- 目錄
第1篇 諾貝爾化學(xué)獎得主斯特凡·赫爾在頒獎晚宴英語演講稿
your majesties,your royal highnesses,ladies and gentlemen,
what a week, what a day, and what a night...!
i cannot imagine anything more e_hilarating than to stand here this evening – also on behalf ofmy colleagues w. e. moerner and eric betzig – thanking the swedish academy and the nobelfoundation for the honor that has been bestowed upon us. we are so grateful to all who havesupported us on our path and – above all – we feel very, very humbled.
like all laureates, each of us three has his own road to this magnificent hall. our personalstories have been quite different.
yet – we have much in common: passion for what we do, and fascination with things thatcannot be done, or – let’s say – things that cannot be done...supposedly.
erwin schrödinger, who spoke at this banquet eighty-one years ago tonight, wrote: “it is fairto state that we are not going to e_periment with single particles any more than we will raisedinosaurs in the zoo”.
well, one of us, w. e., discovered just the opposite – single molecules can indeed be seen andplayed with individually.
now, ladies and gentlemen, what do we learn from this?
first. erwin schrödinger would never have gone on to write “jurassic park”...
second. as a nobel laureate you should say “this or that is never going to happen”, becauseyou will increase your chances tremendously – of being remembered – decades later – in anobel banquet speech.
and so, – on to superresolution fluorescence imaging. according to the belief, molecules closertogether than 200 nanometers could not be told apart with focused light. this is because, in apacked molecular crowd, the molecules shout out their fluorescence simultaneously, causingtheir signal, their voices, to be confused.
but, believe it or not, eric found a way to discern the molecules by calling on each one ofthem individually, using a microscope so simple – that he built it with a friend – in his livingroom.
as for myself, i never had that kind of patience. calling on each molecule one by one? noway. i just told all of them to be quiet – e_cept for a selected few.
just keep the molecules quiet, and let only a few speak up. ... a simple solution to asupposedly unsolvable problem. it made the resolution limit - history.
now have a guess, where did this idea occur to me?
not very far from here, actually: in a student dorm in finnish åbo – in what you may kindly call– a living room.
so, what does it take, ladies and gentlemen, to end up standing here, telling you a story ofimportant discoveries or improvements?
well...you definitely need a living room. at the very least, you need a place to sleep. and whenyou fall asleep you may forget that others consider you – too daring or too foolish.
but when morning comes, you would better find yourself saying: “i have so many choices ofwhat to do or what to leave – every morning, every day. i better judge for myself, and – goahead and do it.”
because nothing is more powerful than an idea whose time has come – even if it came in a –living room – or to someone – with a humble living.
and – if you feel we’ll never raise dinosaurs...who knows? one day someone may be actuallystanding here – giving a banquet speech.
so, let us embrace a culture that addresses problems deemed impossible to solve – and letus now honor those who will do so with a toast.
第2篇 諾貝爾物理學(xué)獎得主中村修二在頒獎晚宴演講稿
your majesty,royal highnesses,ladies and gentlemen,colleagues and friends:
on behalf of my co-recipients, professor isamu akasaki and professor hiroshi amano, i wouldlike to thank the members of the nobel prize selection committee, and members of the swedishroyal academy of science for honouring our invention of the efficient blue-light emittingdiodes (led) which has enabled bright and energy-savings white light sources.
alfred nobel wanted his prize to be awarded based on an invention or discovery in physics that“during the preceding year, shall have conferred the greatest benefit on mankind”. therefore,we are deeply honoured that the dream of led lighting has now become a reality, and isgreatly benefiting mankind.
nowadays we can buy energy efficient led light bulbs at the supermarket and help reduceenergy use. led lighting is 10 times more efficient than conventional incandescent lampso we can drastically reduce energy consumption. i believe that led lighting can also reduceglobal warming too.
in addition, by combining led with solar cell we can give sustainable lighting to the 1.5 billionpeople without electricity that’s cost effective, clean, and safe – truly lighting the world.
my colleague at ucsb, and physics nobel laureate in 2022, professor herbert kromer saidabout led lighting: “we are not just talking about doing things better, but about doing thingswe never could before. you have forvever changed the world, now every person can e_perienceled lighting”.
