第一篇:伟大的演讲08[最终版]
·Eulogy for Robert F.Kenney
Edward Kenney
纪念罗伯特.肯尼迪
爱德华.肯尼迪
(音)伟大的演讲08Press Conference
The confrontation was not created by the police.The confrontation was created by the people who charged the police.Gentlemen, get the thing straight once and for all.The policeman isn't there to create disorder.The policeman is there to preserve this order.冲突不是由警方引起的。冲突是由那些指控警察的人造成的。先生们,千万别扭曲事实。警察不是在那里制造混乱,他们是在维持秩序。
Background
On August 26, 1968, as the Democratic National Convention got underway in Chicago, Illinois, thousands of antiwar demonstrators took to the streets around the International Amphitheater to protest the Vietnam War.背景
1968年8月26日,在伊利诺华州的芝加哥举行民主大会时,成千上万的反战示威者在国际剧场举行了反对越战的游行。
(结束)
·Presidential Campaign Address
Robert F.Kennedy
总统竞选演说
罗伯特.肯尼迪
(音)伟大的演讲08Address On Vietnam War
A spirit of national masochism prevails, encouraged by an impudent core of effete snobs who characterize themselves as intellectuals.在那些自诩为智者、厚颜无耻的势利鬼中的几个核心分子的煽动下,虐待的现象在全国范围内盛行起来。
Background
Spiro Agnew, President Richard M.Nixon's first vice president, was one of the nation's most outspoken critics of the antiwar and counterculture movements of the late 1960s and early 1970s.背景
斯比诺·阿戈纽是总统里查·尼克松的第一位副总统,是美国六、七十年代反战和反文化运动的最直言不讳的批评家。
Sometimes it appears that we are reaching a period when our senses and our minds will no longer respond to moderate stimulation.We seem to be approaching an age of the gross;persuasion through speeches and books is too often discarded for disruptive demonstrations aimed at bludgeoning the unconvinced into action.有时,我们好像到达了一个我们的感觉和头脑都不再对温和平缓的刺激产生反应的阶段;我们好像到了一个反应迟钝的年代,演讲和书本中的劝导也被旨在棒喝未信服者的示威代替。
The young, and by this, I don't mean by any stretch of the imagination, all the young, but I'm talking about those who claim to speak for the young.At the zenith of physical power and sensitivity overwhelm themselves with drugs and artificial stimulants.Subtlety is lost and fine distinctions based on acute reasoning are carelessly ignored in a headlong jump to a pre-determined conclusion.年轻人,我没有夸大我的想象,指所有的年轻人。我说的是企图代表年轻人说话的那些人。在他们身体以及感官的敏感性处于最高峰的时候,他们使自己屈服在毒品和其他虚假的刺激之下。他们的敏感消失了,建立在敏锐推理基础上的细微差别,在他们轻率地急于作决定时被漫不经心地忽视了。
Life is visceral rather than intellectual and the most visceral practitioners of life are those who characterize themselves as intellectuals.Truth is to them revealed rather than logically proved.And the principle infatuations of today revolve around the social sciences;those subjects which can accommodate any opinion, and about which the most reckless conjecture cannot be discredited.Education is being redefined at the demand of the uneducated to suit the ideas of the uneducated.The student now goes to college to proclaim rather than to learn.The lessons of the past are ignored and obliterated and a contemporary antagonism known as the generation gap.A spirit of national masochism prevails encouraged by an effete core of impudent snobs who characterize themselves as intellectuals.所谓的生活是内心的感受而不是发达的智力,而那些信仰内心感受的人却以智者自居。事实是:对他们来说,表面现象更胜于逻辑的推理。今天,这个使人着迷的理论已经威胁到了我们的社会科学;像这一类的主题可以包含任何的观点,哪怕是最鲁莽的但不会使人怀疑的猜测。为了迁就他们的观点,那些没受过教育的人已经给教育重新下了定义。现在,学生们在学校只是去做样子而不是去学习。过去的课本被抛弃,被遗忘,与当代人的对立被叫做代沟。在那些自诩为智者、厚颜无耻的势利鬼中的几个核心分子的煽动下,虐待的现象在全国范围内盛行起来。
