丁禾/英文:修訂版本之間的差異
出自六年制學程
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#[https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/22/science/birds-embryos-communication.html Even Unhatched, Birds Exchange Survival Skills] | #[https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/22/science/birds-embryos-communication.html Even Unhatched, Birds Exchange Survival Skills] | ||
#[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OQw3TNRnJ1I Why the insect brain is so incredible - Anna Stöckl] | #[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OQw3TNRnJ1I Why the insect brain is so incredible - Anna Stöckl] | ||
+ | #[https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/26/world/europe/carl-beech-child-abuse.html U.K. Man Who Made Up Child Abuse Claims Is Sentenced to 18 Years] | ||
+ | #[https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/26/world/middleeast/syria-american-prisoner-goodwin.html An American Aimed to See Every Country in the World. Then He Hit Syria.] | ||
+ | #[https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/27/world/middleeast/turkey-children-isis.html ‘Her Eyes Were Full of Fear.’ Turkey Repatriates Children of ISIS Followers.] | ||
+ | #[https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/27/world/europe/moscow-protest-election-russia.html Moscow Police Arrest More Than 400 at Election Protest] | ||
+ | #[https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/26/world/middleeast/najla-imad-lafta-ping-pong.html She’s 14, Disabled From a Bomb Blast and One of Iraq’s Top Table Tennis Players] | ||
==影片== | ==影片== |
2019年7月27日 (六) 23:59的修訂版本
文章
- Elephants May Sniff Out Quantities With Their Noses
- Denmark Faces an Election Fueled by Anger on Climate and Immigration
- French ISIS Supporters on Death Row in Iraq Ask for Mercy
- Either They Kill Us or We Kill Them
- After 4 Centuries, Family is Selling a Sicilian Island Retreat
- U.N. Aid Chief Warns of Looming ‘Horror’ as Somalia Again Faces Famine
- The Revered Crocodiles of This Island Nation Have Suddenly Started Killing People
- As World Makes Gains Against Child Marriage, Nepal Struggles to Catch Up
- Dutch Teenager’s Death Sets Off Debate, and Media Corrections
- Meet the Deep-Sea Dragonfish. Its Transparent Teeth Are Stronger Than a Piranha’s.
- The Fish Egg That Traveled Through a Swan’s Gut, Then Hatched
- How Should Christians Have Sex?
- Chilean Bishop Resigns After Comments on Absence of Women at Last Supper
- Should I Call My Father?
- This Town Comes Alive Once a Year, as Thousands of Snakes Mate
- How Libra Would Work for You
- Donald Trump, Facebook, Harvard: Your Tuesday Briefing
- Those Puppy Dog Eyes You Can’t Resist? Thank Evolution
- Emaciated Polar Bear Wanders Into a Siberian City
- Khashoggi Killing Inquiry Should Look Into Saudi Prince’s Role, U.N. Expert Says
- In Japan, It’s a Riveting TV Plot: Can a Worker Go Home on Time?
- The Workplace Still Isn’t Equal for Women. Here’s Some Advice to Navigate It.
- Meet the Narluga, Hybrid Son of a Narwhal Mom and a Beluga Whale Dad
- Iran, N.B.A. Draft, ‘Toy Story’: Your Friday Briefing
- Alabama Woman Who Was Shot While Pregnant Is Charged in Fetus’s Death
- Your Friday Briefing
- ‘The Rooster Must Be Defended’: France’s Culture Clash Reaches a Coop
- A Taliban Attack on Children Causes Outrage, Everywhere but at Peace Talks
- 2020 Census, Lee Iacocca, Women’s World Cup: Your Wednesday Briefing
- An Arctic Fox’s Epic Journey: Norway to Canada in 76 Days
- Stored in Synapses: How Scientists Completed a Map of the Roundworm’s Brain
- A Clash of Worldviews as Pope Francis and Putin Meet Again
- More Than 80 Migrants Feared Drowned Off Tunisia Coast
- Kashmiris Call for Investigation of Torture Accusations Against India
- This Reporter Asks a Lot of Questions. In Japan, That Makes Her Unusual.
