3/31/2007

Movie Review: An Inconvenient Truth by A. O. Scott


New York Times May 24, 2006
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/24/movies/24trut.htmlex=1180065600&en=42220907b0fd919b&ei=5083

An Inconvenient Truth /不願面對的真相 by A. O. Scott (a well-known movie critic)

CANNES, France, May 23 — "An Inconvenient Truth," Davis Guggenheim's new documentary about the dangers of climate change, is a film that should never have been made. It is, after all, the job of political leaders and policymakers to protect against possible future calamities, to respond to the findings of science and to persuade the public that action must be taken to protect the common interest.

An image of a glacier in Peru, before it was diminished by climate change.
But when this does not happen — and it is hardly a partisan statement to observe that, in the case of global warming, it hasn't — others must take up the responsibility: filmmakers, activists, scientists, even retired politicians. That "An Inconvenient Truth" should not have to exist is a reason to be grateful that it does.

Appearances to the contrary, Mr. Guggenheim's movie is not really about Al Gore. It consists mainly of a multimedia presentation on climate change that Mr. Gore has given many times over the last few years, interspersed with interviews and Mr. Gore's voice-over reflections on his life in and out of politics. His presence is, in some ways, a distraction, since it guarantees that "An Inconvenient Truth" will become fodder for the cynical, ideologically facile sniping that often passes for political discourse these days. But really, the idea that worrying about the effect of carbon-dioxide emissions on the world's climate makes you some kind of liberal kook is as tired as the image of Mr. Gore as a stiff, humorless speaker, someone to make fun of rather than take seriously.

In any case, Mr. Gore has long since proven to be a deft self-satirist. (He recently told a moderator at a Cannes Film Festival news conference to address him as "your Adequacy.") He makes a few jokes to leaven the grim gist of "An Inconvenient Truth," and some of them are funny, in the style of a college lecturer's attempts to keep the attention of his captive audience. Indeed, his onstage manner — pacing back and forth, fiddling with gadgets, gesturing for emphasis — is more a professor's than a politician's. If he were not the man who, in his own formulation "used to be the next president of the United States of America," he might have settled down to tenure and a Volvo (or maybe a Prius) in some leafy academic grove.

But as I said, the movie is not about him. He is, rather, the surprisingly engaging vehicle for some very disturbing information. His explanations of complex environmental phenomena — the jet stream has always been a particularly tough one for me to grasp — are clear, and while some of the visual aids are a little corny, most of the images are stark, illuminating and powerful.

I can't think of another movie in which the display of a graph elicited gasps of horror, but when the red lines showing the increasing rates of carbon-dioxide emissions and the corresponding rise in temperatures come on screen, the effect is jolting and chilling. Photographs of receding ice fields and glaciers — consequences of climate change that have already taken place — are as disturbing as speculative maps of submerged coastlines. The news of increased hurricane activity and warming oceans is all the more alarming for being delivered in Mr. Gore's matter-of-fact, scholarly tone.

He speaks of the need to reduce carbon-dioxide emissions as a "moral imperative," and most people who see this movie will do so out of a sense of duty, which seems to me entirely appropriate. Luckily, it happens to be a well-made documentary, edited crisply enough to keep it from feeling like 90 minutes of C-Span and shaped to give Mr. Gore's argument a real sense of drama. As unsettling as it can be, it is also intellectually exhilarating, and, like any good piece of pedagogy, whets the appetite for further study. This is not everything you need to know about global warming: that's the point. But it is a good place to start, and to continue, a process of education that could hardly be more urgent. "An Inconvenient Truth" is a necessary film.

"An Inconvenient Truth" is rated PG (Parental guidance suggested). Some of the subjects discussed might be upsetting.



3/29/2007

Take Action Right Now!

1. Finish my autobiography today.

2. Finish Cognitive homework and read the textbook by tomorrow.

3. Check all important information for company interviews in a week.

4. Check all important information for a backpack trip in 3 days.

5. Forbid to read comic books or watch TV in 3 months.

6. Exercise regularly for the rest of my life.

Finally, Be happy everyday without regrets!