if i can tell you a little story of encouragement…when we began work on the blue led in the1980s, we were told again and again that what we were trying to do was impossible.
still, we persevered, working hard for many hours and years to develop this new technology.
after the breakthroughs in making the bright blue led by professors akasaki, amano andmyself, an e_plosion of research activity occurred. thousands of researchers joined the fieldand applied the led to many fields such as mobile phone screens, led television, and ledlighting.
along with professor isamu akasaki and professor hiroshi amano, i would like to thank theswedish royal academy again for awarded this prize to our invention of blue led and energyefficient led lights. i would also like to thank all my colleagues at nichia and ucsb and myfamily for letting me work so hard.
today, i hope that everyone can now use efficient and led lighting to save energy!
thank you! (tack)
第3篇 諾貝爾生理學(xué)獎得主約翰·奧基夫在頒獎晚宴上英語演講稿
your majesties,your royal highnesses,your e_cellencies,ladies and gentlemen
on behalf of my colleagues may-britt and edvard moser, and myself, i would like to e_press ourgratitude to the nobel foundation for hosting this magnificent banquet. i would also like toe_press our gratitude to the nobel committee and assembly for deeming our research worthyof this distinguished accolade. i think it’s fair to say that the nobel prize is the highest honorany scientist or artist can achieve. we are pleased and delighted.
we see the awards as a recognition not only of ourselves and our accomplishments but also ofour collaborators in the study of the spatial functions of the hippocampus, and our colleagues inthe wider field of cognitive and behavioural neuroscience. cognitive neuroscience is entering ane_citing era in which new technologies and ideas are making it possible to study the neuralbasis of cognition, perception, memory and emotion at the level of networks of interactingneurons, the level at which we believe many of the important operations of the brain take place.we know a considerable amount about how individual neurons work and how two cells cancommunicate with each other but the way in which entire networks of hundreds andthousands of neurons cooperate, interact with each other, and are orchestrated to create ourideas and concepts is an undere_plored area of neuroscience. it is probably at this level thatnetwork failure occurs and leads to some of our most disturbing and intractable diseases ofthe mind and brain.
this new area of neuroscience has been made possible by the development of new optical,computer-based electronic, and molecular biological tools which will allow us tomonitor theactivity of many thousands of cells simultaneously and to manipulate their activity. we willmove from looking at correlations between brain activity and behaviour to studying how thebrain causes mental states and behaviour. it is fitting therefore that our fellow laureates thisyear in physics and chemistry are world’s leaders in providing us with some of these tools. weare eager to begin to use some of the laser-based optical techniques being developed by ourchemistry co- laureates.
we are also pleased to be receiving the prize with laureates from so many different countries.science is the quintessential international endeavour and the sterling reputation of the nobelawards is partly due to the widely-perceived lack of national and other biases in the selection ofthe laureates. we believe that the future great contributions to our understanding of thebiological and physical world can come from citizens of any country in any part of the world. it isto the credit of the nobel committees that they have steadfastly endeavoured to follow alfrednobel’s wishes that the prizes recognise contributions to the welfare of humanity regardless ofcountry of origin, gender, race or religious affiliation.
i want to end by recognising and thanking our many collaborators and colleagues toonumerous to mention in this short speech, our universities, ucl and ntnu, and our generousfunders.
thank you for your attention. tack.
第4篇 凱特王妃在英國國家肖像館肖像慈善晚宴英語演講稿
i just wanted to say how delighted i am to be here this evening to celebrate the fantastic work of the national portrait gallery.
the gallery’s achievements are e_ceptional. they hold the most e_tensive collection ofportraits in the world, and their unique and brilliant e_hibitions never fail to inspire us all.
but, it is more than simply a world renowned visitor’s attraction – the gallery’s outreach andresearch programmes makes it one of the leading centres for the important study intoportraiture.
i simply could not be more proud to be its patron.
thank you for being here tonight and showing your support. i hope that you all have awonderful evening.
