2015年4月1日 星期三

week-4 The Imitation Game

The Imitation Game True Story - The Real Alan Turing

by BBC    
    Alan Turing was born on 23 June, 1912, in London. His father was in the Indian Civil Service and Turing's parents lived in India until his father's retirement in 1926. Turing and his brother stayed with friends and relatives in England. Turing studied mathematics at Cambridge University, and subsequently taught there, working in the burgeoning world of quantum mechanics. It was at Cambridge that he developed the proof which states that automatic computation cannot solve all mathematical problems. This concept, also known as the Turing machine, is considered the basis for the modern theory of computation.
    In 1936, Turing went to Princeton University in America, returning to England in 1938. He began to work secretly part-time for the British cryptanalytic department, the Government Code and Cypher School. On the outbreak of war he took up full-time work at its headquarters, Bletchley Park.
    Here he played a vital role in deciphering the messages encrypted by the German Enigma machine, which provided vital intelligence for the Allies. He took the lead in a team that designed a machine known as a bombe that successfully decoded German messages. He became a well-known and rather eccentric figure at Bletchley.
After the war, Turing turned his thoughts to the development of a machine that would logically process information. He worked first for the National Physical Laboratory (1945-1948). His plans were dismissed by his colleagues and the lab lost out on being the first to design a digital computer. It is thought that Turing's blueprint would have secured them the honour, as his machine was capable of computation speeds higher than the others. In 1949, he went to Manchester University where he directed the computing laboratory and developed a body of work that helped to form the basis for the field of artificial intelligence. In 1951 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society.
    In 1952, Turing was arrested and tried for homosexuality, then a criminal offence. To avoid prison, he accepted injections of oestrogen for a year, which were intended to neutralise his libido. In that era, homosexuals were considered a security risk as they were open to blackmail. Turing's security clearance was withdrawn, meaning he could no longer work for GCHQ, the post-war successor to Bletchley Park.
    He committed suicide on 7 June, 1954.
Structure of the Lead
   WHO-Alan Turing 
   WHEN-23 June, 1912 
   WHAT-Alan Turing was born
   WHY-not given
   WHERE- London
   HOW-not given

Keywords
   1subsequently:隨後
   2. burgeoning :蓬勃發展
   3. decipher :解密
   4. automatic:自動的
   5.  eccentric:偏心的
   6. homosexuality:同性戀
   7. neutralise:中和
       
         





2015年3月11日 星期三

week-3 Shanghai, new year, stampede

China confirms identities of 36 stampede deaths

Mon, Jan 05, 2015
by Bloomberg

Chinese authorities confirmed the identities of the 36 people who died in a stampede on New Year’s Eve in Shanghai as the metropolis of 23 million engaged in citywide safety checks.
More than two-thirds of the fatalities were female, according to a statement on the city government’s official microblog.
The youngest was a 12-year-old boy.
Victims included students of Fudan University, East China Normal University and East China University of Political Science, Xinhua news agency reported, citing unidentified people.
The incident has dealt “a heavy blow” to Shanghai’s image, state media Chinanews.com said in a commentary on New Year’s Day.
Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) ordered an investigation and told local governments to prioritize safety as the nation prepares for mass celebrations for the Lunar New Year next month.
Local authorities started emergency safety inspections across Shanghai on New Year’s Day, according to a statement on the city government’s Web site on Saturday.
The metropolis canceled several New Year’s events including a light show and concert as it deployed resources to public areas where crowds are expected, it said.
The disaster was Shanghai’s deadliest since a highrise apartment building fire in 2010 that left 58 people dead.
Inadequate surveillance and shoddy construction standards were the cause of that inferno, according to then-mayor Han Zheng (韓正), who has since been promoted to the city’s highest-ranking Communist Party official.
In Hong Kong, on New Year’s Eve, 1993, 20 people, mostly teenagers, died and 71 were injured in a stampede in the Lan Kwai Fong entertainment district, the South China Morning.

