Re: 2012.12.16聚会及通讯录

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Doris Deng

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Dec 12, 2012, 8:56:38 PM12/12/12
to PanXinyu, yuli...@hotmail.com, XIV, artm...@gmail.com, rexla...@gmail.com, henryyo...@hotmail.com, 1887...@sina.com, abcd0...@yahoo.com.cn, alexvin...@hotmail.com, apple...@sina.com, archo...@hotmail.com, bill...@gmail.com, colli...@126.com, darren...@gmail.com, dengr...@gmail.com, diana...@sina.com, eversum...@126.com, fanz...@163.com, fish...@gmail.com, 朋友, guanj...@gmail.com, huangwe...@hotmail.com, hueka...@gmail.com, jiang...@126.com, jianwei...@gmail.com, jinxu...@gmail.com, joel...@yahoo.com.cn, liangy...@126.com, Chengbin LI, lja...@gmail.com, ljjo...@gmail.com, lk...@163.com, lvyua...@gmail.com, noah...@gmail.com, Huan Lu, ohbana...@hotmail.com, Isaac, roy...@hotmail.com, suosuo1...@126.com, underc...@163.com, vsop...@gmail.com, wangjo...@126.com, xlin...@gmail.com, xyz....@gmail.com, yb2005...@126.com, y-...@126.com, yzs_co...@hotmail.com, Mao Zeng, zhengs...@gmail.com, zhen...@sina.com, zxrm-...@163.com, chaoch...@googlegroups.com, mike....@gmail.com, pany...@gmail.com, mu.ch...@gmail.com
Sorry I cannot :( 

2012/12/13 PanXinyu <jessd...@hotmail.com>
To 悦如、邓熹、余黎藜:
请尽快确认是否能来本次聚会~~Thx~~
 
 
Hi All~~

 
关于2012.12.16聚会:
 
1、时间定为2012.12.16中午至下午具体时间、地点另行通知
 
2、已取得联系人数:                 47人
      其中:
           确定能出席的:                 12人(有人*2哦~~)
           待确认是否能出席的:    13人
           确定不能出席的:             23人
       未取得联系名单:                  18人
       蔡鸿昀、陈黛诗、崔帝尔、邓睿、冯熙铉、黄一峰、贾方兴、江 腾、林 潇、陆 欢、罗孟袁、木 璟、任冠桦、任一粟、王文波、肖 瑶、杨东睿、岳 帅
 
请各位:
 
1、确定能出席,或待确认能出席的,尽快核实确认手机号码/提供最常用联系方式,便于联系;并关注QQ、邮箱、微博最新通知
     *我的联系方式:
            手机:13590280567,
            QQ:21382531,
            邮箱:jessd...@hotmail.com
            微博:Jess舞媚娘
2、如有上述名单中人员的联系方式,请尽快协助转达聚会通知,并告知能否出席,同时提供其手机或最常用联系方式。
 
 
关于通讯录:
 
在本次担任“小联络员”的过程中,我顺手整理了手头有的各位童鞋可取得联系の通讯资料(不完整),已上传至附件,供各位参考~~
 
 
 
 
最后,希望在这次聚会中见到大家!!哈哈!!!
 
 
Yours,
Jessica
 

LIN, Xiao (Joyce)

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Dec 12, 2012, 9:44:08 PM12/12/12
to Doris Deng, PanXinyu, yuli...@hotmail.com, XIV, artm...@gmail.com, rexla...@gmail.com, henryyo...@hotmail.com, 1887...@sina.com, abcd0...@yahoo.com.cn, alexvin...@hotmail.com, apple...@sina.com, archo...@hotmail.com, bill...@gmail.com, colli...@126.com, darren...@gmail.com, dengr...@gmail.com, diana...@sina.com, eversum...@126.com, fanz...@163.com, fish...@gmail.com, 朋友, guanj...@gmail.com, huangwe...@hotmail.com, hueka...@gmail.com, jiang...@126.com, jianwei...@gmail.com, jinxu...@gmail.com, joel...@yahoo.com.cn, liangy...@126.com, Chengbin LI, lja...@gmail.com, ljjo...@gmail.com, lk...@163.com, lvyua...@gmail.com, noah...@gmail.com, Huan Lu, ohbana...@hotmail.com, Isaac, roy...@hotmail.com, suosuo1...@126.com, underc...@163.com, vsop...@gmail.com, wangjo...@126.com, xyz....@gmail.com, yb2005...@126.com, y-...@126.com, yzs_co...@hotmail.com, Mao Zeng, zhengs...@gmail.com, zhen...@sina.com, zxrm-...@163.com, chaoch...@googlegroups.com, mike....@gmail.com, pany...@gmail.com, mu.ch...@gmail.com
Thanks a lot for organizing...

