Wang Jiao, born in 1988, entered Dunhuang Research Institute after graduation and worked in compiling archaeological reports of Dunhuang Grottoes for seven years. Yang Jinli, born in 1987, came to Mogao Grottoes at the age of 19 and became a mural restorer. After 90s, Liu Xiaotong joined 20 14, focusing on the "portrait" of the Mogao grottoes ... Today, Dunhuang Research Institute has a protection team of more than 200 people, including post-80s, post-90s and post-90s. They came to Dunhuang in their youth, took root deeply, and persisted and dedicated themselves to "protecting the Mogao Grottoes and inheriting Dunhuang culture".
Wu Lijun, who has worked for many years, has a very simple resume. During the period of 14 years, he only participated in one project-the construction of the spiritual tunnel on the Da-Rui Railway. The total length of the tunnel is 17.6 km, which is located in the "red bed" geological zone in western Yunnan, with broken surrounding rock and complex geological structure. Crossing seven fault zones has the characteristics of large deformation of soft rock, water gushing and mud bursting, high ground stress, high seismic intensity and high ground temperature, and the construction is very difficult. During the 14 years here, Wu Lijun has encountered numerous mud surges, water surges and landslides, and has also grown from an intern to an expert in tunnel construction. Wu Lijun's work experience is the epitome of the spiritual tunnel builders of China Railway Eighth Bureau.
Determined to serve the country and visit space three times. Nie Haisheng is the first astronaut in China to fly in orbit for 100 days, and also achieved the "grand slam" of the "three-step" strategic task of manned space flight. On the road of chasing dreams, he made steady progress step by step.
China's flying man Su broke through the 10 second mark for the first time, ran out of 10, tied the Asian record, and greatly improved the Asian record by 0.08 seconds ... People never stopped expecting Su, and he never stopped moving forward. Today, in addition to sprinters, Sue is also a teacher. In addition to patiently guiding movements in the classroom, he is also willing to share his story of forging ahead in his sports career with his classmates, planting the seeds of struggle in more people's hearts and injecting the power of progress.