Joke Collection Website - Cold jokes - An English composition

An English composition

Helen Keller (June 27, 1880 - June 1, 1968) was an American educator with disabilities. She became blind and deaf due to a high fever when she was 19 months old. Later, with the efforts of her mentor Anne Sullivan, she learned to speak and began to communicate with other people. and graduated from Harvard University. After her death, she moved the whole world because of her strong will and outstanding contributions. People everywhere have carried out activities to commemorate her. Related works* The Miracle Worker (Taiwan translation: Helen Keller) (2000, TV Movie, Disney) * If I were given three days of light* My life* My teacher

Ostrovs Key

Introduction: Russian dramatist. Born in Moscow on April 12, 1823. He developed a strong interest in drama when he was in middle school. In 1840, he entered the Law Department of Moscow State University and left school three years later to work in the court. He was often exposed to business litigation, which made him familiar with the business world and provided material for his future drama creation. Ostrovsky began writing while serving at the court. In 1850, he published the comedy "My Family Is Easy to Settlement", which satirized the ignorance and profit-seeking of businessmen and raised the crisis of patriarchal business ethics. Readers responded enthusiastically, but it was opposed by the business community and banned by the censors, and the writers were placed under surveillance. "Poverty Is Not a Crime" (1854) was influenced by Slavophiles, and Chernyshevsky criticized it. "Fat" (1856), especially "Thunderstorm" (1859), marked the maturity of Ostrovsky's dramatic creation. In the 1960s, his dramas had various themes, including history and reality. Among them, the comedy "A Wise Man Will Make a Mistake" (1868) portrays the image of a businessman who does whatever it takes to get promoted and make a fortune, as well as the serf owners who oppose reform and the freedom to talk. A typical example of an activist. The works of the 1970s include "The Forest" (1870), "The Wolf and the Sheep" (1875), "The Woman Without a Dowry" (1878), etc., which mainly reflect the decline of aristocratic morality and the essence of bourgeois plunder. He also wrote the fairy tale "Snow Girl" (1873), which was based on folk oral poetry. In his later years, the dramatist paid great attention to society's attitude towards art, and wrote "Famous Actors and Actors" (1881) and "The Innocent Man" (1884), which showed the lives of actors. The plot of Ostrovsky's script unfolds slowly and steadily, and the language is concise, reflecting the character's personality.

Answer: 〤嗳╰☆oο - Scholar Level 3 11-26 15:37

In 1791, Faraday was born in the home of a poor blacksmith on the outskirts of London. His father had a meager income, was often sick, and had many children, so Faraday could not even eat enough when he was a child. Sometimes he could only eat one piece of bread a week, and of course he could not go to school.

When Faraday was 12 years old, he went to the streets to sell newspapers. While selling newspapers, I also learned to read from the newspapers. When he was 13 years old, Faraday entered a printing factory as a book binding apprentice. He was binding books and learning at the same time. Whenever he had spare time, he would read through bound books. Sometimes even on the way to deliver goods, he would watch as he walked. After several years of hard work, Faraday finally took off his illiterate hat.

Gradually, Faraday was able to read more and more books. He began reading the Encyclopedia Britannica, often reading it late into the night. He especially liked books on electricity and mechanics. Faraday had no money to buy books or notebooks, so he used waste paper from the printing factory to make notebooks, excerpts of various materials, and sometimes added illustrations himself.

By chance, Dance, a member of the Royal Society, came to the printing factory to proofread his work and accidentally discovered Faraday's "manuscript". When he learned that these were notes taken by an apprentice bookbinder, he was shocked, so Dance gave Faraday a ticket to attend the Royal Academy.

Faraday came to the Royal Academy to observe in an extremely excited mood. The person who gave the report was David, a famous British chemist who was famous at that time. Faraday's eyes widened and he listened to David's lecture very attentively. After returning home, he compiled his lecture notes into a volume and used it as a "chemistry textbook" for self-study.