I won't make it back though, sorry to miss it.

You guys have fun!!!

XX



2012/12/12 Doris Deng <dor...@gmail.com>

李承斌

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Dec 13, 2012, 4:06:33 AM12/13/12
to LIN, Xiao (Joyce), Doris Deng, PanXinyu, yuli...@hotmail.com, XIV, artm...@gmail.com, rexla...@gmail.com, henryyo...@hotmail.com, 1887...@sina.com, abcd0...@yahoo.com.cn, alexvin...@hotmail.com, apple...@sina.com, archo...@hotmail.com, bill...@gmail.com, colli...@126.com, darren...@gmail.com, dengr...@gmail.com, diana...@sina.com, eversum...@126.com, fanz...@163.com, fish...@gmail.com, 朋友, guanj...@gmail.com, huangwe...@hotmail.com, hueka...@gmail.com, jiang...@126.com, jianwei...@gmail.com, jinxu...@gmail.com, joel...@yahoo.com.cn, liangy...@126.com, lja...@gmail.com, ljjo...@gmail.com, lk...@163.com, lvyua...@gmail.com, noah...@gmail.com, Huan Lu, ohbana...@hotmail.com, Isaac, roy...@hotmail.com, suosuo1...@126.com, underc...@163.com, vsop...@gmail.com, wangjo...@126.com, xyz....@gmail.com, yb2005...@126.com, y-...@126.com, yzs_co...@hotmail.com, Mao Zeng, zhengs...@gmail.com, zhen...@sina.com, zxrm-...@163.com, chaoch...@googlegroups.com, mike....@gmail.com, pany...@gmail.com, mu.ch...@gmail.com
陈沐、黎振廷和我明天中午12点会在万象城的 稻香 饮茶。

欢迎有空的各位加入!

Mike LIU Xi

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Dec 16, 2012, 10:16:57 AM12/16/12
to PanXinyu, Doris Deng, YuLiLi, XIV, Ting Wen, lai Rex, CY, 1887...@sina.com, abcd0...@yahoo.com.cn, alexvin...@hotmail.com, apple...@sina.com, RenArchon, Billy Yao, 肖瑶, Darren Liu, Rui Deng, diana...@sina.com, eversum...@126.com, fanz0913, fish...@gmail.com, 朋友, guanj...@gmail.com, HUANGMandy, Xiaoqi Wang, jiang...@126.com, Jianwei Chen, Xixuan FENG, joel...@yahoo.com.cn, liangy...@126.com, Chengbin LI, lja...@gmail.com, John Liu, lk...@163.com, lvyua...@gmail.com, Fangzhou Liu, Huan Lu, ohbana...@hotmail.com, Isaac, royzgw, suosuo1...@126.com, underc...@163.com, Raphael Liao, wangjo...@126.com, Joyce Lin, xyz....@gmail.com, yb2005...@126.com, 杨东睿, yzs_co...@hotmail.com, Mao Zeng, Zhengshan Xie, zhen...@sina.com, zxrm-...@163.com, chaoch...@googlegroups.com, 元济潘, Mu Chen
Dear all, 

Great to see you guys today - always fun to have such a long and interesting chat!

We had a discussion about how to hold similar gatherings going forward and everybody agrees that we should reply on both email and QQ for circulating the event and contact info. Besides, we agree to segregate the whole list into groups by geography (Guangdong, Shanghai, Beijing, Americas, and Europe) - even if we can't have global re-union soon, we could well possibly have regional ones! More information would be sent out later. 

Pan Xinyu, Thanks very much again for organizing the event. Much appreciated. 

Chen Mu, while you missed the gathering today, you may want to take the lead if you want to have another one before you go back to the States - worth getting in touch with Pan Xinyu/Lai Kai as they should have the latest contact info (QQ, email). 