(结束)
第二篇:美国伟大演讲一百篇
01.Dr Martin Luther King Jr I Have A Dream
02.John F.Kennedy Inaugural Address
03.Franklin Delano Roosevelt First Inaugural Address
04.Franklin D.Roosevelt Pearl Harbor Address to the Nation War Message
05.Barbara Charline Jordan 1976 Democratic National Convention Keynote Address
06.Richard M.Nixon Checkers
07.Malcolm X The Ballot or the Bullet
08.Ronald Reagan The Space Shuttle Challenger Tragedy Address
09.John F.Kennedy Address to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association
10.Lyndon Baines Johnson Address to a Joint Session of Congress on Voting Legislation
11.Mario Matthew Cuomo 1984 Democratic National Convention Keynote Address
12.Jesse Jackson 1984 Democratic National Convention Keynote Address
13.Dwight D.Eisenhower Farewell Address
14.Barbara Charline Jordan Statement on the Articles of Impeachment
15.General Douglas MacArthur Farewell Address to Congress
16.Martin Luther King, Jr I've Been to the Mountaintop
17.Theodore Roosevelt The Man with the Muck-rake
18.Robert F.Kennedy Remarks on the Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr
19.Woodrow Wilson War Message
20.General Douglas MacArthur--Thayer Award Address Duty, Honor, Country
21.Richard M.Nixon The Great Silent Majority
22.John F.Kennedy I am a 'Berliner'
23.Clarence Darrow A Plea for Mercy
24.Russell Conwell Acres of Diamonds
25.Ronald Reagan A Time for Choosing
26.Huey P.Long Every Man a King
27.Anna Howard Shaw The Fundamental Principle of a Republic
28.Franklin Delano Roosevelt The Great Arsenal of Democracy
29.Ronald Reagan The Evil Empire
30.Ronald Reagan First Inaugural Address
31.Franklin Delano Roosevelt First Fireside Chat
32.Harry S.Truman The Truman Doctrine
33.William Faulkner Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech
34.Eugene Victor Debs 1918 Statement to the Court
35.Hillary Rodham Clinton Remarks to the U.N.4th World Conference on Women Plenary Session
36.Dwight D.Eisenhower Atoms for Peace
37.John F.Kennedy American University Commencement Address
38.Ann Richards Democratic National Convention Keynote Address
39.Richard M.Nixon Resignation Address to the Nation
40.Woodrow Wilson The Fourteen Points
41.Margaret Chase Smith Declaration of Conscience
42.Franklin D.Roosevelt The Four Freedoms
43.Dr Martin Luther King, Jr.A Time to Break Silence
44.Mary Church Terrell What It Means to be Colored in Capital of the U.S
45.William Jennings Bryan Imperialism
46.Margaret Sanger The Morality of Birth Control
47.Barbara Pierce Bush Commencement Address at Wellesley College
48.John F.Kennedy Civil Rights Address
49.John F.Kennedy Cuban Missile Crisis Address to the Nation
50.Spiro Theodore Agnew Television News Coverage
51.Jesse Jackson 1988 Democratic National Convention Address
52.Mary Fisher 1992 Republication National Convention Address
53.Lyndon Baines Johnson The Great Society
54.George C.Marshall The Marshall Plan
55.Edward M.Kennedy Faith, Truth and Tolerance in America
56.Adlai E.Stevenson Speech Accepting the Democratic Presidential Nomination
57.Eleanor Roosevelt The Struggle for Human Rights
