2008年3月29日 星期六

Time Magazine - The Dalai Lama's Journey

"Since China wants to join the world community," the 14th Dalai Lama said as I
was traveling across Japan with him for a week last November, "the world
community has a real responsibility to bring China into the mainstream." The
whole world stands to gain, he pointed out, from a peaceful and unified China—
not least the 6 million Tibetans in China and Chinese-occupied Tibet. "But," he
added, "genuine harmony must come from the heart. It cannot come from the barrel
of a gun."
I thought of those measured and forgiving words—the Dalai Lama still prays for
his "Chinese brothers and sisters" every morning and urges Tibetans to learn
Chinese so they can talk with their new rulers, not fight with them—as reports
trickled out of Tibet of freedom demonstrations that have led to some of the
bloodiest confrontations in the region since similar protests preceded a brutal
crackdown in the late 1980s. The violence has left 99 people dead, according to
Tibetan exile groups; the Chinese government says 13 "innocents" were killed in
the riots. Soon after monks began demonstrating in the Tibetan capital of Lhasa,
Chinese forces moved to contain the marchers, but the disturbances spread to
other Tibetan cities, and their causes clearly remain unresolved. Working out how
best to avoid further embarrassment as they prepare for the start of the Olympic
-torch relay on March 25 will be a tricky challenge for China's rulers. As a
diplomat told TIME, "They need to get this under control, but to do so without a
lot of brutality."
How the crisis unfolds will be determined not just in Beijing but also by the
words and actions of a man who protects his people from afar, in his exile home
in the northern-India hill station of Dharamsala. As a Buddhist monk, the Dalai
Lama speaks unstintingly on behalf of all people's rights to basic freedoms of
speech and thought—though as a Buddhist monk, he also holds staunchly to the
view that violence can never solve a problem deep down. If the bloodshed gets out
of control, he said in recent days, he will step down as political leader—a
symbolic act, really, since he would continue to be the head of the Tibetans and
the democracy he has set up in exile already has an elected Prime Minister. In
China meanwhile, Tibetans are still liable to imprisonment for years just for
carrying a picture of their exiled leader (who by Tibetan custom is regarded as
the incarnation of a god, the god of compassion). Some have been shot while
walking across the mountains to visit cousins or children in exile.
As soon as you start talking to the Dalai Lama, as I have been doing for 33
years, you notice that his favorite adjectives are logical and realistic and the
verbs he returns to are investigate, analyze and explore. The Buddha was a
"scientist," he said the last time I saw him, which means that a true Buddhist
should follow the course of reason (recalling, perhaps, that anger most harms the
person who feels it). Contact and communication are the methods he always
stresses—to this day, he encourages every possibility for dialogue with China
and in places even urges Tibetans to study Buddhism under Chinese leaders whom he
knows to be capable.
This determination to be completely empirical—as if he were a doctor of the mind
pledged to examine things only as they are, to come up with a clear diagnosis and
then to suggest a practical response—is one of the things that have made the
current Dalai Lama such a startling and tonic figure on the world stage. There
are few monks in any tradition who speak so rarely about faith while rejecting
anything that has been disproved by scientific inquiry; on his desk at home, he
keeps a plastic model of the brain with detachable parts so that he can take it
apart, put it together again and see how it works. And there are even fewer
political leaders who work from the selfless positions and long-term vision of a
monk (and doctor of philosophy). It's easy to forget that the Dalai Lama is by
now the most seasoned ruler on the planet, having led his people for 68 years—
longer than Queen Elizabeth II, King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand or even Fidel
Castro.
This all has deep and wide implications for a world that seems as religiously
polarized now as it has ever been. Always stressing that the Buddha's own words
should be thrown out if they are shown by scientific inquiry to be flawed, the
Dalai Lama is the rare religious figure who tells people not to get needlessly
confused or distracted by religion ("Even without a religion, we can become a
good human being"). No believer in absolute truth—he eagerly seeks out
Catholics, neuroscientists, even regular travelers to Tibet who can instruct him
—he is also the rare Tibetan who will suggest that old Tibet may have
contributed in part to its current predicament, the rare Buddhist to tell
foreigners not to take up Buddhism but to study within their own traditions,
where their roots are deepest.

2008年3月26日 星期三

Reds - Warren Beatty

A personal epic
Warren Beatty pulls off a difficult task in "Reds." He's got to juggle
several epic stories, including the rise of the American left in the early 20th century, the Russian Revolution, and a personal story of two romantics in a relationship charged by passion both emotional and political.

Any of these story threads presents a difficult task for a filmmaker and Beatty weaves his multilayered tale together with skill. He pays close attention to detail, gives us a multitude of historical characters and events, and mixes his story telling with the words of real people. Beatty buttresses his scenes with deceptively simple "talking heads." These "witnesses" provide a real background to the John Reed/Louise Bryant story
of "Reds," giving viewers a good grounding in the passions of the era. The
attention to little details (Reed bringing Bryant lilies, the constant
phrase "There's a taxi waiting," etc.) provide a rich portrait of two volatile human beings.

Beyond the personal, Beatty knows how to handle epic screen drama. The
rousing montage that leads up to the overthrow of Russian government is
sumptuous and envigorating. Don't be deceived thought; this is not a "pro
-Bolshevik" film by any great stretch of the imagination. Reed's
dissillusionment with the Soviet system is portrayed in agonizing detail.
Emma Goldman's story, a really great history in and of itself, gives
another point of view to the difficulty passionate people have when taking
on governing authorities and social mores.
The performances are uniformally excellent. Beatty and Keaton are well
matched and there's plenty of gems in the supporting roles. Standouts
include Jack Nicholson as Eugene O'Neil, Maureen Stapelton as Emma
Goldman, Edward Herrmann as Max Eastman, writer Jerzy Kosinski as Soviet
bureaucrat Grigory Zinoviev and Paul Sorvino as Louis Fraina.


I love "Reds." It's one of my favorite films. Be forewarned, however, you
could be lost and confused by the myrad of events in this film if you
don't know much about political history of the radical left in early 20th
Century America or the Bolshevik Revolution and its aftermath. On the
other hand, if you're intrigued by the film you'll find yourself up to
your eyeballs at the library reading about the true events and real people
who inspired this film.

Days of Being Wild by Wong Kar Wai





Days of Being Wild, Wong Kar-Wai's 1991 film, followed his 1988 As Tears
Go By and solidified his style. In turn he made these two films after a
couple of intriguing, unconventional swordsman-warrior films. It's easy to
see why he's now regarded as one of the top Chinese directors; both his
subjects and style are unique and captivating.
In Days of Being Wild he casts some of the best young Hong Kong actors
then and now--Leslie Cheung, Maggie Cheung, Andy Lau--in a tale of those
who look for love and never seem to find it. Or at least not for long at
all. When a completely reckless Don Juan type teases a beautiful stadium
ticket taker, promising her at their first meeting he'll always remember
her for the minute they shared, this is enough to seduce the lonely girl
into falling for him, only to have him callously dump her when she asks
him to marry her.
While she finds solace by talking to a street cop, the womanizer hooks up
with a semi-sleazy dancehall girl, meanwhile roughing up his aunt's suitor
for the attempted theft of her pearl earrings. His aunt chides him for
driving away her older suitor, yet stoically accepts what he's done; she
needs him more than her suitor. She raised him when his mother abandoned
him and now is more attached to him than she realized.
The cop leaves his job and becaomes a sailor. The womanizer leaves town
and hooks up with the sailor, completely coincidentally. Meanwhile the
ticket taker girl and the dancehall girl find their own ways without the
love they need, just as the sailor has done, trying to forget the ticket
taker with whom he fell in love, never hearing from her, causing him to
abandon his street, his town, and put out to sea.
The parable of a legless bird, the womanizer's fictional tale he uses in
his seduction ploys, is one that frames this lyrical piece of filmmaking.
The endpieces of lush jungle greenery--hundreds of thick palm trees--
accompany the voiceover narration of this tale. The completely offbeat
music, ranging from salsa to slow romantic dance music--competely Western
--to quirky pizzicatos and glissandi, is similarly accompanied by Chris
Doyle's assured cinematography. This was the first major Hong Kong film
shot by Doyle and his rich style, embracing a wide spectrum of colors and
tones is much in evidence, making this, as already noted, a truly unique
cinematic experience.
In fact, WKW's collaboration with Doyle here is so complete, careful, well
thought out, and subtle, that it would be impossible to imagine one
without the other. So too is the use of the completely Western soundtrack.
Set in 1960s Hong Kong, the feel of the era is effortlessly captured, also
adding to the atmosphere of this rich film.
This is a landmark film in that, for its time, almost 15 years ago, it
focused on aspects of life not previously shown in Hong Kong film and was
an obvious departure from the martial arts movies American audiences
expected from that part of the world. The advent of not only WKW but a
number of 4th, 5th, and 6th generation directors from China and HK can
easily count Wong Kar Wai as one of its breakthrough filmmakers. And this
film is more than ample proof of that.
Loneliness, sadness, restlessness, lust, longing, emptiness. A film that
resonates.....
Definitely recommended.





