2006-12-29

白马湖之冬

无意间读到 夏�D尊的《白马湖之冬》,有些感触,等有空的时候写下来。

在我过去四十余年的生涯中,冬的情味尝得最深刻的,要算十年前初移居白马湖的时候了。十年以来,白马湖已成了一个小村落,当我移居的时候,还是一片荒野。春晖中学的新建筑巍然矗立于湖的那一面,湖的这一面的山脚下是小小的几间新平屋,住着我 和刘君心如两家。此外两三里内没有人烟。―家人于阴历十一月下旬从热闹的杭州移居这荒凉的山野,宛如投身于极带中。

  那里的风,差不多日日有的,呼呼作响,好像虎吼。屋宇虽系新建,构造却极粗率,风从门窗隙缝中来,分外尖削,把门缝窗隙厚厚地用纸糊了,缝中却仍有透入。风刮得厉害的时候,天未夜就把大门关上,全家吃毕夜饭即睡入被窝里,静听寒风的怒号,湖水的澎湃。靠山的小后轩,算是我的书斋,在全屋子中风最小的一间,我常把头上的罗宋帽拉得低低地,在洋灯下工作至夜深。松涛如吼,霜月当窗,饥鼠吱吱在承尘上奔窜。我于这种时候深感到萧瑟的诗趣,常独自拨划着炉灰,不肯就睡,把自己拟诸山水画中的人物,作种种幽邈的遐想。现在白马湖到处都是树木了,当时尚一株树木都未种。月亮与太阳都是整个儿的,从上山起直要照到下山为止。太阳好的时候,只要不刮风,那真和暖得不像冬天。一家人都坐在庭间曝日,甚至于吃午饭也在屋外.像夏天的晚饭一样。日光晒到哪里,就把椅凳移到哪里,忽然寒风来了,只好逃难似地各自带了椅凳逃入室中,急急把门关上。在平常的日子,风来大概在下午快要傍晚的时候,半夜即息。至于大风寒,那是整日夜狂吼,要二三日才止的。最严寒的几天,泥地看去惨白如水门汀,山色冻得发紫而黯,湖波泛深蓝色。

  下雪原是我所不憎厌的,下雪的日子,室内分外明亮,晚上差不多不用燃灯。远山积雪足供半个月的观看,举头即可从窗中望见。可是究竟是南方,每冬下雪不过一二次。我在那里所日常领略的冬的情味,几乎都从风来。白马湖的所以多风,可以说有着地理上的原因。那里环湖都是山,而北首却有一个半里阔的空隙,好似故意张了袋口欢迎风来的样子。白马湖的山水和普通的风景地相差不远,唯有风却与别的地方不同。风的多和大,凡是到过那里的人都知道的。风在冬季的感觉中,自古占着重要的因素.而白马湖的风尤其特别。

现在,一家僦居上海多日了,偶然于夜深人静时听到风声,大家就要提起白马湖来,说"白马湖不知今夜又刮得怎样历害哩!"

2006-12-28

听《广州讲坛》

上面发来两张"广州讲坛"的门票,内容是阎崇年讲的"明亡清兴六十年",早上和处里的领导一起到艺博院去听。

我没有看过阎崇年在"百家讲坛"上讲的"清朝十二帝",只是在emule下载易中天的"品三国"的时候看到有他相关的资源。由于对清朝那点破事实在没什么兴趣,也就没去下载。据阎崇年今早自己介绍,央视原先的计划里清朝十二帝是由十二个人来讲的,每人讲一个,但由于阎在讲努尔哈赤的时候实在讲得太好了,于是后面的就全部由他一个人扛下了。

所谓趁热打铁,于是接下来就有了这个"明亡清兴六十年"。事实上这个内容讲的是袁崇焕,但央视的人说袁崇焕这个人在农村里很多人不认识,于是就换成了现在这样一个据说更可以吸引眼球的名字。上午短短的两个钟头里要讲完央视48集的内容显然是不可能的,所以阎就简单地把明亡清兴的原因总结成:"和"和"分"两个字,明亡是因为明"民族分"、"官民分"、"君臣分",清兴是因为"民族和"、"官民和"、"君臣分"。

2006-12-27

2006-12-26

今日读网

《东坡作文秘诀》

Inside the hidden world of Roman's empire

《隐藏着的罗曼帝国的内幕》,英国《观察家报》记者大卫·史密斯是自罗曼·阿布拉莫维奇三年前买下切尔西后首次独家采访他的人。采访是在圣诞节前的莫斯科进行的,采访报道发在12月24日的报纸上 。

In his first interview for three years, Roman Abramovich, the billionaire owner of Chelsea FC, explains his relationship with the Kremlin, dismisses rumours of divorce, and reveals why he is quitting as governor of Chukotka

'He's very quiet,' says one of Roman Abramovich's closest aides. 'Shy would be a word to describe him.' There have been many others: ruthless, generous, audacious, calculating, visionary. But shy? A strange adjective to describe one of the world's richest and most powerful men - the Russian oligarch who dared to seize English football by the throat.

Then again, no one can quite be sure what to expect on meeting Abramovich for the first time. So little is known of his past, or of his views on business, politics or sport, that guesswork and speculation have fleshed out the man. Was there something untoward about the way he amassed his billions in the 'cowboy capitalism' of Nineties' Russia? How and why has he retained the patronage of President Vladimir Putin while other businessmen were exiled or jailed? What would football look like without him? What will football look like once he has gone?

Well, now we know a little more. In his first interview anywhere in the world for three years, Abramovich talked to The Observer about why he took on English football and insists that his big spending will not destroy the game. He seeks to demolish myths about his childhood and life among London's Russian elite. In the wake of the Litvinenko poisoning affair, he answers and sometimes evades questions about his ties with the Kremlin and why he has quit as governor of a region three times the size of the UK where, by any measure, he has performed an act of extraordinary philanthropy.

Forty years old, 'the quiet oligarch' is sitting in a varnished boardroom in the office of his finance company a short walk from Red Square. At the back of the room is a small picture of Putin and a sculpture of a long fish, given to Abramovich as a gift. On the oak table sit bottles of Evian water - a constant companion to the almost teetotaller on his travels. There is no sign of a security guard.

Like his fellow billionaire Bill Gates, Abramovich is unexpectedly slight. His recent visit to a clinic in Austria was not, as reported, to cope with stress but to shed a couple of kilos in weight. He has receding brown hair, his customary designer stubble and azure-blue eyes. More comfortable in jumpers and jeans, today he is wearing a dark grey suit with thin pinstripes, his blue shirt open at the collar and tieless. Despite his estimated wealth of £10.8bn, the second highest personal fortune in Britain, he sports a chunky Eighties-style digital watch. It doesn't look expensive.

In the first part of the interview the main topic is Chukotka, the icy region in Russia's remote north-east corner where Abramovich has been governor for six years and poured in hundreds of millions of pounds of his own money building schools and equipping hospitals. He speaks Russian with the voice of a bashful public speaker who nevertheless knows his audience will hang on every word. He once reluctantly agreed to be heard on BBC television, but today he has banned even the use of a dictaphone.

On his right is Sasha Borodin, his assistant and interpreter, and John Mann, an American who is Abramovich's spokesman and rumour sweeper: he describes reports that Irina Abramovich recently consulted divorce lawyers as 'definitely not true'. Abramovich sits with arms folded, looking like a man ill at ease. Shy, actually, would be the word.

When the conversation moves on to football, however, he is palpably more relaxed. He does not even take offence when it is put to him that by licensing a bottomless pit of cash, and a scattergun approach to the transfer market, he threatens to turn football into a rich man's game dominated by a global elite.

'I don't see the risk of that,' he said. 'Money plays an important role in football but it is not the dominating factor. When Chelsea play a Carling Cup game in a small city and it could result in a draw - the excitement, the spirit, the atmosphere - that's the real beauty of football in England.'

Abramovich, who made his fortune from oil when Russia's public utilities were privatised in the Nineties, was unknown in Britain until he turned football upside down by buying Chelsea three years ago. He has poured an estimated half a billion pounds into writing off the club's debts and buying players at extravagant prices.

His largesse has caused resentment that goes beyond the normal envy from fans. Chelsea, with its stated ambition of becoming the biggest club in the world, has also become one of the most hated. It has flouted transfer regulations and left a sour taste in many mouths across Europe at the way Abramovich does business. Too aggressive? For once there was a long pause. 'It's difficult to say,' he said at last, in what sounded like a concession. But he then went on to speak off the record and make clear that he feels Chelsea should not be singled out.

No one knows how long the Abramovich empire will last. An employee who has known him for several years warned: 'He gets enthusiastic about things but it doesn't last long. He was enthusiastic about oil for a few years but then got out. It will be the same with Chukotka. It will be the same with football.'

Abramovich, however, is aware of the charge and had an answer ready: 'People who know me said I will win one or two Premierships and will not be interested after that. The reality is that we've won two Premierships but I'm more excited about this particular season than last year or the year before. I am a fan of special nature. I'm getting excited before every single game. The trophy at the end is less important than the process itself.'

Abramovich is part of the rich Russian set that has colonised London's most exclusive neighbourhoods. He has a house in Belgravia worth an estimated £28m as well as an £18m estate in West Sussex. His wife, Irina, a former air stewardess, enjoys the city life and the couple's five children go to English schools. But Abramovich - who also owns a £10m St Tropez villa, two superyachts and a Boeing 767 - does not necessarily regard the British capital as home. 'I live on a plane. I like to visit London. If I had to think where I could live if not Moscow, London would be my first choice and second would be New York. In Moscow I feel most comfortable. I'm used to four different seasons; it's difficult for people in London to understand. People brought up in Russia like my kids want to play in the snow.'

Does money buy you happiness? 'It cannot buy you happiness,' he said. 'Some independence, yes.'

Cold War enmities die hard and the mysterious murder in London of Alexander Litvinenko, the former KGB spy killed by polonium 210, revived the spectre of Russian authoritarianism and foul play. Abramovich claimed to have no opinion on the matter and expressed his faith in 'detectives' to solve it.

He also insisted that he has never been threatened in London and that accounts of his armed bodyguards are exaggerated. He laughed off suggestions that his security precautions include a lookalike to confuse would-be assassins. He claimed that not even the British press, which photographed him and his wife out shopping as rumours about the marriage swirled, have ruffled him. 'I can understand the British media and why they are doing that. It does not add up to much. I'm used in my life to not paying much attention to some things.'

Litvinenko's sinister death was a blow to the image of the gilded circle of Russian expats, but the most famous of them all professes ignorance about how Britain perceives him. A certain steeliness behind the eyes suggests he does not care much.

At the end of the earth and a little bit further is a place called Chukotka. Nine times zones and 4,375 miles east of Moscow, even Russians need a special permit to visit. It took the Soviet revolution two years to reach the frozen waste, when a tiny band of Bolsheviks brought the news that private enterprises were now state property - only for local capitalists to shoot them dead. But communism eventually took hold and the region, 24 miles across the Bering Strait from Alaska, became the front line in the Cold War.

Chukotka straddles the Arctic Circle and its nine-month winter can witness temperatures as low as -60C. It is one of the most hostile environments on the planet, home to just 50,000 people and thousands of miles of nothingness. In the troubled Nineties, wages went unpaid and people starved or walked miles across the frozen tundra to eat a scrap of seaweed or whale blubber. Chukotka was described as a 'post-Soviet pit of despair'; its residents, so the joke has it, consider Siberia a good place for a holiday.

It is hard to imagine a world further removed from that of pampered millionaire footballers, yet this was the first pet project of Abramovich and his fabulous wealth. He arrived as a former student and rubber-duck salesman who had made a killing as the protege of Boris Berezovsky, one of the businessmen who snapped up Russia's state assets at bargain prices as the country plunged into capitalism. When Berezovsky fell foul of Putin, Abramovich bought his mentor's stakes in Sibneft, the oil giant, and Aeroflot, the national airline, and emerged as an oligarch in his own right. Business opponents accused him of ruthless dealing and he was once investigated by the authorities but cleared; allegations of wrongdoing have never stuck.

He had not set foot in Chukotka until the autumn of 1999 but soon became its representative in the Russian parliament and then ran for governor, flying to dozens of remote villages and listening patiently for hours on end to numerous gripes. There were no charismatic set piece speeches - not his style - but he won the election with nearly 100 per cent of the vote, the sort of figure which usually alarms democrats, and took office in 2001. Abramovich spared his family a move but registered as a Chukotka taxpayer, brought Sibneft with him and created two charities whose projects included giving all the region's children an annual holiday somewhere warm. In all he has channelled an estimated £770m into Chukotka and attracted a further £500m inward investment. Critics believe that he was anxious to show Putin and other patriotic Russians his willingness to put the wealth he made on the back of natural resources back into the country, so avoiding the fate of Yukos oil baron Mikhail Khodorkovsky, a politically ambitious critic of the president now serving a prison sentence for tax evasion. But Abramovich's charitable work in Chukotka started before Putin became hammer of the oligarchs.

Abramovich appears weary of the speculation around why he chose the bleak outpost. 'Everyone's got their own reason. Some believe it's because I spent some of my childhood in the far north that I helped Chukotka, some believe it's because I had a difficult childhood that I helped Chukotka, some believe it's because I stole money that I helped Chukotka. None of these is real. When you come out and you see a situation and there are 50,000 people, you want to do something. I haven't seen anything worse than what I saw there in my life.'

Is it the obligation of every billionaire to give a portion of their wealth away? 'If you want to please everyone, the answer would be yes. But charity is a very complicated thing. It's important to find an area where you can really help and you can feel the results. Charity is not like feeding pigeons in the square. It is a process that requires professional management.'

It would take a special kind of cynic not to be impressed by the results. According to Abramovich's press office, 18 new schools have been built, a further 18 rebuilt and new computers, televisions, text books, free meals and therapy facilities provided to pupils. The once-threatened indigenous cultures and languages of the Chukchi and Inuit minorities are back on the curriculum. Twenty-eight hospitals and medical centres have been constructed. In Anadyr, the regional capital, there is a cinema, hotel, museum, supermarket and cultural centre. There is a German-themed restaurant, inspired by Abramovich's visit to the Oktoberfest in Munich five years ago. He always sits at the same table in a quiet corner and likes to play billiards upstairs.

