填空题A convenient point of departure is provided by the famous ClarkTrimble experiments of 1935. Clark-Trimble was not primarily a physicist, and his great (1) of the Graduated Hostility of Things was made almost accidentally. (2) some research into the relation between periods of the day and human bad temper, Clark-Trimble, a leading Cambridge psychologist, came to the (3) that low human dynamics in the early morning could not sufficiently (4) the apparent hostility of things at the breakfast table the way honey gets. (5) the fingers, the unfoldability of newspapers, etc. in the experiments which finally confirmed him in this view, (6) which he demonstrated before the Royal Society in London, Clark-Trimble arranged four hundred pieces of carpet in ascending degrees of quality, (7) coarse matting to priceless Chinese silk. Pieces of toast and marmalade, graded, weighed, and measured, were then dropped on each (8) of carpet, and the marmaladedownwards incidence was statistically (9) . The toast fell right-side-up every time on the cheap carpet, (10) when the cheap carpet was screened from the rest (in (11) case the toast didn't know that Clark-Trimble had other and better carpets), and it fell marmalade-downwards every time on the Chinese silk. (12) remarkable of all, the marmalade-downwards incidence for the intermediate grades was (13) to vary exactly with the quality of carpet. The success of these experiments naturally switched ClarkTrimble's attention to further research on resistentia, a fact which was directly (14) for the tragic and sudden end to his career (15) he trod on a garden rake at the Cambridge School of Agronomy. (16) the meantime, Noys and Crangenbacker had been doing some notable work in America. Noys (17) out literally thousands of experiments, in which subjects of all ages and sexes, sitting in chairs of every conceivable kind, dropped various kinds of pencils. In only three cases (18) the pencil come to rest within easy reach. Crangenbacker's work in the social-industrial field, on the relation of human willpower to specific problems such as (19) a train or subway will stop with the door opposite you on a crowded platform, or whether there will be a mail box (20) on your side of the street, was attracting much attention.
填空题For a child, happiness has a magical nature. I remember making hide-outs in newly-cut hay, playing cops and robbers in the woods, getting a speaking part in the school play. Of course, kids also experience lows, but their delight at such peaks of pleasure as winning a race or getting a new bike is unreserved. In the teen-age years the concept of happiness changes. Suddenly it's conditional on such things as excitement, love, popularity and whether that zit will clear up before night. I can still feel the agony of not being invited to a party that almost everyone else was going to. But I also recall the ecstasy of being plucked from obscurity at another event to dance with a John Travolta look-alike. (67) My dictionary defines happy as "lucky" or "fortunate", but I think a better definition of happiness is "the capacity for enjoyment". The more we can appreciate what we have, the happier we are. It's easy to overlook the pleasure we get from loving and being loved, the company of friends, the freedom to live where we please, even good health. (68) Later, peace descended again, and my husband and I enjoyed another pleasure—intimacy. Sometimes just the knowledge that he wants can bring me joy. You never know where happiness will turn up next. When I asked friends what made them happy, some mentioned apparently insignificant moments. "I hate shopping," one friend said, "But there's a clerk who always chats and really cheers me up". (69) I get a thrill from driving. One day I stopped to let the school bus tuna onto a side road. The driver grinned and gave me a thumbs-up sign. We were two allies in the world of mad motorists. It made me smile. (70) Psychologists tell us that to be happy we need a mixture of enjoyable leisure time and satisfying work. I doubt that my great grandmother, who raised 14 children and took in washing, had none of either. She did have a network of close friends and families, and maybe this is what fulfilled her. If she was content with what she had, perhaps it was because she didn't expect life to be very different. (71) While happiness may be more complex for us, the solution is the same as ever. Happiness isn't about what comes to us—it's about how we perceive what comes to us. It's the knack of finding a positive for every negative, and viewing a setback as a challenge. It's not wishing for what we haven't had, but enjoying what we do possess. A. Another friend loves the telephone. "Every time it rings, I know someone is thinking about me." B. When we think about happiness, we usually think of something extraordinary, a pinnacle of sheer delight—and those pinnacles seem to get rater the older we get. C. In adulthood the things that bring profound joy—birth, love, marriage—also bring responsibility and the risk of loss. Love may not last, sex isn't always good, loved ones die. For adults, happiness is complicated. D. We, on the other hand, with se many choices and such pressure to succeed in every area, have changed happiness into one more thing we "gotta have". We're so self-conscious about our "right" to it that it's making us miserable. So we chase it and equate it with wealth and success, without noticing that the people who have those things aren't necessarily happier. E. I added up my little moments of pleasure yesterday. First there was sheer bless when I shut the last lunchbox and had the house for myself. Then I spent an uninterrupted morning writing, which I love. When the kids came back home, I enjoyed their noise after the quiet of the whole day. F. We all experience moments like these. Too few of us register them as happiness.
填空题the climate affects the future sustainable agricultural development?
1
environmental control is related with the national revenues?
2
the environmental problems are not caused overnight?
3
a variety of species are on the decrease?
4
agriculture is also a factor for file degradation of environment?
5
pollution can be controlled by increasing the production cost of polluting goods?
6
The developing world is often regarded as having a high percentage of heavily polluting activities within its industrial sector.
7
substitutions in consumption, emission abatement and exposure avoid ance.
8
the degradation of environment causes the change of climate?
9
the approaches to research should be adjusted to the changing situation?
10
A
BOOK 1
The book offers a comprehensive perspective on the consequences and possible policy solutions for climatic change as we move into the twenty-first century. It assesses the impact of potential future global climate change on agriculture and the need to sustain agricultural growth for economic development.
The book begins by examining the role of international research institutions in overcoming environmental constraints on sustainable agricultural growth and economic development. The authors then discuss how agricultural research systems may be restructured to respond to global environmental problems such as climate change and loss of genetic diversity. The discussion then extends to consider environmental accounting and indexing, to illustrate how environmental quality can be included formally in measures of national income, social welfare and sustainability. The third part of the book focuses on the effects of and policy responses to climate change. Chapters in this part examine the effect of climate change on production, trade land use patterns and livelihoods. They consider impacts on the distribution of income between developed and developing countries remain a major economic activity. Authors take on an economy-wide perspective to draw lessons for agriculture, trade, land use and tax policy.
B
BOOK 2
The ozone layer is threatened by chemical emissions, the climate is endangered from fossil fuels and deforestation, and global biodiversity is being lost by reason of thousands of years of habitat conversions. Global environmental problems arise out of the accumulated impacts from many years" and many countries" economic development. In order to address these problems the states of the world must cooperate to manage their development processes together--this is what an international environmental agreement must do. But can the world"s countries cooperate successfully to manage global development? How should they manage it? Who should pay for the process, as well as for the underlying problems?
This book presents an examination of both the problem and the process underlying international environmental lawmaking.- the recognition of international interdependence, the negotiation of international agreements and the evolution of international resource management. It examines the general problem of global resource management by means of general principles and case studies and by looking at how and why specific negotiations and agreements have failed to achieve their targets.
The book is designed as an introductory text for those studying global environmental policy making and institution building. It will also be of interest to practitioners and policy makers and scholars in the areas of environmental economics and law.
C
BOOK 3
Industrialization to achieve economic development has resulted in global environmental degradation. While the impacts of industrial activity on the natural environment are a major concern in developed countries, much less is known about these impacts in developing countries. This source book identifies and quantifies the environmental consequences of industrial growth, and provides policy advice, including the use of clean technologies and environmentally sound production techniques, with special reference to the developing world.
The developing world is often seen as having a high percentage of heavily polluting activities within its industrial sector. This, combined with a substantial agricultural sector, which contributes to deforestation, the erosion of the top soil and desertification, has led to extreme pressures on the environment and impoverishes the population by destroying its natural resource base. This crisis suggests that sound industrialization policies are of paramount importance in developing countries" economic development, and calls for the management of natural resources and the adoption of low-waste of environmentally clean technologies.
The authors consider the industrial sector as a pollutant vis-a-vis other sectors of the economy, and then focus on some industry-specific pollutants within the manufacturing sector and some process-specific industrial pollutants. They conclude by reviewing the economic implications of promoting environmentally sound industrial development, specifically addressing the question of the conflict or complementarity which may exist between environmental goods and industrial production.
D
BOOK 4
This is an important book which presents new concepts of the marginal cost of substituting non-pollutive for pollutive goods. Technical in its approach it complements the other literature in the field and will be a significant contribution to the understanding of microeconomic issues in pollution control.
The book focuses on three main concepts- substitutions in consumption, emission abatement and exposure avoidance. The first part considers the adjustment of the scope and combination of goods produced as a method for controlling pollution.
The author argues that pollution is controlled by increasing the relative price of the polluting goods in the production process; thereby reducing demand and subsequent production of the goods. In the second part, the discussion is extended to include the possibilities of preventing or abating emissions in relation to three models.- first, pollution prevention when non-polluting inputs and processes are substituted for pollutants; second, when a proportion of the polluting output is recycled rather than being discarded; and finally end-of-pipe abatement where additional technology is used. In conclusion the author assesses the extent to which pollution damage is controlled by avoidance of emissions, with avoidance being modeled as an add-on technology with its own returns to scale.
填空题WhatdoyouknowaboutBeethoven'smusictalentwhenhewas7?
填空题·indicates that a 63-year-old man ,night find job-sharing against his interest?
填空题Grown-ups, as any child will tell you, are monstrous hypocrites, especially when it comes to television. It is to take their minds off their own telly-addiction that adults are so keen to hear and talk about the latest report on the effects of programs on children. Surely all that nonsense they watch must be desensitizing them, making them vicious, shallow, acquisitive, less responsible and generally sloppy about life and death. But no, not a scrap of convincing evidence from the sociologists and experts in the psyches of children. For many years now parents, teachers and newspaper editors have been disappointed by the various studies, and sociologists are beginning to fall into disrepute for failing to come up with the desired results. The latest report, "Popular TV and Schoolchildren", perhaps more attuned to the authoritarian times in which we live, assumes greater moral leadership and hands out laurels and wooden spoons to TV shows and asserts, as educators should, the importance of having values. The kids, on the other hand, will no be switching off Kenny Everett now they have been told how sexist and trivial he is. (As if they didn't know!) (70) The nation has lived with the box for more than 30 years now and has passed from total infatuation-- revived temporarily by the advent of colour--to the present casual obsession which is not unlike that of the well-adjusted alcoholic. And now tile important and pleasant truth is breaking, to the horror of program makers and their detractors alike, that television really does not 'affect much at all. (71) And if TV imparts little bad, there is no reason to think it does much good either. It has failed spectacularly to make our children more callous and violent, and it has failed by way of "Jackanory" or "Blue Peter" to forge a young nation of origami adepts, or dog handlers or builders of lawn mowers out of coat hangers and wire corks. Television turns out to be no great transformer of minds or society. We are not, en masse, as it was once predicted we would be, fantastically well-informed about other cultures or about the origins of life on earth. People do not remember much from television documentary beyond how good it was. (72) Documentaries are not what most people want to watch anyway. Television is at its most popular when it celebrates its own present. Its ideal subjects are those that need not be remembered and can be instantly replaced, where what matters most is what is happening now and what is going to happen next. Sport, news, panel games, cop shows, long-running soap operas, situation comedies--these occupy us only for as long as they are on. (73) The box is further neutralized by the sheer quantity people watch. The more of it you see, the less any single bit of it matters. Of course, some programs are infinitely better than others. There are gifted people working in television. But seen from a remoter perspective--say, four hours a night viewing for three months--the quality of individual programs means as much as the quality of each car in the rush- hour traffic. For the heavy viewer, TV has only two meaningful states--on and off. What are the kids doing? Watching TV. No need to ask what, the answer is sufficient. Soon, I'll go up there and turn it off. Like a light bulb it will go out and the children will do something else. It appears that the nation's children spend more time in front of their TVs than in the classroom. Their heads are full of TV--but that's all, just TV. The Kojak violence they witness is TV violence, sufficient to itself. It does not brutalize them to the point where they cannot grieve the loss of a pet, or be shocked at some minor playground violence. Children, like everyone else, know the difference between TV and life. TV knows its place. It imparts nothing but itself; it has its own rules, its own language, its own priorities. (74) Whatever the TV/video industry might now say, television will never have the impact on civilization that the invention of the written word has had. The book--this little hinged thing--is cheap, portable, virtually unbreakable, endlessly reusable, has instant replay facilities and in slow motion if you want it, needs no power lines, batteries or aerials, works in planes and train tunnels, can be stored indefinitely without much deterioration. A. Only those who knew something about the subject in the first place retain the information. B. Nor, I suspect, will they have become more sexist and trivial themselves from watching him. C. This is tough on those diligent professionals who produce excellent work; but since--as everyone agrees--awful programs far outnumber the good, it is a relief to know the former cannot do much harm. Television cannot even make impressionable children less pleasant. D. It is less amenable to censorship and centralized control, can be written and manufactured by relatively unprivileged individuals or groups, and--most sophisticated of all--dozens of different ones can be going at the same time, in the same room without a sound. E. It is because this little glowing, chattering screen barely resembles life at all that it remains so usefully ineffectual. To stare at a brick wall would waste time in a similar way. The difference is that the brick wall would let you know you were wasting your time. F. However good or bad it is, a night's viewing is wonderfully forgettable. It's a little sleep, it's entertainment; our morals, and for that matter, our brutality, remain intact.
填空题
填空题An economist is someone who knows a lot about how goods and wealth are produced and used. Food, for (31) , is a kind of goods. Everyone eats food, but the average person does not think much (32) all the things that must happen before (33) appears on his plate. Another example is the paper this article is printed on. (34) started as wood on a tree very far from (35) . Men and machines made the wood (36) paper, which had to be packaged and carried (37) trucks and put into stores. At every step in the process people had to be paid for their work; money had to (38) used for buying and repairing the machines, and so on. Of course, everyone (39) had to make (40) , too. Even a very simple thing (41) a piece of paper has a long story (42) it. Economists try to understand how all the parts of the long story are related. (43) economist learns how to guess (44) will happen in the future, as (45) as goods and prices are concerned. If fruit growers in Florida lose part of their crops (46) of bad weather this month, what will happen to the (47) of oranges in New York two months from (48) ? If banks charge higher interest (49) loans to builders, how will that affect the cost of a new home? These are just a few of the questions economists learn how to (50) . Would you like to be an economist?
填空题66. __________. Demand theory is based on a simply generalization about customer behavior that has been observed for centuries, that almost people would regard as "common sense". Generally speaking, if a good or service becomes more expensive, consumers are less likely to buy it. So, the price of oil more than doubled in 1999, the demand for oil would fall. How much did the demand for oil fall would depend on the elasticity of the demand for oil. Economists describe the demand for oil response as relatively inelastic. So, the fall was not large.67. __________. A substantial rise in the price of oil would affect the demand for oil tankers and coal in 1999.68. __________. The use of coal is the same as oil. When file price of oil rises, fewer people will use oil and more people will use coal. In Economics, coal is a substitute good of oil, the price of oil rises, and the demand for oil falls, the demand for coal increases. As the demand for coal is related to the demand for oil, therefore, a constriction in the demand for oil will mean that the demand for coal will shift to a rise. The increase in demand is shown by demand rising from oil to coal. So, the demand for coal increased in 1999.69. __________. Because the price of oil rose in 1999, refiner had to face a squeeze on profit margins. This made the costs of refining petrol increase. The costs of production increase will lead decrease on the supply for petrol. As the supply for petrol is related to the supply for oil, therefore, an extension in the supply for oil will mean that the supply for petrol will shift to a fall. This decrease in supply is shown by supply falling from Qs0 to Qs1 So, the supply for petrol decreased in 1999.70. __________. Because the price of oil rose in 1999, the supply for oil would raise. Nylon is joint of oil. So, the supply for oil raises the supply for nylon increases. As the supply for nylon is related to the supply for oil, therefore, an extension in the supply for oil will mean that the supply for nylon will shift to a rise. So the supply for nylon increased in 1999.A. The graph shows how the crude oil price has changed between 1994 and 1998. In general, the crude oil price rose up to the peak until 1997, at which point there was a sharp reduction in the crude oil price. Finally, we can summarize that the overall price, if crude oil dropped from over$10 per barrel to almost $7 per barrel between 1994 and 1998. Market forces affected this.B. In 1999 the price of oil more than doubled. Discuss the effects of a substantial rise in the price of oil on the supply and demand for oil and other related products. This affected not only the demand and supply for oil, but also other related products.C. Because the price of oil rose in 1999, producing oil could get more profit. Therefore, some producers would switch from providing nuclear power to providing oil. This meant that more producers would produce oil. Oil becomes more attractive than nuclear power; this will lead decrease on the supply for nuclear power. As the supply for nuclear power is related to the supply for oil, therefore an extension in the supply for oil will mean that the supply will shift to a fall. So, the supply for nuclear power decreased in 1999.D. Supply theory tells us that profit enable producers to use less suitable resources to increase their supply of product. In 1999, the price of oil more than doubled, this meant that the oil producers could get more profit, so the supply would rise. This type of movement is known as an extension which leads to supply rising. How much did the supply for oil raise would depend on the elasticity of the supply for oil. The rule is that the steeper the curve, the more elastic the supply and vice versa. So, the supply for oil is elastic.E. A substantial rise in the price of oil would affect the supply for nuclear power, petrol and nylon.F. We know that oil tankers are used to transport oil. If the price of oil rises, fewer people buy oil. Therefore, less oil tankers are used to transport oil. In Economics, oil tankers are complementary goods of oil, the price of oil rises, and the demand for oil falls, the demand for oil tankers decrease. As the demand for oil tankers is related to the demand for oil, therefore, a constriction in the demand for oil will mean that the demand for oil tankers will shift to a fall. So the demand for oil tankers decreased in 1999.
填空题"Had a good flight?" the Chief asked.
"A bit bumpy over the Azores," Hawthorne said.
1
this occasion he had not had time to
2
from his pale gray tropical suit; the summons had come to him
3
in Kingston and a car had met him at London Airport. He
4
as close to the steam
5
as he could, but sometimes he couldn"t
6
a shiver.
"What"s that odd flower you"re
7
?"
Hawthorne had quite forgotten
8
. He put his hand up to his lapel.
"It looks as though it had once been an orchid," the Chief said with disapproval.
"Pan American gave it to us
9
our dinner last night," Hawthorne explained. He took out the limp mauve rag and put it in the ash-tray. "With your dinner? What an odd thing to do," the Chief said, "it can hardly have improved the meal. Personally I detest orchids. Decadent thing. There was someone, wasn"t there, who wore green
10
?"
"I only put it in my button-hole so as to clear the dinner-tray. There was so little room, with the hot-cakes and champagne and the sweet salad and the tomato soup and the chicken Maryland and ice-cream."
"What a
11
mixture. You should travel BOAC."
"You didn"t give me enough time, sir, to get a booking."
"Well, the matter is rather urgent. You know our man in Havana has been turning
12
some pretty disquieting stuff
13
."
"He"s a good man," Hawthorne said.
"I don"t deny it. I wish we
14
more like him. What I can"t understand is how the Americans have not tumbled to anything there."
"Have you asked them, sir?"
"Of course not. I don"t
15
their discretion."
"Perhaps they don"t trust ours."
填空题
填空题You may say that the business of marking books is going to slow down your reading. (31) probably will. That's one of the (32) for doing it. Most of us have been taken in by the notion that speed of (33) is a measure of our intelligence. There is (34) such things as the right (35) for intelligent reading. Some things should be (36) quickly and effortlessly, and some should be read (37) and even laboriously. The sign of intelligence (38) reading is the ability to read (39) things differently according to their worth. In the (40) of good books, the point is not to see how many of them can you get through, (41) how many can you get through them—how many you can (42) your own. A few friends are (43) than a thousand acquaintances. If this be your goal, (44) it should be, you will not be impatient if it takes more time and effort to read a great book than a newspaper (45) . You may have another objection to (46) books. You can't lend them to your friends (47) nobody else can read them (48) being distracted by your notes. What's more, you won't want to lend them because a (49) copy is a kind of intellectual diary, and (50) it is almost like giving your mind away. If your friend hopes to read your Shakespeare, or The Federalist Papers, tell him, gently but firmly, to buy a copy. You will lend him your car or your coat—but your books are as much a part of you as your head or your heart.
填空题A = Yahoo! B = eBay C = Amazon Which company (companies)
rents its own logistics and infrastructure to other companies to compute
on the Internet?
1
are run without a clear vision for the future?
2
3
held a dominant position in its business but alienated its users?
4
employed internal competition in a way that confused advertisers and
users?
5
is the youngest among the three survivors in the great Internet crisis?
6
has not changed its leader since the very beginning and still sticks to the
game vision?
7
acquired other companies without making them an integral part of it?
8
used to be less profitable but is now on the right track?
9
provides services similar to Google but does not confront it directly?
10
The Internet company, Yahoo! appears in the end to have rebuffed Microsoft, the software Goliath that wanted to buy it. It has done so, in part, by surrendering to Google, the younger Internet company that is its main rival.
Yahoo!
lives, but on the web"s equivalent of life support.
Yahoo! "s descent, first gradual then sudden, during this decade marks a surprising reversal of the fates of the only three big Internet firms to have survived since the web"s earliest days. Back in 1994, Jerry Yang and David Filo, truant PhD students at Stanford, started to publish a list, eventually named
Yahoo!
, of links to cool destinations on the nascent web. Around the same time, Jeff Bezos was writing his business plan for a website, soon to be called Amazon, for selling books online. The following year, Pierre Omidyar, a French-born Iranian-American, put an auction site on the web that would become eBay.
Even as hundreds of other dotcoms fell by the wayside at the turn of the century, these three made it through the great Internet crisis and have since prospered, to varying degrees and at different times. Their fates have reflected the evolution of the web as a whole, and now suggest its future direction. For many years eBay and Yahoo! made more money than Amazon, which, as a capitalintensive retailer, struggled longer with losses and then made profits at lower margins. And yet, says Pip Coburn of Coburn Ventures, an investment adviser, Yahoo! is now drifting and eBay is a washed-up quasi-monopoly, whereas Amazon finds itself at the Internet"s cutting edge.
Yahoo!
set out to be a new sort of media company. Its site became a tawdry strip mall, with big, flashing advertisements next to users" e-mail inboxes. The firm slipped into a mindset of product silos, with the teams for the home-page, e-mail, finance and sports pages competing with each other and for advertisers, and confusing users.
Yahoo!
"s bigger mistake was not to see how the web was changing. Google, also founded by two truant Stanford PhD students, became the leader of a new generation with a vision that web search, rather than
Yahoo!
"s "portal" approach, would guide surfers around the Internet.
Yahoo!
belatedly tried to keep up and bought sites such as flicker, com for photo-sharing and del. icio. us. cam for bookmark-sharing, but it "put them in the curio cabinet" without transforming the company, say"s Jerry Michalski, a technology consultant.
EBay took a different route, recognising that its business—in effect, online yard sales—had potential network effects: in short, that sellers and buyers would flock to whichever site already did the most trading. The firm became a de facto monopoly, but with that came a culture that left many of its users disenchanted, and growth slowed. Some measures, such as the number of new listings of items for sale, are even in decline. Buyers and sellers increasingly rely on Google"s search model, or online social networks, to find things and one another. EBay"s new boss, John Donahoe, is not facing a crisis like
Yahoo!
"s—but neither does he appear to have a big idea for the future.
Amazon, by contrast, has found exactly that. It is the only one of the three that has been led continuously by the same man, its founder Jeff Bezos. Unlike his peers at the other two firms, Mr. Bezos has stuck to his original vision—while adding two new ideas as they presented themselves,
His original plan was to become "Earth"s biggest river" of merchandise, from books and toys to electronics and almost anything else that can be shipped. Then Mr. Bezos realized that the same online store-front and logistics system that worked for Amazon itself could alga work for others, So he added an entirely new category of customers: third-party sellers, who account for 30% of all items sold through Amazon"s site today.
Then, about four years ago, another, and potentially bigger, idea struck Mr. Bezos. Their infrastructure is rivalled in scale by only a few other fu-ms in the world, including Google. So Mr. Bezos again added an entire category of customers: firms that wanted to rent computing capacity from Amazon over the Internet, rather than build their own data centres in a warehouse, It has signed up over 370,000 customers.
Almost by accident, Amazon has thus "backed into cloud computing". If there is a lender in the cloud, it is Google. But Amazon is now right up there. Better yet, although Amazon overlaps with Google in the cloud, it does not rival it directly. Google mostly offers entire applications, such as word processing or spreadsheets, to consumers through their web browsers. Amazon offers services to programmers so they can build and run their own applications.
So there they are. Jerry Yang is still boss of
Yahoo!
, although angry, restive shareholders may oust him at their annual meeting on August 1st, and his top lieutenants are leaving in groves. John Donahoe is looking hard for a purpose that will enable eBay to survive another decade. And Mr. Bezos is right where he wants to be.
填空题· will frustrate those who like to play sports game on computer just as they play in the reality?
