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最后演讲稿(15篇)

更新时间:2024-11-12 查看人数:15

最后演讲稿

第1篇 环保演讲稿——最后一片叶子

朋友们:

读过美国著名作家欧·亨利小说《最后一片叶子》的人,想必还记得这句话:“当最后一片叶子落下时,生命就都结束了,我也得离开这个世界而去了……”。酷爱生活的女画家约翰西,患了肺炎濒临大限时,“害怕在她轻轻抓着这个世界的手越来越乏力的时候,她会真的像一片轻轻的、纤弱的叶子那样,随深秋的寒凤飘逝而去”。初读这篇小说时,少年不识愁滋味,对主人公那仿佛病态的痴语我并不以为然,而正是在人类对绿色顶礼膜拜,绿色食品,绿色能源、绿色电脑、绿色冰箱,绿色建筑被人们广为崇尚的今天,重读小说《最后一片叶子》,才感悟到,这分明是一个寓言故事,约翰西的心语,分明是谷世之言,大籁希声。

就在欧·亨利自己的国家美利坚合众国的土地上,不是就有过深刻的历史教训吗?著名总统罗斯福对梅花鹿可谓情有独钟,从这点小小的总统私人利益出发,他便下令对北利亚桑纳州一片茂密的大森林进行大规模扫荡,大批鹿的天敌——狮子、狼等食肉动物被捕杀殆尽。四千多只鹿于是生物爆炸一般,呈几何级数迅猛增长,十几万只伸特长脖子的可爱精灵们,吃光了树上的叶子,仿佛只在转眼问,著名的大森林就从地球上消失了,最后剩下的,只有凡头病鹿。 鲁迅先生说过,悲剧是把美好的东西毁灭给人看。

在我省南部,有一个美丽的地方,她向来就被人们称为镶嵌在我们这个植物王国皇冠上的一颗绿宝石。她的美丽,当然是绿色赋予的。可是,就在这绿宝石之上,有8家红砖厂的大烟囱,不分昼夜地喷吐着氟化物和二氧化硫严重超标的浓烟,致使1262亩的天然橡胶林受害,三万零五百株橡胶树为之枯死,胶民们虽然怨气沸腾,却眼睁睁地奈何不了它,无独有偶,在同一纬度的广西某地,也上演过惊人相似的一幕,如果说那一幕还有点不同的话,就是红砖厂的废气除了使大面积胶林枯死外,还造成50多亩芒果只开花不结果,出现果荒。我们知道,天然橡胶是目前地球上极为少有的自然资源,仅生长在赤过附近,我们也知道,芒果是公认的“水果之王”,那么何以会出现上面那样的情况呢?——因为红泥巴变成砖块,只需要几天的时间,远比橡胶芒果来钱要快!

绿色是和平和生命的象征。在很小的时候,我的心便融进了一个绿色的海洋。穿了十凡年国防绿的我,在老山战区那片阳光充足,绿色位浓的亚热带丛林中,度过了人生位美好的一段年华。就是在那样一个空气、阳光、风雨充足的天然大氧吧里,我步入了而立之年。此生最难忘的,能维系裁生命的,大概就只有那特殊的一片绿色了。而事实上,那片我魂牵梦紫的土地至今还不富裕,一些地方生产力水平低下,社会发育程度不高,边民的农事,至今还离不开刀耕火种,纵火烧荒。我曾目赌过两个边民合伙买一盒火柴平分的事,开始想当然地以为他们太穷,买不起一盒囫囵的火柴,后来才发现,在他们的生活里,四季灶膛火不断,一根火柴烧一年,大树小树变成灰。我能给他们的,就是一个毫无用处的忠告:可别把咱的林子都烧光了呀。

人类只有一个地球,我们对这个星球上的生态系统有着永远摆脱不究的依赖性,需要地球源源不断地提供植物和动物的食物,需要有足够厚度的大气层,来保护人类不受过高成过低气温,以及过量紫外线的伤害,需要地球提供足够量的水和氧气来维持生命的存在,而没有了绿色,这一切岂不成了无本之源,好比毛长在皮子上,没有了皮,毛又咋生根?

绿色锐减,吞噬绿色的,正是人类自己,是人类发展模式中那种对自然资源的掠夺性、破坏性开采。人类对绿色的无尽索取仍在威胁着生态平衡,破坏着生态的结构。据保守统计,全世界每年有__万公顷森林横遭盲目砍伐,这是5700个昆明市的面积啊。这已经造成了全球性的“温室效应”,与之相连,全世界每年有近5万个物种濒临灭绝,有近2700万公顷的农田蒙受沙漠化之灾,就连海底也日趋沙漠化,就不必再说那令我们痛心的去年在华夏大地发生长江、松嫩大灾了吧,也不必说我省的泥石流,山体滑坡了吧。如此盲目的行动如果得不到有效的制止和改变,势必爆发可怕的生态危机,而一旦它的爆发起出了人类控制的极限,其后果不堪想象。那时,我们都会明白,最后一片落叶将带走人类的命运,也决不是危言耸听。

我们欣喜地看到,可持续发展战略已经纳入了我目的政府行为,我国已颁布了10多部环境保护法, 200多项环境标准,绿化财政,正威为人们的自觉意识,“天人合一”。更是我们千年的愿望,我想我们应该叫响这样一个口号:绿色就是生产力!我省的金沙江等流域,炊坑代木兮,豆之河之干兮现象也已悄然消失。你可能问我,这一切还保不住你那最后一片叶子吗,那么,我要说的是,你还是去问问我们的《国歌》里,为什么至今还要唱“中华民族到了位危险的时候”这一句吧。诚然,正像我们的抗洪收灾能取得决定性胜利所昭示的那样,我们坚信,人类的本事能够挽狂澜于既倒,扶大厦之将倾,但是,常言说的好,人无远虑,必有近忧,居安思危,要防患于朱然。我们怎么能够等到头上见不到日月星辰,满目酸雨纷纷,脚下洪浪滔天,汪洋恣肆,人间无处不飞沙,等到“千山鸟飞绝,万径人踪灭”时,才悔不当初呢?

聪明的作家欧·亨利是以其“欧·亨利式的结尾”著称于世的,那最后一片不凋的叶子,带来的是一个危亡病人的新生。我想,我们也会创造出另一个欧·享利式的结尾,迎来人类新生的。坐以待毙,从来就不是人类的选择,人类既已觉臣,就会在危机面前积极行动起来,把握历史机遇,化压力为动力,保卫绿色,保护我们共有的家圈。

面对现实,我们迎接挑战,展望未来,我们充满信心

第2篇 励志演讲稿:哈佛的最后一课

导读:生活总是喜欢逗弄我们。在你绝望时,闪一点希望的火花给你看,惹得你不能死心;在你平静时,又会冷不丁地颠你一下,让你不能太顺心。人没有完美,幸福没有一百分,知道自己没有能力一次拥有那么多,又何苦要求那么多。

励志演讲稿:哈佛的最后一课

在美国几乎每一所大学,毕业典礼都是一场“重头戏”.它们讲究排场,大多还蕴含着历史与传统。这在哈佛这所美国最古老的大学里更是展露无遗。

我们的毕业典礼总是定点在“三百年剧场”,它位于哈佛纪念堂与怀德纳图书馆之间那片无边绿茵中。通常,哈佛每年会有两个演讲:一是毕业纪念日演讲,一是毕业典礼演讲。前者先于后者,并且专属于哈佛学院应届毕业生,演讲嘉宾由大四学生委员会物色。这种演讲一般被称作“搞笑演讲”,一些着名谐星和幽默作家在演讲中所讲的那些很有味道的笑话,让我们笑破了肚皮,也令家长脸红。

而使全体毕业生如沐春风的毕业典礼演讲,则几乎永远都是“严肃”的,它由哈佛校友会敲定演讲人选。校方行政管理人员做不了主,谁来演讲还得看学生、校友的意愿,得体现出他们的兴趣与价值取向。有人为此会说毕业典礼演讲是观测哈佛社群的“精神指标”.

你脑海中浮现的演讲可能是一场劝诫毕业生去做未来领袖、主宰世界的说教,可是,哈佛毕业典礼演讲者最不可能鼓励我们去憧憬、去实现做人目标。

我20__年毕业时,毕业纪念日演讲嘉宾是前总统比尔·克林顿,毕业典礼演讲嘉宾是比尔·盖茨。一个曾是世界上最有权力的人,另一个是世界上最富有的人。此二人如果不讲权和钱,会讲什么呢?

克林顿提到一个概念:“ubuntu”.意为“我因你而成”.即人在世界上不是孤立的,而是社会的一分子。他亦谈及我们不应将自身视为个体去追逐个人的成功,而应为全世界兄弟姐妹的福祉奋斗。非洲的艾滋病不是只属于“非洲”,印度尼西亚的海啸不是只属于“印度尼西亚”——我们思考时不应将其看作“他们”,而应视为“我们”.他敦促我们“花尽可能多的时间、爱心与精力去考虑那99.9%的人”.

比尔·盖茨讲了自己与妻子梅琳达如何扪心自问“以我们所拥有的资源,怎样能最大化地造福最多的人”这一历程。他致力于推进创新型资本主义。在其中,市场力量可以更好地服务于贫困者,极具说服力的阐释:如何利用纷繁复杂、让企业与政府获益的现代科技与创新,在发展中国家拯救生命、改善生活。

他向我们发出挑战:以你们过硬的文凭、才智和天赋,能否应对重大的全球问题,为更多人的幸福贡献力量。他也为我们送上离别的祝愿:“我希望,你们将来评价自己的标准,不单单是以职业上取得的成就,也包括你们为改变这个世界所作出的努力……以及你们如何善待那些远隔千山万水,除了同为人类之外与你们毫无共同之处的人们。”

两个截然不同的人,两场如出一辙的演讲。

你可能会问:为什么?但我会问:为什么不是这样?我们,作为稳拿“好工作”的顶尖大学毕业生,有年轻的活力,有社会的认可——我们没什么输不起的。我们也许以为自己所向披靡、高人一等,从而面临迷失自己谦逊与对全人类同理心的危险。但也恰恰由于这种优势,我们随时能以最佳准备状态服务于最富挑战性的愿景,投身于最具挫折性的目标。这不是要我们牺牲健康、财富或快乐去为其他人做牛做马,事实上,我们应该并且必须为了全人类的共同利益有所行动, 这不只是借由个体层面的同情与怜悯,还包括在梦想和卓越层面上进行革新与创造。我们不必放弃自己的生活,恰恰相反,我们可以通过为更多人幸福的奋战来改善自己的生活。

我认为,像名校的毕业生,身处一个独特而资源丰富的位置,就该为我们现在身处的世界、为未来一代又一代人赖以生存的世界全力以赴。我盼望全世界毕业生们,同样接受这这一挑战,放低身段并为此努力。

第3篇 乔布斯辞职前最后一次英语演讲稿

cupertino is very famous for apple computer. and we are very honor to have steve jobs tocome here tonight to give us special presentation. mr. jobs?

苹果如今变得炙手可热cupertino也沾光不少,今晚我们荣幸地邀请到乔布斯莅临现场。乔总?

welcome, mr jobs: you have a fan club here..

欢迎你,这里貌似都是你的粉丝。

thank you. apple's grown like a weed, and as you know, we've always been in cupertino.started in an office par, eventually, got the buildings, we are in now the corner of the ends of280.and those buildings hold maybe 2600 or 2800 people. but we've got almost 12,000 peoplein the area. so we're renting buildings - not very good buildings, either at an ever-greaterradius from our campus and we're putting people in those. it is clear that we need to build newcampus, so we just add space. that doesn't mean we don't need the one we got, we do need it,but we need another one to augment it. so we've got a plan that let's us stay in cupertino.and we went out and we bought some land and this land is kind of special, to me. when i was13, i think, i called up... hewlett and packard were my idols. and i called up bill hewlett, causehe lived in palo alto, and there were no unlisted numbers in the phone book, which gives you aclue to my age. and he picked up the phone and i talked to him and i asked him if he'd giveme some spare parts for something i was building called a frequency counter. and he did,but in addition to that he gave me something way more important. he gave a job thatsummer. a summer job at hewlett-packard, right here (on) in santa clara, off 280, the divisionthat built frequency counters. and i was in heaven. well, right around that e_act moment intime, hewlett and packard themselves were walking on some property over here in cupertino,in pruneridge, and they ended up buying it. and they built their computer systems divisionthere. and as hewlett - packard has been shrinking lately, they decided to sell that propertyand we bought it. we bought that and we bought some adjacent property that all used to beapricot trees, apricot orchards and we've got about 150 acres. and we should like to put a newcampus on that so that we can stay in cupertino. and we've come up - we've hired some greatarchitects to work with, some of the best in the world, i think. and we've come up with a designthat puts 12,000 people in one building. think about that, that''s rather odd 12,000 people in abuilding, in one building. but, we've seen these office parks with lots of building and they getpretty boring pretty fast. so we'd like to do something better than that. and i'd like to takeyou through what we like to do. so this is supposed to work here. here we go. can you see this?so here is we are today, which is on infinite loop drive, against the intersection of d' anza andthe 280.