Lust, Caution by Ang Lee






Lust, Caution, Ang Lee's follow up to Brokeback Mountain, for which he won the Academy Award® for Best Director, continues his exploration of people with a passion for each other trapped in a world where their passion could be life-threatening, but in a very different context this time. Set in China during the Japanese occupation of early World War II, the underlying plot concerns the story of young Wong Chia Chi (Tang Wei), an actress and member of a small group of student resistors planning to infiltrate the home of Mr. Yee (Tony Leung), a high-ranking collaborationist government official, in order to kill him for his role in the torture and executions of Chinese resistance fighters. Chi ingratiates herself with Yee's wife, the sophisticated and cultured Mrs. Yee (Joan Chen) under the guise of being the wife of a wealthy but unseen tycoon. Flashbacks tell the tale of how Chi came to be involved with the resistors: her acting ability is her most valuable asset, and her assignment is to act the role of Mr. Yee's lover, right down to the sex. The story of their love and the painful intimacy it involves for both of them is told through their sexual relationship, which starts out violently, drifts into S&M, and shifts with their feelings, moving from pain and fear to some sort of desperate connection. This is lust with a capital L; the film's sex scenes have become famous for their frankness and acrobatic portrayals (they took 12 days to film), but amazingly enough, it's never prurient. The nature of their sexual relationship, and not the sex itself, is the point. Chi falls in love with the man she's supposed to kill, but there is no stopping the mission and she knows it. The danger of it all collapsing for them both is ever present, and that's the Caution. The cinematography and direction in Lust, Caution is masterful, and every scene is beautiful. The film does drift into a languid pace, and at times one wonders why Lee would feel the need to draw it out at the expense of delaying the crucial climactic scenes. Still, it's a wonderful piece of storytelling that should only help solidify Ang Lee's place in cinematic history as a master of films that express the difficulty of being essentially human in an inhumane world.







Heat by Michael Mann

Movie That Matter
Heat

Having developed his skill as a master of contemporary crime drama, writer-director Michael Mann displayed every aspect of that mastery in this intelligent, character-driven thriller from 1995, which also marked the first onscreen pairing of Robert De Niro and Al Pacino. The two great actors had played father and son in the separate time periods of The Godfather, Part II, but this was the first film in which the pair appeared together, and although their only scene together is brief, it's the riveting fulcrum of this high-tech cops-and-robbers scenario. De Niro plays a master thief with highly skilled partners (Val Kilmer and Tom Sizemore) whose latest heist draws the attention of Pacino, playing a seasoned Los Angeles detective whose investigation reveals that cop and criminal lead similar lives. Both are so devoted to their professions that their personal lives are a disaster. Pacino's with a wife (Diane Venora) who cheats to avoid the reality of their desolate marriage; De Niro pays the price for a life with no outside connections; and Kilmer's wife (Ashley Judd) has all but given up hope that her husband will quit his criminal career. These are men obsessed, and as De Niro and Pacino know, they'll both do whatever's necessary to bring the other down. Mann's brilliant screenplay explores these personal obsessions and sacrifices with absorbing insight, and the tension mounts with some of the most riveting action sequences ever filmed--most notably a daylight siege that turns downtown Los Angeles into a virtual war zone of automatic gunfire. At nearly three hours, the film qualifies as a kind of intimate epic, certain to leave some viewers impatiently waiting for more action, but it's all part of Mann's compelling strategy. Heat is a true rarity: a crime thriller with equal measures of intense excitement and dramatic depth, giving De Niro and Pacino a prime showcase for their finely matched talents.

2008年3月24日 星期一

星 期 天 休 息 : 願 馬 英 九 能 垂 範 一 個 明 天 的 中 國


中 華 民 國 總 統 大 選 , 馬 英 九 大 勝 , 台 灣 的 民 主 進 入 新 時 代
。 總 統 大 選 以 經 濟 為 主 調 , 馬 英 九 主 攻 陳 水 扁 八 年 經 濟 建
設 之 空 洞 , 陳 水 扁 轉 而 回 應 以 台 獨 的 虛 無 。 競 選 期 間 , 民
進 黨 對 馬 英 九 的 抹 黑 , 到 了 幼 稚 可 笑 的 程 度 , 台 灣 人 不 接
受 這 一 切 , 對 民 進 黨 失 望 , 希 望 換 一 個 人 , 換 一 個 政 黨 ,
讓 民 進 黨 繼 續 賴 下 去 , 反 而 是 民 智 的 不 成 熟 。 民 主 政 治 最
大 的 好 處 , 是 定 期 投 票 , 一 個 敗 劣 的 政 府 , 把 社 會 折 磨 得
金 屬 疲 勞 , 新 人 上 台 , 重 鼓 民 氣 , 帶 來 新 的 希 望 。 馬 英 九
的 優 勢 , 是 振 作 了 低 迷 的 民 氣 , 有 望 化 戾 氣 為 祥 和 。 中 國
道 家 文 化 , 首 重 一 個 「 氣 」 字 。 中 醫 講 血 氣 , 風 水 講
地 氣 , 書 法 要 體 現 墨 氣 , 兵 器 武 術 , 也 要 顯 示 劍 氣 。 「 氣
」 本 來 是 很 抽 象 的 能 量 , 無 法 以 物 理 實 驗 估 量 , 但 台 灣 的
大 選 , 因 為 長 期 受 排 擠 孤 立 , 台 灣 人 一 生 下 來 , 好 像 備 受
詛 咒 , 無 論 書 讀 得 多 好 , 生 意 多 麼 成 功 , 在 世 界 上 如 何 名
成 利 就 、 春 風 得 意 , 台 灣 人 在 國 際 社 會 中 永 遠 無 法 具 備 完
整 的 人 格 。 台 灣 總 統 大 選 , 投 票 率 極 高 , 選 民 情 感 投 入 ,
爭 辯 政 治 都 很 激 動 , 這 是 因 為 無 分 黨 派 , 人 人 都 知 道 腳 下
的 一 片 孤 土 , 只 能 由 自 己 來 捍 衞 , 軟 弱 退 縮 , 即 無 死 所 。
比 起 歐 美 國 家 , 台 灣 的 民 主 更 為 徹 底 , 民 氣 淋 漓 , 可 以 化
虛 無 為 充 實 , 化 悲 情 為 欣 喜 , 化 夢 想 為 現 實 , 台 灣 缺 乏 國
際 的 人 格 , 台 灣 人 自 然 拚 命 用 選 票 來 宣 示 人 格 , 台 灣 民 主
旺 盛 , 短 短 二 十 年 , 完 成 了 英 美 二 百 年 的 躍 進 , 希 望 贏 得
國 際 的 認 同 和 尊 重 , 這 一 點 , 自 從 蔣 經 國 和 李 登 輝 兩 位 總
統 開 創 坤 , 雖 然 進 不 了 聯 合 國 , 基 本 上 是 做 到 了 。

台 灣 的 民 主 沒 有 流 血 , 風 傳 的 暗 殺 沒 有 發 生 。 不 論 那 一 位
候 選 人 遭 到 暗 殺 , 損 失 的 只 能 是 二 千 三 百 萬 台 灣 人 , 民 主
的 宗 旨 就 是 保 障 和 平 而 公 正 的 權 力 移 交 。 馬 英 九 一 旦 被 暗
殺 , 民 進 黨 即 使 亂 中 勝 選 , 不 可 能 有 公 信 力 , 台 灣 人 越 來
越 成 熟 , 不 可 能 不 知 道 。 台 灣 的 民 主 勝 利 了 , 相 信 絕 大 多
數 香 港 人 , 心 底 都 為 台 灣 人 感 到 高 興 , 為 華 人 覺 得 驕 傲 。
馬 英 九 當 選 , 連 同 立 法 院 多 數 , 會 不 會 「 一 黨 獨 大 」 ? 馬
英 九 既 然 性 格 優 柔 , 更 不 是 獨 裁 強 人 的 材 料 。 「 不 統 、 不
獨 、 不 武 」 是 台 灣 民 主 認 同 的 原 則 , 馬 英 九 競 選 的 政 綱 ,
以 台 灣 本 位 為 主 軸 , 馬 英 九 不 可 能 是 一 言 堂 老 闆 , 只 能 是
台 灣 利 益 的 代 理 人 , 勝 選 後 搶 先 跑 上 台 演 說 的 榮 譽 主 席 連
戰 , 更 不 是 太 上 皇 , 台 灣 包 括 民 進 黨 在 內 的 民 意 才 是 真 正
的 老 闆 。 馬 英 九 勝 選 , 暫 時 拆 除 了 台 獨 的 炸 彈 , 重 振 中 華
民 國 的 國 魂 , 紓 解 了 台 海 的 軍 事 緊 張 氣 氛 , 對 岸 中 國 大 陸
政 府 如 何 面 對 , 反 而 更 需 要 解 放 思 想 , 要 求 產 生 新 思 維。