Later, Faraday sent his carefully bound "Chemistry Textbook" to Professor David, and attached a letter, saying: "I am very willing to escape from the business world and enter the scientific world, because according to my knowledge Imagine that science can make people noble and approachable."

After receiving the letter, David was deeply moved.

He admired Faraday's talents very much and decided to recruit him as his assistant. Faraday was very diligent and quickly mastered experimental techniques and became David's right-hand man.

Six months later, David will go to the European continent for a scientific research trip, interviewing famous scientists from various European countries and visiting chemical laboratories in various countries. David decided to take Faraday abroad. In this way, Faraday traveled with David in Europe for a year and a half, met with famous scientists such as Ampere, gained a lot of knowledge, and also learned French.

After returning to China, Faraday began to conduct scientific research independently. Soon, he discovered the phenomenon of electromagnetic induction. In 1834, he discovered the law of electrolysis, which shocked the scientific world. This law is named "Faraday's law of electrolysis".

Relying on hard self-study, Faraday went from being an apprentice bookbinder who never even went to elementary school to becoming one of the world's top scientists. Engels once praised Faraday as "the greatest electrologist to date".

On August 25, 1867, Faraday passed away while sitting in his study reading. He was 76 years old. Due to his great contribution to electrochemistry, people use his last name - "Faraday" as the unit of electricity; and use the abbreviation of his last name - "Farad" as the unit of capacitance.

Stephen Hawking is one of the internationally renowned great men of this century. He is 60 years old. He was born on the anniversary of the death of Galileo Galilei. He is a professor in the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics of Cambridge University and the most important contemporary generalist. Relativity and cosmologist. In the 1970s, he and Penrose proved the famous singularity theorem, for which they jointly won the Wolf Prize in Physics in 1988. He is therefore known as the world's most famous scientific thinker and most outstanding theoretical physicist after Einstein. He also proved the area theorem of black holes. Hawking's life is very legendary, in terms of scientific achievements. , he was one of the most distinguished scientists of all time. He held the most prestigious professorship ever held at Cambridge, the Lucasian Professorship of Mathematics held by Newton and Dirac. He held several honorary degrees. Member of the Royal Society. He was confined to a wheelchair for 20 years due to Lou Gehrig's disease (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), but he used his disability as an advantage and overcame it. He became a supernova in the international physics community. He could not write and could not even speak clearly, but he transcended the theories of relativity, quantum mechanics, and the big bang and entered the "geometric dance" of creating the universe, even though he sat so helplessly. While in a wheelchair, his thoughts traveled brilliantly across the vastness of time and space, solving the mysteries of the universe.

Professor Hawking is a modern popular science novelist. His representative work is "A Brief History of Time" written in 1988. "History", this is an excellent astronomical science novel. The author has rich imagination, wonderful ideas, beautiful language, and every word is exquisite. It is even more surprising that the changes in the world outside are so magical and wonderful. The book has a cumulative circulation of 25 million copies and has been translated into nearly 40 languages. In 1992, a 3.5 million-pound film of the same name was released. Hawking firmly believed that the basic ideas about the origin of the universe and life can be expressed without mathematics, and the world should be able to. Learn about his esoteric teachings through the audio-visual medium of film. This book is a popular book on the forefront of exploring the nature of time and the universe. It is the most important classic work on contemporary scientific thinking about the universe. It has changed the world. Humanity's concept of the universe. "A Brief History of Time" has caused great repercussions around the world as soon as it was published. It is a landmark book for those of us who prefer words to expressions. Written by a contributor to human thought, this is a work of infinite pursuit of knowledge and a relentless exploration of the mystery of the nature of time and space.

"The Sequel to a Brief History of Time" is a masterpiece of cosmology. Arguably authoritative, Hawking's research achievements and life have always attracted a wide range of readers. "A Brief History of Time Continues" is compiled for readers who want to know more about Professor Hawking's life and theories. The book is based on candid and sincere personal interviews. The book narrates the life course and research work of Professor Hawking, showing the real "person" behind the huge theoretical framework. This book is not an ordinary oral history, but a portrait of one of the greatest minds of mankind in the twentieth century. For non-professional readers, this book is undoubtedly an opportunity for them to enjoy the achievements of human civilization and a source of valuable inspiration.

