2015年4月1日 星期三

Week4-Still Alice

Moore says Alzheimer's role helps raise awareness

5 February 2015
From the section Entertainment & Arts

Julianne Moore has said the most rewarding part of her role in Still Alice has been helping to raise awareness about Alzheimer's.

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-
what-
when-
where-
why-
how-

Keywords:

1. rewarding     有價值的
2. Alzheimer     阿茲海默症
3. linguistics     語言學
4. Bafta     英國學術電視獎
5. screening     放映
6. Press Association     新聞協會
7. accolade     獎項
8. bother     懶得
9. frontrunner     先行者.領跑者

2015年3月11日 星期三

Week3-Uber

Uber Delhi 'rape': India tells states to ban web taxis


India's home ministry has advised all states to ban unregistered web-based taxi firms after a driver for the Uber service was accused of raping a passenger in the capital Delhi.

Delhi has banned Uber and several other web-based taxi firms for failing to carry out adequate driver checks.

The order means taxis from these services will now attract a fine or even be impounded, officials say.

The Uber driver accused of rape has been arrested and remanded in custody.

The 26-year-old woman had used the Uber smartphone app to book a taxi home on Friday night but said she was taken to a secluded area and raped.

Although the driver has not yet given a statement, police say he has confessed to the crime.

"Following the incident of a heinous crime... the government of Delhi has banned Uber to provide any transport related service in Delhi," the home ministry said in a message to state governments around the country.

All internet-based taxi services which are not licensed with the government are also prohibited from operating until they get registered, the letter says, adding that all other states and federally-administered union territories are advised to do the same.

In an order issued late on Monday, the Delhi government said only six registered radio taxi companies were being allowed to continue to operate in the capital.

"All other transport/ taxi service providers through web-based technology, who are not recognised, are prohibited from providing such services... till they get licence/permission from the transport department," S Roy Biswas, Delhi's deputy commissioner of transport, said.

Media reports said the ban could hit a number of taxi services in the city, and thousands of drivers would be out of work.

A BBC correspondent in Delhi says Uber is still accepting bookings on its app and it is not yet clear how the ban will be enforced since Uber taxis do not carry any visible branding.

Uber has not yet commented on the ban.

On Monday, the company described the incident as "horrific" and said it would do everything "to help bring this perpetrator to justice".

The latest allegation of rape has again put the spotlight on the issue of sexual violence against Indian women, following a series of recent incidents.

It comes days before the second anniversary of the gang rape and murder of a student on a bus in Delhi, which prompted global outrage and a tightening of the laws on sexual violence.


Meanwhile, #DelhiShamedAgain and #Uber are among the top Twitter trends in India with many people taking to social media to express their outrage at the incident.

Structure of the Lead:

who-
what-
when-
where-
why-
how-

Keywords:

1. rape     強姦
2. home ministry     內政部
3. impound     扣押
4. remanded in custody     還押
5. secluded     隔離的
6. heinous     滔天的
7. deputy commissioner     副局長
8. correspondent     記者
9. perpetrator     肇事者
10. allegation     指控

Week2-Sydney cafe hostage

Police storm Sydney cafe to end hostage siege, three dead

BY LINCOLN FEAST AND COLIN PACKHAM
SYDNEY Mon Dec 15, 2014 6:34pm EST

(Reuters) - Heavily armed Australian police stormed a Sydney cafe early on Tuesday morning and freed a number of hostages being held there at gunpoint, in a dramatic end to a 16-hour siege in which three people including the attacker were killed.

Police have not publicly identified the gunman but a police source named him as Man Haron Monis, an Iranian refugee and self-styled sheikh known for sending hate mail to the families of Australian troops killed in Afghanistan. He was charged last year with being an accessory to the murder of his ex-wife.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott said the gunman was well known to authorities and had a history of extremism and mental instability.

During the siege at the Lindt cafe in Sydney's central business district, hostages had been forced to display an Islamic flag, igniting fears of a jihadist attack in the heart of the country's biggest city.

Around 2 a.m. local time (10.00 a.m. ET on Monday), at least six people believed to have been held captive managed to flee after gunshots were heard coming from the cafe.

Police then moved in, with heavy gunfire and blasts from stun grenades echoing from the building.

"They made the call because they believed at that time if they didn't enter there would have been many more lives lost," said Andrew Scipione, police commissioner for the state of New South Wales.

An investigation would determine whether hostages were killed by the gunman or died in cross-fire, Scipione told reporters just before dawn.

Police said a 50-year-old man, believed to be the attacker, was killed. Television pictures showed he appeared to have been armed with a sawn-off shotgun.

A man aged 34 and a 38-year-old woman were also killed, police said. The man was the cafe manager and the woman was a mother and barrister, local media reported. Four were wounded, including a policeman hit in the face with shotgun pellets.