台 灣 的 民 主 , 是 無 可 辯 駁 的 事 實 , 台 灣 人 不 是 奴 隸 , 中 華
民 國 今 天 享 有 中 國 三 千 年 歷 史 上 從 未 享 有 的 人 權 和 自 由 。
更 重 要 的 是 , 馬 英 九 是 一 位 君 子 , 不 是 秦 始 皇 、 朱 元 璋 、
明 成 祖 、 萬 曆 皇 帝 、 慈 禧 太 后 一 類 帝 皇 , 殘 暴 陰 險 , 愚 昧
昏 庸 。 這 張 臉 孔 和 這 副 性 格 , 打 破 了 長 夜 的 黑 暗 , 是 中 國
領 袖 史 上 的 全 新 景 觀 , 如 果 治 國 成 功 , 更 打 破 中 國 知 識 分
子 永 遠 只 能 做 屈 原 諸 葛 的 帝 主 附 庸 , 君 子 可 以 成 為 民 主 的
領 袖 , 真 正 是 選 賢 與 能 , 是 禮 運 大 同 的 古 遠 理 想 。
但 願 馬 先 生 再 進 一 步 , 振 興 中 華 文 化 正 在 消 亡 的 高 尚 價 值
觀 : 誠 信 、 道 義 、 慈 愛 、 勇 氣 、 公 義 、 人 情 味 , 勿 讓 日 本
人 專 美 , 這 一 切 , 只 能 在 蔣 經 國 先 生 守 護 過 的 這 片 寶 地 ,
還 剩 下 幾 顆 種 子 。 如 此 期 許 , 可 能 是 奢 望 , 但 馬 英 九 的 良
和 方 正 、 憨 直 清 廉 , 本 來 不 宜 在 政 圈 營 生 , 但 今 日 台 灣 的
民 氣 思 變 , 認 同 馬 英 九 的 正 氣 , 就 有 改 變 宿 命 的 可 能 。 是
難 得 的 歷 史 良 機 , 只 要 相 信 人 性 善 良 , 而 民 主 是 符 合 人 性
的 國 際 潮 流 , 也 就 會 希 望 天 佑 中 華 命 脈 , 台 灣 在 馬 英 九 的
領 導 下 , 建 設 成 一 個 自 由 繁 榮 的 君 子 之 邦 , 不 論 等 多 久 ,
垂 範 一 個 終 將 誕 生 的 光 明 祥 樂 的 明 日 中 國 。
陶傑

馬 英 九 當 選台 灣 總 統

馬 英 九 當 選   國 民 黨 重 新 執 政
台 灣 昨 日 舉 行 第 四 次 總 統 直 選 , 國 民 黨 候 選 人 馬 英 九 狂 勝 220 萬 票 , 讓 藍 天 再 現 , 實 現 執 政 權 的 第 二 次 政 黨 輪 替 。 這 位 在 香 港 出 生 的 台 灣 總 統 , 強 調 台 灣 不 是 香 港 、 不 是 西 藏 ; 這 位 美 國 哈 佛 大 學 法 學 博 士 的 勝 出 , 終 令 華 府 、 北 京 放 下 心 頭 大 石 , 台 海 的 穩 定 可 期 ; 這 位 主 張 兩 岸 「 不 獨 不 統 不 武 」 的 新 台 灣 人 , 承 諾 今 年 7 月 就 加 快 兩 岸 三 通
台 灣 1,320 多 萬 選 民 , 昨 晨 8 時 起 陸 續 前 往 投 票 , 過 程 大 致 順 利 。 投 票 在 下 午 4 時 結 束 , 各 投 票 站 隨 即 當 場 開 票 。 由 於 馬 英 九 得 票 一 路 領 先 , 藍 營 欣 喜 若 狂 , 民 進 黨 候 選 人 謝 長 廷 的 競 選 總 部 則 陷 入 陰 霾 馬 ︰ 從 感 恩 出 發 從 謙 卑 做 起
至 5 時 42 分 , 台 灣 中 央 選 舉 委 員 會 的 網 站 顯 示 , 馬 英 九 的 優 勢 擴 大 至 100 萬 票 。 而 國 民 黨 自 行 統 計 的 結 果 則 顯 示 , 馬 英 九 已 領 先 近 200 萬 票 , 因 此 掛 出 「 恭 賀 當 選 」 的 橫 額 。 至 6 時 , 國 民 黨 高 層 集 體 亮 相 , 宣 佈 勝 選 , 民 進 黨 隨 後 承 認 落 敗 。 這 一 夜 , 多 少 淚 水 灑 在 台 北 。 國 民 黨 主 席 吳 伯 雄 含 淚 感 謝 人 民 的 支 持 , 謝 長 廷 對 哭 泣 的 支 持 者 鞠 躬 致 歉 : 「 選 舉 是 我 個 人 的 失 敗 , 不 是 台 灣 的 失 敗 , 今 天 , 不 要 為 我 哭 泣 。 」 謝 長 廷 展 現 的 風 度 , 為 他 日 後 東 山 再 起 保 住 了 顏 面 。 這 一 夜 , 多 少 承 諾 留 在 台 北 。 馬 英 九 在 防 彈 玻 璃 圍 住 的 演 講 台 發 表 勝 選 感 言 時 承 諾 , 會 維 護 台 灣 的 核 心 價 值 : 就 是 善 良 、 堅 忍 、 包 容 、 勤 奮 、 刻 苦 , 國 民 黨 一 定 從 感 恩 出 發 , 從 謙 卑 做 起 。 將 在 5 月 20 日 卸 任 總 統 的 陳 水 扁 , 也 向 馬 英 九 表 示 祝 賀 , 同 時 承 諾 會 如 期 移 交 政 權 。 這 一 夜 , 多 少 期 待 湧 向 台 北 。 台 灣 股 市 上 周 已 爆 漲 , 上 演 慶 祝 行 情 , 公 開 挺 馬 的 金 鼎 證 券 總 裁 張 平 沼 表 示 , 台 股 指 數 上 看 萬 點 , 那 不 過 是 還 給 台 股 一 個 公 道 。 北 京 國 台 辦 發 言 人 李 維 一 未 向 勝 選 的 馬 英 九 祝 賀 , 但 強 調 : 「 兩 岸 關 係 和 平 發 展 是 兩 岸 同 胞 的 共 同 願 望 , 大 家 共 同 為 此 努 力 。 」


狂 勝 220 萬 票 得 票 率 新 高
馬 英 九 昨 以 220 萬 票 的 差 距 贏 得 總 統 寶 座 , 是 他 從 政 以 來 第 四 次 在 選 舉 中 獲 勝 , 並 創 下 台 灣 總 統 民 選 史 上 得 票 率 ( 58.45% ) 、 得 票 總 數 ( 765.8 萬 票 ) 的 新 高 , 超 過 1996 年 台 灣 第 一 次 直 選 總 統 時 李 登 輝 的 581 萬 票 、 54% 的 得 票 率 。 馬 英 九 還 曾 在 台 北 市 長 選 舉 中 擊 敗 尋 求 連 任 的 陳 水 扁 , 2002 年 又 以 64.1% 得 票 率 連 任 台 北 市 長 , 在 2005 年 以 72.4% 的 優 勢 當 選 國 民 黨 主 席 。 馬 英 九 一 直 是 國 民 黨 重 奪 政 權 的 希 望 , 但 他 出 生 在 香 港 、 曾 經 宣 稱 兩 岸 要 實 現 終 極 統 一 , 也 一 直 成 為 對 手 攻 擊 的 目 標 。 在 藍 營 擁 有 立 法 院 四 分 三 議 席 的 背 景 下 , 馬 英 九 施 政 幾 乎 可 以 為 所 欲 為 , 他 參 選 時 已 提 出 兩 岸 三 通 時 間 表 , 最 快 在 今 年 7 月 實 現 兩 岸 「 周 末 包 機 」 , 明 年 6 月 前 實 現 兩 岸 三 通 。 更 令 人 關 注 是 , 他 會 否 加 快 國 民 黨 與 共 產 黨 自 2005 重 歸 於 好 後 的 合 作 ? 蔣 經 國 在 晚 年 解 除 戒 嚴 , 開 放 民 眾 赴 大 陸 探 親 , 開 放 報 禁 , 打 開 了 民 主 之 門 。 李 登 輝 結 束 了 蔣 介 石 、 蔣 經 國 父 子 在 台 灣 的 威 權 政 治 , 創 建 了 台 灣 的 民 主 制 度 , 也 開 了 台 灣 疏 離 中 國 大 陸 、 走 向 本 土 化 的 時 代 。 馬 英 九 不 可 能 擁 有 國 民 黨 一 黨 獨 大 時 的 威 權 , 也 不 可 能 背 離 台 灣 本 土 化 的 趨 勢 。 他 當 選 國 民 黨 主 席 後 矢 言 「 六 四 不 平 反 , 統 一 不 能 談 」 , 已 修 訂 了 兩 岸 終 極 統 一 的 前 提 。 當 年 提 出 「 新 台 灣 人 」 口 號 幫 助 馬 英 九 擊 敗 陳 水 扁 的 李 登 輝 , 早 前 在 宣 佈 自 己 一 票 將 投 給 謝 長 廷 時 也 向 傳 媒 表 示 , 不 相 信 馬 英 九 會 出 賣 台 灣 。
兩 岸 新 「 三 不 」 ︰ 不 統 不 獨 不 武
其 實 , 馬 英 九 身 上 抹 不 去 蔣 經 國 的 影 子 。 蔣 經 國 生 前 面 對 兩 岸 三 通 壓 力 時 提 出 「 三 不 」 , 即 「 不 妥 協 不 接 觸 不 談 判 」 , 馬 英 九 現 時 的 兩 岸 政 策 主 張 是 新 「 三 不 」 , 即 「 不 統 不 獨 不 武 」 ; 蔣 經 國 推 動 台 灣 十 大 建 設 , 令 台 灣 與 香 港 、 新 加 坡 、 南 韓 躋 身 亞 洲 四 小 龍 , 馬 英 九 如 今 也 提 出 愛 台 灣 十 二 大 建 設 。 國 民 黨 榮 譽 主 席 連 戰 下 月 將 再 赴 大 陸 , 與 共 產 黨 舉 行 會 談 , 國 共 合 作 會 否 加 快 , 屆 時 或 許 會 露 出 端 倪 。 回 首 今 次 選 戰 , 民 進 黨 年 初 在 立 委 選 舉 慘 敗 後 調 整 了 策 略 , 由 深 綠 戰 略 轉 向 中 間 路 線 , 謝 長 廷 的 選 舉 服 飾 、 旗 幟 摒 棄 傳 統 的 綠 色 , 改 用 粉 藍 色 , 但 在 政 治 、 經 濟 、 社 會 發 展 上 並 沒 有 提 出 詳 盡 的 綱 領 , 依 然 強 攻 馬 英 九 持 有 美 國 綠 卡 、 馬 蕭 的 兩 岸 共 同 市 場 是 一 中 ( 一 個 中 國 ) 市 場 以 及 最 近 發 生 的 中 國 槍 殺 示 威 藏 民 事 件 。 但 是 , 綠 卡 牌 改 變 不 了 民 眾 對 馬 英 九 的 信 任 , 一 中 市 場 牌 改 變 不 了 民 眾 對 緩 和 兩 岸 關 係 、 發 展 兩 岸 經 貿 的 願 望 , 西 藏 和 香 港 牌 改 變 不 了 台 灣 不 是 西 藏 、 不 是 香 港 的 事 實 。 而 馬 英 九 、 蕭 萬 長 發 表 的 21 份 政 策 白 皮 書 , 浸 潤 多 少 民 眾 、 學 者 的 心 願 和 智 慧 , 民 進 黨 改 變 了 選 戰 的 色 調 , 但 改 變 不 了 「 只 會 選 舉 、 不 會 治 國 」 的 嘲 諷 , 再 度 應 驗 了 美 國 前 總 統 克 林 頓 當 年 競 選 時 留 下 的 名 言 : 「 It's the economy, stupid. ( 關 鍵 是 經 濟 。 ) 」
台 灣 今 屆 大 選 結 果
當 選 : 馬 英 九   蕭 萬 長 ( 國 民 黨 ) 得 票 數 ( 得 票 率 ) : 7,658,724 ( 58.45% ) 落 選 : 謝 長 廷   蘇 貞 昌 ( 民 進 黨 ) 得 票 數 ( 得 票 率 ) : 5,445,239 ( 41.55% ) 選 民 人 數 : 17,321,622投 票 人 數 : 13,221,609投 票 率 : 76.33%

