2016年3月31日 星期四

week5-AlphaGo

Artificial intelligence: Google's AlphaGo beats Go master Lee Se-dol


12 March 2016

Google's AlphaGo program was playing against Lee Se-dol in Seoul, in South Korea.
Mr Lee had been confident he would win before the competition started.
The Chinese board game is considered to be a much more complex challenge for a computer than chess.
"AlphaGo played consistently from beginning to the end while Lee, as he is only human, showed some mental vulnerability," one of Lee's former coaches, Kwon Kap-Yong, told the AFP news agency. Mr Lee is considered a champion Go player, having won numerous professional tournaments in a long, successful career.

Go is a game of two players who take turns putting black or white stones on a 19-by-19 grid. Players win by taking control of the most territory on the board, which they achieve by surrounding their opponent's pieces with their own.
In the first game of the series, AlphaGo triumphed by a very narrow margin - Mr Lee had led for most of the match, but AlphaGo managed to build up a strong lead in its closing stages.

After losing the second match to Deep Mind, Lee Se-dol said he was "speechless" adding that the AlphaGo machine played a "nearly perfect game". The two experts who provided commentary for the YouTube stream of for the third game said that it had been a complicated match to follow.

They said that Lee Se-dol had brought his "top game" but that AlphaGo had won "in great style". The AlphaGo system was developed by British computer company DeepMind which was bought by Google in 2014. It has built up its expertise by studying older games and teasing out patterns of play. And, according to DeepMind chief executive Demis Hassabis, it has also spent a lot of time just playing the game.

"It played itself, different versions of itself, millions and millions of times and each time got incrementally slightly better - it learns from its mistakes," he told the BBC before the matches started. This virtuous circle of constant improvement meant the super computer went into the five-match series stronger than when it beat the European champion late last year.

Then the goal posts moved. The critics said chess was beyond competing capability because it needed human intuition and creativity.
Critics claimed a horizon where computers might beat some professionals but certainly not grand masters. Humans have limited memory and need brilliant pattern perception and creative strategies to win.

So the critics turned to Go as the impossible. Even with today's vast computer memories and incredibly fast processors (which have doubled more than eight times since Deep Blue), the ancient game will not yield to brute force. The size of the search required for Go is larger than chess by more than the number of atoms in the universe.

When Facebook announced earlier this year that their program had beaten a strong Go amateur, jaws dropped in the AI community - and fell to the floor that same day when Google's Deep Mind genius team announced their AlphaGo beat the European champion 5-0.

To beat one of the world's top players, Deep Mind used a mixture of clever strategies to make the search much smaller. They trained their machine on 30 million expert moves to start with, and then the learning machine played against itself millions of times. It worked - the holy grail is in the bag and the goal posts can shift no further.
Does this mean AI is now smarter than us and will kill us mere humans? Certainly not. AlphaGo doesn't care if it wins or loses. It doesn't even care if it plays and it certainly couldn't make you a cup of tea after the game. Does it mean that AI will soon take your job? Possibly you should be more worried about that.



Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-35785875

Key words:

1.executive (n.)
主管
2.incrementally (adv.)
增值地
3.intuition (n.)
直覺
4.perception (n.)
觀念,看法,認識
5.amateur
(n.) 業餘愛好者
Structure of the Lead
      WHO- AlphaGo, Lee Se-do
      WHEN- 12 March 2016
      WHAT- The Chinese board game
      WHY- Not mentioned
      WHERE- Seoul, in South Korea
      HOW- AlphaGo beat Lee Se-do 4-1

2016年3月24日 星期四

week4-香港書商失蹤

'Smear campaign' against Chinese president linked to disappearance of Hong Kong booksellers

5 January 2016


The suspected abductions of five Hong Kong booksellers who specialized in salacious books about China’s Communist party elite are an attempt to stamp out a “smear campaign” against Chinese president Xi Jinping, a source has claimed.
Five men linked to the Causeway Bay Books shop in the former British colony have vanished since mid-October, in southern
 China, Thailand and, last week, Hong Kong. They include publisher Gui Minhai, the bookshop’s 51-year-old owner, and Lee Bo, his 65-year-old business partner.
Lee disappeared in Hong Kong last Wednesday evening, sparking protests from politicians and activists who accuse Chinese security officials of carrying out the illegal snatchings in order to silence the former colony’s lucrative trade in banned political books.