Medics tried to resuscitate at least one person after the raid and took away several wounded people on gurneys, said a Reuters witness at the scene. Bomb squad members moved in to search for explosives, but none were found.

So far 17 hostages have been accounted for, including at least five others who were released or escaped on Monday.

"To the people of Sydney, this was an isolated incident ... Do not let this sort of incident bring about any loss of confidence of working or visiting our city," said Scipione.

On Tuesday morning, the area near the cafe remained cordoned off, with bystanders and passing office workers leaving flowers under police tape. Flags flew at half mast across the city.

Leaders from around the world had expressed their concern over the siege, including Stephen Harper, the prime minister of Canada, which suffered an attack on its parliament by a suspected jihadist sympathizer in October.

NO LINKS TO TERROR GROUPS

Monis was found guilty in 2012 of sending offensive and threatening letters to families of eight Australian soldiers killed in Afghanistan, as a protest against Australia's involvement in the conflict, according to local media reports. Monis was also facing more than 40 charges of sexual assault.

"He had a long history of violent crime, infatuation with extremism and mental instability," Abbott told reporters in Canberra. The prime minister did not identify the gunman.

A U.S. security official said the U.S. government was being advised by Australia that there was no sign at this stage that the gunman was connected to known terrorist organizations.

Although the hostage taker was known to the authorities, security experts said preventing attacks by people acting alone could be difficult.

"We are entering a new phase of terrorism that is far more dangerous and more difficult to defeat than al Qaeda ever was," said Cornell University law professor Jens David Ohlin, speaking in New York.

ON ALERT

Australia, a staunch ally of the United States and its escalating action against Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, has been on high alert for attacks by home-grown militants returning from fighting in the Middle East or their supporters.

News footage showed hostages in the cafe holding up a black and white flag displaying the Shahada, a testament to the faith of Muslims. The flag has been popular among Sunni Islamist militant groups such as Islamic State and al Qaeda.

The incident forced the evacuation of nearby buildings and sent shockwaves around a country where many people were turning their attention to the Christmas holiday after earlier security scares.

In September, anti-terrorism police said they had thwarted an imminent threat to behead a random member of the public and days later, a teenager in the city of Melbourne was shot dead after attacking two anti-terrorism officers with a knife.

The siege cafe is in Martin Place, a pedestrian strip popular with workers on a lunch break, which was revealed as a potential location for the thwarted beheading.

Muslim leaders urged calm. The Australian National Imams Council condemned "this criminal act unequivocally" in a joint statement with the Grand Mufti of Australia.

The security operation was the biggest in Sydney since a bombing at the Hilton Hotel killed two people in 1978.


(Additional reporting by Jane Wardell, Matt Siegel, Swati Pandey, Wayne Cole and Jason Reed in Sydney and Mark Hosenball in Washington; Writing by Mike Collett-White and Dean Yates; Editing by Mark Bendeich)

Structure of the Lead:

who-Heavily armed Australian police
what-Heavily armed Australian police stormed a Sydney cafe and freed a number of hostages being held there at gunpoint, in a dramatic end to a 16-hour siege in which three people including the attacker were killed.
when-early on Tuesday morning
where-a Sydney cafe
why-not given
how-not given

Keywords:

1. storm     闖入
2. free     釋放
3. hostage     人質
4. gunpoint     槍口下
5. sheikh     酋長
6. Afghanistan     阿富汗
7. accessory     幫兇
8. extremism     極端主義
9. ignite     點燃
10. jihadist     聖戰
11.  flee     逃跑
12. gunshot     槍聲
13. stun grenades     暈眩手榴彈
14. commissioner     專員
15. barrister     律師
16. pellet     子彈
17. resuscitate     復甦
18. raid     襲擊
19. cordon off     封鎖
20. staunch     堅定的

2015年2月26日 星期四

Week1-Eric Garner

Pussy Riot dedicates new song 'I Can't Breathe' to Eric Garner

By Jethro Mullen, CNN
Updated 0929 GMT (1729 HKT) February 19, 2015

(CNN)The dissident Russian punk band Pussy Riot has dedicated its first English-language song, "I Can't Breathe," to Eric Garner.

"This song is for Eric and for all those from Russia to America and around the globe who suffer from state terror -- killed, choked, perished because of war and state-sponsored violence of all kinds -- for political prisoners and those on the streets fighting for change," the band said Wednesday. "We stand in solidarity."

Garner, an unarmed black man, died in New York in July after a white police officer put him in a chokehold. A grand jury in December decided not to indict the officer, Daniel Pantaleo.