3/26/2007

My Favorite Poem 2

The Guitarist Tunes Up by Frnces Cornford
With what attentive courtesy he bent
Over his instrument;
Not as a lordly conqueror who could
Command both wire and wood,
But as a man with a loved woman might,
Inquiring with delight
What slight essential things she had to say
Before they started, he and she, to play.


- very educational and inspirational
- I like the attentive attitude courtesy of the guitarist and the subtle atmosphere between the two, so attractive.

3/25/2007

My favorite poem 1

I'm Nobody by Emily Dickinson
I'm no body! Who are you?
Are you nobody too?
Then there's a pair of us? Don't tell!
They'd advertise, you know!
How dreary to be somebody!
How public - like a frog -
to tell one's name the livelong June
to an admiring blog
--Humerous, sarcastic, and friendly (to me)
--most importantly, this poem exactly addresses my feelings.
--I'm nobody, but will I be happy for it? It depends. :)

3/24/2007

Amazingly Great -to Travel in Greece

Today I got up quite late, at 9:20, which is very unlike me.
Vickie's call and Mei's voice woke me up. I've made an appointment with Vickie at 9:00, so knowing the time indeed shocked me. > < Better time management, next time!

So happy for Vickie's tolerance for my laziness, I left my house at 10:05 to her house. Today is a very big day for us, for we planed beforehand to decide the itinerary of a backpack trip in Greece this summer.

What have been done during a morning and an afternoon?
1. Places that both of us wanted to go have been decided.
2. Detailed problems revealed and discussed: the plane ticket's price, the fare between the sea, and the connection time and availability between islands or cities.

Extremely happy to challenge myself, Mom, and Dad at the same time!
There must be so many challenges to take and overcame before dreams come true!

3/16/2007

Do not think too much


Usually when I deliberate a lot about little details seriously, people would recommend not thinking too much. Am I too sensitive on unnecessary details? Maybe, but I would like to listen to their suggestions and still follow my heart. My heart is very resilient that can be narrowed or broadened depending on what I believe to become. Right now...just relax a bit, do not push yourself too hard. Everything will be just fine. You can think too much...on the positive side.

Right now, time management is my priority. I must learn to cherish life as I'll never turn back time. Truly I cannot go back, but usually people are very forgetful or ignorant. Anyway, life is very beautiful indeed, just that for a lot of things we took for granted so easily.

3/11/2007

Vocabulary from The Joy Luck Club: ch. 8

The Joy Luck Club

Two Kinds


lop (vt.)剪,砍伐,斬(vi.)下垂,閑蕩(a.)垂下的砍伐,剪下的樹枝

bang (n.) 重擊,突然巨響,劉海(vt.)(vi.)發巨響,重擊(ad.)砰然地,突然巨響地,直接地

manger (n.) 馬槽,牛槽,擋水板

prop支柱,支持者,倚靠人,道具,螺旋槳(vt.)支撐,維持

bellow (v.)吼,咆哮,大聲叫喊

foghorn (n.) a warning device consisting of a horn that generates a loud low tone粗嘎的聲音

frenzy (n.) 狂暴,狂怒

lilt(vt.)(vi.)唱輕快的調子,輕快地動輕快活潑的調子,輕快的動作

saucy(a.)傲慢的,莽撞的,活潑的,漂亮的

slide (n.) 滑,滑道,滑梯,山崩,雪崩,幻燈片(vt.)使滑動,偷偷放入(vi.)滑動,滑落,滑

frantic(a.)狂亂的,瘋狂的

arpeggio (n.) 和音急速彈奏[法]

