an airstrike five hours earlier. A rescuer hoists her up and places her into the arms of another man. “Get an ambulance!” he yells. An excited shout goes up from other rescuers and bystanders—“Allahu akbar!” “God is great!” The girl’s hair is matted and her face is smeared with blood. For a second, the camera captures her tiny face, anguished and confused. Later, the rescuers pull out a young boy, alive and waving a bloody hand. Then the rescue team pulls out two more children. Their bodies are lifeless, their faces white with dust. The men of the Civil Defense, Syria’s volunteer rescue organization also known as the White Helmets, lay the children in blankets. The onlookers murmur and cluck their tongues in dismay.
That scene was captured on video after an alleged Russian airstrike in a small farm town called Bashqateen, in the rebel-held countryside West of the city of Aleppo on Sept. 23. For the volunteer rescue worker, it was another daily rescue. Mohamed Ateeq, a 35-year-old civil defense worker, who appears in the video hoisting the young boy from the wreckage, says in a Skype interview, “We’re used to seeing dead people under the rubble. We’re used to seeing people crying from under the rubble.”
After rescuing an estimated 60,000 people, the White Helmets had been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize which was instead awarded to Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos on Friday, for negotiating peace with the FARC rebel group. After Colombian voters rejected the peace deal in a referendum in September, some observers considered the White Helmets the front runner for the prize. Instead the Nobel committee lauded Santos’ efforts to end his country’s decades-old conflict, and the Syrian rescue workers reacted with grace. “Congratulations to the President of Colombia for the @NobelPrize and we wish the people of Colombia peace,” they tweeted, shortly after the announcement. The group followed with sad news: a civil defense volunteer had been killed in the southern Syrian city of Daraa. In Hama province, shelling targeted another civil defense center, apparently destroying it.
The White Helmets head back to work at a moment when President Bashar Assad’s regime is engaged in an escalating military campaign against rebel-held areas of Syria. Backed by Russian airpower, the regime has unleashed devastating airstrikes in recent weeks on the besieged opposition-held section of the city of Aleppo, killing hundreds of civilians and destroying hospitals and other vital infrastructure. On Thursday, the U.N. special envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, warned that if the bombing continues at the current pace, all of eastern Aleppo could be destroyed within two and a half months. “The writing on the wall is if this continues to be the pattern, at this rate this cruel, constant use of military activities, bombing, fighting, destruction will continue,” he said, saying the world needed to act to avert “another Srebrenica, another Rwanda.”
In Syria, every day presents new traumas, and many of them are captured on videotape. In addition to rescuing other Syrians, civil defense workers also exhaustively document their work, providing a record of the life and death drama playing out inside Syria. The Sept. 23 rescue in Bashqateen was no different.
At least some of the children had been sleeping when jet came roaring in low over the rebel-held countryside west of the city of Aleppo that morning, Friday Sept. 23. The air raid targeted a two-story house, shared by four families who fled the fighting in Aleppo city, settling for the moment in Bashqateen. The airstrike flattened the house, killing fifteen people. Five others survived the attack, which civil defense officials believe was a Russian airstrike.
The strike took place around 9.a.m., and three civil defense teams arrived within fifteen minutes. The rescue workers say they labored for more than eight hours to recover the bodies and pull out the survivors, including the eight-month-old girl in the video, named Shams Mohamed Ali. The boy is her two-year-old cousin, Ali, whose mother was killed by the attack as they both slept. “The girl was almost dead,” says Mohamed Ateeq, a 35-year-old civil defense worker, who appears in video footage plucking the young boy from the rubble. In an interview later conducted over video chat, he said he now considers the kids “like my own children.”
The rescue of the children in Bashqateen was little noted by the outside world, but the same day, footage appeared online of another dramatic rescue, in the besieged rebel-controlled section of Aleppo city. Rescuers plucked another young girl, Rawan Alowsh, from the rubble of yet another building smashed by yet another an airstrike. The video went viral, sparking a fleeting moment of attention from the world’s media.
Child victims become icons for a day in this long and exhausting war. In August there was Omran Daqneesh, the “boy in the ambulance” whose bloody face appeared on front pages in Europe and America. In 2014, there was the so-called “miracle baby,” 10-day–old Mahmud Ibildi, somehow pulled from the rubble of an airstrike alive. The boy’s rescuer, a Civil Defense worker named Khaled Omar Harrah, was hailed as a hero—until he was killed during a mortar attack in Aleppo in August 2016. Under shelling and airstrikes by Bashar Assad’s regime and now that of his Russian allies, Syrian civil defense workers in Aleppo and elsewhere have rescued many miracle babies. Some of them go viral. But most fade into obscurity.
In September, airstrikes knocked two of the White Helmets’ four facilities in Aleppo out of service, but Syria’s rescue workers say they have no choice but to press on. The bombs continue to fall, and the White Helmets continue to rush in to save civilians trapped in the rubble. “God willing keep doing our work, our humanitarian mission to save the souls of innocent people,” said Ismail Mohamed, 31, a rescue worker in besieged Eastern Aleppo, in a phone interview in late September. “Other than that, we don’t know what to do.”
On Sept. 30, yet another airstrike destroyed a civilian house in Syria’s Idlib province, adjacent to Aleppo. Civil defense spent two hours digging through the wreckage of a civilian house, and eventually pulled out a woman and two children, including a one-month old baby girl. As they left the scene in a vehicle that appears to be an ambulance, a 26-year-old rescue worker named Muhammad Dieb Al Hur held the girl in his arms and wept. The girl, bleeding from the forehead, made tiny noises. The White Helmets filmed the scene, a moment of pure emotion. She was the latest miracle baby, and she will not be the last.

