填空题
{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}
You are going to read a text about the situation of
the blacks in America, followed by a list of examples and explanations. Choose
the best example or explanation from the list A-F for each numbered subheading
(41-45). There is one extra example which you do not need to use. Mark your
answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
Although no longer slavers after the Civil War, American
blacks took no significant part in the life of white America except as servants
or laborers. Many thousands of them emigrated from the war-ravaged South to the
North from 1865 to 1915 in the hope of finding work in the big industrial
cities. Whole communities of blacks crowded together into ghettos in New York
City, Chicago and Detroit, where once the poor white immigrants had lived. These
ghettos, neglected by the city authorities, became slums. The schools to which
black children went were hopelessly inadequate. Unemployment in black ghettos
remained consistently higher than in white communities.
41. Serious
problems with black ghettos.______
Stable family life was
difficult to maintain.
42. The extreme poverty of the blacks.______
In the late 1970s, nearly a third of all blacks still belonged to the
so-called "underclass", they are so "under-privileged" and poor that they cannot
seize the opportunity for advancement.
43. Efforts to put an end to racial
discrimination.______
Race relations in the USA continue to be
a thorny problem,
44. Improvements in Ives of the blacks.______
Despite some setbacks, race relations are improving.
45. Prevailing
violence in solving racial problems.______
It is said that
television had an enormous influence on frustrated and hitter blacks, for it
showed them bow much better whites on the whole lived than blacks. At the end of
the 1960s, there were serious riots in many cities.
The violence
quickly died down. Blacks began to use their votes to exert political pressure.
Cities like Atlanta (Georgia), Gary (Indiana), and Los Angeles
(California) elected black mayors. Integration of schools, despite resistance
from white groups, goes on, and the proportion of blacks in American colleges
has increased dramatically in the last 20 years. There are reasons to maintain a
cautious optimism that progress in race relations will continue.
[A] It has been estimated that there are more than 20 million
Americans in this category, 10% of the population, including many millions of
whites.
[B] Blacks are gaining in self-confidence. In
more and more areas they are winning control of their communities, and their
standard of living is going up faster than that of the poor whites. It is still
a hard struggle. There is still prejudice and even some hatred, but in most
walks of American life there are now more blacks than ever before.
[C] The era of blatant discrimination ended in the 1960s through
the courageous actions of thousands of blacks participating in peaceful marches
and sitins, to force Southern states to implement the Federal desegregation laws
in schools and public accommodations. Down came the "whites only" notices in
bused, hotels, trains, restaurants, sporting events, restrooms and on park
benches that once could be found everywhere throughout the South. Gone were the
restrictions that prevented blacks voting, Gone, too, were the hideous
lynchings, which since the Civil War had caused the death of thousands of
innocent blacks—hanged without trial by white mobs. However, even today,
poor, uneducated lacks do not always receive the same degree of justice that the
more affluent and better educated can expect.
[D] Many
blacks chose to keep silent about their unfairness instead of resorting to
violence. But their silence was also problem provoking: on the one hand, silence
would build up a lot of complaints and hatred in their minds, thus resulting in
a negative approach to life and everything; on the other hand, silence would
give the whites an impression that the blacks take the reality for granted and
put. more racial discrimination on them.
[E] Unemployed fathers
would on occasion walk out of their homes and never return. Children neglected
by their parents turned in some instances to drugs and crimes. There are more
than 700 murders a year in cities like New York, Detroit, Los Angeles and
Houston, and most of these deaths are of blacks killed by blacks. The black
ghettos are dangerous both for blacks and non-blacks.
[F]
Radical blacks like the Black panthers demanded a free black state within the
Union, and advocated violence to achieve that end and to protect themselves
against what they felt was police brutality toward blacks. For a while,
violence overshadowed the influence of the greatly respected pacifist black,
Martin Luther King, Jr. , who had provided the inspiration and leadership for
those devoted to a peaceful change and whose murder in 1968 stunned
America.