The office claims life expectancy in Chukotka has risen by three years and the birthrate has increased by almost 50 per cent to become the highest in Russia. Infant mortality has been more than halved, giving Chukotka one of the 10 best records of any region in the country - previously it was among the 10 worst.

Children have been at the heart of this grand social project. Much of Abramovich's own childhood was spent with an uncle in an inhospitable northern region, Komi, after he was orphaned at the age of two and a half. These formative years have been described by others as miserable but Abramovich was keen to correct the impression: 'To tell the truth I cannot call my childhood bad. In your childhood you can't compare things: one eats carrots, one eats candy, both taste good. As a child you cannot tell the difference.'

Last week Abramovich's lieutenants took journalists on a tour of Chukotka schools and hospitals. Staff spoke of a miraculous transformation and hailed Abramovich as a messiah. Alexander Maslov, head doctor at the Chukotka regional hospital, recalled: 'In February 2002, the governor invited me to look around the hospital and I wanted to shoot myself because it was so terrible. It was very old, the roofs were leaking, paint was peeling off the walls.' Now the hospital has been completely modernised and Maslov is the luckiest doctor in the world: 'We've got everything we want,' he said.

Reindeer husbandry, a way of life for the Chukchi, has also been saved. Left to the free market, the reindeer herd dwindled from half a million to just 96,000 as animals were eaten out of desperation, and herders lost their jobs and turned to drink. Abramovich-funded subsidies have restored the herd to 200,000 and given the Chukchi wages and hunting weapons. Reindeer herders Aleksei Omrynkau, 57, and his wife Katy, 56, a Chukchi couple, have spent their lives in the sub-Arctic tundra and live in a teepee, or yaranga, made from reindeer skins. Aleksei said: 'In the Nineties there was no money at all and people paid with produce. It's like Soviet times again now: the wages, food supply and social structure are better.' The Omrynkaus have one of the most remote homes conceivable, surrounded by a blanket of white, about 20 miles from the next human habitation. Yet even they have heard of Chelsea's football team. 'I read about it in a magazine in the village,' said Aleksei. 'I'm proud of the governor.'

Abramovich's departure has been cited as evidence that he has lost interest in his native country altogether; last year he sold Sibneft to Gazprom, the state-run gas giant, making himself even richer. But he has billions of pounds invested in Russian steel, pharmaceuticals, property, food processing and magazine publishing, and donates to youth academies for music, science and sport and to several Jewish charities.

When it comes to currying favour with the Kremlin, he has scarcely put a foot wrong. He denies striking any deals and points out that the governorship did not guarantee him political immunity. Yet he will not join criticism of Putin despite growing fears about the direction of a country where journalists have been murdered, suspects tortured in police custody and business corruption is rife. 'In my personal opinion Russia is no less democratic than it used to be,' was his artful comment. Was it ever democratic? 'It is a democratic country. It is democratic enough.'

Khodorkovsky is serving an eight-year sentence in a Siberian penal colony. Berezovsky is in exile in London. Abramovich might appear to be the Kremlin's favourite oligarch. 'Do you mean compared to those who found themselves in exile?' he asked. 'I've never tried to impose pressure on the authority of the government through my business achievements. I cannot tell you what the others were doing.'

The English pronoun 'you' translates into Russian in two ways: vy as a polite form, and ty for addressing friends. When Abramovich meets Putin, he uses vy. 'He is more senior than me,' he explained. The interview done, Abramovich poses for photographs and parts with a smile and wave, his gentle demeanour and lean figure at odds with the fabled marauding Russian bear. He is not one to roar about anything; this instinctively quiet man recognises when silence can serve him better than words. As the multi-billion pound fortune grows, the world waits for him to find a new 'toy'. But winning in life, as in football, can be a fragile business. 'There is a Russian proverb,' he muses, 'You never say that you'll never be in jail or never be poor.' Yet another reason to keep your head down.

The Abramovich CV

Born: Saratov, a town on the Volga river in southern Russia, on 24 October 1966. His mother died from blood poisoning and his father, a building worker, was killed in a construction site accident, leaving him an orphan before his third birthday.

Education: Studied at the Industrial Institute in Ukhta, Komi; drafted to military service; gained a law degree from Moscow State Law Academy in less than a year.

Business interests: Made his fortune from oil, aluminium and airline Aeroflot. Now owns assets in steel, pharmaceuticals, property, food processing and magazine publishing - and Chelsea Football Club, which he bought for £140m in 2003.

Political interests: About to step down after six years as governor of Chukotka, in far north-east Russia.

Estimated wealth: £10.8bn, making him the second richest man in Britain behind steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal.

Family: Married Olga, a divorcee three years his senior, in 1987 but separated two years later. Now married to Irina, a former air stewardess, with whom he has five children.

苏联解体15年

《南方周末》之《苏联解体15年专题》

15年前的12月25日,苏联解体了,15个新的国家诞生了。

15个国家大体可以分为三类:像俄罗斯、波罗的海三国已经进入“治”的阶段,正在走向复兴;大多数国家则刚刚跨进“治”的阶段,远说不上“兴”;而像格鲁吉亚等国则仍然在“乱”与“治”之间过渡。

20世纪,列宁,姓弗拉基米尔的47岁的小个子,领导布尔什维克通过武装起义,打破并着手改造了一个旧俄国;21世纪,普京,又一位姓弗拉基米尔的47岁的小个子,开始试图改造整治一个“乱”的俄罗斯。
  
土库曼斯坦,是当今世界上惟一实行水、电、煤气都免费的国家,贫苦的人,粮食还是国家供给。

深受苏联传统社会主义、俄罗斯大民族主义、欧洲自由主义熏陶的普京,正是把这三种思潮相互融合与取舍,而务实地运用于俄罗斯的复兴。

普京:“谁不为苏联解体而懊悔,谁就没有良心;谁想回到过去的苏联,谁就没有头脑。”
  
目前,阿布拉莫维奇拥有斯拉夫石油公司50%的资产、俄罗斯铝业公司50%的资产、俄罗斯航空公司26%的股份和英国切尔西足球俱乐部,身家108亿美元,被称为“克里姆林宫看不见的手”。

俄社会舆论基金会的民调显示,51%的俄罗斯人认为苏共功大于过,只有15%的人认为苏共过大于功。    
  
俄罗斯总统普京是虔诚的东正教徒,他在朝拜教堂时指出:“没有东正教,就没有俄罗斯。”东正教历来就是俄罗斯的国教,1917年十月革命打破了俄罗斯由信仰东正教的统治者进行治理的历史连续性,共产主义成为苏联公民的惟一信仰。

一位叫季欣柯的博士告诉记者,“不能把俄国人的宗教信仰简单地看作是两面派。俄国人血液里流淌着的是东正教精神,面对强权干预,人们可以去信仰共产主义。一旦宗教信仰恢复自由,人们马上就能放弃共产主义,回到东正教的轨道上。”
  
到目前为止,波罗的海三个国家已经加入北约集团。乌克兰、格鲁吉亚、吉尔吉斯斯坦发生“颜色革命”,先后靠拢西方阵营。
  
波罗的海三国居民平均月工资较高,最高的是爱沙尼亚,它2005年第三季度人均月薪约合593美元。其次是立陶宛(460美元)和拉脱维亚(430美元)。俄罗斯哈萨克斯坦乌克兰白俄罗斯分别以302美元、260美元、220美元和214美元居4到7位,处于中游。紧随其后的是阿塞拜疆140美元、摩尔多瓦121美元、亚美尼亚115美元。其他独联体国家居民月平均收入均不足100美元,吉尔吉斯斯坦乌兹别克斯坦均在60美元左右、格鲁吉亚50美元、土库曼斯坦不足40美元,最低的塔吉克斯坦仅为28美元,其中最低月工资仅为3美元,与最高的爱沙尼亚相比,相差近200倍。 

2006-12-25

11月份全球网站访问量十强

美国网络市场调研公司ComScore 12月21日发表的报告显示,11月份全球网站访问量排在前十位的分别是:
1、微软
2、Google
3、雅虎
4、eBay
5、时代华纳公司
6、Wikipedia
7、亚马逊
8、福克斯互动传媒
9、Ask Network
10、You Tube

其中You Tube同比增长速度最快,达到2000%。虽然You Tube已于今年10月份为Google所收购,此次仍独立计算,不知道将其加上,Google能否超过微软排名第一呢?报道对此没有具体说明。

消息来源:新华网

2006-12-24

年度反新闻辞典,重构2006(转)

钱烈宪的博客上看到这样的一个2006总结,点题一个字:

任志强:我只为穷人盖房子
地产大鳄齐声附和,媒体劝其多为富人考虑
美国企业缺乏规范败走中国股市
刘忠德大赞超女品格高雅
白烨赞扬韩寒开车骂人两不误

网络万民追查爱动物的好女人
李博士说虐恋很高雅
猫虐人照片惊现网络
限制薪酬狂涨,中国颁布最高工资标准
年收入120万元以上免除个税申报
沙龙醒来:怎么还在打仗?

北大教授哭富:我们不值这么多钱
校方承认该校为三流大学,虚心向世界名校学习
替代可口可乐,全球流行王老吉
打假英雄黄禹锡的艰难科研路
美国外汇储备破万亿人民币
英国电视台后悔莫及,萨达姆趁乱掌权搞民主
布什遇刺弄假成真
2006胡润不慈善榜发布
网络风行好人软件
储蓄不堪重负,外资银行要收大额管理费

张艺谋反对靠身体博出位
女演员纷纷做平胸手术
《黄金甲》被批着装太保守
奇闻,汤姆克鲁斯女儿周岁就会跳沙发
吴宗宪入主《艺术人生》
整容明星纷纷返厂求原貌

引领全台激情解说狂潮
还夸女记者像白雪公主一样善良
黄健翔荣升央视体育部总监
美国掀起移民中国潮
王德显多给孙英杰工资达260万
中国公民出境旅游,举止文明受各国称道

警方及时阻止第一刀
专家迅速实施心理救援
qiu xinghua:差点连砍十余人
洪蜂上街大散钱财
上海教育局力挺孟母堂
国人拒绝汽车消费

国人久经考验百毒不侵,红心鸭蛋成时尚食品
“翠花,上苏丹红”
茅于轼小额信贷获诺贝尔和平奖
压力已解,巴士阿叔温柔两小时
彭水县奖励短信诗人住房两套

金鸡影后张钰片酬巨涨
男演员为争搭档不惜色诱
狗仔自拍求阿娇原谅
李湘要钻石婚,不要钻石
孟广美修“内地公厕”

赵丽华冲出亚洲获诺奖
梨花体引领世界文坛新潮流
富人缴税,教育基金获益
齐达内温柔一顶,意大利梦断柏林
布兰妮不做“嫌内裤”,要当“贤内助”

罗马2比0胜卡利亚里

又是小曼奇尼,加上另一个巴西人塔代伊,一记。

2006-12-22

又是托蒂,又是小曼奇尼

在4比0干掉巴勒莫一役中分别梅开二度的托蒂和小曼奇尼又在周三(^_^就在我的生日那天,由于喝酒,老婆大发雷霆)各下一城,导演了2比1小胜都灵的好戏,打破后者主场271分钟不失球的记录。罗马队长本赛季17轮进11球,再次打出个人最好成绩,平了02/03和03/04赛季的记录,其在意甲中的进球也达到了136个,只比蒙特拉少1球,比基耶萨少2球,破记录是迟早的事,就看能破多少了。

干掉拉齐奥后,国米十连胜,离上个赛季罗马十一连胜的记录只有一场,现在也领先罗马7分。不过看看他们的阵容,这样的成绩是应该的,并无稀奇之处。

最新消息,本赛季初由恩波利转会瓦伦西亚不得志的塔瓦诺将于明年1月4日以零价租借的形式加盟罗马。然后他们还将补充球队左路的阵容,或许这样以来,罗马跟国米还是有得一拼?

南方人物周刊中国魅力榜:2006向魅力致敬

《南方人物周刊》发布了中国魅力榜:2006向魅力致敬,在编辑的按语里说到:
学者刘军宁说,中国正在呼唤一个文艺复兴时代的到来。如果不考虑时髦的后现代理论,不考虑宗教神学因虔诚而谨慎的观点,我们大可以认为,即使在当代中国,人文主义的觉醒和归来,也已是一股滚烫的、不可逆转的潮流。

随之而至的一个变化必然是:对一切思想、主义、制度、政策、价值观的评估,都要回转到人的立场上来。

再波澜壮阔的历史,也由一个个鲜活或曾经鲜活的个体生命写就;再繁复细密的社会生活画卷,也由一张张生动或曾经生动的面孔点缀渲染。

一切回到人的立场。这意味着——尊重人的正当欲望、正视人的精神需求、承认人性的弱点和局限,当然,同样重要的是——张扬人类对至真、至善、至美的努力和追求。

骄傲而疯狂的尼采说,“要重估一切价值。”“魅力”——这个让人精神愉悦、可意会却难以言传的词汇,又意味着什么?

