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segunda-feira, 29 de junho de 2015

Chineses lamentam o desaparecimento da Muralha da China .../ Sinosphere / NYTimes

http://sinosphere.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/06/29/disappearance-of-chinas-great-wall-prompts-concerns/?partner=socialflow&smid=tw-nytimes&_r=0

China Fears Loss of Great Wall, Brick by Brick





Scholars say the Great Wall of China is disappearing as a result of erosion, theft of bricks and damage from tourists scrambling over unrestored sections.CreditKevin Frayer/Getty Images
The Great Wall in northern China cannot be seen with the naked eye from high orbit above the Earth or from the moon, as some people believe. For centuries, those who have wanted to see the wall have had to make a trip to Asia to lay eyes on one of the greatest surviving artificial structures in the world.
These days, though, there is less of it to see, according to an article in The Beijing Times that cites local officials, statistics and a Great Wall scholar. The article, which appeared on Sunday, said that 22 percent of what was considered the Ming dynasty Great Wall had disappeared. And the total length of the parts of the wall that have vanished, 1,961 kilometers, or 1,219 miles, is equal to about 30 percent of the artificial part of the Great Wall. (More than 6,200 kilometers of the Ming-era wall’s 8,851.8 kilometers is artificial, and the rest consist of natural barriers, the article said.)
Those numbers were released in 2012 by the State Administration of Cultural Heritage, and no doubt more of the wall has disappeared since then.
The Beijing Times article caused a stir on social media on Monday. People’s Daily, the Communist Party’s flagship newspaper, wrote in English on Twitter: “Report on vanishing Great Wall shocks the country.” Global Times, a newspaper overseen by People’s Daily, expressed anxiety in a Twitter post: “Nearly 30 percent of Great Wall disappears. Fancy a trip before it’s all gone?” People’s Daily Online and Global Times both ran stories on Monday that repeated the findings of The Beijing Times.
The Great Wall is not actually a single wall, of course. Beginning with the Qin dynasty, successive empires built different series of walled fortifications in the area now known as northern China. For example, the Han dynasty, which ruled China from 206 B.C. to 220 A.D., built walls and watchtowers along the Hexi Corridor, a passage between mountains and high plateaus leading through the Gobi Desert in western China. Remnants of the Han-era Great Wall can be found west of the former oasis town of Dunhuang and were explored in the early 20th century by Sir Aurel Stein, the British archaeologist.
The Ming dynasty Great Wall also stretched into Gansu and ended at a desert site called Jiayuguan, east of the surviving Han sections.
It is the parts of the wall built during the Ming, which ruled China from 1368 to 1644, that are the best preserved. In Beijing, most tourists go to see the Ming wall at the renovated sections at Badaling or Mutianyu. In November 2009, President Obamawalked along a temporarily closed-off section of Badaling, which is usually mobbed with tourists. In March of last year, his wife, Michelle Obama, went to Mutianyu with their two daughters and, to descend, took a ride in a plastic sled down a popular tourist slide.
Outside Badaling, Mutianyu and a handful of other heavily visited sections, there is the “wild wall,” and it is in these areas — the vast majority of the Ming-era wall — that the structure is vanishing.
The Beijing Times reported that the main causes were erosion from wind and rain, the plundering of bricks by nearby villagers to use in construction and the scrambling over parts of the wild wall by more adventurous tourists.
Some of the bricks taken by villagers have Chinese words carved into them. Scholars judge those bricks to be invaluable historical relics, yet the same bricks can be found sold in village markets near the Great Wall for about 40 to 50 renminbi, or about $7 to $8 — and that can be bargained down to 30 renminbi, according to The Beijing Times.
In 2006, China established regulations for the protection of the Great Wall. But The Beijing Times said that with little in the way of resources devoted to preservation, and given the fact that the Ming-era wall runs through some impoverished counties, the regulations amount to “a mere scrap of paper.”
Some Chinese citizens expressed concern online after seeing the Beijing Times report. “The modern Chinese have done what people for centuries were embarrassed to do and what the invaders could not do,” one person wrote on a Sina Weibo microblog. “The wall is being destroyed by the hands of the descendants.”
Yifu Dong contributed research from Beijing, and Crystal Tse from Hong Kong.


sábado, 25 de janeiro de 2014

Página de Baskeball do NYT / 25/01/2014

Pro Basketball

ON BASKETBALL

A Different Game, but the Knicks’ Present Resembles Its Past

This season’s Knicks resemble their 1984-85 counterparts in their reliance on one player for the bulk of their offense.
Carmelo Anthony made 23 of the 35 shots he took against the Bobcats.

Carmelo Anthony Scores 62 Points, Setting a Knicks Record

Anthony, saying he was “locked in,” had the N.B.A.’s highest single-game total since 2007, leading the Knicks to a rout at Madison Square Garden.
NETS 107, MAVERICKS 106
Deron Williams, right, fouling the Mavericks’ Devin Harris. Williams scored 18 points as the Nets won their fourth straight.

