七年前的信

乖蚊子 发表于 2011-01-02 22:30:21

这个元旦除了一如既往的聚会 shopping
其余的时间都在整理 整理旧物 整理回忆
在一堆贺卡和礼物里 找到两封没有拆封过的信
一封在03年的夏天 另一封在04年
同一个寄信的地址 同一种笔记
由于04年搬家的原因 信被转寄过
看完信后 很震惊  心情不能平复
如今我只能说 谢谢你 对不起  希望有机会可以让你看到
 

Post SU days

乖蚊子 发表于 2010-11-06 16:13:34

很久很久没有来这里 真的是久违了
从开始找工作的那天起 似乎就无暇顾及
一日复一日的面试
然后 一边实习 一边完成了两个专业的毕业设计
然后 拍了毕业照 去了世博工作 再然后世博结束 开始休年假

昨天是我年假的第二天
我在KJ的门口看到了似曾相识的校服和那些非常灿烂的笑容
教学楼没有改变 但是里面的一切都已不复存在
我看到了高三的语文和数学老师 但是我真的已经不记得他们的名字
这件事情可能比所有人想象的更令我难过
在KJ的这三年是我最珍视的一段时光
甚至比那风生水起的大学生活更让我在乎
可是 为什么 我再也记不起来了

我们KJ那群孩子 都已经各自天涯
很少有留在国内的 更少有留在上海的
我们都有了自己的生活
隔阂是必然的
没有谁去迁就谁

年假之后 会有集团的庆功宴 会有致辞 会有新的岗位
尝试认识更多的人 然后继续自己的生活
似乎一切本就该是这样的








乖蚊子 发表于 2009-11-06 22:01:39

大学最后一个考试周 最后一次好好感受自修教室的氛围
这两天在考研自修教室旁的走道里 很多次的看到菲
四年了 却还是一个人
不得不感叹 这男人感觉越来越妖精了  妖精得非常干净
我最喜欢的紫色衬衫在他身上竟然比穿在香菇身上还要有气场  
话说香菇的气场已经算是登峰造极了

四年前 菲是我在这里最先认识的人之一
四年后 这个男人依然是不能被圈养的

珍惜最后的时光 然后各奔东西

之后会有强生和安利的笔试面试   bless

China's Gala Show of Strength----60th Anniversary of Revolution

乖蚊子 发表于 2009-10-01 19:08:17

BEIJING, Oct. 1 -- China's military brought its latest weaponry to the National Day parade through Tiananmen Square on Thursday, including medium- and long-range missiles and armored vehicles, alongside goose-stepping troops.

President Hu Jintao, standing up in the sunroof of a Chinese-made Red Flag automobile, reviewed the thousands of troops who stood at attention in front of the hotels, government buildings and new shopping plazas along Beijing's Changan Avenue.

Afterward, speaking from the top of the gate to the Forbidden City, Hu dusted off some of the Communist Party's well-worn slogans, reasserting the virtues of "socialism with Chinese characteristics," openness, unity, prosperity, and the continued leadership of the Communist Party.

Thick smog that had blanketed the city Wednesday cleared, and fighter jets, helicopters and China's first midair refueling planes flew over the center of the city.

The missiles and equipment are the latest manifestations of China's more than 10-year-old effort to modernize its military, prompted in part by a confrontation with the United States in 1996 after Washington sent aircraft carriers to protect Taiwan from Chinese missile threats. Ahead of Thursday's parade, U.S. analysts said they were most concerned about infantry combat vehicles, long-range missiles, and missiles that might be aimed at aircraft carriers. 

Still, many foreign military analysts anticipated few, if any, surprises Thursday because most of the equipment had been seen at weapons fairs or in satellite photos, including some available through Google, taken during months of rehearsals for the celebration marking the 60th anniversary of the China's Communist Revolution.

"They've had a couple of practice runs, and it seems that most of what will be in the parade we've seen already," said Richard D. Fisher Jr., a senior fellow on Asian military affairs at the International Assessment and Strategy Center. On Thursday, he said, there were "no surprises."

"Much or most of what will be on display will be same or upgraded models or variations of stuff that was on display 10 years ago," said Dennis J. Blasko, an independent analyst who served 23 years in the U.S. Army as a military intelligence officer and foreign area officer specializing in China.

Such assessments did not deter a barrage of Chinese media coverage before the parade. On Wednesday night, Chinese state television featured stories about military formations, female fighter pilots, and rapid-reaction forces that were shown raiding buildings and buses.

The celebration of the 60th anniversary of the Communist Party's victory in China's civil war also included scores of synchronized dancing performers and students waving colorful banners and props.

The official New China News Agency said a 200,000-square-foot, three-ton cloth painting titled "This Land Is So Rich and Beautiful" was to be held aloft by 2,009 armed policemen. Music was performed by 1,500 military band members, a 2,100-member adult chorus, a youth chorus of 300 and a 130-member orchestra.

There were 34 large floats from various provinces and regions and one featuring 181 foreigners under the banner "One World." Others paid tribute to the country's space program, industrial technologies and environmental awareness. 

But while the demonstrations and display of tanks and other weapons in Tiananmen Square struck a chord among the Chinese, they worried some in the United States.

"The People's Liberation Army is moving from regional power projection to global power projection," said Fisher, who has long warned of against China's military advances. He cited an infantry combat vehicle designed to pop out of a transport plane and logistical-support vehicles. "The message: They're not all tooth. They have plenty of tail to worry us as well," he said.

New Chinese capabilities could undercut the protection the United States offers its allies in the region, he said. He also warned of an amphibious fighting vehicle capable of firing missiles farther than Taiwan's land-bound tanks.

Xiao Gongqin, a historian at Shanghai Normal University, cautioned against misinterpreting the military parade. "It's not like some Westerners think, that China will be expansionist internationally," he said. "Mainly the aim is to increase the Chinese people's confidence. Hu Jintao has emphasized on many occasions that China will adhere to the principles of peaceful diplomacy."

Chas W. Freeman Jr., a veteran diplomat, China expert and former senior Pentagon official, said he did not see a threat to the United States and noted that Chinese military spending is still a fraction of U.S. military spending. Indeed, the Reuters news agency reported Wednesday that two unnamed sources close to the People's Liberation Army said China would reduce its 2.3 million-member army by 700,000, though increases in the air force and navy would offset part of that.

Freeman said the only weapons China has deployed against the United States -- cyberwarfare tools -- were not on display Thursday. "They have no intention of fighting a war in the United States, but we have done a lot of planning about fighting them on their territory," he said. "Their answer has been cyberwarfare."

Freeman did say that Chinese military advances have affected Taiwan. "The Chinese now do have the ability to punish Taiwan so severely that even if the United States intervenes, Taiwan can't win in any sense," he said, adding that the development "has basically brought Taiwan to heel."

Blasko said Chinese officials argue that parading military equipment contributes to transparency and deterrence, although he added that "deterrence and intimidation are two sides of one coin."

But Blasko also cautioned against alarm about China's display. Even if new weapons were in the parade, such as the land-attack cruise missile that analysts would like to know more about, he said, it would say nothing about how many the military has or how well they work.

"What we're seeing here is only equipment," he said. "All we're seeing them do is drive at two or three miles per hour in very neat formations. . . . And the troops marching or flying will have spent five months in preparation for this parade, which means their units will have missed an entire season of field training. But evidently the high command feels this is worth the training loss."