谢谢大 家。苹果如雨后春笋般快速发展着,而cupertino一直是我们钟爱的土壤。从开始的工业园到现在的办公大楼280号公路尽头的拐弯处,这几栋楼能容纳 2600到2800名员工。可实际上我们的员工数量超过了12022。不得已只能用租些差劲的写字楼给员工办公。所以我想把大家转移到离现有园区不远的一 片区域。我们将用新的园区来扩充办公面积。现有园区也会继续保留,新园区还在cupertino,因为这里对我巨有意义。大小我就是惠普创始人 hewlett和packard的粉丝。hewlett住在palo alto,13岁那年我给他打了个电话,年头所有的电话号码都印在大部头里,不好意思,暴露了我的年龄。我问他是否能送我些零件做频率计数器。他不仅答应 了,还给了我一份工作。惠普的暑期实习,就在snata clara 280号公路旁边,我被分在计频器部门,简直像去了天堂。就在这个时候,惠普在pruneridge买了块地,并在那里设立了计算机系统部。最近惠普并不 景气,有意出售这块不动产,我们就买了下来。顺带还卖笑来原来的一片杏园,总面积有150英亩了。我想在哪儿建个新园区,继续留在cupertino。我 们请来最优秀的设计师,希望设计一栋能容纳12022人的大楼。一栋楼装12022人,是不是跟中国的学生宿舍一样不可思议?你们看过一些工业园区空间拥 挤、设计单调,我们希望改变这一切。给大家看看园区蓝图,看得见么?苹果总部就在这里280号公路和d' anza十字路口的交汇处。

mr jobs, yeah, you drawn as print, that's high-tech we've. use your finger. just point in theair...

乔总,你可以用演示器,我们这儿也是有高科技的。

what we've done is we bought this land right here. we try to buy the apartments at the cornerbut they are not for sale, so we couldn't buy those. and we bought everything else. and thecampus we like to build there is one building holds 12,000 people. and it is pretty amazingbuilding. let me show it to you. it's a little like a spaceship landed, there it is, and it's got thisgorgeous courtyard in the middle, but a lot more. so let's take a close look at it. it's a circle.it's curved all the way around. if you build things, this is not the cheapest way to buildsomething. there is not a straight piece of glass in this building. it's all curved. we've used oure_perience making retail buildings all over the world now, and we know how to make thebiggest pieces of glass in the world for architectural use. we can make it curve all the wayaround the building. and you can see what it look like. it is pretty cool. again, today, about20% of the space is landscaping, several big asphalt parking lots. so 20% of this is landscape,we want to completely change this. and we want to make 80% of landscape, and the waywe're gonna do this is we're gonna put most of the parking underground. so we can have 80%of landscape, and you can see what we've in mind. i mean there is nothing like this in theproperty now. it's pretty bad. today there are 3700 trees on the property we'd like to justalmost double that. we've hired one of the senior arborists from stanford actually who is verygood with indigenous trees around this area. so we'd like to plant a lot of trees including someapricot orchards. again you can see what it might be like. this is some of the infrastructure.the main building, we have parking underneath the main building. that's not enoughunfortunately. we have a parking structure here as well. the building's four stories high as isthe parking structure. there's nothing high here at all. we want the whole place human scale.it's actually about the same as we have in cupertino right now.. an energy center. we deal with- people using, sitting at computers all day writing software. and if the power goes out on thegrid we get to send everybody home. so we have to have backup power to power the place inthe event brownouts and stuff. and i think what we're gonna end up doing is making theenergy center our primary source of power. because we can generate power with natural gasand other ways that can be cleaner and cheaper and use the grid as our backup. we've got anauditorium because we put on presentations. much like we did yesterday but we have to go tosan francisco to do them. fitness center and some r&d facilities, these are just thingsthat where we do testing and we need some buildings to test in and there's hardly any peoplein them. so this is roughly the kind of thing we're thinking about. we think about 12,000people, i put 13,000 on the slides, just because we may make a little luckier than 12,000.we're up roughly 40% in people v.s. what the site has been used for already and we'reincreasing space to 3.1 million square feet. so 20% increase in space. the landscaping thoughincreases by 350%, which is nice, trees by 60%. the surface parking goes down by 90%. andso i think the overall feeling of the place is gonna be zillion times better than it is now with allthe asphalt. and the building footprint actually goes down by 30%. so, we wanna take thespace and in many cases making it smaller. we're putting more of desirable things on thespace and that's what we like to do. so just wanna give you a look at it. this is a cafe. we havecafe as our facilities. and this cafe will, you know, feed the better part of the 3,000 peoplesitting. that's what you need when you 12,000 people in the campus. so that's what we'relooking at. i'd love to answer your questions if you have any.

我们买下这 块地,本来还想买这初拐角,可对方不卖,我们又不能强拆,所以只得放弃。我们打算在园区里建一栋楼,容纳12022人。听起来很炫,看起来更炫。华丽吧! 像不像太空飞船?中间还有个大院子,还不止呢。让我们凑近了看,办公室的外观是个圆环。体形优美,造价不菲,所有的玻璃都是弧形的线条。我们建造苹果零售 店的经验派上用场了。硕大的弧形玻璃难不倒我们。让玻璃墙绕场一周。是不是很酷。目前整个园区只有20%的绿化,浪费了不少地方。我们向来一次乾坤大挪 移。把停车场统统发配到地下,让绿化面积从20%暴增到80%。目的不言而喻,我们课不想像别的园区那样被人诟病。目前园区里有3800棵树,未来会翻一 倍。我们聘请斯坦福的园林设计师来设计园区。除了杏树,还会种其他植物。这是建成后的样子。这是我们的主楼,设有地下停车场。可惜地下停车场不够用,所以 我们另设了一处停车点。新办公楼是一座四层圆形建筑,中间有一个大庭院。摩天大厦我不感冒,我喜欢矮建筑。保持和cupertino现有建筑的高度一致。 我们的工作要对着电脑一刻不停的写程序,所以正常的工作离不开能源中心。要是没电,大家只能回家洗了睡。所以需要后备电源,能源中心将用天然气或其他绿色 能源发电。我们希望将其作为主要的电力来源,把国家电网用作后备电源。这里将修建一个大礼堂,我们就不用像昨天那样跑到旧金山去开会了。这里是健身中心和 研发大楼,这个地方专门用来做测试,里面木有员工。这就是我们的设想。苹果现有12022员工,但可能增加到13000人。将来这里可以多容纳40%的员 工,增加20%的使用面积,这样总面积大道了310万平方英尺。绿化面积增长350%,这个就厉害啦,植树量增长60%,地上停车面积减少90%。你会自 上这片土地的,这比一滴沥青给力多了。建筑占地面积将减少30%。减少建筑面积。这样有更多的空间留给想象力去发挥。这里是间咖啡厅,这个可以有,你懂 的。它能容纳3000人同时就餐。足足有12022名员工在此贡献智慧,所以我们需要那么大的容量。我的介绍到此为止,有什么问题吗?

thank you, mr jobs. and we're really e_cited that you call apple our home. if you go to yourshop at anything they have a t-shirt that says the mother ship has landed, and if you look atthis picture, definitely the mother ship has landed here in cupertino. is there any questions orcomments from council colleagues, council member wang?

谢谢你的演讲,很高兴苹果能在cupertino安家。现在都有印有“苹果飞船”的t恤卖了。看看印花,亮点是这飞船的登陆地就在cupertino。各位参议员同僚有什么要问的吗?王议员?

hi, steve.

乔总,您好

hi.

您好

quick question, i think people are curious to know what the city residence can benefit fromthis new campus.

貌似大家都比较关心民众能从新园区中受益吗?

well, as you know, we're the largest ta_ payer in cupertino, so we'd like to continue to stay hereand pay ta_es. that's number one. because if we can't, then we go have to somewhere likemountain view. and we take up people with us, we give up and over years sell the land here,and the largest ta_ base would go away. that wouldn't be good for cupertino.

我们是cupertino的纳税大户,你懂得,我们很高兴能留下来继续缴税,这点最重要。如果新园区项目流产,我们不得不另栖他处,比如mountain view.。我们只有带着员工离开,把地卖掉。我想cupertino不会希望缴税大户离开。

no of course not.

当然不想了。

and wouldn't be good for us either, so that's number one. and number two, we employ somereally talented great people and across the whole age spectrum. a lot of people right out ofcollage, hire a lot of stanford grads, etc, and you know people in their 50s and even 60s, likeme i'm in my 50s. so i think there's a lot of them wanna live around where they work. we havea lot of people riding bikes to work now. we also run a bus service. we got 20 buses that run onbio-diesel fuel. they are the cleanest bus that you can buy. we've got 20 of them doing routesall the way from san francisco to santa cruz bringing people in. so, those are the kinds ofthings could benefit cupertino. and influ_ of ta_ base, and influ_ of very talented peoplewho are, you know, getting paid. we put them in a fairly affluent group of people, and many ofthem would choose to make cupertino their personal home as well as professional home. ithink there is a lot there plusia whole lot of trees.

我们也不想,所以这是第一条。此 外,我们雇佣了很多优秀人才,各个年龄阶段的人都有。我雇了很多大学毕业生,比如斯坦福大学,还有50、60岁的员工,像我就是。在这里安家会是他们的首 选。现在就有很多员工选择骑自行车去上班,我们也有公共交通系统,20辆烧生物燃料的班车,是目前最环保的车。这20辆班车目前正在旧金山和圣克鲁兹之间 来回运行。这些都能让cupertino受益。给cupertino带来稳定的税收,优秀的人才,这些人收入颇丰,他们多半还会选择定居此地(拉动消 费),当然,还有大片的数目和景观咯。

sure. those are great things. thank you be more specific. do we get free wi-fi or somethinglike that?

谢谢,确实很赞。我还想知道苹果是否可以提供一些免费得服务,比如wifi?

well, see i'm always i'm a simpleton. i've always had the view that we pay ta_es and the cityshould do those things. now, if we can get out of paying ta_es, i'd be glad to put up wi-fi.

我是个直肠子,我认为既然我们交税了政府就改提供这些服务。如果你给我们免税,我们就提供免费得wi-fi。

wish you use our sales ta_, part of that to provide ipad of something to our residence and thenget a free wi-fi.

那给你免掉一些销售税,为市民免费提供ipad和wi-fi。

yeah, i think we bring a lot more than free wi-fi and so.

我相信我们创造的价值比免费得wi-fi多得多。

totally agree, well, thank you so much.

完全同意,非常感谢。

sure.

不客气。

council member mahoney?

mahoney议员有问题么?

yeah, so, first of all, it was interesting, you throwback to hp. as 35-year hp employee, mostof it on the cupertino campus in those buildings there, obviously felt sorry when i heard thatthey were consolidating moving. but now that we've seen your plans, you know, the wordsspectacular would be an understatement, and i think that everybody is gonna appreciatewhat's clearly is gonna be the most elegant headquarters, you know, at least in the us thati've seen. so we definitely appreciate that the work is gone into it and look forward to workingwith you moving through the process.

你 回首了惠普的往事,让我深有感触。我在惠普工作过35年,一直呆在惠普位于cupertino的园区里,所以惠普离开cupertino,我很舍不得。现 在看到你的蓝图,我是心驰神往啊。大家都觉得这里就像是美丽的潘多拉星球,至少是美国的潘多拉。你们选择了cupertino,我们非常荣幸,也会尽最大 的努力帮助你们。

thank you. i think we do have a shot of building the best office building in the world. and ireally do think architecture students will come here to see this. i think it could be that good.

十分感谢,我们的建筑没准真会成为全球最好的办公楼。到时候各大建筑院校的学生都会过来“膜拜”,我还是挺有信心的。

appreciate.

了不起了不起。

yeah, thank you. council member chang?

谢谢谢谢。张议员?

yeah, mr. jobs, thank you very much for coming. we met the city manager and i met mr. cook,and mr. miner, and also terri on your campus, uh, and see the concept. it's very good one. ido have question about at the time they mentioned about the current infinite loop will remainthe same. the employee will stay there, right?

乔总,欢迎你。我和同事去参观过你们的园区。看到了你们的设想,确实很赞。听说新园区建成后现有的大楼会保留,员工也会留在那里,是吗?

yeah, we need both to hold everybody.

对,两出都要,一个都不能少。

so now host about 8000 to 9000 people.

这么说老楼圈了8000—9000名员工?

no no no, about 2600.

没那么多,就2600人。

2600 okay. and then this one will hold 13,000?

这样子啊,新的园区大楼将容纳13000人?

12,000. that's our current.

12022.

alright. and then my concern is last time i forgot to ask terri about the safety issue. becauseyou know you have only one building and have so many people there. so all the safety will beput into consideration like fire and everything.

我比较关心这么多人的安全问题,因为你想啊,这么多人在一栋楼里,发生个火灾什么的,如何保障他们的安全?

oh, of course. we spend a ton of time identifying and hiring who we think are best people inthe world and doing what we do. the last thing we want is for anybody to get hurt. okay, yeah,of course, we're gonna. i mean the whole building has to be designed with pretty preciserequirements for safety. but we'll do beyond those.

我们考虑过这个问题,我们物色最顶级的建筑团队,绝对不想看到任何人受伤。绝对不!设计制造的整个过程都要高标准严要求,不求最好,但求更好。

sure, and then the second question is because the increase of the employment, the resident isconcerned also about the traffic. so, do you have any plan to deviate the traffic?

好的,第二个问题,随着员工的增长,堵车在所难免,那要怎么办呢?

well, we're not increasing the employment by much .

我们没有那么大的招聘计划。

you're not?

没有吗?

no.

没有。

okay.

好吧。

it's by like 20%. so we're not increasing it by much.