填空题Note: Answer each question by choosing A, B or C. Some choices may be required more than once. A =Section A B =Section B C =Section C Lessening the effect of the epidemic upon sustainable development is one of the issues USAID will get down to in the future. 71.______ The multinational cooperation is the best way to stop HIV/AIDS from spreading among the mobile population. 72.______ The effective way to deal with HIV/AIDS transmission trom mother to child. 73.______ USAID is trying to work out ways to work out ways to prevent HIV/AIDS transmission from mother to child. 74.______ In the past eight years USAID has experimented with and improved various methods to slow the spread of HIV/AIDS. 75.______ USAID will strengthen women's ability to resist HIV/AIDS. 76.______ Women and children are those who are very easy to be infected HIV/AIDS. 77.______ USAID will put the prevention method into effect. 78.______ The epidemic has been spreading very fast over the past eight years. 79.______ The integration of prevention and cure is the most efficient way of preventing HIV/AIDS. 80.______ Section A Since the US Agency for International Development (USAID) began its first HIV/AIDS prevention efforts eight years ago, the epidemic has changed dramatically. HIV has spread to every region of the world. Millions of people infected with HIV during the first decade of the epidemic are developing opportunistic infections and other AIDS-related illnesses, and many are dying. Women and children are among those most vulnerable to HIV infection. As HIV prevalence and AIDS mortality soar, millions of children will lose their parents. HIV/AIDS is having a devastating impact on the health and well-being of families, communities and nations worldwide. The epidemic's effects on the structure of societies and the productivity of their members undermine efforts to promote sustainable development around the globe. USAID's approach to slowing the spread of HIV/AIDS relies on strategies tested and refined over the past eight years. At the same time, the Agency is moving forward to address new challenges posed by the evolving epidemic. One of the important lessons learned during the past decade is that an effective response to HIV/AIDS requires the full participation of people and communities affected by the virus. Although people living with HIV/AIDS are among the most successful advocates and communicators for prevention, too often their voices are not heard or heeded. Greater involvement of people living with HIV/AIDS is essential to creating the supportive political, legal and social environments needed to control the epidemic. Section B In December 1994 at the Paris AIDS Summit, representatives of 42 governments adopted resolution pledging greater support for networks of people living with HIV/AIDS. Before and during the summit, members of these networks worked with government and multilateral organizations, including USAID, to develop a plan for translating the words of the resolution into concrete action. The Agency is committed to ensuring that people living with HIV/AIDS are accepted in full partnership with governments, international organizations and the private sector in developing, implementing and evaluating HIV/AIDS policies and programs. People living with HIV/AIDS and community-based organizations have been at the forefront of efforts to draw attention to the connection between compassionate AIDS care and effective HIV prevention. In the absence of a vaccine or cure, USAID continues to emphasize HIV/AIDS prevention. But as the number of people suffering from AIDS-related illness begins to increase dramatically, the Agency is also exploring ways to reduce the social impact of AIDS and enhance prevention efforts by integrating prevention and care. The Agency will also continue to pioneer regional approaches to an epidemic that does not recognize national boundaries. Crossborder interventions throughout the world will target mobile populations, including migrant workers, tourists, traders, transport workers and people displaced by war and, social disruption. Results from USAID-supported research on preventing HIV/AIDS in women, from microbiocide development to behavioral research on communication between men and women, will play a key role in slowing the rapid spread of the epidemic in the future. The Agency will continue to support research designed to strengthen programs for women and will move quickly to incorporate promising prevention methods into field activities. USAID will also work to reduce women's vulnerability to HIV prevention by promoting multisectoral efforts to improve their economic and social status. Section C Recognizing the growing threat HIV/AIDS poses to child survival, the Agency will support efforts to identify and test methods of preventing transmission from mother to child, such as Vitamin A supplements and other promising interventions. In addition, USAID will expand efforts to reduce HIV/AIDS among women and children by integrating prevention interventions into its family planning and child survival programs. Effective use of integrated interventions is critical for HIV/AIDS prevention because the virus affects people who are most active in the development process. Decades of progress in health and development are jeopardized by the social and economic impact of the epidmic. Without careful planning, development activities, in trun, can promote the spread of HIV/AIDS by encouraging migration and the separation of workers from their families. Most integration efforts to date have been in health and family planning, but other development sectors have an important role to play in HIV/AIDS prevention. In the future, the Agency will pursue opportunities for reducing HIV transmission and mitigating the impact of the epidemic on sustainable development through its programs in education, agriculture, and human resource and micro-enterprise development. USAID's approach to HIV/AIDS has evolved along with the epidemic. To meet the challenges ahead, the Agency will continue to adapt its strategies and programs in order to benefit from lessons from the field and new opportunities for building effective partnerships. Given the epidemic's profound implications for health, economic growth and social stability, USAID's investment in HIV/AIDS prevention will save millions of lives and promote sustainable development throughout the world.
填空题The author changed his minors.
填空题 If you've been on campus for very long, I'm
certain that you've already heard about this course. You may know that last
semester about fifty{{U}} {{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}}of the students
enrolled in my course failed it. Let me explain how this came{{U}} {{U}}
2 {{/U}} {{/U}}before you jump to any{{U}} {{U}} 3
{{/U}} {{/U}}. In the first{{U}} {{U}} 4 {{/U}} {{/U}}, since
this is a composition class, I expect my students to follow certain
rules{{U}} {{U}} 5 {{/U}} {{/U}}formality. Unfortunately,
students today dislike having to follow rules of any kind, especially
those which they may feel to be unnecessary. For{{U}} {{U}} 6
{{/U}} {{/U}}, I ask that each of your papers{{U}} {{U}} 7
{{/U}} {{/U}}typed and centered on the paper correctly. I count off points for
various kinds of mistakes. A misspelled word will cost you 5 points. You've lost
25 points if you've{{U}} {{U}} 8 {{/U}} {{/U}}five words. If you
write{{U}} {{U}} 9 {{/U}} {{/U}}incomplete sentence, you've lost
10 points. If you give me two complete sentences as one without adequate
punctuation, you've lost 15 points. I do not accept late{{U}} {{U}}
10 {{/U}} {{/U}}You will receive a zero for any theme which you fail to
submit on{{U}} {{U}} 11 {{/U}} {{/U}}I expect, you to read each
assignment. To make certain that you have read the assignment, I{{U}}
{{U}} 12 {{/U}} {{/U}}give you a short unannounced quiz from time
to{{U}} {{U}} 13 {{/U}} {{/U}}. This class meets on Mondays,
Wednesdays, and Fridays. You will have a total of six major tests throughout
the{{U}} {{U}} 14 {{/U}} {{/U}}. Your final grade will be
based{{U}} {{U}} 15 {{/U}} {{/U}}an average of these major
tests, the pop tests,{{U}} {{U}} 16 {{/U}} {{/U}}eight written
themes. If you have any questions at any time, you can see me on Tuesday.
My office is{{U}} {{U}} 17 {{/U}} {{/U}}the second floor of this
building. Your{{U}} {{U}} 18 {{/U}} {{/U}}for Wednesday is to
read Hemingway's short story on page 55. Friday will be the last class day of
this week, so you can expect to write a short in class theme for me then.
That's{{U}} {{U}} 19 {{/U}} {{/U}}for today. I'll{{U}}
{{U}} 20 {{/U}} {{/U}}you on Wednesday.
填空题 Read the following text and fill each of the numbered spaces
with ONE suitable word. Write your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
There are two basic ways to see growth: one as a product, the
other as a process. People have generally viewed personal growth as an external
result or {{U}}(31) {{/U}} that can easily be identified {{U}}(32)
{{/U}} measured. The worker who gets a promotion, the student {{U}}(33)
{{/U}} grades improve, the foreigner who learns a new language — all these
are examples of people who have measurable {{U}}(34) {{/U}} to show for
their efforts. {{U}}(35) {{/U}} contrast, the process of personal growth
is {{U}}(36) {{/U}} more difficult to determine, since {{U}}(37)
{{/U}} definition it is a journey and not the specific signposts or
landmarks {{U}}(38) {{/U}} the way. The process is not the road itself,
but {{U}}(39) {{/U}} the attitudes and feelings people have, their
caution or courage, as they encounter new experiences and unexpected obstacles.
In this {{U}}(40) {{/U}} , the journey never really ends; there are
{{U}}(41) {{/U}} new ways to experience the world, new ideas to try, new
challenges {{U}}(42) {{/U}} accept. In order to grow, to
travel new roads, people need to have a willingness to {{U}}(43) {{/U}}
risks, to confront the unknown, and to accept the possibility that they may
"fail" at first. {{U}}(44) {{/U}} we see ourselves as we try a new way
of being is essential to our ability to grow. Do we perceive ourselves
{{U}}(45) {{/U}} quick and curious? If so, then we tend to take more
chances and to be more open {{U}}(46) {{/U}} unfamiliar experiences. Do
we think we're slow to adapt {{U}}(47) {{/U}} change or that we're not
smart {{U}}(48) {{/U}} to cope with a new challenge? Then we are
{{U}}(49) {{/U}} to take a more passive role or not try at {{U}}(50)
{{/U}}.
填空题
There is a difference between science and technology. Science
is a method of answering theoretical {{U}}(31) {{/U}}; technology is a
method of{{U}} (32) {{/U}}practical problems (and sometimes creating new
problems out ofthe "solutions"). Science has to do with discovering the
facts and relationships{{U}} (33) {{/U}}observable phenomena in nature
and with establishing theories that serve to organize{{U}} (34)
{{/U}}facts and relationships; technology has to do{{U}} (35)
{{/U}}tools, techniques, and procedures for implementing the findings of
science. Another distinction between science{{U}} (36) {{/U}}technology
has to do with the progress in each. Progress{{U}} (37)
{{/U}}science excludes the human factor. And this is justly so.
Scientists,{{U}} (38) {{/U}}seek to comprehend the universe and know the
truth within the highest degree of accuracy and certainty cannot pay attention
to their own or other people's likes or{{U}} (39) {{/U}}or to popular
ideas about the fitness of things. What scientists discover may shock or anger
people -- as{{U}} (40) {{/U}}Darwin's theory of evolution. But even an
unpleasant truth is more than likely to be useful; besides, we have the option
of refusing to{{U}} (41) {{/U}}it! But hardly so with technology; we do
not have the option of refusing to{{U}} (42) {{/U}}the sonic boom
produced by a supersonic aircraft{{U}} (43) {{/U}}overhead; we do not
have the option of refusing to breathe polluted{{U}} (44) {{/U}}; and we
do not have the option of living in a non-atomic age. Unlike science, progress
in{{U}} (45) {{/U}}must be measured in{{U}} (46) {{/U}} of the
human factor. Technology must be our slave and not the reverse. The legitimate
purpose of technology is to serve people — people in{{U}} (47) {{/U}},
not merely some peoples and future generations, not merely{{U}} (48)
{{/U}} who presently wish to gain advantage{{U}} (49)
{{/U}}themselves. Technology must be humanistic{{U}} (50) {{/U}}it
is to lead to a better world.
填空题 A = Chang Ling B = Ding Ling C = Emperor Qian kong"s Tomb Which tomb...
·was opened to the public as early as 19787 71. ______.
·served as a model for the remaining 12 for its good preservation? 72. ______.
·is of higher artistic quality than most imperial tombs? 73. ______.
·is the largest tomb? 74. ______.
·is the first imperial tomb to have been excavated in China? 75. ______.
·has the inner walls and arched ceilings of its gateway and halls decorated with four
·celestial guardians? 76. ______.
·owns three coffins within it? 77. ______.
·holds the coffin of an emperor which was placed over a well? 78. ______.
·has a large red gate with a significant bronze lion which marks the entrance to the ground? 79. ______.
·was a huge and costly construction project which began in 1743? 80. ______.
Maintaining an imperial tradition that originated from the Zhou Dynasty (c. 1066- 1221 BC), the Ming emperors selected the location and design of their tombs while they were still alive. The selection of sites, based on the prevailing winds and the water level, ensured that only benevolent spirits were in habiting the area. Of the 16 Ming emperors, 13 chose to be buried in this serene valley (Shisanling) just north of Beijing.
The Sacred Way
The road to the tombs, which branches off the route to the Great Wall, was once a 6.4 km (4 mi) long sacred way, forbidden to all but the emperor"s funeral cortege. The road begins at a five-arched marble gate, built in 1540. A mile further down stands a three- arched gateway, the Dahongmen (Great Red Gate).
The emperor"s body was carried through the central archway. Only on this one occasion was the center door opened. Just beyond the gate sits a huge stone tortoise(symbol of longevity)with a 9.1 m (30 ft) stele mounted on its back. The stele, the largest such tablet in China, was inscribed by the fourth Ming emperor at the time of the death of his predecessor, Yang Le, in 1424. This tortoise marks the beginning of the famous Avenue of the Animals. Lions, camels, elephants, horses, and two sets of mythical (or at least unrecognizable)beasts, 12 statues in all, line either side of the road, alternately standing and kneeling and most, these days, supporting tourists on their backs while being photographed.
Beyond the animal figures stretch a series of 12 stone human statues, dating from the 15th century: four military men, four civilian officials, and four obedient retainers, all with stately postures and fixed stares--an honor guard for the dead emperor. A legend says that an emperor of the later Qing Dynasty wanted to transport the statues to line the road to his own tomb. One of the emperor"s ministers was told, in a dream, that the statues were eternally loyal to the Ming emperors and therefore should not be moved. The Qing emperor took this as a warning that if the statues were disturbed, a deadly wind would blow down from the Ming Tombs upon the capital and he abandoned the project.
Chang Ling
Of the 13 tombs, only two have been excavated, those of Chang (the burial name for Yong Le, 1403 - 1424), and Ding (Emperor Wan Li, 1562- 1620). The Chang Ling tomb is the largest and best preserved of the tombs; it served as a model for the remaining 12.
Visitors enter through a red gate which opens toward a courtyard. From here they pass under the Gate of Eminent Favors(Lingenmen)into a second courtyard, in which stands the marble Hall of Eminent Favors (Lingendian), surrounded by pine trees(another ancient symbol of longevity) . The roof of the hall is supported by 32 giant tree columns. Beyond this hall is a third courtyard, where the visitor will see a simple stele with the inscription Da Ming--Great Ming. This marks the passage to the sepulcher.
Ding Ling
Also known as the Underground Palace, this is the first imperial tomb to have been excavated in China. The work was completed over a period of three years (1956- 1959). Ding(Emperor Wan Li) was buried here in 1620 with two of his wives in a deep marble vault located four stories underground(on the hottest of summer days the vault remains mercifully cool) . The entrance to the grounds is marked by a large red gate with a magnificent bronze lion. Gigantic marble doors stand at the entrance to the first of the three burial chambers. (After burial, a "locking stone", similar to the modem "police" lock, was rolled in front of the tomb itself. ) Inside are three coffins. Twenty six chests of jewelry and other artifacts were discovered at the foot of the coffins, and many of these finds can be viewed in the two exhibition halls constructed above ground.
The broad, tree shaded grounds surrounding the tomb are dotted with stone picnic tables and seats. Tour groups are usually provided with box lunches which may be eaten outdoors or in a "picnic room" at the foot of the Great Wall.
Emperor Qian Long"s Tomb
In 1978, the tomb of the Qing emperor Qian kong( 1736 - 1796), located about 100 km (62.5 mi) east of Beijing, was opened to the public.
Known as Yu Ling, the tomb is on a grander scale and of higher artistic quality than most imperial tombs. Construction began in 1743 and cost 90 tons of silver. The wood used was the durable, fragrant, close-grained nanmu. Some logs weighed up to 20 tons.
The tomb is, in fact, an underground palace, similar to the tomb of Ding Ling. Nevertheless, Yu Ling has distinctive architectural features. Flanking the roadway leading to the tomb are eight pairs of stone sculptures depicting civil officials, military officers, horses, qilin ( a mythical "animal of good omen), elephants, camels, suanni (mythical monsters), and lions. Each figure was carved from a single stone block. The largest weighs about 43 tons.
The underground palace contains three stone halls and four pairs of stone gates, all arched. The overhanging eaves, tile gutters, ridges, and animal-shaped ornaments on the gate comers are in white marble. Each gate weighs about two tons and contains a Bod-hisattva, each with a different mien.. The inner walls and arched ceilings of the gateways and halls are decorated with four celestial guardians(also called Deva kings), seated statues of gods and Budd has, carvings of potted flowers, and small three-legged tables to hold incense burners and Buddhist scriptures.
The coffin of Qian Long lies in the innermost recess of the underground palace. It was placed over a well that never runs dry.
填空题
填空题
{{B}}Capital markets need a push.{{/B}} It is
an urgent task for China to accelerate the development of the capital market to
facilitate the restructuring of its State economy, according to a recent report
by the State Council Development Research Centre. China has made
considerable progress in developing its capital market in the past decade.
Acquisitions and mergers have given a strong impetus to the reorganization of
enterprises. 66. ______ First, development of
the three elements of China's capital market has not proceeded at the same
pace. Though the stock market has developed rapidly during
recent years, the bond market and medium-and long-term credit market have lagged
behind. In the bond market, the issue and trading of corporate
bonds is far behind those of treasury bonds. Because the risk
and yield of bonds and stocks differ, a well-developed bond market can increase
the choice for investors and those seeking to raise capital. In
developed market economies, funds raised by enterprises through bond financing
are several times higher than those raised through the issue of
shares. The situation is the reverse in China. In 1997,
enterprises raised 132.5 billion yuan (US $16 billion)through stock issues but a
mere 30 billion yuan (US $3.6 billion) through bond issues. 67.
______ To develop the medium-and-long-term credit market, the
State should break the monopoly of inefficient State banks and develop
joint-stock banks, it said. Second, non-State enterprises and
small and medium-sized enterprises are still handicapped in the capital
market. Obstacles remain to their access to the
medium-and-long-term credit market despite the central bank's recent efforts to
make more loans available to them. While large State-owned
enterprises benefit from the State' s preferential policy in issuing bonds and
stocks, most non-state enterprises and small and medium-sized enterprises have
no chance of being listed on the State's official stock market, but have to turn
to volatile over-the-counter markets which have not yet been
legalized. Non-State enterprises do not even have equal rights
in the State's preferential policy in encouraging the merger and reorganization
of enterprises. The State should regulate secondary markets to
provide a fair capital market for non-State enterprises and small and
medium-sized enterprises, the report said. 68. ______
69. ______ Since the merger and acquisition of enterprises
usually involve a huge amount of funds, enterprises can rarely raise enough
money from internal reserves. Therefore, the State should
support financing of the reorganization of enterprises, stressed the
report. Banks should add credit for mergers and acquisitions to
their loan categories. Additionally, restrictive regulations on
enterprises' financing of mergers and acquisitions through the issue of
corporate bonds should be eased or abolished. Finally, there is
a serious shortage of institutional investors aiming at stable long-range
profits in China's security market. To develop institutional investors and
investment funds, the State should encourage pension insurance and trust funds,
the report proposed. 70. ______ In the meantime,
institutional investors should also strengthen their own management and
standardize their operations to raise efficiency. In China's
underdeveloped capital market, inadequate supervision has resulted in excessive
speculation and misconduct by enterprises and investors. To
protect the interests of the masses of small and medium-sized investors, the
State should urgently improve its supervision of the capital market, the report
said.The focus of its supervision should be shifted from the investment
value of securities to the credibility and completeness of listed companies'
reports. A. Third, enterprises still face many difficulties
in financing reorganization through the capital market. B.
However, there is an urgent need to improve the country's capital market, the
report said. C. The growth of these three funds would help
maintain a stable capital market and facilitate the reorganization of
State-owned enterprises. D. In addition, the State should allow
circulation of shares owned by the State in listed companies to facilitate
acquisition of listed companies through the secondary stock market.
E. So, China should make greater efforts to boost its corporate bond
market, urged the report. F. Against the backdrop of the Asian
financial turmoil and shrinking Asian markets, the EU has become an important
export target market for Chinese exporters.
填空题A=Rotherhithe B=Barnes C=Willesden D=King's Cross Which city... ·used to have lot of problems such as drugs, street crime, etc. ? 71. ______ ·has the unpopular style of architecture? 72. ______ ·has the most expensive properties? 73. ______ ·offers big out-fashioned houses at lower price? 74. ______ ·is located in a quiet residential area? 75. ______ ·saw a big increase in price last year? 76. ______ ·will build a lot of new facilities? 77. ______ ·is estimated to be a good investment? 78. ______ ·encourages night-life culture for young people? 79. ______ ·creates energetic multi-cultural atmosphere? 80. ______ A Rotherhithe Rotherhithe may be most famous for its congested tunnel but many young buyers are warming to its riverside charms. It is still much cheaper than its waterside neighbors. The housing stock is predominately 1980s flats, many arranged in cul-de-sacs (死胡同)and closes around Surrey Quays Road. The unpopular architecture has led to the area being called the Milton Keynes of London but properties are spacious and unfashionable style has kept prices down. Paul Mitchell, of estate agents Alex Nell, says, "There is precious little period property, but you will get far more for your money here than a Victorian house with lots of original features down the road in Bermondsey. " Surry Quays shopping center provides all the amenities of a high street but the area is lacking in fun. However, Southwark Council is in talks to develop the "night time economy" which could well lead to an increase in bars and restaurants to cater for the growing number of young professional residents. "It is possible to get a good three-bedroom house in Rotherhithe for 280,000, " says Sumine Jordaan-Robinson, of agents Burwood Marsh , "About eight minutes; walk from the Jubilee line which will have you in Bond street in 15 minutes. There are not that many areas in London where that is possible. " B Barnes Barnes sits just across the river from Hammersmith in southwest London, but it could not be more different from the noise and bustle of the opposite bank. It has been called one of the last true London "villages" with happy residents keeping its old school charms quiet from nosey outsiders and potential developers. Being by the river and predominately residential gives Barnes an attractively lazy vibe. It has a traditional village green complete with idyllic duck pond and quaint pub. The high street is about as far from the Pound Shop and Primark ambience of its neighbors as is possible. But buying into Barnes is not cheap. "Family houses are snapped up incredibly quickly, " claims Chris Carney, sales negotiator at Boileaus estate agents. "It is very hard to get properties of this size, with outside space so close to London, which is why they are expensive. " Large detached Victorian houses on the two main roads, Castlenau and Lonsdale, normally have between five and seven bedrooms, gardens of 120 ft and off street parking. These sell for anything between £2 million and £5 million. By the village green there are rows of immaculate terraced house on a number of streets that run off Church and Station roads, and four bedroom houses of this kind sell for around ~ 1 million. C Willesden Green Willesden Green has both suffered and benefited from its famous neighbors. Despite its growing popularity, the area remains interesting and multicultural, injecting a little bit of soul into what could otherwise become just another yuppie backwater. "Willesden Green has a diverse range of properties from 1930s semi-detached houses to large Victorian properties and new-builds which attract all kinds of buyers, " says Richard Chiti, sales manager at estate agents Ellis and Co. "The roads bordering West Hampstead are popular, as they are wide, tree lined streets with sizeable family houses. Properties in and around Dobree Road, which lead down to Kensal Rise, are also in high demand. " Estate agents and residents agree that the area used to be regarded as dangerous and undesirable, but this has changed over the last decade. It's popular because it is still affordable, although prices have rocketed over the last year. D King's Cross King's Cross used to be renowned for problems including drugs, prostitution and street crime but a £2 billion regeneration programme should help the area lose its seedy reputation. The project includes a new Eurostar terminal opening this year and a spruced-up tube station, alongside hundreds of new homes, offices and leisure facilities set to be completed in 2015. Such development has had a predictable effect on house prices. "There are a lot more amenities now, such as supermarkets, cafes and bars and the issue people used to have with safety a few years ago has disappeared. " By the canal basin, new build flats and luxury ware house conversions form the bulk of property, and at the top end of the market there are stunning penthouses available with views across London. Much of the new development is centered on the back of the station, off York way, and flats are being sold to eager buyers off plan. The older properties are mainly mid-Victorian terraces around Caledonian Road and the streets heading towards Angel, and ex-local authority blocks where it is possible to pick up a two-bedroom refurbished flat for under £250,000. Smith adds, "Investment-wise, King's Cross is a good bet. There is a big rental market here and prices will go up. There are still cheaper properties available, one to two bedroom flats in Victorian conversions, or ex-council properties. But people are holding on to them for dear life in the hope they will go up in value. If you find one, it is worth investing in. /
填空题The ocean bottom—a region nearly 2.5 times greater thanthe total land area of the earth—is a vast frontier that even todayis largely unexplored and uncharted. Until about a centuryago, the deep-ocean floor was completely accessible, hidden (53) ______beneath waters averaging over 3,600 meters deep. Totally withoutlight and subjected intense pressures hundreds of times greater (54) ______than at the Earth's surface, the deep-ocean bottom is a hostileenvironment to humans, in some ways as forbidding and remoteas the void of out space. (55) ______ Therefore researchers have been taking samples of (56) ______deep-ocean rocks and sediments for over a century, the firstdetailed global investigation of the ocean bottom did actually (57) ______start until 1968, with the beginning of the National ScienceFoundation's Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP). Used techniques first developed for the offshore, oil and (58) ______gas industry, the DSDP's drill ship, the Glomar Challenger,was able to maintain a steady position on the ocean's surfaceand drill very deep waters, extracting samples of sediments (59) ______and rock from the ocean floor. The Glomar Challenger's core samples have allowedgeologists to reconstruct that the planet looked like hundreds (60) ______of millions of years ago and to calculate what it will probablylook like millions of years in the future. Today largely on thestrength of evidence gathered during the GlomarChallenger's voyages, nearly all earth scientists agree with (61) ______the theories of plate construction and continental drift thatexplain many of the geological processes that shape on the (62) ______Earth.