"Hawking's Lectures - Black Holes, Infant Universes and Others" is a collection of 13 articles and speeches written by Hawking between 1976 and 1992. It discusses imaginary time, the birth of the infant universe caused by black holes, and scientists' efforts to seek a completely unified theory, and provides unique insights into free will, the value of life, and death.

"The Nature of Space and Time" General relativity was expressed in a complete mathematical form 80 years ago, and the basic principles of quantum theory also appeared 70 years ago. However, these two are the most accurate and most accurate in the entire physics. Can a successful theory be unified in quantum gravity alone? Two of the world's most famous physicists debate this very question. This book is based on six speeches and the final debate given by Hawking and Penrose at Cambridge University.

The book "The Charm of the Future" begins with Stephen Hawking's prediction of the future of the universe in the next billion years, and ends with Don Cubitt's understanding of the last trial. It introduces the development process of prophecy and how we are today. Methods of predicting the future. The text of the book is easy to understand. While the author explains his own views, he also answers some interesting questions, which is very interesting to read.

Who is Hawking? He is a brain, a myth, one of the most outstanding theoretical physicists of our time, a giant in the name of science... Perhaps, he is just a warrior in a wheelchair who challenges destiny.

The birth of a wise brain

Stephen Hawking was born on January 8, 1942, when his hometown of London was being shrouded in Hitler's indiscriminate bombings.

Hawking and his sister spent their childhood in several small towns near London. Years later, their neighbors recalled that Hawking was very eye-catching when he was lying in the pram. His head looked very big, which was unusual for ordinary people. This was probably because Hawking's current fame and achievements were far different from ordinary people. , the neighbor couldn't help but repaint the image of the gifted child in his memory.

However, the Hawking family does appear to be unique in this conservative town. Hawking's parents both received formal university education. His father was a medical scientist engaged in research on tropical diseases, and his mother had many careers. Residents of the town were often surprised to see the Hawkings driving a dilapidated second-hand car through the streets towards the suburbs - cars had not yet entered British households at the time. However, this weird car expanded the world of the Hawking family's free activities.

Hawking is keen to figure out the ins and outs of everything, so when he sees a novel thing, he always likes to take it apart and understand the structure of each part - but he often It is difficult to put it back to its original state, because his hands and feet are far less flexible than his mind, and even his handwriting is notoriously sloppy in the class.

Hawking entered Oxford University to study physics at the age of 17. He was still not a studious student, and this attitude was consistent with that of other classmates at the time. This was a period of confusion among young people after the war - they were tired of everything and felt that there was nothing worth pursuing. Hawking hangs out, drinks, and joins the regatta club with his classmates in school. If things continue like this, he is likely to become a mediocre clerk or teacher. However, the disease appeared.

The disease appeared

Since childhood, sports have never been Hawking's strong point, and he can't do almost all ball games.

In his third year at Oxford, Hawking noticed that he had become more clumsy, falling down once or twice for no apparent reason. Once, he suddenly fell down the stairs for unknown reasons, fell into coma and almost died.

It was not until 1962, when Hawking was a graduate student at Cambridge, that his mother noticed her son's abnormal condition. Hawking, who had just celebrated his 21st birthday, stayed in the hospital for two weeks. After various examinations, he was diagnosed with "Lou Gehrig's disease," which is motor nerve cell atrophy.

The doctor told him that his body would become increasingly inoperable. Only his heart, lungs and brain could still function. In the end, his heart and lungs would also fail. Hawking was "sentenced" to have only two years left to live. That was in 1963.

At first, the disease got worse quickly. This was a blow to Hawking. He almost gave up all study and research because he thought he would not live to complete his master's thesis. However, a woman appeared.

The wheelchair appeared

Hawking's condition gradually worsened. In 1970, Hawking, whose academic reputation was growing, was no longer able to move on his own and began to use a wheelchair. To this day, he has never left it.

