Perfil de amélieWelcome to xinxin's spac...FotosBlogListasMás ![]() | Ayuda |
Coze English Corner CREATION CAFE ![]() Laptop guy: You're cozing. I'm busy! ![]() Relationship topics are tricky. (Cozers laugh.) ![]() What an intellectual gathering! ![]() Lisa argues a point. ![]() Mr. Diplomat and Miss. Engineer ![]() Oh the topic is a little bit serious. ![]() Hey it's not a diplomatic smile. ![]() We're listening... ![]() Sophia the host, Tian the philosopher:) ![]() Vivian shares her best happy marriage tips. ![]() Max poses for the camera. ![]() "It really depends!" says self-assertive yuan. A Moon With DimplesBaby nephew hadn't forgotten me. The moment I walked into the room I heard him chuckle. Sitting on nanny's knees, little one looked up at me and beamed. He had a good laugh when sis and I held him up together to let him stand. I was hoping to catch a glimpse of his killer elfish grin. not lucky enough ha:) 3'12"it's been a month since i last went to the pool. somehow i finished the first 10 laps in a record 32min. that's 3min 12sec per lap, 18sec faster than my best time. awesome. 17th August 2005, BLCU四海乐,Friendship Store, Southgate and all. http://www.dsturgeon.net/china2005/beiyu-e.html ^_^Sagittarius
November 22 - December 21 Today You have done the thinking and planning, and now it is time to take action, dear Sagittarius. Communicating your feelings is a big part of your day, and you should try to keep things as open and honest as possible. Take hold of the electricity in the air and channel it into the projects you have been working on. It is important for you to infuse laughter and lightheartedness into the day. ForesightThis brief article published on the August 4, 2008 issue of Newsweek gave a lucid assessment of how Liu's pre-existing conditions might affect his prospects at the Beijing Games. Politically biased and unforgiving as they are, Western news writers never review on prejudice when it comes to sportsmanship and individual athletes. Liu's pull-out might not have stunned the nation so much if our culture hadn't had the habit of downplaying unwelcoming facts, so give the lad a break. Track and Field: Hurdles for China’s Icon Mark Starr There are only two things in Beijing bigger than 7-foot-6 hoops star Yao Ming: the Great Wall—and hurdler Liu Xiang. Liu's victory in the 110-meter hurdles in Athens was arguably the most surprising of China's 32 gold medals there, and unquestionably the most celebrated back home. No Chinese man had ever before won Olympic gold in track and field, and his triumph turned him into a folk hero, not to mention a pop icon. Liu's face is splashed across billboards and milk cartons, turning him into a one-man metaphor for China's emerging athletic and economic supremacy. The nation is poised for a coronation—make that a deification—on Aug. 21 if Liu can repeat his triumph. But there are some unexpected hurdles in his path. For one, Liu has to prove he's recovered from a hamstring injury that forced him out of a race in June. The bigger worry is Dayron Robles, a 21-year-old Cuban who has blossomed this year and broke Liu's world record. Now a nation frets that Aug. 21 could instead be a day of national mourning. Now for the REAL COUNTDOWN.With the Games less than ten days to go, red round lanterns and flags of Fuwa are being put up along high streets. The National Stadium staged a full dress rehearsal for the opening ceremony last night. Subway passengers are required to go through a hand luggage screening checkpoint. Reconnaissance aircrafts are hovering above our heads. The "Yanjing Beer"(and "China Mobile")-logoed volunteer T-shirt is ubiquitous. "Journey to the East", BBC sport's marketing video for their Olympics coverage—— Is that a compliment or mockery? http://2008.163.com/08/0728/10/4HUASSFU00742QL2.html The image of 沙僧 is really horrifying. When I first saw it I thought it was 白骨精. Home, renovated Pea green is restful and soothing for the eyes, but violet blue adds glamour :) WahahahaI received a call from C press this afternoon. This year they will publish my Chinese translation of the RDM series book. First proof has just arrived. Hee hee. It's the happiest proofreading work I've ever done. A Few Interesting People I Recently MetThree weeks ago I went to an interview with Zhang and Caicai, President and Vice-President of Xianliao Fan Club. The interview consisted of watching Kungfu Panda and happy chit chat time over lunch. (I've skipped what could have