Source: http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20140627-how-our-descendants-will-hate-us

How will the future view us? Tom Chatfield asked some of the world’s best minds, and discovered that we will be seen as barbaric in ways we may not even realise.
Earlier this year, I had a discussion that made me ask a disconcerting question: how will I be viewed after I die? I like to think of myself as someone who is ethical, productive and essentially decent. But perhaps I won’t always be perceived that way. Perhaps none of us will.
No matter how benevolent the intention, what we assume is good, right or acceptable in society may change. From slavery to sexism, there’s plenty we find distasteful about the past. Yet while each generation congratulates itself for moving on from the darker days of its parents and ancestors, that can be a kind of myopia.
I was swapping ideas about this with Tom Standage, author and digital editor of The Economist. Our starting point was those popular television shows from the 1970s that contained views or language so outmoded they probably couldn’t be aired today. But, as he put it to me: “how easy it is to be self-congratulatory about how much less prejudiced we are than previous generations”. This form of hindsight can be dangerously smug. It can become both a way of praising ourselves for progress rather than looking for it to continue, and of distracting ourselves from uncomfortable aspects of the present.

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http://www.nydailynews.com/news/justice-story/typhoid-mary-carrier-death-article-1.1398166

She was declared a menace and sent to live in exile on North Brother Island in East River for more than two decades

BY MARA BOVSUN 

 

personalities-tz13  

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source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2JUVGp6-A5E

 

Questions:
1. Have you played origami before? In your childhood, what kinds of toys did you like to play?

2. In recent years, what newly invented innovative products draws your admiration much? (3C products, stocking spray, sun screen spray, and so on.)

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http://www.economist.com/news/united-states/21600998-after-falling-years-proportion-mums-who-stay-home-rising-return

The return of the stay-at-home mother

After falling for years, the proportion of mums who stay at home is rising

Apr 19th 2014 | WASHINGTON, DC | From the print edition

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source: http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20140612-the-best-way-to-see-the-future

A small group of people have a surprising knack for correctly predicting the course of world events – and you could be one of them, says David Robson.

 

Cast your mind back across the turbulent events of recent history. Did you foresee President Obama’s election before he was even elected as a Democratic candidate – or did you back Hillary Clinton? How about the Arab Spring – could you hear the revolution in the first tremors of dissatisfaction? And did you faithfully predict the recent Ukraine crisis?

 

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Is there a World Cup economic bounce?

(CNN) -- Does hosting the World Cup lead to long-term economic gains? Depends on where you look.

The games in Japan -- which co-hosted with neighboring South Korea in 2002 -- continue to be an economic drag on the local communities. Why? Maintenance of the stadiums built for the games costs more than the revenues they bring in.

Eight of the 10 stadiums built or renovated in Japan for the 2002 World Cup lose between $2 million and $6 million a year, the balance of which is picked up by Japanese taxpayers.

"No strategy, no success," said Ichiro Hirose, a member of the 2002 World Cup Bidding Committee in Japan. "They did not have a strategy" for use of the stadiums after the games, he said.

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Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qck5arjMGBg

Transcript: http://www.mediaed.org/assets/products/151/transcript_151.pdf (from page 27)

 

Vocabulary:

1. turn something on its head  a. totally change something b. to use something in a completely wrong way

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In 1985 DallasRon Woodroof (Matthew McConaughey) — an electrician and rodeo cowboy — is diagnosed with AIDS and given 30 days to live. He initially refuses to accept the diagnosis, but remembers having unprotected sex with an intravenous drug-using prostitute. Ron quickly finds himself ostracized by family and friends, gets fired from his job, and is eventually evicted from his home.

At the hospital, he is tended to by Dr. Eve Saks (Jennifer Garner), who tells him that they are testing a drug called zidovudine (AZT), an antiretroviral drug which is thought to prolong the life of AIDS patients — and which is the only drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for testing on humans.

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The 12 Zodiac Signs and Their Personality Types

 

In Chinese astrology there are twelve different Sun Signs. The Sun Signs are assigned based on the Zodiac sign

the sun is in at the time a person is born. Sun Signs provide information about the unique personality of an

individual. Each sign has specific personality traits that tell who a person is and the type of emotions they are

likely to display. Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius and

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Reel life: The mesmerizing saga of "56 Up"

CBS NEWSSeptember 16, 2013, 3:31 PM

 

(CBS News) Imagine what it would be like to have your whole life from age seven onwards be part a long running series of documentaries. As it happens, fourteen middle-aged people in Britain don't have to imagine it at all. How their real lives as they actually lived them came to be captured on reels of film is our Sunday Morning Cover Story, reported by Lee Cowan:

 It looks like any other group of kids in the early 1960s, but it wasn't just a dance party. It was a sociological experiment for a British documentary called "Seven Up!"

 The idea was to gather 7-year-olds from widely different backgrounds, and look at Britain's class system through their eyes.

 At one end of the extreme: Upper-class seven-year-olds, like the trio of John, Andrew and Charles attending a boarding school.

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