填空题It was a cold day. I sat in my room writing letters. I glanced out of the window. In the window directly opposite me stood Herr Stroh, gazing blatantly upon me. I was annoyed at his interest. I pulled down the blind and switched on the light to continue my writing. But the drawn blind and the artificial light irritated me, and suddenly I didn"t see why I should"t write my let- tees by daylight without being stared at. I switched off the light and released the blind. Herr Stroh had gone. I concluded that he had taken my action as a signal of disapproval, and I settled back to write.
1
I left my room and went down to complain to Frau Lublonitsch.
"She"s gone to the market," Gertha said. "She"s 11 be back in half an hour."
2
"I shah tell Fran Chef, "she said.
Something in her manner made me ask, "Has this ever happened before?"
"Once or twice this year, "she said." I"ll speak to Frau Chef. "And she added, with her music-hall grimace, "He was probably counting your eyelashes."
3
For nearly an hour I sat patiently at the window. Herr Sroh rested his arm now and again, but he did not leave his seat. I could see him clearly, although I think I imagined the grin on his face as, from time to time, he raised the glasses to his eyes. There was no doubt that he could see, as if it were within an inch of his face, the fury on mine. It was too late now for one of us to give in, and I kept glancing down at the entrances to the hotel Stroh, expecting to see Fran Lublonitsch or perhaps one of her sons or the yard hands going across to deliver a protest. But no one from our de approached the Stroh premises. I continue to stare, and Herr continued to goggle through his glasses.
Then he dropped them. It was as if they had been jerked out of his hands by an invisible nudge. He approached close to the window and gazed, but now he was gazing at a point above and slightly to the left of my room. After about two minutes, he turned and disappeared.
4
"Did she telephone to his house?"
"No, Frau Chef doesn"t use the phone; it mixes her up."
"Who protested, then."?"
"Fran Chef."
"But she hasn"t been across to see him. I"ve been watching the house."
"No, Frau Chef doesn"t visit with him. But don"t worry, he known all right that he mustn"t annoy our guests. "
When I looked out of the window again, I saw that the blind of Herr Stroh"s room had been pulled down, and so it remainded for the rest of my stay.
Meantime, I went out to post my letters in the box opposite our hotel, across the path. The sun had come out more strongly, and Herr Stroh stood in his doorway blinking up at the roof of the Guesthouse Lublonitsch. He was engrossed, he did not notice me at all.
5
Like most of the roofs in that province, the Lublonitsch roof had a railed ledge running several inches above the eaves, for the purpose of preventing the snow from falling in heavy thumps during the winter. On this ledge, just below an attic window, stood the gold-and-rose ormolu clock that I had seen in Frau Lublonitsch"s splendid bedroom.
I turned the corner just as Herr Stroh gave up his gazing; he went indoors, sullen and bent. Two ear-loads of people who had moved into the hotel that morning were now moving out, shifting their baggage with speed and the signs of a glad departure. I know that his house was nearly empty.
A. I didn"t want to draw his attention by following the line of his gaze but I was curious as to what held him staring so trance-like up at our roof. On my way back from the post- box I saw what it was.
B. I caught sight of a tiled stove contructed of mosaic files that were not a local type. I also noticed, standing upon the cabinet, a large ornamental clock; each curve and twirl in the case of this clock was overlaid with that gilded-bronze alloy which is known as ormolu. The clock twinkled in the sunlight which slanted between the window hangings.
C. I looked up a few moments later, and this time Herr Stroh was seated on a chair a little way back from the window. He was facing me squarely and holding to his eyes a pair of field-glasses.
D. I returned to my room. Herr Stroh still sat in position, the field-glasses in his hands resting on his knees. As soon as I came within view, he raised the glasses to his eyes, I decided to stare him out until such time as Frau Lublonitsch should return and take the matter in hand.
E. Just then Gertha knocked at my door. "Frau Chef has protested, and you won"t have any more trouble, "she said.
F. So I lodged my complaint with Gertha.
填空题 Machines and foreign competition will
replace{{U}} {{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}}of American jobs. But work
will be plentiful for people{{U}} {{U}} 2 {{/U}} {{/U}}in the
occupations of the future. The Labor Department predicts a net increase of 25
million new jobs in the United States in 1995,{{U}} {{U}} 3
{{/U}} {{/U}}service-industry jobs growing three times{{U}} {{U}}
4 {{/U}} {{/U}}rapidly as factory jobs. "Work will shift its emphasis
from the fatigue and{{U}} {{U}} 5 {{/U}} {{/U}}of the production
line and the typing pool to the more interesting challenge of the electronic
service center, the design studio, the research laboratory, the education
institute, and the training school, "predicts Canadian economist
Calvert. Jobs in high-tech fields will multiply
fastest,{{U}} {{U}} 6 {{/U}} {{/U}}from a low base. In{{U}}
{{U}} 7 {{/U}} {{/U}}of actual numbers, more mundane occupations
will experience the biggest surge: custodians, cashiers, secretaries, waiters
and clerks. Yet much of the drudge work will be taken{{U}} {{U}} 8
{{/U}} {{/U}}by robots. The{{U}} {{U}} 9
{{/U}} {{/U}}of robots performing blue-collar tasks will increase{{U}}
{{U}} 10 {{/U}} {{/U}}3 000 in 1981 to 40 000 in 1990, says John E.
Taylor of the Human Resources Research Organization in Alexandria, Va. Robots
might also be found on war zones,{{U}} {{U}} 11 {{/U}}
{{/U}}space-even in the office, perhaps{{U}} {{U}} 12 {{/U}}
{{/U}}coffee, opening mall and delivering messages. One unsolved
problem: what to do{{U}} {{U}} 13 {{/U}} {{/U}}workers displaced
by high technology and foreign competition.{{U}} {{U}} 14
{{/U}} {{/U}}the world "the likelihood of growing permanent unemployment is
becoming{{U}} {{U}} 15 {{/U}} {{/U}}accepted as a reality among
social planners," notes David Macarov, associate professor of the Hebrew
University in Jerusalem. Meantime, the percentage of time people{{U}}
{{U}} 16 {{/U}} {{/U}}on the job is{{U}} {{U}} 17
{{/U}} {{/U}}to continue to fall. Robert Theobald,{{U}} {{U}} 18
{{/U}} {{/U}}of Avoiding 1984, fears that joblessness will{{U}} {{U}}
19 {{/U}} {{/U}}to increasing depression, bitterness, and unrest. "The
dramatic consequences of such a shift on the Western psyche,{{U}} {{U}}
20 {{/U}} {{/U}}has made the job the way we value human beings, are
almost incalculable, "he comments.
填空题takes advantage of market both at home and abroad?
填空题
If going to work feels more like torture, and fatigue,
depression and irritation are daily aspects of your life, job burnout may be to
blame. Too much office stress is putting a major strain on many professionals,
according to Clare Chen, an analyst at Hudson Recruitment, a Nasdaq-listed
headhunting firm. Along with booming business expansion and fast social
transition, job burnout is pervasive in the Chinese mainland. In April,
Hudson Recruitment surveyed 705 multinational companies in China--mostly based
in Shanghai--about their hiring plans and employees. The survey showed that 33
per cent of survey participants believe job burnout is getting more and more
serious in the mainland. Last year, about 27 per cent of respondents complained
of being overworked. 66. ______. The survey also
indicates that practitioners in media, public relations, advertising, medical
and biotechnology sectors are among the biggest sufferers of job burnout, as
they not only work long hours but face pressures of stiffening job competition
and constantly staying abreast of changes in their sectors. Meanwhile, women
employees suffer more than their male counterparts, as 41.4 per cent of the
women surveyed report they are in a state of moderate job burnout, compared with
37.2 per cent of men. Most people start feeling the most office stress after
working for four years, which is much shorter than 10 years in the late 1990s,
the chinahrd, net survey says. 67. ______.
Turning down these extra hours is not a good career move, Zhang says. "If
you refuse overtime, someone will do it and replace you," he says. However,
Hudson's report finds that a shortage of suitable talent is one of the reasons
for increasing job burnout. 68. ______. Internal
competition for promotions, problems between colleagues, and work and life
imbalances all contribute to psychological tension, which may result in accident
or collapse, says Xu. "High-pressure work environments are taking their toll on
workers' morale," says Gary Lazzarotto, CEO of Hudson Asia. "This can be
detrimental to both workers, whose health and career progress may suffer, and
employers, who pick up the tab in higher insurance costs and lost
productivity." 69. ______. Furthermore, allowing
time off for training will help facilitate employees' know/edge and offer a
cushion for intense work. France-based Schneider Electric invited IBM and
Tsinghua University to formulate a leadership development programme for its
managerial-level talents in China. The one-year programme will offer
e-learning, classroom workshops, professional discussions and courses for 36
trainees selected from its China branch. It uses a model that combines academic
training and business practices together, according to Amy Kan, a human
resources director of Schneider Electric China. 70.
______. Xu offers some advice for the job burnout employees: 1.
Organize and prioritize by taking care of the more difficult and important tasks
early in the day. 2. Have expectations so that you can achieve your goals and
deliver on promises to others. 3. Set aside a period of time dedicated to
responding to e-mail and voicemails. 4. Take care of yourself.
A. Hudson's Chen says there are many factors contributing to the office
stress. "Amid the fierce competition in the human resources (HR) market,
employers have to work longer to cope with heavy workloads, receive last-minute
missions constantly and are faced with work performance appraisals by bosses,"
says Chen. Zhang Xing, a consultant at a PR company, usually works 10 hours a
day. But there are times when he works more than 12 hours a day, and Saturdays
and Sundays sometimes become working days. B. About 55 per cent
of respondents suggested they are working more hours than they were two years
ago. Of those, 13 per cent say their hours are significantly longer. About 42
per cent of office workers surveyed said they worked more than 50 hours a week,
compared with the country's 40-hour-a-week standard. The number is about one
percentage point higher than in last year's survey, Hudson reports.
C. Dealing with the modern world "epidemic" of job burnout is a new
challenge for both employers and employees. In developed nations, entrepreneurs
commonly push a policy known as Work-Life Balance (WLB) to help employees work
productively and better enjoy their lives. "If an employer finds an employee
often works longer, the employer should ask if the executive- designed workload
is too heavy for the employee or if there are some problems with the employee's
working efficiency," says Xu. "Then the employer or the employee should
adjust." D. The long working hours will greatly reduce working
efficiency and productivity, both Chen and Zhang believe. In addition to
physical exertion, psychological tension is another result of an overworked
employee, points out Xu Xinxin, a researcher with the Sociology Research
Institute attached to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. E.
Paid leave is another way to ensure employees not to get worn out. "I find that
many Chinese employees have not realized that it is their right to leave. They
must keep in mind that we have a duty to work and have a fight to leave," says
Lazzarotto. "A nice holiday can refresh you and do good for your company." He
also suggests companies employ new measures to meet the headcount gap.
"Employing and training cost can be compensated by employees' higher
productivity and guarantee a sound talent structure in the long run," he
says. F. By the early 1970s, hundreds of similar studies had
followed Holmes and Rahe. And millions of Americans who work and live under
stress worried over the reports. Somehow, the research got boiled down to a
memorable message. Women's magazines ran headlines like "Stress causes illness!"
If you want to stay physically and mentally healthy, the articles said, avoid
stressful events.
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was a special Administrative Region within one country with a high degree of autonomy?
填空题 Once the exclusive domain of executives with expense
accounts, the mobile phone is set to become one of the central technologies of
the 21st century. Within a few years, the mobile phone will evolve from a
voice-only device to a multi-functional communicator capable of transmitting and
receiving not only sound, but video, still images, data and text. A whole new
era of personal communication is on the way. Thanks in part to
the growth of wireless networks, the telephone is converging with the personal
computer and the television. Soon lightweight phones outfitted with
high-resolution screens—which can be embedded in everything from wristwatches to
palm-held units—will be connected to series of low orbit satellites enabling
people to talk, send and receive e-mail, or take part in video conferences
anytime, anywhere. These phones might also absorb many of the key functions of
the desktop computer. Mobile devices are expected to be ideal for some of the
new personalized services that are becoming available via the Internet, such as
trading stocks, gambling, shopping and buying theater and airline
tickets. The communications revolution is already taking shape
around the globe. In Europe, small scale trials are under way using mobile
phones for electronic commerce. For example, most phones contain a subscriber
identification module (SIM) card that serves primarily to identify a user to the
phone network. But the card could also facilitate limited financial
transactions. Deutsche Bank and Nokia, for example, are working together to
develop mobile banking services. Some manufacturers plan to upgrade the SIM card
to an all-in-one personal identification and credit card. Another approach is to
add a slot to mobile phones for a second smart card designed specifically for
mobile e-commerce. These cards could be used to make payments over the Internet
or removed from the phone for use in point-of-sale terminals to pay for things
like public transportation, movie tickets or a round of drinks at the
bar. In France, {{B}}Motorola{{/B}} is currently testing a dual
slot phone, the StarTACD, in a trial with France Telecom, while in Finland
{{B}}Nokia{{/B}} is testing a phone that uses a special plug-in reader for a tiny
smart card. {{B}}Siemens{{/B}} is pursuing a different approach. Since it is not yet
clear whether it's best to do everything with a single device, {{B}}Siemens{{/B}} is
developing dual slot phones and Einstein, a device equipped with a smart card
reader and keypad that can be linked to the phone via infrared wireless
technology. For those who want to, though, it will be possible
to receive almost all forms of electronic communication through a single device,
most likely a three-in-one phone that serves as a cordless at home, a cell phone
on the road and an intercom at work. "The mobile phone will become increasingly
multifunctional," says Burghardt Shallenberger, vice president for technology
and innovation at {{B}}Siemens{{/B}} Information and Consumer Products in Munich,
"and fingerprint technology or advanced speech recognition will ensure that only
one or two authorized users will be able to operate it." New hybrid devices,
such as {{B}}Nokia{{/B}}'s 9110 Communicator, a combination phone and personal
digital assistant (PDA), are already on the market. But some customers feel the
keyboard and screen are too small and complex for comfort. To
get around these problems, {{B}}Nokia{{/B}}'s 7110 mobile phone has a larger screen
and is operated by a tracking ball in addition to a keyboard. The phone has
found a ready market among young people, who tend to scud more text messages
than they make mobile phone calls—not surprising given the fact that text is
approximately a tenth as costly as voice. The {{B}}Nokia{{/B}} 7110 also offers
Internet access via Wireless Application Protocol (WAP), an open standard that
allows streamlined versions of website contents to be displayed on mobile phone
screens. Phones equipped with WAP enable people on the move to access basic
information—such as news services, stock prices and flight timetables—from
specially "cut-down" sites. For some, any device that bridges
the gap between handwriting and keying in text will be a world-beater.
{{B}}Ericsson{{/B}} is researching a "smart quill" pen that could do just that.
Though the smart quill looks like any other pen, it permits writers to write on
any surface—or even in the air—while a microchip in the tip of the pen records
the shape of the scribblings and transmits them to a remote PC, where special
software converts them into normal text. Could this mean the end of typing? Not
yet. {{B}}Ericsson{{/B}} cannot say when a prototype will be ready.
Keyboards might eventually be unnecessary on mobile handsets if speech
recognition software continues to improve. Mobile phones might then be reduced
to a few computer chips, a microphone and a receiver embedded in an earring. The
{{B}}Philips{{/B}} Genie, a lightweight m6bile phone, can be operated by uttering a
single word. When you type a name into the Genie's keypad, the system asks
whether you would like to assign a voice-dial tag to that name. Through a series
of yes or no prompts, the Genie compiles a list of up to 10 voice tags. The next
time you want to call a person listed as one of these tags, just say that
person's name or a relevant code word. The word home, for example, is sufficient
to place a call to your family.·has a small and complex keyboard and
screen?
{{U}} {{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}}·has combined handwriting and
keying?
{{U}} {{U}} 2 {{/U}} {{/U}}·can
recognize voices?
{{U}} {{U}} 3 {{/U}} {{/U}}·has a voice dial
tag?
{{U}}
{{U}} 4 {{/U}} {{/U}}·has a pen which can write in the
air?
{{U}} {{U}} 5 {{/U}} {{/U}}·might carry out
financial transactions?
{{U}} {{U}} 6 {{/U}} {{/U}}·are
working on dual slot phones?
{{U}}
{{U}} 7 {{/U}} {{/U}}·can be connected to your home by a saying
"Home"? {{U}} {{U}}
8 {{/U}} {{/U}}
{{U}} {{U}} 9 {{/U}} {{/U}}·is
both a phone and personal digital assistant?
{{U}} {{U}} 10 {{/U}} {{/U}}
填空题A=Report 1 B=Report 2 C=Report 3 D=Report 4 Which report(s) say(s) that... · hot weather may cause serious health problems associated with air pollution? 71. ______ · a weather warning system is established to help people away from danger heat? 72. ______ · not only people but also animals and crops are victims of the heat wave? 73. ______ · there were controversies on the issue of global warming? 74. ______ · human activities contribute to global warming? 75. ______ · the deadly heat wave can kill people? 76. ______ · hot weather will have its effects on consumers? 77. ______ · reducing exposure to air pollution can decrease deaths associated with pollution? 78. ______ · hot weather had attacked France twice since 2003? 79. ______ · wildfires increased in North America and other parts of the world recently? 80. ______ A Report 1 A new study requested by the US Congress is helping clear up some of the controversies regarding global warming. It finds the warming of the northern hemisphere in the last decades of the 20th century was unprecedented in the past thousand years. It also says the decade of the 1990s was the warmest on record. Authors believe human activities are at least partly responsible for recent warming. The study comes as extreme weather has struck many parts of the United States. There was flooding in parts of the Midwest last week, more heavy rains this week in the southern and eastern United States. Scientists say that the warmer the air, the more evaporated water it holds. Winds pick up more moisture from the hotter ocean surfaces, resulting in heavier and more frequent downpours. Recent data compiled on wildfires indicate an increasing frequency in North America and elsewhere around the world. Scientists say generally over the last five decades snows are melting sooner and faster, producing hot, dry drought conditions in many parts of the world. Weather patterns have natural cycles, but this latest study suggests more frequent extremes of too dry and too wet conditions may exist for the rest of the decade and beyond. B Report 2 Scientists observed the highest air pollution on record above the Arctic Circle in May. Air pollution has been linked to a number of medical problems including heart attacks, asthma and stroke. It is so hot in many parts of the US that officials are cautioning people to stay indoors. Even short exposure to high temperatures can cause serious health problems. Heat is not the only danger factor. Hot weather with little or no wind can lead to high levels of air pollution, especially ozone. Last year researchers in Boston analyzed pollution rates in nine major US cities. They found the risk of stroke was one percent higher on days with relatively higher air pollution. Scientists say while this increase may seem small, it has a huge effect, since the number of people living in pollution-prone cities is so great. Researchers say pollution particles in the air may enter the body through the lungs and irritate the walls of blood vessels, encouraging clots that travel to the brain. The Hopkins scientists found these fine particles can reach the small airways and the air sacks in the lungs. A study found a link between fine particles in air pollution and risk of death It also found that reducing exposure to air pollution decreased the number of deaths associated with pollution. C Report 3 Europe is baking under a heat wave that has sent temperatures soaring past 36 degrees Celsius in some places. The sizzling weather is blamed for the deaths of at least half a dozen people. Temperatures in parts of France were expected to soar as high as 36 degrees Celsius Wednesday. Other parts of Europe are expected to be even hotter. So far, the heat wave has killed at least six people around Europe, including three in France. The heat is accompanied by unusually dry weather in many places. The sizzling scenario seems very similar to the heat wave of 2003, when heat was linked to the deaths of roughly 30000 people around Europe, half of them in France. Things are different this summer. French social workers and ordinary French are checking in on older people, to make sure they're OK. The government has established a weather warning system, and a help hot line for the elderly and other fragile people. Other European countries are taking similar preventative measures. Nobody wants a repeat of the killer heat wave of 2003. D Report 4 Eleven days of triple digit temperatures in California are taking a toll on the state agricultural industry. Meteorologists expect the deadly heat wave that has killed at least 60 people could subside by this weekend. But the relief may be too late for many California farmers. California dairy farmer Hank Van Excel is doing his best to keep his herds comfortable. But the effect of the heat on his dairy cows is evident. He has lost 14 cows and says milk production is down more than 20 percent. The heat has led to emergency declarations in several counties. The heat has been unprecedented. It's been oppressively hot at night. All of these factors coming together have made it very challenging for the local community. "And California's $ 50 billion-a-year dairy industry is not the only victim. In vineyard, the scorching temperatures will affect the taste of the wines and grapes are beyond raisin. Over in the tomato fields, the heat has killed about 15 percent of the blossoms that typically yield 46000 tons of tomatoes per season. People obviously losing money as the days continue to be hot. It's a story repeated in peach orchards and walnut groves and melon patches up and down the state. It's too early to assess total damages but consumers will feel the heat in their pocketbooks. The consumers deal with it in the prices they're going to pay when they go to the store or when they go to the restaurant./
填空题Scientists Say Plants Helped Ants Evolve Ants evolved far earlier than (1) believed, as far back as 140 million to 168 million years ago -- and they have plants to (2) for their diversity, U.S. researchers reported on Thursday. Researchers at Harvard University used a genetic clock to reconstruct the history of ants, and found that the ant family (3) arose more than 40 million years (4) than previously thought. The family did not diversify into different genera and species (5) flowering plants came (6) the scene, they said. The study sheds light on one of the (7) important and numerous animals, which includes hundreds of (8) species. "We (9) that ant diversification took off (10) 100 million years ago, along with the rise of flowering plants, the angiosperms," Naomi Pierce, a professor of biology who (11) the study, said in a statement. "These (12) provided ants with new habitats (13) in the forest canopy and in the more complex leaf litter on the forest floor, and the herbivorous insects that evolved alongside flowering plants provided food for (14) ." Writing in Friday's (15) of the journal Science, the researchers said they reconstructed the ant family tree (16) DNA sequencing of six genes from 139 ant genera, encompassing 19 of 20 ant subfamilies around the world. Such "molecular clocks" are (17) used, alongside fossil and other evidence, to (18) how old species are. They work on the basis that DNA mutates at a steady and calculable (19) . "Ants are a dominant feature of nearly all terrestrial ecosystems, and yet we know surprisingly little about their evolutionary history: the major groupings of ants, how they are (20) to each other, and when and how they arose," said graduate student Corrie Moreau.
填空题Howmanylanguagesareusedthroughouttheworldtoday?
填空题But in preserving the balance we have to be clear where the problem actually lies. Of the total carbon dioxide emissions caused by burning fossil fuels, only 20 percent comes from transportation. 80 percent comes from static uses of energy — the energy used in our homes, in industry and in power generation. Of the total, 43 percent comes from petroleum, (67) On top of that, a further one megaton is produced by our chemical operations. If you add to that the carbon produced by the consumption of the products we produce — the total goes up to around 95 megatons. That is just 1 percent of the total carbon dioxide emissions which come from all human activity. (68) Only a fraction of the total emissions come from the transportation sector — so the problem is not just caused by vehicles. Any response which is going to have a real impact has to look at all the sources. That means ensuring our own house is in order. It also means contributing to the wider analysis of the problem — through research, technology and through engagement in the search for the best public policy mechanisms — the actions which can produce the right solutions for the long-term common interest. We have a responsibility to act, and I hope that through our actions we can contribute to the much wider process which is desirable and necessary. First we will monitor and control our own carbon dioxide emissions. This follows the commitment we've made in relation to other environmental issues. Our overall goal is to do no harm or damage to the natural environment. That's an ambitious goal which we approach systematically. (69) Now, as well as continuing our efforts in relation to the other greenhouse gases, it is time to establish a similar process for carbon dioxide. Our carbon dioxide emissions result from burning hydrocarbon fuels to produce heat and power, from flaring feed and product gases, and directly from the process of separation or transformation. So far our approach to carbon dioxide has been indirect and has mainly come through improvements in the energy efficiency of our production processes. Over the last decade, efficiency in our major manufacturing activities has improved by 20 percent. (70) It is a learning process — just as it has been with the other emissions we've targeted but the learning is cumulative and I think it will have a substantial impact. Other steps will require investment to make existing facilities more energy efficient. For instance, we're researching ways in which we can remove the carbon dioxide from large compressors and reinject it to improve oil recovery. That would bring a double benefit — a cut in emissions and an improvement in production efficiency. The task is particularly challenging in the refining sector where the production of cleaner products requires more extensive processing and a higher energy demand for each unit of output. That means that to make gasoline cleaner, with lower sulphur levels, takes more energy at the manufacturing stage. That's the trade off. In each case our aim will be to establish a database, including benchmark data; to create a monitoring process, and then to develop targets for improvement through operational line management. (71) We will increase our support for that work. That support will be focused on finding solutions and will be directed to work of high quality which we believe can address the key outstanding questions. A. Let me put that another way — to be clear. Human activity accounts for a small part of the total volume of emissions of carbon — but it is that part which could cause disequilibrium. B. As I said a few moments ago, there are still areas of significant uncertainty around the subject of climate change. Those who tell you they know all the answers are fools or knaves. More research is needed — on the detail of cause and effect, on the consequences of what appears to be happening, and on the effectiveness of the various actions which can be taken. C. Monitoring and controlling emissions is one step. The second is to increase the level of support we give to the continuing scientific work which is necessary. D. Now we want to go further. We have to continue to improve the efficiency with which we use energy. And in addition we need a better understanding of how our own emissions of carbon can be monitored and controlled, using a variety of measures including sequestration. It is a very simple business lesson that what gets measured gets managed. E. Our method has been to focus on one item at a time, to identify what can be delivered, to establish monitoring processes and targets as part of our internal management system and to put in place an external confirmation of delivery. In most cases the approach has meant that we've been able to go well beyond the regulatory requirements. F. We've looked carefully, using the best available data, at the precise impact of our own activities. Our operations — in exploration and in refining — produce around eight megatons of carbon.