All the best, 
Liu Xi



2012/12/12 PanXinyu <jessd...@hotmail.com>

Mike LIU Xi

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Dec 27, 2012, 3:01:25 AM12/27/12
to PanXinyu, Doris Deng, YuLiLi, XIV, Ting Wen, lai Rex, CY, 1887...@sina.com, abcd0...@yahoo.com.cn, alexvin...@hotmail.com, apple...@sina.com, RenArchon, Billy Yao, 肖瑶, Darren Liu, Rui Deng, diana...@sina.com, eversum...@126.com, fanz0913, fish...@gmail.com, 朋友, guanj...@gmail.com, HUANGMandy, Xiaoqi Wang, jiang...@126.com, Jianwei Chen, Xixuan FENG, joel...@yahoo.com.cn, liangy...@126.com, Chengbin LI, lja...@gmail.com, John Liu, lk...@163.com, lvyua...@gmail.com, Fangzhou Liu, Huan Lu, ohbana...@hotmail.com, Isaac, royzgw, suosuo1...@126.com, underc...@163.com, Raphael Liao, wangjo...@126.com, Joyce Lin, xyz....@gmail.com, yb2005...@126.com, 杨东睿, yzs_co...@hotmail.com, Mao Zeng, Zhengshan Xie, zhen...@sina.com, zxrm-...@163.com, chaoch...@googlegroups.com, 元济潘, Mu Chen
张启帆、邹广伟、黎振廷和我明天中午12点会在万象城的 稻香 饮茶。

欢迎有空的各位加入!欢迎带家属哈!

Many thanks and best regards,
刘曦
Xi (Mike) LIU


2012/12/16 Mike LIU Xi <mike....@gmail.com>

Mike LIU Xi

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Jan 6, 2013, 6:48:42 AM1/6/13
to PanXinyu, Doris Deng, YuLiLi, XIV, Ting Wen, lai Rex, CY, 1887...@sina.com, abcd0...@yahoo.com.cn, alexvin...@hotmail.com, apple...@sina.com, RenArchon, Billy Yao, 肖瑶, Darren Liu, Rui Deng, diana...@sina.com, eversum...@126.com, fanz0913, fish...@gmail.com, 朋友, guanj...@gmail.com, HUANGMandy, Xiaoqi Wang, jiang...@126.com, Jianwei Chen, Xixuan FENG, joel...@yahoo.com.cn, liangy...@126.com, Chengbin LI, lja...@gmail.com, John Liu, lk...@163.com, lvyua...@gmail.com, Fangzhou Liu, Huan Lu, ohbana...@hotmail.com, Isaac, royzgw, suosuo1...@126.com, underc...@163.com, Raphael Liao, wangjo...@126.com, Joyce Lin, xyz....@gmail.com, yb2005...@126.com, 杨东睿, yzs_co...@hotmail.com, Mao Zeng, Zhengshan Xie, zhen...@sina.com, zxrm-...@163.com, chaoch...@googlegroups.com, 元济潘, Mu Chen
亲爱的同学们,

不好意思忘发了附件里更新的通讯录 - 正如我上一封邮件所说,我们按所在地把大家分了个组,同时安排了组长。这样方便大家区域性的小聚会,还有出差旅游的时候找到当地的伙伴 - 联系通讯录里面highlight的组长就好!这通讯录我十天前在QQ群上面已经发过一次了。

祝大家新年快乐!

Many thanks and best regards,
刘曦
Xi (Mike) LIU


2012/12/16 Mike LIU Xi <mike....@gmail.com>
Dear all, 
塔利班通讯录(2012.12.18).xls

Mike LIU Xi

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Jan 15, 2013, 8:28:41 AM1/15/13
to PanXinyu, Doris Deng, YuLiLi, XIV, Ting Wen, lai Rex, CY, 1887...@sina.com, abcd0...@yahoo.com.cn, alexvin...@hotmail.com, apple...@sina.com, RenArchon, Billy Yao, 肖瑶, Darren Liu, Rui Deng, diana...@sina.com, eversum...@126.com, fanz0913, fish...@gmail.com, 朋友, guanj...@gmail.com, HUANGMandy, Xiaoqi Wang, jiang...@126.com, Jianwei Chen, Xixuan FENG, joel...@yahoo.com.cn, liangy...@126.com, Chengbin LI, lja...@gmail.com, John Liu, lk...@163.com, lvyua...@gmail.com, Fangzhou Liu, Huan Lu, ohbana...@hotmail.com, Isaac, royzgw, suosuo1...@126.com, underc...@163.com, Raphael Liao, wangjo...@126.com, Joyce Lin, xyz....@gmail.com, yb2005...@126.com, 杨东睿, yzs_co...@hotmail.com, Mao Zeng, Zhengshan Xie, zhen...@sina.com, zxrm-...@163.com, chaoch...@googlegroups.com, 元济潘, Mu Chen
"put it next to sprinkle systems..."

