List 4 examples of disabled people in ancient and modern times, both at home and abroad, who have made great efforts and succeeded.
Zhang Haidi was born in Jinan in the autumn of 1955. He suffered from myelopathy at the age of 5 and was paralyzed from the chest down. Faced with the cruel challenge of fate, Zhang Haidi did not feel depressed or sinking. She fought against the disease with tenacious perseverance and perseverance, withstood severe tests and was full of confidence in life. Although she did not have the opportunity to enter school, she studied hard and completed all elementary and middle school courses. She taught herself college English, Japanese, German and Esperanto, and studied university and master's courses. Zhang Haidi began to engage in literary creation in 1983. He has translated hundreds of thousands of English novels such as "Seaside Clinic" and compiled books such as "Window Open to the Sky", "Questioning of Life", "Dreams in Wheelchairs" and other books. Among them, "Dreams in a Wheelchair" was published in Japan and South Korea, while "Questioning Life" was published less than half a year ago and has been reprinted three times and won the national "Five One Project" book award. Before "Questioning Life", this award had never been awarded to prose works. Recently, a 300,000-word novel "Jue Ding" is about to be released. Since 1983, Zhang Haidi has created and translated more than 1 million words of works.
2. Stephen Hawking
Stephen Hawking is one of the great men with international reputation in this century. He is 60 years old. He was born on the anniversary of the death of Galileo. He is a professor of applied mathematics at the University of Cambridge. and professor of the Department of Theoretical Physics, the most important contemporary general relativity and cosmologist. In the 1970s, he and Penrose proved the famous singularity theorem, for which they jointly won the Wolf Prize in Physics in 1988. He is therefore known as the world's most famous scientific thinker and most outstanding theoretical physicist after Einstein. He also proved the area theorem of black holes. Hawking's life is very legendary, in terms of scientific achievements. , he was one of the most distinguished scientists of all time. He held the most prestigious professorship ever held at Cambridge, the Lucasian Professorship of Mathematics held by Newton and Dirac. He held several honorary degrees. Member of the Royal Society. He was confined to a wheelchair for 20 years due to Lou Gehrig's disease (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), but he used his disability as an advantage and overcame it. He became a supernova in the international physics community. He could not write and could not even speak clearly, but he transcended the theories of relativity, quantum mechanics, and the big bang and entered the "geometric dance" of creating the universe, even though he sat so helplessly. While in a wheelchair, his thoughts traveled brilliantly across the vastness of time and space, solving the mysteries of the universe?
3. Helen Keller
Helen Keller ( June 27, 1880 - June 1, 1968), born in Tuscumbia, Alabama, United States. American female writer, educator, philanthropist, and social activist died of cancer when she was 19 months old. She lost her vision and hearing due to acute congestion. Later, through the efforts of her mentor Anne Sullivan, she learned to speak and began to communicate with others. In June 1899, she was admitted to Harvard University as a Radcliffe woman. College. In 1924, he became the main leader of the American Foundation for the Blind. The most famous ones are: "If You Give Me Three Days of Sight", "My Life Story", and "The Story of Stonewall" in 1964. Won the "Presidential Medal of Freedom". In 1965, he was selected as one of the "Top Ten American Heroes and Icons of the 20th Century" by Time Magazine.
4. Sang Lan
Sang Lan. Born in Ningbo, Zhejiang in 1981, he joined the national gymnastics team in 1993. He won the national vaulting championship in 1997. In 1998, he suffered an accident while practicing vaulting at the 4th American Friendship Games, resulting in a cervical spine fracture and high paraplegia below the chest. Sang Lan always faces the public with a smile. With her tenacious, optimistic, strong and brave mentality, she has infected the whole world with her actions and deeds. She is the most Olympic-spirited female role model and has become a vaulting champion. After being paralyzed, she did not choose to be depressed, but accepted the facts calmly and realized her Olympic dream in her own way. In January 1999, Sang Lan became the first foreigner to preside over the lighting ceremony of the Empire State Building in Times Square; In April 2000, Sang Lan won the fifth "Brave Athlete Award" issued by the Nassau County Sports Committee of Long Island, New York. In May 2000, Sang Lan lit the torch of the fifth China Disabled Games; in September 2000, Sang Lan represented China's disabled people. People's Art Troupe went to the United States to perform; in September 2002, Sang Lan joined "Star TV", a subsidiary of world media tycoon Murdoch News Group, as the host of a new sports special program "Sang Lan 2008". She used this way to continue his Olympic journey. Because she hopes to stand up bravely where she fell and get close to her favorite sport again from a different angle. Since then, she, who loves media career, began to appear in front of the audience with a frank interview style, telling the audience the little-known stories behind the Olympic gold medals from multiple angles and levels, and using her natural, confident hosting style and authenticity The appeal has won recognition from many viewers. Also in September 2002, Sang Lan was admitted to the Department of Journalism, School of Journalism and Communication, Peking University, without examination, to study radio and television.
In the early 1990s, the establishment of Zhuxin Fund marked the beginning of China Investment Fund (the embryonic form of closed-end fund). Later