Hawking, who is always in a wheelchair, works and lives extremely tenaciously.

In March 1991, Hawking was returning to his apartment in Berlin in a wheelchair. He was hit by a car while crossing the street. His left arm was fractured, his head was scratched, and he needed 13 stitches. But 48 hours later, he was Back to the office and getting back to work.

Another time, when he and his friends went to a country house, they turned too sharply uphill and the wheelchair tipped backwards. Unexpectedly, the gravity master was knocked over in the bushes by the earth's gravity.

Although his physical disability is getting worse, Hawking strives to live like an ordinary person and accomplish everything he can do. He is even lively and active - it sounds a bit funny. After he was completely unable to move, he still insisted on using his only movable finger to drive the wheelchair "ramping" on the way to the office; in a Moscow hotel, He suggested dancing, and the sight of him spinning his wheelchair in the hall was a spectacle; when he met Prince Charles, he twirled his wheelchair to show off and ran over his toes.

Of course, Hawking has also tasted the consequences of "free" action. This master of quantum gravity has fallen out of his wheelchair many times under the weak gravity of the earth. Fortunately, every time He stood up again tenaciously.

In 1985, Hawking underwent a tracheal surgery and completely lost the ability to speak. It was under such circumstances that he wrote the famous "A Brief History of Time" with great difficulty, exploring the origin of the universe. Hawking achieved great success, but the reality of life replaced the romance of love, and his marriage to Jane came to an end.

Intuition: Black holes are not black.

The object of Hawking's research is the universe, but he has never been interested in observing astronomy and has only observed with a telescope a few times. Compared with traditional scientific methods such as experiments and observations, Hawking's method relies on intuition.

The great achievement of "black holes are not black" came from a flash of thought. One night in November 1970, Hawking began to think about black holes as he slowly climbed into bed. He suddenly realized that a black hole should have a temperature, so that it would emit radiation. In other words, black holes are not really that black.

This flash idea formed a complete theory after three years of thinking. In November 1973, Hawking officially announced to the world that black holes continuously radiate X-rays, gamma rays, etc. This is the famous "Hawking radiation". Before this, it was thought that black holes could only swallow.

From the singularity of the Big Bang to the radiation mechanism of black holes, Hawking has made outstanding contributions to the development of quantum cosmology. Hawking won the 1988 Wolf Prize in Physics.

King of bestsellers: "A Brief History of Time"

Hawking's popular science book "A Brief History of Time: From the Big Bang to Black Holes" has sold 25 million copies worldwide This volume has been on the bestseller list since its publication in 1988, setting a world record for bestsellers. In this book, Hawking tries to explain black holes, the origin and destiny of the universe, black holes and time travel in a way that ordinary people can understand.

At the beginning of the book "A Brief History of Time", Hawking pointed out: "I was told that every equation I wrote in the book would cut sales in half. So I decided not to write any equations. But at the end of the book, I still included an equation, Einstein's famous equation E=mc2. I hope this won't scare away half of my potential readers. "Now it seems that Hawking was completely overthinking.

Answer: Sakura Blossoms - New to the Level 3 of Jianghu 11-26 16:07

Sima Qian is still overloaded without important parts

Answer: Shimahara Seita - Assistant Level 2 11-26 16:27

Throughout the ages, many celebrities have succeeded through adversity. Like Sima Qian, he was castrated and suffered great humiliation due to Li Ling's case, but he finally withstood the ordeal and worked hard to write the glorious masterpiece - "Historical Records".

Another example is the modern Chinese Zhang Shibo. He experienced a huge change from a strong swimmer to a high paraplegia, but he did not get depressed. Instead, he turned it into motivation, studied diligently, and accomplished many things that healthy people could not do. There are also Zhang Haidi, Li Zhengdao... there are countless celebrities who have become successful in adversity. The students in Beijing's "Hongzhi Class" all grew up in difficult situations and learned to use courage, wisdom and strength to overcome difficulties. They are like grass in the wild, ravaged by wind and rain but not falling, and how can the vitality of those "flowers" in the greenhouse compare with them?

