填空题
{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}
In the following article, some sentences have been
removed. For Questions 41~45, choose the most suitable one from the list A~G to
fit into each of the numbered blanks. There are two extra choices which do not
fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
The race to select the Beijing 2008 Olympic mascot is heating
up and from all accounts the panda is out in front. According to news reports,
the Sichuan panda team is pulling out all the stops to get the giant panda
chosen—not surprisingly, as most of the pandas in China can be found in
Sichuan.41)__________.
So what does an Olympic mascot represent
to the world? The Sichuan team says that the giant panda represents the peace
and harmony of the Olympic spirit, but is that what a panda really portrays?
What, after all, does a giant panda do all day? It pulls down bamboo shoots and
eats, and when it's not eating, it sleeps, That's it! That is all a panda
does.42)__________.
Fortunately there are other candidates for
the honor of representing the Beijing Olympics, including the Chinese tiger. Now
there's a contrast with the panda! The tiger is sleek; the tiger is swift. When
the tiger springs into action, one can see its muscles ripple with energy; When
a tiger is hunting for food, first it stalks its prey, perhaps a herd of wild
swine. Then it chooses a victim and cleverly plans its strategy for the chase.
Carefully choosing its moment, the tiger takes off with power and speed, as much
as 80 km per hour.43)__________.The tiger is sleek, strong, swift and uses
clever strategy to achieve its goal. Is it not the ideal animal to represent the
athletes who have planned and carried out Icing-term strategies to qualify for
the Olympics?
44)__________. However, the tiger, like most
predatory animals, is not truly vicious—this is a common misperception. Under
normal circumstances it kills only for food. When hungry it goes after its prey
with fierce determination. it not take fierce determination for an athlete to
win a medal in the Olympics?
Some years ago, Shell carried out a
very successful ad campaign in Canada and the US. The ads showed a tiger getting
into the gas tank of an auto; the accompanying slogan was "Put a tiger in your
tank!"45)__________. Nowadays China is amazing everyone with the power and speed
of its economic development, far outstripping the other nations of the world. In
the latest Olympics, the Chinese athletes surprised the world not only with the
number of medals they won but also with the categories in which they won them. I
would therefore argue that Beijing's 2008 Olympic mascot should be an animal
that embodies the great qualities, power and speed, of the Chinese athletes and
their homeland--the Chinese tiger.
A. One might say that the
giant panda is fat and lazy! What if there is no bamboo? Does it find other
food? No. When the panda's food disappears, the panda disappears. In fact,
the giant panda is a very vulnerable animal and that is why today it is at risk
of extinction. Do Chinese really want a fat, lazy animal for their Olympic
mascot?
B. Everyone understood the message: the tiger meant
extra power and speed for your car. The original Olympics in Greece brought
together athletes in a fierce trial of power and speed.
C.
Recently it was brought to my attention that the 1988 Seoul Olympics had a tiger
mascot. Does this make the tiger ineligible for use in the 2008 Beijing
Olympics? In an informal poll of my friends and colleagues, I discovered that no
one remembered the mascot of the 1988 games. In fact, they did not remember the
mascot of the Sydney Olympics or even of this year's Athens Olympics.
D. They have created 29 possible panda designs for consideration by the
Beijing Olympic organizing committee, which will be making the choice.
E. To be sure, the giant panda seems loveable whereas the tiger might be
thought by some to be rather fierce.
F. Does that not make the
tiger a better choice to represent an Olympic competition, where the world's top
athletes come together to see who is the strongest, the fastest and the
best?
G. Yes, the tiger has been revered and admired in China
for thousands of years. With its natural characteristics of speed and power, the
Chinese tiger would, I am convinced, be a superb mascot for the 2008
Olympics!