Government critics describe Lee’s suspected abduction to mainland China as the latest sign of Beijing’s erosion of civil rights in what is supposedly a semi-autonomous territory.

“Lee Bo’s case is a game changer. It shows that ‘one country, two systems’ has completely collapsed,” said Bao Pu, a prominent Hong Kong publisher, referring to the political model introduced after handover in 1997 guaranteeing continued freedom to the territory’s residents.

Mystery still surrounds the disappearances of the five booksellers. China has repeatedly denied knowledge of the case, despite growing suspicion that its security forces were responsible for the booksellers’ detentions.

On Monday night it emerged that Lee’s wife had attempted to withdraw a missing person report filed with Hong Kong police after receiving a faxed copy of a letter, supposedly penned by her husband.

The letter’s author, who claimed to be Lee, said he had travelled to mainland China of his own accord to assist with “an investigation which may take a while”.

“I am now very good and everything is normal,” the author wrote, without explaining how he reached mainland China without his travel documents or attracting the attention of immigration officials.

In an interview about three weeks before his own disappearance, Lee told the Guardian he suspected the disappearance of his partner Gui Minhai on 17 October was linked to a mystery book Gui had been preparing to publish.
Lee sought to distance him and the other three booksellers who had already gone missing from the title, claiming to not even know its name. “The content of the book was solely Mr Gui’s business,” he said. “It has got nothing to do with those three guys in Hong Kong. They are just selling books or they were just selling books. They know nothing. They had nothing to do with the content of the book.”

Lee said he suspected his colleagues had been taken in an attempt to prevent the publication of the mystery tome. “I think those people didn’t want the book to come out. They got everybody involved in that book to make sure that the book is not out there,” he told the Guardian.
The Hong Kong-based publishing source, who has direct knowledge of the book’s contents, said the volume was to have been called “Xi and his six women”. Despite its title, the book was mainly focused on just one woman, the source said: a Chinese television presenter whom it claimed Xi had known before he married his current wife, Peng Liyuan, in 1987.
Beijing has long been infuriated by the sensational – and often implausible – political exposés about its leaders’ private lives that are produced in Hong Kong and sell like hotcakes among visitors from the mainland, where such material is banned.

But the source claimed Beijing had viewed a recent flurry of titles about Xi Jinping as “a concerted smear campaign” against the Chinese leader, who took power in November 2012. “They [mainland authorities] might have accepted books critical of other high level cadres, but not of Xi Jinping.”

Gui’s upcoming tome on Xi’s private life was the final straw, the source added. “The mainland authorities decided to shut the whole operation down.”

Despite the growing international outcry surrounding the missing booksellers, China has continued to deny knowledge of the situation.

Police officials in Shenzhen, the city in southern China where Lee is believed to be being held, told the state-run Global Times they had “no knowledge of the case”.

Hong Kong broadcaster RTHK said police in the former colony would continue to investigate Lee’s disappearance.
Speaking before he was taken, Lee said the shadowy nature of Gui’s apparent abduction from his holiday home in Thailand would place whoever had taken him in “quite an awkward position”.

Source: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jan/05/smear-campaign-chinese-president-linked-disappearance-hong-kong-booksellers


Key words:

1.abduction (n.) 綁架
2.salacious (adj.) 好色的,淫蕩的
3.snatch (v.) 奪取,抓住
4.withdraw (v.) 撤退,取回
5.sensational (adj.) 轟動的,聳人聽聞的
6.outcry (n.) 大聲喊叫,吶喊,拍賣


Structure of the Lead
      WHO-  5 bookstore publishers
      WHEN- 5 January 2016
      WHAT-  
      WHY- Disappearing in Hong Kong, and suspected by Hong Kong people 
      WHERE-  Hong Kong
      HOW-  Not mentioned

2016年3月10日 星期四

week3-慰安婦

Japan and South Korea agree WW2 'comfort women' deal

28 December 2015

The issue has been the key cause for strained ties. South Korea has demanded stronger apologies and compensation.
Only 46 former "comfort women" are still alive in South Korea. The announcement came after Japan's Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida met his counterpart Yun Byung-se in Seoul, following moves to speed up talks.
Later Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe phoned South Korean President Park Geun-hye to repeat an apology already offered by Mr. Kishida.
"Japan and South Korea are now entering a new era," Mr. Abe told reporters afterwards. "We should not drag this problem into the next generation."
Ms Park issued a separate statement, saying a deal had been urgently needed - given the advanced age of most of the victims.
"Nine died this year alone," she said. "I hope the mental pains of the elderly comfort women will be eased."
It is estimated that up to 200,000 women were forced to be sex slaves for Japanese soldiers during WW2, many of them Korean. Other women came from China, the Philippines, Indonesia and Taiwan.