第5篇 威廉王子在英國猶太護(hù)理中心25周年慶祝晚宴上英語演講稿
thank you very much, lord levy, for your e_tremely kind introduction and, to lionel, for giving your time to entertain us this evening. i imagine this crowd is a lot rowdier than what you will have at glastonbury.
ladies and gentlemen, thank you for inviting me to join you this evening for your birthdaycelebrations. nearly two hundred years ago, in 1819, there were two quite monumental births.the first was monumental for my family – the birth of my great, great, great, greatgrandmother, queen victoria, who went on to live 81 years and whose daughter-in-law,ale_andra, gave her name to this amazing building.
the second remarkable birth was of an organisation, which later became known as the jewishblind society. over the ne_t two centuries, the world changed considerably. yet there hasalways been one constant in the united kingdom – a jewish community which has organiseditself to support those who need help and support. whether in the time of the jewish board ofguardians, or the jewish welfare board or, in our generation, jewish care, there is a proud storyto be told of self-reliance and communal responsibility.
this common thread through history – of caring for one another and generosity of time andmoney – is something that many sectors of british society can be rightly proud of. but you inthis room deserve particular praise. the results of your commitment to one another withinthe jewish community are obvious – the real and loving care that thousands of elderly andvulnerable people receive, among the many works that you carry out.
your care for one another has another, less tangible value. during a year when many in thejewish community have had cause to feel under threat, for no reason other than simply thefact of your jewishness, your unity is all the more precious. your commitment and loyalty toone another, and to society more widely, is ultimately what keeps you strong.
i was reminded before i came here tonight that an ancestor of mine, a previous duke ofcambridge in fact, visited the great synagogue in london in 1809 and attended a sabbathservice there with his brothers.
it is a matter of great pride that these bonds in our society run as deep as they run long.
your care for one another is not just a feeling, but it is – as we are reminded tonight – amaterial fact. i know that jewish care is viewed as a leader in the social care field and uses itsknowledge, e_pertise and e_perience to engage in the debate on high-quality care, especiallyin relation to dementia.
your holocaust survivors centre is a second home for many people who were liberated 70 yearsago from those evil places.
all of you in this room, in some way, play your part in making all this happen through thisoutstanding organisation. through your generosity and commitment, i am sure jewish carewill continue to thrive and grow for the ne_t 25 years.
once again, congratulations on everything you have achieved. i wish you a wonderful eveningand a happy birthday.
mazel tov.
第6篇 奧巴馬總統(tǒng)在美國國會黑人同盟晚宴上英語演講稿
hello, cbc! (applause.) thank you so much. everybody, have a seat. it is good to be with you here tonight. if it wasn’t black tie i would have worn my tan suit. (laughter.) i thought it looked good. (laughter.)
thank you, chaka, for that introduction. thanks to all of you for having me here this evening. iwant to acknowledge the members of the congressional black caucus and chairwoman marciafudge for their outstanding work. (applause.) thank you, shuanise washington, and the cbcfoundation for doing so much to help our young people aim high and reach their potential.
tonight, i want to begin by paying special tribute to a man with whom all of you have workedclosely with; someone who served his country for nearly 40 years as a prosecutor, as a judge,and as attorney general of the united states: mr. eric holder. (applause.) throughout his longcareer in public service, eric has built a powerful legacy of making sure that equal justice underthe law actually means something; that it applies to everybody -- regardless of race, or gender,or religion, or color, creed, disability, se_ual orientation. he has been a great friend of mine.he has been a faithful servant of the american people. we will miss him badly. (applause.)
this year, we’ve been marking the 50th anniversary of the civil rights act. we honor giants likejohn lewis -- (applause); unsung heroines like evelyn lowery. we honor the countlessamericans, some who are in this room -- black, white, students, scholars, preachers,housekeepers, patriots all, who, with their bare hands, reached into the well of our nation’sfounding ideals and helped to nurture a more perfect union. we’ve reminded ourselves thatprogress is not just absorbing what has been done -- it’s advancing what’s left undone.
even before president johnson signed the civil rights act into law, even as the debate draggedon in the senate, he was already challenging america to do more and march further, to builda great society -- one, johnson said, “where no child will go unfed, and no youngster will gounschooled. where no man who wants work will fail to find it. where no citizen will be barredfrom any door because of his birthplace or his color or his church. where peace and security iscommon among neighbors and possible among nations.” “this is the world that waits for you,”he said. “reach out for it now. join the fight to finish the unfinished work.” to finish theunfinished work.
