填空题WheredidPollybringhispetdogto?
填空题FranklinRooseveltbecamepresident______.
填空题 You will hear a talk about American diet. As you listen, you
must answer Questions 21-30 by writing NO MORE THAN THREE words in the space
provided on the right. You will hear the talk TWICE.{{B}} You now
have 60 seconds to read Questions 21-30.{{/B}}
填空题·was most popular in Tennessee at first?
填空题·offers a poor view even when the mirrors are used?
填空题·has the best engine design in terms of saving money?
填空题·is among the oldest sections and played an important role in American history?
填空题
The behavior of individuals is influenced by heredity,
environment and culture. Culture includes rules of{{U}} (31) {{/U}}an
individual is expected to behave in a particular society. Sometimes rules for
behavior differ{{U}} (32) {{/U}}one culture to another, and sometimes
the rules are{{U}} (33) {{/U}}. The English and Mexican golden rules are
very similar, if not in words, in sentiment. The English golden rule, "Do unto
others as you would have them do unto you," instructs people how to{{U}}
(34) {{/U}}with others inside and outside the home. The Mexican golden
rule, "Between individuals, as between nations, respect{{U}} (35)
{{/U}}other people's rights means peace," likewise instruct people how to
behave with others. Perhaps because all cultures are equally concerned{{U}}
(36) {{/U}}their children's manners, we find many{{U}} (37)
{{/U}}similarities than differences in the way Mexicans and Americans
teaching children the golden rule. In the{{U}} (38)
{{/U}}of strangers, the golden rule is applied similarly and differently in
the two countries. In America, the family emphasizes independence and teaches
children how to take{{U}} (39) {{/U}}of themselves. This lesson often
includes a warning{{U}} (40) {{/U}}they can't believe everyone and
should be waxy of strangers. Children are taught what to do, how to use the
phone, and{{U}} (41) {{/U}}to call for help in (42) of
emergency or trouble with a stranger. {{U}}(43) {{/U}}Mexicans are not
as wary of strangers. They also tell their children to be careful of{{U}}
(44) {{/U}}and to tell an adult{{U}} (45) {{/U}}help is
needed. Mexicans may not need to warn their children about strangers quite{{U}}
(46) {{/U}}much as Americans do simply because, children,
{{U}}(47) {{/U}}are more dependent in Mexico, are with their parents
most of the time. Possibly{{U}} (48) {{/U}}independence is not as big a
cultural value in Mexico{{U}} (49) {{/U}}in the United States. People
give and accept help more readily. Children, then, are taught to help elderly
people and pregnant women{{U}} (50) {{/U}}helping them to cross the
street or to carry a parcel.
填空题Supermarket shoppers have never been more spoilt for choice. But just when we thought traditional systems of selective farming had created the most tempting array of foods money can buy, we are now being presented with the prospect of genetically created strains of cabbages, onion, tomato, potato and apple. It may not tickle the fancy of food purists but it fires the imagination of scientists. Last week they discovered that the classic Parisian mushroom contains just the properties that, when genetically mixed with a wild strain of mushroom from the Sonora desert in California, could help it grow en masse while at the same time providing it with the resilience of the wild strain. (66) "We have found a way of increasing the success rate from one to 90 per cent." This is just one of the many products that, according to skeptics, are creating a generation of "Frankenfoods". The first such food that may be consumed on a wide scale is a tomato which has been genetically manipulated so that it does not soften as it ripens. (67) Critics say that the new tomato—which cost $25 million to research—is designed to stay on supermarket shelves for longer. It has a ten-day life span. Not surprisingly, every-hungry US is leading the search for these forbidden fruit. By changing the genes of a grapefruit, a grower from Texas