In the Absence of Their Owner, the Nets Hang On

Mark Cuban, the Mavericks’ owner, was at Barclays Center. Mikhail D. Prokhorov, the Nets’ owner, wasn’t. It didn’t seem to matter as the Nets improved their January record to 9-1.

sexta-feira, 5 de julho de 2013

Maratona em semifinal de Wimbledon : 4 horas e 43 minutos...! Novak Djokovic venceu Juan Martin del Potro


Djokovic Outlasts del Potro in Epic Wimbledon Semifinal

Kerim Okten/European Pressphoto Agency
Novak Djokovic reacts during his Wimbledon semifinal match against Juan Martín del Potro  on Friday.
WIMBLEDON, England — In an age of Twitter and text messages; of instant gratification and challenged attention spans, men’s tennis continues – despite all the ferocious currents to the contrary -- to excel at long form.

The marathon men were at it again on Friday, this time on Centre Court at Wimbledon in the sunlight, where yet another pair of powerful, evenly matched rivals relentlessly and good-naturedly sent each other scrambling, lunging, sprawling to every straight line and corner of the most famous patch of grass in the game.
“It was one of the best matches I have been a part of; one of the most exciting, definitely,” said the eventual winner Novak Djokovic.
That is well and truly quite a statement considering how many keepsake matches Djokovic has lived, laughed and suffered through in recent years.
He already had played two just this year: his terrific, high quality five-set victory over Stan Wawrinka in the fourth round of the Australian Open and the clay-court chef d’oeuvre of a French Open semifinal that ended up with Rafael Nadal celebrating and Djokovic ruing what might have been.
Friday’s 7-5, 4-6, 7-6 (2), 6-7 (6), 6-3 victory over Juan Martin del Potro of Argentina now rightfully joins the club.
At four hours and 43 minutes, it was the longest semifinal in the history of Wimbledon, the oldest tournament in tennis, and yet it so rarely dragged; so rarely gave the crowd the slightest desire for resolution even if their own Andy Murray was being delayed from taking the court because of all this guts and brilliance on the full stretch.
They do have world-class wingspans, Del Potro and Djokovic. Del Potro is 6-foot-6, or 1.98 meters, and can produce astounding and precisely controlled power from the corners, particularly his forehand corner, with one of his wunder-thunder-strokes late in the fourth set clocking in at 113 miles per hour and leaving Djokovic staring at the spot where it had just landed in disbelief.
But Djokovic, the game’s elastic man, repeatedly returned the favor: stretching into splits in the backcourt and the forecourt to transform Del Potro’s rightful winners into extended rallies.
“It was a really high-level match during four hours, hitting so hard the ball,” Del Potro said, looking happier than one might have expected. “I think it was unbelievable to watch but of course I’m sad because I was so close.”
In truth, he was and he was not. Yes, Del Potro played and still lost a great first set. Yes, he had chances to take command of the third set before losing it in a tiebreaker. And yes, above all, he bravely saved two match points in the fourth-set tiebreaker to extend the match — quite deservedly — into a fifth set.
But Djokovic, one of the sport’s great managers of risk and reward, was never anywhere near the brink of defeat, and he will now have a chance to win his second Wimbledon against Murray, who defeated Jerzy Janowicz in Friday’s second semifinal.
“In the end I think he played unbelievable,” Del Potro said. “I played my best tennis ever on grasscourt for a long time, but it was not enough to beat the number one in the world.”
It is not as if the 8th-seeded Del Potro did not know how to beat Djokovic on grass. He did it here at the All England Club just last year in the bronze-medal match at the Olympics: a best-of-three set affair that contained all the emotion of best-of-five.
Del Potro then beat him again in the semifinals of the prestigous hard-court event in Indian Wells in March.
But those results remain exceptions to the rule in their rivalry. Djokovic has now won 9 of their 12 matches and has won all four of their matches in Grand Slam tournaments.
Djokovic has an edge in mobility, even if Del Potro moves remarkably well for man of his size. Djokovic has an edge in versatility, even if Del Potro can do plenty of damage in the forecourt as well as the backcourt. But even if Del Potro has the edge in raw, flat power, Djokovic also believed he had the edge on Friday in staying power.
“I have lost a long match in French Open just a few weeks ago. You can't win all the matches. But I know that when we get to the fifth set, when I play a top player at the later stages of a major event especially, this is where your physical strength but also mental ability to stay tough can, you know, decide the winner of that match.
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: July 5, 2013
An earlier version of this article misspelled the name of the player who lost to Andy Murray. He is Jerzy Janowicz, not Jery Janowicz.

sábado, 27 de abril de 2013

A história do sobrenome Green no Celtics de Boston

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/27/sports/basketball/four-boston-celtics-named-green-a-history.html?hpw&_r=0


A History of the Celtics’ Greens

Al Bello/Getty Images
Jeff Green, right, drove the ball against Tyson Chandler at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday.
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BOSTON — He holds the record for most games in a Boston Celticsuniform, for a player with the surname Green.
Off the Dribble
Keep up with the latest news, on the court and off, with The Times's basketball blog.