Mark Knopfler

Mark Knopfler was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on the 12th of August 1949.
He was around seven years old when the Knopfler family moved to Newcastle
-Upon-Tyne in the North-East of England. Mark attended Gosforth Grammar
School. As a young boy Mark was inspired by his uncle Kingsley's harmonica
and boogie-woogie piano playing. Later, in his teens, he set his heart on
an all too expensive flamingo-pink Fender Strat, just like Hank Marvin's,
but in the end he had to settle for a £50 twin pick-up Hofner Super Solid.
£50 was a lot of money in those days. Like lots of other guitar-toting
schoolboys of the 1960s, Mark served an early apprenticeship by forming
and joining anonymous schoolboy bands and listening to guitarists such as
Scotty Moore, Jimi Hendrix, Django Reinhardt and James Burton. At sixteen
he made a local TV appearance as half of a harmony duo along with school-
friend Sue Hercombe.
At school Mark had demonstrated a flair for English and in 1967 he went to
study journalism for a year at Harlow Technical College. At the end of the
course he secured a job in Leeds as a junior reporter on the Yorkshire
Evening Post. After two years he decided to further his studies and
commenced a degree in English at Leeds University. It was whilst Mark was
living in Leeds that he met a local blues singer/guitarist by the name of
Steve Phillips. Mark wrote newspaper articles and reviews on the music
scene in and around Leeds. By an odd coincidence, Mark's boss was another
man by the name of Stephen Phillips. This has caused some confusion over
the years and a number of Steve Phillips biographies have claimed
erroneously that Steve himself worked as a journalist. Mark and his boss -
the other 'Steve Phillips' - went to see Steve playing in Leeds. Steve
fondly recalls how Mark's first words were "Steve Phillips, meet Steve
Phillips."
Steve and Mark found that, musically, they had much in common and they
went on to form a duo called The Duolian String Pickers. By day Mark
continued working as a reporter and, later, as a full-time student, while
Steve took a job restoring paintings and furniture at Leeds City Art
Gallery and Temple Newsam House. They played together on and off over the
next five years. Some of their work is featured on Steve's 1996 Just
Pickin' album. "He was a good guitar player, Steve says wryly of the young
Knopfler, "in a B.B. King sort of way." Steve was to have a profound
effect on Mark's guitar playing, introducing him to the intricate lead
technique of black blues guitarist Lonnie Johnson and the subtle skills of
country blues guitar, the elements of which Mark was eventually to weave
into his own unique style of guitar picking. This was, in fact, a very
important stage in Mark's development as a guitarist. He was later to tell
Jack Sonni that it was not until he began to finger-pick that he found his
guitar 'voice'. While living in Leeds, Mark made his first record. It was
recorded in a room that had been converted into a studio in a house in
Pudsey. The song was called "Summer's Coming My Way" and it featured Steve
Phillips on twelve-string guitar.
On graduating from Leeds University in 1973, Mark decided to go to London
and try to break into the rock scene. He scanned through the music press
and finally answered the biggest advert he could find in Melody Maker.
That led him to an audition and a two month stint with a blues band called
Brewer's Droop. Mark played guitar on three songs they recorded at Dave
Edmunds' Rockfield Studios in Wales. The band's drummer was a guy called
Pick Withers. Pick had turned professional at the age of seventeen and was
a very experienced drummer. Having left Brewer's Droop Mark took up a job
as a lecturer at Loughton College in Essex, where he remained for two
years living in a rented flat in Buckhurst Hill, sometimes giving guitar
lessons at Staples Road School. Then, brother David came to stay for a few
weeks en route to London. The Knopfler brothers would often sit up late
into the night playing songs and, without knowing it, to some extent
laying the foundations of what was to become, in time, Dire Straits. It
was the mid-1970s, David moved on to London and Mark went on to form a
working band with friends at Loughton College. They called themselves the
Café Racers.
David came to share a flat at Farrer House on Deptford's Crossfield
Estate, South-East London, with a Leicester-born bass player by the name
of John Illsley. John recalls first meeting Mark. "I'd been out all night
and came in about ten in the morning. I walked into the kitchen, started
making myself a cup of tea, walked into the lounge and there was this guy
lying on the floor with his head propped up against a chair. He was fast
asleep, fully clothed in denim with leather boots. He had a guitar
slouched over his waist." David had often spoken to John of his guitar-
playing brother and John guessed correctly that the guy sprawled out on
the lounge floor was indeed Mark. It wasn't long before John found himself
on stage with Mark. One night the Café Racers' bass player was ill and
John was asked to stand in. Mark and John immediately struck up a great
working relationship and both realised that, despite having built-up a
good reputation on the local pub scene, the Café Racers' had a limited
future. In April 1977, Mark gave up his flat in Buckhurst Hill and moved
in with David and John.
John quickly realised that not only was Mark a talented and excitingly
different guitar player, he was also a gifted song-writer. During the
summer of 1977, the three musicians found themselves playing and
rehearsing Mark's songs. Yet, something was missing - a drummer. Mark,
recalling his brief stint with Brewer's Droop, said he knew of a drummer
who would be ideal for the sort of music they were developing. Mark had
been very impressed with Pick Withers back in 1973 and so Pick was invited
to the Farrer House flat and the four musicians began doing gigs together
under the name of Mark's old band, the Café Racers'. John recalled that
"playing with Pick Withers was fantastic...I'd never played with anybody
as good as him." Later, a friend of Pick's suggested a new name for the
band - Dire Straits. The die was cast. The band's first gig took place on
the open space at the back of the Farrer House flats, the electricity
provided by a power cable running from the stage into a socket on the wall
of John's first floor flat.
On the 27th of July 1977, Dire Straits recorded the now famous demo tapes
of five songs - "Wild West End", "Sultans of Swing", "Down To The
Waterline", "Sacred Loving" and "Water of Love". In what was probably
October, they recorded "Southbound Again", "In The Gallery" and "Six Blade
Knife" for BBC Radio London. Finally, on the 9th of November, demo tapes
were made of "Setting Me Up", "Eastbound Train" and "Real Girl". Many of
these songs reflected Mark's experiences in Newcastle, Leeds and London,
and were to be featured on the first Dire Straits album the following
year. By the mid-1980s Dire Straits had released Brothers in Arms, one of
the best selling albums of all time. The Brothers In Arms tour saw Dire
Straits play 234 shows in twelve months to combined audiences of about 2.5
million. Within a couple of weeks of the tour finishing, Mark was
producing Tina Turner but, at the same time, felt he needed to get back to
his roots. Long-time mates Steve Phillips and Brendan Croker had teamed-up
to form a duo shortly after Mark had left Leeds in 1973. In 1986, Steve
was in London and called in to see Mark, who said he fancied coming up to
Leeds and sitting in with Steve and Brendan on one of their gigs. This
resulted in the three of them playing together at The Grove pub in
Hunslet, Leeds, on the 31st of May, 1986. The following year Mark offered
to produce Steve's next album, but Steve suggested that a new album should
feature both himself and Brendan. Guy Fletcher was brought in to help out
on the technical side. From this evolved the Notting Hillbillies. Ed
Bicknell is an accomplished drummer in his own right and during a meal in
a Notting Hill wine bar, Mark sat next to him and said "OK, Ed; we've
formed a band, and you're the drummer." Paul Franklin joined on pedal-
steel guitar. There followed an extensive UK tour to promote the 1990
release of the multi-platinum selling album Missing......Presumed having A
Good Time. Also in 1990, Mark was able to release the Neck and Neck album,
a joint project with the greatly admired Chet Atkins.
Mark brought Dire Straits back together for the 1988 Nelson Mandela 70th
Birthday Concert which featured Eric Clapton who was standing-in for Jack
Sonni, as Jack had just become the father of twin girls. Mark, John, Alan
Clark and Guy Fletcher appeared on stage at Knebworth in June 1990 along
with, among others, Eric Clapton, Elton John, Ray Cooper and Phil Palmer,
to help raise funds for the Nordoff Robbins charity. Then came the On
Every Street album. The resulting extensive world tour, which played to
more than four million people, was punishing and exhausting. After it was
over Mark felt that he needed to take a break from the pressures of live
performance and studio schedules.
Over the years Mark has collaborated with many artists. He has, at one
time or other, worked with people such as Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, Randy
Newman, Buddy Guy, Tina Turner, Phil Lynott, Willy DeVille, Eric Clapton,
Waylon Jennings, Chet Atkins, Phil Everly, Vince Gill, Paul Franklin, Kate
and Anna McGarrigle, Paul Brady, The Chieftains, Ben. E. King, Mary
Chapin-Carpenter, Joan Armatrading, Scott Walker, Jeff Healey, The Judds,
Jimmy Nail, Bryan Ferry, Aztec Camera, Steely Dan, Sting, Sonny Landreth,
James Taylor, Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, and many
others. He has also devoted a great deal of time to charity work for
institutions large and small. Dire Straits did a total of three concerts
for the Prince's Trust in front of Prince Charles and Diana, Princess of
Wales. They appeared at the 1985 Live Aid Concert and the 1988 Nelson
Mandela 70th Birthday Concert. In 1995 Mark was featured on the chart-
topping Dunblane single "Knockin' On Heaven's Door", and in September 1997
was one of the artists who performed for Sir George Martin's Music For
Montserrat Concert at the Royal Albert Hall. The Notting Hillbillies, too,
have performed many charity concerts, helping to raise money for a range
of deserving causes. Mark has been the recipient of countless awards and
accolades, not least among which was the conferring, in May 1993, of an
Honorary Music Degree by Newcastle University, of which he is justly
proud.
Mark Knopfler has always been a songster - to him the song is king. It is
said that he has never really understood why his music is so popular. In
this he is not alone. When reviewing the Sultans of Swing compilation
album in November 1998, the writers of Mojo magazine commented
"overwhelming sales testify to Mark Knopfler's song-writing ability and
guitar expertise, and there is certainly something intimate and friendly
in that smoky voice and fluid guitar, though the scale of Dire Straits'
success remains mildly baffling." Some have tried to answer this by
arguing that Mark's music has an instant appeal. Perhaps a better
explanation comes in Robert Sandall's liner essay for the Sultans of Swing
compilation. Sandall noted, "As the fires of punk raged around them, they
made no secret of their love for styles of music which the cultural
commissars of the day had recently declared irrelevant....What part could
this lot possibly play in the brave new world of anarchy, media
manipulation and anti-musicianship? Apart from their consummate skill as
performers, it was their complete disregard for all the fashionable
nonsenses of the moment that rescued Dire Straits from the fate which
swiftly overtook most of their punky contemporaries. While others lived
and died in a blaze of publicity and disappointing record sales, they took
the world by stealth....Dire Straits were, above all, superb
communicators.... The heartfelt simplicity of their music - chiefly
derived from Mark Knopfler's gruff vocals and elegantly burnished Fender
guitar tone - came across in songs that sounded both fresh and timeless,
and which also possessed a breathtaking accuracy."
Mark also found time to score the music to numerous films. First came
Local Hero in 1983, followed in 1984 by the Cal and the Comfort and Joy
soundtracks. These were followed in 1987 by The Princess Bride, and two
years later came Last Exit To Brooklyn. Further soundtrack work has seen
the release of Metroland and Wag The Dog, both of 1998, and the soundtrack
album to the film A Shot At Glory released in 2001.
In 1996 Mark began his career as a solo performer with the release of the
Golden Heart album. The album was simply a step forward in the evolution
of his music, "It's just moving forwards...", he said, "... just trying to
be better." Mark's solo career has allowed him to hone his rare talent as
a singer/song-writer. His second solo album, Sailing To Philadelphia, was
released in 2000. Autumn 2002 saw the release of his third solo album, The
Ragpicker's Dream, but, just as rehearsals were about to begin, the
planned 2003 tour had to be cancelled due to a serious motorcycle
accident. Thankfully, Mark made a full recovery from his injuries and was
on the road again in 2005 to promote his fourth solo album, Shangri-La,
released in September 2004. One year on saw the release of The Best of
Dire Straits and Mark Knopfler: Private Investigations compilation album.
2006 saw the release of a number of albums to which Mark has contributed,
and also of the much acclaimed and Grammy nominated All The Roadrunning CD
with Emmylou Harris, promoted by a tour of Europe and North America. In
the fall of 2007 Mark will be releasing a new solo album, Kill To Get
Crimson.
There remains another side to Mark Knopfler, a very private side. By the
mid-80s Mark was being referred to by some as the "quiet man of rock and
roll." He is shy by nature and gets embarrassed when fans tell him how
much they have been affected by his songs and how his music has changed
their lives. It is a matter of public record that Mark has been married
three times. His second marriage produced his twin sons, Benji and Joseph,
born in 1987, and his third marriage to Kitty Aldridge has been blessed
with two daughters - Isabella, born in 1998, and Katya born in 2003. After
almost thirty years at the top of his profession, Mark Knopfler remains,
at heart, a family man who loves nothing better than to spend time with
his wife and his children.