has created a sweet, red, thin-skinned grapefruit expected to sell at a premium over its California and Florida competitors. For chip fanatics who want to watch their waist-lines, new high-starch, low-moisture potatoes that absorb less fat when fried have been created, thanks to a gene from intestinal bacteria. The scientists behind such new food argue that genetic engineering is simply an extension of animal and plant breeding methods and that by broadening the scope of the genetic changes that can be made, sources of food are increased. Accordingly, they argue, this does not inherently lead to foods that are less safe than those developed by conventional techniques. But if desirable genes are swapped irrespective of species barriers, could things spiral out of control? "Knowledge is not toxic," said Mark Cantley, head of the biotechnology unit at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, "It has given us a far greater understanding of how living systems work at a molecular level and there is no reason for people to think that scientists and farmers should use that knowledge to do risky things." Clearly, financial incentive lies behind the development of these bigger, more productive foods. But we may have only ourselves to blame. In the early period of mass food commerce, food varieties were developed by traditional methods of selective breeding to suit the local palate. But as suppliers started to select and preserve plant variants that had larger fruit, consumer expectations rose, leading to the development of the desirable clones. Still, traditionalists and gourmets in Europe are fighting their development. (68) Even in the pre-packaged US, where the slow-softening tomato will soon be reaching supermarkets, 1,500 American chefs have lent their support to the Pure Food Campaign which calls for the international boycott of genetically engineered foods until more is known about the consequences of the technology and reliable controls have been introduced. In the short term, much of the technology remains untested and in the long term the consequences for human biology are unknown. Questions have arisen over whether new proteins in genetically modified food could cause allergies in some people. (69) Then there are the vegetarians who may be consuming animal non-vegetable proteins in what they think is a common tomato, or the practicing Jew who unknowingly consumes a fruit that has been enhanced with a pig's gene. As yet, producers are under no obligation to label "transgeneic" products. Environmentalists worry that new, genetically engineered plants may damage natural environment. A genetically engineered pest-resistant strain of plant that contacts with a native strain, for example, could turn them into virulent weeds beyond chemical control. Animal welfare groups worry about the quality of life of farm animals manipulated so that they produce more meat, milk, and eggs but which may suffer physical damage in the process. (70) Many of these fears spring from ignorance. And although it is hard to separate the paranoia from the benefits, the fact remains that genetic engineering offers ways of solving serious medical and agricultural problems. A. Western farmers have already bred cattle with more muscle than a skeleton can carry. B. Supporters say the tomato, unsurprisingly called Flavr Savr, will taste better because it will be able to mature on the branch longer. C. Consumer opposition means that there are genetically manipulated foods on the German markets, and the Norwegian government has recently put research into genetically engineered foods on hold. D. For example, if a corn gene is introduced into a wheat gene for pest resistance, will those who are allergic to corn then be allergic to wheat? E. "Mushrooms in the past were almost impossible to cross," says Philippe Callac, one of the three scientists working on the mushroom. F. Genetic engineering will interfere with the balance of nature.
填空题·does not offer any scholarships?