been a long introduction to the whole story so if you don't know what I'm talking about, just ignore it.) But I won't forget to introduce these two great leaders haha: Zhang, an algorithmist specialized in automatic translation research. His work may one day lead to revolutionary changes in the translation industry. Translators Beware! :D:D Caicai, an architect turned education consultant who speaks several foreign languages and mentors students in study abroad programs. Bubbly, personable and sweet, this gril practically oozes charisma and magnetic appeal. :D:D:D:D Last but not least! Yang, a former journalist at one of the most popular evening newspapers in the capital but incidentally became my coworker three months ago. Hi Dear, I think I'd better address you as "you" instead of "she":) You are one of the most fantastic people I've ever met. Your radiant smile and your warm, lilting greeting "Hi, xinxin!" every weekday morning lighted up my life. I was grateful and happy with you sitting right opposite me in this office. We talked, laughed and shared stories, and though three months are short, we both grew and changed. When you have "settled down" (ha ha!), give me a call. Miss ya. xinxin Back to My RootsI was born and grew up in the Tiyuguan Rd. neighborhood. I do not live there now, but it's still one of my favorite hangout places. My family's old home is at No.7, Fahuasi St., only one block away from Beijing Stadium and State Administration of Sports headquarters building. Ever since I was a little child I'd been used to seeing really big, athletic, long guys in and around the Stadium complex. But these athletes rarely appeared in crowed, public places. The SAS complex always looked so quiet and secluded that sometimes we just forgot its existence, and there was never a buzz about Guo’an Team training on the stadium turf court every weekend, nor was anyone aware of the fact that a couple of nationally renowned sports physicians were residing in that small, unassuming Sports Hospital building near their home. My mom once told me she saw Liu Xiang outside a consulting room at Sports Hospital. It was last October when she was recovering from her ankle injury. She had an appointment with a reputable physician there but had to wait at the door for more than half an hour. She was wondering why it took so long to finish up with the previous patient when the door opened and she ended up in a daze with this big, athletic, long guy towering over her (my mom has a small frame). When I arrived at the hospital to take her home, that 'patient' was gone. My star-shocked mom told me about this encounter and I was like "Wow, wow, wow!!" I'm a big fan of Liu ha. But why was the Shanghai-based hurdler seeing a doctor at this small hospital in Beijing anyway? Then one day when I watched sports news on TV with mom I was gobsmacked to find out that she actually couldn't tell Liu Xiang from Yao Ming. OMG!!! Who she saw that day could be anyone above 6.2 ft. with an athletic build. Last Wednesday I saw Yi Jianlian very up close. Yi was driving through the front gate of SAS Training Bureau, just about to turn right onto the main street. I was walking towards the same direction—a pedestrain traffic light in the middle of the street, several yards away from the front gate. I was picking up the pace because the light had turned green. Then I heard a horn, I stopped and turned to see a large glitzy SUV right beside me. Its young rider—the big boy Yi—looked much more mature than his age (18?), and much more handsome off the screen haha. Tears from HeavenI got caught in the big downpour last night. I stood waiting at a bus shelter with some other unlucky pedestrians and together we watched a dramatic thunderstorm show. An hour later, after a long (normally a ten minutes' walk) tough journey crossing two rivers several inches deep, I arrived home with my skirt dripping like a leaky tap. What was expected to be another sauna-like sultry summer has actually begun with an uncharacteristically cool, rainy month. That eerily corresponds to an uncharacteristically ill-fated sequence of events in the first half of 2008 (a number the Chinese traditionally associate with luck). Donate Online (RePosted)在线捐款
觉得捐给中国或中国香港的组织来的比较快,个人意见! 中国红十字会在线捐款,网站正常 运行了,接受VISA或者MASTER卡的支付,但是大家要记得网上支付密码,可以选择“抗震救灾”一栏。到了网上visa卡支付那一步,说注意事项:请务必使用傲游2.0或者IE浏览器!http://www.crcf.org.cn/donationol/donation.asp 香港红十字会:https://www.redcross.org.hk/donation/user_donation.asp, 链接很好用!