58.Geraldine Ferraro Vice Presidential Nomination Acceptance Address
59.Robert M.La Follette Free Speech in Wartime(Abridged)
60.Ronald Reagan Remarks on the 40th Anniversary of D-Day
61.Mario Matthew Cuomo Religious Belief and Public Morality
62.Edward M.Kennedy Address to the People of Massachusetts on Chappaquiddick
63.John L.Lewis Labor and the Nation
64.Barry Goldwater Speech Accepting the Republican Presidential Nomination
65.Stokely Carmichael Black Power
66.Hubert H.Humphrey 1948 Democratic National Convention Address
67.Emma Goldman Address to the Jury
68.Carrie Chapman Catt The Crisis
69.Newton N.Minow Television and the Public Interest
70.Edward M.Kennedy Tribute to Senator Robert F.Kennedy
71.Anita Hill Opening Stmt to the Senate Judiciary Committee on Clarence Thomas
72.Woodrow Wilson Final Address in Support of the League of Nations
73.Lou Gehrig Farewell to Baseball Address
74.Richard M.Nixon Cambodian Incursion Address
75.Carrie Chapman Catt Speech Before Congress, 1917
76.Ted Kennedy 1980 Democratic National Convention Address
77.Lyndon Baines Johnson Renunciation Speech
78.Franklin Delano Roosevelt Commonwealth Club Address
79.Woodrow Wilson First Inaugural Address
80.Mario Savio Sit-in Address on the Steps of Sproul Hall
81.Elizabeth Glaser 1992 Democratic National Convention Address
82.Eugene Victor Debs The Issue
83.Margaret Sanger The Children's Era
84.Ursula Le Guin A LEFT-HANDED COMMENCEMENT ADDRESS
85.Crystal Eastman Now We Can Begin
86.Huey P.Long Share Our Wealth(Text)and Barbecue Speech
87.Gerald R.Ford Address on Taking the Oath of the U.S.Presidency
88.Cesar E.Chavez The Mexican-American and the Church
89.Elizabeth Gurley Flynn Statement at the Smith Act Trial
90.Jimmy Carter Energy and the National Goals-A Crisis of Confidenc
91.Malcolm X Message To The Grass Roots
92.Bill Clinton Oklahoma Bombing Memorial Prayer Service Address
93.Shirley Anita St.Hill Chisholm For the Equal Rights Amendment
94.Ronald Reagan Remarks at the Brandenburg Gate
95.Elie Wiesel The Perils of Indifference
96.Gerald R.Ford Address to the Nation Pardoning Richard M.Nixon
97.Woodrow Wilson The League of Nations
98.Lyndon Baines Johnson Let Us Continue
99.McCarthy-Welch Exchange Have You No Sense of Decency
100.Eleanor Roosevelt Address to the United Nations General Assembly
第三篇:伟大的演讲06
·Presidential Campaign Address
Barry Goldwater
总统竞选演说
巴里.苟德沃特
March 31, 1964
1964年3月31日
(音)伟大的演讲06On Black Power
Because if they don't awake they're going to find out that this little Negro that they thought was passive has become a roaring uncontrollable lion.被他们认为是逆来顺受的小黑人们已经变成一只咆哮着的不可操控的狮子。
Background
In March of 1964, Malcolm X, the son of a murdered black nationalist, who had been ordered to remain silent by Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad, formally left the Black Muslims and founded his own mosque.背景
马尔可姆X,他的父亲是一位被谋杀的黑人民主主义者,被全国伊斯兰教的领袖艾尔亚·穆哈墨德命令要保持沉默,于1964年3月,正式离开黑人穆斯林组织,建立了他自己的回教寺庙。
Whites can help us, but they can't join us.They can, there can be no black-white unity until there is first some black unity.We can not think of being acceptable to others, until we have first proven acceptable to ourselves.白种人可以帮助我们,但不会加入我们。先要有黑人自己的联合,否则就不会有黑人和白人的联合。我们要先证明我们是可被接受的,否则就不要企望别人会接受我们。