填空题Too many people are haunted by five dismal words: "But it's too late now." An unfaithful husband would like to salvage his marriage. "But it's too late now." An office worker, fired because of her drinking problem, wishes she could conquer her alcoholism and begin again. "But it's too late now." Few families are without some broken personal relationships. At first those involved may be unwilling to hold out an olive branch. Then, when some time has passed, they may feel it's too late to offer an apology or try to make amends. 16. ______ Not long ago I came upon an article about the distinguished musician Robert Shaw, who was retiring as music director and conductor of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. Years earlier, when I was the new pastor of Marble Church in New York City, Shaw came to me and suggested we have a group of young people sing at our church services. He led such a chorale and was willing to make it available. 17. ______ Unfortunately, some of the members of the congregation, including two of the elders who were strong traditionalists, thought the singing was too much of a departure from the accepted way of doing things at Marble Church. They made their displeasure known to me in unmistakable terms. 18. ______ Almost half a century passed. In all that time I never saw or spoke to Shaw. But then, as I read the article, my conscience reminded me I had made a mistake that still was unrectified. When I got home, I wrote a letter to Robert Shaw telling him that I had been wrong and was sorry. 19. ______ What a lift I got from that! What happy evidence it was that even after many years a word of apology is never too late. 20. ______ Because it never is.A. This struck me as an idea that would appeal to the younger members of our congregation. So I told him to go ahead.The people who sang were spirited and enthusiastic, and I thought they added a new and welcome dimension to our worship services.B. Why not search your mind and see if there is some past episode that calls for a word of reconciliation, some personal problem unsolved, some good deed !eft undone? Even if a long time has elapsed, don't assume it's too late.C. I sayto such people:"Nonsense! It's nevertoo late to make a fresh start."D. Finally, against my better judgement, I told Shaw that I was sorry, but we would have to terminate the arrangement. He was disappointed, but said he understood. This incident would always bother me. I had failed to have the courage of my convictions.E. As we had to make the church hall available for other purposes, one day I came to Shaw and made this clear Without a word, he made his way to me and gave me his hand, leaving me puzzled as to whether this was a gesture of agreement or disappointment.F. Almost at once a reply came from this great man of music, thanking me for the generosity, grace and candidness of my letter and claiming that the fault had been as much his as min
填空题{{B}} A = Li Yulin B = Wang Ying
C = Lin Hong D = Wang Baozhan Who
said that...{{/B}}
{{B}}
A Li
Yulin{{/B}} The terrible earthquake still lingers in the memory of
Li Yulin even after 30 years. Li, 72, at that time Vice Chairman of the trade
union of Tangshan Coalmine, returned home at 11 on the night of July 27, 1976.
He was awakened when the earth thundered. "The sound was so frightening
that it still get me trembling when I recalled it," Li noted. He said he
realized it was an earthquake and immediately pulled his wife down, and they
laid flat on their faces beside the bed. "We were tossed in the air because of
the violent shaking, and our nerves were frazzled," Li recalled.
In less than 20 seconds, the house collapsed. A wardrobe supported
the fallen roof, however, Li managed to pull his wife and three children out of
the house. Finding a safe place for his family, Li ran to the mine, wearing
nothing but his underpants. He was worried about the 2, 000 miners who were
still working underground. "The night was dead quiet and I could even hear my
heartbeat. I felt as if I was alone in the world," Li said, "The railroad tracks
were twisted into an S-shape, and some were two meters above the
ground." After seeing that the miners were all safe, Li knew the
most .urgent thing was to report the disaster to higher authorities. Li,
together with three others, drove the only vehicle available, an ambulance, to
Beijing and informed the Central Government leaders of the situation, enabling
the government to send rescue teams to the spot at once.{{B}}
B Wang Ying{{/B}} Wang Ying,
58, a teacher at the No. 9 Middle School in Tangshan, weeps when her terrible
experience in the earthquake is brought up again. Wang lost her legs during the
tragedy but her husband and daughter escaped unscathed. Her body suffered from
the aftereffects, so painful that she would bite her own fingers until they
bled. She screamed or sang while crying when she was alone to comfort herself.
