【Ptt養雞場】 批踢踢實業坊
Name :新手 (小雞) 生日 :07年 4月23日 (青年 6歲)
體: 216/387 法: 10/10 攻擊力:619 敏捷 :1637 知識 :0
快樂 :15216 滿意 :3188 疲勞 :2 氣質 :44 體重 :4.01
病氣 :0 乾淨 :0 食物 :13 大補丸:0 藥品 :1
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很乾淨..精力旺盛...很快樂..很滿足..
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轉錄篇新聞
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Gul stands firm on Turkish race
Abdullah Gul has said he will not withdraw as ruling party candidate for
Turkey's presidency, despite mounting criticism from opponents and the army.
Mr Gul failed to win election in a first round vote in parliament as
opposition MPs boycotted the vote and challenged its validity in court.
An army statement on Friday accused the government of tolerating radical
Islam and vowed to defend secularism.
Supporters of the secular system are holding a major rally in Istanbul.
Two weeks ago a similar rally in Ankara attracted hundreds of thousands of
secular supporters.
Sunday's "Republican Meeting", planned by dozens of non-governmental
organisations, is taking place in Caglayan Square in Istanbul.
'Test case'
On Saturday, Cemil Cicek, spokesman for the ruling party, the Islamist-rooted
AK (Justice and Development), responded to the unusually forthright army
statement.
The military, which led coups in the past, said it was concerned by the
party's choice of presidential candidate.
Mr Cicek said any intervention was "inconceivable in a democratic state".
"The chief of the general staff is answerable to the prime minister," said Mr
Cicek, who is also justice minister.
The European Union warned the army not to interfere in politics, saying the
controversy was a test case for the military to respect democracy.
The BBC's Sarah Rainsford says the army is sending a signal that it will not
accept Mr Gul's candidacy.
Mr Cicek told reporters that the government had the "primary duty in
protecting the basic tenets of the state".
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has been meeting his cabinet to discuss the
situation.
According to Mr Cicek, the prime minister had a "useful and productive"
telephone conversation with army chief Gen Yasar Buyukanit on Saturday
afternoon.
Turkey is an EU candidate but entry negotiations have been partially frozen
because of a dispute over Cyprus, and the EU is also concerned that Turkey's
commitment to political reform is weakening.
EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said the row was "a clear test case
whether the Turkish armed forces respect democratic secularization and
democratic values".
History of coups
Our correspondent in Istanbul says the army statement late on Friday night
caused a real stir in Turkey.
Many also believe that it is also a message to the judges in the
constitutional court to declare the vote invalid and dissolve parliament, she
adds.
The army has carried out three coups in the last 50 years - in 1960, 1971 and
1980 - and in 1997 it intervened to force Turkey's first Islamist Prime
Minister, Necmettin Erbakan, from power.
The AK is an offshoot of Mr Erbakan's Welfare Party, which was banned in 1998.
The secularist Republican People's Party (CHP), which boycotted Friday's
vote, said it would challenge the election in court because a quorum of MPs
had not been obtained - a charge the AK denies.
A second round of voting is due on Wednesday and the court has said it will
try to rule on the appeal before the vote.
From: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6604643.stm
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Va. Tech wounded face deep physical, emotional scars
POSTED: 4:16 a.m. EDT, April 29, 2007
Story Highlights
‧ Most of the 25 people hurt are healing in private, declining interview
requests
‧ Mother hopes son will not let massacre "be his defining moment"
‧ Expert: Injuries, surgeries could slow academic progress, fuel isolation
‧ Victim's brother: "They're going to get through this together"
BLACKSBURG, Virginia (AP) -- Senior Kevin Sterne will see the scar on his
thigh every time he pulls on his pants. Freshman Hilary Strollo will have to
decide whether to bare her stomach in a swimsuit. And on the day someone
slips a wedding band on her finger, junior Katelyn Carney will see the
healed-up hole that a Virginia Tech gunman put in her left hand.
Most of the dead from the April 16 massacre on campus are buried, their
families learning to live with loss.
Those who survived will have their own struggles, from physical scars to deep
wounds of the psyche, trying to figure out how to stop the most dramatic
event in their lives from overshadowing everything else that happens to them.
Anne Lynam Goddard, whose son Colin was shot three times during the attack on
his French class, sees his trauma the way doctors see the shrapnel embedded
in the tissue of his wounded leg: trying to remove it would cause more pain
and might make matters worse, so it's best to leave it be.
"Your body forms a cocoon, so it will always be part of you, but it won't
hurt. That's how I started thinking about this early on," she said. "My
biggest hope is that this is how my son will remember this. I hope he can
form a cocoon around it and not let it be his defining moment."
