中坝乡村公路建设项目可研报告(定)(编辑修改稿)内容摘要:

kil om etres away. The sun i s red i n the dark sky. There was no stoping the fi res. There was no way to ani ze or m uni cate. The steel rail way tracks were now usel es. And the great pi pes for carryi ng water under the strets had burst. Al l of the ways m an had m ade to kep the ci ty safe were gone in the thi rty second the earth m oved. O ut at sea it was calm. No wi nd cam e up. Yet from every directioneast,weast,north, andsouth, strong wi nds blew upon the unl ucky ci ty. Man him sel f had to make rui ns of the city’s best buil dings so that they woul d not be a danger to those in the streets. A list of buil dings undesteryed was now only a few addreses. A li st of the brave m en and the women woul d fi l a li brary. A li st of al those kil ed wi l never be m ade. Am azi ng as i t m ay seem , Wednesday ni ght was a qui et ni ght. There were no crowds. The poli cem en sai dnothi ng。 even their horses were qui t. There were no shouts or people doing crazy thi ngs. In al those terri bl e hours I saw not one woman who cri ed, not one m an who was excited. Before the fi res, through the night, thousands and thousands of peopl e who had l ost thei r homes left for safety. Som e were covered i n bl ankets. Som etimes whol e famil i es put everythi ng they owned and coul d save i nto wagons. They hel ped one another cl imb the high hil s around the city. Never in al l SanFrsncio’s histroy were her peopl e so kind as on that terrible ni ght. Uni t 5 Elias’ story My nam e is Eli as. I am a poor worker i n SouthAfri ca. The tim e when I fi rst m et N el son Mandel a was a very di ffi cult peri od of my l ife. I was twel ve years old. It was i n 1952 and Mandel a was the black lawyer to whom I went for advice. He offered gui dance to poor bl ack people on thei r l egal probl em s. He was generous wi th hi s tim e, for whi ch I was grateful. I needed his help because I had very l ittl e educati on. I began school at si x. The school where I studi ed for onl y two years was three ki lom eters away. I had to leave because m y famil y coul d not continue to pay the schol fes and the bus fare. I coul d not read or wri te wel . After trying hard, I got a job i n a gol d m i ne. H owever, thi s was a time when one had to got to have a pasbok to li ve i n Johannesburg. Sadl y I did not have i t because I was not born there, and I wori ed about whether I woul d be e out of work. The day when N el son Mandel a hel ped me was one of my happi est. He tol d me how to get the correct papers so I coul d stay in Johanesburg. I becam e m ore hopeful about my future. I never fot how ki nd Mandel a was. When he ani zed the AN C Youth League, I joi ned i t as soon as I coul d. He sai d: “ The l ast thi rty years have sen the greatest num ber of laws stoppi ng our ri ghts and progress, unti l today we have reached a stage where we have alm ost no ri ghts at al .” It was the truth. Black peopl e coul d not vote or choose thei r l eaders. They could not get the jobs they wanted. The parts of town in which they had to l ive were decided by whi te peopl e. The pl aces outside the towns where they were sent to li ve were the poorest parts of South Afri ca. No one could grow food there,. In fact as Nelson Mandel a sai d: “… We were put i nto a posi ti on i n which we had ei ther to accept we were l es im portant, or fi ght the governm ent. We chose to atack the laws. We fi rst broke the l aw in a way which was peaceful。 when thi s was not al l owed… onl y then di d we deci de to answer violence wi th vi ol ence. ” As a m atter of fact, I do not li ke vi ol ence… but i n 1963 I helped him bl ow up som e governm ent buil di ngs. It was very dangerous because if I was caught I could be put in prison. But I was very happy to help because I knew it would help us achieve our dream of m aking black and white people equal . The rest of Eli as’ story You cannot i magi ne how the name of Roben Isl and made us afrai d. It was a prison from which no one escaped. There I spent the hardest time of my l ife. But when I got there Nelson Mandel a was al so there and he hel ped me. Mr Mandela began a schol for those of us who had li tle l earning. We read boks under our blankets and used anythi ng we coul d find to make candles to se the words. I became a good student. I wanted to study oon discover ed, disguises can someti mes be too per fect . 39。 Thi s is a wonder ful pl ace for a pi ic,39。 said Glor ia Gleam. 39。 I t coul dn39。 t be bet er , Gl or ia,39。 Brinksl ey Meers agr ed. 39。 No newspaper men, no fi lm fans! Why don39。 t we e mor e 边境地区专项转移支付资金项目可行性研究报告 项 目 名 称: 睦伦 下者梅 中坝 乡村公路建设项目 申 报 单 位(盖章): 木 央镇人民 政府 联 系 人: 周 靖 电 话: 08766440013 传 真: 08766440012 编 写 时 间: 二 0 一 二 年 二 月 二十三 日 主 管 部 门: away. Onethird of the nati on fel t it . A huge crack that was ei ght kil om etres l ong and thi rty m etres wi de cut across houses,roads and canal s. Steam burst from holes in the ground. H ard hil ls of rock becam e ri vers of di rt. In fi fteen terri bl e seconds a l arge lay in rui ns. The sufferi ng of the people was extrem e. Towthi rds of them di ed or were i njured duri ng the earthquake. Thounds of famil i es were kil l ed and m any chidren were left wi thout parents. The number of peopl e who were kil ed or i njured reached m ore than 400,000. But how coul d the survi vors beli eve i t was natural ?Everywhere they l ooked nearl y everything was destroyed. Al l of the city’s hospital s, 75%of its factories and buil dings and 90%of its homes were gone. Bricks covered the ground l ike red autumn l eaves. N o wind, however,coul d bel ow they away. Two dam s and m ost of the b。
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