However, the greater pain came from the hurt of her family. Several years after
the quake, her husband had a new lover and wanted a divorce. Wang begged him to
put off the split for the sake of their little daughter. But the husband
disagreed and vented his anger on the wife and daughter. Several times, Wang
thought about taking her own life. The depressed family
atmosphere began to affect the five-year-old girl, who also revealed her
suicidal thoughts in her dairy. "But what will happen to my mum if I die?" the
riffle girl wrote in the dairy. Finally the love between mother and daughter
overcame the impetus toward death. After 10 years, Wang let her husband go, and
her daughter chose to live with her. Since the divorce, Wang has been working
harder to raise her daughter, who now is her only reason to stay alive. "However
much my body aches, I insist on cooking for my daughter and never let my
daughter feel distressed," Wang said. Wang's wholehearted
devotion pays off. Though she could have found a better job after graduation
from university, the daughter took a job where Wang worked to take better care
of her mother.{{B}}
C Liu
Hong{{/B}} Lin Hong was nine when his parents died in the
earthquake, Liu doesn't recall much about the quake. "It's like a baffle in a
dream," he said, adding that he woke up to find himself lying in the
ruins. Liu then lived with his grandparents. His grandfather
just told him that his parents had gone to a faraway place for a rescue mission
and wouldn't come back soon. Liu had a bad feeling about that, but he remained
silent. Three months later, Lin went back to school. There was nothing left of
the classroom except a piece of blackboard. Several of Liu's friends had died in
the quake, and more than 10 classmates became orphans. Lin
devoted all his time to studying and barely spoke to others. It was not until he
went to high school that he began to open his heart and try to communicate with
people. Lin later went to the same college that both of his parents had
attended, Hebei Medical University. After graduation, he went to work in
Tangshan Workers' Hospital, where his father used to work. {{B}}
D Wang Baozhan{{/B}} The earthquake
left Wang Baozhan paralyzed. He was only 19. Wang had to be moved to a nursing
home for earthquake victims. The disaster left 3,817 victims paralyzed like
Wang, spending the rest of their lives in a wheelchair. Survival
was not a problem for Wang in the nursing home. He managed to find a job outside
the home and went to work in his wheelchair every day. "I don't want to live a
pointless life, I want it to be better," he said. Wang's life
changed greatly three years later when he met a woman Zhu Deqin, who was five
years older than him and had lost her legs in the disaster. Their love story was
simple, more about mutual caring and encouragement. They had been in love for
nine years and for a time they thought about getting married but did not because
they didn't have a hour. In 1991, the local government invested 400,000 yuan, in
addition to an additional 800,000-yuan donation, to build a community for
housing earthquake victims. The same year, the Tangshan Civil Affairs Bureau
held a wedding ceremony for 10 couples, including Wang and Zhu.·hey were
thrown into the air because of the violent shaking and they
71. ______.were unable to know what to do?
·the greater
pain came from the hurt of the family after the earthquake? 72.
______.·he was still a small boy when both his parents died in the
earthquake 73. ______.and he is told that his parents
went to rescue the survivals?
·there was no less than 20 seconds when his house
collapsed? 74.
______.·he didn't want to live a pointless life, he wanted it to be better?
75. ______.·he went to the same college that both
of his parents had attended? 76. ______.·the
love has got paid off because the daughter came back to the same
77. ______.school in order to take care of her mother after the
graduation?·the local government invested some money to build houses for the
78. ______.earthquake victims?·the
most urgent thing was to report the disaster to higher authorities?
79. ______.·the earthquake left 3,817 victims paralyzed, they have to
live the 80. ______.rest of their lives in
wheelchairs?