Structure of the Lead
   WHO-Chinese authorities 
   WHEN-not given 
   WHAT-confirmed the identities of the 36 people who died in a stampede on New Year’s Eve
   WHY-not given
   WHERE-not given
   HOW-stampede

Keywords
   1. metropoli:都市報
   2. engage in :參與
   3. microblog :微博
   4. fatality死亡人數
   5.  prioritize:優先考慮
   6. inspection:檢查
   7. stampede:踩踏
  8. highrise:高層

2015年3月9日 星期一

week2 - Sydney hostage

Sydney hostage drama grips Australia

Tue, Dec 16, 2014 

in SYDNEY 

A lone gunman kept terrified staff and customers captive into the night yesterday in a downtown Sydney cafe, brandishing an Islamic flag, as five of his hostages managed to flee for their lives.
The pre-Christmas siege of the Lindt Chocolat Cafe triggered a security lockdown in an area of Australia’s biggest city that houses several government and corporate headquarters, as hundreds of armed police surrounded the site.
The government said there was no clear motivation, but the flag appeared to be one commonly used by jihadist groups bearing the Shahada, or profession of faith in Islam.
More than 40 Australian Muslim groups jointly condemned the siege and the use of the flag, which they said had been hijacked by “misguided individuals that represent no-one but themselves.”
“We reject any attempt to take the innocent life of any human being or to instill fear and terror into their hearts,” they said in a statement.
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott convened a national security meeting to deal with the “disturbing” development.
About six hours into the siege, three men emerged from the popular cafe and ran from the building, two from the front door and one from an emergency exit.
About an hour later two distraught women also fled. It was not clear if they escaped or were released.


Structure of the Lead
   WHO-A lone gunman
   WHEN-yesterday night 
   WHAT-A lone gunman kept terrified staff and customers captive 
   WHY-not given
   WHERE-in a downtown Sydney cafe
   HOW-not given

Keywords
   1. captive:俘虜
   2. hijack:劫持
   3. distraught :悲痛欲絕
   4. headquarter總部
   5.  instill :灌輸
   6. misguide:誤導
   7. flee:逃離
   8. condemn:譴責

2015年3月1日 星期日

week-1 Mexico, missing students, dead

Mexico ‘certain’ missing students dead: minister

Thu, Jan 29, 2015
By AFP, MEXICO CITY

    Authorities in Mexico can now say with “legal certainty” that 43 students who went missing in September last year were murdered by hitmen working for a drug gang, Mexican Minister of Justice Jesus Murillo Karam said on Tuesday.

However, parents of the students in a case that convulsed the nation and countries abroad insisted the case not be closed.
The disappearance of the men — all aspiring teachers attending classes at a training college in Guerrero State — sparked nationwide protests and a crisis for the government of Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto.

Officials said the students vanished after gang-linked police attacked their buses in the city of Iguala, allegedly under orders from the mayor and his wife in a night of terror that left six other people dead.

The police then delivered the young men to members of the Guerreros Unidos drug gang, who told investigators they took them in two trucks to a landfill, killed them, burned their bodies and dumped them in a river.

The investigation “gives us the legal certainty that the student teachers were killed in the circumstances that have been described,” Murillo Karam said at a press conference.

Witness and expert testimony “have allowed us to ... come to the conclusion beyond a doubt that the students were abducted and killed, before being incinerated and thrown into the San Juan River, in that order,” he said.

“It is the historic truth,” he said.

He played a video with testimony from detainees and footage from the investigation.

Until now, authorities had still officially considered the students to be missing.

Relatives of the victims, who marched on Monday with several thousand people in Mexico City to mark the four-month mark since their disappearance, have refused to accept the official explanation of events.


 
 
 
Structure of the Lead
   WHO-Authorities in Mexico
   WHEN-Tuesday
   WHAT-43 students who went missing in September last year were murdered
   WHY-not given
   WHERE-not given
   HOW-not given

Keywords
   1.  convulsed:使震撼
   2. nationwide:全國性的
   3. relative:親人ˋ親戚
   4. aspiring有抱負的
   5.  dump :傾倒
   6. authority:當局
   7. conference:發表會
   8. circumstance:情況
   



2014年12月24日 星期三

week7-Hong Kong,occupy

HK police clear protest camp, arrest student leaders

Thu, Nov 27, 2014
AFP, HONG KONG

Hundreds of Hong Kong police yesterday cleared a pro-democracy protest camp, arresting Joshua Wong (黃之鋒) and another student leader, and reopening a main road blocked for almost two months.
Pushing back protesters, police with the help of workmen removed tents and other obstacles blocking the six-lane Nathan Road in Mong Kok district.
It is seen as the most significant move so far in efforts to clear away protest camps at three separate locations in the territory, as public sympathy with the demonstrators wanes.
Scuffles broke out earlier in the day as police wearing helmets and brandishing batons moved in to protect the workmen from the crowds that surged forward to try to stop them tearing down road barricades.
The operation went ahead a day after nearly 150 demonstrators were arrested as authorities cleared a smaller section of the Mong Kok protest camp.
Hundreds of police quickly pushed protesters back, and removed wooden and metal barricades, tents and other obstructions along a 500m stretch of Nathan Road.
About two hours after the operation started, only a handful of protesters remained at the edge of the site.
The movement’s student leaders Wong and Lester Shum (岑敖暉) were arrested at the scene, according to protest group Scholarism and the Hong Kong Federation of Students