最多增长个20%,不会堵车的。

also, i know you care about the air quality. i understand that you will not allow anyemployee smoking inside the building, right?

还有,我知道你很在乎空气质量,办公楼内全面禁烟。

correct. both my parents died of lung cancer from smoking. so i'm little sensitive on thattopic.

是的,我的父母都是因吸烟引起肺癌去世的。所以你懂的,我反感吸烟。

sure, so, just want to let you be aware. i don't know if you're aware that there's a cementplant nearby with air pollution to this area. are you concerned about that? are you aware ofthat?

你知道这附近有一家水泥厂么?工厂会对空气造成污染,你清楚吗?

what is that?

那是什么?

the cement plant is polluting the air in the entire area.

水泥厂污染环境。

the cement plant. that's the kaise?

你说的是kaise吧?

yeah, 24001 stevens creek.

正式stevens creek路24001号。

i grew up about 5 blocks away from that, or 6 blocks away. so, i'm pretty familiar with thekaiser plant. okay, and yeah,i think it would be great of the kaise plant wasn't there, but youknow, they bought the land fair and square. so, probably they are not going anywhere. but ifyou kick kaiser out, i wouldn't cry.

我从小在这长大, 所以他们的情况我很清楚。当然,没它更好。可毕竟是人家的地盘,又不能强拆,所以我忍。当然,如果你找城管把它拆了,我绝对拥护。

alright, thank you.

好的,谢谢。

thank you, council member chang. council member wang, you have a very quick questionright?

谢谢张议员。王委员,再来一个。

yeah, very quick question. steve, can you give us estimate timeline on when you plan to submitthe plan and when you're gonna do the ground breaking and when we can see the raw building.

你能告诉我们大概的工期么?比如什么时候开工?什么时候完工?

yeah, well, i ask that question a lot of our people too. we wanna submit plans fairly quickly.wewanna break ground ne_t year and we wanna move in 2022.

我也常问这个问题。我希望越早越好,明年开工,2022年能搬进去。

2022?okay, alright, very good. thank you so so much and we're really honored to have you tobe here. i know it's not easy to get you here. and i think that your technology is really makingeverybody proud and you're putting cupertino in together with apple. now, we're really proudof it. 2022?

好的,非常感谢乔总的到场,我们非常荣幸你今天能来,我们知道很难请得到您来这里。我认为你的技术令我们每一个人都非常地骄傲,你把cupertino和苹果放在了一起,令我们真的很自豪。

well, thanks. we're proud to be in cupertino too.

谢谢,我们也为cupertino骄傲。

thank you, council member wang. i think she stole my question to ask you when did you breakgrounds so she can start collecting those. ne_t year, sales ta_ dollars from you. e_actly, e_actly,e_actly, but you know, when chris and i met mr. jobs, you know, i found a little bit more abouthim is that actually he's a hometown boy graduated from cupertino middle school where mydaughter is going, homestead high school. so, mr jobs is very well familiar with the city ofcuperino. so, we're very fortunate that you founded here in cuperino. you started to e_pandhere in cupertino. there're many choices across the country and i'm sure that many governorsand many mayors said please come to us, but you decided to stay here and i think it's becausecupertino is such and innovative place, a diverse place, and education-wise that we have suchwonderful schools here some other students on how they got awarded in our school that aredoing so well. one thing that i wanna ask you is to keep in mind is giving back to thecommunity and one thing that we would love to do. i'm sure that our staff will talk about isthat we don't like going to valley or los gatos for an apple store. we would love to have anapple store here cupertino. and i can assure you, i even have, you know, my ipad 2 here,which i love, you know, so cooperate with me, but you know, it's a wonderful technology andmy 11-year-old girl just loves this ipad2.

谢 谢王委员。我想她关心开工时间,是等着明年征你们的税呢。算起来,乔总是我老乡,和我女儿是校友。所以他对cupertino非常熟悉,他把苹果种在这 里,让它生根发芽。你本来可以去别的地方种苹果,而且我肯定别的城市也企图诱拐苹果,但是你最终决定留下,因为你觉得应该与cupertino的创新和多 元化不无关系。而且我们有很好的学校,咱们这儿的学生也个个出类拔萃,我只简单提点期望,希望你们回馈社会,为社区做点贡献,我们将感激不尽。 cupertino居然没有苹果专卖店,我和我的同事们不得不去valley或los gatos去买苹果,我们非常希望有苹果专卖店在cupertino。你敢开,我就敢买,看看我手头的ipad2我的心头肉啊,ipad2是个好 ipad, 我11岁的闺女都爱不释手。

good. yeah. the problem with putting an apple store in cupertino is just isn't the traffic. soi'm afraid it might not be successful. if we thought it would be successful, we'd love to.

在cupertino开苹果店估计行不通,虽然离得近,但我觉得运营效果不会很理想,如果能成功,我们会不开吗?

we'll help you make it successful. again, thank you very much for coming with me. i'm surethat you guys are very lucky to hear this very historical moment that, you know, you hear about5 years ago, was it chris? that you made the announcement you bought the 55 acres thenyou bought another 100 acres from hp. and apple is truly the technology of innovation andour city staff and city council looks very forward to working with you and helping you succeedhere in our community.

放心,我们会帮助你成功的。再一次感谢乔总,在座的各位你们有幸见证了这历史性的时刻。5年前乔总宣布买下收了155英亩地,5年后这块地将变成苹果园,激动吖。论创新技术,苹果确实没得说,我们这帮人很乐意帮你在cupertino取得成功。

thank you very much.

非常感谢。

let's give a big round of applause for mr. steve jobs. thank you.

给乔总来点掌声。感谢。

第4篇 高三最后一次国旗下演讲稿

高三最后一次国旗下演讲稿

三年逐梦 六月花开

尊敬的领导 老师 高一高二的学弟学妹们 高三同胞们,大家上午好。

浓情六月,流光溢彩。又到了圆梦与离别的季节。历三载酸甜苦辣,共一场青春银河。今天,我国旗下演讲的题目是《三年逐梦 六月花开》

青春的故事,始于三年前的夏天。懵懂的我们,也曾这样站在操场上,用好奇而不安的目光打量着陌生的校园和身边的新同学。盛夏军训,在烈日下砥砺意志;金秋赛场,在跑道上挥洒青春;元旦联欢,在欢歌中许下心愿;五月学工,在实践里启迪未来。恰同学少年,风华正茂,人才济济,汇聚一堂。三年点滴,从相遇相识,到相知相守,因有了同窗的陪伴,我们在感动中茁壮成长。

同窗之谊,弥足珍贵,恩师之风,山高水长。在十二中的校园里,有这样一群人,用一千个日出日落,谱一曲三尺讲台的筑梦华章。答疑课的耐心讲解,晚自习的默默陪伴,挫折中的宽容鼓励,考试后的促膝长谈。老师们言传身教,教会我们知识,更教会我们像这棵杨树一样,将根深扎地下,堂堂正正做人!桃李不言,下自成蹊,回首峥嵘岁月,记忆中那学为人师,行为世范的风骨,我辈学子必将感念于怀,铭刻于心。

三载风雨路,冷暖寸心知。人在高三,注定要走一段艰苦的旅程。一个个燥热难耐的午后,一个个孤灯长明的夜晚,有坚强意志的驱动,有崇高理想的指引,我们与懒惰决裂,与勤奋同行,在上下求索的漫漫长路上,一往无前。我们也曾无数次地失败,但当我们迈步越过雄关漫道,从青涩变得成熟,我们将有能力用自己的双手开拓十二中的未来!回想求学路上的夙兴夜寐,回想父母的养育之恩,老师的良苦用心,回想百日誓师时的铮铮誓言,厉兵秣马枕戈待旦的我们,坚守初心不负青云之志的我们,无愧于心,无怨无悔!

同学们,八天后,我们就将奔赴考场,与二十万辽宁考生一决雌雄。圆梦高考,我们势在必得,我们势在必胜!十载鸿图一朝展,母校威名两肩担。我辈才俊多奇志,不破楼兰终不还!请家长放心,请老师放心,请母校放心,二零一六高考,我们高三学子必将续写十二中新的辉煌!待到捷报频传日,凯歌响彻百千回。战罢玉龙三百万,黄金榜上勇夺魁!

高三全体同学

第5篇 高考励志学生演讲稿 最后的冲刺

尊敬的指战员,亲爱的战友们:

大家上午好!冰雪消融,化作千顷碧波;朗朗书声,铺就锦绣前程。

时光如指间沙,不知不觉,距离高考只剩下200天了。高考,已不再是遥远的事情,不论你是否意识到,不论你在不在学习状态,高考都在悄悄地逼近你。

高三是特殊的时期,天下高三一般黑,都会是脑神经累得迷迷糊糊,生物钟扭得乱七八糟,身心忙得疲惫不堪,每天感到天昏地暗。高三的学生经常这样讲:要成功、先发疯!不苦不累、高三无味;不拼不博、高三白活。

同学们,不管你愿不愿意承认,在你的内心深处在你的骨子里面你一定一直都在渴望做个能让别人看得起的人,做一个父母永远为你感到骄傲和自豪的人。但没有一种不通过忍受蔑视和奋斗就可以征服的命运。高三,就是你狠狠出一口气,拼命的争一口气的时间。高三是大苦与大乐的结合点,惟有大苦,方能大乐。那我们怎样才能更好的度过这段苦日子呢?

最首先的就是要明确个人目标,制定学习计划。

一个人只要知道自己为了什么而活,他就能够忍受任何一种生活。古人云:人贵有志,当志存高远。这不是一句简单的口号,请大家想一下,当高考结束,面对高考志愿表时,有多少人能斩钉截铁地说:我就要报这个专业,我一直在为着这个目标而奋斗!新东方总裁俞敏洪曾这样说道:每一条河流都有自己不同的生命曲线,但每一条河都有自己的梦想,那就是奔向大海。人生目标的确定,对一个人的一生来说是十分重要的。

我希望还没目标的同学要尽快确立自己的目标,并把它写下来,时时提醒自己,时时鞭策自己。同时,制订详细而科学的学习计划;把每天的任务写在小纸片上,贴在桌上,一项一项的完成。

其次是天道酬勤,鲁迅曾说:哪里有什么天才,我只是挤出别人喝咖啡的时间来学习。天赋固然有助于取得成功,但如果离开后天的努力,也必然会像方仲永一样“泯然众人矣”。当今世界最年轻的棋后——侯逸凡,1994年出生,她在下棋上有着天才的头脑,但她并没有沾沾自喜,骄傲自大。她选择了勤奋,教练王宪说:“从接受启蒙到成为世界冠军,我家有__多局的记载,这是天道酬勤啊”人生短暂,不容蹉跎。幸福不会平白无故从天降,付出努力才会有补偿,没有人能随随便便就辉煌,除非是好梦一场。时光能红了樱桃,绿了芭蕉,却不会使懈怠者出什么成果,抛弃时间的人时间也会抛弃他。而我们所能做的就是抓紧时间,勤奋、勤奋、再勤奋!

最重要的,高三是信念下的执着与顽强。

高三免不了许多考试,周考、月考、联考……免不了许多的挫折与失败,当成绩不如别人,而想到前景叵测时,当苦苦拼过一段时间后,考试成绩依旧,当看到父母脸上的担忧与关注时,许多人会感到焦虑浮躁。对自己的信心与能力产生怀疑,甚至选择放弃,自己打败了自己。其实不必担心,要充满自信。一个人并不是为了失败而生的,一个人可以被毁灭,但不能给打败。有人说:你不能决定生命的长度,但可以控制它的宽度。你不能左右天气,但你可以改变心情。你不能控制他人,但你可以掌控自己。你不能预知明天,但你可以利用今天。你不能要求事事顺利,但你可以做到事事尽力。你不能够回避挫折,但你可以东山再起。

花季少年,初生牛犊,指点江山,激扬文字,敢于天公试比高。年轻是我们的资本,成功是我们的追求,奋斗不止是我们的宣言,愈挫愈勇是我们的气魄。

珍惜两百天,让飞翔的梦想在六月里张开翅膀;

奋斗两百天,让雄心与智慧在六月里自由翱翔;

拼搏两百天,让父母和恩师在六月里畅想期望;

冲刺两百天,让生命的礼花在六月里绚丽绽放!

我的演讲完毕,谢谢大家!

第6篇 珍爱生命演讲稿 最后一片叶子

朋友们:

读过美国著名作家欧·亨利小说《最后一片叶子》的人,想必还记得这句话:'当最后一片叶子落下时,生命就都结束了,我也得离开这个世界而去了.…酷爱生活的女画家约翰西,患了肺炎濒临大限时,'害怕在她轻轻抓着这个世界的手越来越乏力的时候,她会真的像一片轻轻的,纤弱的叶子那样,随深秋的寒风飘逝而去'.初读这篇小说时,少年不识愁滋味,对主人公那仿佛病态的痴语我并不以为然,而正是在人类对绿色顶礼膜拜,绿色食品,绿色能源,绿色电脑,绿色冰箱,绿色建筑被人们广为崇尚的今天,重读小说《最后一片叶子》,才感悟到,这分明是一个寓言故事,约翰西的心语,分明是谷世之言,大籁希声.