填空题Supermarket shoppers have never been more spoilt for choice. But just when we thought traditional systems of selective farming had created the most tempting array of foods money can buy, we are now being presented with the prospect of genetically created strains of cabbages, onion, tomato, potato and apple. It may not tickle the fancy of food purists but it fires the imagination of scientists, last week they discovered that the classic Parisian mushroom contains just the properties that, when genetically mixed with a wild strain of mushroom from the Sonora desert in California, could help it grow en masse while at the same time providing it with the resilience of the wild strain.66. ______ "We have found a way of increasing the success rate from one to 90 per cent." This is just one of the many products that, according to skeptics, are creating a generation of "Frankenfoods". The first such food that may be consumed on a wide scale is a tomato which bas been genetically manipulated so that it does not soften as it ripens.67. ______ Critics say that the new tomato—which cost $25 million to research—is designed to stay on supermarket shelves for longer. It has a ten-day life span. Not surprisingly, every-hungry US is leading the search for these forbidden fruit. By changing the genes of a grapefruit, a grower from Texas has created a sweet, red, thin-skinned grapefruit expected to sell at a premium over its California and Florida competitors. For chip fanatics who want to watch their waist-lines, new high-starch, low-moisture potatoes that absorb less fat when fried have been created, thanks to a gene from intestinal bacteria. The scientists behind such new food argue that genetic engineering is simply an extension of animal and plant breeding methods and that by broadening the scope of the genetic changes that can be made, sources of food are increased. Accordingly, they argue, this does not inherently lead to foods that are less safe than those developed by conventional techniques. But if desirable genes are swapped irrespective of species barriers, could things spiral out of control? "Knowledge is not toxic," said Mark Cantley, head of the biotechnology unit at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, "It has given us a far greater understanding of how living systems work at a molecular level and there is no reason for people to think that scientists and farmers should use that knowledge to do risky things." Clearly, financial incentive lies behind the development of these bigger, more productive foods. But we may have only ourselves to blame. In the early period of mass food commerce, food varieties were developed by traditional methods of selective breeding to suit the local palate. But as suppliers started to select and preserve plant variants that had larger fruit, consumer expectations rose, leading to the development of the desirable clones. Still, traditionalists and gourmets in Europe are fighting their development.68. ______ Even in the pre-packaged US, where the slow-softening tomato will soon be reaching supermarkets, 1,500 American chefs have lent their support to the Pure Food Campaign which calls for the international boycott of genetically engineered foods until more is known about the consequences of the technology and reliable controls have been introduced. In the short term, much of the technology remains untested and in the long term the consequences for human biology are unknown. Questions have arisen over whether new proteins in genetically modified food could cause allergies in some people.69. ______ Then there are the vegetarians who may be consuming animal non-vegetable proteins in what they think is a common tomato, or the practicing Jew who unknowingly consumes a fruit that has been enhanced with a pig's gene. As yet, producers are under no obligation to label "transgenetic" products. Environmentalists worry that new, genetically engineered plants may damage natural environment. A genetically engineered pest-resistant strain of plant that contacts with a native strain, for example, could turn them into virulent weeds beyond chemical control. Animal welfare groups worry about the quality of life of farm animals manipulated so that they produce more meat, milk, and eggs but which may suffer physical damage in the process.70. ______ Many of these fears spring from ignorance. And although it is hard to separate the paranoia from the benefits, the fact remains that genetic engineering offers ways of solving serious medical and agricultural problems. A. Western farmers have already bred cattle with mare muscle than a skeleton can carry. B. Supporters say the tomato, unsurprisingly called Flaw Saw, will taste better because it will be able to mature on the branch longer. C. Consumer opposition means that there are genetically manipulated foods on the German markets, and the Norwegian government has recently put research into genetically engineered foods on hold. D. For example, if a corn gene is introduced into a wheat gene for pest resistance, will those who are allergic to corn then be allergic to wheat? E. "Mushrooms in the past were almost impossible to cross," says Philippe Callac, one of the three scientists working on the mushroom. F. Genetic engineering will interfere with the balance of nature.