Beijing confronts pollution dilemma

By Jamil Anderlini in Beijing

For nearly 15 years the Chinese government has been talking about improving the air quality in Beijing and by its own measures it seems to have done a pretty good job.

Since the city launched a campaign in 1998 to clean up the atmosphere the number of “blue sky days” recorded by the government increased every single year until 2011, when it achieved a record 286 days with supposedly clean air, compared to just 100 in 1998.

    But as anyone who has lived for long in Beijing can attest, “blue sky” has become something of a redundant concept when applied to air quality in the celestial capital.

    Over the weekend, air pollution readings in the city were the worst since records began about four years ago, with the concentration of fine particulates reaching a level 75 times greater than that considered healthy under the latest US standards.

    A thick layer of toxic fog blanketing Beijing for days blotted out the sun and disrupted traffic as residents were warned to stay inside and avoid any strenuous activity so as to minimise their exposure to the hazardous fumes.

    Despite years of official rhetoric and a couple of years when there was a noticeable improvement, the air now seems to be getting worse and could even present the incoming administration of Xi Jinping with a credibility crisis.

    Chinese and international experts say one of the biggest problems the government faces is the willingness of officials at all levels to sacrifice environmental concerns for the overriding imperative of economic growth.

    A lack of accountability in the system, the weakness of the agencies tasked with tackling the issue and the ease with which data collection and presentation is manipulated all compound the problem.

    “China’s national leaders have ordered an improvement in air quality but thanks to misreporting and manipulation of data at the lower levels, they often aren’t aware of the severity of the problem,” says Steven Andrews, an environmental consultant who exposed official manipulation of air pollution data in Beijing in the run-up to the 2008 Olympic Games. “For lower-level officials, they can often get the same results by manipulating the data as they do by enforcing emissions standards.”

    Thanks to misreporting and manipulation of data at the lower levels, [senior officials] often aren’t aware of the severity of the problem

    - Steven Andrews, environmental consultant

    Since enforcing these standards means confronting powerful state enterprises and power producers – many of which have emissions-treatment equipment installed but choose not to use it because of the costs involved – many officials prefer to massage the numbers, Mr Andrews says.

    Chinese scientists who have conducted independent studies on air quality say that all sorts of tricks are used by the authorities in order to provide numbers that show improvements and make their superiors look good.

    These range from blatantly changing the readings to placing city air monitoring stations in places where pollution levels are lowest, such as in parks or next to sprinkler systems.

    Another problem is that China’s definition of unhealthy pollution levels seems designed to downplay the issue – the highest concentration of toxic particulates still regarded as “excellent” in China is three times higher than the level that is considered healthy in the US.

    That many Beijing residents are even aware the “fog” they have been breathing over the past few days is bad for them already marks a huge leap forward compared with just one year ago.

    It was around this time last year that Beijing, under increasing public pressure, agreed to start reporting concentrations of pm2.5 – a measure of tiny particulates that are the most dangerous to human health because they can penetrate deep into the lungs and even enter the bloodstream.

    Previously Beijing had only reported on the less dangerous larger particles, known as pm10, and the data were considered highly unreliable and subject to manipulation.

    The decision to provide more and better information on air pollution resulted from rising public awareness driven by an unexpected source – the US embassy in Beijing.

    Starting in 2008 the US embassy began publishing hourly readings for pm2.5 concentrations online using equipment installed on the embassy roof that often painted a very different picture from the “blue sky” reports coming from the government.

    Partly as a result of the embarrassing discrepancies between the US embassy numbers and the official data, the director of the Beijing Air Quality Department announced in June last year that henceforth the city would end its reporting of blue sky days.

    At the same time he identified a big part of the problem when he acknowledged that “the air quality results we released were always different from the true feelings of the general public”.


    Many thanks and best regards,
    刘曦
    Xi (Mike) LIU


    2013/1/6 Mike LIU Xi <mike....@gmail.com>
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