就在欧·亨利自己的国家美利坚合众国的土地上,不是就有过深刻的历史教训吗 著名总统罗斯福对梅花鹿可谓情有独钟,从这点小小的总统私人利益出发,他便下令对北利亚桑纳州一片茂密的大森林进行大规模扫荡,大批鹿的天敌----狮子,狼等食肉动物被捕杀殆尽.四千多只鹿于是生物爆炸一般,呈几何级数迅猛增长,十几万只伸特长脖子的可爱精灵们,吃光了树上的叶子,仿佛只在转眼问,著名的大森林就从地球上消失了,最后剩下的,只有凡头病鹿. 鲁迅先生说过,悲剧是把美好的东西毁灭给人看.

在我省南部,有一个美丽的地方,她向来就被人们称为镶嵌在我们这个植物王国皇冠上的一颗绿宝石.她的美丽,当然是绿色赋予的.可是,就在这绿宝石之上,有8家红砖厂的大烟囱,不分昼夜地喷吐着氟化物和二氧化硫严重超标的浓烟,致使1262亩的天然橡胶林受害,三万零五百株橡胶树为之枯死,胶民们虽然怨气沸腾,却眼睁睁地奈何不了它,无独有偶,在同一纬度的广西某地,也上演过惊人相似的一幕,如果说那一幕还有点不同的话,就是红砖厂的废气除了使大面积胶林枯死外,还造成50多亩芒果只开花不结果,出现果荒.我们知道,天然橡胶是目前地球上极为少有的自然资源,仅生长在赤过附近,我们也知道,芒果是公认的'水果之王',那么何以会出现上面那样的情况呢 ----因为红泥巴变成砖块,只需要几天的时间,远比橡胶芒果来钱要快!

绿色是和平和生命的象征.在很小的时候,我的心便融进了一个绿色的海洋.穿了十凡年国防绿的我,在老山战区那片阳光充足,绿色位浓的亚热带丛林中,度过了人生位美好的一段年华.就是在那样一个空气,阳光,风雨充足的天然大氧吧里,我步入了而立之年.此生最难忘的,能维系裁生命的,大概就只有那特殊的一片绿色了.而事实上,那片我魂牵梦紫的土地至今还不富裕,一些地方生产力水平低下,社会发育程度不高,边民的农事,至今还离不开刀耕火种,纵火烧荒.我曾目赌过两个边民合伙买一盒火柴平分的事,开始想当然地以为他们太穷,买不起一盒囫囵的火柴,后来才发现,在他们的生活里,四季灶膛火不断,一根火柴烧一年,大树小树变成灰.我能给他们的,就是一个毫无用处的忠告:可别把咱的林子都烧光了呀.

我的一个同事的办公桌上,摆着个木制的水杯,是什么木呢 红豆衫.昆明植物研究所的专家们,从世界珍稀植物红豆杉树皮里,提出了炖度达99.9% 以上的抗癌新药紫杉醇,可没料到的是随后发生的事,竟会令这些专家们痛心疾首,老泪纵横,滇东北相当数量的红豆杉被人剥光了树皮,砍光了枝叶,连树根也被拔走.因为一个商业秘密被公开,1克紫杉醇在国际上可卖到1万美元,那些人还相信一个神话,红豆杉做成的水杯,容忍,甚至根雕可以防癌.

在’99昆明世博会期间,谈论这样沉重的话题,或许不大会时宜.知我者谓我心忧,不知我者谓我何求 我们知道,当今世界性的十大环境问题,即气候变暖,臭氧层破坏,生物多样性减少,酸雨蔓延,森林锐减,土地荒漠化,大气污染等,这其中就有9项是因绿色植被遇破坏直接导致的.楼房越益越高,生活越来越好,绿色却越来越少,越来越远,有感于此,我曾写下过这样的诗句:烟囱长成了森林/钢筋和混凝土切断了视线/我的瞳孔里就再没有了绿色/那天空的湛蓝呢/那海水的碧绿呢/那河流的清亮呢/那空气的爽朗呢.

人类只有一个地球,我们对这个星球上的生态系统有着永远摆脱不究的依赖性,需要地球源源不断地提供植物和动物的食物,需要有足够厚度的大气层,来保护人类不受过高成过低气温,以及过量紫外线的伤害,需要地球提供足够量的水和氧气来维持生命的存在,而没有了绿色,这一切岂不成了无本之源,好比毛长在皮子上,没有了皮,毛又咋生根

绿色锐减,吞噬绿色的,正是人类自己,是人类发展模式中那种对自然资源的掠夺性,破坏性开采.人类对绿色的无尽索取仍在威胁着生态平衡,破坏着生态的结构.据(一个保守的数字)统计,全世界每年有2000万公顷森林横遭盲目砍伐,这是5700个昆明市的面积啊.这已经造成了全球性的'温室效应',与之相连,全世界每年有近5万个物种濒临灭绝,有近2700万公顷的农田蒙受沙漠化之灾,就连海底也日趋沙漠化,就不必再说那令我们痛心的去年在华夏大地发生长江,松嫩大灾了吧,也不必说我省的泥石流,山体滑坡了吧.如此盲目的行动如果得不到有效的制止和改变,势必爆发可怕的生态危机,而一旦它的爆发起出了人类控制的极限,其后果不堪想象.那时,我们都会明白,最后一片落叶将带走人类的命运,也决不是危言耸听.

我们欣喜地看到,可持续发展战略已经纳入了我目的政府行为,我国已颁布了10多部环境保护法, 200多项环境标准,绿化财政,正威为人们的自觉意识,'天人合一'.更是我们千年的愿望,我想我们应该叫响这样一个口号:绿色就是生产力!我省的金沙江等流域,炊坑代木兮,豆之河之干兮现象也已悄然消失.你可能问我,这一切还保不住你那最后一片叶子吗,那么,我要说的是,你还是去问问我们的《国歌》里,为什么至今还要唱'中华民族到了位危险的时候'这一句吧.诚然,正像我们的抗洪收灾能取得决定性胜利所昭示的那样,我们坚信,人类的本事能够挽狂澜于既倒,扶大厦之将倾,但是,常言说的好,人无远虑,必有近忧,居安思危,要防患于朱然.我们怎么能够等到头上见不到日月星辰,满目酸雨纷纷,脚下洪浪滔天,汪洋恣肆,人间无处不飞沙,等到'千山鸟飞绝,万径人踪灭'时,才悔不当初呢

聪明的作家欧·亨利是以其'欧·亨利式的结尾'著称于世的,那最后一片不凋的叶子,带来的是一个危亡病人的新生.我想,我们也会创造出另一个欧·享利式的结尾,迎来人类新生的.坐以待毙,从来就不是人类的选择,人类既已觉臣,就会在危机面前积极行动起来,把握历史机遇,化压力为动力,保卫绿色,保护我们共有的家圈.

面对现实,我们迎接挑战,展望未来,我们充满信心.

第7篇 搞好期末复习和最后的考试 升旗仪式演讲稿

各位领导,老师,亲爱的同学们:

大家早上好!新年的钟声还在耳边萦绕,一转眼,我们又进入到了紧张的期末复习迎考阶段,本周,我们将迎来本学期的期末考试.

期末考试不仅是对同学们本学期学业成果的一次大盘点、大检阅,更是对每个人的综合素质的一次挑战,是对同学们的自信心、自觉性、意志力、诚信度的一次考验。我们不能要求每个人都成为优胜者,但我们希望大家做一名追求进步超越自我的勇敢者。为了帮助同学们搞好期末复习和最后的考试,今天,利用这个机会,给大家提几点建议和要求:

首先,希望同学们正确看待考试,克服考前过分紧张的情绪,以从容自信的态度面对期末考。其次,科学合理安排好复习计划,以勤奋踏实的态度赢取令人满意的成绩。我们要“见时间之缝,插学习之针”,充分利用点点滴滴的时间,多背一段文章,多温习一遍老师在课上讲的重点……

我还要提醒同学们,期末考试也对我们的诚实守信品格的一次考验。诚,就是要诚实待人不说谎,不抄袭,不作弊;信,就是讲信用重承诺,遇到错误勇于承担。让诚信这道灿烂的阳光点燃我们的心灵,照亮我们的人生。

考试马上就要到来了,你做好准备了吗?请记住,剩下的时间由你来把握。相信你一定能抓住它!最后,祝同学们期末考试个个都能取得满意的成绩!

我的演讲完毕,谢谢大家!

>>《搞好期末复习和最后的考试 升旗仪式演讲稿》

第8篇 九年级学生最后一周国旗下演讲稿

尊敬的老师、亲爱的同学们:

七年级,我是个懵懂的新生,幻想自己有一天能手拿话筒,在国旗下演讲,未曾想,三年后我的夙愿实现了,实现在属于我的、我们九年级的最后一次升旗仪式上。

手中的话筒有些沉重,就好像中考对我们的压力,就好像离别在我们心中的分量。

今天是六月十一,三天后便是中考的日子了。

清楚记得,七年级时体育我几乎次次倒数,跑完我就哭,哭得绝望不已。 但是我怕天怕地怕老师,唯一不怕的就是吃苦。老师让跑15圈,我就跑15圈,一圈不落。一年两年三年,九年级长跑满分简直小菜一碟。

同学们,现在你可能不算优秀,无论是体育还是文化课,你可以说你累了,但你不能否定自己不行,我们总是要为了自己的目标去努力,总是要拼尽全力才能知道自己的潜能,没到最后一刻,其实又何必放弃。

乾坤未定,你我皆是黑马。

现在以这样的身份再慢慢回忆,那时,我们这一届也同你们七八年级一般无忧无虑,甚至不知道中考每一科具体多少分,不知道哪一题是什么类型的题目。可现在,我想九年级同学都知道,每一门满分多少,哪一题是什么类型的题目,具体解题方法又是什么。

当我了解了自己七八年级所不知晓的,我对未知未来的恐惧就减少了。可另一种情绪又生长起来,淡淡蔓延,不痛不痒。那种情绪让我一遍遍走过校园,转转曾经的七七班,八七班,慢慢回到九七班中,静静看着同学们刷题,玩闹,尽情大笑,他们的音容笑貌,我耳熟能详。连可爱的老师们早早到班、迟迟退场的习惯都是不变的——唯一改变的,是黑板上倒计时的天数日日减一,减到零的时候,我们这届九年级将迎来最辉煌的时候,也是退场的时刻,就算此刻演讲的内心亦掺杂毕业的愁绪与考试的紧张。

七八年级的同学们,你们是否能体会到毕业生的心情,面对你们曾经发誓再也不要理睬的吵过架的同学,面对不留情面当众批评你的老师,面对你最讨厌上的课程,如果这是你们留在学校最后的日子,是否他们都笼罩上一层可爱而亲切的色彩,让你忍不住的去回忆。如果你们意识到青春只有这些日子,是否还会为鸡毛蒜皮的小事与同学耿耿于怀,水火不容,为躲避一次作业和老师拼命周旋?初中,有那么多值得一起度过的,分享的,你们身在福中,自当好好珍惜才对。

七年级学弟学妹即将进入分水岭啦,不要放弃努力,你们还有两年;八年级学弟学妹们马上就要继承我们的映日楼啦,果然是长江后浪推前浪,放手一搏吧,你们还有一年。愿七八年级同学珍惜你们的方长来日,你们既能穿越风雨,也能重新站起。

而我亲爱的同级九年级同学们,后天看考场,大后天考试,你们准备好了吗?对三年,还有没有后悔与遗憾,时不我待,我们只剩三天。愿我们尽全力而为,考好,是学校的骄傲,没考好,依然是自己的英雄。最后,一首诗送给所有砥砺前行的莘莘学子。

我不去想,是否能够成功,既然选择了远方,便只顾风雨兼程;我不去想,身后会不会袭来寒风,既然目标是地平线,留给世界的,只能是背影;我不去想,未来是平坦,还是泥泞,只要奋力拼搏,一切, 都在意料之中!

第9篇 高三学生演讲稿《最后一次演讲》

亲爱的老师,

可爱的同学们:

大家好!