填空题For children with learning disabilities, success at reading and mathematics isn't always as easy as learning their ABCs or that two plus two equals four. That's because some young stem have difficulty automatically retrieving such basic building blocks as letters, words, numbers and mathematical facts. 66. ______ The study also provides new evidence that there are distinct subtypes of learning disabilities and that specialized interventions may be required to help children overcome these different kinds of disabilities. 67. ______ The work is funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD.. The inability to rapidly and automatically retrieve and identify the building blocks of language and math forces children to use more cognitive resources to recall basic material. This, in turn, moans their attention is not focused on higher thinking processes such as comprehension and problem solving, according to Beminger and Busse. They like learning to read and do math to mastering how to drive a car. 68. ______ "This is why we start by learning to drive in an empty parking lot and not on the freeway with all of its complexity, " adds Busse, "to he good at reading, writing and mathematics we also need to coordinate and recall all kinds of basic information automatically. " The UW researchers say children with the dual reading and math calculation disability typically don't complete their written school work on time. This becomes a big problem and children become frustrated. Eventually, they start to avoid math, reading and writing. The UW study looked at first through sixth-graders from 102 families who either had a reading disability or dual disability in reading and writing. The children were given a three to-four-hour battery of 15 tests that measured reading, writing and math skills. Among the tests was one that checked rapid automatic naming by having the children read rows of letters, digits and of letters and digits from cards. 70. ______ "If you have this deficit you have limited access to your memory for remembering the names of the letter F or the numeral 6. Dual deficit kids really have a difficult time identifying letters and numbers quickly and automatically. You can see it in how fast they can read and write a sentence under time. " "We don't know yet, but perhaps these children just need more practice in learning these automatic elements. " says Beminger. "Or it may be that their nervous systems axe wired differently and more practice will aggravate the problem. At this point we don't know if this problem can be fixed or if school curriculums are wrong for these children. Schools may well need new interventions to help these children. " A. A new study by University of Washington researchers, comparing children with a reading disability to those with dual reading and math calculation disabilities, indicates that this inability to rapidly retrieve basic information leads to impaired ability across the three domains of reading, writing and math. B. "There are certain things we need to learn to operate a car, such as shifting gears and when to switch on a turn signal. Many of these become automatic so we can be alert to other drivers and conditions on the road. "says Beminger. C. These findings were presented Sunday at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association in Boston by Julie Busse, a UW educational psychology doctoral student. The results come from a larger study looking at the family genetics of learning disabilities headed by Virginia Beminger, UW professor of educational psychology. D. "With dual disabilities, the big message is if your child is having trouble across subjects, it may be because he or she is having trouble getting things on automatic pilot. " says Beminger. "These children need to be told that they are not 'stupid', even though sometimes they may be labeled that way because so much of what we do is automatic. The children we studied all have IQs above the mean. " E. Other members of the UW research team are Robert Abbott, professor of educational psychology, and Jennifer Thomson, research coordinator. F. The researchers found that the children who have the most difficulty with this skill are more likely to be impaired overall in reading, writing and math calculation. Children who are less hampered by rapid automatic naming are more likely to only be reading impaired.
填空题
填空题{{I}} You will hear a dialogue about a lost property. Listen and
complete the sentences in questions 1~5 with the information you've heard. Write
not more than 5 words in each numbered box. You will hear the recording twice.
You now have 25 seconds to read the table below.{{/I}}
Information about Sudeley
Castle 1. opening hour ______a.m.
closing hour 5p.m. 2. cost for adults £______
cost for children £3
Information about Snowshill
Manor 3. collection that children will like
______ 4. payment for visit £______ 5. close
from (month) ______
