新闻摘抄300字

发布时间:2017-01-25 来源: 美文摘抄 点击:

新闻摘抄300字篇一:活着——摘录

1.其实人真的是一种存在,他和万物一样并无意义。追寻,探究的本质不过是一个大笑话而已。

这不是余华写的,感觉真他么虚无,又有那么一点点不知道是什么道理的道理,我也想过:人为什么活着?这问题,简直不是问题,谁能解决?

2.生命中其实没有幸福或者不幸的,生命只是活着,静静地活着,有一丝孤零零的意味。 这也是内容简介中写的,不懂。

3.作者简介中提到,余华山东人,迁至浙江海盐,当过5年牙医,后弃医从文。看来,并不是我大学毕业以后的工作就会伴随我一辈子,几年后我甚至会从事一个现在自己都无法想象的工作。这么推动自己做出这种改变的又会是什么力量?

4.内心让他真实地了解自己,一旦了解了自己也就了解了世界。

我的感悟向来都是由己及人的,经历过之后急于告诉别人,你应该怎么做。虽然有时绝对了一些,但也大致无异。可是这个原则会不会太狭隘了?你了解自己么?你对自己的了解也仅限于自己,能推广到别人身上么?

5.作家的使命不是发泄,不是控诉或者揭露,他应该向人们展示高尚。这里所说的高尚不是那种单纯的美好,而是对一切事物理解之后的超然,对善与恶一视同仁,用同情的眼光看待世界。

人性是复杂的,任何事情都不是简单地非黑即白,这让我想起了柴静采访虐猫事件的主角,整个采访并不是以批判、仇视的视角来进行,在镜头面前她甚至没有忏悔,这也是很多观众不解的。同样,节目没有给她同情,她也不需要同情,她只是需要公正,需要以她本来的面目去呈现她。然后,就剩下每个人自己的命运了。

关于药家鑫的案件,五年后,在有着相似经历的宋的解释中,柴才真正理解药家鑫,而别人,不可能真正理解,因为我们都没有经历过,我们都只是从自己的坐标系出发来考虑这件事。或许因为如此,柴才慢慢意识到,新闻调查,只求了解认识而已,不要以设定好的想法和目的去采访。

或许余华走的更远,他同情世人。

6.人是为活着而活着,不是为活着以外的任何事活着。

7.他们对自己的经历缺乏热情,仿佛是道听途说般的只记得零星几点也都是自身之外的记忆,用一两句话表达了他们所认为的一切。

或许是因为经历太少,目前为止,我的经历也是零星破碎的片段,一直以来想把这些片段写出来,当做回忆,或者算是重新走过这二十多年。但是总也不知道,为什么自己只记得这零星点点?以前总是不愿意回忆,觉得童年很“悲惨”,到现在想回忆却也忘得差不多了,只能归咎于:记忆力太差了。

8.两个雇工,王喜临死前要把绸子做的衣服送个福贵,长根为了不拖累福贵宁可去要饭,给红霞捡了个红绸都要特地送来。我丝毫不怀疑这个故事的真实性,我想,那时的人们就是这样。

9.如果不是福贵和他爹两个败家子,或许被毙的就是他;如果不是一时发善心敲门他就不会和仆人打架;如果不打架他就不会被抓去当兵;如果 当初他胆子大一点去找大饼,或许他也会跟老全一样死去;如果当天她跟媳妇回去也不会把家产输个精光。太多的偶然,但是这就是命。

新闻摘抄300字篇二:时事新闻摘抄:Oligarchs unload Sochi Olympics assets to recoup investment

Oligarchs unload Sochi Olympics assets to recoup

investment

SOCHI, Russia (AP) -- The ski jump sits shrouded in mist, its coat of snow undisturbed by any athletes hurtling down the ramp to take off into the air.

A year ago, the jump bustled with activity at the Sochi Olympics as the world's best ski jumpers - including women, for the first time - competed for gold. But it made some unwanted history as well, becoming a stark symbol of how some of the plans for President Vladimir Putin's $51 billion Winter Games went terribly wrong.

The cost of the facility soared during construction from $40 million to nearly $300 million. The overrun embarrassed the Kremlin, which publicly shamed the businessman involved, and he fled the country in the face of a corruption investigation.

Russia had vowed to pay for what became the most expensive Olympics of all time by getting super-rich private investors to take the cost from the state. Instead, as the first anniversary of those games approaches, at least two of those oligarchs are quietly dumping their increasingly toxic assets on the state - forcing Russian taxpayers to pick up the bill.