魅力跟一个人的职位,跟一个人身家几何,跟一个人高矮胖瘦,跟他(她)用什么牌子的香水、换小汽车的频率,跟一个人在各项排行榜上的名次,没有太大关系。

魅力不是高高在上的骄横气。你可以富可敌国,但不可以像暴发户,一边打着饱嗝一边剔牙花;你可以权势倾城,却不可以颐指气使,以为人人都会围着你欢快地旋转。

魅力不是奶油般的漂亮面孔。一个人可以标致如奥黛丽·赫本或者布拉德·皮特,却可能面目狰狞;一个演员可能在银幕上温柔可亲,在私人场合,却人格变态。

魅力不是装腔作势,更不是扭捏作态。

我们所说的魅力,是一个人的浑身上下、公开和私下的言谈举止,所散发出来的综合气息。除了他的影响力、光彩形象之外,还与他的德行相勾连。这是一个古老的标准,也是万无一失的标准。

魅力人格对他人的感召力,就如同倦鸟归林,旅人思念家乡,万涓溪流汇流大海。

我们有过魅力极其稀缺的年代,也有过用其他品质替代魅力的年代。今天,魅力正在成为越来越重要的一种无形力量,它像一道光环,护持着一个人赢得成功、话语权和影响力。

满城尽带黄金甲

唐朝文学青年,后来的农民领袖,黄巢同学考大学没考上后,他发扬光大了中国农民领袖富有“革命浪漫主义情怀”的伟大的历史的传统,并掀起了一个小高潮,用“托物言志”的手法一下整了三首诗,其中《不第后赋菊》说:“待到秋来九月八,我花开后百花杀。冲天香阵透长安,满城尽带黄金甲。”

我朝著名教坊头目张艺谋师傅把《不第后赋菊》最后一句顺过来,网罗一众明星,耗费数亿巨资,弄了一部电影——《满城尽带黄金甲》。

据说此片投资3亿元,创了中国电影的投资记录;又据说他们预计票房收入可达10亿元,如果如意算盘最终打成,另一个记录又会诞生:中国电影票房最高收入记录。他们保障后面一个记录诞生的手段是垄断全国各个数字影院的放映权,就是说在这段时间是“满城尽放黄金甲”,还据说这引起了《末攻》、《三峡好人》、《伤城》等正在上映和即将上映的电影的抗议。然而没用,我们正在疾步走向全球化,我们正在努力建设文化大国,我们正在极力增加文化产品的输出量,要是真能把这部电影弄到国际上去,牺牲几部“小”电影算什么呢?

于是,又有了“满城尽谈黄金甲”。前几天报纸说,已经有避孕套、防盗门等多种商品盯上了“黄金甲”这个词,欲将之注册为商标而后快。昨晚看《锵锵三人行》,谈的也是这部电影。可爱的“咸湿佬”窦文涛老师找来电影的几张截图,那真跟我们单位早上食堂一样壮观,整个画面,满满的都是白花花的“馒头”,就那样贴在一大群女人的胸部上。“一堆馒头引发的硬度”,有个网友说在看电影的整个过程中,他下面都是硬的。有记者问周杰伦跟巩俐演对手戏时的感受,周同学说他连正眼都不敢看巩老师一下,怕受不了那刺激。窦老师对东方人乳房能有这样的高位感到很奇怪,一边在自己的胸部比划挤兑,一边请教台湾来的嘉宾李秀媛女士。李老师也真是不吝赐教,她说:一般稍微有点发育的女人,背部都会有一些赘肉的,把这些赘肉往前面济,并用透明胶纸贴住,就能起到抬高乳房高度的效果,同时也能掩盖背部的赘肉,让该大的大,该小的小,一举两得。真是醍醐灌顶,这也解开了我多年心里同样的疑问。

喜欢用“吊诡”这个词的许子东老师,这次又把这个词派上用场了。他说的是这些所谓的商业大片:大家都会一边看一边骂,然后在骂声中,又有更多的人走进电影院去,然后出来又骂,然后又有人进去。他说这背后其实是因为观众有一种受虐心态,就像中国足球,虽然球迷每次看完比赛,都会咬牙切齿义愤填膺,但当下一次有中国队的比赛的时候,大家还会继续去看。有此一说,姑且听之。

2006-12-21

Almost all Americans have sex before marrying

最新研究成果表明:Almost all Americans have sex before marrying

Data from the 2002 survey indicate that by age 20, 77% of respondents
had had sex, 75% had had premarital sex, and 12% had married; by age
44, 95% of respondents (94% of women, 96% of men, and 97% of those who
had ever had sex) had had premarital sex. Even among those who abstained
until at least age 20, 81% had had premarital sex by age 44. Among cohorts
of women turning 15 between 1964 and 1993, at least 91% had had premarital
sex by age 30. Among those turning 15 between 1954 and 1963, 82% had had
premarital sex by age 30, and 88% had done so by age 44.

不知道中国的情况怎么样呢?

2006-12-20

20世纪中文小说前100强 PK 英文小说前100强

时近岁末,最近比较关注各种总结和评选。刚刚在网上看到这样一篇文章《20世纪中文小说前100强 PK 英文小说前100强》,且付了下载地址。英文小说由《时代》周刊评出,并有详细的评述。中文小说则由中国大陆、台湾、香港、新加坡、马来西亚和北美地区的一些学者评出,包括有王蒙、王晓明、刘再复、谢冕、王德威、黄子平等,当然也少不了余秋雨老师。在100部中文小说里,金庸、古龙、梁羽生各有一部入选,分别是《射雕英雄传》、《楚留香》和《白发魔女传》。不过也有一些连名字都是第一次听到。

2006-12-18

(旧文)那飘逝的是永恒的

和许多人一样我忍受不了美好事物逝去时的落寞,比如香销玉陨,比如曲终人散。

在每个星期天的晚上我常常幻想现在要是星期五该多好。至今,我仍记得童年时寒假行将结束的时候彷徨和无助:盼了一年的春节和正月里热闹的赛会已经结束,大人们开始下地忙活,天空飘着阴冷的空气,地上鞭炮的碎屑凌乱狼藉,新学期又要开始。

意大利捧杯的时候正是北京时间星期一的凌晨,坐在回宿舍的的士上,我闻到了自己身上呛人的烟味和刺鼻的酒味,突然有种熟悉的怅然若失:世界杯结束了,三个小时后要去上班了。

12年前,我听着收音机记住了巴乔,后来我忘不了那个站在巴西球门前茕茕孓立的背影,留着马尾辫;我听着收音机记住了罗马里奥,后来我忘不了进球 后摇着摇篮,想要把惊喜献给他的孩子的那个父亲;我听着收音机记住了斯托依奇科夫和布洛林,虽然我至今不知道他们的样子。

8年前,在金山脚下学校的传达室里我看到了法国用点球把意大利挡在4强之外;暑假回家后生平第一次调闹钟起来看齐达内用他如今更加出名的光头粉碎巴西人的卫冕之梦,惊叫声把妈妈吓醒。

6年前,在康乐园D栋801宿舍漫天飘雪的电视机上我看到了荷兰人克鲁伊维特羞辱了南斯拉夫,之后意大利人圣托尔多又让荷兰人绝望不已,再之后法国人维尔托德和特雷泽盖又联袂绝杀了意大利。从那时起我相信运气也是守恒的。

4年前,在东莞的宾馆里我看到了安贞焕用金球让意大利瘫痪在8分之1的赛场上,之后他被老羞成怒的佩鲁贾解雇,转投扶桑。

2年前,在单位宿舍电脑的屏幕上,顽劣不羁的卡撒诺流下了伤心的泪水,为意大利的出局,我伤心欲绝;托蒂箭一般的口水让我明白男人在需要的时候是必须发怒 的,虽然有人说运动员要遵守体育道德,然而,感情是不需要理性的,更何况是崇拜。卡撒诺和托蒂,刚柔之际,让我想起鲁迅的诗句:无情未必真豪杰,怜子如何 不丈夫。

今年的世界杯我看见了什么?我又看不见什么?

我看不见目中无人的卡撒诺,他在罗马?在巴厘?在马德里?反正他不在德国,他不在柏林。那个背对队友拿着水瓶戏弄教练的巴厘男孩不见了,连同他满 脸的麻子;我看不见劳动模范一般的韩乔生,他留在央视的后方和美女一起弄起“欢乐世界杯”,当他把自己的口误当成特色把玩不已的时候,我已不再觉得他的可 爱了;我看不见长发飘飘的巴蒂了,英雄迟暮的他,走完卡塔尔的养老之路后,他去向何方?

我看见了灵魂附体的黄健翔,当他声嘶力竭鬼哭神嚎一般喊出意大利万岁的时候,“马尔蒂尼今天生日快乐!”什么国家电视台的评论员应该中立平衡,此 刻我觉得完全是扯淡;我看到了炉火纯青的齐达内,一代足球大师用他淘汰巴西的光头顶向意大利人马特拉齐的时候,我鄙视那些说为了国家的利益应该克制自己的 情感的中庸之论,连自己的母亲和姐姐的尊严都不能维护的人(此处有待证实)有何脸面去谈爱国的情操?我看到了马特拉齐为了球队的胜利不择手段的挑衅,或者 这正是弱肉强食适者生存的立足之道;我看到了里克尔梅一次次致命的传球,却毁在保守固执的佩克尔曼手中,此刻我只能向命运的无奈低头;我看到了小组赛里像 计算机一般精确的出线队伍,我徒叹足球本来不应该是这样;我看到了淘汰赛里夺冠热门纷纷落马,我庆幸足球还能带给我们惊喜,这让我明白足球预测全部是闲得 蛋痛之人的无聊游戏,除非参赛队里有中国队在;我惊讶于意大利人在后院起火的同时还能团结一致,这让我的小人之心没有能够得逞。此刻我只希望意大利司法部 门不要像中国的同行学习,他们该怎么判还应该怎么判,不要用一块遮羞布盖住了本该暴露于光天化日之下的丑恶,这种事情我们见得太多了。

“那飘逝的是永恒的”!

“只有过去永不结束”!

我记住四年一次的世界杯。

无关生死,不可或缺

打开电脑,看到罗马4比0干掉巴勒莫的消息,不明白这样一支球队怎么会在前周末0比3输掉德比大战。

世界上,生活里,有些东西无关生死,却不可或缺。足球应该就是这样一种东西。暂时想不到有什么其他事物具备这样的魅力,除了生活本身:柳暗花明峰回路转否极泰来喜极而泣。这样想起来,罗马大起大落也就不足为奇了。所谓生的伟大死的光荣,毛泽东老师有时还真想一位哲学家。

这样的状态,托蒂不去国家队是说不过去了。一个无聊的想法:要是托蒂老师生在中国,会不会被骂为汉奸卖国贼呢?现在意大利人骂他意奸卖国贼吗?那个倒霉的巴勒莫后卫,我猜他一辈子都不会有那么漂亮的进球。为什么乌龙总是那么漂亮呢?就像你总有非常巧合的机缘去办砸一件事。

有点替小曼奇尼可惜,为什么巴西国家队不把他弄进去呢?记忆里他好像进过一次,以后他还会有机会吗?

同样无关生死却不可或缺的还有网络,就如《时代周刊》把千千万万网民评为今年的年度人物一样。这个世界纷纷扰扰,无论是坏是好,只要有台上网的电脑,生活就可以不那么枯燥。

google终于发布了用于firefox的工具栏3.0的中文版,加入了很多本来只有在ie上才有的功能,比如网络书签,我原来理想中的浏览器终于出现了——多标签浏览和网络书签。盼望已久的东西最终得到了,有什么比这更快乐的吗?

《倾城之恋》美国纽约首次翻译出版

这本 Love in a Fallen City 2006年10月10日由纽约书评出版社(New York Review Books Classics)出版,译者为美国女学者金斯柏里(Karen S. Kingsbury)。344页的平装书要价14.95美元。

  《倾城之恋》主要包括了“倾城之恋”和“金琐记”等六篇小说,主要是张爱玲在四十年代走红上海的作品。这六部作品多是首次被翻成英文。

  许多英文报章均对《倾城之恋》英文版的出版大加赞赏。《纽约时报书评》称张爱玲为中国文学的巨人,《出版人周刊》(Publishers Weekly)也对《倾城之恋》英文版的出版进行了大力推介。

  本书的翻译者金斯柏里早年毕业于哥伦比亚大学,获得博士学位,其毕业论文便是以张爱玲为主题。金斯柏里先后在中国大陆和台湾生活过近20年,包括在重庆教英文,在台北学中文,更在台湾东海大学教英语语言文学达14年之久。

金斯柏里之前也曾翻译过一些张爱玲的作品,出版在一些专业性刊物上。她目前居住在西雅图。

  最初“发掘”出《倾城之恋》的是纽约书评经典图书系列的编辑Edwin Frank。他在一本书的脚注里发现了张爱玲这个名字,决定把这个作者的书找来看一看,于是他从图书馆借来了《金琐记》,看完之后被深深吸引,于是决定以经典图书的类别来翻译出版《倾城之恋》。

  下面是纽约书评网站上对张爱玲、《倾城之恋》和译者 Karen S. Kingsbury的介绍:

Eileen Chang (1920-1995) was born into an aristocratic family in Shanghai. Her father, deeply traditional in his ways, was an opium addict; her mother, partly educated in England, was a sophisticated woman of cosmopolitan tastes. Their unhappy marriage ended in divorce, and Chang eventually ran away from her father—who had beaten her for defying her stepmother, then locked her in her room for nearly half a year. Chang studied literature at the University of Hong Kong, but the Japanese attack on the city in 1941 forced her to return to occupied Shanghia; where she was able to publish the stories and essays (collected in two volumes, Romances, 1944, and Written on Water, 1945) that soon made her a literary star. In 1944 Chang married Hu Lancheng, a Japanese sympathizer whose sexual infidelities led to their divorce three years later. The rise of Communist influence made it increasingly difficult for Chang to continue living in Shanghai; she moved to Hong Kong in 1952, then immigrated to the United States three years later. She remarried (an American, Ferdinand Reyher, who died in 1967) and held various posts as writer-in-residence; in 1969 she obtained a more permanent position as a researcher at Berkeley. Two novels, both commissioned in the 1950s by the United States Information Service as anti-Communist propaganda, The Rice Sprout Song and Naked Earth, were followed by a third, The Rouge of the North (1967), which expanded on her celebrated early novella, "The Golden Cangue." Chang continued writing essays and stories in Chinese, scripts for Hong Kong films, and began work on an English translation of the famous Qing novel The Sing-Song Girls of Shanghai. In spite of the tremendous revival of interest in her work that began in Taiwan and Hong Kong in the 1970s, and that later spread to mainland China, Chang became ever more reclusive as she grew older. Eileen Chang was found dead in her Los Angeles apartment in September 1995.

Karen S. Kingsbury has lived in Chinese-speaking cities for nearly two decades. She taught English in Chonquing on the Whitman-in-China program, studied Chinese in Taipei and, for fourteen years, taught English language and literature at Tunghai University in Taichung. Her Columbia University doctoral dissertation was on Eileen Chang, and she has published previous translations of Chang's essays and fiction in Renditions and in The Columbia Anthology of Modern Chinese Literature. She lives in Seattle.