填空题In recent thirty years, Confucius and Confucianism are introduced and discussed systematically in
填空题
After its misadventures in 1093, when American marines were
driven out of Somalia by skinny gunmen, America has used a long spoon in supping
with Somalia's warlords. This, like so much else, changed on September
11th. 66. ______. Clandestine, up to a point:
within hours of the arrival in Baidoa of nine closely cropped Americans sporting
matching satellite phones and shades, their activities were broadcast. After
meeting various warlords, the group inspected a compound that had apparently
been offered to them as their future base. They also saw an old military
depot. Neither can have been encouraging: the compound has been taken over
by war-displaced families, and the depot by thorn-scrub. America
was already convinced of al-Qaeda's presence in Somalia. It had listed a Somali
Islamic group, al-Itihaad al-Islamiya (Islamic Unity), as a terrorist
organization. 67. ______. It fears that lawless
Somalia could become a haven for escapes from Afghanistan. The American navy is
currently patrolling the country's long coastline, while spy planes are said to
be criss-crossing the heavens. 68. ______. With
a little bit of help, he told his American visitors, he would be ready "to
liberate the country from these evil forces". America had already heard as much
through its embassies in Nairobi and Addis Ababa, which maintain contact with
the warlords, and from Ethiopia. The warlords are supported by
Ethiopia, which has a historical fear of a strong Somalia, in a bid to oppose
the government. But their differing views on where to strike at the "terrorists"
reveal that their individual ambitions are even sharper than their dislike of
file government. Mr. Ismail says that Merca, which is claimed by
his Rahanwein clan, is the capital of terror. 69.
______. The LIN rays there is only an orphanage there now. But
the island is close to Mr. Morgan's home town of Kismaayo, which he failed to
capture from a pro-government militia in July, and he is determined not to fail
again. None of this looks good for Somalia's official president,
Abdiquassim Salad Hassan, whose government is in control of about half the
capital, Mogadishu. He has formed his own anti- terrorism unit, and invited
America to send investigators, or even troops. America, armed with stories about
the presence of al-Itihaad members held back, but on December 18th sent an envoy
to Mogadishu. Both Mr. Hassan and the UN say that al-Itihaad is
not a terrorist organization. It emerged as an armed force in 1991, battling for
power in the aftermath of Siad Barre's fall. It had some early successes,
briefly taking Kismaayo. But it was always dependent on the blessing of its
members' clan elders. When the elders eventually called their fighters back, a
hard core of Islamists fled to the Gedo border region where, in 1997, they were
crushed by Ethiopian troops 70. ______. The
Baidoa alliance plainly hopes to be supported as proxies in a fight against
"terrorism" and the Mogadishu regime. But the latest intelligence leaks suggest
that the first reports may have overestimated al-Qaeda's presence in Somalia.
Nor would Mr. bin Laden and his henchmen find it easy to lie low in an oral
culture that considers rumour-mongering to be a form of manners. Even so, the
warlords seem to believe that they have won some promise of help. Soon after the
arrival of the American group, they pulled out of the peace talks they had been
holding with their government in Nairobi. A. Al-Itihaad
subsequently infiltrated Somalia's business class, and now runs Islamic schools,
courts and clinics with the money it has accumulated. B.
According to Abdullahi Sheikh Ismail, the acting chairman of the loose alliance
of warlords who control most of Somalia and are based in Baidoa, there are
"approximately 20, 480armed extremists" in Somalia and "85% of the government is
al-Itihaad". C. Muhammad Hersi Morgan, known as the "butcher of
Hargeisa" because he once razed that town to the ground, says an al-Itihaad camp
on Ras Kamboni island is still active. D. American intelligence
officers are working with two warlords to gather information about suspected
al-Qaeda people in Somalia. E. It had also forced the closure of
Barakaat, Somalia's biggest banking and telecoms company, which handles most of
the remittances that Somalis working abroad send back to their
families. F. On December 9th America sent a clandestine mission
to talk to a collection of Somali warlords, who like to claim that their
country, in particular their UN-sponsored government, is overrun with
terrorists.
填空题As the Internet has rapidly become a mainstream medium, the social impact of the Internet has been a topic of ongoing debate. Some studies have found that Internet use is associated with reduced social networks and increased loneliness.
Internet use appears to cause a decline in psychological well-being,
1
to research at Carnegie Mellon University. Even people
2
spent just a few hours a week
3
the Internet experienced more depression and loneliness
4
those who logged on less frequently, the two-year study showed. And it wasn"t
5
people who were already feeling had spent more time on the internet,
6
that using the Net actually appeared to
7
the bad feelings.
Researchers are puzzling over the results,
8
were completely contrary
9
their expectation. They expected that the Net would
10
socially healthier than television, since the Net allows
11
to choose their information and to communicate
12
others.
The fact
13
Internet use reduces time available for family and friends may account
14
the drop in well-being, researchers hypothesized. Faceless, bodiless "virtual" communication may be less psychologically satisfying than
15
conversation, and the relationships formed through it may be shallower.
16
possibility is that exposure
17
the wider world via the Net makes users less
18
with their lives.
"But it"s important to remember this is
19
about the technology, per se; it"s about
20
it is used," says psychologist Christine Riley of Intel, one of the study"s sponsors. "It really points to the need for considering social factors in terms of how you design applications and services for technology."
填空题was severely impaired in its economy by the crisis in and beyond Southeast Asia?
填空题the climate affects the future sustainable agricultural development?
填空题Recent surveys show that Japanese youth have become a "Me Generation" that rejects traditional values. "Around 1980 many Japanese, (31) young people abandoned the values of economic success and began (32) for new sets of values to (33) them happiness," writes sociologist Yasuhiro in Comparative Civilizations Review. Japanese youth are placing more importance on the individual's pursuit of (34) and less on the values of work, family, and society. Japanese students seem to be losing patience with work, (35) their counterparts in the United States and Korea. In a 1993 (36) of college students in the three countries, only 10% of the Japanese regarded (37) as a primary value compared with 47% of Korean students and 27% of American students. A greater (38) of Japanese aged 18-24 also preferred easy jobs (39) heavy responsibility. The younger Japanese are showing less concern for family values as they pursue an inner world of private satisfaction. Data collected (40) the Japanese government in 1993 shows that only 23% of Japanese youth are thinking about supporting their aged parents, in contrast (41) 63% of young Americans. It appears that many younger-generation Japanese are (42) both respect for their parents (43) a sense of responsibility to the family. Author Yoshizaki attributes the change (44) Japanese parents' over-indulgence of their children, material affluence, and growing (45) for private matters. The shift (46) individualism among Japanese is most pronounced among (47) very young. According to 1991 data (48) the Bunka Center of Japan, 50% of Japanese youth aged 16-19 can be labeled "self-centered" compared with 33% among (49) aged 25-29. To earn the self-centered label, the young people responded positively to (50) ideas as "I would like to make decisions without considering traditional values" and "I don't want to do anything I can't enjoy doing./
填空题
{{B}} Which book...{{/B}}·places an stress on something that
can hardly be learnt at school?
71. ______.·is particularly helpful for those who fear
changes?
72. ______.·tells readers it
doesn't follow that those who don't have good academic achieve-
·ment will not make a fortune?
73. ______.·is not written by a single writer?
74.
______.·tells a very simple story but it contains many messages?
75. ______.·seems not to express ideas straightforward?
76. ______.·is
written by the one who also wrote a lot of other works with other writers?
77. ______.·is probably full of facts?
78. ______.·is not only
statistical but also interesting?
79. ______.·is not related to finance?
80. ______.{{B}}A{{/B}}
Change can be a blessing or a curse, depending on your perspective. The
message of Who Moved My Cheese? is that all can come to see it as a blessing, if
they understand the nature of cheese and the role it plays in their lives. Who
Moved My Cheese? is a parable that takes place in a maze. Four beings live in
that maze: Sniff and Scurry are mice--nonanalytical and nonjudgmental, they just
want cheese and are willing to do whatever it takes to get it; Hem and Haw are
"little people", mouse-size humans who have an entirely different relationship
with cheese. It's not just sustenance to them; it's their self-image. Their
lives and belief systems are built around the cheese they've found. Most of us
reading the story will see the cheese as something related to our
livelihoods--our jobs, our career path, the industries we work in--although it
can stand for anything, from health to relationships. The point of the story is
that we have to be alert to changes in the cheese, and be prepared to go running
off in search of new sources of cheese when the cheese we have runs out. Dr.
Johnson, co-author of The One Minute Manager and many other books, presents this
parable to business, church groups, schools, military orgazinations--any place
where you find people who may be nervous about or resist change. And although
more analytical and skeptical readers may find the tale a little too simplistic,
its beauty is that it sums up all natural history in just 94 pages: Thingy
change. They always have changed and always will change. And while there's no
single way to deal with change, the consequence of pretending change won't
happen is always the same: The cheese runs out.{{B}}B{{/B}}
Personal-finance author and lecturer Robert Kiyosaki established his
unique economic perspective through exposure to a pair of disparate influences:
his own highly educated but fiscally unstable father, and the multimillionaire
eighth-grade dropout father of his closest friend. The lifelong monetary
problems experienced by his "poor dad" (whose weekly paychecks, while
respectable, were never quite sufficient to meet family needs) pounded home the
counterpoint communicated by his "rich dad" (that "the poor and the middle class
work for money", but "the rich have money work for them"). Taking that message
to heart, Kiyosaki was able to retire at 47. Rich Dad, Poor Dad, written with
consultant and CPA Sharon L. Lechter, lays out the philosophy behind his
relationship with money. Although Kiyosaki can take a frustratingly long time to
make his points, his book nonetheless compellingly advocates for the type of
"financial literacy" that's never taught in schools. Based on the principle that
income-generating assets always provide healthier bottom-line results than even
the best of traditional jobs, it explains how those assets might be acquired so
that the jobs can eventually be shed.{{B}}C{{/B}} What do you do
after you've written the NO. 1 best-seller The Millionaire Next Door? Survey 1,
371 more millionaires and write The Millionaire Mind. Dr. Stanley's extremely
timely tone is mixture of entertaining elements. It resembles Regis Philbin's
hit show(and CD-ROM game) Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, only you have to pose
real-life questions, instead of quizzing about trivia. Are you gambling,
divorce-prone, conspicuously consuming "Income-Statement Affluent" Jacuzzi fool
soon to be parted from his or her money, or a frugal, Noyal, resole your shoes
and buy your own groceries type like one of Stanley' s "Balance-Sheet Affluent"
millionaires? "Cheap dates, "millionaires are 4.9 times likelier to play with
their grandkids than shop at Brooks Brothers. "If you asked the average American
what it takes to be a millionaire," he writes, "they'd probably quoted a number
of predictable factors: inheritance, luck, stock market investments... Topping
his list would be a high IQ, high SAT scores and gradepoint average, along with
attendance at a top college." No way, says Stanley, backing it up with data he
compiled with help from the University of Georgia and Harvard geodemographer Jon
Robbin. Robbin may wish he'd majored in socializing at LSU, instead, because the
numbers show the average millionaire had a lowly 2.92 GPA, SAT scores between
1100 and 1190, and teachers who told them they were mediocre students but
personable people. "Discipline 101 and Tenacity 102' made them wealth. Stanley
got straight C's in English and writing, but he had money-minded drive. He urges
you to pattern your life according to Yale professor Robert Sternberg's
Successful Intelligence, because Stanley's statistics bear out Sternberg's
theories on what makes minds succeed--and it is not IQ. Besides
offering insights into millionaires' pinchpenny ways, pleasing quips("big brain,
no bucks" ), and 46 statistical charts with catchy titles, Stanley' s book booms
with human-potential pep talk and bristles with anecdotes--for example, about a
bus driver who made $ 3 million, a doctor(reporting that his training gave him
zero people skills)who lost $ 1.5 million, and a loser scholar in the bottom 10
percent on six GRE tests who grew up to be Martin Luther King Jr. Read it and
you'll feel like a million bucks.
填空题
Thomas Aquinas, who knew more about education and persuasion
than almost anybody who ever lived, once said that when you want to convert
someone to your view, you go over to {{U}}(31) {{/U}} he is standing,
take him {{U}}(32) {{/U}} the hand (mentally speaking), and guide him to
where {{U}}(33) {{/U}} want to go. You
{{U}}(34) {{/U}} stand across the room and shout at him. You don't order
him to {{U}}(35) {{/U}} over to where you are. You start where he
is, and work from that position. {{U}} (36) {{/U}} the only
way to get him to {{U}}(37) {{/U}} his attitude. I have
never known a single passionate and prejudiced argument to win {{U}}(38)
{{/U}} a person who disagreed with it, or {{U}}(39) {{/U}} to
persuade a person who was neutral on the subject. The chief {{U}}(40)
{{/U}} is that all passionate and prejudiced arguments overstate their case
and {{U}}(41) {{/U}} their opponents' case. When
you think that {{U}}(42) {{/U}} is wrong, and you disagree with him, the
first {{U}}(43) {{/U}} is to determine in what {{U}}(44)
{{/U}} he is right. This is right. For {{U}}(45) {{/U}} view can be
entirely wrong, and everybody has a little piece of truth by the tail. This is
the piece we start with. We work from there, and concede as {{U}}(46)
{{/U}} as we honestly can. A philosopher said that we have
{{U}}(47) {{/U}} right to oppose a position until we can state that
{{U}}(48) {{/U}} in a way that fully satisfies {{U}}(49) {{/U}}
who hold it; until, indeed, we can make out a better case for it than the
proponent himself {{U}}(50) {{/U}}.
填空题·is probably frightening?
填空题The curious youngster, the crack student who gets nothing (31) A's in math and sciences, the bright and inventive whiz kid who frightens his or her schoolmates, sometimes becomes an inventor that the world will honor forever for devising an important machine, improving an old process, or making a major breakthrough (32) the search for the cure for some disease. It is rare nowadays to see one person alone invent something entirely new and startling. More (33) a number of researchers are working (34) a problem that has been studied by others for some time; a pioneer has (35) the groundwork, probably, and his or her successors are building on it, step by step. Scientists, engineers, and technicians are a competitive lot; they often have a clear idea (36) what is afoot in (37) others' laboratories, and they do their (38) to beat their rivals to the final glorious discovery. Some inventors are neither scientists not trained technicians: they are merely tinkerers who play (39) an idea, working in a amateurish way but with great imagination and skill. While they tinker, they might stumble, entirely by chance, upon some major fact (40) they had not at all expected. The faculty of making such lucky (41) unplanned discoveries is called serendipity. (42) the word "serendipity" nor the occurrence that is expressed are very common. Usually discoveries are the fruit of hard work and obstinate, dogged perseverance. Thomas Edison, who (43) the electric light bulb and the phonograph(among other things)said that genius, which brings discoveries, is 10 (44) inspiration and 90 percent perspiration. It is not enough to announce one's invention to the world, (45) we have seen in the case of young Imogen Cunningham. The inventor should protect his (46) her brainchild against pirates who (47) steal the idea and make practical (48) of it. To establish ownership and rights, the wise inventor (49) to the Patent Office for a patent of invention. If someone infringes (50) inventor can appeal to the courts. The litigation may be slow, but it is usually thorough.
填空题From her vantage point she watched the main doors swing open and the first arrivals pour in. Those who had been at the head of the line paused momentarily on entry, looked around curiously, then quickly moved forward as others behind pressed in. Within moments the central public area of the big branch bank was filled with a chattering, noisy crowd. The building, relatively quiet less than a minute earlier, had become a Babel. Edwina saw a tall heavy-set black man wave some dollar bills and announce loudly, "I want to put my money in the bank. " 66. ______ It seemed as if the report about everyone having come to open an account had been accurate after all. Edwina could see the big man leaning back expansively, who was still holding his dollar bills. His voice cut across the noise of other conversations and she heard him proclaim, "I'm in no hurts. There's something I'd like you to explain. " Two other desks were quickly manned by other clerks. With equal speed, long wide lines of people loaned in front of them. Normally, three members of staff were ample to handle new account business, but obviously inadequate now. Edwina could see Tottenhoe on the far side of the bank and called him on the intercom. She instructed, "Use more desks for new accounts and take all the staff you can spare to man then. " 67. ______ Tottenhoe grumbled in reply, "You realize we can't possibly process all these people today, and however many we do will tie us tip completely. " "I've got an idea, "Edwina said, "that's what someone has in mind. Just hurry the processing all you can. " 68. ______ First, an application form called for details of residence, employment, social security, and family matters. A specimen signature was obtained. Then proof of identity was needed. After that, the new accounts clerk would take all documents to an officer of the bank for approval and initialing. Finally, a savings passbook was made out or a temporary checkbook issued. Therefore the most new accounts that any bank employee could open in an hour were five, so the three clerks presently working might handle a sum of ninety in one business day, if they kept going at top speed, which was unlikely. 69. ______ Still the noise within the bank increased. It had become an uproar. A further problem was that the growing mass of arrivals in the central public area of the bank was preventing access to tellers' counters by other customers. Edwina could see a few of them outside, regarding of the milling scene with consternation. While she watched, several gave up and walked away. Inside the bank some of the newcomers were engaging tellers in conversation and the tellers, having nothing else to do because of the melee, chatted back. Two assistant managers had gone to the central floor area and were trying to conduct the flood of people so as to clear some space at counters. They were having small success. 70. ______ She decided it was time for her own intervention. Edwina left the platform and a failed--off staff area and, with difficulty, made her way through the milling crowd to the main front door. A. Yet she knew however much they hurried it would still take ten to fifteen minutes to open any single new account. It always did. The paperwork required that time. B. But still no hostility was evident. Everyone in the now jam--packed bank who was spoken to by members of the staff answered politely and with a smile. It seemed, Edwina thought, as if all who were here had been briefed to be on best behavior. C. A security guard directed him, "Over there for new accounts. " The guard pointed to a desk where a clerk-- a young girl-- sat waiting. She appeared nervous. The big man walked toward her, smiled reassuringly, and sat down. Immediately a press of others moved into a ragged line behind him, waiting for their turn. D. Even leaning closer to the intercom, it was hard to hear above the noise. E. Even tripling the present complement of clerks would permit very few more than two hundred and fifty accounts to be opened in a day, yet already, in the first few minutes of business, the bank was crammed with at least four hundred people, with still more flooding in, and the line outside, which Edwina rose to check, appeared as long as ever. F. Obviously someone had alerted the press in advance, which explained the presence of the TV camera crew outside. Edwina hoped to know who had done it.
填空题 Read the following text and fill each of the numbered
spaces with ONE suitable word. Write your answers on
ANSWER SHEET 1.
"The more gadgets there are, the{{U}} (31) {{/U}}things seem to
get. " said Honore Ervin, co-author of The Etiquette Girls : Things You Need to
Be Told. "Just because it' s there{{U}} (32) {{/U}}your disposal,
doesn’t mean you have to use it 24/7. " A recent{{U}} (33)
{{/U}}by market research company Synovate showed that 70 percent of 1,000
respondents {{U}}(34) {{/U}}the poorest etiquette in cell phone users
over other devices. The worst habit? Loud phone conversations in public places,
or "cell yell," {{U}}(35) {{/U}}to 72 percent of the Americans
polled. "People use{{U}} (36) {{/U}}anywhere and
everywhere," Ervin said. "At the movies-turn{{U}} (37) {{/U}}your cell
phone. I don't want to pay $10 to be sitting next to some guy chitchatting to
his girlfriend{{U}} (38) {{/U}}his cell phone. " This rudeness has
deteriorated public spaces, according to Lew Friedland, a communication
professor {{U}}(39) {{/U}}the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He{{U}}
(40) {{/U}}the lack of manners a kind of unconscious rudeness,{{U}}
(41) {{/U}}many people are not{{U}} (42) {{/U}}of what they're
doing or the others around them. "I think it's really noticeable
in any plane, train or bus{{U}} (43) {{/U}}you're subjected against your
will {{U}}(44) {{/U}}someone else's conversation," he said. "You can
listen to intimate details of their uncle's illness, problems with their lovers
and{{U}} (45) {{/U}}they're having for sinner. " "It{{U}} (46)
{{/U}}what. was a public" common space and starts to{{U}} (47)
{{/U}}it up into small private space. " A short time ago, if
cell phone users{{U}} (48) {{/U}}politely asked to talk quietly, they
would{{U}} (49) {{/U}} with chagrin, he said. "Now more and more people
are essentially treating you like you don't understand that loud cell phone use
is{{U}} (50) {{/U}}in public."
填空题A = Colt
B = Lancer
C = Grandis
D = Outlander
Which car (s)...
● is for those who want both looks and performance?
1
● has the technology to stop and start again automatically?
2
● have been rated as the Euro NCAP five-star?
3
4
● takes the safety of other road-users into consideration?
5
● has the equipment that enables the driver to back safely?
6
● have back seats that can be folded up?
7
8
● is a compact car with multiple places for storage?
9
● has airbags only for the driver and the passenger in the front?
10
A
Colt
Radical, contemporary design in a stylish compact form—this describes the new Mitsubishi Colt. Not only is Colt fun to drive, it also excels in its combination of interior flexibility and roominess. Sitting on an advanced but compact platform with a long wheelbase, Colt offers excellent cabin space.
The people who designed the Colt are massively safety conscious. Colt models come generously equipped with
The Colt"s Auto Stop the boot space holds up to 882 liters of luggage and there are trays and storage compartments throughout the car. It"s perfect for a family-sized trip. Mitsubishi has tried to make everyone in the family equal, too. So, the seats in the second row can recline and slide backwards and forwards. This should end the squabbles about seating arrangements. When you want to get away from it all, with an easy switch from the two to the four-wheel drive mode you can explore the possibilities of what is a genuine off-road vehicle, ideal for families who love adventures. It will give you and your passengers all of the usual big-car protection and more (it"s engineered to achieve the absolute maximum Euro-NCAP 5-stars); it"s been designed to do it in such a way as to minimize injury to pedestrians or damage to smaller vehicles. The height of the Outlander makes it easy to look ahead, which you tend to do when you have a family. Impressively, then, the 2.0 DI-D has the lowest CO2 emissions of any seven seat 4×4 and achieves over 40 mpg.1. B[解析] 细节题。题目问的是“哪种车既好看,操作性又好?”从B文中第一段第一句“Fed up with having to compromise between the car you want and the car you need?”可得出此类型车可满足你的双重需求。故选B。 2. A[解析] 细节题。题目问的是“哪种车能够自动启动与停止?”从A文中第三段“The Colt"s Auto Stop & Go technology automatically stops and then restarts the engine when the car is stationary at road junctions or in congested traffic.”说明此种车型能够自动启动和停车,可得出答案,故选A。 3. B[解析] 细节题。题目问的是“哪种类型的车被定级为欧洲碰撞测试五星级安全标准?”由B文中第二段“The Lancer is one of the first cars to gain Euro NCAP five-star safety rating under their new more stringent standards.”说明这种类型车已获得碰撞测试五星级安全标准。故选B。 4. D[解析] 细节题。题目问的是“哪种类型的车被定级为欧洲碰撞测试五星级安全标准?”由D文中第四段“It will give you and your passengers all of the usual big-car protection and more (it"s engineered to achieve the absolute maximum Euro-NCAP 5-stars)”可得出此种类型车也获得五星级安全标准。故选D。 5. D[解析] 推理题。题目问的是“哪种类型的车考虑到了他人安全?”由D文中第四段最后一句“it"s been designed to do it in such a way as to minimize injury to pedestrians or damage to smaller vehicles.”由对此车的精心设计,尽量减少对行人和小型车辆的伤害可得出,此车着重考虑了对他人安全的问题。故选D。 6. D[解析] 题目问的是“哪种类型的车让驾驶者能够安全地向后?”根据D文中第三段“the seats in the second row can recline and slide backwards and forwards”可得出此车能够让乘客安全的在座位上向后或向前,故选D。 7. B[解析] 题目问的是“哪种类型的车有可以折叠的后座?”根据B文中第四段“It even has folding rear seats and most models have a movable load floor that allows you to carry all manner of paraphernalia.”。说明此车有可以折叠的后座。故选B。 8. C[解析] 题目问的是“哪种类型的车有可以折叠的后座?”根据C文中第一段中“But, use the Fold 2 Hide concept, and they form a flat loading area. On your two-week break you"ll pack in everything you need, even if you decide on camping.”。说明此种车型也有可折叠的后座。故选C。 9. A[解析] 题目问的是“哪种类型的车带有多样化的存贮空间?”根据A文开头部分“Radical, contemporary design in a stylish compact form—this describes the new Mitsubishi Colt. Not only is Colt fun to drive, it also excels in its combination of interior flexibility and roominess. Sitting on an advanced but compact platform with a long wheelbase, Colt offers excellent cabin space.”即可看出此车不仅精致,而且空间足够大。故选A。 10. A[解析] 题目问的是“哪种类型的车仅对前排的驾驶员和乘客配备了安全气囊?”从A文中第二段“Colt models come generously equipped with driver and passenger front airbags”即可得出此车为前排驾驶员和乘客配备了安全气囊,故答案为A。
填空题You will hear a long talk. As you listen, answer the questions or complete
the notes in your test booklet for Questions 21 to 30 by writing no more than
three words in the space provided on the right. You will hear the talk
twice.