Structure of the Lead:
WHO      The men of the Civil Defense, Syria’s volunteer rescue organization also known as the White Helmets
WHAT    hoists her up and places her into the arms of another man. The rescuers pull out a young boy, alive and waving a bloody hand. Then the rescue team pulls out two more children. Their bodies are lifeless, their faces white with dust.
WHERE in the rubble
WHY     not given
WHEN   not given
HOW     not given
Keyword:
1.rubble(n.)瓦礫堆;碎石
2.hoist(v.)抬起;吊起
3.
anguished(a.)苦澀的

4.dismay(n.)失望;沮喪
5. referendum(n.)全民公投
6.regime(n.)政府;政權
7.devastating(a.)破壞性極大的
8.traumas(n.)心理;精神創傷
9.smashed(v.)搗爛;撞碎
10.obscurity(a.)沒沒無聞的
11.adjacent(a.)鄰近的

熊本地震 (27)

Japan quakes leave at least 35 dead


DO NOT PANIC:With rain and wind hampering rescue operations, Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga urged people to help each other and remain calm

AP, MASHIKI, Japan

Army troops and other rescuers yesterday rushed to save scores of trapped residents after a pair of strong earthquakes in southwestern Japan killed at least 35 people, injured about 1,500 and left hundreds of thousands without electricity or water.
Rainfall was forecast to start pounding the area soon, threatening to further complicate the relief operation and set off more mudslides in isolated rural towns, where people were waiting to be rescued from collapsed homes.
Kumamoto Prefecture official Riho Tajima said the death toll stood at 22 from the magnitude 7.3 earthquake that shook the Kumamoto region on the southwestern island of Kyushu early yesterday. On Thursday night, Kyushu was hit by a magnitude 6.5 quake that left 10 dead.
Japanese media reported that nearly 200,000 homes were without electricity and that drinking-water systems had also failed in the area. Television footage showed people huddled in blankets, sitting or lying down shoulder-to-shoulder on the floors of evacuation centers. An estimated 400,000 households were without running water.
Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said that 1,500 people had been injured in the quakes. Tajima said that 184 people were injured seriously and that more than 91,000 people had been evacuated from their homes. More than 200 homes and other buildings were either destroyed or damaged, she said.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe expressed concerns about secondary disasters as forecasters predicted rain and strong winds later in the day. With soil already loosened by quakes, rainfall can set off mudslides.
“Daytime today is the big test” for rescue efforts, Abe said.
Landslides have already cut off roads and destroyed bridges, slowing down rescuers.
Police received reports of 97 cases of people trapped or buried under collapsed buildings, while 10 people were caught in landslides in three municipalities in the prefecture, Japan’s Kyodo news agency reported.
Kumamoto Prefecture has been rocked by aftershocks, including the strongest with a magnitude of 5.4 yesterday morning. The Japan Meteorological Agency said that the magnitude 7.3 quake early yesterday might have been the main one, with one from Thursday night a precursor.
The quakes’ epicenters have been relatively shallow — about 10km — resulting in more severe shaking and damage. National broadcaster NHK said as many as eight quakes were being felt per hour in the area.
Suga told reporters that the number of troops in the area was being raised to 20,000, while additional police and firefighters were also on the way.
He urged people not to panic.
“Please let us help each other and stay calm,” Suga said in a nationally televised news conference.
Kyushu island’s Mount Aso, the largest active volcano in Japan, erupted for the first time in a month, sending smoke rising about 100m into the air, but no damage was reported.
The Nuclear Regulation Authority reported no abnormalities at Kyushu’s Sendai nuclear plant.