2008年3月20日 星期四

Neil Young

Biography
Neil Young was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada to sportswriter and
novelist Scott Young and Rassy Ragland, who had moved to Toronto from
their family home of Manitoba to pursue a sport journalism career. Neil
spent his early years in the small country town of Omemee, in southern
Ontario (130 km northeast of Toronto). He was diagnosed with diabetes as a
childand a bout of polio at the age of 6 left him with a weakened left
side; he still walks with a slight limp.

In 1965 Young toured Canada as a solo artist and composing music for
commercial advertisements. In 1966, he joined Rick James-fronted Mynah
Birds. The band managed to secure a record deal with the Motown label.
Unfortunately, as their first album was being recorded James was arrested
for being AWOL from the army.[9] After the Mynah Birds disbanded, Young
and bass player Bruce Palmer relocated to Los Angeles. Young has admitted
in an interview that he was in the United States illegally until receiving
a green card in 1970.


In May 1968, the band split up for good, but in order to fulfill a
contractual obligation, a final album, Last Time Around, was recorded,
primarily from recordings made earlier that year. Young contributed the
songs "On the Way Home" and "I Am a Child", singing lead on the latter.


Also that year, Young released his third solo album, After the Gold Rush
(1970), which featured, among others, a young Nils Lofgren, Stephen
Stills, and CSNY bassist Greg Reeves. Young also recorded some tracks with
Crazy Horse, but dismissed them early in the sessions. Aided by his
newfound fame with CSNY, the album was a commercial breakthrough for Young
and contains some of his best known work. Notable tracks include the title
track, with dream-like lyrics that run a gamut of subjects from drugs and
interpersonal relationships to environmental concerns, as well as Young’s
controversial and acerbic condemnation of racism in "Southern Man," which,
along with a later song entitled "Alabama," later prompted Lynyrd Skynyrd
to decry Young by name in the lyrics to "Sweet Home Alabama."


On September 8, 1972, the Academy Award-nominated actress Carrie
Snodgress, with whom he had been living, gave birth to Neil Young's first
child. The boy, Zeke, was later diagnosed with cerebral palsy. Young fell
in love with Snodgress after seeing her in a movie on television after
which Young wrote the song "A Man Needs a Maid" from the Harvest album,
featuring the lyric "I fell in love with the actress/she was playing a
part that I could understand."


In the second half of 1973, Young formed The Santa Monica Flyers, with
Crazy Horse's rhythm section augmented by Nils Lofgren on guitar. Deeply
affected by the drug-induced deaths of Whitten and roadie Bruce Berry,
Young recorded Tonight's the Night. The album's dark tone and rawness
caused Reprise to delay the release until two years later and only after
being pressured by Young to do so.[17] The album received mixed reviews at
the time, but is now regarded by some as a precursor to punk rock. In
Young's own opinion, it was the closest he ever came to art.