Structure of the Lead
   WHO-Hong Kong police
   WHEN-yesterday 
   WHAT-cleared a pro-democracy protest camp
   WHY- not given 
   WHERE-not given
   HOW-not given

Keywords
   1. pro-democracy支持民主的
   2. obstacle:障礙物
   3. territory:領土
   4. wane:減弱
   5. scuffle:混戰
   6. brandish:揮舞
   7. baton:警棍
   8. barricade:路障
   9. obstruction:障礙物

2014年12月17日 星期三

week6-actor, Ko, Jaycee, drug, arrest

Jackie Chan’s son Jaycee arrested in Beijing drug bust with Taiwanese actor Kai Ko

by Wu NanMonday, 18 August, 2014

Jackie Chan's son, Jaycee Chan, and Taiwanese actor Kai Ko have both been detained by Beijing police for drug-related offences, police revealed last night.
Jaycee Chan, also known as Fang Zuming, was detained by Beijing police together with his friend, 23-year-old Taiwanese movie star Kai Ko Chen-tung, the Beijing News and Beijing Times newspapers reported on Monday.
In a  statement released on its official Weibo account on Monday evening, the Beijing public security bureau said that police officers detained a number suspects for drug use last Thursday in Dongcheng District, including a 32-year-old Hong Kong actor with the surname Chan and a 23-year-old Taiwan actor named Ko. These descriptions seem to match Jaycee Chan and Kai Ko. 
Urine tests on both Chan and Ko have returned positive results for marijuana, and both actors have confessed to using it, the police statement said. Police also recovered more than 100 grams of marijuana from Chan's home, it said. 
The police statement says Chan has been put under criminal detention for the suspected crime of "providing a shelter for others to abuse drugs," which carries a maximum prison term of three years if a suspect is convicted.

Structure of the Lead
   WHO- Jaycee Chan and Taiwanese actor Kai Ko
   WHEN-not given
   WHAT-they have both been detained by Beijing police
   WHY- drug-related 
   WHERE-not given
   HOW-not given

Keywords
   1. detain:扣留
   2. offence:罪行
   3. statement:聲明
   4. bureau:局ˋ辦公處
   5. suspect:嫌疑犯
   6. urine test:尿液篩檢
   7. marijuana:大麻
   8. confess:承認
   9. detention:拘留
  

week5-Ferguson, Michael Brown, Darren Wilson, Missouri

Marchers across US rally to protest police killings

Mon, Dec 15, 2014Reuters, WASHINGTON and NEW YORK

Thousands of demonstrators marched in Washington, New York City and Boston on Saturday to protest killings of unarmed black men by police officers in the US.
Organizers said the marches were among the largest in the recent wave of protests against the killings of black males by police in Ferguson, Missouri; New York City; Cleveland, Ohio, and elsewhere.
The protests were mainly peaceful, although police in Boston said they arrested 23 people who tried to block a highway.
One person was arrested in New York City after two officers were assaulted by protesters, prompting a condemnation from New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, who said the alleged assault marked “an ugly and unacceptable departure from the demonstrations thus far.”
“Those who reject peaceful protest and provoke violence can expect immediate arrest and prosecution,” said De Blasio, who has been sharply criticized by the city’s police officers’ union for not supporting the police department.
Police in Oakland, California, ordered hundreds of demonstrators to disperse on Saturday night after a grocery store was looted.
Decisions by grand juries to return no indictments against the officers involved in the deaths of Michael Brown in Missouri and Eric Garner in New York have put police treatment of minorities back on the national agenda.

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2014/12/15/2003606808


Structure of the Lead
   WHO-thousands of demonstrators
   WHEN-Saturday
   WHAT-thousands of demonstrators marched
   WHY- to protest killings of unarmed black men by police officers in the US.
   WHERE-Washington, New York City and Boston
   HOW-not given

Keywords
   1. demonstrator:示威者
   2. unarmed:手無寸鐵的
   3. assault襲擊
   4. prosecution:起訴
   5. departure from:違背
   6. indictment:控告
   7. alleged:所謂的
   8. condemnation:譴責