####http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2016/04/17/2003644128

Structure of the Lead:
WHO     Army troops and other rescuers 
WHAT    rushed to save scores of trapped residents
WHERE southwestern Japan
WHY     a pair of strong earthquakes
WHEN   yesterday
HOW    killed at least 35 people, injured about 1,500 and left hundreds of thousands without electricity or water
Keyword:
1.pound(v.)重擊,襲擊
2.magnitude(n.)震度
3.
footage(n.)片段

4.huddled(a.)擠成一團的
5.evacuation(n.)疏散
6.municipality(n.)市政府,當局政府
7.precursor(n.)先鋒,前兆
8.epicenter(n.)震央
9.abnormality(n.)反常;異常(身體上的)

火箭回收 (27)

SpaceX successfully lands a Falcon 9 rocket at sea for the third time

And its fourth overall



SpaceX just successfully landed the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket on a drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean. It was the third time in a row the company has landed a rocket booster at sea, and the fourth time overall.
The landing occurred a few minutes before the second stage of the Falcon 9 delivered the THAICOM-8 satellite to space, where it will make its way to geostationary transfer orbit (GTO). GTO is a high-elliptical orbit that is popular for satellites, sitting more than 20,000 miles above the Earth. The 3,100-kilogram satellite will spend 15 years there, helping to improve television and data data signals across Southeast Asia.
After landing, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk said that there would be "some risk of tipping" as the rocket was brought back to port.
SpaceX started trying to land the first stage of its rockets back in January 2015, but the first successful landing didn't come until December. Since then, though, the company has had more luck. SpaceX has now successfully executed three drone ship landings in the past two months. A second ground attempt is scheduled for July.
The company was coy about its chances for a successful landing this time, saying that recovering the rocket booster would be "challenging." That's because, when SpaceX performs these high-orbit missions, the rocket reaches a much higher speed and needs to be loaded with much more fuel compared to missions to low Earth orbit. In turn, the Falcon 9 booster is left with less fuel to guide it to the drone ship, and it has to decelerate from a higher speed. That's why some previous attempts at landing Falcon 9 first stages in the ocean after GTO missions had failed.
To be fair, though, all the other sea landing attempts that occurred before April also failed. That first sea landing in April came during a mission to low Earth orbit, but it was apparently a turning point. SpaceX successfully landed another booster during its following attempt at the beginning of May, which was a mission to GTO.
SpaceX is attempting to make its rockets reusable because it could drastically reduce the cost of launching goods (and eventually, people) into space. Successfully landing the rocket boosters is obviously a huge first step — one that SpaceX has now performed four different times.
But for SpaceX to truly achieve its goal of reusability, the company is going to have to start re-flying the boosters that it has landed. In April, Musk said that he hoped launch the first rocket that landed at sea by May or June, but the plan appears to have changed. The company now plans to re-fly the rocket that was landed at the beginning of May, but there is no timeframe for that launch.
In the meantime, SpaceX is running out of space to store its rockets at the Kennedy Space Center. The hangar the company is using can hold up to five rocket boosters, and this newly-landed one will make four. Musk has said that SpaceX might transport some of the boosters to the company's test facility in McGregor, Texas. And, at some point in the near future, SpaceX says it plans to take the first rocket it landed back in December and put it on display at the company's headquarters in Hawthorne, California.
####http://www.theverge.com/2016/5/27/11787532/spacex-falcon-9-rocket-landing-success-sea-drone-ship
Structure of the Lead:
WHO      SpaceX  
WHAT    successfully landed the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket
WHERE on a drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean
WHEN   the third time in a row
HOW     landed a rocket booster at sea, and the fourth time overall
WHY     Not given
Keyword:
1.satellite(n.)衛星
2.geostationary transfer orbit (GTO) 地球同步轉移軌道
3.
elliptical(a.)橢圓形的 
4.orbit(n.)軌道(行星或恆星)
5.execute(v.)處決,處死
6.coy(a.)故作神秘的
7.drastically(adv.)大幅度地
8.timeframe(n.)時間範圍
9.hangar(n.)飛機庫

巴黎氣候高峰會 (27)

COP21: The global warming targets agreed in Paris will drive a carbon-capture revolution

Beginning in 2016, leaders will have to begin to live up to their pledges

Sunday 13 December 2015
Tim Flannery 

The Paris agreement on climate change refers to limiting temperature rises to 1.5C above the pre-industrial average, and includes a “ratchet mechanism” of five-yearly reviews of progress, commencing in 2019. Together, this powerful combination could lead to full decarbonisation by the middle of the century. The depth of the agreement beyond national politics is also important. Bill Gates committed to the largest green innovation fund ever, mayors of 1,000 cities committed to 100 per cent renewable energy by 2050, and the talk in business circles was all about opportunity, rather than cost.