In 1976, Young performed with The Band, Joni Mitchell, and other rock
musicians in the high profile all-star concert The Last Waltz. The release
of Martin Scorsese's movie of the concert was delayed while Scorsese
unwillingly re-edited it to deemphasize the lump of cocaine that was
clearly visible hanging from Young's nose during his performance of
"Helpless."[23] Young later said, "I'm not proud of that," according to
one of his biographers.


The 1980s were a lean time for Young both critically and commercially.
After providing the incidental music to a biopic of Hunter S. Thompson
entitled Where the Buffalo Roam, he recorded Hawks & Doves (1980), a
folk/country record. Re-ac-tor (1981), once again with Crazy Horse, was a
façade of distortion and feedback obscuring a relatively weak selection of
songs, but his strangest record of the decade came with Trans (1982).
Recorded partially with vocoders, synthesizers, and other devices that
modified instruments and vocals with electronic effects, it is sometimes
considered an experiment related to finding a technology that would become
a means to communicate for Young’s son (with his wife Pegi), Ben, who has
severe cerebral palsy and cannot speak. Many fans were baffled by the
radical forms of this album and rockabilly-styled Everybody's Rockin'
(1983), and record company head David Geffen even sued Young for making
"unrepresentative" music—i.e. music that did not sound like Neil Young—
that deliberately lacked commercial appeal.[24] Young later stated that he
would have preferred to release the songs featuring the synclavier and
vocoder as an EP, and that their inclusion with the Hawaiian-themed
rockabilly was a mistake. Also premiered at this time though little seen
was an eclectic full-length comedy film Human Highway starring, co-
directed and co-written by Young.
In 1983, Young worked with British video director Tim Pope, making two
videos - "Wonderin'" and "Cry, Cry, Cry."


Old Ways (1985) saw a return to country music, recorded with a group of
friends and session musicians. Landing on Water (1986) is entertaining for
the blending of synthesizers and other instruments related to the 80's
into Young’s own style, with lyrics that take pot shots at some favourite
targets, including CSN in "Hippie Dream," with a chorus that goes: "But
the wooden ships/Were just a hippie dream," and David Geffen in "Drifter,"
with the line: "Don’t try to tell me what I gotta do to fit." The
resumption of his partnership with Crazy Horse on Life (1987) fulfilled
his contract with Geffen, and Young was finally able to switch labels.

2008年3月18日 星期二

Michael J.Box - Lucky Man


Lucky Man

Starting into any celebrity memoir is always a little harrowing. Will Star X check their ego at the door? Will the sugarcoating be too much to bear? Who is going to be the target of the revenge-inspired smear campaign?
That's why Lucky Man is so refreshing. Michael J. Fox has told the story of his life and, more importantly, of his struggle with Parkinson's Disease. LUCKY MAN, though, is no sob story. Fox sees his diagnosis with PD as an opportunity to help.
"The ten years since my diagnosis have been the best ten years of my life, and I consider myself a lucky man." this quote sums up the feel of the whole book. Warm, funny and painfully honest, Fox lets us into his life both before and after PD. We learn about his family, his drinking problem and life in Hollywood, but not in the lurid way that some stars tell it. His writing is down to earth and real.
Michael J. Fox has crafted an inspirational and important book without relying on cookie-cutter tear-jerking cliche or obvious pity ploys. LUCKY MAN is the best memoir I've read in a long time.

2008年3月16日 星期日

Aung San Suu Kyi

Brief Biography
Aung San Suu Kyi is the daughter of one of Burma's most
cherished heroes, the martyred General Aung San, who led his
country's fight for independence from Great Britain in the
1940s and was killed for his beliefs in 1947. Suu Kyi has
equaled her father's heroics with her calm but passionate
advocacy of freedom and democracy in the country now called
Myanmar, a name chosen by one of the most insensitive and
brutal military dictatorships in the world.


The ruling junta ? "political party" would be too generous a
concession ? goes by the Orwellian name of the State Law and
Order Restoration Council (SLORC). Burma, or Myanmar, has a
population of 45 million and is Southeast Asia's second
largest country (in area) after Indonesia.

The news event that brought Suu Kyi back into prominence in
May 2002 was her release from 19 months of house arrest in her
barricaded villa in Yangon, formerly Rangoon. The United
Nations helped to negotiate her release this time.

There was outrage around the world in 2000 when Suu Kyi tried
to leave Yangon, only to be thwarted by authorities. In August
of that year Suu Kyi, her driver and 14 members of her pro-
democracy party were confined in two cars on the side of the
road outside of Yangon. She endured a similar roadside
standoff for 13 days in 1998, during which time she suffered
severe dehydration and had to be returned to her home by
ambulance.

Suu Kyi (pronounced Soo Chee) was two years old when her
father ? the de facto prime minister of newly independent
Burma ? was assassinated. Though a Buddhist ? the predominant
religion of Burma ? she was educated at Catholic schools and
left for India in her mid-teens with her mother, who became
the Burmese ambassador to India. Suu Kyi went to England where
she studied at Oxford University. There she met Michael Aris,
the Tibetan scholar whom she married. They had two sons,
Alexander and Kim.

A watershed in her life was 1988, when Suu Kyi received a call
from Burma that her mother had suffered a stroke and did not
have long to live. Suu Kyi returned to Burma, leaving her
husband and two children behind in England, having cautioned
them years earlier that duty may one day call her back to her
homeland.

She arrived back in Burma to nurse her mother at a time of a
burgeoning pro-democracy movement, fueled by the energy and
idealism among the country's young people. There were
demonstrations against the repressive, one-party socialist
government. Suu Kyi was drawn into the pro-democracy movement,
which was snuffed out by SLORC, which seized power on
September 18, 1988. Thousands of pro-democracy advocates were
killed.

Next came a general election in 1990, which political parties
were allowed to contest. Suu Kyi headed the National League
for Democracy (NLD), which won a landslide victory, with 80
per cent support. This was not be tolerated by the SLORC
leaders, who refused to recognize the election results. Worse,
SLORC put the elected pro-democracy leaders under house
arrest, including Suu Kyi.

Despite the restrictions of house arrest, Suu Kyi continued to
campaign for democracy, and for this she won the Nobel Peace
Prize in 1991.

One of Suu Kyi's most dramatic speeches was in 1995, soon
after she was released from nearly six years of house arrest,
when she spoke to a global women's conference in Beijing. She
didn't appear at the conference, but spoke to the
international gathering by means of a video smuggled out of
Burma. Suu Kyi always expresses herself with calm conviction
and calm passion, which reflects her Buddhist upbringing. She
is Gandhian in her synergistic mixture of force and restraint.
In her speech, she said, "?to the best of my knowledge, no war
was ever started by women. But it is women and children who
have always suffered the most in situations of conflict." She
mentioned "the war toys of grown men." Without specifically
targeting her SLORC opponents, but her words dripping with
gentle sarcasm, Suu Kyi went on to say:
"There is an outmoded Burmese proverb still recited by men,
who wish to deny that women too can play a part in bringing
necessary change and progress to their society: 'The dawn
rises only when the rooster crows.' But Burmese people today
are well aware of the scientific reason behind the rising of
dawn and the falling of dusk. And the intelligent rooster
surely realizes that it is because dawn comes that it crows
and not the other way around.

"It crows to welcome the light that has come to relieve the
darkness of night. It is not the prerogative of men alone to
bring light to the world: women with their capacity for
compassion and self-sacrifice, their courage and perseverance,
have done much to dissipate the darkness of intolerance and
hate, suffering and despair."
It was a powerful speech, subtly crafted for the targeted
audience in her homeland.

In 1999, Michael Aris, was dying of prostate cancer in
England, where he lived with their two sons. He had repeatedly
requested permission to visit his wife one last time before he
died, but the SLORC authorities denied him entry, arguing that
there are no proper facilities in the country to tend to a
dying man. They suggested instead that Suu Kyi visit him in
England. She refused, fearing if she ever left the country she
would never be allowed to return.

The day Aris died, on his 53rd birthday on March 27, 1999, Suu
Kyi honoured the occasion at her home in Rangoon, with 1,000
friends and supporters, including high-ranking diplomats from
Europe and the United States. As part of a ceremony, she
offered food and saffron robes to 53 Buddhist monks, one for
each year of her husband's life. The monks recited prayers and
chanted sutras. Instead of wearing her usual bright flowers
and wreathes of jasmine, Suu Kyi chose instead a traditional
black lungi with a white jacket. She cried only when one of
the monks reminded the audience that the essence of Buddhism
is to treat suffering with equanimity.

The police did not stop the supporters from visiting Suu Kyi
in her time of grief. But they took the names and addresses of
all those who attended at the service to honour the husband
from whom she had been separated since she left England to
tend to her dying mother.

John Grisham

Biography
Long before his name became synonymous with the modern legal thriller, he was working 60-70 hours a week at a small Southaven, Mississippi law practice,
squeezing in time before going to the office and during courtroom recesses to
work on his hobby—writing his first novel.
Born on February 8, 1955 in Jonesboro, Arkansas, to a construction worker and
a homemaker, John Grisham as a child dreamed of being a professional baseball
player. Realizing he didn't have the right stuff for a pro career, he shifted
gears and majored in accounting at Mississippi State University.
After graduating from law school at Ole Miss in 1981, he went on to practice law for nearly a decade in Southaven, specializing in criminal defense and personal
injury litigation. In 1983, he was elected to the state House of
Representatives and served until 1990.