- Eva Kor, Survivor of Twin Experiments at Auschwitz, Dies at 85
- Iran, Women’s World Cup, Jeffrey Epstein: Your Monday Briefing
- The Power of a Unified ‘No!’: U.S. Asylum Restrictions Hit a Bump
- Afghan Talks With Taliban Reflect a Changed Nation
- Mid-Brexit, Britons Pause to Debate What Really Matters: Tea
- Young Afghan General Tries to Reform Police With American Way of War
- Ignored in Russia, Domestic Abuse Victims Try European Courts
- U.K. Parliament Workers Face ‘Unacceptable’ Abuse, Report Says
- Populist Mayor Is Picked to Run Against Taiwan’s President
- The Taliban Promise to Protect Women. Here’s Why Women Don’t Believe Them.
- The 5G Health Hazard That Isn’t
- |Italy Police Seize Missile From Neo-Nazi Sympathizers
- Police in Crete Arrest 27-Year-Old Man in Killing of American Scientist
- Ilhan Omar, Jeffrey Epstein, Ricardo Rosselló: Your Tuesday Briefing
- A Better Way to Manage Your Period? Try the Menstrual Cup, Scientists Say
- A Prosperous China Says ‘Men Preferred,’ and Women Lose
- Ebola Outbreak in Congo Is Declared a Global Health Emergency
- Trump’s Immigration Measures, Far From New, Follow Europe’s Example
- At Least 13 Dead in Suspected Arson at Japanese Anime Studio
- Japan Fire Killed Mostly Women, at a Studio Known for Hiring Them
- Angela Merkel ‘Feels Solidarity’ for Congresswomen Targeted by Trump
- When N.Y.C. Is Your Gym
- The Perfect Antidote to Trump
- Saudi Guardianship Laws Could Be Set to Change. Here’s How Women Are Reacting.
- A Historic Contender for Canada’s Top Political Job
- Taliban Attack Security Checkpoint and Hospital in Pakistan
- Heat Wave, Iran, ASAP Rocky: Your Friday Evening Briefing
- Venezuela Blackout Leaves Caracas, and Much of the Country, Without Power
- In Pakistan, a Feminist Hero Is Under Fire and on the Run
- U.K., Puerto Rico, Equifax: Your Tuesday Briefing
- Even Unhatched, Birds Exchange Survival Skills
- Why the insect brain is so incredible - Anna Stöckl
- U.K. Man Who Made Up Child Abuse Claims Is Sentenced to 18 Years
- An American Aimed to See Every Country in the World. Then He Hit Syria.
- ‘Her Eyes Were Full of Fear.’ Turkey Repatriates Children of ISIS Followers.
- Moscow Police Arrest More Than 400 at Election Protest
- She’s 14, Disabled From a Bomb Blast and One of Iraq’s Top Table Tennis Players
影片
新聞
- The Yamuna, India's most polluted river
- I Survived The Holocaust Twin Experiments
- How I Escaped The Holocaust
- 65 Migrants Were Picked Up at Sea. Then the Politics Began.
食物
- How To Make A Croquembouche (Cream Puff Tower)
- HONEY | How It's Made
- Why Caviar Is So Expensive | So Expensive
- How Bubble Gum Is Made
- How This 13-Pound $600 Chocolate Egg Is Made | The Making Of
- The 'Meat Men' Behind The Country's Best Cuts | Forbes
- Making Rainbow Croissants: Behind Tasty
- How To Cook Perfect Pasta
- How Is McDonald's Different In Japan?