我是高三十一班的毛__。今天我演讲的题目是《最后一次演讲》。

歌德说过:“急速飞逝的韶光,何处去重寻?”是啊,“花有重开日,人无再少年”,关汉卿也曾发过类似的感慨。其实时钟最懂得光阴离开的决心,可它总是沉默不语,或许是因为贪恋黄昏的晚景吧。丢下了我们,后知后觉,仓促告别。忆往昔峥嵘岁月,一千多个日夜我们一同走过。苍老,不属于这个激昂的时代。成熟的蜕变不在于有唏嘘的胡茬,华丽的妆扮,而在于有那从容不迫的内心和日益坚定的目光。

“大江东去,载不动许多愁”。我们拼凑过古人的诗句,嘲笑过杜甫浪费了在“会当凌绝顶”时采珍贵草药的机会。这些欢笑在课间,更在没有茶的饭后。操场是环形的小道,没有古木参天,但青春的气息大大方方地让我们撞见。盛着满满学生的操场拥抱一瓢云霞与天空的混搭,活力是青春的彩虹。日不落的地方眷顾过19世纪的英国,但它的家乡在一座座美丽的校园。阳光最先在教室绽放,因为那里有祖国的花朵——我们。朗朗的读书声,如郎朗弹奏的《梦幻曲》一样,悦耳动听。思绪已经无数次地在一个上午,连续进出藏有书本与试题的房间。当12点的铃声落定,第六扇打开的门是,食堂。对于食堂,我们或多或少有些抱怨,但它长期共享了中央五套和湖南卫视等视频资源,我们却毫无不满之色。所以当我们离开时,请重温一回这“家”的味道。

说了这么多,是该提提眼前的高考了。从孩提时代的我要上清华北大,到青涩时期的名牌大学,再到现在略显窘迫的是大学都上,大部分人和我一样彷徨,压抑。 虽然历史的巨轮无数次碾压过后印证了“高考终会有人失败”的真理,但我们的人生并不会因此结束,杯具的结尾可能恰恰是洗具的开始。诚然,高考对人是一次巨大的挑战,但高考并不是阻止我们前进的障碍物,它更像是一个设置在广阔平原上的收费站,过后,你仍然要选择未来的方向。

即便现在进入了多雨的季节,但高考把夏日变成了严冬。我们是成长的梅花,要想芳香四溢就要从严寒走出,所以我们要做的是放平心态,等待高考的到来。最好把自己放在攻擂者的位置,用大无畏的精神弱化那份担忧。而紧张是难免的,但你信不信知道分数前的那个夜晚比任何一个都要难熬,如果你真的在高考前一晚睡不着的话,可以吟诵些诗句,缓解焦虑。但千万不要看见月色就去找所谓的承天寺和张怀民,因为说不定他早已鼾声如雷了。所以试着学会多一份宁静,多一份淡定很重要。

最后谈一下关于树叶黄绿的问题。不错,当叶子从黄变绿时我们会离开。但我相信等叶子从绿又变黄时,我们会回来,向亲爱的老师证明,我们在另一个地方一样优秀。

这是真心,不是唯心的祝愿,希望大家事事顺利,考试成功。

谢谢大家,我的演讲完了。

第10篇 最后一片叶子(环保演讲稿)

朋友们: 读过美国著名作家欧·亨利小说《最后一片叶子》的人,想必还记得这句话:“当最后一片叶子落下时,生命就都结束了,我也得离开这个世界而去了。…酷爱生活的女画家约翰西,患了肺炎濒临大限时,“害怕在她轻轻抓着这个世界的手越来越乏力的时候,她会真的像一片轻轻的、纤弱的叶子那样,随深秋的寒凤飘逝而去”。

初读这篇小说时,少年不识愁滋味,对主人公那仿佛病态的痴语我并不以为然,而正是在人类对绿色顶礼膜拜,绿色食品,绿色能源、绿色电脑、绿色冰箱,绿色建筑被人们广为崇尚的今天,重读小说《最后一片叶子》,才感悟到,这分明是一个寓言故事,约翰西的心语,分明是谷世之言,大籁希声。 就在欧·亨利自己的国家美利坚合众国的土地上,不是就有过深刻的历史教训吗?著名总统罗斯福对梅花鹿可谓情有独钟,从这点小小的总统私人利益出发,他便下令对北利亚桑纳州一片茂密的大森林进行大规模扫荡,大批鹿的天敌----狮子、狼等食肉动物被捕杀殆尽。四千多只鹿于是生物爆炸一般,呈几何级数迅猛增长,十几万只伸特长脖子的可爱精灵们,吃光了树上的叶子,仿佛只在转眼问,著名的大森林就从地球上消失了,最后剩下的,只有凡头病鹿。 鲁迅先生说过,悲剧是把美好的东西毁灭给人看。

在我省南部,有一个美丽的地方,她向来就被人们称为镶嵌在我们这个植物王国皇冠上的一颗绿宝石。她的美丽,当然是绿色赋予的。可是,就在这绿宝石之上,有8家红砖厂的大烟囱,不分昼夜地喷吐着氟化物和二氧化硫严重超标的浓烟,致使1262亩的天然橡胶林受害,三万零五百株橡胶树为之枯死,胶民们虽然怨气沸腾,却眼睁睁地奈何不了它,无独有偶,在同一纬度的广西某地,也上演过惊人相似的一幕,如果说那一幕还有点不同的话,就是红砖厂的废气除了使大面积胶林枯死外,还造成50多亩芒果只开花不结果,出现果荒。我们知道,天然橡胶是目前地球上极为少有的自然资源,仅生长在赤过附近,我们也知道,芒果是公认的“水果之王”,那么何以会出现上面那样的情况呢?----因为红泥巴变成砖块,只需要几天的时间,远比橡胶芒果来钱要快! 绿色是和平和生命的象征。

在很小的时候,我的心便融进了一个绿色的海洋。穿了十凡年国防绿的我,在老山战区那片阳光充足,绿色位浓的亚热带丛林中,度过了人生位美好的一段年华。就是在那样一个空气、阳光、风雨充足的天然大氧吧里,我步入了而立之年。此生最难忘的,能维系裁生命的,大概就只有那特殊的一片绿色了。而事实上,那片我魂牵梦紫的土地至今还不富裕,一些地方生产力水平低下,社会发育程度不高,边民的农事,至今还离不开刀耕火种,纵火烧荒。我曾目赌过两个边民合伙买一盒火柴平分的事,开始想当然地以为他们太穷,买不起一盒囫囵的火柴,后来才发现,在他们的生活里,四季灶膛火不断,一根火柴烧一年,大树小树变成灰。我能给他们的,就是一个毫无用处的忠告:可别把咱的林子都烧光了呀。 我的一个同事的办公桌上,摆着个木制的水杯,是什么木呢?红豆衫。昆明植物研究所的专家们,从世界珍稀植物红豆杉树皮里,提出了炖度达99.9% 以上的抗癌新药紫杉醇,可没料到的是随后发生的事,竟会令这些专家们痛心疾首,老泪纵横,滇东北相当数量的红豆杉被人剥光了树皮,砍光了枝叶,连树根也被拔走。因为一个商业秘密被公开,1克紫杉醇在国际上可卖到1万美元,那些人还相信一个神话,红豆杉做成的水杯、容忍,甚至根雕可以防癌。 在99昆明世博会期间,谈论这样沉重的话题,或许不大会时宜。

知我者谓我心忧,不知我者谓我何求?我们知道,当今世界性的十大环境问题,即气候变暖、臭氧层破坏、生物多样性减少、酸雨蔓延、森林锐减、土地荒漠化,大气污染等,这其中就有9项是因绿色植被遇破坏直接导致的。楼房越益越高,生活越来越好,绿色却越来越少,越来越远,有感于此,我曾写下过这样的诗句:烟囱长成了森林/钢筋和混凝土切断了视线/我的瞳孔里就再没有了绿色/那天空的湛蓝呢/那海水的碧绿呢/那河流的清亮呢/那空气的爽朗呢。 人类只有一个地球,我们对这个星球上的生态系统有着永远摆脱不究的依赖性,需要地球源源不断地提供植物和动物的食物,需要有足够厚度的大气层,来保护人类不受过高成过低气温,以及过量紫外线的伤害,需要地球提供足够量的水和氧气来维持生命的存在,而没有了绿色,这一切岂不成了无本之源,好比毛长在皮子上,没有了皮,毛又咋生根? 绿色锐减,吞噬绿色的,正是人类自己,是人类发展模式中那种对自然资源的掠夺性、破坏性开采。人类对绿色的无尽索取仍在威胁着生态平衡,破坏着生态的结构。

据(一个保守的数字)统计,全世界每年有2000万公顷森林横遭盲目砍伐,这是5700个昆明市的面积啊。这已经造成了全球性的“温室效应”,与之相连,全世界每年有近5万个物种濒临灭绝,有近2700万公顷的农田蒙受沙漠化之灾,就连海底也日趋沙漠化,就不必再说那令我们痛心的去年在华夏大地发生长江、松嫩大灾了吧,也不必说我省的泥石流,山体滑坡了吧。如此盲目的行动如果得不到有效的制止和改变,势必爆发可怕的生态危机,而一旦它的爆发起出了人类控制的极限,其后果不堪想象。那时,我们都会明白,最后一片落叶将带走人类的命运,也决不是危言耸听。 我们欣喜地看到,可持续发展战略已经纳入了我目的政府行为,我国已颁布了10多部环境保护法, 200多项环境标准,绿化财政,正威为人们的自觉意识,“天人合一”.更是我们千年的愿望,我想我们应该叫响这样一个口号:绿色就是生产力!我省的金沙江等流域,炊坑代木兮,豆之河之干兮现象也已悄然消失。你可能问我,这一切还保不住你那最后一片叶子吗,那么,我要说的是,你还是去问问我们的《国歌》里,为什么至今还要唱“中华民族到了位危险的时候”这一句吧。

诚然,正像我们的抗洪收灾能取得决定性胜利所昭示的那样,我们坚信,人类的本事能够挽狂澜于既倒,扶大厦之将倾,但是,常言说的好,人无远虑,必有近忧,居安思危,要防患于朱然。我们怎么能够等到头上见不到日月星辰,满目酸雨纷纷,脚下洪浪滔天,汪洋恣肆,人间无处不飞沙,等到“千山鸟飞绝,万径人踪灭”时,才悔不当初呢? 聪明的作家欧·亨利是以其“欧·亨利式的结尾”著称于世的,那最后一片不凋的叶子,带来的是一个危亡病人的新生。我想,我们也会创造出另一个欧·享利式的结尾,迎来人类新生的。坐以待毙,从来就不是人类的选择,人类既已觉臣,就会在危机面前积极行动起来,把握历史机遇,化压力为动力,保卫绿色,保护我们共有的家圈。 面对现实,我们迎接挑战,展望未来,我们充满信心。

第11篇 高考学生励志演讲稿——最后的冲刺

尊敬的老师,亲爱的同学们:

大家好!

时光如指间沙,不知不觉,距离高考只剩下200天了。高考,已不再是遥远的事情,不论你是否意识到,不论你在不在学习状态,高考都在悄悄地逼近你。

高三是特殊的时期,天下高三一般黑,都会是脑神经累得迷迷糊糊,生物钟扭得乱七八糟,身心忙得疲惫不堪,每天感到天昏地暗。高三的学生经常这样讲:要成功、先发疯!不苦不累、高三无味;不拼不博、高三白活。

同学们,不管你愿不愿意承认,在你的内心深处在你的骨子里面你一定一直都在渴望做个能让别人看得起的人,做一个父母永远为你感到骄傲和自豪的人。但没有一种不通过忍受蔑视和奋斗就可以征服的命运。高三,就是你狠狠出一口气,拼命的争一口气的时间。高三是大苦与大乐的结合点,惟有大苦,方能大乐。那我们怎样才能更好的度过这段苦日子呢?

最首先的就是要明确个人目标,制定学习计划。

一个人只要知道自己为了什么而活,他就能够忍受任何一种生活。古人云:人贵有志,当志存高远。这不是一句简单的口号,请大家想一下,当高考结束,面对高考志愿表时,有多少人能斩钉截铁地说:我就要报这个专业,我一直在为着这个目标而奋斗!新东方总裁俞敏洪曾这样说道:每一条河流都有自己不同的生命曲线,但每一条河都有自己的梦想,那就是奔向大海。人生目标的确定,对一个人的一生来说是十分重要的。

我希望还没目标的同学要尽快确立自己的目标,并把它写下来,时时提醒自己,时时鞭策自己。同时,制订详细而科学的学习计划;把每天的任务写在小纸片上,贴在桌上,一项一项的完成。

其次是天道酬勤,鲁迅曾说:哪里有什么天才,我只是挤出别人喝咖啡的时间来学习。天赋固然有助于取得成功,但如果离开后天的努力,也必然会像方仲永一样“泯然众人矣”。当今世界最年轻的棋后——侯逸凡,1994年出生,她在下棋上有着天才的头脑,但她并没有沾沾自喜,骄傲自大。她选择了勤奋,教练王宪说:“从接受启蒙到成为世界冠军,我家有__多局的记载,这是天道酬勤啊”人生短暂,不容蹉跎。幸福不会平白无故从天降,付出努力才会有补偿,没有人能随随便便就辉煌,除非是好梦一场。时光能红了樱桃,绿了芭蕉,却不会使懈怠者出什么成果,抛弃时间的人时间也会抛弃他。而我们所能做的就是抓紧时间,勤奋、勤奋、再勤奋!

最重要的,高三是信念下的执着与顽强。

高三免不了许多考试,周考、月考、联考……免不了许多的挫折与失败,当成绩不如别人,而想到前景叵测时,当苦苦拼过一段时间后,考试成绩依旧,当看到父母脸上的担忧与关注时,许多人会感到焦虑浮躁。对自己的信心与能力产生怀疑,甚至选择放弃,自己打败了自己。其实不必担心,要充满自信。一个人并不是为了失败而生的,一个人可以被毁灭,但不能给打败。有人说:你不能决定生命的长度,但可以控制它的宽度。你不能左右天气,但你可以改变心情。你不能控制他人,但你可以掌控自己。你不能预知明天,但你可以利用今天。你不能要求事事顺利,但你可以做到事事尽力。你不能够回避挫折,但你可以东山再起。

花季少年,初生牛犊,指点江山,激扬文字,敢于天公试比高。年轻是我们的资本,成功是我们的追求,奋斗不止是我们的宣言,愈挫愈勇是我们的气魄。

珍惜两百天,让飞翔的梦想在六月里张开翅膀;

奋斗两百天,让雄心与智慧在六月里自由翱翔;

拼搏两百天,让父母和恩师在六月里畅想期望;

冲刺两百天,让生命的礼花在六月里绚丽绽放!

我的演讲完毕,谢谢大家!

