731477 ランダム
 HOME | DIARY | PROFILE 【フォローする】 【ログイン】

慶應通信60期生(法学部甲類)の徒然日記(’10年卒)

慶應通信60期生(法学部甲類)の徒然日記(’10年卒)

【毎日開催】
15記事にいいね!で1ポイント
10秒滞在
いいね! --/--
おめでとうございます!
ミッションを達成しました。
※「ポイントを獲得する」ボタンを押すと広告が表示されます。
x

PR

Profile

yoko0625

yoko0625

Calendar

Category

Freepage List

Archives

2024年06月
2024年05月
2024年04月
2024年03月
2024年02月

Comments

yoko@ Re[1]:忘れないうちに。(英語1)(11/03) 高田大輝さんへ 全く更新していないブロ…
高田大輝@ Re:忘れないうちに。(英語1)(11/03) 記事拝見しました。 法学部甲類に在学中の…
yoko@ Re[1]:レポート返却(社会政策)(12/26) もきちさん すっかり更新しない過去ブログ…
もきち@ Re:レポート返却(社会政策)(12/26) ブログを拝見させて頂いていると、結構「…
ヤマダ タロウ@ Re:お返事が。(04/17) yoko0625さん >忙しいところ、ありがと…
2009年02月06日
XML
その2です。
>第2章、こいつも新聞記事ですね。

A Newspaper Article

Atomic Bombings Top U.S. Journalists' List of Century's News

NEW YORK (AP)-The top news story of the 20th century was the United States' atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, according to a survey of prominent U.S. journalists and scholars released Wednesday.
The 1945 bombings, which killed thousands and led to the end of World War II, topped 99 other stories of the century. The list was compiled for the Newseum, a museum about news gathering, in an exercise likely to kindle debate.
The No.2 choice was an achievement of science, peaceful and wondrous: U.S. astronaut Neil Armstrong's walk on the moon in 1969.

Third place went to Japan's bombing of Pearl Harbor.
Participants were each asked to select the 25 most important news events, and their lists were combined to produce a final ranking of 100. That list, rearranged in chronological order, now becomes a ballot that the public can vote on.
"It was agonizing," CNN anchor and senior correspondent Judy Woodruff said of the selection process.

She too concluded the century's lead news event was the atomic bombing. "Because so many people died, it drove home the awful power of this new instrument," said Ms. Woodruff, who was born the following year.
"The one thing for which this century will be remembered 500 years from now was: This was the century when we began the exploration of space," said historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr., whose choice for No.1 was Armstrong's moon walk.
"People always say: If we could land on the moon, we can do anything," said Maria Elena Salinas, co-anchor at Miami-based Spanish-language cable network Univision, who also made it her first choice.

Though third on the list, Japan's bombing of Pearl Harbor was No.1 for Ben Bradlee. "I'm going to write the next one of these things in disappearing ink," said the journalist of 50-plus years.
At 77, Bradlee was alive for most events he chose from. Now vice president at-large at The Washington Post, his choices for the top 25 were as personal as they were professional.
"World War II was 25 percent of my life at one time," Bradlee said. The assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963 was No.6 on the final list, No.2 for Bradlee.
The Watergate scandal? The event his reporters uncovered and which led to the resignation of President Nixon, was No.7 for Bradlee, No.14 on the list of 100.
The Newseum, based in Arlington, Virginia, is a project of The Freedom Forum, a nonpartisan foundation that promotes under-standing between the news media and public.

Forum spokeswoman Susan Bennett said the public can cast votes by visiting the Newseum; its traveling exhibit, NewsCapade, scheduled to visit 30 cities this year; or, starting Wednesday, its Web site, www. newseum. org.
The sex scandal leading to President Bill Clinton's impeachment ranked No.53 on the final list. It was not among Ms. Woodruff's 25, however.
"When I think about the amount of time we spent on the Lewinsky story. . . ," she said. "There's so much more important going on in the world."

With his 81-year-old eyes, historian Schlesinger looked forward.
"I put DNA and penicillin and the computer and the microchip in the first 10 because they've transformed civilization. Wars vanish," Schlesinger said, and many people today can't even recall when the Civil War took place.
"Pearl Harbor will be as remote as the War of the Roses," he said, referring to the English civil war of the 15th century.

And there's no need to get hung up on the ranking, he said. "The order is essentially very artificial and fictitious," he said. "It's very hard to decide the atomic bomb is more important than getting on the moon."

Some events ranked among the top 10 reflected the survey's American orientation: No.5-women win the vote in the United States, 1920, and No.9-the 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education Supreme Court case that ended school segregation.
Other stories in the top 10 included: No.4-Wilbur and Orville Wright fly the first powered airplane, 1903; No.7-Horrors of Nazi Holocaust, concentration camps exposed, 1945; No.8- World War I begins in Europe, 1914; and No.10, U.S. stock market crashes: The Great Depression sets in, 1929.





お気に入りの記事を「いいね!」で応援しよう

Last updated  2009年02月09日 09時24分58秒
コメント(0) | コメントを書く
[英語1・2・3・7] カテゴリの最新記事



© Rakuten Group, Inc.