One day at the DeSoto County courthouse, Grisham overheard the harrowing
testimony of a twelve-year-old rape victim and was inspired to start a novel
exploring what would have happened if the girl's father had murdered her
assailants. Getting up at 5 a.m. every day to get in several hours of writing
time before heading off to work, Grisham spent three years on A Time to Kill
and finished it in 1987. Initially rejected by many publishers, it was
eventually bought by Wynwood Press, who gave it a modest 5,000 copy printing
and published it in June 1988.
That might have put an end to Grisham's hobby. However, he had already begun
his next book, and it would quickly turn that hobby into a new full-time
career—and spark one of publishing's greatest success stories. The day after
Grisham completed A Time to Kill, he began work on another novel, the story of
a hotshot young attorney lured to an apparently perfect law firm that was not
what it appeared. When he sold the film rights to The Firm to Paramount
Pictures for $600,000, Grisham suddenly became a hot property among
publishers, and book rights were bought by Doubleday. Spending 47 weeks on The
New York Times bestseller list, The Firm became the bestselling novel of 1991.

The successes of The Pelican Brief, which hit number one on the New York Times
bestseller list, and The Client, which debuted at number one, confirmed
Grisham's reputation as the master of the legal thriller. Grisham's success
even renewed interest in A Time to Kill, which was republished in hardcover by
Doubleday and then in paperback by Dell. This time around, it was a
bestseller.
Since first publishing A Time to Kill in 1988, Grisham has written one novel a
year (his other books are The Firm, The Pelican Brief, The Client, The
Chamber, The Rainmaker, The Runaway Jury, The Partner, The Street Lawyer, The
Testament, The Brethren, A Painted House, Skipping Christmas, The Summons, The
King of Torts, Bleachers, The Last Juror, and The Broker) and all of them have
become international bestsellers. There are currently over 225 million John
Grisham books in print worldwide, which have been translated into 29
languages. Nine of his novels have been turned into films (The Firm, The
Pelican Brief, The Client, A Time to Kill, The Rainmaker, The Chamber, A
Painted House, The Runaway Jury, and Skipping Christmas), as was an original
screenplay, The Gingerbread Man. The Innocent Man (October 2006) marks his
first foray into non-fiction.

Grisham lives with his wife Renee and their two children Ty and Shea. The
family splits their time between their Victorian home on a farm in Mississippi
and a plantation near Charlottesville, VA.
Grisham took time off from writing for several months in 1996 to return, after
a five-year hiatus, to the courtroom. He was honoring a commitment made before
he had retired from the law to become a full-time writer: representing the
family of a railroad brakeman killed when he was pinned between two cars.
Preparing his case with the same passion and dedication as his books'
protagonists, Grisham successfully argued his clients' case, earning them a
jury award of $683,500—the biggest verdict of his career.
When he's not writing, Grisham devotes time to charitable causes, including
most recently his Rebuild The Coast Fund, which raised 8.8 million dollars for
Gulf Coast relief in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. He also keeps up with his
greatest passion: baseball. The man who dreamed of being a professional
baseball player now serves as the local Little League commissioner. The six
ballfields he built on his property have played host to over 350 kids on 26
Little League teams.

Nelson Rolihlahla MANDELA

Brief Biography

Mandela's words, "The struggle is my life," are not to be taken lightly.
Nelson Mandela personifies struggle. He is still leading the fight against apartheid with extraordinary vigour and resilience after spending nearly three decades of his life behind bars. He has sacrificed his private life and his youth for his people, and remains South Africa's best known and loved hero.
Mandela has held numerous positions in the ANC: ANCYL secretary (1948); ANCYL president (1950); ANC Transvaal president (1952); deputy national president (1952) and ANC president (1991).
He was born at Qunu, near Umtata on 18 July 1918.
His father, Henry Mgadla Mandela, was chief councillor to Thembuland's acting paramount chief David Dalindyebo. When his father died, Mandela became the chief's ward and was groomed for the chieftainship.
Mandela matriculated at Healdtown Methodist Boarding School and then started a BA degree at Fort Hare. As an SRC member he participated in a student strike and was expelled, along with the late Oliver Tambo, in 1940. He completed his degree by correspondence from Johannesburg, did articles of clerkship and enrolled for an LLB at the University of the Witwatersrand.
In 1944 he helped found the ANC Youth League, whose Programme of Action was adopted by the ANC in 1949.
Mandela was elected national volunteer-in-chief of the 1952 Defiance Campaign. He travelled the country organising resistance to discriminatory legislation.
He was given a suspended sentence for his part in the campaign. Shortly afterwards a banning order confined him to Johannesburg for six months. During this period he formulated the "M Plan", in terms of which ANC branches were broken down into underground cells.
By 1952 Mandela and Tambo had opened the first black legal firm in the country, and Mandela was both Transvaal president of the ANC and deputy national president.
A petition by the Transvaal Law Society to strike Mandela off the roll of attorneys was refused by the Supreme Court.
In the 'fifties, after being forced through constant bannings to resign officially from the ANC, Mandela analysed the Bantustan policy as a political swindle. He predicted mass removals, political persecutions and police terror.
For the second half of the 'fifties, he was one of the accused in the Treason Trial. With Duma Nokwe, he conducted the defence.
When the ANC was banned after the Sharpeville massacre in 1960, he was detained until 1961 when he went underground to lead a campaign for a new national convention.
Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK), the military wing of the ANC, was born the same year. Under his leadership it launched a campaign of sabotage against government and economic installations.
In 1962 Mandela left the country for military training in Algeria and to arrange training for other MK members.
On his return he was arrested for leaving the country illegally and for incitement to strike. He conducted his own defence. He was convicted and jailed for five years in November 1962. While serving his sentence, he was charged, in the Rivonia trial, with sabotage and sentenced to life imprisonment.
A decade before being imprisoned, Mandela had spoken out against the introduction of Bantu Education, recommending that community activists "make every home, every shack or rickety structure a centre of learning".
Robben Island, where he was imprisoned, became a centre for learning, and Mandela was a central figure in the organised political education classes.
In prison Mandela never compromised his political principles and was always a source of strength for the other prisoners.
During the 'seventies he refused the offer of a remission of sentence if he recognised Transkei and settled there.
In the 'eighties he again rejected PW Botha's offer of freedom if he renounced violence.
It is significant that shortly after his release on Sunday 11 February 1990, Mandela and his delegation agreed to the suspension of armed struggle.
Mandela has honorary degrees from more than 50 international universities and is chancellor of the University of the North.
He was inaugurated as the first democratically elected State President of South Africa on 10 May 1994 - June 1999


Nelson Mandela retired from Public life in June 1999. He currently resides in his birth place - Qunu, Transkei.

Jackson Browne

Jackson Browne

Over the course of more than three decades, Jackson Browne has
written and performed some of the most literate and moving
songs in popular music. With classic albums including Late For
The Sky, The Pretender, Running On Empty, and For Everyman,
and songs like "Doctor My Eyes," "Rock Me On The Water," and
"Lives In The Balance," he has defined a genre of songwriting
that is charged with honesty, emotion and personal politics.


Jackson’s artistry was recognized with his 2004 induction
into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He also received in 2004
an honorary Doctorate of Music from Occidental College in Los
Angeles, for "a remarkable musical career that has
successfully combined an intensely personal artistry with a
broader vision of social justice."

Browne’s last album release was 2005’s GRAMMY®-nominated
Jackson Browne Solo Acoustic Vol. 1, presenting twelve songs
culled from his acclaimed solo acoustic concerts performed
worldwide. He is currently working in the studio on a new
album.

Tracing the roots of Browne’s career leads back to the mid-‘
60s and Los Angeles/Orange County folk clubs, where he played
solo. Born in Germany to American parents, Jackson moved to
Los Angeles at age 3, and, except for a short period living
and working in New York City in the late 1960s, has always
lived in Southern California.

His integral presence in the coffeehouse scene there
ultimately led to his celebrated 1972 debut album, Jackson
Browne. The now-classic LP introduced ten original songs,
including "Rock Me On The Water," and "Jamaica Say You Will,"
featuring David Crosby on harmony vocals. Crosby and Graham
Nash sang on "Doctor My Eyes," the album’s first single,
which became a #8 hit on Billboard’s pop singles chart.

Browne’s 1973 follow-up, For Everyman, included "These Days,"
and "Take It Easy," co-written with Glenn Frey, which had been
The Eagles’ debut single and breakthrough hit the year
before. 1974’s Late For The Sky—cited by Rolling Stone that
year as one of the ‘100 Best Albums,’ and again in 1997 as
one of the "200 Essential Rock Collection Albums," and in 2003
as one of the ‘500 Greatest Albums Of All Time’—was Jackson
’s confessional masterpiece of lyrical introspection. The
Pretender, following two years later, was a breakthrough album
—Jackson’s first to chart in the Billboard Top 10, peaking
at #5. On the heels of that success came what stands as
Jackson’s top-selling album, 1977’s seven-times platinum,
life-on-the-road concept opus Running On Empty.

