Archive for December 14th, 2009

Chinese Conversation – lesson 655

Monday, December 14th, 2009

在办公室
戴夫:你在用的是哪种浏览器?看起来不像是IE。
艾力克:因为它不是。这是火狐,一个很棒又全新的客户端开放源代码。
戴夫:喔,我听过那个!这比Explorer更安全,对吧?
艾力克:对,也比较快。而且,这不是微软的产品。
戴夫:所以你并不支持邪恶帝国……那是谁做出来的呢?
艾力克:来自世界各地想要合力开发好软件的程序设计师。
戴夫:喔,就跟Linux一样。
艾力克:有点像。Linux是根据UNIX而来,而火狐原本是根据Netscape,两个都被重新编写过。

In the office
Dave: What’s that web browser you’re running? It doesn’t look like Internet Explorer.
Alex: That’s because it’s not. It’s Firefox, a great new open source client.
Dave: Oh, I heard about that! It’s more secure than Explorer, right?
Alex: Yes, and faster, too. Plus, it’s not a Microsoft product.
Dave: So you’re not supporting the Evil Empire… Who made it then?
Alex: Programmers from around the world who just wanted to collaborate on good software.
Dave: Oh, like Linux.
Alex: Kind of. Linux is based on UNIX, and Firefox was originally based on Netscape, but both have been rewritten.

(Source: wwenglish.com)

Cir – Lesson 537

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Archaeologists have developed a clear image of a 2,000-year-old imperial garden found in south China’s Guangdong Province by studying more than 100,000 seeds found in an ancient well at the relic site.

   Various kinds of vegetation, including banyans and waxberries, were planted more than 2,000 years ago in the imperial garden, which belonged to the ancient state of Southern Yue, archaeologists report.

The garden is the oldest imperial garden to be excavated in China.

“It was without doubt an elegant garden decorated by plentiful flowers and trees,” Zhao Zhijun, a researcher with the Institute of Archaeology under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told Xinhua on Tuesday.

“Members of the royal family of the Southern Yue enjoyed the beautiful scenery in the garden while tasting delicious fruits such as lychee, Chinese black olive, melon, persimmon, date, grape and apple,” Zhao said.

A large amount of waxberry stones and melon seeds have been discovered in the ancient well in the garden. This is the first time that remains of melon were found in Guangdong Province, according to archaeologists.

In addition, archaeologists have also found seeds of wax gourd in the well, which are the earliest to be discovered in China so far.

“It’s widely believed in academic circles that wax gourd originated in China. But archaeological evidence has never backed that up until we discovered these wax gourd seeds in the garden,” Zhao said.

The fruit seeds not only tell archaeologists about the life of the nobility of the Southern Yue State, but also the long history of cultivation of fruits and development of vegetable resources in China, Zhao said.

The ancient well, in which the seeds were well preserved for more than 2,000 years, is located in the northwest area of the garden. The three-meter-deep well was used for drainage, said archaeologists.

The seeds soaked in water were preserved and gave archaeologists a chance to investigate the vegetation in the garden, Zhao said.

The remains of the palace and garden of Southern Yue State were discovered in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong Province in 1990s. The ancient state was founded by Zhao Tuo, a military officer of Qinshihuang, the first emperor of the Qin Dynasty (221-206 BC), in 203 BC and destroyed by the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-25 AD) in 111 BC. Enditem

(Source: xinhuanet.com)

Beijing Olympic – More Olympians turn up at Eugene

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Women’s Hammer Throw

(BEIJING, July 6) — Jessica Cosby, 2006 USA Outdoor champion, stunned the field with an Olympic Trials record throw of 70.72m/232-0 as the women’s throws took center stage Saturday at the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team Trials for Track and Field.

Together with second-place Amber Campbell (69.24m/227-2) and fourth-place Loree Smith (67.11m/220-2), Cosby is now part of the U.S Hammer Throw team.

Third-place finisher Sarah Veress (68.60m/225-1) will be out of the roster for Beijing, as she lacks the Olympic “A” standard of 69.50 m/228-0.

3000m Men’s Steeplechase

In the 3000m Men’s Steeplechase, Anthony Famiglietti came out victorious. The three-time U.S. runner-up won his first national title since 2002 with a time of 8 minutes and 20.24 seconds. William Nelson (8:21.47) out ran Josh McAdams (8:21.99) for second.

Men’s High Jump

Jesse Williams secured a place on the American Olympic team with his first national title after he cleared 2.30m/7-6.5 in the Men’s High Jump.

Dustin Jonas, who tied for sixth (2.24m/7-4.25), is the next highest finishing jumper to meet the Olympic “A” standard. Scott Sellers, in 7th place, claimed the final roster position.

Women’s Shot Put

Michelle Carter, U.S. high school record holder, won the Women’s Shot Put with a personal best of18.85m/61-10.25.

The 22-year-old follows in the footsteps of her father, 1984 Olympic Shot Put silver medalist and boys’ high school record holder Michael Carter,to make her first Olympic Team.

The younger Carter is the 2004 World Junior Champion and 2003 Pan Am Junior gold medalist. At the 2003 Texas state meet, she set the national prep record with her throw of 16.73m/54-10.75. Her national HS record of 81 feet, 3.5 inches is considered by many to be the greatest high school record in any event in history.

2004 Olympian Kristin Heaston finished second in Saturday’s competition with 18.34m/60-2.0, surpassing USA Indoor Champion Jillian Camarena with 18.12m/59-05.5.

Men’s 20km Race Walk

Kevin Eastler won his fourth Men’s 20km Race Walk title and secured his place on the Olympic Team with his win in on Saturday. Eastler came in at 1:27:07.

As the only athlete with the Olympic “A” standard, Eastler will be the sole American in the event in Beijing.

(Source: en.beijing2008.cn)