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1、s no need to cryIn this place youll feel theres no hurt or sorrowThere are ways to get thereIf you care enough for the livingMake a little space, make a better place.Heal the world, make it a better placeFor you and for me and the entire human raceThere are people dyingMake a better place for you an

2、d for meIf you want to know why theres a love that cannot lieLove is strong, it only cares of joyful givingIf we try, we shall seeIn this bliss, we cannot feel fear or dreadWe stop existing and start livingThen it feels that alwaysLoves enough for us growingSo make a better world, make a better worl

3、d重复And the dream we were conceived inWill reveal a joyful faceAnd the world we once believed inWill shine again in graceThen why do we keep strangling lifeWound this earth, Crucify its soulThough its plain to see, this world is heavenly be Gods glowWe could fly so high, let our spirits never dieIn m

4、y heart I feel you are all my brothersCreate a world with no fear, together well cry happy tearsSee the nations turn their swords into plowsharesWe could really get thereMake a little space, to make a better place .重复3You and for meTips for College Freelancers致校园自由职业者的建议Ive attended quite a few high

5、 school graduation parties over the past couple of weeks. During all those parties, Ive gotten pulled aside several times by soon-to-be college freshmen who want to know if they can freelance while attending college. Considering I did exactly that, I think freelancing while in college can be a good

6、way to bring in some money, as long as you are prepared to handle both your commitments to your studies and your commitments to your clients. There are a few steps you can take to make the whole situation easier.1. Spend Spare Time Laying GroundworkIts rare that a freelancer starts out with even a f

7、ew regular clients. The situation is made even more complex by the fact that most recent graduates dont have a big portfolio of work to show off to potential clients. So take advantage of sometime to lay your groundwork:Get a website built up Put together some great portfolio pieces even if you have

8、 to volunteer to get them Learn about the business side of freelancing, like book-keeping Work on marketing yourself to clients2. Make Your Schedule a PriorityNo matter how you keep track of time spent on client projects, you need one calendar with both the important dates for your classes and your

9、clients listed. When I was in college, I would sit down with the syllabus for each class and add it to the calendar where I kept track of client due dates. Having all that information in one place made it much easier to avoid scheduling a clients project on top of the study time for a big exam.3.Get

10、 Your Own EquipmentMore than a few college campuses talk up the technology they make available on campus, like labs full of brand new Macs loaded with the latest version of Adobe Creative Suite. While that may sound like just the ticket for turning out great work for your clients, its important that

11、 you keep anything not school related off those computers. Most schools actually have policies in place stating that they can get a cut of any paying work done on their computers and who wants to give up any of their income?4. Try to Keep Your Student Status out of It When companies know that theyre

12、 dealing with freelancers who happen to be in college, they often expect lower prices, no matter the quality of that freelancers portfolio. Even worse, some companies will hesitate to hire a student because of concerns that he or she just isnt qualified for the job. Its generally not worth your whil

13、e to mention that youre a student and try to avoid putting that fact on your website or any other promotional materials you hand out.An Interview with Wentworth MillerLuYu: Please take a seat. Well, by their reaction I guess I dont have to tell you how popular you are in China.Wentworth Miller: Yes,

14、 yes. Ive been told we have a fairly big fan base here. A huge. Well, I know this is your third trip to China. Yes, thats right. Do you get to walk around a little bit in Beijing and Shanghai? I have. Um, all three times Ive come . its been for work, so thats taken priority. But I always make sure t

15、hat for every day of press and publicity I have one day for seeing the sights and exploring as much as I can in that limited time, what Shanghai and Beijing have to offer. If you have the time, where do you want to go? Uh, Ive been to the Great Wall. Oh, really? And Id dearly like to go back. Theres

16、 just something so extraordinary about standing on a monument. Something built by man that can also be seen from space. I think thats kind of incredible. Did you get onto the top? I sure did. And it was steep, actually. I was really surprised and I was huffing and puffing, but these little old women

17、 were kind of scooting by me, and I was sort of embarrassed; I felt like I had to work to keep up. I was just wondering, what kind of boy were you when you were very little in school? Were you a popular boy? I wasnt particularly popular . I did a lot of . I dont believe you, somehow. I participated

18、in a lot of extra-curricular activities. I was a swimmer, I was on the newspaper, I was on the yearbook; um, I did plays, of course, I sang in the chorus. Um, so I was fairly well-known, I knew a lot of people, but I wasnt necessarily close to many people. Um, my parents were very strict, very tradi

19、tional and conservative, so when I came home from school I was expected to sit down for four and five hours to do my homework. Four and five hours? However long it took. Um, and while I was doing my homework, I could only listen to certain kinds of music. Like classical, for example. Because they th

20、ought if I listened to pop while I was doing homework, Id be distracted. So, I kind of grew up developing a taste for classical music without realizing it. It became kind of a necessary background for me; something that automatically puts me at ease, puts me in a kind of meditative mood. So you neve

21、r had the period of a so-called a “rebellious time”? Not really. I almost feel as though my decision to become an actor was my rebellion, because up until that point Id been on a very traditional path. Um, Id worked hard in school, Id gone to the best college that I was able to get into, and I think

22、 the expectation was that I was going to have a job with a desk, and a steady 9-5, and a paycheck, and an assistant of my own, that kind of thing. But deciding to become an actor was a little bit like deciding to step off a cliff. I wasnt sure what was going to happen next. There was no road map, th

23、ere was no recipe for success. So in that way I think I had my rebellion, it was just a few years later than your average kid. What kind of jobs did you do at that time? Um, anything and everything. Mostly I sat behind a desk, and answered phones for other people. In fact, when I eventually audition

24、ed for Prison Break when I auditioned for Michael Scofield I had to go to the Fox Studios, to the lot, and read for a roomful of executives, maybe thirty or forty people, and half of those people Ive actually temped for at one point, because I had been working so long in the business as a tempt, wai

25、ting for my big break. Thats good. Yeah, it was good actually, because it made me realize that all of these faceless individuals, who I might have assumed were intimidating, scary, all-powerful were actually just human beings. They had the same hopes and dreams and fears that I did, and thats becaus

26、e I got to see them from a totally different perspective. Were you ever feeling like, “OK, this is too hard. Im just going to quit”? Absolutely, I think its a very difficult business. And there were many times when I felt as though I was the only one who believed in myself. I wasnt hearing very many

27、 “Yeses” out there in the business. What I was hearing was a lot of “Nos”, but because there really was no Plane B, because I didnt want to be a lawyer also, or a doctor also, I had no choice, but to stick with it, thats my only alternative. Tokyo: City OverviewTokyo was known as Edo until 1868, but

28、 its hard to imagine that this high-rise, high-tech metropolis could possibly have existed in a time before electricity and concrete. Tokyo isnt just a futuristic city; its the place that has shaped our vision of what the future will look like.Theres a sci-fi familiarity to areas like Shibuya, Shinj

29、uku and Akihabara; the skyscrapers glowing with illuminated signs, subway stops inside shopping malls and taxis with automated doors could be straight out of Blade Runner or The Fifth Element. But the space-age city of Tokyo has been shaped by a history of catastrophe. In the 20th century alone, Tok

30、yo suffered earthquakes, fires and devastating bombing. The result is a city that has repeatedly been forced to be rebuilt, shedding its past with each successive redevelopment. In Tokyo, the future is a long-standing tradition.After centuries of expansion, Tokyo has grown vertically to accommodate its 12 million residents. Perhaps the inevitability of another catastrophic earthquake accounts for the lack of emoti

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