Japan-South Korea's 'comfort women' deal
l          Japan will give 1bn yen to a fund for the elderly comfort women, which the South Korean government will administer
l          The money also comes with an apology by Japan's prime minister and the acceptance of "deep responsibility" for the issue
l          South Korea says it will consider the matter resolved "finally and irreversibly" if Japan fulfils its promises
l          South Korea will also look into removing a statue symbolizing comfort women, which activists erected outside the Japanese embassy in Seoul in 2011
l          Both sides have agreed to refrain from criticizing each other on this issue in the international community

After the meeting in Seoul, Mr. Kishida called the agreement "epoch-making".
"Prime Minister Abe expresses anew his most sincere apologies and remorse to all the women who underwent immeasurable and painful experiences and suffered incurable physical and psychological wounds as comfort women," Mr. Kishida told reporters.
The wording of the deal does not explicitly state that the "comfort women" will receive direct compensation, but states that the fund will provide "support" and bankroll "projects for recovering the honor and dignity and healing the psychological wounds".
Some former "comfort women", such as Lee Yong-soo, have taken issue with this. The 88-year-old told the BBC: "I wonder whether the talks took place with the victims really in mind. We're not after the money. If the Japanese committed their sins, they should offer direct official government compensation."
Another former "comfort woman", 88-year-old Yoo Hee-nam, said: "If I look back, we've lived a life deprived of our basic rights as human beings. So I can't be fully satisfied. But we've been waiting all this time for the South Korean government to resolve the issue legally. As the government worked hard to settle deal before the turn of the year, I'd like to follow the government's lead."
Earlier in the year, the South Korean president called for a resolution to the "comfort women" dispute by the year's end, marking the 50th anniversary of diplomatic relations.
However, few believed that a quick breakthrough could be reached on a thorny issue that has strained the region for decades and some critics say the talks have been rushed to preserve the symbolism.
It's unclear if Japan's admission of responsibility was legal or just humanitarian, and Tokyo's offer of 1bn yen has been described as a measure to help the women, not as direct government compensation.
The dozens of surviving women have asked for a formal apology specifically addressed to themselves and direct compensation. They say past expressions of regret have been only halfway and insincere.
Japan has repeatedly apologized or acknowledged its responsibility for wartime sex slaves, most notably in a 1993 statement by the then-chief cabinet secretary Yohei Kono.
It had also resisted giving greater compensation, arguing that the dispute was settled in 1965 when diplomatic ties were normalised between the two countries and more than $800m in economic aid and loans was given to South Korea.
A private fund was also set up in 1995 for the victims and lasted for a decade, but money came from donations and not from the Japanese government.

Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-35188135

Key words
1. administer (v.) 管理,執行,操縱
2. irreversibly (adv.) 不可挽回地
3. refrain (v.) 克制,抑制
4. remorse (n.) 悔恨,自責,懊惱
5. immeasurable (adj.) 無限的,不可計量的
6. explicitly (adv.) 明白地
7. bankroll (n.) 資金
8. dignity (n.) 尊嚴

Structure of the Lead
      WHO- Comfort women
      WHEN- 28 December 2015
      WHAT-  Japan and Korea agree the idea of comfort women
      WHY- No mentioned
      WHERE- Japan

      HOW-  Mr. Abe expresses anew his most sincere apologies and remorse to comfort women 

2016年3月3日 星期四

week2-緬甸礦災

Myanmar elite 'profits from $31bn jade trade'


23 October 2015

Their report claims jade valued at a staggering almost $31bn (£20bn) was extracted from Burmese mines last year. It estimates that the figure for the last decade could be more than $120bn.
Presented with the data by the BBC, the government did not question the quantity or valuation of the jade. But it said most of the gemstones from the last year had been stockpiled, with only a small fraction sold so far.
'A stage of democratic transition'