The terror of those moments is nightmarish. After sneaking into a dorm and
killing two students with two shots from a 9 mm handgun, Seung-Hui Cho took
his time, heading to a post office to mail a package of video and writings
expressing his anger.
Then he chained the doors of Norris Hall, stormed several classrooms and
unloaded more than 170 rounds over nine long minutes. Students -- some
wounded, some not -- cowered, played dead and listened in horror as 30 of
their classmates and teachers died.
Cho then put a bullet through his head and dropped to the floor amid his
victims.
Most of the 25 people hurt in the worst mass shooting in modern U.S. history
are healing in private, declining or ignoring interview requests.
Justin Klein, a junior from Catonsville, Maryland, who survived three gunshot
wounds, issued a statement saying he is progressing physically and
emotionally. He's back on campus, with friends forming a buffer around his
wheelchair, shielding him from reporters.
"My place is here, with my friends," Klein wrote. "The Hokie community is
strong and resilient, we will persevere, we will go on and we will heal."
It will not be easy. As the weeks and months unfold, the wounded could
experience depression, survivor's guilt, thoughts of suicide, anger,
depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.
Physical injuries and painful follow-up surgeries could slow students'
academic progress and keep them feeling somewhat isolated, said Melissa
Brymer, a clinical psychologist with the UCLA-Duke National Center for Child
Traumatic Stress.
"Their scars can be reminders to themselves and to others, so this may impact
their peer relationships. Their peers might not be able to cope with those
reminders. They might distance themselves," she said.
There is no single way for victims of a tragedy to recover and adapt to what
has happened, said Mark Lerner, a clinical psychologist and traumatic stress
consultant.
"For some people, getting back on the horse, getting back on the bicycle and
exposing themselves to this difficult environment where this has occurred,
being back on that campus will be a really good thing for them," Lerner said.
"For others, it may be more than can be expected, too much for them to
handle."
Hokies will 'get through this together'
Patrick Strollo, brother of injured freshman Hilary Strollo, said there is no
doubt she will return to campus after recovering at home in Gibsonia,
Pennsylvania, from three gunshot wounds.
"What are the other options? She's not the only one who had something happen
to her. Every single person who goes to that school has had something happen
to them," he said. "She has a ton of friends there and she needs to stick to
the people she can relate with, and they're going to get through this
together."
Strollo faces a struggle similar to that of Sterne and Carney. Sterne was
wounded in the leg, the image of him being carried out of the building
captured in a now-famous photograph. Carney was hit in the hand during her
German class, but helped fend off the gunman by barricading the door to stop
him from getting back into the room.
The bloodbath at Virginia Tech was singular in its horror. But in many ways,
the path the wounded must follow is not so different from the one others have
traveled.
In January 2000, Alvaro Llanos was a freshman at New Jersey's Seton Hall
University when two students set fire to a dormitory. Three classmates died.
The flames left the upper half of his body with painful and -- for some time
-- obvious scars.
He went through physical therapy and took a year off from school. When he
returned, he found support -- and scrutiny.
"I figured I'd feel more comfortable being back at school. Especially when
people know what happened, it would be easier than going to a different
school and having to answer questions," Llanos said.
But after walking into a Spanish class the first day back, he quickly
realized it wasn't going to be that easy.
"I felt like everyone was staring at me," he recalled. "I didn't feel like
one of the regular students anymore."
That was six years ago, and Llanos has not graduated. He has made a new life,
different from the one he'd envisioned.
'You have to move on'
Instead of pursuing a computer science degree, his recovery process persuaded
him to train as a physical therapist. He married, has a toddler daughter and
expects a second child soon.
And he has found in himself an energy and positive outlook; he rarely
tolerates self-pity.
Some of the Virginia Tech wounded may find it hard to summon patience, but
eventually, they must push forward because so much awaits them, Llanos said.
"You have to move on. You can't be stuck because if you stay stuck you're
never going to be happy," he said. "Be happy and fulfill your life."
Sitting in her son's hospital room the day after the shootings, Anne Goddard
tried to preempt the most difficult question Colin could ask himself.
"There is no answer to the question of why some people got shot and died and
why some people got shot and lived," she told him. "There is no answer to
that question. Don't go looking for it."
"Yeah," he said. "You're right."
Colin Goddard is already looking ahead. In the emergency room the day he was
shot, the child who was born in Bangladesh and raised in Somalia and Egypt
wanted to know if he could still do his internship on a development project
this summer in Madagascar.
"Some parents would be afraid to let their kid go. I'm not," said Anne
Goddard, a veteran aid worker who directs the Richmond, Virginia-based
Christian Children's Fund. "I want him to come back in August talking about
something very different."
From: http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/04/29/vatech.wounded.ap/index.html
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