Eileen Chang is one of the great writers of twentieth-century China, where she enjoys a passionate following both on the mainland and in Taiwan. At the heart of Chang's achievement is her short fiction—tales of love, longing, and the shifting and endlessly treacherous shoals of family life. Written when Chang was still in her twenties, these extraordinary stories combine an unsettled, probing, utterly contemporary sensibility, keenly alert to sexual politics and psychological ambiguity, with an intense lyricism that echoes the classics of Chinese literature. Love in a Fallen City, the first collection in English of this dazzling body of work, introduces American readers to the stark and glamorous vision of a modern master.

还有其他一些媒体(还有李安?)对张和张的小说的评说:

... A giant of modern Chinese literature...
The New York Times

Chang's obsession with privacy made her known as the 'Garbo of Chinese letters,' and photographs reveal a woman whose elegance and contemplative introspection justify that title. Nevertheless, from out of the frenzy of renown that surrounded her, the sheer quality of Chang's prose emerges clearly,and her voice...has a sound like none other in the canon of Chinese, or for that matter, American prose stylists.
Boston Review

With language as sharp as a knife edge, Eileen Chang cut open a huge divide in Chinese culture, between the classical patriarchy and our troubled modernity. She was one of the very few who could see on both sides of that divide, into which her heroines so often disappeared. Eileen Chang is the fallen angel of Chinese literature, and now, with these excellent new translations, English readers can discover why she is so revered by Chinese readers everywhere.
— Ang Lee

These six stories, most available in English for the first time, were published to acclaim in China and Hong Kong in the '40s; they explore, bewitchingly, the myriad ways love overcomes (or doesn't) the intense social constraints of time and place.... In these eloquent tragedies, Chang plunges readers in medias res. She expertly burdens her characters with failed dreams and stifled possibilities, leads them to push aside the heavy curtains of family and convention, and then shows them a yawning emptiness. Their different responses are brilliantly underplayed and fascinating.
— starred review, Publishers Weekly

This posthumous collection contains six vibrant stories that depict life in post-WW II China...Evocative and vivid, Chang's stories bristle with equal parts passion and resentment.
Booklist

A major rediscovery.
Kirkus Reviews

网站上还有《白玫瑰,红玫瑰》的节选:

On the day he was to move in, Zhenbao left work just after dusk. He and his brother were busy supervising the coolies as they carried the trunks in, and Wang Shihong was standing arms akimbo in the doorway, when a woman walked in from the room behind. She was washing her hair, which was all lathered up with shampoo, the white curls standing high on her head like a marble sculpture. “While the workmen are here,”
she said to Shihong, holding her hair with her hands, “have them arrange all the furniture and things. It’s no use asking our majordomo to help: he’ll just make excuses—if he’s not in the mood he won’t do anything.”

“Let me introduce everyone,” said Wang Shihong. “Zhenbao, Dubao, my wife. I believe you haven’t met yet?”

The woman withdrew her hand from her hair to shake hands with the guests, but seeing the shampoo on her fingers, she hesitated. She nodded and smiled instead, then wiped her fingers on her dressing gown. A little shampoo splashed the back of Zhenbao’s hand. Instead of rubbing it off, he let it dry there. The skin puckered up slightly, as if a mouth were lightly sucking at the spot.

Mrs. Wang turned and went back into the other room. Zhenbao directed the workers as they moved the bed and wardrobe, but he felt troubled, and the sucking sensation was still there. His mind wandered as he headed to the bathroom to wash his hands, thinking about this Mrs. Wang. He’d heard that she was an overseas Chinese from Singapore who, when she was studying in London, was quite a party girl. She and Wang Shihong got married in London, but Zhenbao had been too busy to attend the wedding. Seeing her was much better than hearing about her: under her white, shampoo-sculpted hair was a tawny gold face, the skin glistening and the flesh so firm that her eyes rose at a long upward slant, like the eyes of an actress. Her striped dressing gown, worn without a belt, hugged her body loosely, and the black-and-white stripes hinted at her figure, each line, each inch, fully alive. People like to say that the wide, long-sleeved gowns of former times didn’t flatter curvaceous beauties, but Zhenbao had just discovered that this was not the case. He turned on the faucet. The water wasn’t very hot, though the water heater downstairs was certainly on, and yet the lukewarm stream seemed to have a lighted wick running through it. Twisting and winding, the water ran from the faucet, every inch of it alive, while Zhenbao’s mind went running off to who knows where.

Wang Shihong heard the sound of running water and came into the bathroom. “Do you want to take a bath? The water never comes up hot in this bathroom. The hot water pipe wasn’t connected properly. That’s one bad thing about this apartment. If you want to wash, come into our bathroom.”

“Oh no, please don’t bother,” Zhenbao said. “Isn’t your wife washing her hair?”

“She must be finished by now. I’ll go and have a look.”

“Oh, really, it’s not that important.”

Wang Shihong went to speak with his wife, and his wife said, “I’m just finishing. Tell the amah to draw him a bath.”

A little later,Wang Shihong told Zhenbao to bring his soap, towel, and clothes into their bathroom. Mrs. Wang was still in front of the mirror, struggling to get a comb through her tightly permed hair. The bathroom was full of steam, and the night wind blew in through the open window. On the floor, clusters of fallen hair swirled about like ghostly figures.

Zhenbao stood outside the door holding his towel and watching the tangled hair, in the glare of the bathroom light, drifting across the floor. He felt quite agitated. He liked women who were fiery and impetuous, the kind you couldn’t marry. Here was one who was already a wife, and a friend’s wife at that, so there couldn’t be any danger, but . . . look at that hair! It was everywhere. She was everywhere, tugging and pulling at him.

The couple stood in the bathroom talking, but the water filling the tub was loud and Zhenbao couldn’t hear what they said. When the tub was full, they came out so he could take his bath. After his bath, Zhenbao crouched down and started picking up stray hairs from the floor tiles and twisting them together. The permed hair had turned yellow at the ends; it was stiff, like fine electrical wire. He stuffed it into his pocket. His hand stayed there, and his whole body tingled. But this was too ridiculous. He extracted the hair from his pocket and tossed it
into the spittoon.

转载的转载:中文108 Blogger

无聊布棉的blog上看到他转载的一篇2006年中文博客封神榜:中文108 Blogger,总结得还很全面,里面很多平时常看的博客,再转于此。

双核
双核,就是两个核心。2006年博客可以分为两个部分,一个是草根博客,一个是明星博客;一个是追求质量,一个是追求访问量。
Keso:少跟我提客观。我继续按我的想法写,你用你的智力读,千万别认为我有误导你的兴趣。非要认为自己被误导了的智力半残者,对不住您了。明年?今年我已经接了第一个博客广告,还被邀请去了google总部……地址:http://www.donews.net/keso
徐静蕾:感谢CCTV,感谢天极网,感谢蕾丝们,感谢你,感谢我,谢谢大家!我希望文采更好一点,不仅仅是为了你好读一点,我写起来也好玩一点。2006年我出书了,不好卖?明年我多接几个AMD博客广告,自己买一百万本《老徐的博客》……地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/xujinglei

三剑客
剑是华丽的,同时,它也是锋利的。
罗永浩:今年我从新东方辞职了,搞了牛博网和老罗动画工作室,明年?我还是一样彪悍。地址:http://www.luoyonghao.net/
王小峰:“按摩乳”出书了,书名叫《不许联想》,和老徐一样书也不好卖?明年我也接广告去……地址:http://www.wangxiaofeng.net/
猛小蛇:《狗日报》改版了,又改版了,明年?还接着改版……地址:www.18mo.com

四把刀
刀没有剑华丽,也没有剑锋利,但是,我们的生活里少不了刀。
风妖:网虫一只,上世纪90年代末触网,沉迷至今,每天上网超过12小时,新婚之夜也在上网写博客。地址:http://www.koubao.com/
李坏:谁在用琵琶弹奏一曲嘻唰唰?地址:http://www.1blog.cn/
布棉:今年给粉丝棉花们寄了贺卡,棉花们还不高兴,要我寄点更值钱的,什么更值钱?当然就是钱了。汗!地址:http://www.xucx.com/blog/
胜总:今年接了10多万的广告,明年我还接。有没有人给我博客投放广告啊,有没有人啊?地址:blog.donews.com/shengzong

七匹狼
他们像狼一样战斗,有狼的个性。
安替:博客总是被封,搬家是件麻烦事,你没被封过不知道。明年不希望还是这样了,当然,偶尔被封,也是很好的。地址:http://mranti.spaces.live.com/Blog/
木木:我累了,不玩了。你们还不累呀?你们这些臭男人,吃药来看我的博客?地址:http://wunv6.blogcn.com/
毒药:我有才有貌有身高,有钱有权有年龄,我不红谁红?年年桃花红,明年?我继续红。顺便把后年也说了,后年我还红……地址:http://lwhanz1981530.spaces.live.com/
水木周平:营销魔术师也能红,不服气?明年你继续看我博客。地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/shuimu
钱烈宪:我将继续发言,继续给你讲有趣的事情,你来不来看那是你的事。地址:http://moogee.sohoxiaobao.com/
于敦德:一个藏袍将继续关注好玩的技术,你觉得不好玩?先看看我域名吧。地址:http://www.example.net.cn/
月光:喜欢google的都来,不喜欢的怎么办?当然也来,我就不相信我不能让你喜欢。地址:http://www.williamlong.info/

十神
他们不是人,他们是神。
顺风:今年我思考出了一本书,虽然我还在思考怎么样才能让这本书有人买。明年?我当然是继续思考了。地址:http://shunfeng.bokee.com/
flypig和平客:我们口沫横飞说音乐、心领神会说传媒、百无禁忌说段子,我们只说彼此听得懂的真心话……地址:http://www.antiwave.net/
舞美师:今年我让你们电视看超级女声,上网看我。明年?明年还有超级女声吗?我预言……地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/u/1229327625
Joychan:postshow要赚钱了,当然,我们首先还是要为你奉献有趣的东东。地址:http://www.postshow.net/
胖星儿:做做饭,说说爱。我一边讲做饭,一边给你谈男女关系。我也出书了,书名就叫《谈情说菜》。地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/wangxiaoxing
袁智勇:我花了500万来写这个博客,应该没有人不喜欢我这么做吧?明年?我想还是先挣个500万再说……地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/yzy
梅子:他们叫我美食达人,嘻嘻,其实我只是一个煮妇。出书?我的书有《恋人食谱——梅子的写食日记》和《温情煮意———梅子的写食日记二》。地址:http://plum.blog.sohu.com/
原晓娟:我今年在“德国之声国际博客大奖赛”中获得“最佳中文博客”大奖,明年?粉丝们都希望我的病能够好起来。地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/shuweicao
艾晴晴:我就是想用曲别针换到别墅,我能吗?不能吗?不管,我要换到别墅!地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/aqq
美凝:我征婚了,他们说我征婚瞄准的对象就是丁磊。怎么,不行吗?我可是优质女……地址:http://hexun.com/meining

十一郎
易中天说,郎就是小伙子的意思,孙郎就是孙帅哥,周郎就是周帅哥,十一郎呢,就是十一个帅哥。
麦田:这一次,我做自己的社区了,明年,我将给你讲我的这个社区。地址:http://maitian.blog.techweb.com.cn/
方兴东:今年我好累,明年我更累,就为了让你们每个人都有博客。地址:http://fangxd.bokee.com/
刘韧:今年,很多人都在学我的1、2、3、4,明年,我继续我的1、2、3、4。地址:blog.donews.com/liuren
李承鹏:因为,虚构比真实更难,所以,小说比球评更难。我又开始昼伏夜出,毛发耸立,像出没于东三环双井桥旁的一只野猫。地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/lichengpeng
王建硕:我写英文博客,坚持写,希望你也坚持看。地址:http://www.wangjianshuo.com/
王小山:我的博客地址是哪里?我也不知道,不过,好象每个博客网站都有我的博客。地址:http://wangxiaoshan.blog.sohu.com/
董路:结婚生孩子的当天都不放过写博客,不是每天都要结婚生孩子,博客,当然每天都要写啦。地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/donglu
和菜头:我总觉得自己是头驴。为了追求脑门前的萝卜,不停地前进,不停地拉磨。我想我身在驴圈,在每一个疲惫的夜晚,站在我的槽边吃着料豆。偶尔抬起头来看星星,那么这头驴子也会想到些什么。因此,记下那些在槽边的心情。地址:http://www.hecaitou.net/
陆新之:我关注主流新闻重要行业核心企业,且看且记,希望你且上网且看,且看且回贴。地址:http://luxinzhi.blogms.com/
王通:企业网站如果不具备网络营销功能,就像一个失去性功能的男人,他是一个人,但,只能算一个废人!所以,企业做网站,要从营销的角度去做,这样才能产生经济效益。地址:http://www.ufoer.com/
小刀马:摸爬滚打于网络世界,每天在挨踢着,妄想刀出鞘能刀刀命中死穴,平民思索,平民感怀。明年?我将继续笔写心情,混迹江湖。地址:http://blog.sohu.com/members/xiaodaoma/

十二钗
宝玉问道:“何为金陵十二钗正册?”警幻道:即贵省中十二冠首女子之册。
木子美:今年结婚好,我也想结婚了。博客?不,我现在是播客,快来听我的播客节目吧。地址:http://podcast.bokee.com/muzimei.html
芙蓉姐姐:今年我拍卖了约会权,虽然不成功,但是有了经验。明年?我不是说过了吗,即使全世界都误解藕,藕也不会放弃自己。地址:http://furongjiejie.bokee.com/
二月丫头:我像莫文蔚吗?像吗?不像吗?地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/eryueyatou
黛秦:他们说我用色相推销新书,但这是不是比有些女作家用新书来推销色相要好那么一点点呢?地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/daiqin
流氓燕:小女子今年年方三十一,身材稍有走样,倒也不失标致。我流氓?我最近正在拍李银河老师的马屁。地址:http://liumangyan.tianyablog.com/
dodolook:今年我和MOP签约了,还接了广告。明年?我的脸还是粉嘟嘟的。地址:http://my.mop.com/dodolook
Ayawawa:比我聪明没我漂亮,比我漂亮没我聪明,我智商145。今年如此,明年还不是一样。地址:http://blog.ayawawa.com/
张静君:我一向都写日记的,以前写静君笔记,现在写静君博客,就是记录自己工作和生活中的趣事以及感悟,我以博客为乐。地址:http://zjj.anyp.cn/
鱼顺顺:明年,我首先要把家务做好,然后,再把博客写好。绝对不允许自己先写好博客再做家务!地址:http://yushunshun.blog.sohu.com/
北京女病人:我还是一如既往地写随笔,俺期待的只是病愈后那个神清气爽的时刻。地址:http://lome.blogcn.com/
孟静:北有什么?北有什么?北有什么?北有孟静。嘻嘻。明年?我继续八卦……地址:http://mj6655.yculblog.com/
菁菁河边草:当妈总是有第一次,明年?我要把黄豆打扮得漂漂亮亮,我在创业!地址:ladygrass.blog.sohu.com