Beginning in 2016, leaders will have to begin to live up to their pledges. If we are to limit temperature rise to 1.5C, delay by even a single year will be costly. The world is already at 1C, and the carbon budget (the amount of atmospheric carbon we can emit before reaching 1.5C) is half what is allowable under a limit of 2C. In a very short time we will be out of carbon budget to stay below 1.5C, so regardless of how fast we limit fossil fuels, we will need to invest in third-way technologies to capture CO2 from the atmosphere.
A world committed to a 1.5C limit will need to phase out the burning of coal before 2030, and to have decarbonised transport systems before 2050. This represents an enormous opportunity for clean energy technologies. Wind and solar will need to increase rates of implementation several times over, and the deployment of electric vehicles, along with alternative fuels for aviation and shipping, will need to accelerate sharply.
A huge investment in innovation in third-way technologies is also required. To cut atmospheric CO2 by 1ppm (parts per million) requires the removal of 18 gigatonnes of it – for which you’d need to plant a forest four times the size of Australia. Carbon sequestration in forests, crops, rangelands, biochar and wood industry products can play a part, but seaweed farms offer far larger carbon capture potential. Because they are excellent habitats for fish and shellfish, they also offer huge protein yields. But ways will need to be found, and financed, to process the kelp and sequester the carbon it captures.
Cement manufacture accounts for 5 per cent of global emissions, and the transition to carbon-negative concretes, already a nascent industry, must be accelerated, along with the use of silicate rocks, which sequester CO2 as they weather. If we can quarry and crush 5 to 6 gigatonnes of silicate rock per annum using clean energy, we can capture and store 3 to 4 gigatonnes of atmospheric CO2. Nascent industries in plastics and carbon fibres made from CO2 also have a role to play.
If the idea of such changes by mid-century sounds like sci-fi, just imagine the changes that occurred between 1915 and 1950 – from the horse-drawn to the nuclear era. The rate of change has only accelerated since, and the problem that will drive the innovation – the greenhouse gases that will drive ever worse climatic shifts – will not go away of its own accord. Indeed, the innovation revolution that drives the third way promises to make the clean energy revolution look like small beer.
Structure of the Lead:

WHAT    The Paris agreement on climate change refers to limiting temperature rises to 1.5C above the pre-industrial average, and includes a “ratchet mechanism” of five-yearly reviews of progress, commencing in 2019.

HOW     this powerful combination could lead to full decarbonisation by the middle of the century.
WHERE NOT GIVEN
WHO      NOT GIVEN
WHY     NOT GIVEN
WHEN   NOT GIVEN
Keyword:
1.commence(v.)開始,著手
2.innovation(n.)創造,使用(新觀念)
3.phase out 淘汰
4.implementation(n.)履行
5. accelerate(v.)加快
6.gigatonnes(n.)億噸
7.sequestration(n.)封存
8.rangeland(n.)牧場
9.biochar(n.)生物炭
10.nascent(a.)新生的,萌芽的

2016年11月7日 星期一

巴黎恐怖攻擊 (27)

Paris attacks: Blindfolded Muslim man asks people to 'show him trust with a hug' after shootings

Onlookers are reduced to tears by the man's gesture at the Place de la République