Su Wu (140 BC - 60 BC), courtesy name Ziqing, was a native of Duling (southwest of Xi'an, Shaanxi Province today), the prefect of the county, and the son of Su Jian. In his early years, he took his father's shade as his husband and moved to Zhongshangjian. In the first year of Tianhan (100 BC), he paid homage to General Zhonglang. At that time, the relationship between the Han Dynasty in the Central Plains and the Xiongnu, the minority regime in the northwest, was going from good to bad. In 100 BC, the new chanyu of the Xiongnu regime came to the throne. In order to show friendship, the emperor of the Han Dynasty sent Su Wu to lead more than a hundred people and bring a lot of property as envoys to the Xiongnu. Unexpectedly, just when Su Wu completed his mission and was about to return to his country, civil strife broke out among the upper echelons of the Xiongnu. Su Wu and his party were implicated, detained, and asked to betray the Han Dynasty and surrender to the Chanyu.

Initially, Chanyu sent people to lobby Su Wu, promising generous salary and high-ranking officials, but Su Wu sternly refused. Seeing that persuasion was of no use, the Xiongnu decided to resort to cruelty. It was the middle of winter, with heavy snow falling in the sky. Shan Yu ordered his people to lock Su Wu into a large open-air cellar and cut off food and water, hoping that this would change Su Wu's belief. Time passed day by day, and Su Wu was tortured in the cellar. When he was thirsty, he would eat a handful of snow; when he was hungry, he would chew the sheepskin jacket he was wearing. After several days, Shan Yu saw that Su Wu, who was on the verge of death, still showed no sign of surrender, so he had no choice but to release Su Wu.

Chanyu knew that no matter soft or hard, there was no hope of persuading Su Wu to surrender, but he respected Su Wu's integrity more and more, could not bear to kill Su Wu, and did not want him to return to his country, so he decided to kill Su Wu. He was exiled to Lake Baikal in Siberia and asked to herd sheep. Before leaving, Chanyu summoned Su Wu and said, "Since you don't surrender, I will let you herd sheep. When the rams give birth to lambs, I will let you return to the Central Plains."

With After his companions separated, Suwu was exiled to the inaccessible Lake Baikal. Here, there is no way to escape based on personal ability alone. The only company Su Wu had was the envoy stick representing the Han Dynasty and a small flock of sheep. Su Wu used this envoy stick to herd sheep every day, thinking that one day he would be able to return to his country with it. Day after day, year after year, the decorations on the envoy's stick fell off, and Su Wu's hair and beard also turned white.

In Lake Baikal, Suwu herded sheep for nineteen years. For more than ten years, the Xiongnu Chanyu who originally ordered him to be imprisoned has passed away. Even in Su Wu's country, the old emperor also died, and the old emperor's son succeeded to the throne. At this time, the new Chanyu implemented the policy of peace with the Han Dynasty, and the Han Dynasty emperor immediately sent envoys to take Su Wu back to his country.

Su Wu was warmly welcomed in the capital of the Han Dynasty. Everyone from the emperor to the common people paid tribute to this hero who was full of national integrity. More than two thousand years have passed, and Su Wu's noble integrity has become an example of Chinese ethical personality and a national cultural and psychological element.