填空题Whatdoesthelecturemainlyconcern?
填空题The first person who used Confucianism to express Christianity was from
填空题
填空题is particularly helpful for those who fear changes?
填空题Accordingtothespeaker,whoshouldenjoytherightofAcademicFreedom?
填空题The author holds that engineering and humanities have the least in common. 71. ______ Science and humanities are both theoretical subjects. 72. ______ The author's thought processes are different when he studies literature and engineering respectively. 73. ______ The other students didn't understand the language of mathematics when the author used it. 74. ______ The author changed his minors. 75. ______ The author wanted to combine engineering with humanities. 76. ______ The author chose the college he attended because he wanted a broad education that would develop flexibility and values. 77. ______ The author's secondary school ambition was to major in electrical engineering. 78. ______ Many engineering students don't take their core courses seriously. 79. ______ The author found that his two fields of study did not mix well and he could not apply them easily. 80. ______ Section A Engineering students are supposed to be practically and rationally personified, but when it comes to my college education I am an idealist and a fool. In high school I wanted to be an electrical engineer and, of course, any sensible student with my aims would have chosen a college with a large engineering department, prestigious reputation and lots of fancy labs and research equipment. But that's not what I did. I chose to study engineering at a small liberal-arts university that doesn't even offer a major in electrical engineering. Obviously, this was not a practical choice; I came here for more noble reasons. I wanted a broad education that would provide me with flexibility and a value system to guide me in my career. I wanted to open my eyes and expand my vision by interacting with people who weren't studying science or engineering. My parents, teachers and other adults commended me for such a prudent choice. They told me I was wise and mature beyond my 18 years, and I believed them. I headed off to college sure I was going to have an advantage over these students who went to the big engineering "factories" where they didn't care if you had values or were flexible. I was going to be a complete engineer: technical genius and sensitive humanist all in one. Now I'm not so sure. Somewhere along the line my lofty ideals smacked into reality, as all naive visions eventually do. After three years of struggling to balance math, physics and engineering courses with the humanities courses of my core, I have learned there are reasons why few engineering students try to combine engineering with a broad liberal curriculum in college. Section B The reality that has blocked my breezy path to stereotype smasher is that engineering and the liberal arts simply don't mix as easily as I assumed in high school. Individually they shape a person in very different ways; together they threaten to confuse. The struggle to reconcile the two disciplines is difficult. Students who pursue more traditional liberal-arts degrees don't experience the dichotomy between major and core studies that I do. English or psychology majors find related subjects in almost any of their core courses. They can apply much of what they learn in "Chaucer and His Age "or "Personality Theories "to questions raised in "American Foreign Policy "or "Religions of the World". But I rarely find that my ability to analyze circuits by LaPlace transforms is applicable to the discussions held in my religion or history courses. What I contribute is almost always something learned in another core class, not in the science building. On the rare occasions when I do speak from my knowledge of engineering, there is a language barrier. I can't talk mathematics to the people in my core classes because most don't understand it. They force me to deliver a diluted and popularized version of my point that often fails to convey the impact I think it should. It's like telling a joke to someone who doesn't get it. You say the punch line and he looks dumbly at you, waiting for more. It's frustrating. Not only do engineering and humanities subjects not overlap, but each discipline demands that I think in separate modes. When I walk into a core classroom I am expected to look at many different aspects of existence from a single point of view, such as ethical theory or Romantic poetry. When I enter an electronics laboratory I am expected to examine one thing, such as the characteristics of the ideal transformer, from several different angles, such as the laws of magnetic induction or the perspective of practical design. It feels different in the classroom than in the lab. The differences follow me out of the classroom. When I sit back in the recliner in my room to read a novel for "British Literature", I open my mind to allow associations between new knowledge and old. But when it is time to work through a few problems for "Electromagnetic Theory", I sit down at my desk on a hard wooden chair and shut out all of my thoughts except those that will help me find the answers. Section C The Two Cultures. The essential approach of each discipline can be captured in a metaphor. Imagine how each would use a spotlight to explore a theatrical stage. The humanities would use one colored filter and point the light all over the stage. Engineering would focus a tight beam on one particular actor and use the entire spectrum of colored filters. The gap between the two cultures of science and humanities is a common theme. But the engineer has even less in common with the humanities than the scientist does. The scientist at least shares the humanist's ideal of knowledge for its own sake: the unimpeachable position of pure theory. Engineers are denied even this because they are explicitly concerned with using knowledge to fulfill our needs and purposes, both glorious and mundane. There is no pure theory in engineering. There is only what works. Many engineering students avoid the conflict between their major and their core by placing less emphasis on courses outside their major. They train their thinking to be most effective at solving well-defined problems and muddle through the foggy issues in their core courses as best they can. I am stubborn enough to believe I can learn to think more freely and still be an effective engineer, and that I can be technically honed and still be a human being. But I know I can't smash all the stereotypes; I have acquired some of the prejudices they are based on. My writing professor urges me to be less rational. My religion professor reminds me that technology cannot solve all our problems, as much as I would like it to. As I was preparing last spring to register for classes this fall, I saw that I could be spending more time in the lab than ever during my senior year. Suddenly I wanted out. I swapped my minors in electrical engineering and computer science for a degree in physics, the most I could do without postponing my graduation. I was reluctant to switch, and someday I may return to engineering. But for now I need to stay closer to the humanities of my core so that I do not abandon part of myself before I know who I really am.
填空题A=Advertisement 1 B=Advertisement 2 C=Advertisement 3 D=Advertisement 4 E=Advertisement 5 Which advertisement(s) ... · is/are looking for someone who has a cross-disciplinary background? 71. ______72. ______ · is/are looking for someone who would like to study a subject as a PhD degreecandidate? 73. ______ · is/are for a vacancy that excludes overseas applicants? 74. ______ · require(s) the post holder to work at the company for about six months? 75. ______ · require(s) assistance in the publication of an academic journal? 76. ______ · offer(s) the job with the shortest term of contract? 77. ______ · suggest(s) that the applicant be keen on the theory related to the project? 78. ______ · offer(s) a job that is least attractive in terms of salary? 79. ______ · implies/imply that the applicant needs to play a part in the team? 80. ______ A SCHOOL OF PROFSS, ENVIRONMENTAL AND MATRIALS ENGINEERING Research Fellow in Materials Characterization The above EPSRC-funded post is available from 1 October 2012 for a fixed period of three years to work on the modeling of electron energy loss near-edge fine structure for the extraction for bonding information from nano-scale solids. Applicants should have a PhD in physical/engineering sciences and research experience in physics/chemistry electron microscopy and/or computing/programming. Salary will be on the scale for Research Staff Grade 1A(15159~22785 p. a.) according to qualifications and relevant experience. Application forms and further particulars may be obtained from Dr Rik Brydson, School of Materials, University of Leeds,Leeds,LS2 9JT, te1:0113 233 2369. In all enquiries please quote the reference number 58. Closing date for applications; 24 July 2012. B Four Studentships Four 3-year EPSRC-funded studentships are available (leading to the degree of PhD), the maintenance grants of which will be supplemented to 6295 p.a. (EPSRC Quota+1000). Candidates must have at least a Class 11-1 degree, or equivalent and be UK residents (to qualify for a maintenance grant). ⊙ Analytical electron microscopy and/or surface analysis. Contact; Dr Rik Brydson (as above) ⊙ Flow behavior and structure of ceramic pastes, and ⊙ Colloid behavior of ceramic systems. Contact.- Professor Brian Rand, tel.. 0113 233 2536, email: b. rand@leeds, ac. uk ⊙ Materials process modeling/fluid dynamics. Contact: Dr Andy Mullis, tel: 0113 233 2568, email: met6am@ sun. leeds, ac. uk C PROCTER DEPARTMENT OF FOOD SCIENCE Research Fellow/Officer in Dairy Emulsion Science The above post is available immediately for a fixed period of 18 months to carry out an experimentally based project concerned with fundamental and applied aspects of emulsion systems in relation to development of new dairy-type food products. The project is funded by St. Ivel (Unigate) Ltd and about one third of the time will be spent at company premises near Swindon. Applicants should have a PhD degree in food science and chemistry. Salary will be on the scale for Research Staff Grade 1A within the range 15159~22785 p. a. according to qualifications and relevant experience. Application forms and further particulars may be obtained from Professor Eric Dickinson, the Procter Department of Food Science, the University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, tel,, 0113 233 2956, fax: 0113 233 2982, email: e. dickinson@leeds, ac. uk. In all enquiries please quote the reference number 72/109. Closing date for applications.. 24 July 2012. D DEPARTMENTS OF FOOD SCIENCE AND APPLIED MATHEMATICS Research Fellow and Studentship A research fellowship is available from 1 October 2011 for a fixed period of three years, along with a studentship for an EPSRC-funded project "Ultrasound propagation in soft solids". Ultrasound measurement allied to an understanding of ultrasound propagation in soft solids is complementary to mechanical rheometry and gives important information on the structure of the system and the particle interactions. The research fellow will develop the applied mathematics aspects of this project. Applicants for the fellowship should have a PhD or equivalent qualification in a relevant discipline, a background in scattering theory and an interest in the theory of acoustic propagation in systems of weakly interacting particles. The research student, whilst primarily an experimentalist, must also be interested in theory. Salary for the fellowship will be on the scale for Research Staff Grade 1A within the range 15159~16045 p.a. according to qualifications and relevant experience. Application forms and further particulars may be obtained from Malcolm Povey, Procter Department of Food Science, the University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, tel: 0113 233 2963. Fax: 0113 233 2982, email: m. j. mpovey@leeds, ac. uk. World Wide Web: http..//www, food. leeds, ac. uk/mp, htm. In all enquiries please quote the reference number 72/108. Closing date for applications= 24 July 2012. E RESEARCH SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AND HEALTH MIDWIFERY STUDIES, CENTRE FOR REPRODUCTION, GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT Part-Time Research Fellow/Officer The above part-time (50%) post is available immediately for a fixed period of two years. The Midwifery Studies Research Group carries out clinical research related to midwifery, as well as research in the organization of maternity care and the dissemination and implementation of research evidence. The appointee will have a background in epidemiology or health services research to assist in the preparation of Cochran Reviews. He/She will work on reviews of trials in the field of breast-feeding: no prior knowledge of breastfeeding research will be required. Applicants should have a first degree in a related subject and a higher degree or research training in epidemiology or health services research. The knowledge of, and interest in systematic reviewing is essential as is an ability to use initiative and work as part of a team. Salary will be on the scale for Research Staff Grade 1A (15259~22785 p.a. Pro rata) according to qualifications and relevant experience. Informal enquiries may be made to Professor Mary Renfrew, tel: 0113 233 6888, fax: 0113 244 9730, or email: m, j. renfw@leeds, ac. uk; or Dr Mike Woolridge, tel: 0113 233 6894. Application forms and further particulars may be obtained from Trish Walker, Midwifery Studies, the University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, tel: O113 233 6888. In all enquiries please quote the reference number 90/19.
填空题Answer questions by referring to 3 passages concerning cultural differences. Note: Answer each question by choosing A, B or C and mark it on ANSWER SHEET 1. Some choices may be required more than once. A=Passage One B=Passage Two C=Passage Three In which passage you will find ... Asian workers in American company has got emotional starvation? 21. ______ people are willing to give much information of their culture when asked? 22. ______ in one country, if you are punctual for a party, you will feel embarrassed? 23. ______ the idea that the interior world of people in different cultures are basically the same in nany aspects? 24. ______ misunderstanding arises because of different manners in showing refusal? 25. ______ a manager found his foreign stuff have complaints due to different understanding of me word? 26. ______ misunderstanding arises because of different manners in accepting compliments? 27. ______ before entering another culture, it is crucial to know different thinking patterns? 28. ______ if a person says, It's trouble some and I'm not much thirsty. you should offer him something to drink? 29. ______ is there much to be gained by observing how people of the same culture interact with each other? 30. ______ Passage One American and Chinese cultures are at polar opposites. An American hostess, complimented for her culinary skills, is likely to say, "Oh, I'm so glad you liked it. I cooked it especially for you." Not so a Chinese host or hostess, who will instead apologize profusely for giving you "nothing" even slightly edible and for not showing you enough honor by providing proper dishes. The Chinese take pride in "modesty"; the Americans in "straightforwardness". That modesty has left many a Chinese hungry at an American table, for Chinese politeness calls for three refusals before one accepts an offer, and the American hosts take a "no" to mean "no", whether it's the first, second, or third time. Recently, a number of a delegation sent to China by a large American corporation complained to me about how the Chinese had asked them three times if they would be willing to modify some proposal, and each time the Americans had said "no" clearly and definitely. My friend was incensed that the Chinese had not taken their word the first time. I recognized the problem immediately and wondered why the American had not studied up on cultural differences before coming to China. It would have saved them a lot of perplexity and needless frustration in their negotiation. Once you've learned the signals and how to respond, life becomes infinitely easier. When guests come, I know I should immediately ask if they'd like a cup of tea. They will respond, "Please don't bother," which is my signal to fetch tea. Passage Two An Asian engineer is assigned to a US laboratory and almost suffers a nervous breakdown. A US executive tells his staff he's going to treat them fairly — and creates dissension. Each of these real life cases involved people who were regarded as superior employees, but were ill-equipped to cope with the complexities and dangers of intercultural management. Never show the sole of your shoe to an Arab; never arrive on time for a party in Brazil; and in Japan, don't think "yes" means "yes", but simply learning the social "dos" and "don'ts" is not the answer, according to the new culture specialists. The penalties for ignoring different thinking patterns, they point out, can be disastrous. For example, the American manager who promised to be fair thought he was telling the Japanese staff that their hard work would be rewarded; but when some workers received higher salary increase than others, there were complaints. "You told us you'd be fair, and you lied to us," accused one salesman. "It took me a year and a half," signed the American, " to realize that 'fair', to my staff, means being treated equally." The Asian engineer who suffered in American was the victim of another mistaken expectation. He was accustomed to the warm group environment so typical in Japan. But in American company, everyone is expected to be self-starter, who thrives on working alone. For this Japanese it was emotional starvation. Passage Three As we interact with others of different cultures, there is no good substitute for receptiveness to interpersonal feedback, good observation skills, effective questions, and some horse sense. There is much to be gained by observing how people of the same culture interact with each other. Don't be afraid to ask questions as most people respond very positively to inquiries about their culture. Ask a variety of people so you can get a balanced view. Making a genuine effort to find the positive historical, literary, and cultural contributions of a society; learning a few polite expressions in another person's language; and showing appreciation for the food and music of another culture can have especially positive effects. The conclusion, then, is not that there are no cultural differences. These differences between cultures and peoples are real and can add richness (and humor) to the fabric of life. People everywhere have much in common, such as a need for affiliation and love, participation, and contribution. When the exterior is peeled off, there are not so many differences after all.
填空题the environmental problems are not caused overnight?
填空题Confucianism has its greatest effect among European countries in 71. ______ The first person who used Confucianism to express Christianity was from 72. ______ More than one thousand years ago, students were sent to China to study Confucianism. They came from 73. ______ Centuries ago, in ______, the government even set up universities and hold ceremonies in memory of Confucius. 74. ______ Confucius has been given a thorough study and review for the sake of capital expansion in 75. ______ War and development motivated the study of Confucianism in 76. ______ In ______, Confucius' teachings can even find its reflection in the Declaration of the Right of Man and of the Citizen. 77. ______ The earliest classical books of Confucius translated into European language appeared in 78. ______ Confucianism has its most influential power upon foreign countries in 79. ______ In recent thirty years, Confucius and Confucianism are introduced and discussed systematically in 80. ______ In Japan It has been a long history of 1750 years ever since Confucianism was introduced into this country. Confucius' teachings are in every field of the social life in Japan. Its influence on the people's moral concepts and views about education are the deepest in Japan. It was in the 16th year of Mikado (285 A. D. ) that Confucius' teachings began to be introduced to Japan. In the year the suggestion of a Korean envoy was adopted and Wang Ren, a Chinese court academician was sent to Japan to present to the Mikado ten copies of Lun Yu (The Analects of Confucius) and a copy of an Article of a Thousand Words (Qian Zi Wen). Wang Ren's arriving at Japan is generally regarded as the beginning of Confucianism being spread in the country. Confucius' teachings were accepted by both the government and the public. Confucianism quickly took its roots among the people and developed constantly. Combined with the conditions in Japan Confucianism has gradually become part of the national culture of the country. During the time of Sui dynasty and Tang dynasty Japan sent many students to China to study Confucianism. Under the influence of Confucius' theory about a unified domain, Japanese successfully carried the DAIKA Reform after which Japanese society started to transit from a slavish society to a feudal society. The person pulling strings behind the scenes of the reform was a great Confucianist who had studied in China for 20 to 30 years. During the 200 years after the reform Japan had sent to China 19 groups of envoys. The country did its utmost to import the culture of Tang dynasty, develop national education based on Confucianism, spread the thought of the sage, set up universities and hold ceremonies in memory of Confucius. In the years of EDO Confucius' teachings were unprecedentedly popular. The ruling class people took the lead in reading the classical books of Confucianism, setting up education based on Confucianism, building Confucius' Temples. Education was developed, people of talents came forth in large numbers and the academic circle reached to its flourishing time. The major schools include School of Yonego, School of Yang Ming, School of Mito, School of Kogaku, School of Eclecticism, School of Textual Research. Since the beginning of 20'th century, especially in the late thirty years, among countries except China the study of Confucianism is best developed in Japan. Not only that Confucianism influenced Japanese society in the past 1 000 years, it also has great effect on the people at present time. In Italy China is one of the birth places of human civilization. As the kernel of the traditional culture of ancient China, Confucius' teachings greatly influenced not only the historical development of Oriental society, but also the social life of some European countries. Confucius' influence on Italy has something to do with the missionaries who came to China to do missionary work. In 1582, the Society of Jesus sent Matteo Ricci to China. In order to do their missionary work well he studied Confucianism very hard. Matteo Ricci was the first person who used Confucianism to express Christianity. He arrived in Beijing in 1601 and lived there for years. He published the Latin version of the Four $ bus which were the earliest classical books of Confucius translated into European Language. Matteo Ricci had made some contributions to the cultural exchange between the East and the West, so in Italy he was called "the first man who facilitated the flow of culture between China and Western countries", "Learned Western Confucianist" and "Christian Confucius". The study of Confucius in today's Italy has made some progress and several groups of books about Confucius have been published. In France Among European countries, Confucianism has its greatest effect in France. It was introduced to France soon after it was introduced to Italy. During the Enlightenment and the French Revolution, Confucianism had made some positive contributions to the bourgeois revolution in France. Among the great thinkers Confucianism mainly influenced the Encyclopedism dism school and Physiocratic school. Its influence on the French Revolution can be seen in the Declaration of the Right of Man and of the Citizen, drafted by Robespierre, leader of Jacobin Club, the declaration says that freedom is the right belonging to all those who do not do harm to others, the principle of freedom is nature, the rule is justice, the guarantee is the law and the moral limits are in the following, '"Don't treat others in the way you do not want to be treated. " The Chinese Study Institute of Paris University is the major one that studies Confucianism in France. The subjects include Confucianist Classics and Confucianism. In Grand Larousse Encyclopedique (published in 1973), under the entry of Confucius, Confucius and Confucianism are introduced and discussed systematically. As a representative work of Confucian study in France it starts its discussion with Confucius and ends with Mr. Feng Youlan, a Chinese expert at Confucian study. In America Through missionary activities Americans began to study Confucianism, motivated by capital expansion. The study has been pushed forward while the U. S. -China policy and international conditions are changing frequently. From the end of the 19th century to the early 20th century, especially during World War Ⅰ and World War Ⅱ , more attention was paid to the work because of political and military reasons. The founding of the People's Republic of China and the triumph of China and Korea over America in Korean War made Americans feel it necessary to work even harder in the study of Chinese history and present conditions. As a result, Confucianism which has influenced Chinese in the history and at present time was paid great attention to, especially in the years after 1960's because of the international conditions, especially the Sino-U. S. relationship, Chinese study in America, including the study of Confucius, developed quickly. In the American academic field Confucius has been given a thorough study and review. More and more Americans began to understand and respect Confucius as a famous intellectual in Chinese history and Confucianism as the representative of Chinese feudal traditional culture. In People's Almanac Handbook, published in 1985 in America, Confucius heads the list of the ten great thinkers in the world.
填空题
It was a cold day. I sat in my room writing letters. I
glanced out of the window. In the window directly opposite me stood Herr Stroh,
gazing blatantly upon me. I was annoyed at his interest. I pulled down the blind
and switched on the light to continue my writing. But the drawn blind and the
artificial light irritated me, and suddenly I didn' t see why I shouldn' t write
my letters by daylight without being stared at. I switched off the light and
released the blind. Herr Stroh had gone. I concluded that he had taken my action
as a signal of disapproval, and I settled back to write.
66. ____________ I left my room and went down to complain
to Frau Lublonitsch. "She's gone to the market," Gertha said.
"She' 11 be back in half an hour." 67. ____________
"I shall tell Frau Chef," she said. Something in her
manner made me ask, "Has this ever happened before.'?" "Once or
twice this year," she said. "I' 11 speak to Frau Chef." And she added, with her
music-hall grimace, "He was probably counting your eyelashes."
68. ____________ For nearly an hour I sat patiently at the
window. Herr Stroh rested his arms now and again, but he did not leave his seat.
I could see him clearly, although I think I imagined the grin on his face as,
from time to time, he raised the glasses to his eyes. There was no doubt that he
could see, as if it were within an inch of his face, the fury on mine. It was
too late now for one of us to give in, and I kept glancing down at the entrances
to the hotel Stroh, expecting to see Frau Lublonitsch or perhaps one of her sons
or the yard hands going across to deliver a protest. But no one from our side
approached the Stroh premises. I continue to stare, and Herr Stroh continued to
goggle through his glasses. Then he dropped them. It was as if
they had been jerked out of his hands by an invisible nudge. He approached close
to the window and gazed, but now he was gazing at a point above and slightly to
the left of my room. After about two minutes, he turned and
disappeared. 69. ____________ "Did she
telephone to his house?" "No, Frau Chef doesn't use the phone;
it mixes her up." "Who protested, then?" "Frau
Chef." "But she hasn't been across to see him. I' ve been
watching the house." "No, Frau Chef doesn't visit with him. But
don't worry, he knows all right that he mustn't annoy our guests."
When I looked out of the window again, I saw that the blind of Herr
Stroh' s room had been pulled down, and so it remained for the rest of my
stay. Meantime, I went out to post my letters in the box
opposite our hotel, across the path. The sun had come out more strongly, and
Herr Stroh stood in his doorway blinking up at the roof of the Guesthouse
Lublonitsch. He was engrossed, he did not notice me at all. 70.
____________ Like most of the roofs in that province, the
Lublonitsch roof had a railed ledge running several inches above the eaves, for
the purpose of preventing the snow from falling in heavy thumps during the
winter. On this ledge, just below an attic window, stood the gold-and-rose
ormolu clock that I had seen in Frau Lublonitsch's splendid bedroom.
I turned the corner just as Herr Stroh gave up his gazing; he went
indoors, sullen and bent. Two car-loads of people who had moved into the hotel
that morning were now moving out, shifting their baggage with speed and the
signs of a glad departure. I know that his house was nearly empty.
A. I didn' t want to draw his attention by following the line of
his gaze but I was curious as to what held him staring so trancelike up at our
roof. On my way back from the postbox I saw what it was.
B. I caught sight of a tiled stove constructed of mosaic tiles that were
not a local type. I also noticed, standing upon the cabinet, a large ornamental
clock; each curve and twirl in the case of this clock was overlaid with that
gildedbronze alloy which is known as ormolu. The clock twinkled in the sunlight
which slanted between the window hangings. C. I looked up a few
moments later, and this time Herr Stroh was seated on a chair a little way back
from the window. He was facing me squarely and holding to his eyes a pair
of field-glasses. D. I returned to my room. Herr Stroh still
sat in position, the field-glasses in his hands resting on his knees. As soon as
I came within view, he raised the glasses to his eyes. I decided to stare him
out until such time as Frau Lublonitsch should return and take the matter in
hand. E. Just then Gertha knocked at my door. "Frau Chef has
protested, and you won't have any more trouble," she said. F.
So I lodged my complaint with Gertha.
填空题RedCrosswasestablished______.
填空题 Read the following text and fill each of the numbered
spaces with ONE suitable word. Write your answers on ANSWER
SHEET 1.
