填空题
{{B}}PART TWO{{/B}}
{{B}} ·Read the following text.
·Choose the
best sentence from A--H to fill in each of the gaps.
·For each gap
9--14, mark one letter A--H.
·Do not use any letter more than
once.
{{/B}}
You're busy filling out the application form for a position you really
need; let's assume {{U}}(9) {{/U}}. Isn't it tempting to lie just a
little, to claim on the form that your diploma represents a Harvard degree?
{{U}}(10) {{/U}}
More and more people are turning to utter deception
like this to land their job or to move ahead in their careers, for personnel
officers, like most Americans, value degrees from famous schools. A job
applicant may have a good education anyway, {{U}}(11) {{/U}} Registrars
at most well-known colleges say they deal with deceitful claims like these at
the rate of about one per week.
Personnel officers do check up on degrees
listed on application forms. Then, {{U}}(12) {{/U}}, most colleges are
reluctant to accuse the applicant directly. One Ivy League School calls them
"impostors"; another refers to them as "special cases". One well-known
West Coast school, in perhaps the most delicate phrase of all, says that these
claims are made by "no such people".
To avoid outright lies, some job-seekers
claim that they "attended" or "were associated with" a college or university.
After carefully checking, a personnel officer may discover that "attending"
means being dismissed after one semester. It may be that "being associated with"
a college means that {{U}}(13) {{/U}}. One school that keeps records of
false claims says that the practice dates back at least to the turn of the
century--that's when they began keeping records, anyhow.
{{U}}
(14) {{/U}}. One company, with offices in New York and on the West
Coast, will put your name on a diploma from any number of nonexistent colleges.
The price begins at around twenty dollars for a diploma from "Smoot State
University". The prices increase rapidly for a degree from the "University of
Purdue". As there is no Smoot State and the real school in Indiana is properly
called Purdue University, the prices seem rather high for one sheet of
paper.
A. the job-seeker visited his younger brother for a football
weekend
B. Ox that you finished an extra couple of years back at State
University?
C. you have never been enrolled by a university
D. if it turns
out that an applicant is lying
E. you once actually completed a couple of
years of college work or even that you completed your degree
F. if you don't
want to lie or even stretch the truth, there are companies that will sell you a
phony diploma
G. though the applicant is telling truth about his education
background
H. but he or she assumes that chances of being hired are better
with a diploma from a well- known university