2016年3月31日 星期四

still Alice,Alzheimer's disease

Moore says Alzheimer's role helps raise awareness


5 February 2015
The actress has already won 17 awards for her role as a linguistics professor who battles with the disease, and is nominated for an Oscar and a Bafta.
She said: "It's been really amazing, I have to say."
The 54-year-old was at a special screening of the film on Thursday hosted by the Alzheimer's Society.
"It's been nice to hear from people that their experience was represented and they felt seen," she told the Press Association.
As she attended the event at the Curzon Mayfair in London, she admitted: "That's probably the most rewarding experience that I've had, because I think there's a tremendous amount of shame around the disease and people feel like they're not seen, they feel isolated."
Moore hoped the awards season would encourage more people to see the movie, which is released in the UK on 6 March.
She said: "It brings so much attention to the movie, and this is a movie we all care about, and so it's wonderful because hopefully people will see the film."
The Hunger Games star added: "It's so, so nice to receive these accolades, particularly from your peers.
"There are so many great performances and great films every year, so if people even bother to write down your name, it's really lovely."
Moore is nominated for best actress at the Bafta awards at the Royal Opera House in London's Covent Garden on Sunday night.
She is also considered the frontrunner to win the best actress Oscar in Hollywood on 22 February. The actress has previously been Oscar-nominated four times but has never won.



Structure of the Lead:
WHO- Julianne Moore
WHEN- 5 February 2015
WHAT- won 17 awards
WHY- She roles as a linguistics professor who battles with the disease.
WHERE-not given
HOW- This movie encourages more people to see.
Keywords:
1. linguistics: 語言學
2. nominate: 提名
3. represent: 代表

2016年3月24日 星期四

Two missing Hong Kong booksellers return from China

By Ralph Ellis, Katie Hunt and Zahra Ullah, CNN
March 7, 2016
Two of five missing booksellers believed to have been held in China have returned to Hong Kong, the Hong Kong police said Sunday.
Cheung Chi Ping requested the police to cancel his missing persons case, two days after his fellow bookseller Lui Por returned to Hong Kong also asking police to close his missing persons case.
Both men requested no further help from the government or police and "refused to disclose other details," according to police statements.
All five men were involved with publisher Mighty Current and its shop Causeway Bay Books, which sold gossipy titles about China's elite.
The disappearance of the booksellers sparked outrage in Hong Kong and internationally over fears they were taken against their will in December by Beijing authorities. Thousands of people demonstrated in Hong Kong to demand their return.
    Hong Kong authorities have said China was holding some of the men. China has repeatedly said its officials wouldn't do anything illegal.
    Lui Por and associates Cheung Chi-ping, Lam Wing-kee and Gui Minhai appeared on television on February 26 admitting to "illegal book trading" in China.Gui Minhai, the owner of Hong Kong publisher Mighty Current, ordered thousands of "unauthorized" books sent to mainland China, the other men said.
    The fifth bookseller, Lee Bo, appeared on Chinese television Monday to say he hadn't been abducted from Hong Kong. Lee said he went to China to assist police with an investigation and was free to return once the investigation had finished.
    The three other booksellers are still believed to be in mainland China.

    2016年3月10日 星期四

    Emojis help kids communicate abuse

    by Hope King 

    May 28, 2015

    Abused Emojis is a new iOS app and keyboard that aims to help kids and teens communicate difficult situations through images.