Children who grip their pens too close to the writing point
are likely to be at a disadvantage in examinations,{{U}} (31) {{/U}}to
the first serious investigation into the way in which writing technique can
dramatically affect educational achievement. The survey of 643
children and adults, ranking from pre-school to 40-plus, also suggests{{U}}
(32) {{/U}}penholding techniques have deteriorated sharply over one
generation, with teachers now paying far{{U}} (33) {{/U}}attention to
correct pen grip and handwriting style. Stephanie Thomas, a
learning support teacher{{U}} (34) {{/U}}findings have been published,
was inspired to investigate this area{{U}} (35) {{/U}}he noticed that
those students who had the most trouble with spelling{{U}} (36)
{{/U}}had a poor pen grip. While Mr. Thomas could not establish a
significant statistical link{{U}} (37) {{/U}}pen-holding style and
accuracy in spelling,he{{U}} (38) {{/U}}find huge differences in
technique between the young children and the mature adults, and a definite{{U}}
(39) {{/U}}between near-point gripping and slow, illegible
writing. People who{{U}} (40) {{/U}}their pens at the
writing point also show other characteristics{{U}} (41) {{/U}}inhibit
learning,{{U}} (42) {{/U}}as poor posture,leaning too{{U}} (43)
{{/U}}to the desk,using four fingers to grip the pen{{U}} (44)
{{/U}}than three, and clumsy positioning of the thumb (which can obscure{{U}}
(45) {{/U}}is being written ). Mr. Thomas believes
that the{{U}} (46) {{/U}}between elder and younger writers is{{U}}
(47) {{/U}}too dramatic to be accounted for simply by the possibility
that people get better at writing as they grow{{U}} (48) {{/U}}. He
attributes it to a failure to teach the most effective methods, pointing out
that the differences between{{U}} (49) {{/U}}groups coincides with the
abandonment of formal handwriting instruction in classrooms in the sixties. "The
30-year-old showed a huge diversity of grips,{{U}} (50) {{/U}}the over
40s group all had a uniform 'tripod' grip. "
填空题Karoshi -- Worked to Death Japan's rise from the devastation of World War Ⅱ to economic prominence between 1945 and 1975 was not without human cost. People cannot work for ten or twelve hours a day six and seven days a week, year after year, (1) suffering physically as well as mentally. But during the first three postwar decades no one (2) any special attention to the (3) than usual number of men in their 40s and 50s who died of brain and heart ailments, most often (4) acute cardiac insufficiency and subarachnoid hemorrhage. It was not (5) the latter part of the 1980s, when several high-ranking business executives who were still in their prime (6) suddenly died without any previous (7) of illness, that the news media began picking up on what appeared to be a new (8) . This new phenomenon was quickly labeled karoshi, (9) "death from overwork", and once it had a (10) and its symptoms were broadcast far and wide, it quickly became obvious that (11) was experiencing a virtual epidemic. According to Labor Ministry (12) there had been only twenty-one cases of (13) in 1987, twenty-nine cases in 1988 and thirty cases in 1989. But a liaison council of attorneys established in 1988 to monitor (14) from overwork estimated in 1990 that over 10,000 people were (15) each year from karoshi. Most of the (16) of death from overwork had been putting in more than one hundred hours of overtime each. The victims did not receive (17) overtime pay for their (18) work. After years of such intense overwork, most of them find that they cannot rest even when they do take time (19) . They are (20) wound up that not working leaves them disoriented and suffering from serious stress.
填空题
填空题 Answer questions 71-80 by referring to the comments on the
economy of three different countries/region in the following magazine
article. Note: Answer each question by choosing A, B or C and
mark it on ANSWER SHEET 1. Some choices may be required more than
once.{{B}}A=Indonesia B=Hong Kong
C=CanadaWhich country/region…{{/B}}
{{B}}Indonesia{{/B}} The period under review (1994-98)
has been one of great contrast for Indonesian. After three decades of continuous
growth fostered by political, social and macro-economic stability, the Asian
economic crisis of 1997 has sown the seeds of major change in Indonesia's
economic and financial structures, which prompted calls for reform.
Trade and foreign direct investment have been at the heart of Indonesia's
economic policy. In the face of the recent economic crisis, the Government
undertook to accelerate the pace of reforms and to remove many remaining
restrictions on domestic and international trade. From 1994 to 1996, real GDP
grew on average by 8% annually. Although economic activity started to decelerate
in the second half of 1996, the financial crisis of 1997 transformed a soft
landing of the Indonesian economic into a serious recession.
Indonesia's international trade has also been severely affected by the
recession in the country and elsewhere in Asia. Imports, which increased by
nearly 27% in 1995, declined by 3% in U. S. dollar value in 1997 before failing
by 30% in the first quarter of 1998. Exports a major element that could have
stimulated activity in current circumstances, have fallen (in value terms) as a
result of the slump in demand elsewhere in Asia. The causes of
the financial and currency turmoil are multiple and complex. External factors,
such as the withdrawal of international investors from Asia in the wake of the
Thai, Philippines and Korean Crisis, were compounded by internal developments,
particularly growing uncertainty about economic, social and political stability
in Indonesia.
{{B}}Hong Kong{{/B}} The period under review
(1994-95) was marked by two main events. The first was Hong Kong's reversion to
the People's Republic of China, on 1 July 1997, and its designation as a Special
Administrative Region (SAR) with a high degree of autonomy with regard to
economic (and most other) policies under the "one country, two systems"
framework established in accordance with the Basic Law. Hong Kong is one of, if
not the most liberal among WTO members. There is no indication that Hong Kong's
traditional openness to trade and foreign investment has been affected by
reunification, and as such, the present economic regime may be broadly
characterized as "business as usual". The second main event
during the review period was the outbreak of the economic crisis in Thailand in
July 1997 and its spread to other countries in and beyond South East Asia. The
crisis, and the associated drop in demand throughout the region, has seriously
impaired Hong Kong's economic performance since the third quarter of 1997,
causing a dramatic slow-down in economic activity. Nor, it would
appear, has the Government attempted to influence the long-run structural
evolution of Hong Kong's economy during the period under review. One of the main
features of this evolution has been the increasingly closer links with the
fast-developing adjacent region of South China. In response to
domestic calls for the Government to take action in order to alleviate, if not
reverse, the recent slow-down in economic growth and the consequent rise in
unemployment, in June 1998 the Government introduced a package of relief
measures. Apart from the implementation of a few "emergency" measures, the
authorities have largely refrained from interfering with the normal functioning
of the free-market system.
{{B}}Canada{{/B}} Canada
has continued to pursue an outward-oriented strategy that, combined with prudent
macroeconomic policies, has been integral to a recent strong growth performance.
Over the last two years, Canada has participated in regional and multilateral
initiatives that have further liberalized its generally open economy. It has
also demonstrated its commitment to a strong multilateral trading system through
an active and constructive participation in all aspects of work in the WTO.
Domestic initiatives to lower interprovincial trade barriers, and move forward
internal deregulation, enhance transparency, and rationalize the import regime
have helped Canadian producers to adapt to the challenges, and to take advantage
of the opportunities resulting from greater market access both at home and
abroad. Economic activity has reflected strong private consumption and
investment. Developments in the past two years have confirmed
trade as a major determinant of Canada's economic performance. Exports continued
to benefit from the United States' cyclical lead, supported by efficiency gains
in the Canadian economy. The U. S. share in Canadian trade has risen further, to
some 83% of merchandise exports and 67% of imports. Canada's aggregate output
thus remains exposed to slower growth in the United States. The
financial crisis in Asia has had so far a limited impact on Canada's overall
economic growth, as only 8% of Canadian exports are destined for that region.
Nevertheless, the crisis has been felt distinctively in western Canada and, if
protracted, could have significant indirect effects on the economy as a
whole. __ has been broadly characterized by its openness to
trade and foreign investment? 71. ______ .
__ has a strong link with the U. S. economy?
72. ______ . __
was severely impaired in its economy by he crisis in and beyond South-east
Asia?
73. ______ . __ called for reform in
economic and financial structures, which was particularly true during
the crisis in South-east Asia?
74. ______ . __ has strengthened links with the Southern
part of China?
75. ______ . __ wants
to lower inter-provincial trade barriers to strengthen internal deregulation?
76. ______ . __ is the one where the lack of stability in
economy, society and politics blocked its economic development?
77. ______ . __ was a special
Administrative Region within one country with a high degree of
autonomy?
78. ______ . __ takes advantage of
market both at home and abroad?
79. ______
. __ is a very liberal WTO member or actively involved in the
work in WTO? 80. ______
.
填空题 Answer questions 71-80 by referring to the following
article. Note: Answer each question by choosing A, B or C and
mark it on ANSWER SHEET 1. Some choices may be required more than
once.{{B}}Which article…{{/B}}
{{B}}A{{/B}} The Government is going to give new "job
splitting" grants to employers willing to offer part-time work to people
claiming unemployment benefit. The next scheme, which took many
union leaders and large employers by surprise yesterday night, will be announced
in detail in the autumn. It is intended to cost the taxpayer nothing because of
savings in unemployment benefit. The proposal, unveiled last night by Mr, Norman
Tebbit, Secretary of State for Employment, will be in addition to the new
Community Programme for the long-term unemployed. Mr. Tebbit
said that under the scheme a vacancy could be offered to two unemployed people,
one existing full-time employee or two existing full-time employees if one of
them would otherwise have been made redundant. The Employment
Secretary suggested yesterday that workers reaching retirement might find the
idea of sharing their job attractive, if pensions could be secured. But he also
said that firms might find it attractive to offer one vacancy to two school
leavers. In a sharp reaction to the Community Programme, Mr.
Nicholas Hinton, director of the National Council for Voluntary Organizations,
whose members will be expected to sponsor many of the new places, said: "The
Government is trying to spread too little money too thinly among too many people
and many voluntary organizations are suspicious of its motives. "
{{B}}B{{/B}}
Few people believe that unemployment in the United Kingdom will fall
favorably below the 3.2 million mark, or 13.4 percent of the labour force,
during the next few years. The remarkable rise in productivity over the past
year will, if it continues, make it even more difficult to tackle unemployment.
Many firms are confident that they can meet any increase in demand without
hiring extra staff. Remedies more imaginative and more permanent
than those tried so far are needed. The Government's job-splitting scheme
announced on Tuesday is one example that should be welcomed. Another good idea
is Rank Xerox's "networking" plan, by which executives would be able to work
part-time from home. The possibilities of work-sharing need to be more
vigorously investigated, on the lines indicated by a recent OECD study. If the
total hours of work required are not going to increase-with output rising thanks
to improved productivity-then let us try to share those working hours more
equitably among the labour force. Work-sharing helps to produce
new jobs by reducing the working hours of those in existing jobs. The danger
with work-sharing is that employees may expect to be paid more per hour for
working shorter hours, and that fixed labour costs will rise as the numbers on
the payroll increase. Many employers therefore fear that the effect on costs and
prices would be inflationary. The Government is therefore subsidizing employers
to participate in its job-splitting scheme. Most kinds of
work-sharing involve marginal cuts of a few per cent in total working hours, and
thus only modest increases in the number of jobs. The biggest difference would
be made if a substantial number of full-time jobs could be turned into part-time
jobs. The Government's role would be to adapt the tax and social security system
to make part-time work more attractive to employers and employees, notably by
ensuring that as many part-time employees as possible escape both tax and social
security payment. The social effects of work-sharing, are likely
to be beneficial, since it would involve an attempt to match work opportunities
to a wider variety of life styles. The combination of one fulltime and one
part-time spouse might become much more universal.
{{B}}C{{/B}}
Part-timers usually earn less per hour than a full-timer, have fewer
fringe benefits and less job security. They have virtually no career prospects.
Employers often think that working parttime means that a person has no ambition
and no chance of promotion. But job-sharing bridges that gap and
offers the chance of interesting work to people who can only work part-time and
that does not mean just married women. As Adrienne Broyle of "New Ways to
Work"-formally the London Job-sharing Project-points out: "There are various
reasons why people want to job-share and so have more spare time. " A growing
number of men want to job-share so that they can play an active role in bringing
up their children. It allows people to study at home in their free time, and
means that disabled people or those who otherwise stay at home to look after
them, can work. Job-sharing is also an ideal way for people to ease into to
retirement. Many employers are wary of new work schemes, but an
investigation carried out by the EOC shows that they can profit in various ways
from sharing. If one sharer is away sick, at least half the job continues to be
done. Skilled workers who cannot work full-time can bring years of experience to
a job. Half-timers have to work flat out without a tea break.
Another attraction is that two people bring to one job twice as much experience,
sets of ideas and discussion. But there are financial pitfalls
for the job-sharers. If one becomes unemployed, he should be
eligible for Unemployment Benefit. But he has to sign on as being available for
full-time work. Otherwise, he can not claim the benefit.
Pensions are a big block. The EOC paper points out that the Local
Government Superannuation Scheme excludes people who work less than 30 hours a
week. For those who are attracted to job-sharing, beware. Most
occupational pension schemes are based either on the average annual earnings
during membership of the scheme or on the employee's final salary.
·tells us that the government will give support to employers, who offer
part-time jobs?
71. ______ . ·states that employers can benefit
from having two people performing the same job?
72. ______ . ·provides
means for older people to ease into retirement?
73. ______ .
·implies that work-sharing schemes have so far been unsatisfactory?
74. ______ . ·shows
that the author approves the Government's plan?
75. ______
. ·indicates that a 63-year-old man might find job-sharing
against his interest? 76. ______ . ·states that
job-sharing can offer the chance of interesting work to people who can only work
part-time?
77. ______ . ·says that many organizations are doubting
the motives of the government in advocating job-sharing?
78. ______ .
·implies that increased payment for less work would destroy the scheme?
79. ______ . ·states that a
rise in output does not reduce unemployment?
80. ______ .
填空题AccordingtotheFBI,howmanyrobberiesweresolvedbythepolicelastyearintermsofpercentage?
填空题You will hear a talk about World Trade Organization. As you listen, you must answer Questions 35 to 44 by writing not more than three words in the space provided on the right. You will hear the talk twice. You now have I minute to read Questions 35 to 44.
填空题
填空题
The autumn rains had come in with two angry storms, and Lazy
River was waking up. In a week school{{U}} (31) {{/U}}be closed for
Easter vacation. Dick and Turkey planned to have a trip to the inland by
boat,{{U}} (32) {{/U}}they collected maps and statistics of the entire
inland river system. Water levels down Lazy River; levels down the Namoi; along
the Darling and the Murray; all were{{U}} (33) {{/U}}their fingertips.
They were very happy because now{{U}} (34) {{/U}}, it appeared, except
the joy of voyaging lay{{U}} (35) {{/U}}them and the Southern Ocean or
Central Queensland. It was clear to them{{U}} (36) {{/U}}Australia's
early explorers had{{U}} (37) {{/U}}a big mistake toiling overland when
they{{U}} (38) {{/U}}have opened up the continent rapidly and pleasantly
with paddle and pole. It was at this stage{{U}} (39)
{{/U}}Dick's father put his foot down. "Now listen, you
chap," he said quietly. "It begins to look like a wet autumn and the river is
already{{U}} (40) {{/U}}wild. A few days' rain or a wicked storm or
two{{U}} (41) {{/U}}it' 11 flood. I'm not going to{{U}} (42)
{{/U}}your mother worrying herself sick about you, Dick. I know you' re{{U}}
(43) {{/U}}on the trip but floods aren't{{U}} (44)
{{/U}}anyone can fool with. You can go for a camp if you like, but no
further{{U}} (45) {{/U}}six miles from home; and of course you'll
camp{{U}} (46) {{/U}}the flood level." It was{{U}}
(47) {{/U}}a blow to their inter-state
dreams,{{U}} (48) {{/U}}the boys had' to concede, on reflection,
that what their father said was reasonable.{{U}} (49) {{/U}}they told
their classmate Fred Ingleton at school on Monday about their father's
suggestion, he became suddenly cheerful. "That's{{U}} (50)
{{/U}}my dad said, "he grinned. "Now he might let me go with you. He reckons
you made a decent swimmer of me!"
填空题
Old people are always saying that the young people are not{{U}}
(31) {{/U}}they were. The same comment is made{{U}} (32)
{{/U}}generation to generation and it is always{{U}} (33) {{/U}}. It
has never been truer than it is today. The young are better educated. They have
a lot more money to spend and enjoy{{U}} (34) {{/U}}freedom. They grow
up more quickly and are not so{{U}} (35) {{/U}}on their parents. Events
which the old generation remember vividly are {{U}}(36) {{/U}}more than
past history. This is as it should be. Every new generation is{{U}} (37)
{{/U}}from the one that preceded it. Today the difference is very marked
indeed. The old always assume that they know best for the
simple{{U}} (38) {{/U}}that they have been{{U}} (39) {{/U}}a bit
longer. They don't like to feel that their values are being questioned or
threatened. And this is precisely what the {{U}}(40) {{/U}}are doing.
They are questioning the assumptions of their elders and disturbing{{U}}
(41) {{/U}}complacency.They take leave to{{U}} (42)
{{/U}}that the older generation has created the best of all possible worlds.
What they reject more than anything{{U}} (43) {{/U}}conformity. Office,
hours, for instance, and nothing more than enforced slavery. Wouldn't people
work best{{U}} (44) {{/U}}they were given complete freedom and
responsibility? And what {{U}}(45) {{/U}}the clothing? Who said that all
the men in the world should{{U}} (46) {{/U}}drab grey suits? If we turn
our minds to more serious matters, who said that human differences can best be
solved through conventional politics{{U}} (47) {{/U}}by violent means?
Why have the older generation so often used violence to{{U}} (48)
{{/U}}their problems? Why are they are so unhappy and guilt-ridden in their
personal lives, so obsessed{{U}} (49) {{/U}}mean ambitions and the
desire to amass more and more material possessions? Can anything be right with
the rat-race? Haven't the old lost touch with all{{U}} (50) {{/U}}is
important in life?
填空题
填空题
A bank is a business establishment that safeguards people's
money and uses it to make loans and investments. Banks differ in the services
they provide and in how they are owned. Commercial banks are the
most numerous banks in the United States. They offer a full range of services,
including checking and savings accounts, loans, and trust services. They
primarily serve the needs of businesses but also offer their services to
individuals. A commercial bank is owned by stockholders who buy
shares in it. In return for investing in the bank's stock, the stockholders
expect the bank to pay them cash dividends from its profits.
Saving and loan associations are the second largest group of deposit
institutions in the United States. Savings and loans, as they are often called,
were established to help people to purchase homes. Through the years they have
been the chief source of home mortgages. Traditionally, they loaned money to
businesses only for real estate construction. But today, sayings and loan
associations offer a variety of services for individuals and businesses,
including NOW accounts, checking accounts, money market accounts, IRA's and
business loans. In the past, almost all savings and loans were
owned and operated by their depositors. But today, many are owned and operated
by stockholders. Savings banks are most commonly found in the
Northeast. They were created in the early 1800's as charitable institutions to
provide a safe place for poor working people to save for retirement. Originally,
almost all savings banks were mutual savings banks, which are run by a board of
trustees who elect their own successors. Mutual savings banks pass on any
profits to their depositors as interest. But since the mid-1980's, many savings
banks have become stock savings banks. These banks are run by a board of
directors who are elected by shareholders. Savings banks offer
savings and checking accounts and individual retirement accounts and make
personal and business loans. Federal and state laws ensure the safety of
depositors' money by limiting the investments such banks can make and by
insuring the deposits. Savings banks invest chiefly in mortgages and government
bonds. Central banks, which in most countries are government
agencies, perform many financial services for the national government. Their
chief responsibilities are to regulate banking and to influence such economic
factors as interest rates, the availability of loans, and the money supply. The
money supply is the total quantity of money in the country, including cash and
bank deposits. Central banks also perform a variety of services
for other hanks. For example, they serve as a lender of last resort — that is,
they make emergency loans to banks that are short of cash. Central banks also
handle the clearing of checks, the process by which banks settle claims against
one another that result from the writing of checks. In the
United States, the Federal Reserve System serves as a central bank. Most large
U.S. commercial banks belong to the system. Central banks in other nations
include the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England. Investment
banks purchase newly issued stocks and bonds from corporations and governments.
These banks then resell the securities to individual investors in smaller
quantities. An investment bank makes a profit by selling securities at a higher
price than it paid for them. Most U.S. banks once did such buying and selling,
but now only specialized investment banks and a few large commercial banks do
so. An investment bank may overestimate the demand for the securities that it
buys and may have to sell them at a loss. Congress believed this risk helped
cause many bank failures during the early years of the Great Depression. As a
result, it passed the Glass-Steagall Banking Act of 1933. On provision of the
act prohibited an institution that accepted deposits and made loans from doing
investment banking.A=Commercial banks/A commercial bankB=Savings and
loan associations/A savings and loan associationC=Savings banks/A savings
bankD=Central banks/A central bankE=Investment banks/An investment
bankWhich kind of bank/banks ...· were created in the early 1800's as
charitable institutions to provide a safe place for poor workingpeople to
save for retirement?
71. ______· were established to help people to purchase homes?
72. ______· purchase newly
issued stocks and bonds from corporations and governments and resell the
securitiesto individual investors in smaller quantities?
73.
______· perform many financial services for the national government?
74. ______· offer a variety of services for individuals and
businesses, including NOW accounts, checkingaccounts, money market accounts,
IRA's, and business loans?
75. ______·
are the largest group of banks in the United States?
76. ______· invest chiefly in mortgages and government
bonds?
77.
______· handle the clearing of checks, the process by which banks settle
claims against one another thatresult from the writing of checks?
78. ______· is owned by
stockholders who buy shares in it?
79. ______· may overestimate the demand for the
securities that it buys and may have to sell them at a loss?
80.
______
填空题A=Henri Matisse
B=Francis Bacon
C=Mark Rothko
Which painter...
● is famous for the pleasing, decorative effect of paintings?
1
● wants to be intimate and human?
2
● thinks that there is no art without love?
3
● expresses horror, loneliness, violence and oppression in his paintings?
4
● wants to show people anger in his paintings?
5
● didn"t want to describe objects in a photographic way?
6
● says that nowadays people have no religion?
7
● liked tragic and timeless subjects?
8
● felt his painting had a religious meaning?
9
● is more concerned with expressing feeling than he is with telling a
story?
10
Henri Matisse
Henri Matisse is famous for the wonderful colours of his paintings and for their pleasing, decorative effect. In an interview in 1952, Matisse said: "First of all, I must say that there is no single abstract art. If the subject of a painting isn"t important, if Acre is no story in the picture, then it is abstract." Today the artist doesn"t need to represent objects. However, even though he has to concentrate on the picture he must remember the object and his feelings for the object. One starts with the object, then the feelings follow. One doesn"t start from nothing. Today, too many so-called abstract painters start from nothing and so they arrive at nothing. They have no strength, no inspiration, no feeling. One doesn"t find any expression of feeling in their colors. They don"t relate their colors to each other. If they can"t create relationships they are using colors uselessly. The French word "rapport" means the connection between things. "Rapport" is love. Without "rapport", without love, there is no way of choosing what to do. Without love there is no art.
Matisse shows us in this interview that he wanted to paint colours and shapes which are related to each other rather than to object and scenes. He wanted to express feelings and didn"t want to describe objects in a photographic way. Most artists since 1900 have had a similar aim.
Francis Bacon
Francis Bacon once told a BBC interviewer, "I have nothing to express." However, for many people who look at his pictures, Bacon expresses horror, loneliness, violence and oppression. There is no love in these paintings. The people don"t have a warm and a friendly spirit. They are trapped and desperate animals rather than people. Some times the paint is smeared across the picture and expresses anger and violence, but the subject might be love making or is it fighting?
Francis Bacon doesn"t want to show us angry people. He wants to show us angry paint! Then we will feel anger and not just see it. (In a similar way, the quality of the voice in anger is more important than the words themselves.) Paint, of course, can"t be angry! However, lines and shapes can express anger and it is lines of this kind which fill Bacon"s pictures. Compare the lines and movement in Bacon"s picture with the picture by Van de Velde and indeed many other pictures in the book.
Bacon says that art used to be an expression of religion and artists had hope through religion. Now, he says, we have no religion and artists have no hope. Art is a game. Artists concentrate on the game and don"t have to think about the awful unknown.
In one important way Francis Bacon is a traditional painter. His painting are seen more or less from one viewpoint. And it is true that he is more concerned with expressing feeling than he is with telling a story which is quite clear and can be put into words.
Mark Rothko
Rothko"s paintings are very big. He said, "I want to be intimate and human. If you paint a small picture you are outside it and you control it. If you paint a big picture you are in it." However, I don"t agree that we remain outside a smaller picture.
Rothko liked tragic and timeless subjects. He painted large areas of color with soft edges. His paintings are like landscapes with huge areas of sky and land but, of course, there is no detail; there are no trees and buildings, there are not clouds and birds. Before 1957 he painted light, bright pictures, but then he began to use dark colors. He felt his paintings had a religious meaning, and he wanted to affect people. He didn"t want to paint "social" paintings like Leger, but to paint beautiful and eternal symbols.
填空题What is the new brand name for his company?