In the winter of the fourth year of Taichu (101 BC), the Xiongnu Chanyu died at Xiangli Lake. His younger brother, Qie Tuanhou, was established as the Chanyu. In order to reconcile with the Han Dynasty, he sent envoys back to the Han envoys who had been detained in the past. Chongguo et al. In March of the first year of the Tianhan Dynasty (100 BC), Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, in order to repay the goodwill of the Xiongnu, sent the Zhonglang General Su Wu, the Deputy Zhonglang General Zhang Sheng, and the Attaché Chang Hui on an envoy to the Xiongnu. They sent back the detained Xiongnu envoys and gave them generous gifts. Shanyu property. After Su Wu and others arrived at the Xiongnu, Yu Chang and others, who had surrendered to the Xiongnu, conspired with Zhang Sheng to kidnap Shanyu's mother, the Yan family, and return to the Han Dynasty. After the incident, Su Wu was implicated. Su Wu did not want to be humiliated and failed to commit suicide. The Chanyu respected him and sent his Han minister Wei Lu to persuade him to surrender, but Su Wu remained unmoved. So the Chanyu imprisoned Su Wu in a underground kiln and deprived him of food and drink, in order to force him to submit. Su Wu refused to die for several days. The Huns thought he was a god, so they exiled him to an uninhabited place in the remote North Sea (today's Lake Baikal) to graze sheep. In the second year of the First Yuan Dynasty (85 BC), the Xiongnu Hu Yantang Chanyu was newly established and sent envoys to make peace with the Han Dynasty. The Han Dynasty asked the Xiongnu to release Su Wu. In the sixth year of the First Yuan Dynasty (81 BC), Su Wu and nine others were welcomed back home by Han envoys.

Su Wu detained the Xiongnu for 19 years and learned a lot about the border peoples. After returning home, he was appointed as a vassal state and was responsible for the affairs of ethnic minorities. He was unyielding and unyielding among the Xiongnu, and was regarded by later generations as one of the models for upholding national integrity.

Mao Zedong’s treatment in 1918 when he was working as a student in the Peking University Library

There are several different versions of the historical facts about Mao Zedong’s working-study in the Peking University Library in 1918. This is introduced in more detail and verified in "Cai Yuanpei Chronicles".

In August 1918, Mao Zedong, Xiao Yu and several other members of the Xinmin Society went north together to discuss work-study studies in France. After arriving in Beijing, Mao Zedong determined to stay in China and planned to find a job at Peking University. Yang Changji, their teacher when they were studying at Hunan First Normal University in Changsha, is now teaching in the Philosophy Department of Peking University. He also hoped that Mao Zedong could "enter Peking University" in order to lay a "great and long-lasting foundation" in the future. (Quoted from "Cai Linbin to Mao Zedong", originally published in the 1st episode of "Xinmin Society Correspondence Collection".)

During the Hunan First Normal University period, Mao Zedong's classmates arrived in Beijing from Changsha and stayed together. Xiao Yu from Yang Changji's family recalled: Mao Zedong also assisted when Cai Hesen, Xiong Guangchu and others and I planned the preparatory courses for work-study students. After several consultations, Mao would rather stay in Beijing than go to France. …Mao was a practical person, not a scholar, and of course he had no interest in studying abroad. … Cai Hesen and I agreed that Mao would stay in Beijing for a work-study program, just like we did in France. This faced the problem of finding a job for Mao to make ends meet. The three discussed this issue many times. At this time, we were recruiting members of the society at Peking University. According to our judgment, it would be best for Mao to find a job at Peking University. We want to ask him to take on the job of cleaning the classroom so that he can work and listen to the class at the same time. At that time, it was popular in Peking University to hire workers to mop floors and sweep floors after class. The job was easy, and they also had some additional benefits, including frequent contact with professors and students. This arrangement was ideal for Mao.

How to get this job is a problem. ... Finally, we thought of Principal Cai, who is always kind and generous. We wrote to ask him if he could assign a classmate a job of cleaning the classroom. Principal Cai learned about this and had a better idea, asking Mao Zedong to work in the Peking University Library. He wrote a note to the library director Li Dazhao: "Mao Zedong wants to find a part-time work-study job in our school. Please try to find a place in the library." Li Dazhao obediently gave Mao the job of cleaning rooms and organizing books, a very simple job. errand. (Xiao Yu: The fifth abridged translation of "Mao Zedong and Me", see Taiwan's "Yiwenzhi" Issue 20, May 1967.) Xiao Yu (Zi Sheng)'s memoirs were written and published in English, and there are different Chinese translations . Another translation said that Xiao Yu, Cai Hesen and others wrote to President Cai Yuanpei, "asking him to hire one of our companions who cannot go to France as a cleaner on the campus. Mr. Cai Yuanpei is a great person, and he read our letter After that, he immediately understood what was going on. But he had a better idea. He felt sorry for Mao Zedong and was very happy that he could work hard and work hard on himself. Instead of letting him be a cleaner, he could go to the school library. Go to work. So he wrote a letter to Mr. Li Dazhao, the director of Peking University, saying: 'Mao Zedong needs to find a job in this school so that he can work part-time. Please arrange a position for him in the library. '" (Quoted from "Mao Zedong and Me", 1976 edition of Taiwan Yuancheng Cultural Book Supply Co., Ltd., page 56.)