Hpakant, in Kachin state, is the site of the world's biggest jade mine. We were stopped from travelling there by the chief minister, but footage obtained from the site shows huge articulated vehicles turning mountains into moonscapes.
With an election on the horizon and considerable political uncertainty the companies involved are clearly in a hurry.
To operate a mine in Hpakant you need military connections. The main companies listed in the Global Witness report are either directly owned by the army, or operated by those with close ties.
A few are run by those connected to ethnic armies, in return for them maintaining a ceasefire.
"If a military family does not have a jade company they are something of a black sheep," Mike Davis from Global Witness said. "These families are making extraordinary sums of money, often in the tens and hundreds of millions of dollars."
Prominent among those allegedly profiting from the trade are jade companies owned by the family of retired senior general Than Shwe. As the military ruler of Myanmar, also known as Burma, between 1992 and 2011, he presided over a period in which demonstrations were brutally repressed and opponents imprisoned. Despite having retired many still think he's influential behind the scenes.
The Global Witness report - Jade: Myanmar's 'Big State Secret' - claims that companies connected to Than Shwe's family made more than $220m in jade sales in 2013 and 2014.
Several of the other companies are linked to recent ministers but most named were at their most prominent before Thein Sein's quasi-civilian government came to power in 2011. None were immediately available for comment.
More than a year in the making, this report digs deep into previously unseen Burmese government figures.
To reach the headline number of nearly $31bn extracted in 2014 they took the officially recorded figure for jade production (16,684 tonnes) and then estimated, based on previous studies, the proportion that's likely to have been mined of each quality or "grade".
Using the prices for each grade from publically recorded sales they then calculated the likely total value of jade production. That came to a jaw-dropping $30.859bn.
To double-check this number, Global Witness then obtained customs data for jade imports into China. Last year precious and semi-precious stone imports from Myanmar were valued at $12.3bn on a weight of 5,402 tonnes. The researchers' analysis of the data shows that almost all of that was jade.
Using the officially declared production figure for 2014, and keeping all things equal (to the average value of declared imports into China) then the estimated value for the jade mined in 2014 is $37.98bn.
Clearly in both methods estimates are being used, but the ballpark figure remains similar and huge. The real total could even be much higher with many insiders saying that the best quality jade never goes through the books and is smuggled directly to Chinese buyers.
This contents of the report challenges the Burmese army narrative of recent history. The military has long said that it keeps a tight control of Burmese political life to maintain stability and, in the face of numerous ethnic wars, to prevent the country disintegrating.
It was, the people were told, a selfless act to maintain the unity of a troubled country.
This report makes it clearer than ever before that the top brass used their privileged positions to award themselves choice concessions and contracts and become extremely rich.
Ye Htay, a director from the Ministry of Mining, confirmed that the valuation of the jade mined in 2014 at $31bn was plausible, but said that most of it had been stockpiled and not sold.
Sales through the Nay Pyi Taw emporium last year were close to $1bn, he said, with about $90m paid in taxes.
He was much less forthcoming when pressed on how the concessions were awarded and the dominance of military companies.
He said Myanmar was "in a stage of democratic transition" and that such moves "haven't happened during the last five years".
There is an element of truth in that. The most egregious abuses do seem to date back to before 2010, and all agree that there have been moves towards greater transparency.
This report underscores just how difficult it will be to prise the Burmese army away from political power.
It also helps explain why the conflict in Kachin State, where the mines are, has proved so difficult to resolve.
Last week, rebels from the Kachin Independence Army refused to sign anationwide agreement with the government - aimed at ending decades of civil conflict - and clashes with the Burmese army continue.
"Jade is a key source of financing for both sides," Mike Davis told me.
"There is an incentive there for the hardliners on the government side to keep the conflict going until such time as they can be confident that when the dust settles, their assets will still be there."
Most proposals for a lasting federal settlement to Myanmar's long running ethnic conflicts involve greater transparency and the sharing of wealth from natural resources in the states where they are extracted.
It's easy to see why peace and democratic transformation aren't attractive options for those making hundreds of millions from exploiting the jade mines.



source: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-34600551

2016年2月26日 星期五

week1-臺中國家歌劇院

National Taichung Theater brings performance venue to central Taiwan

2014/11/23

By Christie Chen and Hau Hsueh-chin


Taipei, Nov. 23 (CNA) Central Taiwan's first opera house opened Sunday with a grand ceremony to inaugurate what Culture Minister Lung Ying-tai called "the pride of Taichung."

Designed by Pritzker Architecture Prize-winning Japanese architect Toyo Ito, the eye-catchingly modern National Taichung Theater boasts a 2,014-seat grand theater, a 800-seat theater and a 200-seat black box.