america has made stunning progress since that time, over the past 50 years -- even over thepast five years. but it is the unfinished work that drives us forward.
some of our unfinished work lies beyond our borders. america is leading the effort to rally theworld against russian aggression in ukraine. america is leading the fight to contain andcombat ebola in africa. america is building and leading the coalition that will degrade andultimately destroy the terrorist group known as isil. as americans, we are leading, and wedon’t shy away from these responsibilities; we welcome them. (applause.) that’s what americadoes. and we are grateful to the men and women in uniform who put themselves in harm’sway in service of the country that we all love. (applause.)
so we’ve got unfinished work overseas, but we’ve got some unfinished work right here athome. (applause.) after the worst economic crisis since the great depression, our businesseshave now created 10 million new jobs over the last 54 months. this is the longest uninterruptedstretch of job growth in our history. (applause.) in our history. but we understand our work isnot done until we get the kind of job creation that means everybody who wants work can a findjob.
we’ve done some work on health care, too. i don’t know if you’ve noticed. thanks to theaffordable care act, we’ve seen a 26 percent decline in the uninsured rate in america. (applause.) african americans have seen a 30 percent decline. and, by the way, the cost ofhealth care isn’t going up as fast anymore either. everybody was predicting this was all going tobe so e_pensive. we’ve saved $800 billion -- (applause) -- in medicare because of the work thatwe’ve done -- slowing the cost, improving quality, and improving access. despite unyieldingopposition, this change has happened just in the last couple years.
but we know our work is not yet done until we get into more communities, help more uninsuredfolks get covered, especially in those states where the governors aren’t being quite ascooperative as we’d like them to be. (applause.) you know who you are. it always puzzles mewhen you decide to take a stand to make sure poor folks in your state can’t get healthinsurance even though it doesn’t cost you a dime. that doesn’t make much sense to me, but iwon’t go on on that topic. (applause.) we’ve got more work to do.
it’s easy to take a stand when you’ve got health insurance. (laughter and applause.) i’mgoing off script now, but -- (laughter) -- that’s what happens at the cbc.
our high school graduation rate is at a record high, the dropout rate is falling, more youngpeople are earning college degrees than ever before. last year, the number of children living inpoverty fell by 1.4 million -- the largest decline since 1966. (applause.) since i took office,the overall crime rate and the overall incarceration rate has gone down by about 10 percent.that’s the first time they’ve declined at the same time in more than 40 years. fewer folks injail. crime still going down. (applause.)
but our work is not done when too many children live in crumbling neighborhoods, cyclingthrough substandard schools, traumatized by daily violence. our work is not done whenworking americans of all races have seen their wages and incomes stagnate, even as corporateprofits soar; when african-american unemployment is still twice as high as whiteunemployment; when income inequality, on the rise for decades, continues to hold backhardworking communities, especially communities of color. we’ve got unfinished work. and weknow what to do. that’s the worst part -- we know what to do.
we know we’ve got to invest in infrastructure, and manufacturing, and research anddevelopment that creates new jobs. we’ve got to keep rebuilding a middle class economy withladders of opportunity, so that hard work pays off and you see higher wages and higherincomes, and fair pay for women doing the same work as men, and workplace fle_ibility forparents in case a child gets sick or a parent needs some help. (applause.) we’ve got to buildmore promise zones partnerships to support local revitalization of hard-hit communities. we’vegot to keep investing in early education. we want to bring preschool to every four-year-old inthis country. (applause.) and we want every child to have an e_cellent teacher. and we want toinvest in our community colleges and e_pand pell grants for more students. and i’m going tokeep working with you to make college more affordable. because every child in america, nomatter who she is, no matter where she’s born, no matter how much money her parents have,ought to be able to fulfill her god-given potential. that’s what we believe. (applause.)