With the arrangement of Li Dazhao, the 26-year-old Mao Zedong became an assistant at the Peking University Library. The monthly salary is 8 yuan, which is almost the same as the monthly salary of the workers. At that time, the monthly salary of a teaching assistant at Peking University was between 50 yuan and 80 yuan. In January 1917, Chen Duxiu sent a letter to Hu Shih, inviting him to teach at Peking University. The letter stated that at Peking University, “seniors’ monthly salary is 300 yuan, and important professors also earn this amount.” At that time, the average tuition fee for a professor was about 200 yuan. Mao Zedong’s specific work was to manage Shanghai’s Shenbao, Current Affairs News, and Republic of China Daily, Beijing’s Morning Post, Beijing News, National Gazette, and Shuntian Times, Tianjin’s Ta Kung Pao, and Changsha’s Fifteen Chinese and foreign newspapers, including Ta Kung Pao, the English Beijing Herald, and the Japanese China Shinpo, register new arrivals of newspapers and periodicals and the names of readers every day. Although it was a humble position and trivial, it provided young Mao Zedong with a broad world to come into contact with new ideas. He was living in a small alley on Jingshan East Street called Sanyanjing Ji'an East Road. In the west room of the north room of this small courtyard No. 7, he lived in the same room with Cai Hesen and other eight members of the Xinmin Society. "Sleeping on a high bed with a big quilt". Anyone who wants to turn over at night must first say hello to his friends around him.

Although the conditions here are poor, it is very close to the red building on the beach and is convenient for activities. He actively participated in the activities of the Philosophy Society and Journalism Research Society at Peking University, met Cai Yuanpei, Chen Duxiu, Li Dazhao, Deng Zhongxia, Shao Piaoping, Hu Shi and other new-school figures, and began to study and study Marxism.

Mao Zedong himself recalled to American journalist Snow in the late 1930s: Beijing is too expensive for me... I have to find a job right away. Yang Changji, my former ethics teacher at the normal school, was now a professor at Peking National University. I asked him to help me find a job, and he introduced me to the director of the Peking University Library, who was Li Dazhao. He gave me a job as a library assistant, and the salary was not low, eight yuan a month. (Snow's "Journey to the West", Sanlian Bookstore 1979 edition, pp. 126-127.) There is also another record. Jiang Menglin, who was once the acting president of Peking University, said in the article "Li Dazhao and Mao Zedong in Memories": "Mao Zedong went to the Peking University library to work as secretary when I was the acting president. One day, Li Shouchang came to the principal's office and said that Mao Zedong had no food. Eat, what should I do? I said, why don't you let him start a cooperative? He said no, it's bankrupt. I said, if there is nothing in the library, I will give him a position, so I picked up the pen and wrote. A note: "Send Mao Zedong as library secretary with a monthly salary of seventeen yuan." (See Jiang Menglin's "New Wave", Taiwan Biography and Literature Publishing House, 1967 edition, page 123.)

Crying can't solve the problem, so why. Not smiling

Female college student takes her father to study

Xinhuanet, Wuhan, October 10 (Reporter Li Pengxiang) “I can’t choose the conditions of life, but I can choose the attitude towards life. "Since a disaster is coming, crying can't solve the problem, so why not laugh?" Huang Lainv, a female college student majoring in computer science at Wuhan University, chose to be strong in the face of difficulties. Her story of studying with her father and constantly improving herself touched the land of Jingchu.