Garner's last words, "I can't breathe," became a rallying cry for protests over police treatment of minorities in the United States and inspired Pussy Riot's latest song.

The band recorded the track in New York in December, amid the protests following the grand jury decision not to indict Pantaleo.

They released two different videos for the song Wednesday.

One is a compilation of footage filmed at the site of Garner's death on Staten Island. It shows memorials and demonstrations after the grand jury decision and features members of Garner's family.

"It was a cold and militarized winter, a time of grief and outrage," the band said.

Video references Russia, Ukraine
The other video shows Pussy Riot's two highest-profile members, Maria Alyokhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, gradually being buried in a grave.

They're wearing blue Russian riot police uniforms, which the band said was a reference to "the violent clashes of police and the protesters fighting for change in Russia."


As clumps of soil drop onto the women's bodies and faces, the song's main refrain repeats over and over, "It's getting dark in New York City."

The camera then rises up from the filled-in grave as a voice reads a transcript of the final sentences Garner said to the police officers who approached him.

That video also includes a reference to the Ukrainian conflict, showing a pack of "Russian Spring" cigarettes in its opening moments.


"'Russian Spring' is a term used by those who are in love with Russia's aggressive militant actions in Ukraine, and the cigarettes are a real thing," the band said.


Structure of the Lead:
who-The dissident Russian punk band Pussy Riot
what-dedicated its first English-language song, "I Can't Breathe," to Eric Garner.
when-not given
where-not given
why-not given
how-not given

Keywords:
1. dissident     意見不同的
2. punk band     朋克樂團
3. perished     滅亡
4. solidarity     團結
5. chokehold     鎖喉
6. indict     起訴
7. compilation     彙集
8. militarized     軍事化
9. clashes     衝突
10. clumps     團
11. refrain     副歌
12. transcript     副本

2014年12月24日 星期三

week7-Gutter oil

Taiwanese ‘gutter oil’ scandal spreads to Hong Kong, Macau

AFP, HONG KONG

Pineapple buns and dumplings have been pulled from the shelves in Hong Kong as authorities check whether they contain what media are referring to as “gutter oil” that has sparked a growing regional food safety scare, officials said yesterday.

An investigation was launched after oil from a Taiwanese company accused of using illegally recycled products — including fat collected from grease traps — was exported to the territory.

Taiwanese authorities say a factory in Greater Kaohsiung illegally used 243 tonnes of tainted products to mix with lard oil in a case that has reignited regional concerns about food safety.

The lard oil — a clear oil pressed from pig fat — was supplied to at least 900 restaurants and bakeries in Taiwan. The owner of the factory was arrested on Sunday.

The scare has now spread to Hong Kong, with local chains forced to pull products from their shelves and experts ramping up spot checks.

Philip Ho, an officer from the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department, told Radio Television HK yesterday that dozens of food samples had been taken, with results expected in the next few days.

The government’s Centre for Food Safety is also conducting tests on mooncakes from retailers across the territory. The pastries are consumed in vast numbers during the Mid-Autumn Festival.

Popular bakery chain Maxim's Cakes removed pineapple buns from its shelves over the weekend after confirming it had used oil from Chang Guann Co (強冠企業), the Taiwanese oil manufacturer at the heart of the scandal.

Macau’s Food Safety Centre said 21 bakeries and food manufacturers had bought oil from Chang Guann through a local importer.


Shoppers in Hong Kong said they were increasingly concerned about the safety of food, especially imported products.


Structure of the Lead:

when-yesterday
what-Pineapple buns and dumplings have been pulled from the shelves
who-authorities
why-check whether they contain what media are referring to as “gutter oil” that has sparked a growing regional food safety scare
how-not given
where-Hong Kong

Keywords:

1. grease trap     隔油地
2. tainted     被污染的
3. lard oil     豬油
4. reignite     重燃
5. pastry     糕點

2014年12月17日 星期三

Week6-Drug arrest

Taiwan, HK celebs in Beijing drug bust

By Ted Chen ,The China Post

TAIPEI, Taiwan -- The manager of Ko Chen-tung (柯震東), a Taiwanese actor and singer, in a statement yesterday confirmed rumors that his client had been taken into custody by Beijing authorities for alleged narcotics consumption.

According to a report by China's The Beijing News (新京報), Ko was arrested along with Jaycee Chan (房祖名), a singer and actor from Hong Kong and the son of international kung fu superstar Jackie Chan (成龍). Commentators familiar with the entertainment industry noted that Ko and Chan are close personal friends, and that Chan, who has been residing in Beijing the past few years, is known to frequently host parties.

Reports indicate that both Ko and Chan have been held in 14-day administrative detention in Beijing since last Saturday, and may be released from custody on Aug. 26.