填空题It was supposed to have been a routine commercial flight over Peru. Flying at 7,000 feet, the plane had just passed through a minor electrical storm. Suddenly, without warning, a ball of dazzling light appeared off the starboard wing. 16. ______ Inside the plane, the lights grew dim, and the beginning of panic was evident. In the cockpit, the compass was going defective and radio reception went dead. Transmission, however, remained unaffected. 17. ______ The report reached the desk of Edward U. Condon of the University of Colorado. Doctor Condon is under contract to the Air Force and is the official watchdog for such aerial phenomena. He immediately began checking the persons aboard the plane who had seen the mysterious object. Putting together bits of information from each, he quickly dismissed the obvious explanations. It had not been an exceptionally bright planet, such as Venus or Jupiter, nor a plastic weather balloon. It had not acted at all like a meteor or a re-entering satellite. It was obviously not a strangely shaped cloud formation. For nearly 15 years, various groups have expounded the theory that UFOs are actually spacecraft from other worlds. On the surface, this appears to be the simplest explanation. I believe, however, that it is by far the hardest explanation to swallow. 18. ______ And, more importantly, there is the irrefutable fact that space is under constant surveillance. The United States maintains a large number of tracking stations. The Russians and Germans also keep their own tracking equipment in constant use. What then was this fiery ball of light that tracked the Peruvian airliner? I have always suspected that most UFO sightings could be explained by natural phenomena, and 1 personally believe that what the people on that plane saw was an aerial phenomenon as strange and enigmatic as UFOs themselves. Its name is "ball lightning", and as the name suggests, it is spherical in shape. Appearing usually after a thunderstorm, it ranges in size from 10 to 30 inches in diameter and can last for up to one minute. Since it is electrical in nature and is seen for such a short period of time, little is known about it save one thing: its behavior is decidedly weird. One of the first reported appearances of ball lightning came from East Prussia some 40 years ago. According to the owner of ,a restaurant, there had been a heavy thundershower early in the afternoon, and the restaurant was hit by lightning. He investigated but found no damage. Then, from out of nowhere, a glowing, reddish ball appeared. It was over a foot in diameter. Both doors were open, and the thing seemed to move with the air currents. It was rotating all the time and passed a good number of people. Everyone watched as it climbed along the wiring of the electric bell, and, as if caught in a draft, traveled along another electric wire to the back of the room. Then it just disappeared altogether. In 1927, from Bad Godesberg, Germany we heard of "...a ball of light that was perched on the cast-iron post of a wire fence." Or, from Kalispell, Mont., about people who saw "...brilliant balls of light drop to the ground and disappear." 19. ______ During the last year of World War II, however, American fighter pilots began talking about something they called "Foo Fighters". They were balls of fiery light which appeared a few yard beyond the wing tips of their aircraft. Originally believed to be a revolutionary Axis weapon, stories about them were sharply censored. After the war, suspicion grew that the Foo Fighters were lightning balls, somehow produced by the presence of aircraft in an electrically charged atmosphere. The theory was enhanced by other reports of similar sightings. In April, 1952, a British science journal reported that a lightning ball appeared in the cabin of a British commercial airliner flying at 9,200 feet. It most likely had entered the craft through an air-intake vent. The lightning ball slowly drifted along the aisle, probably scaring the passengers silly. It moved to the rear of the plane and simply vanished from sight. Like most lightning balls, it did no harm. People have actually been touched by them without experiencing any sensation. 20. ______ It is my firm contention that many of today's UFOs are no more than appearances of ball lightning, and that also includes the report of Peru.A. In the first place, alien spacecraft would most certainly explore rather khan engage in a futile game of hide-and-seekB. It moved to a point directly above the airliner and, maintaining a constant air speed, the mysterious light stayed there for a while.C. Just as suddenly, the ball of light was gone. Was the unidentified flying object an uninvited visitor from another planet?D. None of these appearances of ball lightning caused a UFO report; people just didn't worry abut UFOs then,E. So what we have here is a well-documented, natural phenomenon. It is mysterious mainly because of its inherent nature, which makes more thorough investigation nearly impossible,F. The resemblance of this report to the Foo Fighters is obvious. But to say definitely that Foo Fighters were ball lightning poses other questions,
填空题 You will hear a talk. As you listen, you must answer questions
21—30 by writing NO MORE THAN THREE words in the space provided on the right.
You will hear the talk TWICE.