reverie (n.) 夢想,沈思,幻想曲

petticoat (n.) 裙子,童裝,女裝;女人,女性,少女

snotty (a.)流鼻涕的,下賤的

showpiece (n.) 展出地

dawdle (vi.)(vt.)遊手好閑,混日子

medallion (n.) 大獎章,圓形浮雕,圓形裝飾

nosy (n.) (a.)鼻子大的,好管閑事的,愛追問的大鼻者

ruse (n.) 策略,謀略,詭計

sill (n.) 基石;基木;門檻;窗臺

stairwell (n.) a vertical well around which there is a stairway

feisty (a.) 積極的,脾氣不好的

smock (n.) 工作服,罩衫,套掛(vt.)使穿上工作服,做出裝飾用衣褶

scallion (n.) 青蔥,冬蔥,大蔥

hoist (n.) 升高,起重機,推動(vt.)(vi.)升起,升高,舉起

heave 舉,拋,起伏,鼓起(vt.)用力舉起,使脹起,使鼓起(vi.)拋出,起伏,喘息,凸起

tidbit (n.) 一口;小片;珍聞;小欄報導

pry (n.) 窺探,好奇者(vi.)打聽,窺探(vt.)橇,用杠杆撬開

exasperation (n.) 惱怒

snicker (n.) 竊笑(vi.)竊笑(vt.)竊笑著說

fiasco (n.) 慘敗,大失敗

wedge (n.) 楔子,楔形物,起因,使分裂的東西(vt.)楔住,嵌,擠進,楔入(vi.)楔入,擠進

budge(vi.)移動,微微一動(vt.)推動羔皮

yank (vt.)(vi.)猛拉

slack(n.)鬆弛,靜止,淡季,閑散,家常褲(a.)鬆弛的,不流暢的,疏忽的,懶散的,無力的

brittle(a.)易碎的,脆弱的,易壞的

recital (n.) 背誦,吟誦,詳述

pouch(n.) 小袋,小包,眼袋,郵袋,育兒袋(vt.)裝…入袋中,使成袋狀(vi.)成袋狀

Vocabulary from The Joy Luck Club: Ch.1

The Joy Luck Club

The Joy Luck Club (p. 8~p.32)

cerebral aneurysm (n.) 腦動脈瘤an aneurysm of the carotid artery

anchor (n.) 鐵錨(vt.)停泊,拋錨,用錨系住

bowel (n.) 腸

wishful (a.)向往的,渴望的;癡心妄想的,單相思的

stringy (a.)線,繩的,纖維的,粘性的

squash (n.) 壓碎的東西,南瓜,擁擠嘈雜的人群(vt.)壓扁,鎮壓,壓制(vi.)被壓扁,發濺潑聲

gruel (n.) 稀粥(vt.)使極度疲勞

porridge (n.) 粥,麥片粥,稀飯

wheelbarrow (n.) 獨輪手推車

strewn 原型strew: (vt.)散播,撒滿

sling (n.) 投石器,拋擲,吊物機(vt.)用投石器投擲,用吊鉤釣上,吊起

groove (n.) 凹槽,慣例,最佳狀態(vt.)開槽於

duckling (n.) 小鴨子

tardy (a.)慢的,遲鈍的,遲到的,勉強的,拖拉的,遲的

consulate (n.) 領事,領事任期,領事館

camphor (n.) 樟樹,樟腦

nub (n.) 小塊,瘤,結節,要點

banquet (n.) 宴會,酒席

recoup (n.) (vt.)償還,賠償,補償,扣除(vi.)補償損失

scrape (n.) 刮,擦,挖,擦痕,刮擦聲,困境(vi.)刮掉,擦掉,刮出刺耳聲(vt.)刮,擦,擦傷

accompanist (n.) 伴奏者

evict (vt.)逐出,趕出,驅逐

exasperate (vt.)使惱怒,激怒,惡化(a.)惱怒的,激怒的,惡化的

mindful (a.)深切注意的,留神的,
留心的

3/06/2007

Satisfaction: broadcast from the Infinite Mind

From: http://www.lcmedia.com/mind466.htm

SATISFACTION
Week of February 13, 2007

In this hour, we explore Satisfaction. If, in the immortal words of the apparently immortal "Rolling Stones," you feel you "can't get no... satisfaction" you're not alone. Research suggests that when it comes to pursuing satisfaction, many Americans are going the wrong way. It seems we would do well to rethink expectations, scale back on options, and be grateful for what we have. Guests include Dr. Barry Schwartz, professor of social theory and social action, Swarthmore College; Dr. David Myers, professor of psychology, Hope College, Michigan and Dr. Mike McCullough, associate professor of psychology and religion, University of Miami; philosopher-diva, singer-songwriter Nora York; veteran restaurant reviewer Mimi Sheraton; and storyteller Peninnah Schram. Plus commentary from John Hockenberry.