For the oligarchs, it's a way to recoup billions of dollars as they struggle in an economy battered by plunging oil

prices and Western sanctions. For Putin's critics, it's evidence of the crony capitalism that shields Russia's rich and powerful businessmen from economic pain.

Two key investors have unloaded properties built for the Olympics at a combined cost of $3 billion, a spokesman to Russia's deputy prime minister confirmed to The Associated Press. The issue is a major

headache for Putin, who needs to pay off the oligarchs to keep them happy, while preventing the murky deals from triggering a wave of popular uest.

The risks for Putin are magnified as the country enters recession and its rainy-day funds dwindle, even as Russia prepares for staging yet another major international sports event: the 2018 World Cup.

In addition, other oligarchs may now be waiting for the right moment to demand their reward or compensation for coming to the government's rescue by taking on what became unprofitable Sochi projects.

"They don't have any good options here," Sam Greene, director of King's Russia Institute at King's College London, said of the Kremlin. "They either have to take the public hit, or they have to take the opposition of the oligarchs."

For now, Greene said it appears that Putin is opting for coddling the oligarchs.

"There seems to be something of an emerging understanding ... that the government will help the titans of the economy to maintain the liquidity they need to stay in business," he said. "In return for that, they remain quiet, they remain loyal, but they also maintain employment and they keep moving money through the economy."

The ski jump and nearby ski resort first became a notorious example of Sochi's excesses in 2013 when Putin visited the construction site and publicly dressed down officials for allowing the original owner, tycoon Akhmed Bilalov, to incur massive cost overruns: "Well done!" Putin burst out, his voice heavy with sarcasm. "You're doing a good job!"

Bilalov fled Russia days later, after prosecutors launched a corruption investigation into why the cost of the ski jump had ballooned from original estimates of 1.2 billion rubles to 8 billion (then worth nearly $300 million). His case has not yet reached court, and he remains in exile in an unknown country.

Sberbank, which is Russia's largest bank and is run by close Putin ally German Gref, stepped in to buy the ski jump and ski resort at the government's request. It took out a $1.7 billion loan to fund more than 70 percent of the infrastructure project. Today, the project loses money and the bank remains saddled with the massive debt.

For Sberbank, the solution has been to obtain Kremlin authorization to swap its Olympic project, which cost nearly $2.7 billion at the time, for the Sochi Games' media center, which was owned by the regional

government. Ilya Dzhus, a spokesman for Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Kozak, confirmed the deal to the AP.

It's not clear how much the media center - similar to a large convention complex - would fetch if sold on the market. But the key to the deal is that by giving the ski jump, which is still used by the Russian national team, and the ski resort to the regional government, Sberbank is washing its hands of the $1.7 billion loan. Sberbank,

which has the state as its majority stakeholder, did not respond to numerous calls and emails seeking comment.

"Giving away assets ... is a way to cut costs in a crisis situation," Mikhail Kasyanov, Russia's prime minister from 2000-2004, said in an interview. According to Kasyanov, their thinking goes: "I'd rather lose what I have invested, my own 15-30 percent, but I would not have to pay out the rest in loans."

In another Sochi project, Viktor Vekselberg - estimated by Forbes magazine to be Russia's third-richest man - invested half a billion dollars to build two giant hotels next to the Olympic Park.

With the hotel market saturated in Sochi, Vekselberg decided to hand over one hotel to the state. That amounts to dumping the $450 million loan he took out from VEB bank - which covered 90 percent of the cost of the two hotels - onto the state as well. Vekselberg's investment vehicle Renova has not officially announced the deal, and its representative was unavailable for comment by email and telephone, but Dzhus, the government spokesman, confirmed the ongoing sale.

Meanwhile, residents of Sochi - long a resort destination for Russian vacationers - have seen few economic benefits from hosting the Olympics. Promises that the games would solve perennial problems such as poor transportation and electricity remain unfulfilled one year afterward.

A much-touted $8.5 billion rail link between the Black Sea coast and the mountains is all but suspended. A dispute between the local administration and the monopoly Russian Railways over who will pay for the costly maintenance of the Olympics' most expensive project has threatened to shut it down.

Tourists who came to Sochi this winter to ski found only six trains a day running between the coast and the mountains, and no trains running between the airport and central Sochi. During the Olympics, there were trains rolling along the picturesque ravines of the mountain resorts every 15 minutes.