The architecturally complex theater was an engineering challenge constructed entirely without beams or columns and relying instead on 58 curved wall units. It is believed to be the first theater in the world to employ such a construction technique.

While the outside walls appear to be smooth surfaces thanks to the installation of glass windows, the basic structure itself is a series of tubular voids connected together.
Called a "sound cave" by Ito, the state-of-the-art opera house took nearly 5 years to complete at a cost of NT$4.36 billion (US$141 million).

President Ma Ying-jeou, who attended the inauguration ceremony, expressed hope that the theater will help his administration reach its goal of "rejuvenating the country through culture."
He gave credit to Taichung Mayor Jason Hu, who is up for re-election next week, for turning the daunting architectural challenge into a reality.

Culture Minister Lung, meanwhile, thanked the workers who helped construct the building along with city government employees.
A series of performances by prominent local groups will take place at the opera house starting this month to celebrate its inauguration.
The series begins Sunday with a production of "Cat Man" by Taiwanese opera troupe Ming Hwa Yuan Arts and Cultural Group.

Paper Windmill Theater will then perform its production of "Don Quixote" Nov. 27 and Nov. 28, which will be followed by a concert by Taiwanese violinist Hu Nai-yuan and the Taiwan Connection Chamber Orchestra on Dec. 7. Ju Percussion Group will then give a performance on Dec. 13.

The National Taichung Theater is part of the government's efforts to strengthen support for and improve the quality and international competitiveness of Taiwan's performing arts.
It is being touted as a leg of the "golden triangle" for the performing arts in Taiwan, alongside Taipei's

National Theater and Concert Hall and Kaohsiung's Wei-Wu-Ying Center for the Arts, the latter of which is set to be completed next year.
The Ministry of Culture will take over the operation of the National Taichung Theater starting in January next year. 

source: http://focustaiwan.tw/news/aedu/201411230024.aspx

The keywords:


1.beams 樑 (n.)
2.columns 柱子 (n.)
3.inauguration 就職典禮 (n.)
4.rejuvenate 使年輕,使恢復 (v.)
5.daunting 使人畏縮的 (a.)
6.prominent 卓越的,顯著的 (a.)
7.competitiveness 競爭力 (n.) 

Structure of the Lead
      WHO-  Toyo Ito
      WHEN- November 23,2014
      WHAT- A great architecture in Taichung City 
      WHY- No mentioned
      WHERE- Taichung City
      HOW- Designed by a Japanese anarchistic  


2016年1月4日 星期一

week-5天津爆炸

China explosions: What we know about what happened in Tianjin
17 August 2015

How did the blasts happen?

They took place at a warehouse at the port which contained hazardous and flammable chemicals, including calcium carbide, sodium cyanide, potassium nitrate, ammonium nitrate and sodium nitrate.
Officials insist it is not yet clear what triggered the blasts and say they are still investigating. Chinese media said that at least one member of staff from Tianjin Dongjiang Port Ruihai International Logistics, which owns the warehouse, has been arrested.
Before the explosions, several firefighters were already at the scene trying to control a blaze. There have been suggestions that water sprayed on some of the chemicals could have led to the blasts.
Calcium carbide, known to be at the site, reacts with water to create the highly explosive acetylene.
Chemical experts suggest an acetylene blast could then have detonated the other chemicals for a much larger blast.

How big were the explosions?

The China Earthquake Networks Centre said the initial explosion, in a city with a population of around 15 million, had a power equivalent to three tonnes of TNT detonating, while the second was the equivalent of 21 tonnes.
The second was so big that satellites orbiting Earth picked it up as well. Chinese data site Cnbeta published pictures showing the sudden flare.

How bad is the devastation?

The explosion destroyed a significant amount of goods stored at and around the port, in the Binhai New District.
Large shipping containers were tossed into the air like matchsticks and were crumpled by the blasts.
A logistics park containing several thousand cars was incinerated by the fireball. Renault says some 1,500 of its cars were lost, while Hyundai said it had around 4,000 cars on the site - although it has not yet assessed the level of damage.
The blast wave rippled out several kilometers from the port into residential areas. The impact rocked entire buildings, shattered windows and tore doors off their hinges.
More than 720 people were taken to hospital, of whom nearly 60 are either critically or seriously injured. Reuters reports that several thousand people living near the port have had to leave their homes, and are now staying in local schools.

How are the blasts being dealt with?