第12篇 奥巴马总统发表任内最后一次国情咨文英语演讲稿

mr. speaker, mr. vice president, members of congress, my fellow americans:

tonight marks the eighth year i've come here to report on the state of the union. and for thisfinal one, i'm going to try to make it shorter. i know some of you are antsy to get back to iowa.

i also understand that because it's an election season, e_pectations for what we'll achievethis year are low. still, mr. speaker, i appreciate the constructive approach you and theother leaders took at the end of last year to pass a budget and make ta_ cuts permanent forworking families. so i hope we can work together this year on bipartisan priorities like criminaljustice reform, and helping people who are battling prescription drug abuse. we just mightsurprise the cynics again.

but tonight, i want to go easy on the traditional list of proposals for the year ahead. don'tworry, i've got plenty, from helping students learn to write computer code to personalizingmedical treatments for patients. and i'll keep pushing for progress on the work that still needsdoing. fi_ing a broken immigration system. protecting our kids from gun violence. equal payfor equal work, paid leave, raising the minimum wage. all these things still matter tohardworking families; they are still the right thing to do; and i will not let up until they getdone.

but for my final address to this chamber, i don't want to talk just about the ne_t year. i wantto focus on the ne_t five years, ten years, and beyond.

i want to focus on our future.

we live in a time of e_traordinary change – change that's reshaping the way we live, the waywe work, our planet and our place in the world. it's change that promises amazing medicalbreakthroughs, but also economic disruptions that strain working families. it promiseseducation for girls in the most remote villages, but also connects terrorists plotting an oceanaway. it's change that can broaden opportunity, or widen inequality. and whether we like itor not, the pace of this change will only accelerate.

america has been through big changes before – wars and depression, the influ_ ofimmigrants, workers fighting for a fair deal, and movements to e_pand civil rights. each time,there have been those who told us to fear the future; who claimed we could slam the brakes onchange, promising to restore past glory if we just got some group or idea that wasthreatening america under control. and each time, we overcame those fears. we did not, inthe words of lincoln, adhere to the “dogmas of the quiet past.” instead we thought anew, andacted anew. we made change work for us, always e_tending america's promise outward, to thene_t frontier, to more and more people. and because we did – because we saw opportunitywhere others saw only peril – we emerged stronger and better than before.

what was true then can be true now. our unique strengths as a nation – our optimism andwork ethic, our spirit of discovery and innovation, our diversity and commitment to the ruleof law – these things give us everything we need to ensure prosperity and security forgenerations to come.

in fact, it's that spirit that made the progress of these past seven years possible. it's how werecovered from the worst economic crisis in generations. it's how we reformed our health caresystem, and reinvented our energy sector; how we delivered more care and benefits to ourtroops and veterans, and how we secured the freedom in every state to marry the person welove.

but such progress is not inevitable. it is the result of choices we make together. and we facesuch choices right now. will we respond to the changes of our time with fear, turning inward asa nation, and turning against each other as a people? or will we face the future withconfidence in who we are, what we stand for, and the incredible things we can do together?

so let's talk about the future, and four big questions that we as a country have to answer –regardless of who the ne_t president is, or who controls the ne_t congress.

first, how do we give everyone a fair shot at opportunity and security in this new economy?

second, how do we make technology work for us, and not against us – especially when it comesto solving urgent challenges like climate change?

third, how do we keep america safe and lead the world without becoming its policeman?

and finally, how can we make our politics reflect what's best in us, and not what's worst?

let me start with the economy, and a basic fact: the united states of america, right now, hasthe strongest, most durable economy in the world. we're in the middle of the longest streakof private-sector job creation in history. more than 14 million new jobs; the strongest two yearsof job growth since the ‘90s; an unemployment rate cut in half. our auto industry just had itsbest year ever. manufacturing has created nearly 900,000 new jobs in the past si_ years. andwe've done all this while cutting our deficits by almost three-quarters.

anyone claiming that america's economy is in decline is peddling fiction. what is true – andthe reason that a lot of americans feel an_ious – is that the economy has been changing inprofound ways, changes that started long before the great recession hit and haven't let up.today, technology doesn't just replace jobs on the assembly line, but any job where work canbe automated. companies in a global economy can locate anywhere, and face toughercompetition. as a result, workers have less leverage for a raise. companies have less loyaltyto their communities. and more and more wealth and income is concentrated at the very top.

all these trends have squeezed workers, even when they have jobs; even when the economy isgrowing. it's made it harder for a hardworking family to pull itself out of poverty, harder foryoung people to start on their careers, and tougher for workers to retire when they want to. andalthough none of these trends are unique to america, they do offend our uniquely americanbelief that everybody who works hard should get a fair shot.

for the past seven years, our goal has been a growing economy that works better for everybody.we've made progress. but we need to make more. and despite all the political arguments we'vehad these past few years, there are some areas where americans broadly agree.

we agree that real opportunity requires every american to get the education and training theyneed to land a good-paying job. the bipartisan reform of no child left behind was animportant start, and together, we've increased early childhood education, lifted high schoolgraduation rates to new highs, and boosted graduates in fields like engineering. in the comingyears, we should build on that progress, by providing pre-k for all, offering every student thehands-on computer science and math classes that make them job-ready on day one, and weshould recruit and support more great teachers for our kids.

and we have to make college affordable for every american. because no hardworking studentshould be stuck in the red. we've already reduced student loan payments to ten percent of aborrower's income. now, we've actually got to cut the cost of college. providing two years ofcommunity college at no cost for every responsible student is one of the best ways to do that,and i'm going to keep fighting to get that started this year.

of course, a great education isn't all we need in this new economy. we also need benefits andprotections that provide a basic measure of security. after all, it's not much of a stretch tosay that some of the only people in america who are going to work the same job, in the sameplace, with a health and retirement package, for 30 years, are sitting in this chamber. foreveryone else, especially folks in their forties and fifties, saving for retirement or bouncing backfrom job loss has gotten a lot tougher. americans understand that at some point in theircareers, they may have to retool and retrain. but they shouldn't lose what they've alreadyworked so hard to build.

that's why social security and medicare are more important than ever; we shouldn't weakenthem, we should strengthen them. and for americans short of retirement, basic benefitsshould be just as mobile as everything else is today. that's what the affordable care act is allabout. it's about filling the gaps in employer-based care so that when we lose a job, or go backto school, or start that new business, we'll still have coverage. nearly eighteen million havegained coverage so far. health care inflation has slowed. and our businesses have created jobsevery single month since it became law.

now, i'm guessing we won't agree on health care anytime soon. but there should be other waysboth parties can improve economic security. say a hardworking american loses his job – weshouldn't just make sure he can get unemployment insurance; we should make sure thatprogram encourages him to retrain for a business that's ready to hire him. if that new jobdoesn't pay as much, there should be a system of wage insurance in place so that he can stillpay his bills. and even if he's going from job to job, he should still be able to save forretirement and take his savings with him. that's the way we make the new economy workbetter for everyone.

i also know speaker ryan has talked about his interest in tackling poverty. america is aboutgiving everybody willing to work a hand up, and i'd welcome a serious discussion aboutstrategies we can all support, like e_panding ta_ cuts for low-income workers without kids.

but there are other areas where it's been more difficult to find agreement over the last sevenyears – namely what role the government should play in making sure the system's not rigged infavor of the wealthiest and biggest corporations. and here, the american people have a choiceto make.

i believe a thriving private sector is the lifeblood of our economy. i think there are outdatedregulations that need to be changed, and there's red tape that needs to be cut. but after yearsof record corporate profits, working families won't get more opportunity or bigger paychecksby letting big banks or big oil or hedge funds make their own rules at the e_pense of everyoneelse; or by allowing attacks on collective bargaining to go unanswered. food stamp recipientsdidn't cause the financial crisis; recklessness on wall street did. immigrants aren't the reasonwages haven't gone up enough; those decisions are made in the boardrooms that too often putquarterly earnings over long-term returns. it's sure not the average family watching tonightthat avoids paying ta_es through offshore accounts. in this new economy, workers and start-upsand small businesses need more of a voice, not less. the rules should work for them. and thisyear i plan to lift up the many businesses who've figured out that doing right by their workersends up being good for their shareholders, their customers, and their communities, so that wecan spread those best practices across america.

in fact, many of our best corporate citizens are also our most creative. this brings me to thesecond big question we have to answer as a country: how do we reignite that spirit ofinnovation to meet our biggest challenges?

si_ty years ago, when the russians beat us into space, we didn't deny sputnik was up there.we didn't argue about the science, or shrink our research and development budget. we built aspace program almost overnight, and twelve years later, we were walking on the moon.

that spirit of discovery is in our dna. we're thomas edison and the wright brothers andgeorge washington carver. we're grace hopper and katherine johnson and sally ride. we'reevery immigrant and entrepreneur from boston to austin to silicon valley racing to shape abetter world. and over the past seven years, we've nurtured that spirit.

we've protected an open internet, and taken bold new steps to get more students and low-income americans online. we've launched ne_t-generation manufacturing hubs, and online toolsthat give an entrepreneur everything he or she needs to start a business in a single day.

but we can do so much more. last year, vice president biden said that with a new moonshot,america can cure cancer. last month, he worked with this congress to give scientists at thenational institutes of health the strongest resources they've had in over a decade. tonight, i'mannouncing a new national effort to get it done. and because he's gone to the mat for all of us,on so many issues over the past forty years, i'm putting joe in charge of mission control. forthe loved ones we've all lost, for the family we can still save, let's make america the countrythat cures cancer once and for all.

medical research is critical. we need the same level of commitment when it comes todeveloping clean energy sources.

look, if anybody still wants to dispute the science around climate change, have at it. you'll bepretty lonely, because you'll be debating our military, most of america's business leaders, themajority of the american people, almost the entire scientific community, and 200 nationsaround the world who agree it's a problem and intend to solve it.

but even if the planet wasn't at stake; even if 2022 wasn't the warmest year on record – until2022 turned out even hotter – why would we want to pass up the chance for americanbusinesses to produce and sell the energy of the future?

seven years ago, we made the single biggest investment in clean energy in our history. hereare the results. in fields from iowa to te_as, wind power is now cheaper than dirtier,conventional power. on rooftops from arizona to new york, solar is saving americans tens ofmillions of dollars a year on their energy bills, and employs more americans than coal – in jobsthat pay better than average. we're taking steps to give homeowners the freedom to generateand store their own energy – something environmentalists and tea partiers have teamed up tosupport. meanwhile, we've cut our imports of foreign oil by nearly si_ty percent, and cut carbonpollution more than any other country on earth.

gas under two bucks a gallon ain't bad, either.

now we've got to accelerate the transition away from dirty energy. rather than subsidizethe past, we should invest in the future – especially in communities that rely on fossil fuels.that's why i'm going to push to change the way we manage our oil and coal resources, so thatthey better reflect the costs they impose on ta_payers and our planet. that way, we putmoney back into those communities and put tens of thousands of americans to work building a21st century transportation system.

none of this will happen overnight, and yes, there are plenty of entrenched interests whowant to protect the status quo. but the jobs we'll create, the money we'll save, and the planetwe'll preserve – that's the kind of future our kids and grandkids deserve.

climate change is just one of many issues where our security is linked to the rest of the world.and that's why the third big question we have to answer is how to keep america safe andstrong without either isolating ourselves or trying to nation-build everywhere there's a problem.

i told you earlier all the talk of america's economic decline is political hot air. well, so is all therhetoric you hear about our enemies getting stronger and america getting weaker. the unitedstates of america is the most powerful nation on earth. period. it's not even close. we spendmore on our military than the ne_t eight nations combined. our troops are the finest fightingforce in the history of the world. no nation dares to attack us or our allies because they knowthat's the path to ruin. surveys show our standing around the world is higher than when i waselected to this office, and when it comes to every important international issue, people of theworld do not look to beijing or moscow to lead – they call us.

as someone who begins every day with an intelligence briefing, i know this is a dangeroustime. but that's not because of diminished american strength or some looming superpower. intoday's world, we're threatened less by evil empires and more by failing states. the middle eastis going through a transformation that will play out for a generation, rooted in conflicts thatdate back millennia. economic headwinds blow from a chinese economy in transition. even astheir economy contracts, russia is pouring resources to prop up ukraine and syria – states theysee slipping away from their orbit. and the international system we built after world war ii isnow struggling to keep pace with this new reality.

it's up to us to help remake that system. and that means we have to set priorities.

priority number one is protecting the american people and going after terrorist networks. bothal qaeda and now isil pose a direct threat to our people, because in today's world, even ahandful of terrorists who place no value on human life, including their own, can do a lot ofdamage. they use the internet to poison the minds of individuals inside our country; theyundermine our allies.

but as we focus on destroying isil, over-the-top claims that this is world war iii just play intotheir hands. masses of fighters on the back of pickup trucks and twisted souls plotting inapartments or garages pose an enormous danger to civilians and must be stopped. but theydo not threaten our national e_istence. that's the story isil wants to tell; that's the kind ofpropaganda they use to recruit. we don't need to build them up to show that we're serious,nor do we need to push away vital allies in this fight by echoing the lie that isil isrepresentative of one of the world's largest religions. we just need to call them what they are– killers and fanatics who have to be rooted out, hunted down, and destroyed.

that's e_actly what we are doing. for more than a year, america has led a coalition of morethan 60 countries to cut off isil's financing, disrupt their plots, stop the flow of terroristfighters, and stamp out their vicious ideology. with nearly 10,000 air strikes, we are takingout their leadership, their oil, their training camps, and their weapons. we are training, arming,and supporting forces who are steadily reclaiming territory in iraq and syria.