聚贤庄(59人)
煮酒论英雄,聚贤庄内的好汉们。
张怀旧:今年我骂了很多人,明年,我将骂更多的人。我就是看不惯!地址:http://zhanghuaijiu.blog.sohu.com/
十年砍柴:我在钢筋水泥森林里挥着斧头砍柴。遗憾?就是为什么叫十年砍柴的人这么多……地址:http://liy303.tianyablog.com/
炳叔:爱戴墨镜,不分昼夜。戴着墨镜写博客?有什么问题吗?地址:http://blog.donews.com/bingshu/
牛角尖:我现在专职研究互联网,你可以看看我的博客。地址:http://blog.donews.com/tycoo
卢亮:做一件事情就要把它做好,明年?当然继续写。地址:http://blog.wespoke.com/
曹野:我将一如既往地严肃讨论时政,反映社会现实,理性探讨问题,引导自由思维…怎么好象在喊口号?地址:http://caoyee.bokee.com/
洁尘:作家的工作就是写,有稿费要写,没有稿费的博客也要写。地址:http://lybmm1967.tianyablog.com/
横戈:有时间的时候,我会写篇blog。明年?我希望多有点时间……地址:hengge.blogbus.com
刘润:三年前建成“靠近我”,写下第一篇blog的时候,没想到可以坚持三年。明年当然还要继续。地址:http://blog.run2me.com/runliu/
吕欣欣:对互联网发展、技术引发的媒体变革、IT发展、电影、足球、游戏等多个领域感兴趣,造成了什么都不精的杂家。地址:http://www.lvxinxin.com/
高飞:挨踢人,喜欢看电影,如影随形,更喜欢看完后写博客,深信一切产业的终极目标都是娱乐产业。明年?喜欢多看几部电影,多写几篇博客。地址:http://atblog.org/blog/
李安科:我就喜欢照相和贴图,明年?继续照我的大头照。地址:http://www.yeele.com/
董事长:我觉得地球人可以简单的分为两类:会点菜的和不会点菜的。我自己?当然是不会点菜的。明年,我想学点菜……地址:http://www.blogcn.com/user2/dsz/
李许:六合彩一天不灭,我一天不停博!明年六合彩会消失吗?我希望会,所以希望明年我可以不写博客了。地址:http://mari.bokee.com/
诗哲魂:我是一个追求自由的人,一个崇尚自然过简朴生活的人, 一个以梭罗精神生活为榜样的人……地址:http://shizhehun.bokee.com/
老虎庙:我的博客24小时在线。记录文革亲历的“史海勾沉”系列;记录国防战备工程建设中人性历练的“食、色、性”系列;记录北京城市改建对传统文化的破坏的系列文字;以及记录了大量发生在自己身边的社会事件……地址:http://24hour.blogbus.com/
caiwangqin:今年参加了中文网志年会,见到了不少bloggger朋友,也许明年我们还会北京再见。地址:http://www.caiwangqin.com/
尚进:很小的时候,托儿所阿姨评价“这个孩子很复杂”。现在,常写IT评论和文化杂谈,复杂不复杂,我也不知道。地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/shangjin
黄集伟:我就是读点书、说点话、转点文、怀点旧,不费什么力气,明年继续。地址:http://www.huangjiwei.com/blog/
费乐沃:我继续写YY先生语录。YY先生决定买一模一样的衬衫七件,一模一样的裤子七条,一模一样的皮鞋三双,一模一样的袜子十四双。问他为什么?说,每天都穿一样的衣服上班。地址:http://www.philewar.org/
车东:除了自己写博客,我还成功地把自己的父亲变成了一个Blogger。另外,再次强调,我是一个搜索引擎技术的受益者。地址:http://www.chedong.com/
桑格格:一定要写点什么,这一天我才会高兴……在日记的最后一页,我发现了这样一行字:“桑格格,17岁,1997年11月”的字样。地址:http://sggsgg.tianyablog.com/
读乐乐:我们的治学口号是:爱思考,皮肤好!教你读《离骚》,如果把《离骚》排成五个字一排的中文字方阵,你会发现,至少有三个“兮”在一条直线上;如果把《离骚》排成七个字一排的中文字方阵,你会发现,至少有五个“兮”在一条直线上;如果把《离骚》排成九个字一排的中文字方阵,你会发现,哇,好多的“兮”都在一条直线上啊!地址:http://paowang.com/blog/dulele/
周天舒:一个blogger要靠口碑传播去获得收入其实比靠google adsense去获得收入还要不靠谱。我宁可在我的blog上放置显性的广告,也不会让我的口碑被隐性广告所利用。地址:zhoutianshu.blog.hexun.com
史炜:把每天说的话,想的事写成文字,就成了博客。博客其实很原始,就象原始人在岩石上画符号记事,都是怕把昨天给忘了。地址:shiwei88.blog.sohu.com
王翌:不要再玩blog点名游戏游戏了,你点到我,我也不一定接。地址:http://daqiwangyi.blog.sohu.com/
韩浩月:患有写作这种精神顽疾十数年,至今未愈,博客加重了我的病情。地址:http://hanhaoyue.bokee.com/
胖大海:我继续有一说一。地址:http://www.yyse.net/
郑云深:在博客家族里文字博客始终会是主流,刻事录将继续记录一个blogger的每一天。地址:http://www.klogs.org/
金陵:Blog与教师专业发展有着内在的联系。是教师利用“零障碍”的社会性软件,用心灵书写属于自己的网络日志的方式。教师可以方便地将教学、研究、生活等方面的精神与物质的成果上传发表,形成教师个人的资源积淀,成为人生路上的好帮手。Blog可以跨越时空形成网上头脑风暴,成为支持教师隐性知识显性化的重要途径。地址:http://www.szeblog.cn/user1/3/
topku:我流串于鲜活互联世界,书写有关网络、品牌、营销,关注博客领域发生的一切事情,我很有个性?是啊,被你发现了……地址:http://www.topku.com/
herock:咖啡和Blog的一个共同点就是——都是小众的乐趣,并不适合聚众享用。地址:http://www.herock.net/
风吹佩兰:我欲放歌行,云深不识径。且喜天意怜,野花正缤纷。——这首诗是抄来的,但我很喜欢。地址:http://fengchuipeilan.tianyablog.com/
詹膑:前阵子受人影响,开始更深入地考虑“人”的问题,也一下子对周边的世界有了不同的看法。感谢web2.0,让我见到的非常多有意思的人,其中绝大多数我都很喜欢。继续写博客,继续认识有意思的人。地址:http://zhanbin.com/blog/
icebin:一只为了理想奋斗的猪,我经常会为有MM来留言而兴奋不已。明年没别的奢望,不奢望自己写多少,就奢望留言能够更多点。地址:http://www.icebin.net/
桑葚:我想的是(事)物(的道)理,记的是流水账。地址:http://yanfeng.org/blog/
叶子:我歇息了,我消停了,我肚子大了,我,不再忙碌了。当然,我还得继续写怀孕日记,明年?接着写宝宝日记。地址:http://www.uuzone.com/blog/yezi
康国平:北京风大,切勿说话,我忙着和自己对话。地址:http://kangkang.bokee.com/
Gkin:我的摄影博客,爱摄影,爱博客。地址:http://gkin.net/blog/
Miles:李开复说,当一个人对某个领域感兴趣时,他会在走路、上课或洗澡时都对它念念不忘,这样就容易在该领域取得成功。有激情,就可能为它废寝忘食,连睡觉时想起一个主意都会跳起来。这时候,人们已经不是为了成功而工作,而是为了“享受”而工作了。地址:http://www.miles8.com/
周轶君:今年我没有在中东,我要去香港了,告别新华社,去凤凰卫视。《诗经》里说,茕茕白兔,东走西顾;衣不如旧,人不如新。地址:http://zhouyijun.blogbus.com/
高磊:博客就是个胡思乱想的地方,一不留神也会出来几句不胡思乱想的话。当然,更有我的摄影作品。地址:http://gao.blogbus.com/
胖兔子粥粥:msn内的计数器显示,流量达到490,000呢…当然,距离弯弯的59,000,000还差得很远。明年?这就是我的目标啦。地址:http://pangtuzizhouzhou.spaces.live.com/
JinnLynn:写我所思,写我所感,写我所爱,兴趣是Jinn's Blog存在的唯一动力!地址:http://www.jinnlife.com/
zhangteng:瞎讲三千,一个人住双人间的好处是,看电视吃东西把一个床弄得很乱,睡觉的时候却还有一个新的床.....地址:http://zhangteng.blogbus.com/
Bluesky:我的博客不仅仅谈UI设计,还谈好玩的。地址:http://www.haoxiaowei.com/
阿祥:感知信息时代脉膊,关注知识经济浪潮;以独立眼光看业界,以客观笔墨记兴衰。网站稿费不高,明年?我还是写博客吧。地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/axiang
番茄:一年半的时间,140多万的点击量,哈哈,我番茄想不红都不行了。地址:http://www.tblog.com.cn/
杨溯:当一段故事和一段经历尘埃落定的时候,面对过去,我们要心怀感激,感激过去,感激经历,感激,所有值得感激的人……地址:http://www.yangsu.cn/
子东:年有寒暑,月有圆缺,常植花菜,不破杂芜网志地。地址:http://zidon.lvwo.net/
大头绿豆:没错,我只是那么多猪肉佬中不出众的一个,我的不一样,无非是偶尔发些不知所谓的唏嘘罢了。也即是说,虽然我是猪肉佬,好歹我还有些异处;虽然我偶尔唏嘘,但是那也阻止不了我只是个猪肉佬这一事实。地址:http://www.bighead.cn/
沈阳:三年,699篇Blog,约295.5万字博客文帖。老网虫夫妇的博客网站还将继续写下去,直到金婚,再开个金婚博客。今年还打了一场博客官司,明年?还要打官司吗?地址:http://www.w.org.cn/
Kevin和Tony:当我还在为了生存挣扎的时候,布拉格过于“乌托邦”了,什么PR=5,什么排名20w,都不如晚上洗个热水澡来得实际。关门之前最后说一句,请大家注意版权的问题。地址:http://kevintony.com/blog/
Acosta:我是草根,访问量也能过千万。帅啊帅啊,帅也是一种罪啊!可是,我千万访问量怎么排这么靠后的位置啊?你们作弊!地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/Acosta
地瓜猪:穿起防辐射的肚兜,继续给我的猪娃写BLOG。谁说孕妇不能用电脑?谁说未婚妈妈抬不起头做人?我就做给你们看看!地址:http://blog.sina.com.cn/m/diguapig
科尔沁夫:我就是一个退休了的乐评人,能不写字就不写字,能享受生活就享受生活……地址:http://keer/ .blog.a8.com
一枚糖果:到截稿时间为止,糖果粉丝团们一共爱了糖果340366次,你爱过一次没有?没有的话,先啃个棒棒糖,找找感觉。地址:http://lovecandy.tianyablog.com/
dongdan小宇:我爱摄影,不仅仅是为了“中国博客网最佳图片博客”这个称号,因为这就是我的生活,每天拿着相机捕捉精彩一刻。透亮的光线从镜头的那端触摸我的眼睛,让我不假思索点击快门,那个清脆的声响,那个凝固的时间总是能让我快乐。地址:http://dongdandd.blogcn.com/
林艺:媒体把我称为“中国民间性家教第一人”,这个称号太正式,我更喜欢别人把我当作知心哥哥,把你的绝对隐私交给我,请你绝对放心。地址:http://xingjiajiao.blog.sohu.com/
结语:中国博客的清明上河图
2002年,中国没有BSP,个人主页服务也一片萧条,我在国外的一个BSP网站上用中文写blog。这个时候,方兴东正在利用他的媒体关系宣传博客概念。于是有朋友看了报纸和我的blog后问我,什么是博客?我解释不清楚。我问方兴东,什么是博客?我感觉方兴东也解释不清楚。
2006年,我已经不用再和你解释什么是博客了,虽然到今天我仍然无法向你解释清楚什么是博客。
在这之前,木子美已经告诉了一部分上网用户什么叫做博客;2006年,徐静蕾把什么是博客告诉了剩下的那些人。于是,呈现在我们面前的,是一幅清明上河图。
虽然,2006年,方兴东已经把握不住博客网了,博客在中国迷失了方向。但是,博客却又被那个刚刚说看不起博客的新浪陈彤,做出了一个样子——这不仅仅是明星博客。我们可以注意到,新浪最值钱的社会新闻,已经在前段时间,被博客改头换面地替代。
2006年,Blogger们为中国互联网无偿贡献了内容。在这之前,新浪网想都不敢想能够向徐静蕾免费约一篇稿子(那时候的徐静蕾还远远没有今天写博客的徐静蕾出名),而现在,徐静蕾每天都在新浪博客上贴自己的写真。现在,Blogger们所缺的,就是获得作为一名Blogger的价值。你除了可以把博客作为头衔写在名片上,还可以获得实在的名与利。
坚持做内容的Blogger,将会从中获得收益,Keso已经被Google总部邀请去参观了;徐静蕾如果没有写博客,现在也不过是一个演员、一个导演,但是现在不同了,她已经是一个有很多人喜欢的演员和导演了,有AMD的广告找上她。她现在肯定每天都会感谢老天:亲娘啊,谢谢你博客!
2006年,有歌手投入500万打造自己的博客,明年,这样的事情还会有;2006年,所有的网络红人,无论幕后有没有推手,都依靠了博客的力量。越来越多的网络用户,会用博客来干一点正经事,或扬名,或赚钱。
我和你打一个赌,当个人博客有了收入,或者重新认识了博客的价值,明年天极网的这个博客封神榜,就会有人主动地找到我,请我吃顿饭:Hi!哥们,我想进这个榜!

