2014年10月29日 星期三

week2 - Korean ferry sank

Students Among Hundreds Missing After South Korean Ferry Sinks

APRIL 16, 2014

    
    JINDO, South Korea — The parents waited in dread through the night, huddled under blankets in this South Korean port town, staring out to sea for a sign that rescuers had found any of the 281 people, many of them high school students, still missing after a ferry sank on Wednesday.
    
    They refused to sleep in a tent set up for them, preferring to scan the horizon for helicopters returning from the rescue effort 11 miles off the country’s southwest coast. As the hours passed with little news of what may be one of South Korea’s worst peacetime disasters, they demanded information from officials who said that fierce tides were keeping divers from entering the ship, which had mostly slipped beneath the waves long before.
    
    By Thursday morning, the Ministry of Security and Public Administration, which is coordinating the rescue efforts, reported that 175 passengers and crew members had been rescued. Nine people were confirmed dead, including four students, two teachers and a member of the ferry’s crew. But fears of a much higher death toll were stoked as survivors said they believed that many people had been trapped below deck. According to some who spoke to the local news media, passengers had been told to remain in their seats and may have stayed there until it was too late.


Structure of the Lead
   WHO-the parents
   WHEN-Wednesday
   WHAT-waiting for their children
   WHY- the ferry which their children took was sunk
   WHERE-South Korean port town
   HOW-not given

Keywords
   1. port:港口
   2. horizon:地平線
   3. coordinate:協調
   4. diver潛水員   
   5. confirm:證實
   6. crew:機組人員
   7.  toll:死亡人數
   8. deck:甲板
   9. stoke:困住
           

2014年10月22日 星期三

week1-2013年回顧

War zone at mile 26: ‘It’s all blood’

Wed, Apr 17, 2013NY Times News Service, BOSTON
About 30m from the end of the 42km Boston Marathon, explosions shook the street and sent runners frantically racing for cover. The marathon finish line, normally a festive zone of celebration and exhaustion, was suddenly like a war zone.
“These runners just finished and they don’t have legs now,” said Roupen Bastajian, 35, a Rhode Island state trooper and former US Marine. “So many of them. There are so many people without legs. It’s all blood. There’s blood everywhere. You got bones, fragments. It’s disgusting.”
The Boston Marathon, which takes place on Patriots’ Day, a state holiday, is usually an opportunity for the city to cheer with a collective roar.
However, the explosions turned an uplifting day into a nightmarish swirl of bloodied streets and torn-apart limbs as runners were toppled, children on the sidelines were maimed, and a panicked city watched its signature athletic spectacle destroyed.
This year, more than 23,000 people started the race in near-perfect conditions. Only about 17,580 finished.Three people were killed in the blast and more than 100 were injured.

Structure of the Lead
   WHO-marathon runners
   WHEN-not given
   WHAT-explosions shook the street and sent runners frantically racing
   WHY- not given
   WHERE-Boston
   HOW-not given

Keywords
   1. frantically:瘋狂的
   2. festive喜慶的
   3. fragment碎片
   4. maimed殘廢的
   5. swirl漩渦
   6. near-perfect:近乎完美
   7. collective集體的
   8. roar咆哮
   9. spectacle:眼鏡
    10. topple:推翻