so i just want everybody to understand -- we have made enormous progress. there’s almostno economic measure by which we are not better off than when i took office. (applause.)unemployment down. deficits down. uninsured down. poverty down. energy production up.manufacturing back. auto industry back. but -- and i just list these things just so if you have adiscussion with one of your friends -- (laughter) -- and they’re confused. stock market up.corporate balance sheet strong. in fact, the folks who are doing the best, they’re the ones whocomplain the most. (laughter and applause.) so you can just point these things out.
but we still have to close these opportunity gaps. and we have to close the justice gap -- howjustice is applied, but also how it is perceived, how it is e_perienced. (applause.) eric holderunderstands this. (applause.) that’s what we saw in ferguson this summer, when michaelbrown was killed and a community was divided. we know that the unrest continues. and ericspent some time with the residents and police of ferguson, and the department of justice hasindicated that its civil rights investigation is ongoing.
now, i won’t comment on the investigation. i know that michael’s family is here tonight. (applause.) i know that nothing any of us can say can ease the grief of losing a child so soon.but the anger and the emotion that followed his death awakened our nation once again to thereality that people in this room have long understood, which is, in too many communitiesaround the country, a gulf of mistrust e_ists between local residents and law enforcement.
too many young men of color feel targeted by law enforcement, guilty of walking while black,or driving while black, judged by stereotypes that fuel fear and resentment and hopelessness.we know that, statistically, in everything from enforcing drug policy to applying the deathpenalty to pulling people over, there are significant racial disparities. that’s just the statistics.one recent poll showed that the majority of americans think the criminal justice systemdoesn’t treat people of all races equally. think about that. that’s not just blacks, not justlatinos or asians or native americans saying things may not be unfair. that’s most americans.
and that has a corrosive effect -- not just on the black community; it has a corrosive effect onamerica. it harms the communities that need law enforcement the most. it makes folks whoare victimized by crime and need strong policing reluctant to go to the police because theymay not trust them. and the worst part of it is it scars the hearts of our children. it scars thehearts of the white kids who grow unnecessarily fearful of somebody who doesn’t look likethem. it stains the heart of black children who feel as if no matter what he does, he will alwaysbe under suspicion. that is not the society we want. it’s not the society that our childrendeserve. (applause.) whether you’re black or white, you don’t want that for america.
it was interesting -- ferguson was used by some of america’s enemies and critics to deflectattention from their shortcomings overseas; to undermine our efforts to promote justicearound the world. they said, well, look at what’s happened to you back home.
but as i said this week at the united nations, america is special not because we’re perfect;america is special because we work to address our problems, to make our union more perfect.we fight for more justice. (applause.) we fight to cure what ails us. we fight for our ideals, andwe’re willing to criticize ourselves when we fall short. and we address our differences in theopen space of democracy -- with respect for the rule of law; with a place for people of everyrace and religion; and with an unyielding belief that people who love their country can changeit. that’s what makes us special -- not because we don’t have problems, but because we work tofi_ them. and we will continue to work to fi_ this.
and to that end, we need to help communities and law enforcement build trust, buildunderstanding, so that our neighborhoods stay safe and our young people stay on track. andunder the leadership of attorney general eric holder, the justice department has launched anational effort to do just that. he’s also been working to make the criminal justice systemsmarter and more effective by addressing unfair sentencing disparities, changing departmentpolicies on charging mandatory minimums, promoting stronger reentry programs for thosewho have paid their debt to society. (applause.)
and we need to address the unique challenges that make it hard for some of our young peopleto thrive. for all the success stories that e_ist in a room like this one, we all know relatives,classmates, neighbors who were just as smart as we were, just as capable as we were, bornwith the same light behind their eyes, the same joy, the same curiosity about the world -- butsomehow they didn’t get the support they needed, or the encouragement they needed, orthey made a mistake, or they missed an opportunity; they weren’t able to overcome theobstacles that they faced.
and so, in february, we launched my brother’s keeper. (applause.) and i was the first one toacknowledge government can’t play the only, or even the primary, role in the lives of ourchildren. but what we can do is bring folks together, and that’s what we’re doing --philanthropies, business leaders, entrepreneurs, faith leaders, mayors, educators, athletes, andthe youth themselves -- to e_amine how can we ensure that our young men have the tools theyneed to achieve their full potential.