Dadada/文

TIME's Person of the Year List

终于还是让我找到了自1927年《时代》开始评选年度人物以来所有获奖者。出处

Since 1927, TIME Magazine has chosen a man, woman, or idea that "for better or worse, has most influenced events in the preceding year." Though TIME's list is not an academic or objective study of the past, the list gives a contemporary viewpoint of what was important during each year. There are many interesting facts about the list:

Charles Lindbergh (1927) was the first, and the youngest, person to receive the distinction. He was 25 years old.

Mrs. Wallis Warfield Simpson, the woman whom English King Edward VIII abdicated in order to marry, was the first woman to receive the honor - 1936.

Though a number of people have received the honor twice, U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt is the only person to have been named three times: 1932, 1934, and 1941.

Adolf Hitler, the murderous leader of Nazi Germany, received the honor in 1938.

A whole generation was named in 1966 - "Twenty-five and Under."

In 1982, the computer became the first object ever to receive the distinction.

There are several years where large groups of people were nominated: the American Fighting-Man (1950), the Hungarian Freedom Fighter (1956), U.S. Scientists (1960), Twenty-Five and Under (1966), the Middle Americans (1968), and American Women (1975).

1927
Charles Augustus Lindbergh
1928
Walter P. Chrysler
1929
Owen D. Young
1930
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
1931
Pierre Laval
1932
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
1933
Hugh Samuel Johnson
1934
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
1935
Haile Selassie
1936
Mrs. Wallis Warfield Simpson
1937
Generalissimo & Mme Chiang Kai-Shek
1938
Adolf Hitler
1939
Joseph Stalin
1940
Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
1941
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
1942
Joseph Stalin
1943
George Catlett Marshall
1944
Dwight David Eisenhower
1945
Harry Truman
1946
James F. Byrnes
1947
George Catlett Marshall
1948
Harry Truman
1949
Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill
1950
American Fighting-Man
1951
Mohammed Mossadegh
1952
Elizabeth II
1953
Konrad Adenauer
1954
John Foster Dulles
1955
Harlow Herbert Curtice
1956
Hungarian Freedom Fighter
1957
Nikita Krushchev
1958
Charles De Gaulle
1959
Dwight David Eisenhower
1960
U.S. Scientists
1961
John Fitzgerald Kennedy
1962
Pope John XXIII
1963
Martin Luther King Jr.
1964
Lyndon B. Johnson
1965
General William Childs Westmoreland
1966
Twenty-Five and Under
1967
Lyndon B. Johnson
1968
Astronauts Anders, Borman and Lovell
1969
The Middle Americans
1970
Willy Brandt
1971
Richard Milhous Nixon
1972
Nixon and Kissinger
1973
John J. Sirica
1974
King Faisal
1975
American Women
1976
Jimmy Carter
1977
Anwar Sadat
1978
Teng Hsiao-P'ing
1979
Ayatullah Khomeini
1980
Ronald Reagan
1981
Lech Walesa
1982
The Computer
1983
Ronald Regan & Yuri Andropov
1984
Peter Ueberroth
1985
Deng Xiaoping
1986
Corazon Aquino
1987
Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev
1988
Endangered Earth
1989
Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev
1990
The Two George Bushes
1991
Ted Turner
1992
Bill Clinton
1993
The Peacemakers
1994
Pope John Paul II
1995
Newt Gingrich
1996
Dr. David Ho
1997
Andy Grove
1998
Bill Clinton and Kenneth Starr
1999
Jeff Bezos
2000
George W. Bush
2001
Rudolph Giuliani
2002
The Whistleblowers
2003
The American Soldier
2004
George W. Bush
2005
Bill Gates, Melinda Gates, & Bono

英雄所见略同:关于年度人物

早在2004就有人认为博客(写博客的人)应该成为当年的年度人物,这个假设今年终于变成现实,虽然范围变得更大了,是所有网络的使用者和创造者。

The Bloggers Should Be TIME's People of the Year
Each year around this time going all the way back to 1927 the editors of TIME magazine sit down to debate and select their Person or People of the Year. Last year, if you recall, they selected the American soldier. In prior years they have selected everyone from Charles Lindbergh (1927) to The Computer (1982), Andy Grove (1997), Jeff Bezos (1999), George W. Bush (2000), Rudy Giuliani (2001), the Whistle Blowers (2002) and many more luminaries.
The Person of the Year is defined as folllows:
"Person of the Year is an annual issue of TIME magazine that features a profile on the man, woman, couple, group, idea, place, or machine that "for better or worse, has most influenced events in the preceding year"
For 2004, I cannot think of a single person or persons that had a greater influence on society than the bloggers. Let's remind them by making our voice heard. If you think about American politics, media, business - no one, no one had a greater influence for better or worse than the bloggers. Not Osama Bin Laden. Not Sadaam Hussein. Not John Kerry. No one. The bloggers absolutely deserve to be this year's People of the Year. If you agree, then make your voice heard. Send an email to the editors of TIME and explain why the bloggers deserve to be this year's choice. Alternately, leave a comment on this post and I will forward this link with my email.

《时代周刊》年度人物:你



一年一度的《时代》周刊年度人物结果出来了,今年的年度人物就是:——世界上任何一个角落,坐在电脑前,使用网络的你我他。Person of the Year: You.Yes, you. You control the Information Age. Welcome to your world.



Web 2.0 is a massive social experiment, and like any experiment worth trying, it
could fail. There's no road map for how an organism that's not a bacterium lives
and works together on this planet in numbers in excess of 6 billion. But 2006
gave us some ideas. This is an opportunity to build a new kind of international
understanding, not politician to politician, great man to great man, but citizen
to citizen, person to person. It's a chance for people to look at a computer
screen and really, genuinely wonder who's out there looking back at them.


1982年计算机也被《时代周刊》评为年度人物。1927年,《时代》开始评选年度人物,至今已有80年了,本来想找找这80年来,每年都有些什么人事会成为《时代》关注的焦点,很奇怪网上居然搜不到这样的资料。只是在思维的乐趣上找到这样一篇写于2005年初的《<时代>的选择——<时代>周刊77年年度人物》



2004年的《时代》周刊年度人物又一次成为了人们争论的话题。12月27日出版的《时代》周刊公布了新的《时代》年度人物,在2004年成功连任的总统布什成为了《时代》眼中这一年对于世界而言最重要的人,布什因此成为第十九次当选《时代》年度人物的美国总统。“重塑政治规则以符合自己牛仔式的领导风格”,《时代》这样评价布什。《时代》周刊的主编凯利说:“年度风云人物的评选标准是,当选者应该在本年度对新闻与人们生活的影响最大,不管这种影响是好还是坏。”凯利是在为布什的争议性进行辩护,因为无论是在国内还是国外,人们对布什连任的态度像是两个极端,而反对的声音总是被听得最清晰,诸如美国年轻人在互联网上向全世界人们道歉,因为由于美国人的原因,全世界不得不继续忍受这个家伙又一个四年。

1923年3月,亨利·卢斯和他在耶鲁大学的同学布里顿·哈登出版了第一期《时代》。1927年,《时代》开始评选年度人物。作为世界上最有影响力的新闻时政杂志之一,《时代》每一次年度人物的评选结果,都会成为世界其他媒体上的新闻,并且引起争论。最近的围绕2003年当选的年度人物美国士兵的争论是:士兵们只是拉姆斯菲尔德为首的鹰派的工具,不具备当选资格;或者是为什么当选的不能是伊拉克战火中的平民?而在2001度,纽约市长朱利安尼而非拉登成为年度人物,也开始让人怀疑《时代》的评选标准并非如《时代》标榜的那样无分国界善恶,只问影响,而是带有强烈的美国价值取向。

从1927年到2004年,《时代》已经进行了77次年度人物评选。如果基本认可《时代》编辑对这个世界的看法,那么这77次年度人物的评选,就可以看成是对过去77年中决定这个世界前行发向的力量的梳理。可以很明显的看出,《时代》的逻辑是:无论世界局势如何,政治力量是对世界影响最大的;在和平时期,商业力量和它的代表人物也会成为风云人物,而在真正时期,能够集中人们注意力的则是军人;此外,宗教、科技、环保、觉醒的群体等都在某一阶段成为人们关注的核心。

在年度人物评选中,对美国总统的偏爱很明显。从1927年到2004年,《时代》周刊对年度人物的77次评选中,有19次的年度人物都是美国总统或者总统位居其中,还不包括艾森豪威尔作为军人被选中的一次;联邦法官斯瑞卡因为审理“水门事件”迫使尼克松辞职,这一次的年度人物也算直接跟总统有关,或者说因为和总统发生关系而当选。美国总统这一职务是当选为《时代》年度人物概率最高的职业,从1932年富兰克林·罗斯福当选为《时代》年度人物以来,历届总统共12位,除了到倒霉的杰拉尔德·福特之外,都一次或两次的成为了《时代》眼中的世界领袖——富兰克林·罗斯福当选了三次,理查德·尼克松在某种意义上也当选了三次,一次单独入选,一次和基辛格同时入选,一次因为水门事件使法官斯瑞卡当选。甚至仅仅是经过选举成为美国总统和连任也可以是当选《时代》年度人物的理由,杜鲁门、肯尼迪、卡特、里根、克林顿等都因为竞选成功而当选,小布什则因为选举而成为年度人物两次——或许福特没有成为《时代》赞许的世界领袖和年度人物,仅仅是因为他是继承了被迫辞职的尼克松的职务,而不是经过选举获得这一世界上权势最大的职务的。一种玩笑说法是,如果你想成为《时代》周刊的年度人物,那么,最保险的办法是想办法成为美国总统,这个职业当选的概率几乎是100%。美国国内政治家在过去的77年中,当选为《时代》年度人物的次数是9次,包括审理水门事件的法官斯瑞卡和调查克林顿性丑闻的检查官斯塔尔。这样,美国政治家共当选《时代》年度人物28次。与之对比的是,世界其他国家的政治领袖们共当选为《时代》周刊年度人物27次。当选的世界政治家中有很多当之无愧的大人物:圣雄甘地、丘吉尔、戴高乐、斯大林、希特勒、戈尔巴乔夫,还有我们中国人很熟悉的邓小平与唯一的一对年度夫妻蒋介石和宋美龄。这一数字对比构成了人们对《时代》标榜的国际视野的质疑,为什么过去77年中影响世界的政治家中有一半都供职于美利坚合众国?

同政治相比,商界和金融界并没有得到应有的重视,而商业力量对世界的改变众所周知。在77年《时代》年度人物中,只有5次是商界人士入选。1928年,克莱斯勒的创始人沃尔特·克莱斯勒成为《时代》评选出的第二位年度人物,紧接着通用电气的董事会主席欧文·杨成为1929年的年度人物。但是此后直到1997年英特尔的安迪·葛鲁夫和1999年亚马逊的杰夫·贝佐斯成为《时代》的年度宠儿,将近半个世纪的时间中,只有通用汽车的哈洛·科蒂斯在1955年获得过这一荣誉。当然,如果把传媒大亨、CNN的创始人泰德·特纳也当成商界人士看待的话,就是六次了。并没有金融界的人士出现,尽管他们是精英意识最浓重的一群人,并且自认为能改变世界,这从一个简单的例子就可以看出。当克林顿还是美国总统的时候,在一次宴会上,一位夫人问希拉里做世界上最有权势的人的妻子该是什么感觉,但是未等希拉里回答,旋即改口:“噢,也许我该去问格林斯潘夫人。”显然同企业家和金融家相比,《时代》周刊认为政治家们对这个世界的影响更大。即使是在金融危机席卷全球的时候,也没有哪个金融界人士能够挤进《时代》的年度人物。

每一次对美国影响巨大的战争都会让《时代》选择军界人士作为年度人物。1943年和1944年,马歇尔将军和艾森豪威尔将军分别成为《时代》的年度人物,前者是因为帮助美国准备了战争,美国军队从20万扩张到800万。而后者则是因为率领盟军取得对德的辉煌战绩。此后两人分别因为马歇尔计划和成为美国总统再次当选年度人物。朝鲜战争让美国大兵G·I·Joe成为1950年的《时代》年度人物;越南战争则使韦斯特·莫兰,美国越战司令成为了1965年的《时代》年度人物。我们熟悉的伊拉克战争则推出了一个群体:美国士兵。

在年度人物的选择上,国际组织也没有得到《时代》的重视,无论是联合国还是国际货币基金组织,没有任何一位官员能够进入《时代》的视野。

读到这里,你会以为《时代》选择年度人物的参考资料是怀特·米尔斯的《权力精英》:政治家、企业高管和军界人士构成了年度人物的绝大多数。但是必须承认,《时代》选择年度人物的视野相当开阔,成为《时代》年度人物的还包括两位教皇(1962、1994)、一位飞行员林白(1927,也是第一位年度人物)、三位首次登上月球的宇航员(1968)、一位在艾滋病防治领域做出突出贡献的医生(1996)、十三位科学领域的领头羊(1960),甚至还有温莎公爵夫人(1936),“爱江山更爱美人”的主角,征服了英国国王的最有魅力的女人。而计算机(1982)和危险中的地球(1988)成为《时代》的年度人物,也可以看出《时代》的标准并非死板。年轻一代、中产阶层、美国妇女也都曾作为一个群体成为《时代》的年度人物。2002年,三位分别揭开世通、安然和FBI丑闻的女士成为《时代》的年度人物,也让人觉察到《时代》的正义感。当《时代》评选世纪人物时,任何一位伟大的政治家无论是罗斯福还是丘吉尔,或者是影响世界深远的希特勒、斯大林都没有能够取代爱因斯坦在《时代》心中的地位,可以看出《时代》的标准并非一些人认为的那般总统至上和美国至上,无论如何,同爱因斯坦相比,也还是三次成为《时代》年度人物的罗斯福更能代表美国。