In 1985, Huang Lainv was born in Hepu County, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Four years later, her mother left home due to unbearable pressure in life and has not been heard from since. Soon, the county cultural troupe where my father worked temporarily also disbanded. The father and daughter work everywhere and depend on each other. Because she had no money, Huang Lainv, who had finished her third grade of elementary school, had to drop out of school and help her father earn money by digging conches at the beach. And her father did not forget to tutor Huang Lainv in her fourth grade classes under the kerosene lamp. Half a year later, the two returned to their hometown. Huang Lainv went straight to fifth grade and was admitted to junior high school with the top score in the town.

Because of her excellent grades, Huang Lai’s three years of high school tuition were free and she successfully completed her studies. In 2003, she was admitted to the computer science and technology major of Wuhan University with excellent results. The happy father specially asked someone to sew seven large snakeskin sacks, packed all his belongings and came to Wuhan. With the help of the school, Huang Lainv successfully entered college classes with the help of student loans. My father also found a rental house near the school and set up a breakfast stall. Life seemed to be getting better and better, but a disaster quietly befell them.

During the winter vacation in 2005, when Huang Lainv came out of the kitchen, she found her father lying on the ground vomiting and convulsing. The hospital diagnosed a sudden cerebral hemorrhage. Huang Lainv said: "It was the most miserable Spring Festival I had ever spent. My father had coughs, constipation, and diarrhea every day. He was finally tired and fell asleep on New Year's Eve. It was very cold in the house and it was raining outside." < /p>

However, 6 days after being discharged from the hospital, my father suffered another cerebral hemorrhage, resulting in complete hemiplegia on the right side of his body. Not only that, subsequent examinations also revealed that my father had diabetes, cerebral infarction and bladder cancer. In order to treat her father's illness, Huang Lainv began to work hard as a tutor. In those days, she got up at 6 o'clock every morning to help her father wash his face and brush his teeth, give injections and take medicine; rush home at noon to cook and prepare medicine for his father; in the evening, after taking a bus for more than an hour across the river to work as a tutor in Hankou, she also Putting his father to sleep; late at night, then opening the book to study.

Huang Lainv said: "I think I can't give up no matter what. This is what children should do. My father has paid so much for me. The saddest thing in the world is: a child wants to support him but his mother is not there . I will never let this happen!”

At the most critical moment, teachers and classmates extended a warm hand and raised nearly 40,000 yuan in three donations. While busy for her father, Huang Lainv also did not fall behind in her studies. She passed the CET-6 and also won a national scholarship.

On September 13, the Hubei Provincial Department of Education awarded Huang Lainv the honorary title of "Outstanding College Student in the Province for Self-improvement", calling on everyone to learn from her perseverance and perseverance fighting spirit, respect the elderly, practice filial piety, and repay kindness. The traditional virtues of facing difficulties, an optimistic and sunny mentality, and the excellent qualities of diligent study, determination to become talented, and persistent pursuit.

Huang Lainv said: "What supported me through the most difficult days was faith, hope and love. I have always believed that there is no obstacle in the world that cannot be overcome; I have always known that, There are always many people around me who love me, and I am very happy."

Never give up - Huang Lainv's life choice

Author: Cai Yun. , Liu Xi, Zhang Fei Release time: 2006-03-31

Get up at 6:30 every morning to make breakfast, take care of his father in the hospital bed, wash his face and brush his teeth, give injections and take medicine. After his father eats, he spends half When I was young, I walked to the Department of Information Science to attend classes. I had to rush back to my home in Chagang Community at noon and after class in the afternoon to cook for my father. Four nights a week, after settling down with my father, I have to take the bus for more than an hour to Hankou for tutoring. I usually can't go home until after 10:30 in the evening. Under the dim light, after putting her father to sleep, she opened the book again without caring about the fatigue of the day. On weekends, she also has to go to the Department of Informatics to do a work-study job in the school - on duty. For more than a year, Huang Lainv has moved forward step by step with an almost stubborn persistence