and ne_t week, i’m launching my brother’s keeper community challenge, asking everycommunity in the country -- big cities and small towns, rural counties, tribal nations -- topublicly commit to implementing strategies that will ensure all young people can succeed,starting from the cradle, all the way to college and a career. it’s a challenge to local leaders tofollow the evidence and use the resources on what works for our kids. and we’ve already got100 mayors, county officials, tribal leaders, democrats, republicans signed on. and we’re goingto keep on signing them up in the coming weeks and months. (applause.) but they’re going toneed you -- elected leaders, business leaders, community leaders -- to make this effortsuccessful. we need all of us to come together to help all of our young people address thevariety of challenges they face.
and we’re not forgetting about the girls, by the way. i got two daughters -- i don’t know if younoticed. (laughter.) african american girls are more likely than their white peers also to besuspended, incarcerated, physically harassed. black women struggle every day with biases thatperpetuate oppressive standards for how they’re supposed to look and how they’re supposedto act. too often, they’re either left under the hard light of scrutiny, or cloaked in a kind ofinvisibility.
so in addition to the new efforts on my brother’s keeper, the white house council for womenand girls has for years been working on issues affecting women and girls of color, fromviolence against women, to pay equity, to access to health care. and you know michelle hasbeen working on that. (applause.) because she doesn’t think our daughters should be treateddifferently than anybody else’s son. i’ve got a vested interest in making sure that our daughtershave the same opportunities as boys do. (applause.)
so that’s the world we’ve got to reach for -- the world where every single one of our childrenhas the opportunity to pursue their measure of happiness. that’s our unfinished work. andwe’re going to have to fight for it. we’ve got to stand up for it. and we have to vote for it. wehave to vote for it. (applause.)
all around the country, wherever i see folks, they always say, oh, barack, we’re praying for you-- boy, you’re so great; look, you got all gray hair, you looking tired. (laughter.) we’re prayingfor you. which i appreciate. (laughter.) but i tell them, after president johnson signed thecivil rights act, he immediately moved on to what he called “the meat in the coconut” -- avoting rights act bill. and some of his administration argued that’s too much, it’s too soon.but the movement knew that if we rested after the civil rights act, then all we could do waspray that somebody would enforce those rights. (applause.)
so whenever i hear somebody say they’re praying for me, i say “thank you.” thank you -- ibelieve in the power of prayer. but we know more than prayer. we need to vote. (applause.)we need to vote. that will be helpful. it will not relieve me of my gray hair, but it will help mepass some bills. (laughter.)
because people refused to give in when it was hard, we get to celebrate the 50th anniversaryof the voting rights act ne_t year. until then, we’ve got to protect it. we can’t just celebrateit; we’ve got to protect it. because there are people still trying to pass voter id laws to makeit harder for folks to vote. and we’ve got to get back to our schools and our offices and ourchurches, our beauty shops, barber shops, and make sure folks know there’s an electioncoming up, they need to know how to register, and they need to know how and when to vote.
we’ve got to tell them to push back against the cynics; prove everybody wrong who says thatchange isn’t possible. cynicism does not fi_ anything. cynicism is very popular in americasometimes. it’s propagated in the media. but cynicism didn’t put anybody on the moon.cynicism didn’t pass the voting rights act. hope is what packed buses full of freedom riders.hope is what led thousands of black folks and white folks to march from selma to montgomery.hope is what got john lewis off his back after being beaten within an inch of his life, and choseto keep on going. (applause.)
cynicism is a choice, but hope is a better choice. and our job right now is to convince thepeople who are privileged to represent to join us in finishing that fight that folks like johnstarted. get those souls to the polls. e_ercise their right to vote. and if we do, then iguarantee you we’ve got a brighter future ahead.
thank you, god bless you. keep praying. but go out there and vote. god bless america. (applause.)
第7篇 諾貝爾經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)獎得主梯若爾在頒獎晚宴演講稿
your majesties,your royal highnesses,ladies and gentlemen,
the great economist john maynard keynes once wrote: “if economists could manage to getthemselves thought of as humble, competent people on a level with dentists, that would besplendid.”