Concerning non-violence it is criminal to teach a man not to defend himself when he is the constant victim of brutal attacks.There are problems in the community.Some of those, examples of those problems are the ah, ah vices that destroy the moral fiber
in our community.Drunkenness, drug addiction, ah, prostitution, and organized crime that runs the Negro community are probably 90% of its economic potential and moral potential.如果是出于对“非暴力”的考虑,教一个不断受到野蛮攻击的人不要去自卫,那是罪过的。在社会上存在些问题。有些是,例如,破坏我们道德勇气的恶行。操纵黑人社区的酗酒,吸毒,卖淫,有组织犯罪等,大概90%是因为社区的经济潜力和道德潜势。
One of my, ah, reasons for going out on a limb, as I have is to try and make white people be shocked awake to some of their senses.Because if they don't awake they're going to find out that this little Negro that they thought was passive has become a roaring uncontrollable lion right at their doorstep, not at their doorstep, inside their house, in their bed in their kitchen, in their attic, in their basement.And if you know that in time, you can do something about it.我孤立无援的一个原因是,我在尝试让白人惊悟过来。因为如果他们不醒悟,他们快要发现--被他们认为是逆来顺受的小黑人们已经变成一只咆哮着的不可操控的狮子,站在他们门前的台阶上,不,而是在他们的屋子里,在他们的床上,在他们的厨房里,在他们的阁楼上,在他们的地下室里。如果你及时得知,你就能做些事情了。
(结束)
·The Signing of the Civil Rights Bill
President Lyndon B.Johnson
在签署民权法令时的讲话
灵顿.约翰逊总统
(音)伟大的演讲06-The Signing of the Civil Rights Bill
We believe that all men are created equal.Yet, many are denied equal treatment.我们深信所有人天生都是平等的,但还有很多人仍然得不到公平的待遇。
Background
On July 2, 1964, in a nationally televised address, President Lyndon B.Johnson spoke of the significance of the civil rights act that he was about to sign into law.The Civil Rights Act of 1964, which was the most sweeping civil rights legislation passed by Congress since Reconstruction, prohibited racial discrimination in employment and education, and outlawed segregation in public facilities.背景
1964年7月2日,在一次全国电视讲话中,灵顿·约翰逊总统谈到了即将被立入国家法律的民权法令的重要性。1964年的民权法令是自重建计划以来,对禁止就业和教育中的种族歧视以及公共设施的非法种族隔离方面囊括得最全面的民权法令.My fellow Americans, I am about to sign into law the Civil Rights Act of 1964.I want to take this occasion to talk to you about what that law means to every American.One hundred and eighty years ago this week a small band of valiant men began a long struggle for freedom.They pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor, not only to found a nation, but to forge an ideal of freedom;not only for political independence, but for personal liberty;not only to eliminate foreign rule, but to establish the rule of justice in the affairs of men.亲爱的美国人民,我即将要把1964年的民权法令立入我国的法律,我想籍此机会讲解一下我国的法律对每一位美国人的意义。一百八十八年前的这个星期,一小群勇敢的人开始一个漫长的争取自由的斗争。他们放弃生命、财富、荣誉,不仅是为了建立一个国家还是为了创造完美的自由;不仅是争取政治独立还要争取个人自由,不仅是要铲除外来统治,还要建立公正的法律。
That struggle was a turning point in our history.Today in far corners of distant continents the ideals of those American patriots, still shape the struggles of men who hunger for freedom.This is a proud triumph, yet those who founded our country knew that freedom would be secure only if each generation fought to renew and enlarge its meaning.那场斗争是我们历史的转折点。今天,在各大洲遥远的角落,美国的爱国者们的理想还继续影响着那些渴望自由的人所进行的斗争。这是个值得自豪的胜利。但是,我们的建国功臣清楚知道,只有以后的每一代人都争取更新和扩大自由的意义,他们所赢得的自由才可得到保障。