Rumors of Ko and Chan's arrest in Beijing had first gone viral online following a cryptic message that had surfaced on China's leading social media outlet Weibo (微博). The message's author implied that his father was a member of Beijing law enforcement and had just questioned Ko overnight.

Marijuana Discovered in Chan's Beijing Residence
Meanwhile, media reports from China indicate that Ko and Chan were arrested at Chan's Beijing residence as early as last Tuesday, which coincides with the two singers and actors' six-day social media silence. Most notably, reports indicate that the police recovered 100 grams of marijuana from Chan's Beijing residence, an amount deemed to be more than what is plausible for personal consumption, and may have severe legal consequences for Chan, ranging from three to five years of imprisonment to the death penalty if Chinese prosecutors find evidence that Chan intended to distribute the narcotics. In addition, Chinese media reports suggest that urine tests revealed that Chan and Ko had both consumed marijuana.

Ko's management apologized to the public for his misstep and failure to uphold expectations as a role model, while claiming ignorance of his alleged narcotics consumption. Ko's father also issued an apology and expressed regret to the public, and stated that the rising star will face all legal consequences.

Ko first rose to stardom following his role as male lead in 2011's Taiwanese film “You are the Apple of My Eye” ( 那些年,我們一起追的女孩). The film was directed by Taiwanese novelist Giddens Ko (九把刀), who expressed his disbelief and disappointment at Ko Chen-tung's misstep.

Entertainment commentators noted that Ko's rising stardom, in particular in the vast China market, may come to an abrupt halt following his drug arrest. Commentators stated that China's sweeping narcotics crackdown will likely spell doom for Ko's career in the mainland, as convicted offenders are blacklisted.


Incidentally, Ko starred in a government anti-drug campaign, while in 2009 China's National Narcotics Control Commission had selected Jackie Chan as its anti-drug ambassador.


Structure of the Lead:

where-in a statement
when-yesterday
what-confirmed rumors that his client had been taken into custody by Beijing authorities
why-for alleged narcotics consumption
who-The manager of Ko Chen-tung (柯震東), a Taiwanese actor and singer
how-not given

Keywords:

1. custody     保管
2. narcotics     毒品
3. administrative detention     行政拘留
4. viral     病毒
5. cryptic     神秘的
6. marijuana     大麻
7. plausible     合理的
8. prosecutor     檢察官
9. abrupt halt     突然的停止
10. crackdown     鎮壓
11. ambassador     大使

2014年12月10日 星期三

week5-Ebola

Elaborate Ebola claims all lies: CDC

Staff writer, with CNA
A suspected Ebola case reported to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) appears to be a hoax after a test on a young man hospitalized on Friday came back negative, a health official said yesterday.
The 19-year-old student now faces a fine of between NT$10,000 and NT$150,000 under the Communicable Disease Control Act (傳染病防治法), which requires people to provide factual information about communicable diseases.
CDC Deputy Director-General Chuang Jen-hsiang (莊人祥) said that the test was negative after samples were rushed to a lab in Taipei early in the morning.
The young man’s story about traveling in Africa and eating bat meat are now believed to have been entirely made up.
Chuang said earlier that a search based on the personal information provided by the man yielded no record of him ever leaving Taiwan, despite claims that he had recently been to Nigeria. It turns out that he does not even have a passport, Chuang added.
The claim was also suspicious because Nigeria was declared Ebola-free in October, even as other west African nations continue to battle the spread of the virus.
It was not immediately clear why the young man had given false information to doctors at Kaohsiung Veterans General Hospital, where he was admitted late on Friday.
If the test results had come back positive, the man would have been the nation’s first Ebola case.
The student, who is said to have taken an extended leave from school, has shown no symptoms since being hospitalized and has given contradictory accounts of his condition and purported travels, Chuang said.
The man told doctors in Greater Kaohsiung that he had recently traveled to Nigeria, where he ate a meal made from bat meat. Bats are known to be carriers of the Ebola virus, which has caused about 6,200 deaths this year, mainly in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia.
The man complained of a fever and other symptoms such as vomiting and diarrhea, the hospital said.
Even though the man had not traveled to the three West African nations still listed as having ongoing Ebola outbreaks, the hospital reported the suspected case to the CDC at about midnight on Friday after careful evaluation, Kaohsiung Department of Health official Tsai Wu-hsiung (蔡武雄) said.
As a precaution, the patient had been placed in a negative pressure isolation ward, officials said.


Structure of the Lead:

when-yesterday
what-A suspected Ebola case reported to the Centers for Disease Control appears to be a hoax after a test on a young man hospitalized on Friday came back negative
who-not given
where-not given
why-not given
how-not given

Keywords:

1. hoax     惡作劇
2.factual     真實的
3.purported     聲稱的