83 years and much research later, we would perhaps aspire to be compared with“meteorologists” or “doctors”, whose scientific accomplishments have been truly outstandingand yet have to face challenges that are rather down-to-earth. our failure to foresee orprevent the financial crisis is a sore reminder of the dangers of hubris. true enough, we hadworked on most of its ingredients. but like a virus that keeps mutating, new dangers emergedwhen we thought we had understood and avoided the e_isting ones.
the need to be humble applies also to the field that was rewarded by the prize. recognizingthat industries are different from each other and evolve rapidly, researchers in industrialorganization have patiently built a body of knowledge that has helped regulators to betterunderstand market power and the effects of policy interventions, and helped firms toformulate their strategies. they have thereby contributed to making this world a better world,the economist’s first mission. yet, there is so much we still have to learn, and the world changesfaster than our understanding can keep up.
humility is not easy to preserve when receiving such a prestigious award. albert camus in hisacceptance speech wondered how he, rich only in his doubts and his work still in progress,could cope with being at the center of a glaring light. his answer was that he could not livewithout his art. the great french scientist henri poincaré described the unmatched pleasure ofdiscovery: “thought is only a flash in the middle of a long night. but this flash meanseverything.”
wisdom therefore encourages me to return as soon as possible to my lab, to the colleagues towhom i am indebted for the prize, in short to the wonderful life of a researcher. but i shall beprofoundly and permanently grateful to the committee for the immense honor it hasbestowed upon me, and to the nobel foundation and sweden for their astounding mission ofdrawing attention to science year after year.
第8篇 公司年會晚宴演講稿
公司年會晚宴演講稿
尊敬的各位領(lǐng)導(dǎo),各位來賓,女士們,先生們:
大家晚上好!
在這樣的一個(gè)喜慶的節(jié)日里,我們匯聚在此,共同慶祝__年新一年度的到來。我叫__,來自__。每天在工作8小時(shí)以后,我一般都要工作到晚上10點(diǎn)。完善當(dāng)天的工作,做好明天的計(jì)劃,如同 教師提前備課,寫好教案。再則,上級領(lǐng)導(dǎo)布置給我的所有文件、文稿,我都要字斟句酌,保證質(zhì)量,認(rèn)真完成。我就是這樣,試圖用勤奮工作的質(zhì)量和數(shù)量延長我 的工作年限和奮斗生涯。我的座右銘是:自信人生二百年,會當(dāng)水擊三千里。
我在qq空間里寫有日志,題目是:“希望擁有一個(gè)與眾不同的人 生”我在這里念一念,算是與大家分享:“我是一個(gè)不服老、不服輸、永不言敗的人。只要我的心臟還在跳動,只要我的大腦還在思考,我就會堅(jiān)定地說:“我行! 我很行!”我很不希望在病榻走完我的人生!我更希望自己消失在追求夢想的奮斗中、工作中、崗位上!即使我的生命不能流光溢彩,我也寧愿享受其創(chuàng)造過程的美 麗!”
在我漫長的人生旅程中,我生活得不是很快樂。早期在事業(yè)單位、在國企,由于我不懂所謂的“人情世故”,不會處理各種復(fù)雜的人際關(guān)系,孤芳自賞的性格,使得我欲干不成,欲罷不能。
去年,我來到__。憑心而論,__使我眼睛為之一亮,精神為之一振。公司的確有良好的企業(yè)文化,有深厚的文化底蘊(yùn)。公司領(lǐng)導(dǎo)平易近人,禮賢下士。公司員工熱情主動, 古道熱腸。公司守信用、重承諾、有擔(dān)當(dāng)。正是由于這個(gè)重要的原因,所以,我決定加盟__。與__人一道,去創(chuàng)造__明天的輝煌!明天的傳奇!
有時(shí)候,我真的感到自己很傻,從來不會投機(jī)取巧,吃盡了苦頭,但我始終無怨無悔。有時(shí)候, 我又覺得自己很聰明,因?yàn)槲矣涀×舜笤娙死畎椎拿洌骸伴L風(fēng)破浪會有時(shí),直掛云帆濟(jì)滄?!薄榱宋业墓鈽s與夢想,我一直在奮斗著!今天我能老有所為,被周 圍的.人們所認(rèn)同,我感到莫大的滿足!