From the Minuteman at Concord to the soldiers in Vietnam, each generation has been equal to that trust.Americans of every race and color have died in battle to protect our freedom.Americans of every race and color have worked to build a nation of widening opportunities.Now, our generation of Americans has been called on to continue the unending search for justice within our own borders.从那些独立战争时在康科德的民兵到那些去越南的士兵,每一代都有履行这个使命的责任。美国人民,不分种族,不分肤色,都曾经为保卫我们的自由战死沙场,还一起努力创造一个机会越来越广阔的国家。现在,我们这代人必须继续在国境内追求正义,这是永无休止的任务。
We believe that all men are created equal.Yet, many are denied equal treatment.We believe that all men have certain unalienable rights.Yet, many Americans do not enjoy those rights.We believe that all men are entitled to the blessings of liberty.Yet, millions are being deprived of those blessings.Not because of their own failures, but because of the color of their skin.The reasons are deeply imbedded in history and tradition and the natureof man.We can understand without rancor or hatred how this all happened.But it cannot continue.Our constitution, the foundation of our republic, forbids it.The principles of our freedom forbid it.Morality forbids it.And the law I will sign tonight forbids it.我们深信所有人天生都是平等的,但还有很多人仍然得不到公平的待遇。我们深信所有人都有不可剥夺的权利,但有很多美国人民仍然享受不到那些权利。我们深信所有人都有资格拥
有自由的幸福,但是,仍有千千万万的人被剥夺这种幸福,这一切都不是他们的过失,只是他们的肤色不同而已。其原因已经在历史上,传统上,人性里根深蒂固。我们不怨恨,同时也能理解这一切是如何发生的。但是这不能继续下去,我们共和国的基石--宪法不容许这样,我们的自由原则不容许这样,伦理道德不容许这样。今晚我将要签署的法案也不容许这样。
(结束)
第四篇:美国历史上个伟大演讲
美国历史上个伟大演讲
这是由100多位美国专家根据社会、政治影响以及文字的优美程度评选出的美国20世纪最伟大的100大经典演讲。
黑人民权运动领袖马丁路德·金的出色演讲《我有一个梦》,当之无愧的入选为最伟大的演讲之首,与那场浩浩荡荡的民权运动一起铭记入史册。马丁路德·金的演讲造诣十分高,通篇绝无错漏,善于运用循序渐进的排比句。不像其他民权领袖,马丁路德·金更善于运用情感而不激进,他的个人魅力和亲和力更能争取更广泛的中间团体的支持(如女权运动组织,宗教团体,自由主义者等)。马丁路德·金同时入选100强的演讲还包括《攀越巅峰》和反对越战的《打破沉默》。马丁路德·金的演讲,不论是风格还是遣词造句,不论是语调还是情感运用,方方面面都值得学习和借鉴。
约翰·肯尼迪的《总统就职演说》紧随其后坐亚望冠。(我们也许更了解肯尼迪总统遇刺而不是肯尼迪总统本人)在大多数美国人心目中,肯尼迪总统的地位极高。肯尼迪总统正直,睿智,俊俏而有活力,他是一个天生的的领导,有一种使大家都愿意跟随他的神奇魅力。肯尼迪29岁当选参议员,并在其后的总统大选中击败当时已经两任副总统的民主党候选人尼克松,当选为美国史上最年轻的总统。肯尼迪总统努力寻求自由,和平的战后新格局。尽管一上任便遭遇古巴导弹危机和太空危机,肯尼迪总统却能成功地带领美国人走出困境。
其《总统就职演说》中的一句“亲爱的美国人民,不要去问国家能为你做点什么,而应该问你自己能为国家做些什么。”则成为经典中的经典。(“ask”在英语中既有“问”的意思,也有“要求”的意思,因此这是一语双关句,另一种意思是“亲爱的美国人民,不要去要求国家给与,而应该要求你自己为国家贡献。”)
富兰克林·罗斯福(注:美国史上有两位罗斯福总统,两位都有多篇演讲入选。泰迪·罗斯福即大罗斯福总统,富兰克林·罗斯福即小罗斯福总统)的《第一次总统就职演说》(主要针对当时的经济危机)及《国会珍珠港事件演讲:开战宣言》则当选为第三及第四位。这位领导美国人走出经济危机并战胜法西斯主义,使美国成为世界霸主的唯一一位4任总统的轮椅上的铁人,成为美国人心目中最伟大的总统。其入选的伟大演说也是最多的。
不知是否因为上述3位深受美国人的爱戴,《罗斯福总统辞世》《马丁路德·金遇刺》《肯尼迪总统遇刺》这3篇演说也在100强中榜上有名。
100个伟大演说还收录了许多经典之作。如马歇尔的《马歇尔计划》,杜鲁门总统的《杜鲁门主义》,里根总统的《“挑战者”号
遇难演说》,卡特(总统)《国家能源计划》。也包括诺贝尔得奖演说,联合国关注艾滋病演说等等。
由于是由美国人投票选出,我们能从投票的结果看出一些有趣的现象。例如希拉里·罗翰·克林顿的演说《女权也是人权》名理前茅,有这样的支持度多少也反映了2008年总统大选的形势。而比尔·克林顿,这位以能言善辩著称的总统,居然只有一篇《奥拉荷马州炸弹惨剧追悼会演说》排在可怜的第92位,可见其在美国人心目中的“光辉”形象。乔治·布什(老布什)总统成为唯一一位没有演说入选的总统(20世纪)。所谓有其父必有其子,所以我们对小布什总统错漏百出的滑稽演说也应该见怪不怪了。
所有的演讲都有其特定的社会历史背景。听演讲能更深刻地了解当时社会环境。当然您首先需要对美国史略知一二。如果您不知道70年代的反战浪潮,也就无法理解何为《沉默的大多数》,不知道“水门事件”,也就不清楚尼克松总统为何突然发布《辞职演说》。本人建议,听演讲的同时翻阅一下相关历史资料,有助于更深刻的理解。
01.Dr Martin Luther King Jr I Have A Dream
02.John F.Kennedy Inaugural Address