Host Dr. Fred Goodwin begins with an essay in which he points out that Americans are over-investing time and effort in activities that fail to bring them commensurate satisfaction. Research suggests that high life satisfaction is associated with what Dr. Goodwin calls "the old fashioned stuff: stable marriages, close family ties, good friendships, and involvement in religion."

Next, storyteller Peninnah Schram puts satisfaction in perspective with the tale of a man who thinks he's unhappy, until he follows his rabbi's advice and moves a cow, a goat, and some chickens into his family's tiny house. Talk about misery. Following the wise rabbi's directions, he then moves the livestock out of the house. At last, life is sweet.

Ms. Schram is the director of the Jewish Storytelling Center at the 92nd Street Y in New York and the author of seven books of Jewish folk tales, including Jewish Stories One Generation Tells Another. She can also be heard on the CD and audiotape All About Hanukkah in Story and Song.

To contact Ms. Peninnah Schram, or to learn more about her work, please visit this web site or write to Ms. Schram at 92nd Street Y, 1395 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY 10128. To purchase Ms. Schram's books, audiotape, or CD, click here.

Dr. Goodwin then interviews Dr. Barry Schwartz, professor of social theory and social action at Swarthmore College and author of The Paradox of Choice: Why More is Less; and Dr. David Myers, professor of psychology, Hope College, Michigan. In the past forty years, Dr. Myers points out, Americans's real income has doubled yet in the same time frame, the divorce rate was doubling, teen suicide tripling, and violent crime quadrupling. Dr. Schwartz suggests that the increased dissatisfaction with life is related to the dizzying proliferation of choices that face us on a daily basis, from what kind of jeans to buy, to whom to marry, to what religion to practice, to what career to pursue. The work of sorting through choices is wearing and the work of passing up choices can leave us filled with regret for the paths not taken. Those most prone to taking on exhaustive (and exhausting!) comparisons of all available options, for instance in planning a vacation, Dr. Schwartz calls "maximizers." He contrasts them to the easier going, more easily satisfied folk he calls "satisficers" (rhymes with "sacrificers."). While maximizers may end up doing "better," in some respects, than satisficers (for instance, landing jobs with fatter salaries), paradoxically they are less satisfied with what they get.

Want to increase your level of satisfaction? Dr. Myers suggests committing to friends, family, and aerobic exercise. Dr. Schwartz says develop realistic expectations (so that good vacation isn't marred by not being the most fabulous fantastic vacation ever in the whole wide world) and "choose when to choose." Don't feel you have to do detailed studies of every choice you face and once you've made a decision, move on. (Cue up Edith Piaf singing "Non, je ne regrette rien...")

To contact Dr. David Myers or learn more about his research, please visit his web site or write to him at Hope College, Holland, MI 49422-9000. To purchase his book, Intuition: Its Powers and Perils, click here.

To contact Dr. Barry Schwartz, or to learn more about his work, please visit his web site or write to him at 500 College Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 19081-1397. To purchase his book, The Paradox of Choice: Why More is Less, click here.

Next, philosopher-diva, singer-songwriter Ms. Nora York performs a song about dissatisfaction, entitled "What I Want." The song's lyrics return again and again to "I want what I can't have, need what I can't want..." Despite rave reviews from critics, Ms. York tells interviewer Emily Fisher that there's always something more to...want. "What I Want" is also the name of the CD that Ms. York is now recording; its release is planned for Fall, 2004.

To learn more about Nora York andher upcoming performances and CD, or to send her an email, visit NoraYork.com.

After a short break, Dr. Goodwin returns to interview researcher Dr. Mike McCullough, associate professor of psychology and religion at University of Miami. Dr. McCullough is a co-editor of The Psychology of Gratitude, published by Oxford University Press. His research suggests that taking a few minutes at the end of every day to write about events of the day for which you feel thankful will boost your sense of life satisfaction. You're also likely to sleep better and your spouse is likely to find that you seem happier with your life. His research suggests that people suffering from life-altering diseases also benefit from this "prescription." "Gratitude is an important coping skill," notes Dr. McCullough. He suggests that programs like Alcoholic Anonymous, which urges recovering alcoholics to cultivate an "attitude of gratitude," may tap into what he calls "folksy wisdom" that social scientists are only beginning to study.

