查看完整版本: NYTimes的贱文一篇ZT

LupinIII 2008-5-13 12:50 PM

NYTimes的贱文一篇ZT

<h1>
‘No Hope’ for Children Buried in Earthquake</h1><br>DUJIANGYAN, China — The children who were considered fortunate escaped
with a broken bone or a severed limb. The others, hundreds of them,
were carried out to be buried, and their remaining classmates lay
crushed beneath the rubble of the schoolhouse.<br><br><p>“There’s no hope for them,” said Lu Zhiqing, 58, as she watched
uniformed rescue workers trudge through mud and rain toward the mound
of bricks and concrete that had once been a school. “There’s no way
anyone’s still alive in there.”</p><p>Little remained of the original
structure of the school. No standing beams, no fragments of walls. The
rubble lay low against the wet earth. Dozens of people gathered around
in the schoolyard, clawing at the debris, kicking it, screaming at it.
Soldiers kept others from entering. </p><p>A man and woman walked away
from the rubble together. He sheltered her under an umbrella as she
wailed, “My child is dead! Dead!”</p><p>As dawn crept across this
shattered town on Tuesday, it illuminated rows and rows of apartment
blocks collapsed into piles, bodies wedged among the debris, homeless
families and their neighbors clustered on the roadside, shielding
themselves from the downpour with plastic tarps. </p><p>The  <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/science/topics/earthquakes/sichuan_province_china/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier" title="More articles about the Sichuan earthquake.">earthquake</a>
originated here in the lush farm fields and river valleys of Sichuan
Province, killing almost 10,000 people and trapping thousands more. </p><p>One
of the most jarring tragedies of the disaster was the school collapse
in a suburb of Dujiangyan. At least several hundred children were
killed, perhaps as many as 900. Prime Minister <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/w/wen_jiabao/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about Wen Jiabao.">Wen Jiabao</a> flew here on Monday to survey the destruction, but he  was powerless to ease the suffering of the survivors. </p><p>In
the center of town, a woman said she had called local government
officials 10 times to plead for help in rescuing her son and mother,
but no one had come.</p><p>So on Tuesday morning, she stood crying
before the remains of her apartment building. Her 5-month-old son was
still buried in there, as was her 56-year-old mother.</p><p>“I was outside when the earthquake hit,” said the woman, Wang Xiaoni, 26. “I ran back even while the ground was still shaking.”</p><p>She shook her head.  “Who’s going to help them now?”</p><p>People
wandered up and down the street taking photos with cell phones and
digital cameras. “This isn’t even the worst-off area,” one man said.</p><p>One
block over, the façade of a white six-story residential building had
sheared off, leaving one side of the apartments open to the air. Each
living room had a television set untouched by the earthquake. But in
the cascade of rubble at the foot of the building, a lifeless head and
arm stuck out of the debris, and another body could be seen on the
other side of the mound of rubble.</p><p>Across the street, a young man
and his older sister walked out of an apartment building with a red
duffel bag and armloads of bedding they stacked on the sidewalk.</p><p>“Everything
in the apartment was destroyed,” said the man, Ji Yongtao, 27, waving a
hand up at the second floor. “We need to find a place to live. We’ll
spend the night in a building that was recently built, or on the first
floor somewhere. We’re not going back up there.”</p><p>Dozens of people
had gathered on the sidewalk by a major intersection down the street.
They were constructing a huge tent, pulling a tarp over upright wooden
poles they had lashed together. This would be their home for the day,
and maybe the night, and maybe the next few days and nights. </p><p>Busloads of soldiers rode past in the street. But there was no immediate help for the people.</p><p>“We
left with nothing but the clothes we’re wearing,” said Hu Huojin, 38,
cradling her 6-year-old son in her arms. “We don’t dare stay in our
homes. We’ll return when we’re told it’s safe to go back. Otherwise, we
don’t dare live there.”</p><p>She gazed out at the wet street. </p><p>“I can’t even remember how long the ground shook,” she said. “It was enormous.”</p><p>An
elderly couple stood under a store awning on the edge of the tent
village. The man held the family dog, Chou Mer, but they had not seen
their son, a cab driver, since he left home hours before the
earthquake. </p><p>“We still haven’t heard from him,” said the mother,
Yang Limei, 58. “Last night, we kept calling him, but we couldn’t get
through. I don’t know what to do. We can’t even wait for him at home.”</p><p>Her husband, Chui Xianchao, 63, said, “The walls are still standing, but everything else fell to the ground.” </p><p>Ambulances
roared by on the way to the hospitals in Chengdu, the provincial
capital. Another bus rolled past carrying soldiers. </p><p>The army
had appropriated public buses throughout the region, and men wearing
green fatigues peered out the windows at the homeless in the street.</p><p>“No one’s come to help us yet,” Mr. Chui said. “Those soldiers are going somewhere else.”</p><p>A
few miles to the south, in front of the collapsed school, a half-dozen
soldiers linked hands to form a human blockade in front of the rubble.
Two women tried to push their way through. The soldiers did not budge.</p><p>“There are still children in there, and we can’t help them if you keep trying to get in,” one soldier said.</p>The
only people allowed in were teams of rescue workers and doctors. A
group of doctors in white lab coats sat in a bus, waiting their turn to
help.<br>Some slept. They said no one had been brought out alive  in hours.<br>

LupinIII 2008-5-13 12:56 PM

作者叫Edward Wong , 中文名字黃安偉, wiki上有些对他的介绍.  发现美国媒体上的宗毓华之流还不在少数, 真不知道说他们什么好, "汉奸"吗? 但人家又特把自己当美国人.

aeolus 2008-5-13 01:10 PM

<P>奸汉</P>
<P>[quote]原帖由 <I>LupinIII</I> 于 2008-5-13 11:56 AM 发表 <A href="http://www.umasscssa.org/forum/redirect.php?goto=findpost&amp;pid=134112&amp;ptid=11061" target=_blank><IMG alt="" src="http://www.umasscssa.org/forum/images/common/back.gif" border=0></A> 作者叫Edward Wong , 中文名字黃安偉, wiki上有些对他的介绍. 发现美国媒体上的宗毓华之流还不在少数, 真不知道说他们什么好, "汉奸"吗? 但人家又特把自己当美国人. [/quote]</P>

snail 2008-5-13 01:12 PM

贱B.
对不起,我骂人没什么水准。

dhdxx 2008-5-13 01:13 PM

qie,中国这次比上次老美的<font id="zoom" class="f14">卡特里娜飓风后的反应速度快多了,写这种文章只是让白痴老美还以为自己国家多么英明神武</font><br>[quote]原帖由 <i>LupinIII</i> 于 2008-5-13 12:50 PM 发表 <a href="http://www.umasscssa.org/forum/redirect.php?goto=findpost&amp;pid=134111&amp;ptid=11061" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.umasscssa.org/forum/images/common/back.gif" alt="" border="0"></a>

‘No Hope’ for Children Buried in EarthquakeDUJIANGYAN, China — The children who were considered fortunate escaped
with a broken bone or a severed limb. The others, hundreds of them,
were carrie ... [/quote]

together 2008-5-13 01:39 PM

写这种文章估计纯粹是为了挣点稿费,hoho,连稍微有良知的美国人看了都会觉得,为什么会NC到要拿自然灾害来做文章,NC到极点。。。。

Nirvana 2008-5-13 01:46 PM

畜生!

Scoriger 2008-5-13 01:49 PM

没有这种垃圾,又怎么体现得出这个世界的美呢?
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