03.Franklin Delano Roosevelt First Inaugural Address
04.Franklin D.Roosevelt Pearl Harbor Address to the Nation War Message
05.Barbara Charline Jordan 1976 Democratic National Convention Keynote Address
06.Richard M.Nixon Checkers
07.Malcolm X The Ballot or the Bullet
08.Ronald Reagan The Space Shuttle Challenger Tragedy Address
09.John F.Kennedy Address to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association
10.Lyndon Baines Johnson Address to a Joint Session of Congress on Voting Legislation
11.Mario Matthew Cuomo 1984 Democratic National Convention Keynote Address
12.Jesse Jackson 1984 Democratic National Convention Keynote Address
13.Dwight D.Eisenhower Farewell Address
14.Barbara Charline Jordan Statement on the Articles of Impeachment
15.General Douglas MacArthur Farewell Address to Congress
16.Martin Luther King, Jr I've Been to the Mountaintop
17.Theodore Roosevelt The Man with the Muck-rake
18.Robert F.Kennedy Remarks on the Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr
19.Woodrow Wilson War Message
20.General Douglas MacArthur--Thayer Award Address Duty, Honor, Country
21.Richard M.Nixon The Great Silent Majority
22.John F.Kennedy I am a 'Berliner'
23.Clarence Darrow A Plea for Mercy
24.Russell Conwell Acres of Diamonds
25.Ronald Reagan A Time for Choosing
26.Huey P.Long Every Man a King
27.Anna Howard Shaw The Fundamental Principle of a Republic
28.Franklin Delano Roosevelt The Great Arsenal of Democracy
29.Ronald Reagan The Evil Empire
30.Ronald Reagan First Inaugural Address
31.Franklin Delano Roosevelt First Fire
side Chat
32.Harry S.Truman The Truman Doctrine
33.William Faulkner Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech
34.Eugene Victor Debs 1918 Statement to the Court
35.Hillary Rodham Clinton Remarks to the U.N.4th World Conference on Women Plenary Session
36.Dwight D.Eisenhower Atoms for Peace
37.John F.Kennedy American University Commencement Address
38.Ann Richards Democratic National Convention Keynote Address
39.Richard M.Nixon Resignation Address to the Nation
40.Woodrow Wilson The Fourteen Points
41.Margaret Chase Smith Declaration of Conscience
42.Franklin D.Roosevelt The Four Freedoms
43.Dr Martin Luther King, Jr.A Time to Break Silence
44.Mary Church Terrell What It Means to be Colored in Capital of the U.S
45.William Jennings Bryan Imperialism
46.Margaret Sanger The Morality of Birth Control
47.Barbara Pierce Bush Commencement Address at Wellesley College
48.John F.Kennedy Civil Rights Address
49.John F.Kennedy Cuban Missile Crisis Address to the Nation
50.Spiro Theodore Agnew Television News Coverage
51.Jesse Jackson 1988 Democratic National Convention Address
52.Mary Fisher 1992 Republication National Convention Address
53.Lyndon Baines Johnson The Great Society 54.George C.Marshall The Marshall Plan
55.Edward M.Kennedy Faith, Truth and Tolerance in America
56.Adlai E.Stevenson Speech Accepting the Democratic Presidential Nomination
57.Eleanor Roosevelt The Struggle for Human Rights
58.Geraldine Ferraro Vice Presidential Nomination Acceptance Address
59.Robert M.La Follette Free Speech in Wartime(Abridged)