More than 1,000 firefighters were dispatched to the scene to contain the fires. On Monday, authorities said they were putting out one last area that was still burning, and the last of the toxic chemicals would be neutralized and disposed of by the end of the day. More than 200 chemical and biological experts from the military were on site earlier.
President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang have vowed to hold a thorough investigation and ensure "open and transparent information disclosure to the public". 
China has also ordered a nationwide check on dangerous chemicals and explosives.


Is it safe?

About 700 tonnes of sodium cyanide was present at the site. It is soluble in water and, when dissolved or burned, it releases the highly poisonous gas hydrogen cyanide.
Authorities on Monday confirmed that three waste water discharge monitoring stations within the evacuated area saw excessive levels of cyanide, with one station recording a level 27.4 times the normal limit, reported People's Daily.
But authorities have insisted that the pollutants are contained and not at risk of spreading beyond the evacuated area.

What impact will this have on Tianjin port?

Tianjin is a significant industrial port near Beijing, and is a gateway for goods going in and out of the capital and China's industrial north. It is also a main trading hub for metals and steel.
The port remains partially open as the explosion was contained in one section.
But authorities have imposed stringent checks and movement in and out of the port has slowed down, which is likely to affect some industries, the Mysteel.com news portal reported.
Mining giant BHP Billiton saw some disruption to its port operations and shipments.
On Monday, car maker Toyota said it was closing production lines at its factories near Tianjin until the end of Wednesday, while agricultural machinery maker John Deere said it suspended work indefinitely. Both saw some of their workers injured by the blasts.

Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-33844084


Structure of the Lead

      WHO-  Tianjin Dongjiang Port Ruihai International Logistics

      WHEN- August 12, 2015

      WHAT-  Explosions in China

      WHY- Hazardous and flammable chemicals were triggered the blasts

      WHERE- Tianjin port, China  

      HOW- The explosion destroyed a significant amount of goods stored at and around the port


1.ammonium (n.) 銨
2.acetylene (n.) 乙炔,俗稱風煤、電石氣、電土
3.detonated (v.) 使爆炸,使爆
4.incinerated (v.) 燒成灰,燒棄,灰化
5.dispatched (v.) 派遣
6.
neutralized (v.) 使中立,使成中立地帶,使中和,抵銷
7.stringent (a.) 迫切的,嚴厲的

week-6-巴黎恐攻

Father's Talk With Son About Paris Terror Attack Goes Viral
NOV 17 2015
A heart-wrenching video of a French father reassuring his young son about the Paris terror massacre has been shared more than 11 million times on Facebook.
In the clip, which aired on Canal+ television show "Le Petit Journal," a reporter asks the boy if he understands why extremists killed people in Paris on Friday.
The father, later identified as Angel Le, tries to explain the floral tributes outside the Bataclan theatre, where the majority of the victims of Friday's attacks were killed.
"What about the baddies, Dad?" asks his son, Brandon. "They've got guns."
"They've got guns but we have flowers," Le replies.
In a comment posted on the Facebook clip, Le wrote: "I'm the dad with the little boy, thank you all for the great comments that you have posting for us. When I see all this support it tells me one thing: I'm proud to be French and proud of my fellow countrymen!"

Here is the interview in full:

Journalist: Do you understand what's happened? Do you understand why these people have done this?

Boy: Yes, because they are very, very, very bad. Bad people aren't very nice. And you have to be very careful because you need to move house.

Father: No, don't worry, we don't have to move. France is our home.

Boy: But what about the baddies, Dad?

Father: There are baddies everywhere. There are bad guys everywhere.
Boy: They've got guns. They can shoot us because they're very, very bad, Daddy.
Father: They've got guns but we have flowers.
Boy: But flowers don't do anything. They're for... they're for... they're for...
Father: Look, everyone is laying flowers here.
Boy: Yes.
Father: It's to fight against the guns.
Boy: Is it for protection?
Father: That's right.
Boy: And the candles too?
Father: They're so we don't forget the people who have gone.
Boy: Oh. The flowers and candles are there to protect us?
Father: Yes.
Journalist: Do you feel better now?
Boy: Yes, I feel better. 

source: 
http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/paris-terror-attacks/fathers-talk-son-about-paris-terror-attack-goes-viral-n464981

Structure of the Lead

      WHO- A French father and his young son

      WHEN- November 17, 2015

      WHAT- A touching talk

      WHY- Not mention

      WHERE- Paris

      HOW- Not mention