《时代》的选择也带有时代的特点。很明显,冷战结束以后,90年代和之后的《时代》年度人物中,国际政治领袖很少出现,已经进行的15次年度人物评选中,只有拉宾、阿拉法特、克拉克、曼德拉作为和平缔造者在1993年被集体评为年度人物。而美国总统5次入选,不包括总统的美国政治家3次入选。此前,70年代、80年代各有5次国际政治领袖入选,50年代有6次,40年代有3次,30年代有6次。60年代的10次评选结果都是美国国内的人群或人,这或许是因为60年代是美国的多事之秋,从年度人物也可看出:科学家、种族运动领袖马丁·路德·金,越战司令官(可以同反战运动相联系)、年轻一代(可以同学生运动、嬉皮士相联系)、中产阶层和林登·约翰逊(都可以同美国60年代的反贫穷、要求平等的运动相联系)。

如果试图解释90年代之后《时代》更多的选择美国国内人、人群作为年度人物,最容易的方法是将之归结为美国的大国思维——令人哭笑不得并且无法否认的是,从一战结束算起,美国就已经成为不可忽视的大国,而到了20世纪90年代,真正的大国也只有美国了。美国总统被称为全世界权力最大的人,尽管他的权力是受到制约的权力。而且不能忘记的是,《时代》周刊是一份美国杂志,在同样具有影响力的人物中,它完全有权利优先考虑本国的杰出人物。而真正具有国际视野的看法应该是,从行业来看,《时代》的选择的确反映了90年代以来影响世界的人物和力量:两位新兴技术和行业的企业家、应对艾滋病的医生、公司和政府丑闻的接露者,以及试图给世界带来和平的政治家。

“不偏不倚与公正的区别是什么?一个有责任感的新闻工作者对在他看来是符合实际情况的事实进行分析时,是有偏向的。他只要不是为了说明自己的观点而歪曲事实,只要不隐瞒说明一个不同观点的事实真相,他就是公正的。”在纪念《时代》创刊两周年的一篇文章中,《时代》这样宣布。《时代》从未标榜自己能够不偏不倚地报道世界,它只是忠实地反映出自己眼中的世界,即使有时是带着强烈的偏见。因此我们不能过分指责《时代》年度人物的选择上存在偏向性,而是要看到《时代》想要展现给我们的影响我们世界的力量和人物。

2006-12-14

切除包皮有助于预防艾滋病

美国国家健康协会(National Institutes of Health )最新研究成果表明,切除包皮有助于预防艾滋病。报道说包皮内侧有很多Langerhans细胞,这些细胞容易寄生爱滋病毒,而且包皮在性交过程中容易造成轻微的破损,这样增加了感染爱滋病毒的可能性。

《纽约时报》《独立报》《卫报》等各大报纸对此均有报道。

Exploring Google's Hidden Features

原文
Google Is a Calculator

When you can’t be troubled to reach over and pick up the handheld calculator sitting on your desk, you can use Google as a high-tech web-based calculator. All you have to do is enter your equation or formula into the standard Google search box, and then click the Google Search button. The result of the calculation is displayed on the search results page; it’s that simple.

You can use the standard algebraic operators to construct your calculations—+, -, x, and / for addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division, accordingly. For example, to add 2 plus 3, enter 2 + 3 and press Enter. To divide 10 by 2, enter 10 / 2, and so on.

And Google’s calculator isn’t limited to basic addition and multiplication. It can also handle more advanced calculations, trigonometric functions, inverse trigonometric functions, hyperbolic functions, and logarithmic functions. Just enter the proper formula into the search box, and wait for Google to display the answer.

Google Knows Mathematical Constants

In addition to performing calculations, Google also knows a variety of mathematical and scientific constants, such as pi, Avogadro’s Number, and Planck’s Constant. It also knows the radius of the Earth, the mass of the sun, the speed of light, the gravitational constant, and a lot more.

For example, if you’re not sure what the value of pi is, just enter pi into the Search box and press Enter; Google returns 3.14159265, as it should. How about the speed of light? Enter speed of light, and Google returns 299,792,458 m/s. It’s amazing what Google knows.

Google Converts Units of Measure

Another surprise is that Google’s calculator also handles conversions. It knows miles and meters, furlongs and light years, seconds and fortnights, and even angstroms and Smoots—and can convert from one unit of measurement to another.

The key to using the Google calculator as a converter is to express your query using the proper syntax. In essence, you want to start with the first measure, followed by the word "in," followed by the second unit of measure. A general query looks like this: x firstunits in secondunits.

For example, to find out how many feet equal a meter, enter the query 1 meter in feet. Not sure how many teaspoons are in a cup? Enter 1 cup in teaspoons. Want to convert 100 U.S. dollars into Euros? Then enter 100 usd in euros. And so on and so forth.

Google Is a Dictionary

Want to look up the definition of a particular word, but don’t want to bother pulling out the old hardcover dictionary? Not sure of a specific spelling? Then use Google as an online dictionary to look up any word you can think of. It’s easy—and there are two ways to do it.

The first approach to looking up definitions is to use a ´All you have to do is enter the keywords what is in your query, followed by the word in question. (No question mark is necessary.) For example, to look up the definition of the word "defenestrate," enter what is defenestrate.

When you use a "what is" search, Google returns a standard search results page (typically with several useful definition links in the list), as well as a definition section at the top of the page. This section includes a short definition of the word and two useful links. The first link, disguised as the result title, is actually a link to other definitions of the word on the web. The second link, Definition in Context, displays an example of the word used in a sentence.

Google Is a Glossary

Even more definitions are available when you use the Google Glossary feature. Google Glossary is what Google calls it, anyway; really, it’s just another advanced search operator that produces some very specific results.

The operator in question is define:. Use this operator before the word you want defined, with no spaces between. So, for example, if you want to define the word "defenestrate," enter the query define:defenestrate.

When your query includes the define: operator, Google displays a special definitions page. This page includes all the definitions for the word that Google found on the web; click a link to view the full definition.

And here’s something else to know. If you want to define a phrase, use the define: operator but put the phrase in quotation marks. For example, to define the phrase "peer to peer", enter the query define:"peer to peer".

Google Lists All the Facts

When you’re looking for hard facts, Google might be able to help. Yes, Google always returns a list of sites that match your specific query, but if you phrase your query correctly—and are searching for a fact that Google has pre-identified—you can get the precise information you need at the top of the search results page.

What types of information are we talking about? Fact-based information, such as birthdates, birthplaces, population, and so on. All you have to do is enter a query that states the fact you want to know. For example:
To find the population of San Francisco, enter population san Francisco.
To find where Mark Twain was born, enter birthplace mark twain.
To find when President Bill Clinton was born, enter birthday bill clinton.
To find when Raymond Chandler died, enter die raymond chandler.
To find who is the president of Germany, enter president germany.

The answers to these questions are displayed at the top of your search results page. You get the precise answer to your question, according to the referenced website. Click the associated link to learn more from this source.

Google Displays Weather Reports

Did you know that Google can be used to find and display current weather conditions and forecasts? It’s a pretty easy search; all you have to do is enter the keyword weather, followed by the location. You can enter the location as a city name, city plus state, or Zip code. For example, to view the weather forecast for Minneapolis, enter weather minneapolis.

Google displays current weather conditions and a four-day forecast at the top of the search results page. And, while this is a good summary report, you may want to click through to the more detailed forecasts offered in the standard search results listings below the four-day forecast.

Google Knows Current Airport Conditions

Weather information is important to travelers, as is information about flight and airport delays. Fortunately, you can use the main Google search page to search for this information, just as you did with weather forecasts.

To search for weather conditions and delays at a particular airport, all you have to do is enter the airport’s three-letter code, followed by the word airport. For example, to view conditions at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport (with the code MSP), enter msp airport. This displays a link to conditions at the chosen airport; click this link for detailed information.

Google Tracks Flight Status

Google also lets you track the status of any U.S. flight and many international flights. All you have to do is enter the flight number into the Google search box. For example, to find out the status of United Airlines flight 116, enter ua116.

Google now displays links to three sites that let you track the flight status—Travelocity, Expedia, and fboweb. Click one of these links to view real-time flight status—including maps of where the plane is in its route.

Google Tracks Packages

Airline flights aren’t the only things you can track with Google. Google also lets you track the status of package deliveries, from the U.S. Postal Service, FedEx, and UPS. All you have to do is enter the package’s tracking number into the Google search box, and Google will display a link to the service’s tracking page for that package.

Google Is a Giant Phone Directory

As part of its massive database of information, Google now includes listings for millions of U.S. households in what it calls the Google PhoneBook. You search the PhoneBook listings from the main Google search box, using specific query parameters.

All you have to do is enter some combination of the following parameters: first name (or initial), last name, city, state, or Zip code. For example, to search for John Smith in Minneapolis, enter john smith minneapolis mn. As you might suspect, the more details you provide, the more targeted your results will be.

When you enter your query using one of these methods, Google returns a search result page with a PhoneBook Results item at the top of the results list. The two or three names listed here aren’t the only matches in the Google PhoneBook, however. To see the other matching names, click the PhoneBook Results link; this displays a full page of PhoneBook listings.

And here’s something even more cool—Google lets you perform reverse phone number lookups. Just enter the full phone number, including area code, into the standard Google search box. You can enter all 10 numbers in a row, without hyphens (like this: 1234567890), or use the standard hyphenated form (like this: 123-456-7890); Google accepts either method. When you click the search button, Google displays a single matching PhoneBook result.

Google Knows Area Codes

It goes without saying that if Google knows phone numbers, it also knows area codes. If you have an area code and want to know which city it serves, just enter the area code; Google will return the city in which that area code resides.

Google Has Movie Information

Numbers aren’t the only types of information available via a Google lookup. You can also use the standard Google search box to look up movie reviews and showtimes. All you have to do is enter the word movies followed by the name of the movie. For example, to find out when Casino Royale is showing in your neighborhood, enter movies casino royale.

Google now displays a movie information section at the top of the search results page. From here you can click to view movie reviews, showtimes for a theater near you, and so on.
And if you can’t remember the name of a given movie, you can use Google to figure it out for you. Just enter the movie: operator, followed by whatever information you do know—an actor’s name, the movie’s director, a plot detail, or whatever. Google returns a list of movies that match your search criteria, along with reviews for each movie listed. Click the movie title to view more reviews for that movie.

Google Loves Music

Google not only lets you search for movie information, it also is a great search engine for music. Google knows the names of tens of thousands of popular performers; all you have to do is enter the performer’s name in the search box, and Google returns specific information about that performer.

For example, when you search for norah jones, Google displays a Norah Jones section at the top of the search results page. This section includes a brief listing of the artist’s most recent (or most well-known) albums and songs.

And there’s more. Click the performer’s name and you see a visual listing of the artist’s albums. Click any album art or title and you see a listing of album tracks, a link to album reviews, and links to download tracks from the album from a variety of online music stores. Back on the main artist page, there are also links to websites devoted to the artist, news about the artist, photos of the artist, and mentions of the artists in Google Groups discussion forums.

Google Knows the Answer to the Ultimate Question

Let’s return to Google’s calculator for one final hidden feature. As you recall, the Google calculator has been hardwired to include the answers to some fairly complex—and fairly fanciful—calculations. For a bit of fun, try entering the query what is the answer to life the universe and everything. Google’s answer should delight long-time fans of Douglas Adams’ The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. (It’s "42", in case you were wondering.)

2006-12-13

记一次有意义的聚会

须金矿,好吃的炒面,引三五伉俪来喝酒。

无论从理论还是经验上来讲,聚会一般都是相当有意义的,因为从那里可以八卦到很多八卦。

人还是那些人,该胖的继续胖,胖不了的依然瘦。比如古典诗人民政干部JJ同学尽管五点下班,之后携工商局的夫人早早来到,可依然看不出有发福的苗头。而公安厅的JH同学就不一样了,从外表看是典型的中国阿SIR,尽管目前来看其本质还是好的阿SIR。

上楼,坐定,关小音乐,开始吃饭。SSLP和GR师妹表现突出,手脚麻利地运回一堆好吃的东东。少有地享受了一回当男人的尊严,心花暗暗在秘密处盛开。

然后电话不断响起,明显地体会到里万机的快感。于是,YW同学、XX同学、PH伉俪、XY师姐、CH同学、CM同学、CY老师、XX师姐的BF先后到来,场面开始壮观。YW同学一袭黑色风衣,尽显熟女魅力,尽管苗条了很多,可脸蛋仍比MSN上的照片圆润一点,正如JH同学事先所料,她穿裙子了。XX同学瘦了很多,不知道是西藏之行的舟车劳顿,还是人民教师的职业让她心力交瘁,无人知道。PH伉俪的出现,引起了一阵小小的骚动,因为P同学实在太像哈利·波特了,我疑心她身边的太太就是J·K·罗琳,如果他们两人再带上一把扫帚那就perfect了。XY师姐刚坐定就带来一个振奋人心的消息:她的师弟BF迟点会光临,并有可能带来小鸡翼。接着就是CH同学、CM同学和XY师姐的BF。CY老师的莅临把聚会推上第一个高潮,他说他被人了,所以才没有第一时间赶到,原来他去参加刘小枫老师希腊古典语言的博士生讨论课。至此少长咸集、群贤毕至。

聚会始终在亲切友好、热烈活泼的气氛中进行,聚会各方就共同关心问题,坦诚地交换了意见,并达成了广泛的共识。以下是聚会过程中的一些花絮:

我刚到门外吩咐服务员拿啤酒,回来刚坐下,CH同学就问问要了酒没有,所谓心有灵犀也不过如此。后来得知,现在我俩上班的地方分别位于农林路的两端,how to say呢,“君住长江头,我住长江尾,日日……”

银行家CM同学悄悄地来,正如她悄悄地走,其实我一直想跟她讨论,中国银行业对外开放后,会给我们老百姓带来什么好处,比如说,外国银行会不会给我们提供无息的住房贷款……