60.Ronald Reagan Remarks on the 40th Anniversary of D-Day
61.Mario Matthew Cuomo Religious Belief and Public Morality
62.Edward M.Kennedy Address to the People of Massachusetts on Chappaquiddick
63.John L.Lewis Labor and the Nation
64.Barry Goldwater Speech Accepting the Republican Presidential Nomination
65.Stokely Carmichael Black Power
66.Hubert H.Humphrey 1948 Democratic National Convention Address
67.Emma Goldman Address to the Jury
68.Carrie Chapman Catt The Crisis
69.Newton N.Minow Television and the Public Interest
70.Edward M.Kennedy Tribute to Senator Robert F.Kennedy
71.Anita Hill Opening Stmt to the Senate Judiciary Committee on Clarence Thomas
72.Woodrow Wilson Final Address in Support of the League of Nations
73.Lou Gehrig Farewell to Baseball Address
74.Richard M.Nixon Cambodian Incursion Address
75.Carrie Chapman Catt Speech Before Congress, 1917 76.Ted Kennedy 1980 Democratic National Convention Address
77.Lyndon Baines Johnson Renunciation Speech
78.Franklin Delano Roosevelt Commonwealth Club Address
79.Woodrow Wilson First Inaugural Address
80.Mario Savio Sit-in Address on the Steps of Sproul Hall
81.Elizabeth Glaser 1992 Democratic National Convention Address
82.Eugene Victor Debs The Issue
83.Margaret Sanger The Children's Era
84.Urs
ula Le Guin A LEFT-HANDED COMMENCEMENT ADDRESS
85.Crystal Eastman Now We Can Begin
86.Huey P.Long Share Our Wealth(Text)and Barbecue Speech
87.Gerald R.Ford Address on Taking the Oath of the U.S.Presidency
88.Cesar E.Chavez The Mexican-American and the Church
89.Elizabeth Gurley Flynn Statement at the Smith Act Trial
90.Jimmy Carter Energy and the National Goals-A Crisis of Confidenc
91.Malcolm X Message To The Grass Roots
92.Bill Clinton Oklahoma Bombing Memorial Prayer Service Address
93.Shirley Anita St.Hill Chisholm For the Equal Rights Amendment
94.Ronald Reagan Remarks at the Brandenburg Gate
95.Elie Wiesel The Perils of Indifference 96.Gerald R.Ford Address to the Nation Pardoning Richard M.Nixon
97.Woodrow Wilson The League of Nations
98.Lyndon Baines Johnson Let Us Continue
99.McCarthy-Welch Exchange Have You No Sense of Decency
100.Eleanor Roosevelt Address to the United Nations General Assembly
第五篇:纪念伟大的运动演讲
纪念伟大的运动演讲
纪念伟大的运动演讲
回溯历史今年月日是伟大的运动周年年前中国局势已是万分危机东北沦陷华北告急日本侵略者占领了大半个中国北方五省危在旦夕日本侵略者到处烧杀抢掠千百万中国人民被杀害成百上千的村镇被胰为废墟一座又一座城市被狂轰烂炸中国共产党于年月日发表了《为抗日救国告全体同胞书》号召全国人民起来抗日救
国年月日在中国共产党的组织和领导下北平市学生联合会率领北平市多名学生举行示威游行学生们高呼打倒日本帝国主义停止内战一致对外等口号学生的示威游行得到了北平市民众和各界人士的支持示威游行的队伍不断扩大国民党政府出动了大批的军警进行镇压打伤和逮捕了许多学生年月日北平市学生联合会组织全市学生举行总罢课准备发动更大规模的斗争月日北平市学生和市民及各界人士一万多人再次举行了声势浩大的示威游行北平市学生和市民及各界人的示威游行得到了全国各地的支持和援助南京上海天津广州武汉杭州等地相继举行了示威游行天津学生又组成了南下扩大宣传团开赴当时的国府—南京一场举国上下波澜壮阔声势浩大得到全国人民各党派各界人士的支持的抗日救国学生运动席卷中华大地形成了全国人民抗日民主运动的新高潮推动了抗日民族统一战线的建立掀开了中华民族抗日救国抗击日本侵略者的伟大战争的序幕
运动是在中国共产党组织和领导下的一次伟大的抗日救国运动也是一次伟大的学生爱国运动它永垂青史刻在中国历史的丰碑上原创:wenmi114.com
同学们运动已经过去快年了今天我们纪念它不仅是缅怀过去追念先人更是为了让我们永远铭记这个神圣而又伟大的日子牢记国耻永远不忘日本对中华民族的侵略
同学们今天我们的国家已非昔日的贫穷与落后的中国我们已是一个蒸蒸日上的日渐繁荣的团结进步的具有着强大的国防力量和经济基础的具有着伟大的爱国主义精神和民族精神的自立世界民族之林的国家在中国共产党领导下我们全国各族人民正在努力建设我们伟大的国家
同学们你们是国家未来的栋梁祖国明天的希望你们肩负着中华民族复兴和发展的使命让我们踏着先辈的足迹努力学习用我们的智慧和双手把我们的祖国建设的更加强大更加美丽更加昌盛
我的讲话完了谢谢大家
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