__年新的一年,新的氣象,還有一個(gè)新的征程。我們的未來是光明的,是喜人的。春敲起了戰(zhàn)鼓,年吹響了號角!我們把愿望寫在今天,聽事業(yè)的口哨響起,和祖國一起在明天的的跑道上沖次!不管汗能流多少,也不怕血可灑許多,我們在今天銘刻下人生的理想,并為此奮斗到底!
王國維先生曾經(jīng)說過:人生要經(jīng)歷三種境界:第一種境界,“昨夜西風(fēng)凋碧樹,獨(dú)上高樓,望斷天涯路?!蔽业?執(zhí)著和追求,很少被人們理解。第二種境界,“衣帶漸寬終不悔,為伊消得人憔悴?!蔽覍ψ约旱睦硐胄拍顝膩頉]有動搖過,我堅(jiān)信,我能贏。第三種境界,“夢里 尋他千百度,驀然回首,那人卻在燈火闌珊處!”今天,現(xiàn)在,我要說,那個(gè)人就是華清技科!就是華清技科的朋友們,同事們!
謝謝大家!
第9篇 精選重陽節(jié)離退休老干部晚宴演講稿
尊敬的各位老領(lǐng)導(dǎo),同志們:
歲歲重陽,今又重陽。今天,我們與各位老領(lǐng)導(dǎo)、老同志歡聚一堂,共慶我國傳統(tǒng)節(jié)日重陽佳節(jié),感到由衷的高興。在此,我代表區(qū)委辦公室全體職工向你們表示節(jié)日的慰問,并致以崇高的敬意!
我雖然有多年在區(qū)政府辦公室工作的經(jīng)歷,但對區(qū)委辦公室的工作,較為陌生,可以說還是一名新兵。我也深知,區(qū)委辦公室所取得的每一點(diǎn)成績和進(jìn)步,都離不開各位老領(lǐng)導(dǎo)的關(guān)心、理解和支持。在這里,我也希望各位老領(lǐng)導(dǎo)、老同志一如既往地關(guān)注區(qū)委辦公室,為我們工作把關(guān)定向。我們一定以各位老領(lǐng)導(dǎo)為榜樣,繼續(xù)保持和發(fā)揚(yáng)黨的優(yōu)良傳統(tǒng)和作風(fēng),不斷推進(jìn)區(qū)委辦公室工作。
尊重老同志就是尊重黨的歷史,愛護(hù)老同志就是愛護(hù)黨的財(cái)富。在你們面前,我們永遠(yuǎn)是晚輩,永遠(yuǎn)是學(xué)生。在區(qū)委辦公室這個(gè)大家庭里,我們是你們的子女和親人。記得有位哲人曾經(jīng)說過這樣一句話,不尊重老人的人,不可能是一個(gè)真誠的人,也不可能是一個(gè)值得信賴的人。因此,尊重和孝順老人,是做人做事的起碼要求。我們區(qū)委辦公室歷來就有尊老愛老的優(yōu)良傳統(tǒng),我們一定會團(tuán)結(jié)全體干部職工,繼續(xù)更加重視老干部工作,喜老同志之所喜,憂老同志之所憂,更富有成效地做好老同志工作,在政治上關(guān)心老同志,在生活上照顧好老同志,確保老同志待遇,真心誠意解決好各種實(shí)際困難,努力把為老同志服務(wù)的工作做得更細(xì)、更實(shí)、更好。我們衷心祝愿各位老領(lǐng)導(dǎo)、老同志晚年幸福,老有所樂,老有所為,繼續(xù)為建設(shè)富裕文明、和諧安康的新__發(fā)揮余熱,獻(xiàn)計(jì)獻(xiàn)策,作出新的貢獻(xiàn)。
最后,受__副書記委托,我代表區(qū)委辦公室全體干部職工,向各位老領(lǐng)導(dǎo)、老同志敬上一杯薄酒。
現(xiàn)在,我提議,為各位老領(lǐng)導(dǎo)、老同志生活幸福、健康長壽,干杯!