XY师姐的师弟BF最终没有带来我们中意食的小鸡翼,而是一袋好吃的橘子……

其实,此次聚会的主题是唱歌。善解人意的XX同学在CY老师刚到的时候就给他点了一首《那一场风花雪月的事》,作为CY老师的代表作,我是在大一圣诞节的晚会上第一次听他唱这首歌的。由于送提前回家的SSLP下楼,没有欣赏到他这次的演绎。回来的时候就听到他唱庞龙的《无情的背叛》,JH同学说:TMD,老师的声音还这么年轻。已经HIGH起来的CY老师后来又来了一首《死了都要爱》,显然已经有点力不从心,他终于还是失声了。

YW同学整晚唱着男人的歌曲,也不知道是为了什么。XX师姐和XX同学唱的歌我一句都听0吾明,这让我感到自己的未老先衰。而CM同学《梦回唐朝》的倾情演出让人倍感难得,毕竟激情仍在啊。作为曾经的维纳斯校园歌手大赛的冠军,PH同学唱着“个个说你老婆无晒胸肌”的时候,让人感到一种灵魂的颤栗。据说他在演唱Beyond的某首歌的时候居然情动于衷以至于潸然泪下。看着他和他的罗琳老婆同抽一支烟同喝一杯酒同唱一首歌,我突然想,雎鸠关关、琴瑟和鸣大概也就是这个样子吧。

可惜JJ伉俪和CM同学未唱一首就匆匆离去了,相比而言,JJ同学还是非常难得,毕竟《有多少爱可以胡来》作为聚会的压轴歌曲,最终还是由他来演绎。

出乎意料的是我还收到了出乎意料的表扬。CY老师说我外表软弱,其实很大气;YW同学说我有时有点幽默。这让我相当局促,以致于有点坐立不安:要是把“外表软弱”和“有时有点”去掉就更完美更到位了,我觉得表扬人就应该不遗余力地令人发指地狠狠地往死里表扬。

此外。

不出意外的话,CY老师这个月就要当上副教授了;

中文系有可能聘请谢有顺作为教授;

PH同学有可能出国深造。

总之,这是一次团结的聚会,一次胜利的聚会,一次和谐的聚会。用一个字来概括就是一次有意义的聚会。

几幅画的回忆

早上打开google主页,发现其logo变成了上图。

曾经在初中的时候,美术老师拿着一张画着苹果的素描作业在班上讲: 把苹果画成这样的同学,不仅会引来苹果们的抗议,也对不起这5毛钱一张的白纸。很不幸,美术老师说的那位同学正是我。这是我从小没有艺术感觉带来的后果,影响所及,至今我不喜欢看电影,看不懂美术作品,只能听流行歌曲——而且限定中文。

但是就算这样,在那时的美术课上,有几幅画还是给了我深刻的印象。一幅叫做《泉》,一个少女肩上扛着个花瓶,(就像我刚刚扛着桶装水一样)瓶口朝下,瓶里的水像瀑布一样直流下来,晶莹透彻。和水一样晶莹透彻的是这个少女:她没穿衣服。忘了课本和老师是怎样介绍这幅作品的,反正应该不是在洗澡,我之所以对其念念不忘,是因为那是我当时为数不多的可以看到女人裸体的机会。

另一幅是《自由引导人民》,据说反映的是法国1830年七月革命(这是我刚才确认的)的场景。陈升《关于男人》里唱到“Wine,Woman and War 是男人永远的最爱。”一个初中生虽然还不能算是男人,但至少也有男人因子的萌动了。我在心理暗暗地想,用这样一个半露酥胸的女人冲在前面,紧随其后的臭男人应该会多一点吧。后来老师说,这女的象征着自由女神,当时我不明白自由女神为什么要这样装束,当然现在也仍然有点迷糊。
再有一幅就是上面这幅《呐喊》,对其印象深刻,是因为这样的作品冲击了我固有(如果有的话)审美感受,有解释说这是后工业时代里人极度痛苦的象征。在我的印象里这是毕加索的作品。刚才看到google将其作为logo,感觉好奇怪。一查,才知道画的作者叫爱德华·蒙克(Edvard Munch),是“挪威表现主义画家和版画复制匠。他对心理苦闷的强烈的,呼唤式的处理手法对20世纪初德国表现主义的成长起了主要的影响。”生于1863年12月12日,故于1944年1月23日。原来google弄这个是为了纪念爱老师的生日。不知道还有什么人享受过这种待遇?会有什么人将享受这种待遇?

2006-12-11

The Top 100——The most influential figures in American history

《大西洋月刊》邀请10位顶级的历史学家评出美国历史上100个最有影响力的人物

1 Abraham Lincoln
He saved the Union, freed the slaves, and presided over America’s second founding.

2 George Washington
He made the United States possible—not only by defeating a king, but by declining to become one himself.

3 Thomas Jefferson
The author of the five most important words in American history: “All men are created equal.”

4 Franklin Delano Roosevelt
He said, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself,” and then he proved it.


5 Alexander Hamilton
Soldier, banker, and political scientist, he set in motion an agrarian nation’s transformation into an industrial power.

6 Benjamin Franklin
The Founder-of-all-trades— scientist, printer, writer, diplomat, inventor, and more; like his country, he contained multitudes.

7 John Marshall
The defining chief justice, he established the Supreme Court as the equal of the other two federal branches.

8 Martin Luther King Jr.
His dream of racial equality is still elusive, but no one did more to make it real.

9 Thomas Edison
It wasn’t just the lightbulb; the Wizard of Menlo Park was the most prolific inventor in American history.

10 Woodrow Wilson
He made the world safe for U.S. interventionism, if not for democracy.

11 John D. Rockefeller
The man behind Standard Oil set the mold for our tycoons—first by making money, then by giving it away.

12 Ulysses S. Grant
He was a poor president, but he was the general Lincoln needed; he also wrote the greatest political memoir in American history.

13 James Madison
He fathered the Constitution and wrote the Bill of Rights.

14 Henry Ford
He gave us the assembly line and the Model T, and sparked America’s love affair with the automobile.

15 Theodore Roosevelt
Whether busting trusts or building canals, he embodied the “strenuous life” and blazed a trail for twentieth-century America.

16 Mark Twain
Author of our national epic, he was the most unsentimental observer of our national life.

17 Ronald Reagan
The amiable architect of both the conservative realignment and the Cold War’s end.

18 Andrew Jackson
The first great populist: he found America a republic and left it a democracy.

19 Thomas Paine
The voice of the American Revolution, and our first great radical.

20 Andrew Carnegie
The original self-made man forged America’s industrial might and became one of the nation’s greatest philanthropists.

21 Harry Truman
An accidental president, this machine politician ushered in the Atomic Age and then the Cold War.

22 Walt Whitman
He sang of America and shaped the country’s conception of itself.

23 Wright Brothers
They got us all off the ground.

24 Alexander Graham Bell
By inventing the telephone, he opened the age of telecommunications and shrank the world.

25 John Adams
His leadership made the American Revolution possible; his devotion to republicanism made it succeed.

26 Walt Disney
The quintessential entertainer-entrepreneur, he wielded unmatched influence over our childhood.

27 Eli Whitney
His gin made cotton king and sustained an empire for slavery.

28 Dwight Eisenhower
He won a war and two elections, and made everybody like Ike.

29 Earl Warren
His Supreme Court transformed American society and bequeathed to us the culture wars.

30 Elizabeth Cady Stanton
One of the first great American feminists, she fought for social reform and women’s right to vote.

31 Henry Clay
One of America’s greatest legislators and orators, he forged compromises that held off civil war for decades.

32 Albert Einstein
His greatest scientific work was done in Europe, but his humanity earned him undying fame in America.

33 Ralph Waldo Emerson
The bard of individualism, he relied on himself—and told us all to do the same.

34 Jonas Salk
His vaccine for polio eradicated one of the world’s worst plagues.

35 Jackie Robinson
He broke baseball’s color barrier and embodied integration’s promise.

36 William Jennings Bryan
“The Great Commoner” lost three presidential elections, but his populism transformed the country.

37 J. P. Morgan
The great financier and banker was the prototype for all the Wall Street barons who followed.

38 Susan B. Anthony
She was the country’s most eloquent voice for women’s equality under the law.

39 Rachel Carson
The author of Silent Spring was godmother to the environmental movement.

40 John Dewey
He sought to make the public school a training ground for democratic life.

41 Harriet Beecher Stowe
Her Uncle Tom’s Cabin inspired a generation of abolitionists and set the stage for civil war.

42 Eleanor Roosevelt
She used the first lady’s office and the mass media to become “first lady of the world.”

43 W. E. B. DuBois
One of America’s great intellectuals, he made the “problem of the color line” his life’s work.

44 Lyndon Baines Johnson
His brilliance gave us civil-rights laws; his stubbornness gave us Vietnam.

45 Samuel F. B. Morse
Before the Internet, there was Morse code.

46 William Lloyd Garrison
Through his newspaper, The Liberator, he became the voice of abolition.

47 Frederick Douglass
After escaping from slavery, he pricked the nation’s conscience with an eloquent accounting of its crimes.

48 Robert Oppenheimer
The father of the atomic bomb and the regretful midwife of the nuclear era.

49 Frederick Law Olmsted
The genius behind New York’s Central Park, he inspired the greening of America’s cities.

50 James K. Polk
This one-term president’s Mexican War landgrab gave us California, Texas, and the Southwest.

51 Margaret Sanger
The ardent champion of birth control—and of the sexual freedom that came with it.

52 Joseph Smith
The founder of Mormonism, America’s most famous homegrown faith.

53 Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.
Known as “The Great Dissenter,” he wrote Supreme Court opinions that continue to shape American jurisprudence.

54 Bill Gates
The Rockefeller of the Information Age, in business and philanthropy alike.

55 John Quincy Adams
The Monroe Doctrine’s real author, he set nineteenth-century America’s diplomatic course.

56 Horace Mann
His tireless advocacy of universal public schooling earned him the title “The Father of American Education.”

57 Robert E. Lee
He was a good general but a better symbol, embodying conciliation in defeat.

58 John C. Calhoun
The voice of the antebellum South, he was slavery’s most ardent defender.

59 Louis Sullivan
The father of architectural modernism, he shaped the defining American building: the skyscraper.

60 William Faulkner
The most gifted chronicler of America’s tormented and fascinating South.

61 Samuel Gompers
The country’s greatest labor organizer, he made the golden age of unions possible.

62 William James
The mind behind Pragmatism, America’s most important philosophical school.

63 George Marshall
As a general, he organized the American effort in World War II; as a statesman, he rebuilt Western Europe.

64 Jane Addams
The founder of Hull House, she became the secular saint of social work.

65 Henry David Thoreau
The original American dropout, he has inspired seekers of authenticity for 150 years.

66 Elvis Presley
The king of rock and roll. Enough said.

67 P. T. Barnum
The circus impresario’s taste for spectacle paved the way for blockbuster movies and reality TV.

68 James D. Watson
He codiscovered DNA’s double helix, revealing the code of life to scientists and entrepreneurs alike.

69 James Gordon Bennett
As the founding publisher of The New York Herald, he invented the modern American newspaper.

70 Lewis and Clark
They went west to explore, and millions followed in their wake.

71 Noah Webster
He didn’t create American English, but his dictionary defined it.

72 Sam Walton
He promised us “Every Day Low Prices,” and we took him up on the offer.

73 Cyrus McCormick
His mechanical reaper spelled the end of traditional farming, and the beginning of industrial agriculture.

74 Brigham Young
What Joseph Smith founded, Young preserved, leading the Mormons to their promised land.

75 George Herman “Babe” Ruth
He saved the national pastime in the wake of the Black Sox scandal—and permanently linked sports and celebrity.

76 Frank Lloyd Wright
America’s most significant architect, he was the archetype of the visionary artist at odds with capitalism.

77 Betty Friedan
She spoke to the discontent of housewives everywhere—and inspired a revolution in gender roles.

78 John Brown
Whether a hero, a fanatic, or both, he provided the spark for the Civil War.

79 Louis Armstrong
His talent and charisma took jazz from the cathouses of Storyville to Broadway, television, and beyond.

80 William Randolph Hearst
The press baron who perfected yellow journalism and helped start the Spanish-American War.

81 Margaret Mead
With Coming of Age in Samoa, she made anthropology relevant—and controversial.

82 George Gallup
He asked Americans what they thought, and the politicians listened.

83 James Fenimore Cooper
The novels are unreadable, but he was the first great mythologizer of the frontier.

84 Thurgood Marshall
As a lawyer and a Supreme Court justice, he was the legal architect of the civil-rights revolution.

85 Ernest Hemingway
His spare style defined American modernism, and his life made machismo a cliché.

86 Mary Baker Eddy
She got off her sickbed and founded Christian Science, which promised spiritual healing to all.

87 Benjamin Spock
With a single book—and a singular approach—he changed American parenting.

88 Enrico Fermi
A giant of physics, he helped develop quantum theory and was instrumental in building the atomic bomb.

89 Walter Lippmann
The last man who could swing an election with a newspaper column.

90 Jonathan Edwards
Forget the fire and brimstone: his subtle eloquence made him the country’s most influential theologian.

91 Lyman Beecher
Harriet Beecher Stowe’s clergyman father earned fame as an abolitionist and an evangelist.

92 John Steinbeck
As the creator of Tom Joad, he chronicled Depression-era misery.

93 Nat Turner
He was the most successful rebel slave; his specter would stalk the white South for a century.

94 George Eastman
The founder of Kodak democratized photography with his handy rolls of film.

95 Sam Goldwyn
A producer for forty years, he was the first great Hollywood mogul.

96 Ralph Nader
He made the cars we drive safer; thirty years later, he made George W. Bush the president.

97 Stephen Foster
America’s first great songwriter, he brought us “O! Susanna” and “My Old Kentucky Home.”

98 Booker T. Washington
As an educator and a champion of self-help, he tried to lead black America up from slavery.

99 Richard Nixon
He broke the New Deal majority, and then broke his presidency on a scandal that still haunts America.

100 Herman Melville
Moby Dick was a flop at the time, but Melville is remembered as the American Shakespeare.