Thursday 19 November 2015

Alexandra Sims


A Muslim man stood blindfolded in the center of Paris asking mourners to embrace him as they gathered to commemorate the 129 victims killed in a series of terror attacks across the capital.
Footage posted online shows the man standing next to a homemade sign reading: “I’m Muslim, but I’m told that I’m a terrorist. I trust you, do you trust me? If yes, hug me.”
The video shows dozens of onlookers approaching the man and embracing him at the Place de la République, which has become a hub for homages and tributes.
One woman is moved to tears by the man's gesture and joins another onlooker to hug him.
After taking off his blindfold the man, who remains unnamed, said: “I would like to thank every one of you for giving me a hug. I did this to send a message to everyone.
“I am Muslim, but that doesn’t make me a terrorist. I never killed anybody. I can even tell you that last Friday was my birthday, but I didn’t go out.
“I deeply feel for all the victims’ families. I want to tell you that ‘Muslim’ doesn’t necessarily mean ‘terrorist’.
“A terrorist is a terrorist, someone willing to kill another human being over nothing. A Muslim would never do that. Our religion forbids it.”
The video has been watched more than 10 million times on Facebook and received 150,000 likes in two days.  
Attacks by jihadist militants and a rise in refugees seeking help in Europe has led to renewed focus on Europe’s Muslim population.
Since the Paris attacks, committed by Isis militants and suicide bombers, the Slovakian Prime Minister claimed his country is “monitoring every Muslim,” while Poland has demanded security guarantees before accepting 
However, a survey of seven European countries last spring by the Pew Research Centre, found France has the most positive views on followers of Islam, with 74 per cent of people surveyed holding a favourable view of the Muslim community.
In Britain, an advert organised by the Muslim Council of Britainon behalf of more than 300 mosques and community groups said the "barbaric acts of [Isis] have no sanction in the religion of Islam, which forbids terrorism and the targeting of innocents."
The advert called on everyone to stand together to ensure communities were not turned against each another.
Structure of the Lead:
WHO      a Muslim man
WHAT    stood blindfolded
WHERE in the center of Paris
WHY    asking mourners to embrace him as they gathered to commemorate the 129 victims killed in a series of terror attacks across the capital.  
WHEN   not given
HOW     not given
Keyword:
1.mourner (n.)哀悼者
2.hub (n.)中心:樞紐
3.
homage (n.)崇敬,敬意
4.tributes (n.)頌詞,禮物
5. jihadist militant聖戰激進分子
6.monitor (v.)監察,監視
7.barbaric (a)殘暴的,野蠻的
8.sanction (n.)制裁

2016年10月24日 星期一

Emoji (27)

Oxford’s 2015 Word of the Year Is This Emoji

Nov. 16, 2015 2:08 PM
 
Oxford Dictionaries made history on Monday by announcing that their “Word of the Year” would not be one of those old-fashioned, string-of-letters-type words at all. The flag their editors are planting to sum up who we were in 2015 is this pictograph, an acknowledgement of just how popular these pictures have become in our (digital) daily lives.

Although emoji have been a staple of texting teens for some time, emoji culture exploded into the global mainstream over the past year,” the company’s team wrote in a press release. “Emoji have come to embody a core aspect of living in a digital world that is visually driven, emotionally expressive, and obsessively immediate.”


Oxford University Press—which publishes both the august Oxford English Dictionary and the lower-brow, more-modern Oxford Dictionaries Online—partnered with keyboard-app company SwiftKey to determine which emoji was getting the most play this past year. According to their data, the “Face With Tears of Joy” emoji, also known as LOL Emoji or Laughing Emoji, comprised nearly 20% of all emoji use in the U.S. and the U.K., where Oxford is based. The runner-up in the U.S., with 9% of usage, was this number.


Caspar Grathwohl, the president of Oxford Dictionaries, explained that their choice reflects the walls-down world that we live in. “Emoji are becoming an increasingly rich form of communication, one that transcends linguistic borders,” he said in a statement. And their choice for the word of the year, he added, embodies the “playfulness and intimacy” that characterizes emoji-using culture.


Though this marks a historic moment of recognition for the pictures plastered throughout tweets and texts, Oxford has not added or defined any emoji in their actual databases. Nor, says a spokesperson for the publisher, do they have plans to do so at this point. The word emoji, however, has been in both the OED and Oxford Dictionaries Online since 2013.


Japanese telecommunications planner Shigetaka Kurita is credited with inventing these little images in 1999, taking the emoticons that had been gaining steam on the Internet to an iconic level. Inspired by comics and street signs, the name for the alphanumeric images comes from combining the Japanese words for picture (e-) and character (moji). “It’s easy to write them off as just silly little smiley faces or thumbs-up,” sociolinguist Ben Zimmer told TIME for a story on how emoji fit into humans’ long history of using pictures to communicate. “But there’s an awful lot of people who are very interested in treating them seriously.”



####http://time.com/4114886/oxford-word-of-the-year-2015-emoji/


Structure of the Lead:
  WHO         Oxford Dictionaries
 
WHEN       on Monday
 
WHAT       made history 
  HOW         announcing that their “Word of the Year” would not be one of those old-                        fashioned, string-of-letters-type words at all
 WHERE     not given
 WHY          not given

Keyword:
 
1. staple (n.)訂書針,日常必需品
 2. mainstream (n.)主流
 
3. press release 新聞稿
 4.
 comprise (v.)由...組成
 
5. transcend (v.)超越,優於
 
6. tweet(n.)用推特發的訊息

 7. linguistic (a.)語言的
 8. telecommunication (n.)電信
 9. iconic (a.)圖像的,肖像的