填空题
填空题A=Canon Elan IIE B=Casio Digital Camera C=Sharp Digital Viewcam Which camera · enables the users to add pictures to documents? (21) · has a flash system that can balance subject and background? (22) · can satisfy photo fans requirements? (23) · has the ability to rewind film in near silence? (24) · has a different way of showing pictures? (25) · has the technology to an off-center subject? (26) · can work as a still camera? (27) · has an eye catching design function? (28) · offers a software to group pictures easily? (29) · can send a picture back to the camera? (30) Canon Elan IIE Canon Elan IIe fuses the high-performance of the EOS system with eye-catching design. An Eye On Composition: using Eye-Controlled Focus, you can choose to focus on and shoot an off-center subject—there's no need to center and recompose. And as your eye follows the action, the camera follows you. So when an unexpected moment occurs while you're shooting, even if it's off-center, you have the technology to capture it accurately and easily. What you see, and where you see it, is now exactly what you'll get. The Freedom of Choice. for vertical compositions, the Elan IIE is equally proficient. Bi-directional Eye-Controlled Focus allows for more versatility by putting three-point autofocus between you and your subject no matter which way you orient the camera. Let There Be Light= The Elan IIE is equipped with an advanced, built-in flash. And Canon's exclusive E-TTL flash system, available with the optional Speedlite 380EX, helps to provide a natural balance between subject and background. The Zebras Are Feeding: Elan IIE's improved Whisper Drive allows you to rewind film in near silence. Whether you're shooting on the Serengeti or on the sly in your own backyard, there are a number of situations which demand quiet performance—and Canon delivers! Hey, Cool Looking Camera! Thanks. And, with an improved control layout, it's even easier to use. Form and function are truly united in the Elan IIE. Casio Digital Camera The new Casio QV-10A plus Digital Camera might just change the way you take and display your picture. Because until now, digital cameras were bulky and expensive, the QV-10A plus is anything but. Using it is simple. With its LDC screen you see your pictures instantly. With the touch of a button you can delete images you don't want or display one, four or nine shots at a time in the camera or on a TV. It can even send images from the computer back to the camera, so it's perfect for presentations. And with the QV software, you can easily add photos to documents and e-mail. Plus with the Adobe Photo Deluxe software that's included, you can even customize your photos. All it takes is the Casio QV-10A plus. Sharp digital Viewcam One device that's a sure thing on almost any photo bug's dream list is a combination camcorder and still camera. Now, Sharp's new digital Viewcam is among the first of a group of imaging devices offering such dynamic duality. For movies, the compact VL-DX10 uses a small digital cassette tape, a format that's superior to VHS or 8mrn. What cranks this device's value up a notch is its ability to take photos like a digital still camera. As many as 12 high-resolution pictures can be stored in the 2 MB flash memory and in economy mode. The still-picture quality is similar to that of other digital cameras— well short of 35ram prints but useful nonetheless if you're transferring images to computer. With this many images at your beck and call, organizing them becomes important, Sharp supplies a software program that lets you group picture "galleries" that can be stored by subject for easy retrieval.
填空题Children who grip their pens too close to the writing point are likely to be at a disadvantage in examinations,
1
to the first serious investigation into the way in which writing technique can dramatically affect educational achievement.
The survey of 643 children and adults, ranking from preschool to 40-plus, also suggests
2
pen-holding techniques have detedorated sharply over one generation, with teachers now paying far
3
attention to correct pen grip and handwriting style.
Stephanie Thomas, a learning support teacher
4
findings have been published, was inspired to investigate this area
5
he noticed that those students who had the most trouble with spelling
6
had a poor pen grip. While Mr. Thomas could not establish a significant statistical link
7
pen-holding style and accuracy in spelling, he
8
find huge differences in technique between the young children and the mature adults, and a definite
9
between near-point gripping and slow, illegible writing.
People who
10
their pens at the writing point also show other characteristics
11
inhibit learning,
12
as poor posture, leaning too
13
to the desk, using four fingers to grip the pen
14
than three, and clumsy positioning of the thumb (which can obscure
15
is being written).
Mr. Thomas believes that the
16
between elder and younger writers is
17
too dramatic to be accounted for simply by the possibility that people get better at writing as they grow
18
. He attributes it to a failure to teach the most effective methods, pointing out that the differences between
19
groups coincides with the abandonment of formal handwriting instruction in classrooms in the sixties. "The 30-year-old showed a huge diversity of grips,
20
the over 40s group all had a uniform "tripod" grip."
填空题The integration of prevention and cure is the most efficient way of preventing HIV/AIDS.
填空题The multinational cooperation is the best way to stop HIV/AIDS from spreading among the mobile population.
填空题The children participate in the parent's studying.
填空题WhatdoyouknowaboutBeethoven'smusictalentwhenhewas7?
填空题·has no easy track for the game?
填空题{{B}} Which game...{{/B}}
{{B}}A{{/B}} Like your motorcycle games big, bold, and
beautiful? All those superlatives and more apply to Motorcross Madness 2, the
sequel to one of the most funny (if not the most realistic) motorcross
simulations ever created. This sequel improves on the original
by offering larger racing environments, more modes of play, and much more
detailed graphics. The environments now have a full complement of trees, cacti,
bushes, and other solid objects to smack into, and some game modes even
introduce highway traffic into the mix. There's nothing like jumping over a
moving semi on your way to the finish line! The new Pro Circuit career mode adds
a lot of replay-ability (and long-term strategy) to the game, and fun
multiplayer modes like tag offer a refreshing break to standard racing when
playing online. On the downside, all the new graphical goodness
requires some advanced computer hardwares. While a 3-D accelerator isn't
required, that's a little like saying your car doesn't need an engine because
you can still push it. With a decent 3-D card, at least a 350 MHz processor, and
plenty of RAM, however, the game really comes to life. Those of you with 3-D
audio cards are also in for a treat, as it becomes possible to tell where other
riders are just by listening. It took time to get used to Motocross Madness 2's
complete over-the-topphysics. Hitting even a minor jump launches the bike
straight up into the air, and bigger hills can leave you staring down at the
treetops for over five seconds. It's a little ridiculous, but once we gained
some familiarity with the tracks it virtually made the game a lot of fun. More
air time means more chances to perform outrageous aerial stunts, from the Tail
Grab to the back-bending Cordova. Unfortunately, it also means unfortunate
encounters with trees which are much harder to avoid. If you buy
sports games based only on their ability to realistically portray the sports
they are simulating, Motocress Madness 2 will disappoint. For those of you who
like big air, big stunts, enormous open environments, and lots of challenging
arcade action, this game is better than its predecessor in every
way.{{B}}B{{/B}} SimCity 3000 is back, and it's bigger than
ever! Maxis pulled out all the stops for this new version of the bestselling
game, adding enough new customized graphics to recreate cities from all over the
world. The new European mid Asian building sets serve up hundreds of new
buildings that match the architecture of these diverse environments. From the
Great Wall to the Berlin Wall, it's in there. Of course, you can still mix and
match—freedom to manage a city as you choose has always been the name of this
game. No addition to the SimCity family would be completely without some new
methods for destroying your creations, and Simcity 3000 Unlimited has four mare
devastating disasters than the old version. You can recreate the movie
Armageddon by unleashing large chunks of flaming space debris, smite your
populace with a buzzing swarm of locusts, destroy seaports and coastal
developments with a whirlpool, or uncork some toxic clouds. The Building
Architect, formerly available as a free download, is now packed on the CD-ROM.
This 3-D architectural program lets users set up the buildings of their dreams,
from dilapidated outhouses to towering skyscrapers to works of modem art that
are intended for pure decoration. Don't worry if you don't foci
like using this powerful tool to create things yourself—the game comes with
dozens of new ways to make your cities unique, and you can always head to the
SimCity Exchange to download imaginative add-ons created by other users. The
infinite expand-ability and infinite replay-ability of this game should keep
would-be mayors completely occupied until they move to the suburbs of The
Sims.{{B}}C{{/B}} Want to live forever? Get a taste for what
it's like with Vampire: The Masquerade Redemption, the first computer
role-playing game based on the tremendously popular dice-and-paper and
live-action RPG from White Wolf Game Studio. Die-hard fans will grumble a bit at
some of the translation concessions from book to hard drive. The vampiric
disciplines in particular are less flexible and occasionally more hassle than
they're worth—sure, you can mm into a wolf, but you can't return to your natural
form until the time limit expires. Still, these limitations don't interfere with
the gameplay, which is fast moving, challenging, and genuinely creepy. Graphics
and sounds are well designed, and along with the plot they evoke the mood of
gothic horror that has made Vampire so popular. The
single-player mode locks you into the story line of Christof, a medieval
crusader who blunders into immortality at the fangs of an ancient Brujah
vampire. Christof's damnation and search for redemption lead him from the Prague
of the Dark Ages to modern New York City. Multiplayer options include local area
network and Internet play as well as the ability to make and run your own
stories for other players. The manual is beautiful and helpful, a rare
combination. Clearly, the designers took their cue from White Wolf, as evidenced
by the clarity of text and carefully chosen illustrations. Though Redemption is
really worth playing, garners should be warned that the save-game feature is
irritating and often beyond the player's control and that the installation
requires at least 720 MB (and up to 1.3 GB!). Despite these flaws, the game is
still wicked fun and merits plenty of praise.· is sold well?
71. ______· requires steep
hardware requirement?
72.
______· is probably frightening?
73. ______· offers
some more ways to destroy what the players have built?
74. ______· seems difficult to save the game?
75.
______· has no easy track for the game?
76. ______· enables players to
construct buildings in different styles?
77. ______· has detailed and interactive environments?
78. ______· enables players to make up
their own stories?
79. ______· will frustrate
those who like to play sports game on computer just as they play in
the reality?
80. ______
填空题Audi A3 Most of our drivers said the A3 was their definite favourite in this group. They described it as refined and comfortable with good handing characteristics and light, precise steering. All the seats were comfortable and the front ones were easy to adjust. Most drivers liked the driving position, helped by a good range of steering wheel and seat height adjustments. The main instruments were clear and dashboard controls were well positioned. Mirror coverage was excellent but our drivers complained that the view out of the rear was badly hindered by the high rear window line and thick pillars. Getting into the back seats was easy, thanks to a clever seat mechanism, which moves the seat up and forward as well as tilting the backrest. Rear legroom was reasonable but the rear seat was only barely wide enough for three adults. Luggage space was average for this class of car but you have to remove the rear head restraints to fold the rear seat. There were plenty of useful interior storage spaces. All A3s come with an alarm and immobilizer as standard. Our "thief" got in through the doors in 20 seconds. But the radio was a non-standard fit, which is probably to deter thieves. The hinges of the rear seats could release in an accident, allowing luggage to crash through into the passenger compartment. Also, the driver's knees could be damaged by stiff structures under the dash. Some parts of the fuel system and electrics would be vulnerable to damage in a frontal collision. Honda Civic Honda says its special VTEC engine has a winning combination of economy and performance, but our drivers found it a bit of a curate's egg. It was the most economical of the car on test, but drivers found it sluggish at low revs, and its acceleration in the fifth gear was slow, so overtaking normally meant having to shift down to the fourth gear. The driving position was acceptable, but our panel criticized the restricted rear visibility— the rear window was quite small. Drivers found the back rest supportive but it was not available to make fine adjustments to the angle. The ride comfort was acceptable, but it wasn't as good as the Audi's or Rover's. The driver's seat didn't slide forward when it was tilted, making rear access awkwardly from this side. In the back, headroom and legroom was excellent but testers didn't find the seats particularly comfortable. The luggage space was small for this class of car, especially with the rear seats in place. However, folding the rear seat to increase luggage space was easy. Other points proved by our panel included well-placed minor controls, good mirror coverage, but fiddly radio controls. All Civics come with an immobilizer but no alarm. You may want to consider paying extra for an alarm, as our "thief" broke into through the doors in 13 seconds, and into the engine bay in just five seconds. There were stiff structures under the dash which could damage the driver's knees in an accident, though there was no problem on the passenger's side. The handbook (like the Audi's) provided suggestion on Using child restraints. Rover 216 The 1.6-litre engine had good power delivery at both high and low revs but some drivers complained that it was noisy at high revs. The brakes didn't have very good progression, but drivers like their positive feel. Ride comfort and the handling were recommended. But drivers found it difficult to achieve a comfortable driving position, The driver's seat was not height-adjustable, and there was only limited space to rest your clutch foot. Some testers also found the seat backrest uncomfortable. Visibility was married by the small mirrors. The rear view was also restricted by thick pillars and the small rear window, Getting into the back was tricky because the front seats did not slide forward when tilted. Once in the back, legroom and headroom were poor, and testers complained that their rear seat base was unsupportive. Luggage space was smaller than average for this class of car—this was compounded by a high boot sill and difficulties in folding the rear seat. But there were large pockets in the doors and rear side panels. The main radio controls were more convenient; they were mounted on the steering wheel so drivers didn't have to take their hands off the wheel to use them. Our Rover 200s came with an alarm, though this isn't standard on all versions. Our "thief" broke in through the doors in 15 seconds. Some of the electrics would be vulnerable in a frontal impact. The rear seat hinges could release in an accident, allowing luggage to crash through into the passenger compartment. Also, information in the handbook on using child restrains was not adequate.
填空题PresidentKennedydied______yearsbeforethedaythespeechwasmade.
填空题{{B}} A = Bordeaux B = Burgundy
C = Champagne Which region(s)...{{/B}}
{{B}}A Bordeaux:{{/B}} An area in
southwestern France considered by most wine enthusiasts as the world's greatest
W. ine-producing region because of the large quantity (ranging from 700 million
to 900 million bottles annually) and the high quality of the wines. This large
region has about 280,000 vineyard acres and essentially covers the same
territory as the department of Gironde. At its center lies the seaport city of
Bordeaux, which sits on the Garonne River upstream from the Gironde estuary,
which empties into the Atlantic Ocean. The Bordeaux region's fame dates back
some 2,000 years when Romans first sang the praises of its wines. The wide
popularity of Bordeaux wines in the United Kingdom (where they're called
clarets) can be traced back to the period from 1152 to 1453, when the English
owned this region, which was acquired through a royal marriage and then lost in
the 100 Years' War. Bordeaux gains most of its fame from its red wines, which
generally make up over 75 percent of the production. Nevertheless, the region's
rich, sweet white wines from Sauternes are world renowned, and its DRY white
wines from Graves have a serious following. Bordeaux's primary appellations,
which cover the entire region, are Bordeaux AC--for red, white, and rose
wines--and Bordeaux Superieur AC--a designation for red and rose wines that
requires lower grape yields and slightly higher alcohol levels than basic
Bordeaux. There are over fifty individual appellations in Bordeaux, and,
generally, the smallest ACs produce the highest-quality wines. There are also
thousands of individual chateaux-some are quite impressive, while others are
simply tiny farmhouses.
{{B}}B
Burgundy:{{/B}} One of the world's most famous winegrowing areas, located in
eastern France, southeast of Paris. Bourgogne, as it's called in France, has
about 110,000 vineyard acres, which is about 40 percent of what exists in
Bordeaux. Burgundy consists of five basic regions. Burgundy and its wines have a
long history going back at least to the time when the Romans ruled this region.
In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, the Grand Duchy of Burgundy
flourished, controlling an area that included what are now parts of Belgium, the
Netherlands, Luxembourg, and a large portion of northern France. It was a rich
and powerful empire, and the great Dukes of Burgundy savored the region's
marvelous wines as part of their opulent lifestyle. The Burgundy region has
established a reputation over the centuries not only for its fine wines but also
for its marvelous food. The wines vary considerably from region to region
throughout Burgundy, but the focus is on three grape varieties--Pinot Noir and
Gamay for red wines and Chardonnay for whites. Though other varieties are grown,
they're being replaced in many areas by the three most prominent grapes. Gamay
is the dominant red grape in Beaujolais, while Pinot Noir prevails in the other
regions. The very best red wines come from the Grands Crus in the Cote d'Or.
Chardonnay is grown throughout the region and reaches its zenith in the C6te de
Beaune. Although the wines made of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay get most of the
attention, more wines are produced in Beaujolais (where they make Gamay-based
wines) than in the rest of Burgundy. In some ways, the Burgundian system for
identifying quality wines is much more straightforward than that of Bordeaux. In
addition to the Appellation d'Origine Controlee (AC) Bordeaux uses a complex and
inconsistent chateau classification system. Burgundy uses only the AC system to
classify regions, villages, and individual vineyards into appellations, the
theory being that the smaller and more precise the appellation, the higher the
general quality of the ' wine.
{{B}}C Champagne:{{/B}} This most celebrated sparkling wine
always seems to signal "special occasion". Though bubbling wines under various
appellations abound throughout the world, true Champagne comes only from the
Champagne region in northeast France. Most countries bow to this tradition by
calling their sparkling wines by other names such as spumante in Italy, Sekt in
Germany and vin mousseux in other regions of France. Only in America do some
wineries refer to their bubbling wine as "champagne". Dom Perignon, 17th-century
cellarmaster of the Abbey of Hautvillers, is celebrated for developing the art
of blending wines to create Champagnes with superior flavor. He's also credited
for his work in preventing Champagne bottles and corks from exploding by using
thicker bottles and tying the corks down with string. Even then, it's said that
the venerable Dom Perignon lost half his Champagne through the bottles bursting.
French Champagne is usually made from a blend of chardonnay and pinot noir or
pinot blanc grapes. California "champagnes" generally use the same varieties,
while those from New York more often are from the pressings of catawba and
delaware grapes. Good Champagne is expensive not only because it's made with
premium grapes, but because it's made by the methode champenoise. This
traditional method requires a second fermentation in the bottle as well as some
100 manual operations (some of which are mechanized today). Champagnes can range
in color from pale gold to apricot blush. Their flavors can range from toasty to
yeasty and from dry (no sugar added) to sweet.·has a fame dating back to
Roman times?
71. ______·is known for its fine wines as well as its
wonderful food?
72. ______·produces a wine which is called by
different names in other countries?
73. ______·have a long history going back to Roman times?
74. ______
75.
______·produces a wine created by a cellarmaster blending different wines?
76. ______·was
once owned by the English in history?
77. ______·produces a wine that requires a
second fermentation in the bottle?
78. ______·is best known for its red wines?
79. ______·uses a more straightforward system to
classify its regions, villages and vineyards? 80. ______
填空题{{B}} A = George Clooney B = Johnny
Depp C = Will Smith D = Matt
Damon Which actor(s) ...{{/B}}
{{B}}A{{/B}} George Clooney: George Clooney has had a bumpy ride up
the Hollywood ladder. He started acting seriously at age 2l, and after appearing
in about 15 failed TV shows, he got his big break and made it big on ER. He has
played everything from the caring, "break the roles" doctor to "do what it
takes" billionaire superhero. If there is one character trait from these parts
that reflects George Clooney, it is the calculated recklessness that seems to
govern his actions. Any way you slice it, George Clooney has made his mark on
Hollywood and is well on his way to superstardom. His films
generally make for good entertainment and he gives off a "one of the boys" feel
that makes even guys warm up to him. He's the kind of guy you would invite over
to watch football on Sunday afternoons. George is somewhat of a Hollywood
anomaly in that he doesn't buy into the whole "I'm a big star so I should get
special treatment" notion. He's a regular guy that happens to be a star and he
likes it that way. The man has been at the top of People
magazine's "Most Beautiful People" list for what seems like forever, with no
signs of him dropping off anytime soon. He's cool and that's no lie. Here's a
guy that would look good dressed in a garbage bag. It doesn't seem to matter
what he wears because he always pulls it off with flying colors. Part of the
reason he's known for being such a snazzy dresser is that he doesn't deviate too
far from the norm, but at the same time he isn't afraid to add his own personal
touch.
{{B}}B{{/B}} Johnny Depp: Johnny Depp is an actor who takes
his job seriously. He knows the ins and outs of life in Hollywood and doesn't
let himself get caught up in the hype machine. He does whatever he likes and has
so far enjoyed a successful career on the big screen. His films do well with
audiences and critics alike. Furthermore, he constantly tries to mix it up and
try his hand at different roles to broaden his repertoire.
Johnny Depp is the mysterious type. He isn't a big talker and when he does
have something to say, it's usually short and sweet. Depp comes across as the
brooding type, but he is much more congenial than he looks. He's a movie star
yet doesn't look like one. Low-key may be the best way to describe him. However,
he has had his wild times. He once trashed a swanky hotel room in New York and
has thrown the occasional punch at the paparazzi. He once played
guitar in a band (quite well, apparently), and he owned the infamous Viper Room,
a club in Los Angeles. Is it a wonder that women flock to him? The fact that
he's attached and has two children does not seem to deter the legions of adoring
females that want to get deep with Depp. Johnny Depp simply
exudes coolness. He's not a rebel but does march to his own beat. Perhaps it is
his quirks and laid-back style that set him apart from the Hollywood rabble;
whatever it is, there is definitely something about Johnny that says
cool. Johnny prefers to dress casually, some would even say
sloppily. He wears jeans and leather pants with open shirts. He is also big on
leather jackets and tends to wear his hair long.
{{B}}C{{/B}}
Will Smith: Will Smith has triumphed in just about every venue in
entertainment: from music to television to the big screen. His success is
attributed to his incredible charisma and his instantly recognizable smile that
helped him win over fans of all ages from around the world. He
writes his own songs, produces and acts. Well, if he was a weak actor he would
be labeled as a singer trying to act, and if he couldn't rap he would be deemed
an actor trying to sing. The thing is that we can't accuse him of either,
because Smith has been consistently excellent on every level. Despite being
constantly criticized by other rap artists who deem Will Smith as soft, Smith
lives the life that everyone desires. He is the ever-faithful husband despite
the daily temptations thrust upon him by groupies. He was a self-proclaimed
womanizer but family life has domesticated him considerably. His image as a
positive role model sets him apart in so many different ways that we don't know
who to compare him to. He has Grammy Awards and Billboard album
sales plaques, but where is the Oscar? Will is a perfectionist and he won't rest
until an Oscar is sitting on his mantel. Smith loves to dress
sharp in smooth threads. He ii one of those men that take pride in grooming
himself and looking good. Knowing the importance of style, he has become fast
friends with some heavy-hitting fashion designers and has even taken part in
several fashion shows.
{{B}}D{{/B}} Matt Damon: A few
years ago, Matt Damon seemed to be everywhere and anywhere. He was Hollywood's
new "Golden Boy", and who could blame the media for its fascination with the
talented Mr. Damon? He is virtually a rags to riches story, a young turk who
became one of Hollywood's most influential stars seemingly overnight.
Still, despite his vast popularity and fame, he continues to be generally
under-appreciated and unrecognized for his talent as an actor. He is more than a
pretty boy; he is a great all-round actor. Thanks to his charm, talent,
matinee-idol looks, and dedication to his craft, Matt Damon is set to remain a
fixture in Hollywood for some time to come. With the humility he has and plenty
of gray matter upstairs, it seems only a matter of time before his Oscar has a
buddy. It's very easy for a person in Damon's situation to fall into the
trappings of celebrity. But we never worry about Damon falling into such a trap.
In fact, we can't even imagine him being anything but courteous and
genial. Matt's killer wardrobe of choice consists of jeans and a
T-shirt. His look is all about comfort, not appearance. When necessary, he'll
dress for success, but the rest of the time he's as simple as his Boston roots.
But when he does turn it on, he quickly becomes one of his industry's best-
dressed men, often spotted wearing the latest fashions from top designers who
clamor to put a shirt on his back.· is willing to spend a lot to follow
fashion design?
71. ______· is the one that people would
like to watch sports together?
72. ______· both have talents in music though in
different genres?
73. ______
74. ______· embodies the dream of becoming famous overnight?
75. ______· is quite elusive and difficult to
pin down?
76. ______·
experienced hard time before gaining fame on the big screen?
77. ______· has already won
an Academy Award?
78. ______· has a positive image of a responsible
married man?
79. ______· will probably be among the
most beautiful people for a long time?
80. ______
填空题Children who grip their pens too close to the writing point are likely to be at a disadvantage in examinations, (31) to the first serious investigation into the way in which writing technique can dramatically affect educational achievement. The survey of 643 children and adults, ranking from pre-school to 40-plus, also suggests (32) pen-holding techniques have deteriorated sharply over one generation, with teachers now paying far (33) attention to correct pen grip and handwriting style. Stephanie Thomas, a learning support teacher (34) findings have been published, was inspired to investigate this area (35) he noticed that those students who had the most trouble with spelling (36) had a poor pen grip. While Mr. Thomas could not establish a significant statistical link (37) pen-holding style and accuracy in spelling, he (38) find huge differences in technique between the young children and the mature adults, and a definite (39) between near-point gripping and slow, illegible writing. People who (40) their pens at the writing point also show other characteristics (41) inhibit learning, (42) as poor posture, leaning too (43) to the desk, using four fingers to grip the pen (44) than three, and clumsy positioning of the thumb (which can obscure (45) is being written). Mr. Thomas believes that the (46) between elder and younger writers is (47) too dramatic to be accounted for simply by the possibility that people get better at writing as they grow (48) . He attributes it to a failure to teach the most effective methods, pointing out that the differences between (49) groups coincides with the abandonment of formal handwriting instruction in classrooms in the sixties. "The 30-year-old showed a huge diversity of grips, (50) the over 40s group all had a uniform 'tripod' grip./
填空题It is difficult to find reliable body counts of suicides, and of course the rate (1) which people kill themselves (2) from place to place and from time to time. (3) , you can get some idea of the size of the problem (4) you realize that every 30 minutes someone in the Untied States (5) suicide. And for every successful suicide there are probably three attempts (6) fail. Suicide statistics are notoriously unreliable (7) only because shame is attached (8) the act but also because people who successfully kill themselves have often tried and (9) several times before. One survey at a suicide center showed that 60 percent of those who finally (10) to kill themselves had made previous attempts. Also, (11) looks like an accident may actually be deliberate suicide. We know that more than 55,000 persons die each year in automobile accidents, (12) no one knows how many of these drivers consciously or unconsciously set (13) the conditions for a fatal crash. When car accidents were carefully (14) in one study, up to one-half of the dead drivers had numerous previous driving offenses; over half had also been drinking; and nearly half were suffering (15) depression. Such self-destructive drivers were characterized as reckless, risk taking, impulsive persons who frequently got (16) the wheel after a violent argument. A survey of known suicides gave this description of the conditions in (17) self-destruction is most likely to occur: in the spring, in the late afternoon, on a Monday and at home. Suicide is (18) likely in the early morning in winter. (19) these details tell only part of the story. The finger on the trigger or the hand fumbling (20) the bottle of sleeping pills varies according to sex, marital status, and race.