    The idea was developed by Bris, a Swedish non-profit which manages a helpline for children and teenagers.
    The organization says the app is intended to reflect and extend the kind of work Bris does.
    "Every day we have contact with hundreds of kids through phone, chat and mail conversation,"Bris explains on its site. "Many of the problems that children face today are stigmatized ...The Abused Emojis app is a symbol for our work to make children talk more freely about their situation."
    The set of 15 emojis are based on existing icons, each revised to portray different types of physical and psychological harm.
    The hear-no-evil, see-no-evil monkeys, for example, are upset. The praise hands have red cuts across the wrists, and various figurines have bruises or Band-Aids on their faces.
    Mark Davis, president and co-founder of Unicode, says his personal opinion is that the Abused Emojis campaign seems like a "very worthy cause."
    Some of the Abused Emojis "could be represented already in Unicode, using what are called 'joiners,' which is how Apple portrays diverse families. Others would require new characters, and would have to go through the selection process, Davis said.
    The Unicode Consortium is releasing a set of 41 new emojis in June, and it has selected 38 emoji characters as candidates for next year's release. The list of those candidates is not final.
    Bris communications director Silvia Ernhagen said that being included in the larger set of Unicode emojis "would be a good outcome to broaden the range of feelings," but emphasized this wasn't the app's main goal.
    The iPhone app launched on the iTunes App Store a little over a week ago and has been downloaded tens of thousands of times.
    According to the developer, Abused Emojis is already the third most downloaded free iOS app in Sweden.
    Some users have been concerned about letting the app have "Full access" to an iPhone's keyboard. Third-party apps can retrieve information that is typed on a device this way, but Bris says it does not collect, store or transmit any personal data from users.


    Structure of the Lead:
    WHO- kids and teens
    WHEN- May 28, 2015
    WHAT- abused emojis
    WHY-emojis help kids communicate abuse
    WHERE-not given
    HOW-some emojis would have to go through the selection process
    Keywords:
    1. stigmatized: 誣衊
    2. revise: 修改
    3. portray: 寫真
    4. campaign: 活動
    5. Consortium: 聯盟


    2016年3月3日 星期四

    More than 100 jade hunters killed in landslide at Myanmar mine

    November 24, 2015

    At least 113 people were killed in northernMyanmar when a huge hill of tailings from a jade mine collapsed onto the huts of sleeping workers, according to state-run media.
    Local officials estimate another 30 victims were "buried under the soil."
    The collapse of the roughly 60-meter-high (200-foot-high) mound took place at about 3 a.m. Saturday in Hpakant, in Myanmar's northern state of Kachin, the Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper reported.
    Seventy huts containing sleeping workers were buried in the slide, with only five huts spared, according to the newspaper. The huts had been situated in a ravine between two huge hills of dump soil, it reported.
    The military was working with local residents in rescue and recovery efforts, it reported Monday, warning that many more people remain missing.
    The area produces some of the world's highest quality jade, a nearly translucent green stone that is highly valued in neighboring China.
    Many workers, typically migrants from other parts of the country, eke out a livelihood in the shadow of the mines by sifting through the tailings for leftover jade, the newspaper said.
    Local authorities said they had earlier issued notices telling the workers they could not stay on the site, according to the newspaper.

    'Slush fund'

    A report published last month by environmental advocacy group Global Witness estimated the value of Myanmar's jade industry at as high as $31 billion last year -- 48% of the country's GDP.
    But it claimed the resource was being treated as a "slush fund" by people connected to the country's former military leaders, and drug lords.
    Although the value of the jade was about $21,000 a year for each person in Kachin state, local people saw little of the revenue from this valuable resource, the report said. On the contrary, the practices of mining companies had created environmental hazards for locals, it said.
    The report said there had been a series of fatal accidents in recent months arising from the common mining company practices of "dumping huge quantities of waste into lakes and streams or in massive mounds which are prone to collapse."
    "Untrammeled jade exploitation has turned Hpakant into a moonscape, with mining bringing down 'jade mountains,' leaving behind water-filled craters and causing widespread flooding and pollution," the report said.
    Prostitution and drug use are rife among the mining communities, the report said. Community leaders in Myitkyina, the capital of Kachin state, told CNN in March that the region was battling a major heroin epidemic, with many young people using the drug.
    Myanmar's government has been fighting on and off for decades with the Kachin Independence Army, a rebel guerrilla force seeking independence for the predominantly Christian ethnic minority in the remote state.
    http://edition.cnn.com/2015/11/22/asia/myanmar-landslide/

    Structure of the Lead:
    WHO- jade hunters
    WHEN- November 24, 2015
    WHAT- more than 100 jade hunters killed in landslide
    WHY- dumping huge quantities of waste into lakes and streams or in massive    mounds which are prone to collapse.
    WHERE- Myanmar
    HOW- Myanmar's government has been fighting on
    Keywords:
    1. ravine:深谷
    2. translucent: 半透明的
    3. eke out: 免強維持
    4. advocacy: 擁護
    5. slush fund: 行賄基金