可以用PAYPAL捐的:MITBBS清华学生会组织的 http://www.mitbbs.com/article_t/Donation/27176194.html, 不想等的话就用Paypal. 在美国的同学,试试白天的时候捐吧,国内晚上,可能上网的人没那么多,服务器不忙。强烈建议捐中国红十字会,多试试,肯定能打开。耐心地试,肯定没问题。不能用苹果电脑!!!!!!!!!!!!! 现在可能流量大起来了,所以很慢,但是用WINDOWS应该还可以。香港红十字会也成啊,我觉得一定要给中国的组织,这样比较快。耐心的刷刷等等网页肯定能打开的,还有不要忘了存下最后给你的号码,可以查到没到账。 更新啦!最近去了趟黄山。说是去黄山,实际上大部分时间都奔波于周边县城的景点之间。歙县、绩溪、屯溪、黟县是我记住的几个地名。安徽文化底蕴深厚啊!县名都用一般人读不出来的生僻字;)
第一天,我们在合肥下火车直奔胡主席故乡绩溪龙川。这一奔就是五个小时啊!看了不到一小时的胡氏宗祠又匆忙赶往歙县看牌坊(贞节牌坊,汗~~)大家算了下,一天下来总共八小时车程——而从北京到合肥的火车也只有九个小时而已。晚宿屯溪。 第二天,一早就感到湿气很重,上黄山时已经下起了小雨。前一天晚上已经有一部分人因天气预报说有中雨,加入了只坐缆车不爬山的老年团。但我当时想,虽然下雨爬山很难受,但也许雨中的黄山也有别样的景致呢。 但我不知道,山中的雨是伴着雾气的。走在半山腰,四周都是浓雾。传说中的云海只在中午放晴的两三分钟内瞥见一眼,可怜啊。后来雨越下越大,但游客却非常非常多。导游说,由于新建了高速路,现在一到周末就会有很多安徽周边省份的游客来黄山游玩。下山途中,一条螺旋形窄道竟堵得水泄不通。来黄山没看到传说中的自然美景,而被挤在狭窄通路上时,极目望去,黄色、紫色(山上卖的雨衣以这两种颜色为主)的上下山人流倒是蔚为壮观啊! 最后一天去宏村看民居。这个村落是专供游客参观的景点。跟着健步如飞的解说员、混杂在熙攘的游客人群中,这样看到的徽州民居与想象中的水墨建筑差太多了。比较有趣的风景是在湖边、小巷口写生的美术学院的学生们。几个学生或站或坐,在同一个位置描摹同样的建筑,每人的作品却在用色、线条、意境上各不相同。这让我想到,似乎每个人都会用自己感觉舒适的方式来诠释生活。如果,人们都能以评判艺术作品时那种宽容的态度来看待信仰和生活方式与自己不同的人,世界会变得很和谐吧。 顺便说一句,这最后一天是大晴天,暴晴!(好像老天觉得这帮人的黄山之行还不够遗憾似的。)我们又是大多时间耗在返回合肥的路上,五六个小时——快赶上美国的公路电影了:) BLCU old auditorium on fire
My Dear Alma Mater, You don't hit rock bottom easily. Things could always get worse.My mom's broken ankle is never going to heal. I think in many ways she's just like a child. I think in her dictionary there is no such words as "consequences". I kind of blame myself for not having taken good care of her. I've told her not to walk on her left leg before the cast is off, but she didn't listen. Only three weeks after her injury she was caught hopping around at home, apparently not on crutches! I became a nervous wreck. I even thought of taking an one-month leave from work to keep my eyes on her during the day. Now she had this horrible cast from toes to knee again, just as she did in the emergency room three months ago. Pointing to the X-rays the doctor announced that the bone fracture was not healing. You wouldn't believe that last month, somehow she managed to attend my sister's wedding, plaster all off and no crutches. She said she was recovering and everyone was happy to believe it. We might not see light at the end of the tunnel anytime soon. Daymare on Line Number 5, TIANTANDONGMEN StationAccording to official forecasts, October 17-18 will be the start of a cold outbreak. That's why I wore a sweater under the coat this morning. In the packed subway car, what at first was tolerable heat now became stifling. I couldn't believe I was riding a Line 5 subway train instead of a Line 750 bus——in the subway you don't expect a train to stop for two minutes at each stop and get stuck on the tracks. When the doors closed at Tiantandongmen station, the train didn't start going. Five minutes later the train was still there. When the doors suddenly opened I felt relieved and tried to move. But, alas, no one around me made any effort of egressing. What's worse, more passengers on the platform were entering!! Now the exit was simply blocked and then the doors closed again! We waited for another five minutes, which felt like hours——I couldn't breathe and was scaring myself visualizing all kinds of underground disasters. There IS an accident, and WE ARE ALL TRAPPED! The doors eeriely opened again. Surprisingly, I still had to "squeeze" a way out and get some fresh air, because apparently most other people took the train as their shared property and literally refused to get off. (What was on their mind anyway?) Before I knew I was on the platform, and soon all passengers were cleared out of the cars. Some got mad at the announcements that there was a breakdown of the automation system. Some lady went hysterical and kept yelling at every platform conductor she saw coming by. Some mischievous guys were recording the crowded spectacle with camcorder cell phones. Rest in Peace, Banana PaulToday's China Youth Daily presents a one-page biography of Paul Denman. He was one of the English-speaking teachers in my college and taught my English speaking and writing courses. He died of skin cancer last week. The paper paid tribute to him in recognition of his years of work as the male speaker in the NMET Listening Test. |
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