填空题
填空题A=Rotherhithe B=Barnes C=Willesden Green D=King's Cross Which city... · used to have lot of problems such as drugs, street crime, etc. ? (21) · has the unpopular style of architecture? (22) · has the most expensive properties? (23) · offers big out-fashioned houses at lower price? (24) · is located in a quiet residential area? (25) · saw a big increase in price last year? (26) · will build a lot of new facilities? (27) · is estimated to be a good investment? (28) · encourages night-life culture for young people? (29) · creates energetic multi-cultural atmosphere? (30) A Rotherhithe Rotherhithe may be most famous for its congested tunnel but many young buyers are wanning to its riverside charms. It is still much cheaper than its waterside neighbors. The housing stock is predominately 1980s flats, many arranged in cul-de-sacs (死胡同) and closes around Surrey Quays Road. The unpopular architecture has led to the area being called the Milton Keynes of London but properties are spacious and unfashionable style has kept prices down. Paul Mitchell, of estate agents Alex Neil, says, "There is precious little period property, but you will get far more for your money here than a Victorian house with lots of original features down the road in Bermondsey. " Surry Quays shopping center provides all the amenities of a high street but the area is lacking in fun. However, Southwark Council is in talks to develop the "night time economy" which could well lead to an increase in bars and restaurants to cater for the growing number of young professional residents. "It is possible to get a good three-bedroom house in Rotherhithe for 280,000," says Sumine Jordaan-Robinson, of agents Burwood Marsih, "About eight minutes; walk from the Jubilee line which will have you in Bond street in 15 minutes. There are not that many areas in London where that is possible. " B Barnes Barnes sits just across the river from Hammersmith in southwest London, but it could not be more different from the noise and bustle of the opposite bank. It has been called one of the last true London "villages" with happy residents keeping its old school charms quiet from nosey outsiders and potential developers. Being by the river and predominately residential gives Barnes an attractively lazy vibe. It has a traditional village complete with idyllic duck-pond and quaint pub. The high street is about as far from the Pound Shop and Primark ambience of its neighbors as is possible. But buying into Barnes is not cheap. "Family houses are snapped up incredibly quickly," claims Chris Carney, sales negotiator at Boileaus estate agents. "It is very hard to get properties of this size, with outside space so close to London, which is why they are expensive. " Large detached Vicuorian houses on the two main roads, Castlenau and Lonsdale, normally have between five and seven bedrooms, gardens of 120 feet and off street parking. These sell for anything between £ 2 million and £ 5 million. By the village there are rows of immaculate terraced house on a number of streets that run off Church and Station roads, and four bedroom houses of this kind sell for around 2 billion regeneration programme should help the area lose its seedy reputation. The project includes a new Eurostar terminal opening this year and a spruced-up tube station, alongside hundreds of new homes, offices and leisure facilities set to be completed in 2015. Such development has had a predictable effect on house prices. "There are a lot more amenities now, such as supermarkets, cafes and bars and the issue people used to have with safety a few years ago has disappeared. " By the canal basin, new-built flats and luxury ware house conversions form the bulk of property, and at the top end of the market there are stunning penthouses available with views across London. Much of the new development is centered on the back of the station, off York way, and flats are being sold to eager buyers off plan. The older properties are mainly mid-Victorian terraces around Caledonian Road and the streets heading towards Angel, and ex-local authority blocks where it is possible to pick up a two-bedroom refurbished flat for under £ 250,000. Smith adds, "Investment-wise, King's Cross is a good bet. There is a big rental market here and prices will go up. There are still cheaper properties available, one to two bedroom flats in Victorian conversions, or ex-council properties. But people are holding on to them for dear life in the hope they will go up in value. If you find one, it is worth investing in. /
填空题From her vantage point she watched the main doors swing open and the first arrivals pour in. Those who had been at the head of the line paused momentarily on entry, looked around curiously, then quickly moved forward as others behind pressed in. Within moments the central public area of the big branch bank was filled with a chattering, noisy crowd. The building, relatively quiet less than a minute earlier, had become a Babel. Edwina saw a tall heavy-set black man wave some dollar bills and announce loudly, "I want to put my money in the bank." (66) It seemed as if the report about everyone having come to open an account had been accurate after all. Edwina could see the big man leaning back expansively, who was still holding his dollar bills. His voice cut across the noise of other conversations and she heard him proclaim, "I'm in no hurts. There's something I'd like you to explain. ' Two other desks were quickly manned by other clerks. With equal speed, long wide lines of people loaned in front of them. Normally, three members of staff were ample to handle new account business, but obviously inadequate now. Edwina could see Tottenhoe on the far side of the bank and called him on the intercom. She instructed, "Use more desks for new accounts and take all the staff you can spare to man then. " (67) Tottenhoe grumbled in reply, "You realize we can't possibly process all these people today, and however many we do will tie us tip completely." "I've got an idea, "Edwina said, "that's what someone has in mind. Just hurry the processing all you can." (68) First, an application form called for details of residence, employment, social security, and family matters. A specimen signature was obtained. Then proof of identity was needed. After that, the new accounts clerk would take all documents to an officer of the bank for approval and initialing. Finally, a savings passbook was made out or a temporary checkbook issued. Therefore the most new accounts that any bank employee could open in an hour were five, so the three clerks presently working might handle a sum of ninety in one business day, if they kept going at top speed, which was unlikely. (69) Still the noise within the bank increased. It had become an uproar. A further problem was that the growing mass of arrivals in the central public area of the bank was preventing access to tellers' counters by other customers. Edwina could see a few of them outside, regarding of the milling scene with consternation. While she watched, several gave up and walked away. Inside the bank some of the newcomers were engaging tellers in conversation and the tellers, having nothing else to do because of the melee, chatted back. Two assistant managers had gone to the central floor area and were trying to conduct the flood of people so as to clear some space at counters. They were having small success. (70) She decided it was time for her own intervention. Edwina left the platform and a failed--off staff area and, with difficulty, made her way through the milling crowd to the main front door. A. Yet she knew however much they hurried it would still take ten to fifteen minutes to open any single new account. It always did. The paperwork required that time. B. But still no hostility was evident. Everyone in the now jam--packed bank who was spoken to by members of the staff answered politely and with a smile. It seemed, Edwina thought, as if all who were here had been briefed to be on best behavior. C. A security guard directed him, "Over there for new accounts. "The guard pointed to a desk where a clerk—a young girl—sat waiting. She appeared nervous. The big man walked toward hers smiled reassuringly, and sat down. Immediately a press of others moved into a ragged line behind him, waiting for their turn. D. Even leaning closer to the intercom, it was hard to hear above the noise. E. Even tripling the present complement of clerks would permit very few more than two hundred and fifty accounts to he opened in a day, yet already, in the first few minutes of business, the bank was crammed with at least four hundred people, with still more flooding in, and the line outside, which Edwina rose to checks appeared as long as ever. F. Obviously someone had alerted the press in advance, which explained the presence of the TV camera crew outside. Edwina hoped to know who had done it.
填空题·is popular in the south?
填空题WhendoesthefirsttrainoftheLondonUndergroundleave?
填空题Does the publisher of Douglas Starr's excellent Blood—An Epic History of Medicine and Commerce actually expect to sell many copies? Whoever chose the title is certain to scare off the squeamish, and the subtitle, which makes the effort sound like a dry, dense survey text, has really done this book a disservice. In fact, the brave and curious will enjoy a brightly written, intriguing, and disquieting book, with some important lessons for public health. 66. ______ The book begins with a historical view on centuries of lore about blood—in particular, the belief that blood carried the evil humors of disease and required occasional draining. As recently as the Revolutionary War, Bloodletting was widely applied to treat fevers. The idea of using one person's blood to heal another is only about 75 years old although rogue scientists had experimented with transfusing animal blood at least as early as the 1600s. The first transfusion experiments involved stitching a donor's vein (in early cases the physician's) to a patient's vein. 67. ______ Sabotaged by notions about the" purity" of their groups' blood, Japan and Germany lagged well behind the Allies in transfusion science. Once they realized they were losing injured troops the Allies had learned to save, they tried to catch up, conducting horrible and unproductive experiments such as draining blood from POWs and injecting them with horse blood or polymers. 68. ______ During the early to mid-1980s, Start says, 10,000 American hemophiliacs and 12,000 others contracted HIV from transfusions and receipt of blood products. Blood banks both here and abroad moved slowly to acknowledge the threat of the virus and in some cases even acted with criminal negligence, allowing the distribution of blood they knew was tainted. This is not new material. But Starr's insights add a dimension to a story first explored in the late Randy Shilts's And the Bond Played On. 69. ______ Is the blood supply safe now? Screening procedures and technology have gotten much more advanced. Yet it's disturbing to read Starr's contention that a person receiving multiple transfusions today has about a 1 in 90,000 chance of contracting HIV—far higher than the" one in a million" figure that blood bankers once blithely and falsely quoted. Moreover, new pathogens threaten to emerge and spread through the increasingly high-speed, global blood-product network faster than science can stop them. This prompts Starr to argue that today's blood stores are" simultaneously safer and more threatening" than when distribution was less sophisticated. 70. ______ A. The massive wartime blood drives laid the groundwork for modern blood-banking, which has saved countless lives. Unfortunately, these developments also set the stage for a great modern tragedy—the spread of AIDS through the international blood supply. B. There is so much drama, power, resonance, and important information in this book that it would be a shame if the squeamish were scared off. Perhaps the key lesson is this: The public health must always be guarded against the pressures and pitfalls of competitive markets and human fallibility. C. In his chronicle of a resource, Starr covers an enormous amount of ground. He gives us an account of mankind's attitudes over a 400-year period towards this "precious, mysterious, and hazardous material" ; of medicine's efforts to understand, control, and develop blood's life-saving properties; and of the multibillion-dollar industry that benefits from it. He describes disparate institutions that use blood, from the military and the pharmaceutical industry to blood banks. The culmination is a rich examination of how something as horrifying as distributing blood tainted with the HIV virus could have occurred. D. The book's most interesting section considers the huge strides transfusion science took during World War Ⅱ. Medicine benefited significantly from the initiative to collect and supply blood to the Allied troops and from new trauma procedures developed to administer it. It was then that scientists learned to separate blood into useful elements, such as freeze-dried plasma and clotting factors, paving the way for both battlefield miracles and dramatic improvement in the lives of hemophiliacs. E. Starr's tale ends with a warning about the safety of today's blood supply. F. Start obtained memos and other evidence used in Japanese, French, and Canadian criminal trials over the tainted-blood distribution. (American blood banks enjoyed legal protections that made U.S. trials more complex and provided less closure for those harmed.) His account of the French situation is particularly poignant. Starr explains that in postwar France, donating blood was viewed as a sacred and patriotic act. Prison populations were urged to give blood as a way to connect more with society. Unfortunately, the French came to believe that such benevolence somehow offered a magical protection to the blood itself and that it would be unseemly to question volunteer donors about their medical history or sexual or drug practices. Combined with other factors, including greed and hubris, this led to tragedy. Some blood banks were collecting blood from high-risk groups as late as 1990, well into the crisis. And France, along with Canada, Japan, and even Britain, stalled approval and distribution of safer, American heat-treated plasma products when they became available, in part because they were giving their domestic companies time to catch up with scientific advances.
填空题A team of American scientists has
1
again that there is no safe cigarette. The scientists said that even cigarettes with low
2
of tar and nicotine are harmful. And they said that the only sure way to
3
the danger of cancer and heart disease is to stop smoking completely. The new report was made by a committee
4
the national research council.
The health dangers of tar and nicotine have been well reported and reports appear to
5
helped change American smoking customs. Fifteen years ago only about two percent of the cigarettes sold in the United States were low
6
tar and nicotine. Today more
7
forty percent are low tar and nicotine cigarettes. The new report noted that studies have been made from the years 1955 to 1975.
8
that period the average amount of tar and nicotine in cigarette was reduced by about one half.
9
during the same time lung cancer and other cancers of the breathing system increased
10
seventy percent.
11
fact, male smokers
12
thirty-five or older were more
13
to die
14
lung cancer in 1975
15
smokers of the same age twenty years early.
填空题Note: Answer each question by choosing A, B, C or D and mark it on
ANSWER SHEET 1
. Some choices may be required more than once.
A=BOOK REVIEW 1 B=BOOK REVIEW 2 C=BOOK REVIEW 3 D=BOOK REVIEW 4 Which book review(s) contain(s) the following information?
·Comparison of the significance of two economic books.
1
·Stiglitz"s prestige in the field of economics.
2
·Stiglitz"s criticism of those who exaggerated the power of markets in developing countries.
3
·Policy making should consider local conditions.
4
·The intervention of government is the way to assist globalization.
5
·Stiglitz"s dedication to the development of poor countries.
6
·Stiglitz"s preference of one type of economic policy over another one.
7
·More people joined Stiglitz in criticizing free trade and globalization.
8
·Stiglitz"s points have been supported by what actually happened in the country.
9
·Mainly gives positive comments on Stiglitz and his new book.
10
A
The main point of the book is simple: globalization is not helping many poor countries. Incomes are not rising in much of the world, and adoption of market-based policies such as open capital markets, free trade, and privatization are making developing economies less stable, not more. Instead of a bigger dose of free markets, Stiglitz argues, what"s needed to make globalization work better is more and smarter government intervention. While this has been said before, the ideas carry more weight coming from someone with Stiglitz"s credentials. In some ways, this book has the potential to be the liberal equivalent of Milton Friedman"s 1962 classic Capitalism and Freedom, which helped provide the intellectual foundation for a generation of conservatives. But Globalization and Its Discontents" does not rise to the level of capitalism and freedom. While Stiglitz makes a strong case for government-oriented development policy, be ignores some key arguments in favor of the market. "The book"s main villain is the International Monetary Fund, the Washington organization that lends to troubled countries", Stiglitz" contempt for the IMF is boundless, "It is clear that the IMF has failed in its mission, " he declares. "Many of the policies that the IMF pushed have contributed to global instability. "
B
While parts of this book are disappointingly shallow, Stiglitz"s critique of the market-driven 90"s still resonates, especially when the business page is full of stories about white-collar crime and the stock market seems stuck in a perpetual rut. Even the United States cannot blithely assume that financial markets will work on autopilot. It is testament to the salience of Stiglitz"s arguments that many economists—even some Bush Administration officials—now embrace his view that economic change in the developing world must evolve more with local conditions, not on Washington"s calendar. Without a thorough makeover, globalization could easily become a quagmire. Stiglitz shared a Nobel Prize last year for his work analyzing the imperfections of markets. His main complaint against Rubin and Summers, who served as Treasury Secretaries, and against Fischer, the NO. 2 official and de facto chief executive of the international Monetary Fund, is that they had too much faith that markets could transform poor countries overnight. He labels these three men market fundamentalists, who fought to maintain financial stability with the same urgency that an earlier generation struggled to contain communism. Worse, he suggests, they shilled for Wall Street, conflating the interests of the big banks with the financial health of the world.
C
"Stiglitz, 58, is hardly the first person to accuse the IMF of operating undemocratically and exacerbating Third World poverty. But he is by far the most prominent and his emergence as a critic marks an important shift in the intellectual landscape. Only a few years ago, it was possible for pundits to claim that no mainstream economist, certainly nobody of Stiglitz"s stature, took the criticism of free trade and globalization seriously. Such claims are no longer credible, for Stiglitz is part of a small but growing group of economists, sociologists and political scientists, among them Dani Rodrik of Harvard and Robert Wade of the London School of Economics, who not only take the critics seriously but warn that ignoring their concerns could have dire consequences. " Over the past several years, Stiglitz, a celebrated theorist who was awarded the 2001 Nobel Prize in economics for his work on asymmetric information, has grown accustomed to being at the center of controversy. From 1997 to 2000, he served as senior vice president and chief economist at the World Bank—a title that did not stop him from publicly criticizing the bank"s sister institution, the International Monetary Fund, Stiglitz"s outspokenness, unprecedented for a highranking insider, infuriated top officials at the IMF and US Treasury Department, and eventually led James Wolfensohn, the World Bank"s president, to inform him that he would have to mute his criticism or resign, Stiglitz chose to leave.
D
"Stiglitz" book makes a compelling case that simple-minded economic doctrine, inadequately tailored to the realities of developing countries, can do more harm than good, and that the subtleties of economic theory are actually quite important for sound policy advice. But simplistic political advice—give developing countries more voice and the institutions of global governance will be rendered more legitimate and efficient—is equally problematic. Political reform is as subtle and complex as economic reform. Evidently, the best minds among us have only begun to think about it. " Joseph Stiglitz"s memoirs of his years in Washington, D.C. —first as chair of President Bill Clinton"s Council of Economic Advisers and then as chief economist at the World Bank—have the flavor of a morality play. Our goodhearted but slightly native hero, on leave from Stanford University, sets out for the nation"s capital to serve his country and improve the lot of the developing world. Once there he finds a morass of political opportunism, ideologically motivated decision-making and bureaucratic inertia. Undeterred, he battles valiantly on behalf of impoverished nations against the unrelenting globalisers of the International Monetary Fund.
填空题
66. __________. Demand theory is based on a simply
generalization about customer behavior that has been observed for centuries,
that almost people would regard as "common sense". Generally speaking, if a good
or service becomes more expensive, consumers are less likely to buy it. So, the
price of oil more than doubled in 1999, the demand for oil would fall. How much
did the demand for oil fall would depend on the elasticity of the demand for
oil. Economists describe the demand for oil response as relatively inelastic.
So, the fall was not large.67. __________. A substantial
rise in the price of oil would affect the demand for oil tankers and coal in
1999.68. __________. The use of coal is the same as oil.
When file price of oil rises, fewer people will use oil and more people will use
coal. In Economics, coal is a substitute good of oil, the price of oil rises,
and the demand for oil falls, the demand for coal increases. As the demand for
coal is related to the demand for oil, therefore, a constriction in the demand
for oil will mean that the demand for coal will shift to a rise. The increase in
demand is shown by demand rising from oil to coal. So, the demand for coal
increased in 1999.69. __________. Because the price of oil
rose in 1999, refiner had to face a squeeze on profit margins. This made the
costs of refining petrol increase. The costs of production increase will lead
decrease on the supply for petrol. As the supply for petrol is related to the
supply for oil, therefore, an extension in the supply for oil will mean that the
supply for petrol will shift to a fall. This decrease in supply is shown by
supply falling from Qs0 to Qs1 So, the supply for petrol
decreased in 1999.70. __________. Because the price of oil
rose in 1999, the supply for oil would raise. Nylon is joint of oil. So, the
supply for oil raises the supply for nylon increases. As the supply for nylon is
related to the supply for oil, therefore, an extension in the supply for oil
will mean that the supply for nylon will shift to a rise. So the supply for
nylon increased in 1999.A. The graph shows how the crude oil price has
changed between 1994 and 1998. In general, the crude oil price rose up to the
peak until 1997, at which point there was a sharp reduction in the crude oil
price. Finally, we can summarize that the overall price, if crude oil dropped
from over$10 per barrel to almost $7 per barrel between 1994 and 1998. Market
forces affected this.B. In 1999 the price of oil more than doubled. Discuss
the effects of a substantial rise in the price of oil on the supply and demand
for oil and other related products. This affected not only the demand and supply
for oil, but also other related products.C. Because the price of oil
rose in 1999, producing oil could get more profit. Therefore, some producers
would switch from providing nuclear power to providing oil. This meant that more
producers would produce oil. Oil becomes more attractive than nuclear power;
this will lead decrease on the supply for nuclear power. As the supply for
nuclear power is related to the supply for oil, therefore an extension in the
supply for oil will mean that the supply will shift to a fall. So, the supply
for nuclear power decreased in 1999.D. Supply theory tells us that
profit enable producers to use less suitable resources to increase their supply
of product. In 1999, the price of oil more than doubled, this meant that the oil
producers could get more profit, so the supply would rise. This type of movement
is known as an extension which leads to supply rising. How much did the supply
for oil raise would depend on the elasticity of the supply for oil. The rule is
that the steeper the curve, the more elastic the supply and vice versa. So, the
supply for oil is elastic.E. A substantial rise in the price of oil
would affect the supply for nuclear power, petrol and nylon.F. We know
that oil tankers are used to transport oil. If the price of oil rises, fewer
people buy oil. Therefore, less oil tankers are used to transport oil. In
Economics, oil tankers are complementary goods of oil, the price of oil rises,
and the demand for oil falls, the demand for oil tankers decrease. As the demand
for oil tankers is related to the demand for oil, therefore, a constriction in
the demand for oil will mean that the demand for oil tankers will shift to a
fall. So the demand for oil tankers decreased in 1999.
填空题It is not uncommon for distinguished scientists in the twilight of their careers to turn their hand to philosophy. Unfortunately, the failures among such endeavors are generally acknowledged to outnumber the successes, and Wilson's contribution to the genre must on the whole be consigned to the majority. 16. ______ Wilson does, however, intend to present a thesis, the thesis that all knowledge is unified. The key concept he exploits, borrowing from the 19th century philosopher William Whewell, is consilience. For Whewell, consilience meant seeking principles with as wide an explanatory reach as possible. Its meaning in Wilson's text is somewhat indefinable: Sometimes it seems only to mean that different kinds of phenomena have something to do with one another. Sometimes it marks the insistence that there is a seamless web of cause and effect. Quite often it also seems to mean some strong doctrine of physicalist reductionism, though no such doctrine is ever spelled out in any kind of detail. 17. ______ For example, one of the most notorious topics from Sociobiology is the development of the idea that differences in magnitude of contribution to the reproductive purpose will lead to the evolutionary selection of sexually differentiated behavioral dispositions. Broadly, the idea is that males will pursue the maximum volume of reproductive output, whereas females will aim to produce a smaller quantity of high quality offspring. This will lead males to seek as many mates as possible, while females can be expected to look carefully for a high quality mate with the resources to spend on her offspring. 18. ______ Having established the relevance of biology to human concerns, Wilson advances his claim for consilience with science in chapters on the social sciences, on the arts, and an ethics and religion. Some of Wilson's views in these areas seem decidedly eccentric. 19. ______ The chapter on ethics and religion is even more perplexing than I have so far suggested. Wilson sees ethics as involving a fundamental divide between the transcendentalist and the empiricist, the former but not the latter holding moral values to be independent of contingent facts about human nature. Imaginary representatives of these extreme positions are used to present their arguments, but what actually emerges is a debate almost entirely concerned with the existence of God. Although Wilson may be right that "the mixture of moral reasoning employed by modern societies are...a mess," he offers nothing likely to improve this situations. The book concludes with a worthy plea for environmental awareness, but since this had little connection with the earlier themes I will not discuss it. 20. ______ The first printing of this book ran to 56,500 copies, and I was left wondering how people with more rigorously worked out views on such topics might come to command a comparable audience.A. Wilson examines important topics and he writes agreeably, if not always clearly. But the central thesis of the book is vague, the arguments presented generally difficult to discern, and many.of the opinions expressed are quite eccentric.B. When RA. Poucher published in 1867 a large volume modestly entitled The Universe, he explained in the introduction that the title was intended merely to indicate that he "had gathered from creation at large, often contrasting the smallest of its productions with the mightiest." I was reminded of this work while readingE. O. Wilson's book Consilience, much of which struck me as more of a compendium of scientific fact and speculation than any systematically worked out philosophical theme.C. Wilson's well-known book Sociobiology, published in 1975, presented claims for the genetic determination of a wide variety of behavioral traits of humans as well as other animals, and some of its central ideas get rehearsed here. At the same time, Wilson is greatly concerned to refute charges of crude genetic determinism, and he devotes a lot of space to discussing the interactions between genes and environment. But in the end, the lesson does not seem quite to have gotten through.D. In his book, Wilson wants to convince us that biology is a necessary ingredient of the arts, ethics, and so on.There is a very modest thesis possible here that humans do have some kind of nature and that this nature has something to do with why we like certain kinds of art and why certain social structures would not suit us.The problem here is that finding something interesting to say calls for some sophisticated philosophical work, and Wilson does not do the sort of work necessary.E. Thus in the present bookWilson remarks that reproductive asymmetries between the sexes "predict patterns of mate choice and courtship ...," without seeing any need to worry about interactions with culture. But in fact if development is a matter of interaction between genes and environment, it is not clear that any such predictions follow.F. It is important to note, however, that if we were totally different kinds of organisms, we might not mind being enslaved. But it is absurd to suppose that consilience in Wilson's more aggressive sense of reduction has any relevance her