填空题A=Henry James B=Theodore Dreiser C=Carl Sandburg D=Sinclair Lewis Who... · died at the age of 89? 71. ______ · graduated from Yale after some unhappy years there? 72. ______ · described daily life in America and made his readers laugh at some silliness of their country? 73. ______ · made Europe his permanent home? 74. ______ · wrote his first novel about a prostitute? 75. ______ · was usually too shy to take part in his brothers' activities when he was young? 76. ______ · died in England? 77. ______ · was a journalist and editor before being recognized as a novelist? 78. ______ · was a Swedish-born American? 79. ______ · wrote children's books? 80. ______ A Henry James When he was growing up in New York, Henry was given a great deal of independence, so much in fact, that he felt isolated from other people. As a quiet child among exuberant brothers and cousins, Henry was more often an observer than a participant in their activities. When, as a young man, a back injury prevented his fighting in the Civil War, he felt even more excluded from the events of his time. While the adult Henry James developed many close friendships, he retained his attitude of observer, and devoted much of his life to solitary work on his writing. Henry's family lived for a time in Boston, where he became acquainted with New England authors and friends of his father, began his friendship with William Dean Howells, and attended Harvard Law School. After 1866 ,James lived in Europe much of the time and in 1875 decided to make it his permanent home. He lived in Paris for a year, where he met Turgenev, Flaubert, and Zola. The next year he settled in London and lived there and in the English countryside for the rest of his life. In 1915,a year before his death, to show his support of England in World War I ,James became a British citizen. B Theodore Dreiser Born in small-town Indiana, Dreiser rebelled as a youth against the poverty and narrowness of the life around him. One of his high school teachers recognized his talent and paid his tuition at Indiana University. But Dreiser left college after a year because he felt it "did not concern ordinary life at all". He had various jobs in Chicago: washing dishes, shoveling coal, working in a factory, and collecting bills — experiences which he later used in his writing. He taught himself to be a newspaper reporter and supported himself as a journalist and editor for many years while he was struggling to become recognized as a novelist. In what was almost a convention of naturalism, Dreiser's first novel was about a prostitute, but unlike Stephen Crane's Maggie, Dreiser's heroine prospers and flourishes. The end furnished a worse shock to Dreiser's readers than his choice of subject: Carrie is not only a rather improbable success on the musical comedy stage but one of her prosperous lovers, whom she has found useful in advancing her career, has suffered a reversal of fortune as startling as Carrie's. Readers in 1900 found the "punisthment" of the lover peculiarly distasteful to their notions of justice; according to the prevailing double standard of sexual morality, the woman was supposed to be punished, not the man. C Carl Sandburg The polar opposite of Robinson, Carl Sandburg(1878~1967) played the part of the simple workman, down to the cloth cap which he often wore. Nevertheless, he was an artist with words. His language was more colloquial and his rhythms looser than Robinson's; yet he too knew the value of form and poetic technique. As critic Louis Untermeyer puts it, there are "two Sandburgs: the muscular, heavy-listed, hard-hitting son of the streets, and his almost unrecognizable twin, the shadow-painter, the haunter of mists, the lover of implications and overtones." Sandburg was born in Galesburg, Illinois, of Swedish immigrant parents. He did odd jobs, served in the Spanish-American War, and worked his way through nearly four years of college afterward. From 1910 to 1912 he acted as secretary for the first Socialist mayor of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Not long afterward he attracted public notice with his increasingly powerful poetry, especially the poem, Chicago, and he gradually became able to give most of his time to his writing. He did some literary journalism; he wrote ballads and books for children, and he continued with his serious poetry. And all the while, his interest in Abraham Lincoln as well as models for his characters. His father was a prosperous merchant~ his mother had been a schoolteacher. D Sinclair Lewis Sinclair Lewis (1885~1951) was born in the town of Sauk Center, Minnesota. He was graduated from Yale after several unhappy years there and then became a journalist and editor. His early writing was commercial and undistinguished. But when he published Main Street in 1920, he proved that he had become a very effective novelist. Main Street immediately captured America's attention, as did Scott Fitzgerald's very different This Side of Paradise, published in the same year. In his first important novel, Lewis established the methods and subject matter that would bring him world fame and eventually a Nobel Prize in Literature — the first American author to be so honored. That is, he described daily life in America with such a sharp eye and ear that readers could easily recognize it as part of their own experience. But he did it with such an emphasis on the comic and ridiculous that he made his readers laugh, in spite of themselves, at some of the silliness of their country. Like the noted satirists of the past, he wanted to do more than amuse. He wanted to reform the America he pictured by skilfully arousing his readers' sympathies for the non-conformist in a conformist society. The heroine of Main Street is a rebellious young woman who struggles hard to bring culture to her dead little town, and we feel a wry regret when in the end she decides to conform.
填空题says that many organizations are doubting the motives of the government in advocating job sharing?