N.B.A.

Knicks

Nets

W.N.B.A.

Liberty

Charles Krupa/Associated Press
Gerald Green in a 2007 game against Stephon Marbury and the Knicks.
Jeff Green passed Gerald Green on that fanciful career list this season (playoff games included). He also supplanted Gerald Green for most points scored in a game by a Celtic named Green (43.) Gerald’s Boston best was 33 points against Atlanta in April 2007.
Not that Jeff Green’s path to the Celtics was a simple one. A 6-foot-9 forward out of Georgetown, he was drafted in the first round by Boston in 2007 and traded the same day to Seattle in a multiple-player deal that brought Ray Allen to the Celtics. Nearly four years later, the Celtics reacquired Green, allowing him to become the fourth player named Green to play for a franchise known for its green uniforms and green mascot (a leprechaun) and occasionally known simply as the Green.
While Jeff Green is the most successful Green to wear Celtics green — this season he played in 81 games, averaging 27.8 minutes and 12.8 points — the most important Green in team history is probably Sihugo Green. It was not what he did in his 10 games with the Celtics at the end of his career in the 1965-66 season. It was the impact he had on the Celtics — and the N.B.A. — before he played a single game in the league.
Sihugo Green was a 6-2 guard out of Boys High in Brooklyn who played at Duquesne, where he was a two-time all-American. In 1956, the Rochester Royals had the No. 1 pick in the N.B.A. draft. Green was eligible. So, too, was Bill Russell, but he had an Olympic commitment that would delay his N.B.A. debut until December. He was also being pursued by the Harlem Globetrotters, who were said to be offering an outlandish sum: $25,000 a year.
Celtics Coach Red Auerbach craved Russell. He saw him as a transformative presence. He arranged for the team owner, Walter Brown, to promise the owner of the Royals that he could have Brown’s show, the Ice Capades, for two weeks if he bypassed Russell. The owner, Les Harrison, agreed; the ice shows, after all, were guaranteed money. Russell was not.
As a result, the Royals took Sihugo Green. He played two seasons for them, then bounced around, finishing up with the Celtics a decade later. He averaged 9.2 points a game in his professional career.
“He wasn’t much of an N.B.A. player,” recalled Tommy Heinsohn, who was also taken in the 1956 draft as the territorial choice of the Celtics. “He had all this hype because he came out of New York.”
Meanwhile, Auerbach swapped Ed Macauley, an All-Star, and the rights to Cliff Hagan to St. Louis for the No. 2 pick, which he used to select Russell. The Celtics won their first title that season and Russell won 10 more over the next 12 years.
In 1963, the Celtics, as the defending champions, had the eighth pick in the first round — it was then a nine-team league — and used it on a bruising, 6-6 forward from Colorado State named Bill Green. He was an all-American and had averaged 22.1 points and 9.6 rebounds in his three college seasons. But he had a phobia: flying.
He had flown on planes in his college days, but a couple of harrowing trips convinced him that he could no longer do it. After the Celtics drafted him, Green sought counseling, but to no avail. According to a 1986 article in Sports Illustrated, Auerbach agreed to allow Green to travel by train to an exhibition game in St. Louis. The catch was that Green had to fly back to Boston with the team. He could not do it.
“The fear had just built to a point where I couldn’t take it anymore,” Green told the magazine. “I wouldn’t do it.”
Bill Green never played for the Celtics or for any other N.B.A. team. He ended up in education, eventually taking a principal’s job in the Bronx, and died of a heart attack in 1994. He was 53. Two picks after the Celtics took Green in 1963, Baltimore drafted a future Hall of Famer, Gus Johnson.
Bill Green does not count as one of the four Celtic Greens. But Rickey Green does. He had a long N.B.A. career — 946 games — and started ahead of John Stockton in Utah in 1984-85, Stockton’s rookie season. But he was 37 when he joined the Celtics in 1991. They used him sparingly, and he reluctantly ended up on the team’s injured list in March with a phantom ailment so the team could activate Larry Bird.
The Celtics sent Green home to “recuperate” in his native Chicago. He soon received a call from N.B.A. security, wondering how his recovery was going. He did come off the injured list for a pair of games in March 1992, and was then waived. He never played in another N.B.A. game.
The fourth Green is Gerald Green, drafted out of high school by the Celtics in 2005. He was outrageously athletic, but had no idea how to play at the N.B.A. level. He won the dunking contest at the 2007 All-Star Game and was one of many chips used by Celtics General Manager Danny Ainge to acquire Kevin Garnett from the Minnesota Timberwolves in 2007.
Green has bounced around since then, including two years out of the league, but returned with the Nets last season and now plays for Indiana, his sixth N.B.A. team.
Finally, there is one more Green, or more accurately, a Greene, as in Orien Greene, who played 80 games for the Celtics in the 2005-6 season, averaging 3.2 points per game. But Greene isn’t Green. Or as Auerbach might have said: close, but no cigar.