Browne’s next project was the all-star series of concerts
organized by Bonnie Raitt, Graham Nash, John Hall and Jackson
in 1979 to benefit MUSE (Musicians United for Safe Energy). In
addition to serving on the MUSE Foundation Board, Jackson
helped edit and compile the 1980 3-LP live album from those
shows. No Nukes/The MUSE Concerts for a Non-Nuclear Future
featured a line-up including Bruce Springsteen, The Doobie
Brothers, Carly Simon, James Taylor, Ry Cooder, Chaka Khan,
Peter Tosh, and Tom Petty, among many others. The album,
which includes Jackson’s "Before The Deluge," climbed to #23
on Billboard’s pop chart, a considerable feat for a triple-
disc collection.

Jackson’s studio work continued with 1980’s Hold Out, a #1
album, featuring the hits "Boulevard" and "That Girl Could
Sing." In 1982, Browne scored a #7 hit with the single
"Somebody’s Baby," from the soundtrack for Fast Times at
Ridgemont High. 1983’s Lawyers In Love also spawned several
popular singles, including "Tender Is The Night" and "For A
Rocker."

In 1986, Jackson continued to develop his social focus with
Lives In The Balance. This topical disc was included in
Rolling Stone’s 1986 ‘Best 100 Albums,’ and again in their
1990 special issue of ‘100 Greatest Albums of the 1980s.’
1989’s World In Motion was a call to action even more
explicitly political than its predecessor.

I’m Alive was a striking return to the personal and romantic
subject matter that characterized Jackson’s earlier work.
Released in 1993, and widely considered a career highlight,
the disc found Jackson revisiting matters of the heart and
soul on tracks including "My Problem Is You" and "Sky Blue and
Black." On 1996’s Looking East, he addresses various aspects
of personal growth and social struggles, and their
interconnectedness in the world around him.

2002 marked the release of The Naked Ride Home, Jackson’s
first suite of all new songs since Looking East, and one of
the most eclectic of his career, exploring the human condition
with a grace and insight that became his trademarks.

Jackson Browne’s overall body of work was celebrated in 2004
with the release of Elektra-Rhino’s 2CD compilation The Very
Best of Jackson Browne, featuring 32 songs selected from
throughout his career. The one earlier compilation of Jackson
’s work is Elektra’s 1997 single-disc overview The Next
Voice You Hear: The Best of Jackson Browne.

In 2002, Jackson became the fourth recipient of the John
Steinbeck Award, given to artists whose works best exemplify
the environmental and social values that were essential to the
great California-born author. Browne joins a group of honorees
that now includes filmmaker John Sayles, playwrights Arthur
Miller and Lanford Wilson, musician Bruce Springsteen, authors
Tom Wolfe and Kurt Vonnegut, and Studs Terkel.

The search for truth and one´s place in the world remain
central to Jackson Browne’s songs. "Everything in life is
colored by your personality," Steinbeck once wrote, adding,
"but as you mature you become more aware of outside things,
less concerned about yourself." In that regard, Jackson has
been an ever evolving and maturing creative voice, and a world
citizen, for most of his life.

Che Guevara

Biography
Ernesto Guevara de la Serna (June 14, 1928 – October 9,
1967), commonly known as Che Guevara, el Che, or simply Che;
was an Argentinian Marxist revolutionary, global political
figure, author, military theorist, and leader of Cuban and
internationalist guerrillas. As a young man, Guevara studied
medicine and traveled "rough[›]" throughout Latin America,
activities that brought him into direct contact with the
poverty in which many lived. Through these experiences he
became convinced that only revolution could remedy the
region's economic inequality, leading him to study Marxism and
become involved in Guatemala's social revolution under
President Jacobo Arbenz Guzmán.


Later while in Mexico in 1956, Guevara joined Fidel Castro's
revolutionary 26th of July Movement that fought a guerrilla
war and ultimately seized power from the regime of the U.S.-
supported Cuban dictator General Fulgencio Batista in 1959.
For a few months after the success of the Cuban Revolution,
Guevara was assigned the role of supreme prosecutor,
overseeing the revolutionary tribunals and executions of
suspected war criminals associated with the previous regime.
Along with serving in several important posts in the new
government, and traveling around the world meeting important
leaders on behalf of Cuban socialism, he was a prolific writer
of an assortment of books, including a classic manual on the
theory and practice of guerrilla warfare (foco theory).
Guevara left Cuba in 1965 to incite revolutions first in a
failed attempt in Congo-Kinshasa and ultimately in Bolivia,
where he was captured and executed.
Although a controversial figure during his life, after his
death, Guevara became an icon of socialist revolutionary
movements worldwide and a countercultural hero. He has since
been venerated and reviled in dozens of biographies, memoirs,
books, essays, documentaries, songs, and films. An Alberto
Korda photo of him (shown) has received wide distribution and
modification. The Maryland Institute College of Art called
this picture "the most famous photograph in the world and a
symbol of the 20th century






Andy Warhol


The Philosophy of Andy Warhol: From a to B and Back Again

The private Andy Warhol talks: about love, sex, food, beauty, fame, work, money, success; about New York and America; and about himself--his childhood in McKeesport, Pennsylvania, good times and bad times in the Big Apple, the explosion of his career in the sixties, and life among celebrities.

2008年3月15日 星期六

José Mourinho

José Mourinho

why we like him?

Since we're not matching wits with Jose Mourinho, we can
graciously admire his strategic coaching mastery from the
sidelines. He's as confident as they come and he boasts a
recent track record of success; no wonder he's the world's
highest-paid football (or, to North Americans, soccer)
manager.

why is he famous?

Some call him arrogant, others call him confident. Either way,
Mourinho spews enough brash comments and has enough swagger to
secure a spot in the spotlight. He doesn't just talk the talk,
though; he's done his share of walking, managing FC Porto to
the top of the Champions League in 2004 and, in a more
profiled job, leading Chelsea to their first English
Premiership title in 50 years, in 2005.
Mourinho is considered to be one of the best coaches in
Europe, having won four consecutive league titles (two at
Porto and two at Chelsea) and also the UEFA Champions League
and the UEFA Cup with Porto. For two consecutive years (2004
and 2005), Mourinho was named the world's best football coach
by the International Federation of Football History and
Statistics (IFFHS). He is well-known for his self-belief,
dapper attire, and has at times been a controversial figure.



The Wisdom of Forgiveness by Dalai Lama

The Wisdom of Forgiveness:
Intimate Conversations and Journeys

The great leader as we've never seen him before. This is the
extraordinary documentation of the evolving friendship between
the Dalai Lama and the man who followed him across Ireland and
Eastern Europe, on a pilgrimage to India's holy sites, and
through the Dalai Lama's near fatal illness. On this
remarkable journey Victor Chan was awarded an insight into His
Holiness-his life, his fears, his faith, his compassion, his
day-to-day practice-that no one has reported before. We've
heard the public voice of His Holiness--now we are invited to
listen in on his personal explorations, and to take
instruction on the Tibetan art of living.

The Innocent Man by John Grisham




The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town


John Grisham’s first work of nonfiction, an exploration of small town justice gone terribly awry, is his most extraordinary legal thriller yet.In the major league draft of 1971, the first player chosen from the State of Oklahoma was Ron Williamson.
When he signed with the Oakland A’s, he said goodbye to his hometown of Ada and left to pursue his dreams of big league glory.Six years later he was back, his dreams broken by a bad arm and bad habits—drinking, drugs, and women. He began to show signs of mental illness.
Unable to keep a job, he moved in with his mother and slept twenty hours a day on her sofa.In 1982, a 21-year-old cocktail waitress in Ada named Debra Sue Carter was raped and murdered, and for five years the police could not solve the crime. For reasons that were never clear, they suspected Ron Williamson and his friend Dennis Fritz. The two were finally arrested in 1987 and charged with capital murder.
With no physical evidence, the prosecution’s case was built on junk science and the testimony of jailhouse snitches and convicts. Dennis Fritz was found guilty and given a life sentence. Ron Williamson was sent to death row.If you believe that in America you are innocent until proven guilty, this book will shock you. If you believe in the death penalty, this book will disturb you. If you believe the criminal justice system is fair, this book will infuriate you.

In The Quiet Land By Aung San Suu Kyi

In The Quiet Land
(By Aung San Suu Kyi)

In the Quiet Land, no one can tellif there's someone who's listeningfor secrets they can sell.The informers are paid in the blood of the landand no one dares speak what the tyrants won't stand.
In the quiet land of Burma,no one laughs and no one thinks out loud.In the quiet land of Burma,you can hear it in the silence of the crowd
In the Quiet Land, no one can saywhen the soldiers are comingto carry them away.The Chinese want a road; the French want the oil;the Thais take the timber; and SLORC takes the spoils...
In the Quiet Land....In the Quiet Land, no one can hearwhat is silenced by murderand covered up with fear.But, despite what is forced, freedom's a soundthat liars can't fake and no shouting can drown.










人生三境界

清 王國維
《人間詞話》【人生三境界】

古今之成大事業、大學問者,必經過三種之境界。

『昨夜西風凋碧樹,獨上高樓,望盡天涯路』此第一境也

『衣帶漸寬終不悔,為伊消得人憔悴』此第二境也

『眾裡尋他千百度,驀然回首,那人在卻在燈火闌珊處』此第三境也。

此等語皆非大詞人不能道。然遽以此意解釋諸詞,恐為晏歐諸公所不許也。