if this congress is serious about winning this war, and wants to send a message to our troopsand the world, you should finally authorize the use of military force against isil. take a vote.but the american people should know that with or without congressional action, isil will learnthe same lessons as terrorists before them. if you doubt america's commitment – or mine – tosee that justice is done, ask osama bin laden. ask the leader of al qaeda in yemen, who wastaken out last year, or the perpetrator of the benghazi attacks, who sits in a prison cell. whenyou come after americans, we go after you. it may take time, but we have long memories, andour reach has no limit.

our foreign policy must be focused on the threat from isil and al qaeda, but it can't stopthere. for even without isil, instability will continue for decades in many parts of the world –in the middle east, in afghanistan and pakistan, in parts of central america, africa and asia.some of these places may become safe havens for new terrorist networks; others will fall victimto ethnic conflict, or famine, feeding the ne_t wave of refugees. the world will look to us tohelp solve these problems, and our answer needs to be more than tough talk or calls to carpetbomb civilians. that may work as a tv sound bite, but it doesn't pass muster on the worldstage.

we also can't try to take over and rebuild every country that falls into crisis. that's notleadership; that's a recipe for quagmire, spilling american blood and treasure that ultimatelyweakens us. it's the lesson of vietnam, of iraq – and we should have learned it by now.

fortunately, there's a smarter approach, a patient and disciplined strategy that uses everyelement of our national power. it says america will always act, alone if necessary, to protectour people and our allies; but on issues of global concern, we will mobilize the world to workwith us, and make sure other countries pull their own weight.

that's our approach to conflicts like syria, where we're partnering with local forces and leadinginternational efforts to help that broken society pursue a lasting peace.

that's why we built a global coalition, with sanctions and principled diplomacy, to prevent anuclear-armed iran. as we speak, iran has rolled back its nuclear program, shipped out itsuranium stockpile, and the world has avoided another war.

that's how we stopped the spread of ebola in west africa. our military, our doctors, and ourdevelopment workers set up the platform that allowed other countries to join us in stampingout that epidemic.

that's how we forged a trans-pacific partnership to open markets, protect workers and theenvironment, and advance american leadership in asia. it cuts 18,000 ta_es on products madein america, and supports more good jobs. with tpp, china doesn't set the rules in that region,we do. you want to show our strength in this century? approve this agreement. give us thetools to enforce it.

fifty years of isolating cuba had failed to promote democracy, setting us back in latinamerica. that's why we restored diplomatic relations, opened the door to travel andcommerce, and positioned ourselves to improve the lives of the cuban people. you want toconsolidate our leadership and credibility in the hemisphere? recognize that the cold waris over. lift the embargo.

american leadership in the 21st century is not a choice between ignoring the rest of the world –e_cept when we kill terrorists; or occupying and rebuilding whatever society is unraveling.leadership means a wise application of military power, and rallying the world behind causesthat are right. it means seeing our foreign assistance as part of our national security, notcharity. when we lead nearly 200 nations to the most ambitious agreement in history to fightclimate change – that helps vulnerable countries, but it also protects our children. when wehelp ukraine defend its democracy, or colombia resolve a decades-long war, thatstrengthens the international order we depend upon. when we help african countries feed theirpeople and care for the sick, that prevents the ne_t pandemic from reaching our shores. rightnow, we are on track to end the scourge of hiv/aids, and we have the capacity toaccomplish the same thing with malaria – something i'll be pushing this congress to fund thisyear.

that's strength. that's leadership. and that kind of leadership depends on the power of oure_ample. that is why i will keep working to shut down the prison at guantanamo: it'se_pensive, it's unnecessary, and it only serves as a recruitment brochure for our enemies.

that's why we need to reject any politics that targets people because of race or religion. thisisn't a matter of political correctness. it's a matter of understanding what makes us strong. theworld respects us not just for our arsenal; it respects us for our diversity and our opennessand the way we respect every faith. his holiness, pope francis, told this body from the very spoti stand tonight that “to imitate the hatred and violence of tyrants and murderers is the bestway to take their place.” when politicians insult muslims, when a mosque is vandalized, or a kidbullied, that doesn't make us safer. that's not telling it like it is. it's just wrong. it diminishesus in the eyes of the world. it makes it harder to achieve our goals. and it betrays who we areas a country.

“we the people.” our constitution begins with those three simple words, words we've come torecognize mean all the people, not just some; words that insist we rise and fall together. thatbrings me to the fourth, and maybe the most important thing i want to say tonight.

the future we want – opportunity and security for our families; a rising standard of living anda sustainable, peaceful planet for our kids – all that is within our reach. but it will only happenif we work together. it will only happen if we can have rational, constructive debates.

it will only happen if we fi_ our politics.

a better politics doesn't mean we have to agree on everything. this is a big country, withdifferent regions and attitudes and interests. that's one of our strengths, too. our foundersdistributed power between states and branches of government, and e_pected us to argue, justas they did, over the size and shape of government, over commerce and foreign relations, overthe meaning of liberty and the imperatives of security.

but democracy does require basic bonds of trust between its citizens. it doesn't work if wethink the people who disagree with us are all motivated by malice, or that our politicalopponents are unpatriotic. democracy grinds to a halt without a willingness to compromise;or when even basic facts are contested, and we listen only to those who agree with us. ourpublic life withers when only the most e_treme voices get attention. most of all, democracybreaks down when the average person feels their voice doesn't matter; that the system isrigged in favor of the rich or the powerful or some narrow interest.

too many americans feel that way right now. it's one of the few regrets of my presidency – thatthe rancor and suspicion between the parties has gotten worse instead of better. there's nodoubt a president with the gifts of lincoln or roosevelt might have better bridged the divide,and i guarantee i'll keep trying to be better so long as i hold this office.

but, my fellow americans, this cannot be my task – or any president's – alone. there are awhole lot of folks in this chamber who would like to see more cooperation, a more elevateddebate in washington, but feel trapped by the demands of getting elected. i know; you've toldme. and if we want a better politics, it's not enough to just change a congressman or a senatoror even a president; we have to change the system to reflect our better selves.

we have to end the practice of drawing our congressional districts so that politicians can picktheir voters, and not the other way around. we have to reduce the influence of money in ourpolitics, so that a handful of families and hidden interests can't bankroll our elections – and ifour e_isting approach to campaign finance can't pass muster in the courts, we need to worktogether to find a real solution. we've got to make voting easier, not harder, and modernizeit for the way we live now. and over the course of this year, i intend to travel the country topush for reforms that do.

but i can't do these things on my own. changes in our political process – in not just who getselected but how they get elected – that will only happen when the american people demand it.it will depend on you. that's what's meant by a government of, by, and for the people.

what i'm asking for is hard. it's easier to be cynical; to accept that change isn't possible, andpolitics is hopeless, and to believe that our voices and actions don't matter. but if we give upnow, then we forsake a better future. those with money and power will gain greater controlover the decisions that could send a young soldier to war, or allow another economic disaster,or roll back the equal rights and voting rights that generations of americans have fought, evendied, to secure. as frustration grows, there will be voices urging us to fall back into tribes, toscapegoat fellow citizens who don't look like us, or pray like us, or vote like we do, or share thesame background.

we can't afford to go down that path. it won't deliver the economy we want, or the security wewant, but most of all, it contradicts everything that makes us the envy of the world.

so, my fellow americans, whatever you may believe, whether you prefer one party or no party,our collective future depends on your willingness to uphold your obligations as a citizen. tovote. to speak out. to stand up for others, especially the weak, especially the vulnerable,knowing that each of us is only here because somebody, somewhere, stood up for us. to stayactive in our public life so it reflects the goodness and decency and optimism that i see in theamerican people every single day.

it won't be easy. our brand of democracy is hard. but i can promise that a year from now,when i no longer hold this office, i'll be right there with you as a citizen – inspired by thosevoices of fairness and vision, of grit and good humor and kindness that have helped americatravel so far. voices that help us see ourselves not first and foremost as black or white or asianor latino, not as gay or straight, immigrant or native born; not as democrats or republicans,but as americans first, bound by a common creed. voices dr. king believed would have the finalword – voices of unarmed truth and unconditional love.

they're out there, those voices. they don't get a lot of attention, nor do they seek it, but theyare busy doing the work this country needs doing.

i see them everywhere i travel in this incredible country of ours. i see you. i know you'rethere. you're the reason why i have such incredible confidence in our future. because i seeyour quiet, sturdy citizenship all the time.

i see it in the worker on the assembly line who clocked e_tra shifts to keep his company open,and the boss who pays him higher wages to keep him on board.

i see it in the dreamer who stays up late to finish her science project, and the teacher whocomes in early because he knows she might someday cure a disease.

i see it in the american who served his time, and dreams of starting over – and the businessowner who gives him that second chance. the protester determined to prove that justicematters, and the young cop walking the beat, treating everybody with respect, doing the brave,quiet work of keeping us safe.

i see it in the soldier who gives almost everything to save his brothers, the nurse who tends tohim ‘til he can run a marathon, and the community that lines up to cheer him on.

it's the son who finds the courage to come out as who he is, and the father whose love for thatson overrides everything he's been taught.

i see it in the elderly woman who will wait in line to cast her vote as long as she has to; thenew citizen who casts his for the first time; the volunteers at the polls who believe every voteshould count, because each of them in different ways know how much that precious right isworth.

that's the america i know. that's the country we love. clear-eyed. big-hearted. optimistic thatunarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word. that's what makes me so hopefulabout our future. because of you. i believe in you. that's why i stand here confident that thestate of our union is strong.

thank you, god bless you, and god bless the united states of america.

第13篇 初中学生演讲稿800字:最后的一滴水

水是人类及一切生物最可求的东西,它曾滋润每一土地,让树木茁壮成长,给鸟儿们提供了一个温暧的家,为人们撑起一片儿阴凉,也曾让芳草萋萋,鲜花怒放,曾经更是让庄稼籽粒饱满,丰收满仓。可你没有想过如果没有水,那么世界又将丢去怎样?

炎炎六月,白花花的太阳太阳火烤着万物,大地的身躯已裂成龟壳状,庄稼树木都耷拉着脑袋,湖泊廋弱的体变得更加娇小了,鱼儿们慌乱地跳跃着,似乎在祈求什么,暗黄的河水发出刺鼻的臭味,人们在断电的屋子里痛苦不堪,如果恰巧在这时世界没有了一滴水,你将会怎么办。

没有水的日子,我们不能想象,所以我们要珍惜地球上仅有的水资源。可是我看见的却是每一条被污染的河流,而每一条都是暗黄肮脏,到处有排放污水的管道。所以我们要用手关紧正在滴水的水龙头,并加以宣讲节水的重要性,用一水多用的方法来代替随意浪费。

水对人们有着极为重要的地位,对人们的生活遍布极广。人们,漱口、洗脸、做饭、上厕所、洗手等都需要用水,而如果现在不珍惜用水的话,那么将来后悔就会你们自己。到那时可不要怨天尤人,这一切都是你们亲手造成的。有些人可能会说“地球有这么多的水,我浪费一点应该不会有什么在碍吧?”那么你的回答是错的,因为地球有这么多的人,如果一人一天浪费一点,那么一天将丢浪费掉多少水。你有没有想过,就是因为你浪费的这一点,导致地球损失多少吨水啊。据资料统计;百分之二十三的耕地面积严重污染,百分之五十的江河水流减少或被严重污染,百分之二十五的哺乳动物和百之十二的鸟类涉临灭绝,三分之一的土地面积面临沙漠化,八十个国家严重缺水,十亿人中受到荒漠化的威胁。

人可以几天不进食,但不可以几天不喝水。而现在,全地球有20亿人中正处于严重缺水状况!水的危机,已经向人类敲了警中!

一看到生活中,工作中、玩耍中、无时无不在浪费水资源。如果全世界的人,每人节约一滴水,那会有多少水啊?人们眼里那微不足道的一杯水,凝集着如此多的数据,令人可怕啊!被以为水用之不尽,取之不竭,如果真到了“水比油贵“那就悔之晚矣也?

水是生存之本,赶快行动起来珍惜和保护水资源吧!如果人类再恣意地破坏和浪费水资源,世界上最后一滴水将是人类自己的眼泪!

让我呼吁起来;不要让那最后一滴水成为你的眼泪,所以从现在开始,从你我出发,更好地珍惜每一滴水。

第14篇 最后一次升旗演讲稿

最后一次升旗演讲稿 篇一

一首歌词这样写道:“一切美好只是昨日沉醉,淡淡感受才是今天滋味;想想明天,又是日晒风吹,无惧无畏,不气不馁。”的确,昨天的快乐与悲伤,成功与失败,在今天看来也只能是回忆了。平平淡淡是今天的感受,但昨天是今天的基础,平凡是不凡的载体,吸取昨天的经验与教训,以饱满的热情投入到今天的工作中,明天自然会美好。

昨天我们在哪里?在想什么?在做什么?昨天我们在读高二,对高三满怀憧憬,满怀向往,或许也有人满心恐惧。而今天我们已真正踏上了人生中特殊而关键的一步——高三,请问,此时此刻,你是否还在向往?或者还在恐惧?或者还有其它的感受?

也许昨天我们已经在那个被称为没有硝烟的战场上闪现过自己的身影,但由于种种原因,我们不得不重新踏上这一征程,不得不重操旧业,重整旗鼓。

无论以前怎样,总之,志同才能道合,同一个志向使我们相聚高三,相聚南郊,我们选择了南郊这块沃土,就应该在这里勤勤垦垦地耕耘,为的是明年六月的收获,说到六月,不禁使我想起了昨天……

作为补习生,我有过这样的感触(当然,我的感触并不能代表所有的补习生):6月8号,从考场上出来时,我明显感觉到心情并不如预期的那么轻松与喜悦,反而更加沉重,那时,我心里不断地默念:“要是再给我一个月、哪怕十天,该多好啊!”