Back in Sochi, a company called Basic Element, which is owned by billionaire Oleg Deripaska, is trying to sell seaside condos that housed the Olympic athletes. The company spent $1.4 billion building Olympic

infrastructure, but is not among those seeking to unload their assets to the state. Instead, it is trying to restructure its loans with a state-owned bank while holding onto its investment.

Its deputy director general, Andrei Elinson, said the company "never considered these projects as some sort of charity or sponsorship."

"We believe that we have delivered what we were asked for. Now we want them (the government) to give us a simple return on our investment," Elinson told the AP.

The legacy of Sochi's busted budget is causing concern about Russia's ability to pull off the World Cup in three years, now that the ruble has lost more half of its value and the economy is struggling under the brunt of Western sanctions over the crisis in Ukraine and the collapse of the price of oil.

The soccer stadiums are only a tiny part of the overall construction for the World Cup. There are 11 host cities that will require new highways, airport expansions, train links, metro lines and giant hotels that are unlikely to be

used again.

Unlike Sochi, the World Cup will largely be funded directly by the Kremlin, either through the federal budget or through state-owned companies, with only a few oligarchs in the mix.

The ruble's plunge also means the price of building materials will soar, causing the World Cup to far exceed its original budget of $20 billion.

As a way to battle galloping inflation, Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko said in January that Russia will be looking to simplify the design of the World Cup venues without compromising the requirements of soccer's governing body, FIFA. He also said the government would be looking to attract private donors, although he would not say who these might be.

In the Olympics, the government produced a detailed plan of infrastructure to be built - from arenas to new sewage works. By contrast, it's unclear what projects will be commissioned for the World Cup, apart from the stadiums. Plans for the most expensive World Cup infrastructure - rail lines estimated to be worth $14 billion at the time - have been repeatedly revised and are likely to be reviewed further.

Despite such uncertainty, a recent opinion poll conducted in Russia by the AP and NORC Center for Public Affairs Research showed that half the respondents expect the World Cup to be good for the economy. The survey of 2,008 Russian adults was conducted between Nov. 22 and Dec. 7, 2014; it had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.4 percentage points.

And despite Sochi's problems, the poll also found that 51 percent believe the Olympics were an economic boon.

新闻摘抄300字篇三:语文学习计划范文300字3篇

语文学习计划范文300字3篇

学生个人学习计划是否具有科学性和可行性,是关系到学生能否有效地完成学习任务,提高开放教育教学质量的重要因素。本文是小编为大家整理的语文的学习计划范文300字,仅供参考。

语文学习计划范文300字篇一:

新学期的开始,也意味着初三学年将进入一个最紧张、最繁忙的时期,如何搞好初三学习工作,如何使我们在初中阶段的最后几个月学有所获,在中考考场上交一份令老师、家长满意的答卷,这是摆在每一位初三学子面前的重要任务。语文是一门基础学科,语文学习的成效如何,往往决定或影响着其他学科的学习,因此,对我们每一位学生来说,肩负着光荣而沉重的使命。

为此,我在新学期的开始阶段,认真地回顾和思索一下自己以往的语文学习情况,筹划一下新学期的语文学习及后阶段的语文复习计划,是十分必要的。 我以往的问题:(可能有点夸张,你看着修改吧)

(1)语文积累贫乏,语文视野狭窄,语文基本知识零碎或一知半解。

(2)思想肤浅,思维单一,缺少灵活性和深刻性。

(3)阅读理解能力、文字组织和表达能力、写作能力不强。

(4)语文习惯较差,读书缺乏耐心,做题不够细心,书写缺少规范。

(5)语文学习态度不正确,认为凭自己现有的知识水平即可应付。

应该阅读学习

(1)阅读是我的个性化行为

(2)阅读学习可以培养我们具有感受、理解、欣赏和评价的能力。同时还可以培养我们探究性阅读和创造性阅读的能力,以拓展他们的思维空间。

(3)阅读学习我要重视朗读和默读,学会精读、略读和浏览。

(4)语法和修辞等语文知识不作系统、集中的学习,而是采用随文学习的方法。(5)阅读学习可以培养学生广泛和浓厚的阅读兴趣,做到"多读书,好读书,读好书,读整本的书"。 提升思想,提升语言,提升技巧。

提升思想,有四个目标:

(1)面对生活或语言材料会展开思考。就是说要习惯于思考,不人云亦云,不全盘接收。

(2)面对生活或语言材料会正确思考。就是说要有思考的方法,不偏激,讲辨证。

(3)面对生活或语言材料会多向思考。就是拓宽思想广度,力求不钻牛角尖,既会逆向思维,又会发散思维。

(4)面对生活或语言材料敢于深刻思考。就是要能抓住事物的本质,见人之所未见,思人之所未思,感人之所未感。

解题技巧 审题:三读三思――读题干,思考命题意图;读要求,明确解题方向;读材料,思考蕴含的解题信息。 解题:三比――联系知识积累,比较中发现异同;联系题目要求,比较中求得最佳;联系解题思路,比较中分出条理。

作答:三细三清――细心作答,不偏题意,做到思路清;细心推敲,不漏要点,做到表述清;细心组织,不漏标点,不写错字,不乱图乱改,做到书写清。

复查:三定三戒――面对难题情绪稳定,戒心慌意乱;遇到模棱两可的问题时,思想坚定,戒犹豫徘徊把对的改错;发现答题错误时,迅速改定,戒粗心疏忽错失良机。) 知识点的梳理是一

新闻摘抄300字

个长期积累的过程 学生到了初三,相应的知识点也到了一个可以归纳总结的时候。

在初三语文学习中,很多的阅读文题目其实也都是在以各种形式在考知识点,可是我们很多同学,到了临考前,诸如连人物描写的几种角度(语言描写,动作描写,肖像描写,心理描写),诸如修辞手法的几种形式(比喻、排比、拟人)都还是模糊一片。虽然每个毕业班的老师都会采取临时突击的办法,以结构图的形式把知识点给予明确的概括,在阅读文章中予以强化,可是张冠李戴的现象依然是相当多的。

因此,初三语文的学习,是一个长期点滴积累的过程,平时要把知识点的梳理系统化,渗透进日常的学习中,这样,对知识点的了解有了至少一年甚至更长的时间,在初三语文的学习中,就不会再具有如此的难度。

要训练自己自学知识的能力 基础知识的学习可以很简单,老师报答案,学生们记答案,长期下来,学生们不仅惰性增加,对听来的答案也并非真正掌握。 如果,在更早的时候,我们能养成勤查工具书的习惯,养成借助学习资料自己找答案的习惯,那么,在初三语文的学习中,我们的自学能力会有更多的提高,我们的知识面和字词的积累以及语感反应都会有更乐观的表现,学习起来也会更有信心。

要有规律有技巧地进行答题 很多时候,在碰到类似的阅读问题的时候,信手写来,凭着感觉走是最常见的答题方法。其实,初三语文阅读文章的答题也是有技巧有规律的。文章中关键句子的把握,答题时关键词句的出现,常常就可以让阅读问题的回答变得又快又准确。

初三语文的答题技巧无非有这些:某段文字的作用常常表现在内容和结构两方面上,从内容看,不外乎为塑造人物服务,从结构看,或作铺垫,或埋伏笔......那么在答这道题时,答题的大方向是不会出错的。

这样看来,要学好初三语文其实并不难,做一篇文章,应有做一篇文章的效果。要在做题目的时候,了解出题者的出题意图,熟悉并掌握一些经常出现的题型的答题技巧与规律,并能在阅读文训练中发复运用。

语文学习计划范文300字篇二:

一、 预习

(一) 预习的内容

1.通读一遍课文(默读),读时动笔勾画出生字词和多音形近字。

2. 查字词典,弄清生字词的音、形、义。

3. 有感情的放声朗读课文两遍。

(二) 要求

1.在预习单上注明文体(文学体裁注明是诗歌、散文、小说、戏剧);实用文体则辩明是记叙文还是说明文、议论文。

2. 写出应掌握的文学文体知识

3. 生字词注音并释义。

4.写出整体感知到的文章所表达的思想感情和倾向。

5. 写出自己对文章结构和写法感受最深的理解。

6.学习小组交流对文章提出的疑问(每班以4人为1学习小组,各学习小组轮流对该学的课文出一张预习题单。

7.可利用知识导学来预习当天的课文,了解本课中要求掌握的重点和难点,初步了解课文的大致内容,方便课堂的听讲,提高课堂效率。

二、课堂学习

1.课堂学习提倡民主气氛,破除教师、作者的权威,可以向教师作者发问质疑,交流自己的观点和见解。

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