To learn more about Dr. Mike McCullough's research or to contact him, please visit this web site or write to him at University of Miami 5202 University Drive, Coral Gables, FL 33124. To purchase The Psychology of Gratitude, click here.

In the program's last interview, The Infinite Mind's Devorah Klahr speaks with veteran restaurant critic Ms. Mimi Sheraton, whose high standards have long safeguarded diners against the horrors of canned peas and sloppy service. Ms. Sheraton's new book is a memoir, "Eating My Words: An Appetite for Life," published by William Morrow. While some restaurateurs have found her more scathing reviews hard to digest, Ms. Sheraton says she goes to restaurants optimistically, "hoping for the best every time."

To contact Ms. Mimi Sheraton, write to her care of HarperCollins Publishers, 10 East 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022. To order Ms. Sheraton's memoir, "Eating My Words: An Appetite for Life" click here.

Finally, a slap on the cheek to satisfaction. Commentator John Hockenberry takes on the long-standing, score-keeping, getting-even mentality behind "getting satisfaction" for quarrels that demand to be redressed. He points to what's happening in the Middle East and North Korea. Mr. Hockenberry suggests that brandishing holy books, waving flags, and shedding blood will not put an end to the outrages they seek to redress. The pursuit of such "satisfaction" creates new scores, and the settling of those scores, new outrages.

3/02/2007

歡迎大家參加三興分館英文讀書會!

星星相印英閱會 第三期                     
一、活動名稱:星星相印英閱會第三期~~~理性與感性的對話                     

二、活動目標:全程英文討論。                                 
(1)以Joy Luck Club、No Name Woman 探討中國現代女性如何面對文化衝突、找到自我;      
(2)以QBQ!問題背後的問題 探討職場、業界,甚至人生的問題背後潛藏的問題,進而找出解決之道。                                        
三、辦理單位:台北市立圖書館三興分館。
                             
四、活動時間:3/7/2007~4/25/2007每個禮拜三晚上7-9點,計八週   

五、活動地點:台北市立圖書館三興分館5F會議室。(地址:臺北市吳興街156巷6號5樓)

六、參加對象:具有中高級英語口說、閱讀能力,喜愛閱讀、討論者。   
       
七、活動名額:15名。
                                
八、活動內容:
(1) summary更理解書中內容
(2) group discussion 靈活思考、分享人生經驗
(3) other activities彈性運用、隨機應變                         

九、活動費用:Free!No name woman將提供免費講義,其他書請自行取得。       

十、報名時間:即日起接受報名至人數額滿截止。請於開館時間內至本分館4樓服務臺報名或以電話、傳真報名。 電話:(02)8732-1063 傳真:(02)8732-1064  
         
十一、讀書會帶領人:Lyra Ma馬自立& May Kao高美娟    
             
<<書單簡介>>                                   
1.Joy Luck Club by AmyTan美國女兒如何從中國媽媽的經歷中追尋自我,由於喜福會是一長篇小說,此次讀書會將著重剖析主線劇情—女兒吳精妹與母親夙願的故事(4 chapters)  
         
2.No Name Woman by Maxine Hong Kingston 短篇小說,收錄在The WomanWarrior,是華裔女作家自傳性濃厚的作品,遙想在中國農村犯下通姦罪的姑姑當時的心境與抉擇。

3.QBQ! by John Miller提供絕佳的資源,為組織與個人生活提升可觀的價值,方法就是消除諉過、抱怨與拖延,切實執行QBQ的服務精神。

I have a dream


I have a dream that all the worries just go away and never come back. Actually, there is nothing to worry about as long as you are a healthy normal person. Relax, and then you can do your best, Lyra! I am sure the study group will work out greatly and fluently if I really give 99 percent of hard-working. :) In addition, today is my birthday, so my wish is world peace, which contains everything I've desired, such as losing some weight. XD