是啊!多努力一个月,甚至是多做几道数学题,多记几个英语单词,也许乾坤已被扭转,相信在场的大多数补习生都有这样的感触,但时光不可能倒流,后悔不起任何作用。

考完试后,紧接着是等待,当然是等待成绩,那种等待我觉得用“焦急”来形容已经不够份量,那是一种忐忑不安的等待,成绩总要揭晓,人总要面对现实,等待总会有个答案,同学的一个电话驱散了我内心所有的不安,使我变得出奇的平静,知道为什么吗?因为当电话那边小心翼翼地说出我的高考(高考新闻,高考说吧)成绩时,我全身发麻,头脑空白,已不知道什么叫不安,只是觉得一切已尘埃落定。再怎么不安也于事无补了!在亲朋好友的面前,我没有流下一滴怯懦的眼泪,而是把它深深地埋在了我的心里,因为我知道:这一切都是自己挣得的,是自己选择的,是自己造成的,所以更多的是后悔,是自责,而不是委屈的泪水。

再后来,看着同学们的录取通知书纷纷而至,看着同学的脸上露出幸福的笑容,看着同学的父母满意地点头,看着人家大摆宴席举怀相庆,看着人家迈着愉悦的步伐走向心中的大学……那种痛苦是难以言表的,起初是撕心裂肺、痛不欲生,后来渐渐地能舒缓些了。如果没有参加过高考的同学认为“撕心裂肺、痛不欲生”这两个词用得太夸张的话,那么我想真诚地告诉你们:这种感觉不要轻易去尝试。同时,我也想告诉我们补习生同学:一定不能再吃回头草,从哪里跌倒,便从哪里爬起,那种痛苦最好不要再来一次。

命运是公平的,有付出就会有回报。我们不必后悔,不必抱怨,“悟以往之不谏,知来者之可追,实迷途其未远,觉今是而昨非。”

不管以前浪费了多少时间,干了多少不应该的事,不管我们的知识还有多么大的欠缺,既然我们毅然地选择了高考,选择了补习,我们就没有理由后退,没有资格去痛苦,选择自己所追求的目标,追求自己所选择的目标,我们应该为自己的选择负责,为自己的选择承担一切。

杜牧有言“秦人不暇自哀,而后人哀之,后人哀之而不鉴之,亦使后人而复哀后人矣。”补习生的经验教训是值得应届生借鉴的,只有这样,才能避免重蹈覆辙,同时这句话也警示我们补习生同学要吸取教训,不能再犯同样的错误。

也许,昨天我们还在课堂上睡觉;

也许,昨天我们还在自习时闲聊;

也许,昨天我们还为一些小事和同学争执不休;

也许,昨天我们还因一次失败而落寞惆怅;

但既然已成为昨天,就让记忆把它封存,让历史把它定格。每天早上,伴着黎明的阳光,我们应该告诉自己:今天是全新的一天,是充满希望的一天,今天的我已不是昨天的我,今天的我应该充满活力,充满激情,应该带着自己的梦想奔跑在青春的路上。

明日复明日,明日何其多,人生又能有多少个明日让你我推拖!把握一个今天,胜过两个明天,为了高考,我们斗志昂扬,我们无所畏惧,是高考激发了我们的斗志,是高考激起了我们对明天的追求。但这种斗志不仅仅要用在备战高考上,更多地要用在一生的奋斗中,为了明天,让我们把“成才报国”深深地植根于心中,肩负起“成才报国”的重压,我们就会感到高考只不过是人生中数不尽的大大小小的考试中的一个,为了明天,从今天开始,从现在开始,行动、行动,全力以赴我们心中的梦。

最后一次升旗演讲稿 篇二

老师们,同学们:

早上好!今天我讲话的题目是:励志和勤奋是成才的必由之路。

“励”是鼓舞,劝勉;“志”是关于将来要有所作为的意愿和决心,是有识之士的心愿。“励志”是激发文气,以求有所作为的意思。

励志,首先要有志向,有高尚、远大的理想和明确的奋斗目标。

少年周恩来在全班同学面前表明了自己的心迹:要“为中华之崛起而读书”,而当时与他同班的其他同学读书的目的是为明理、为做官、为挣钱、为吃饭,只是为了满足个人修养和生活的需要,而周恩来不愿意自己的民族再软弱,不愿意自己的同胞受欺辱,他把个人的学习与民族振兴的大业联系起来,立下远大志向,为祖国的兴盛而学习和奋斗,后来成为新中国的第一任,受到全国人民乃至世界各国人民的爱戴。可见,高尚、远大的理想和明确的奋斗目标对人一生的引领作用有多么巨大!

其次,励志一定要有实践,要为实现志向而进行不懈的努力。

明朝的宋濂,他就是我们浦江人,家境贫寒但自幼好学,向别人借书来看;冬天砚台里的墨汁结成了冰,手指冻僵了他也从不停止;成年以后,他背着经书到很远的地方去寻师求教,天气严寒,路途险恶,脚上的皮肤冻裂了都不知道;到了老师那里,耐心等待,虚心请教;生活清苦,他一天只能吃上两顿饭,没有鲜美的鱼肉,穿着破衣烂袄,生活在一群衣着华丽的纨绔子弟中间,却乐在其中,一点也不羡慕别人。他一生刻苦学习,后来成为了太子的老师,明朝“开国文臣之首”。

现在,我们正处在长知识、长身体的关键时期,学习是我们目前最主要的任务,是一个在老师指导下从无知到有知再到创新的过程,也是应该伴随我们一生的事情。我们耳熟能详的关于勤学的名句可以说数不胜数:天才出于勤奋;业精于勤荒于嬉;书山有路勤为径,学海无涯苦作舟……但是光记住这些名言警句还远远不够,勤奋学习应该体现在我们生活和学习中的每一个环节,按时起床,充分预习,认真听讲,积极思考,踊跃发言,及时复习,独立作业,敢于质疑,善于合作,勇于创新;摸索并掌握科学的、适合于自己的学习方法,重视每一门学科,关注社会和时代的发展,并且坚持不懈,才能给自己的终身发展奠定坚实的基础,创造成功的机会。

人生是一条射线,以我们的出生为起点,可以无限延伸。理想有多高远,学习有多勤奋,坚持有多长久,这条射线就有多长,我们的人生轨迹就有多深,价值就有多大,意义就有多远。“黑发不知勤学早,白首方悔读书迟。”我希望我们礼张中小的每一位同学们都能牢记“和谐、勤奋、求实、创新”的校训,树立远大理想,坚定报国信念,勤奋学习,汲取知识,锻炼能力,提高素质,增长才干,成为社会主义事业的合格接班人。

谢谢大家!

最后一次升旗演讲稿 篇三

在这热情奔放、充满收获的季节里,非常荣幸作为教师代表为我们高三学子们顺利完成高中学业而祝贺,也为你们即将出征走向高考考场而壮行!在此,我谨代表全体教师向你们献上我们最诚挚的祝福。

高中是一本太仓促的书,在不知不觉间,三年的时光,一千多页就这样匆匆翻过。那么多生动的细节,那么多精彩的瞬间早已深深铭刻在我们彼此的心头。是你们用青春与热情挥洒出十八岁的绚烂和辉煌,是你们用勤奋与智慧编织了高中生活的丰富和多彩。想起三年前,你们怀揣梦想走进一中,带着稚嫩的笑脸、好奇的眼睛去欣赏名人园、凯旋门;又带着求知的渴望去艮岳假山探寻孔孟先贤思想文化里的精髓。三年来,一中是你们的校园,是你们的乐园,更是你们的家园。一言楼留下你们勤奋苦学的身影,二雅楼依旧回荡着你们剑指高考的豪迈。鉴湖的波纹荡漾着你们的欢歌笑语,雷锋广场一砖一石见证了你们挥汗如雨的飒爽英姿。可以说,你们的足迹已经融入到一中永久的记忆。你们就是我们校园里那道最美的风景!

再过三天,你们就要参加高考了,这是一次知识、能力、心理、体能的综合测试,是一场激烈的竞争。作为大学入学的选拔性考试,高考是人生走向成功旅途中的一个重要路标。但是,我们还应该明确:一次考试的成功并不代表人生的成功,高考不是生活的全部,高考成绩只是一个相对的衡量标准,人生的最后成功也不完全取决于一次高考。同时,掌握知识与运用知识在高考中固然重要,但更重要的是心态稳定和正常发挥。可以形象地说,高考既是知识战也是心理战,越是高考期间,越要心平气和,一如往常。所以,同学们对高考既要充满信心,又要有一个平和的心态。你们接受着最好的教育,也做好了充分的准备。微笑进考场,正常去应对,你们就是最棒的。我们全体老师相信你们,祝福你们!

同学们,在即将离开母校之前,请用手轻抚母校的一草一木,用心感受老师的一言一行,用情体味和学弟学妹共同学习切磋的点点滴滴,这将是你以后最珍贵的记忆。当你离开校园,继续追逐青春的梦想时,请恪守“砺志、尚礼、博学、慎思”的校训砥砺人生,服务祖国,回报社会。我们毕业的莘莘学子中,有威加四海、勋满中华的军旅将军;有神思飞扬、经邦治国的科学巨擘;也有引领发展、商海弄潮的经济贤达。你们当以他们为榜样,用智慧去改天换地、用实干去开创先河,用一中人特有的豪迈去“跨过那站着的前人”,继续谱写我们一中华丽的乐章。

同学们,外面的世界,海阔天空;外面的世界,大浪淘沙。不论你走到哪里,不论你走多远,你都会在老师期待的目光里;不论你从事什么职业,不论你飞多高,你都会在母校的关注里。希望大家珍惜这份情,无论何时,都不要忘了自己的家、自己的母校。

同学们:长叮咛、短嘱咐,万语千言难以诉尽老师对你们的依依不舍,就让我们把这份浓重的师生情谊化为对你们的美好祝福——祝你们在高考中取得理想的成绩,快乐幸福地走进新学府的大门,开创人生另一个辉煌!老师坚信:你们的生命会因为你们精彩的一跃而灿烂夺目,一中的历史会因你们奋力的一搏而更加辉煌!

第15篇 学生开学演讲稿:最后一个开学典礼

大家上午好!

很荣幸能够代表九年级在这样一个盛大的集会上九年级开学典礼发言稿。三年前,我来到江声,曾站在这儿,用稚嫩的童声呐喊出青春的理想;现在,我又站在了这讲台上,只不过却是我初中阶段最后一个开学典礼。我的心情仍是那么地紧张和激动,只是更多了浓浓的亲切和几分即将分别的惆怅。

此时此刻,我想到了与我们朝夕相处的可敬的老师们——对待工作严肃认真,时刻关心我们生活学习的班主任;善解人意的语文老师;耐心的数学老师;热情的英语老师;和蔼的物理老师;循循善诱的化学老师;阳光的体育老师。更有日日夜夜在工作岗位上艰苦奋斗的行政领导和无私奉献的其他老师们。

是你们的辛勤工作,是你们的呕心沥血使我们这些懵懂少年成长为有理想、有抱负的青少年;是你们用知识的清泉浇灌我们干涸的心田,使我们由一株株柔弱的小树成长为生机勃勃,焕发着顽强生命力的大树。在这里,让我代表所有的同学,向全体辛勤耕耘的老师们说一声:谢谢!你们辛苦了!

我还不禁想到了与我情同手足的同学们。忘不了教室里的激烈辩论、共同钻研;忘不了寝室里的谈天说地,海侃神吹;也忘不了运动场上的飒爽英姿、呐喊助威。共同的学习和生活让我们结下了深厚的友谊。可是,岁月匆匆,时光飞逝,留给我们在江声的日子已屈指可数。不管以后身在何处,我们决不忘记自己曾经在江声这片神圣的土地上学习过、生活过、奋斗过。这段纯真的友谊、难忘的经历将是我们人生道路上的宝贵财富。

九年级的伙伴们,今天,宣告着我们初中阶段的最后一个学期的战斗正式拉开了帷幕。学习了三年,奋斗了三年,就是为了通过中考这块垫脚石顺利进入理想的高中,以继续为人生的理想而奋斗!三年磨一剑,现在不正是我们显露锋芒的大好时机吗?人生能有几回搏,此时不搏待何时?

那么,从今天开始,让我们以只争朝夕的精神和精益求精的学风,总结学习经验,调整好心态,以最好的学习方法,最佳的精神状态,投入到学习中来,集中思想,发奋学习,多学多问,同时也要注意身体,劳逸结合,使自己在初中的最后一个学期来一个腾飞。我相信大家一定有信心也有勇气面对即将到来的中考,参加这一人生难得的机遇和挑战,谱写我们江声实验学校更加灿烂辉煌的新篇章!

海阔凭鱼跃,天高任鸟下。七、八年级的学弟学妹们,你们也应该庆幸能选择我们这个环境一流、质量一流的学校,更应该珍惜这一切的拥有。不用汗水浇铸的果实不会甜美,不用行动证明的誓言不会实现。愿同学们新年里勤奋进取、乐观向上,向更高的目标、更强的力量,更好的素质迈进!

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