- 4 Levels of Mac and Cheese: Amateur to Food Scientist | Epicurious
- 4 Levels of Pizza: Amateur to Food Scientist | Epicurious
- 4 Levels of Brownies: Amateur to Food Scientist | Epicurious
- Meat Expert Guesses Cheap vs Expensive Deli Meats | Price Points | Epicurious
TED ED
- Could we actually live on Mars? - Mari Foroutan
- Can a black hole be destroyed? - Fabio Pacucci
- Ugly History: Witch Hunts - Brian A. Pavlac
- The rise and fall of the Berlin Wall - Konrad H. Jarausch
- How do vitamins work? - Ginnie Trinh Nguyen
- How do crystals work? - Graham Baird
- You are more transparent than you think - Sajan Saini
- Could underwater farms help fight climate change? - Ayana Johnson and Megan Davis
- The Romans flooded the Colosseum for sea battles - Janelle Peters
- What is HPV and how can you protect yourself from it? - Emma Bryce
- What makes TB the world's most infectious killer? - Melvin Sanicas
TED
- My life as a work of art | Daniel Lismore
- An ingenious proposal for scaling up marine protection | Mark Tercek
- Architectural secrets of the world's ancient wonders | Brandon Clifford
其他
- Meeting a Wormlion Is the Pits | Deep Look
- Godzilla and Mothra: King and Queen of the Kaiju
- 17 Year Periodical Cicadas | Planet Earth | BBC Earth
- The Extraordinary Life Cycle of a Hornet Colony
- Cameras Capture a Hornet Hatching Up-Close
Podcast
Caliphate
- Prologue: The Mission
- Chapter 1: The Reporter
- Chapter 2: Recruitment
- Only one true God. God is the lawgiver.
- Destroy fake gods and idols, which includes leaders of democracy countries and spiritual believes except for Islam.
- Be loyal to God. Reject everything God disapproves.
- Chapter 3: The Arrival
- Chapter 4: Us vs. Them
- Chapter 5: The Heart
- Chapter 6: Paper Trail
- Chapter 7: Mosul
- Mosul was the largest city ISIS held in Iraq. It was also one of the oldest cities in the world. The ancient city was once an economic center of the region, but the ongoing war in the country had taken away all its glory. After American troops being drawn back from Iraq in 2011, Mosul was seized by a terrorist group, which later became ISIS.
- ISIS provided a rather functional government compared to corrupted Iraqi officials. The extremists provided electricity to poor area, forbidden bribes, and clean the roads. Because of its capacity to govern, ISIS quickly won supports from poor areas around the globe.
- However, they also carried out brutal punishments. Dissidents were lashed, amputated or beheaded publicly. As the result, the group remained being feared and hated by many of its citizens.
- Chapter 8: The Briefcase
- Rukmini Callimachi was a journalist whose reporting focused on Islamic State. After ISIS retreat from Mosul, she went to the city to get documents left behind by the extremist group.
- She was companied by a translator who identified himself as Hawk, and a journalist from The New York Times.
- The Iraqi security force allowed them to go into western Mosul and collect documents. They also sent an amour car and some armed man to protect the journalists.
- As they drove into the city, Callimachi saw ruined buildings everywhere. She couldn't see any body, yet she could smell the stench coming from them.
- Their destination was a church building, which later became the headquarter of ISIS. The building had already been searched. They couldn't find any files.
- When they got out of the church, Hawk recognized some of the nearby buildings. He used to work as a translator for US forces there. After ISIS took over Mosul, Hawk’s neighbor reported him. He was taken to the buildings again to meet a religious judge. The judge threw him in jail for a night.
- He led the journalists into one of the buildings and went on searching the rooms. He came back with a black briefcase.
- The briefcase contained financial reports, receipts and IDs, all with ISIS logo on them. Callimachi had learned many departments of the Islamic States from the documents.
- She was also aware that ISIS had become a self-sufficient organization. Unlike other terrorist groups, it didn't rely on donors. The self-claimed Caliphate taxed their citizen and trade with foreign forces, just like a country.
- The reporters also found a marriage certification, which enabled them to identify the owner of the briefcase, whose name was Abu Jarrah. They also learned his family's whereabouts from the documents they obtained.
- Callimachi and Hawk went to the hometown of Abu Jarrah. They spoke to his family, whom kept denying their relative had joined the Islamic State. However, they told Callimachi a story.
- After the US invasion in 2003, American soldiers broke into Abu Jarrah's house. They suspected Abu Jarra's grandfather had planted a land mine in nearby road. They asked the old man to follow them, but he was too weak to stand. So they dragged him out of the house and took him way to be questioned. He was released the next day.
- Abu Jarrah came from a wealthy family. They were respected by local people. The event was a huge humiliation of the family, which could explain why Abu Jarrah had joined the ISIS.
- The family confirmed that Abu Jarrah was alive, but refuse to give his actual location.