填空题·has,in general, a warm climate?
填空题
A stunned Hollywood debated the future of one of its biggest
stars Sunday. as a sheriff's watchdog launched an investigation into a possible
cover up of a leaked report that quoted Mel Gibson unleashing a tirade of
anti-Semitic remarks during a drunken driving arrest. One media expert said
Gibson irreparably damaged his career with his "crazy" behavior following his
arrest by Los Angeles County Sheriffs deputies in Malibu early Friday. Charges
of anti-Semitism were also leveled against the actor-director with the release
of his 2004 blockbuster "The Passion of the Christ." 66.
______. According to the report, in addition to threatening the
arresting deputy and trying to escape, Gibson said, "The Jews are responsible
for all the wars in the world," and asked the officer, James Mee, "Are you a
Jew?" The report has not been made public, but the Los Angeles Times reported
Sunday that it had independently verified its authenticity. 67.
______. Filmgoers, too, could overlook much if the film is
perceived as worthwhile. "Usually it comes down to the marketing of the movie
and does the average person want to see the film," said Paul Dergarabedian,
president of box office tracking firm Exhibitor Relations. The Office of
Independent Review, a department watchdog panel, has opened an investigation
into whether authorities gave Gibson preferential treatment by covering up his
alleged inflammatory comments, said its chief attorney, Mike Gennaco. "Assuming
that the report was excised, then the question is was it done for a good reason
within regulations," he said. Gibson has filmed public service announcements for
Sheriff Lee Baca's relief committee dressed in a sheriff's uniform.
68. ______. Gibson said in his apology that he said
"despicable" things to deputies during his arrest. "I acted like a person
completely out of control when I was arrested and said things that I do not
believe to be true and which are despicable," Gibson said. Abraham H. Foxman,
national director of the Anti-Defamation League, called Gibson's apology
"unremorseful and insufficient." 69. ______.
Days before "Passion" was released, Gibson's father Hutton Gibson was
quoted saying the Holocaust was mostly "fiction." The younger Gibson has said
that he will not speak against his father. Gibson, 50, was arrested after
deputies stopped his 2006 Lexus LS 430 for speeding at 2:36 a. m. Friday.
Sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore said deputies clocked him doing 87 mph in a
45 mph zone. 70. ______. He won a best-director
Oscar for 1995's "Braveheart." He also starred in the "Lethal Weapon" and "Mad
Max" films, "What Women Want" and "The Man Without a Face," among other
films. A. "There is no cover-up," Baca told the Los Angeles
Times. "Our job is not to focus on what he said. It's to establish his
blood-alcohol level when he was driving and proceed with the case. Trying
someone on rumor and innuendo is no way to run an investigation, at least one
with integrity." B. Gibson's publicist, Alan Nierob, would not
elaborate beyond a nonspecific apology Gibson issued Saturday. Sheriff's sources
also declined to comment on Gibson's alleged remarks. Studio executives; who
spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the mater,
were divided on how Gibson's behavior would affect his career. One noted that
people have short memories, including filmmakers who might want to profit from
Gibson's star power. C. "It's a nuclear disaster for him," said
publicist Michael Levine, who has represented Michael Jackson and Charlton
Heston, among others. "I don't see how he can restore himself." The
entertainment Web site TMZ posted what it said were four pages from the original
arrest report, which quoted Gibson as launching an expletive-laden "barrage of
anti-Semitic remarks" after he was stopped on Pacific Coast Highway.
D. "It's not a proper apology because it does not go to the essence of his
bigotry and his anti-Semitism," he said in a statement on the organization's Web
site. "We would hope that Hollywood now would realize the bigot in their midst
and that they will distance themselves from this anti-Semite." This is not the
first time Gibson has faced accusations of anti-Semitism. Gibson produced,
directed and financed "Passion," which some Jewish leaders said cast Jews as the
killers of Jesus. In a 2004 interview with ABC's Diane Sawyer, Gibson said he
was not anti- Semitic. "To be anti-Semitic is a sin," he said. "It's been
condemned by one Papal Council after another. To be anti-Semitic is to be
tm-Christian, and I'm not." E. It is clear, however, that there
is considerable dissent within the scientific community. Researchers from green
pressure groups claim that the report's results under-report the scale of
decline in fish stocks. But independent research commissioned by the Sea
Fisherman's Society argues that the report's figures are wildly wrong. Todd
Marvin of the Society claimed in an interview that the report used data which
was collected a long time ago, and ignores recent research showing a much more
healthy picture of fish numbers. He called for a widening of the powers of
fishing vessels to take different species in increased numbers.
F. A breath test indicated Gibson's blood-alcohol level was 0. 12 percent,
Whitmore said. The legal limit in California is 0.08 percent. Gibson posted $
5,000 bail and was released hours later. In his statement, Gibson also said he
has struggled with alcoholism and had taken steps "to ensure my return to
health."
填空题WherewouldhestayafterhisscholarshipyearinLondonwasover?
填空题{{B}} A = Sweden B = Norway C =
Finland In which country can you find{{/B}}
{{B}}
A Sweden{{/B}}
With the value of exports amounting to 30 percent of its GDP, Sweden is
highly dependent on free international trade to maintain its living standard. In
1991 Sweden attached its currency to the European Currency Unit (ECU), and in
1995 it became a full member in the European Community (EC). Sweden also has to
cope with problems of competitiveness that have caused industry to invest much
more abroad than at home. Most of Sweden's large industrial companies today are
transnational, and some employ more people abroad than in Sweden, where
production costs are high. Employment in agriculture, forestry,
and fishing has declined since the mid-20th century. Employment in industry
reached a peak in 1960, but the tertiary sector (including services and
administration) has become the main growth area, the expanding public sector
being one of its major components. Female participation in the workforce
is high compared to most other countries. Sweden is noted for
its liberal employee benefit plans. The normal statutory work week is 40 hours,
but actual work hours per employee in Swedish industry is among the lowest in
Europe. The minimum amount of annual paid vacation is five weeks and two days.
In addition, there are other legal grounds for paid absence. Employers pay
additional fees of more than 43 percent of gross wages for statutory social
benefits, including pensions.{{B}}
B
Norway{{/B}} The Norwegian economy is dependent largely on
the fortunes of its important petroleum industry. Thus, it experienced a decline
in the late 1980s as oil prices fell, but by the late 1990s it had rebounded
strongly, benefiting from increased production and higher prices. Norway
reversed its negative balance of payments, and the growth of its gross national
product (GNP) --which had slowed during the 1980s--accelerated. By the late
1990s Norway's per capita GNP was the highest in Scandinavia and among the
highest in the world. In an effort to reduce economic down turns caused by
drops in oil prices, the government in 1990 established the Government Petroleum
Fund, into which budget surpluses were deposited for investment
overseas. Only about one-fifth of Norway's commodity imports are
food and consumer goods; the rest consists of raw materials, fuels, and capital
goods. The rate of reinvestment has been high in Norway for a number of years.
This is reflected in the relatively steady employment in the building and
construction industry. Rapid growth, however, has been registered in commercial
and service occupations, as is the case in most countries with a high standard
of living. Fewer than 5 percent of the industrial companies in
Norway have more than 100 employees. Nonetheless, they account for half of the
industrial labour force and for more than half of production. The smaller
companies are usually family-owned, whereas most of the larger ones are
joint-stock companies. Foreign interests control companies accounting for about
10 percent of total production. Only a few larger concerns are state-owned, and
even these are usually run with almost complete independence. However, the
government traditionally has had a significant ownership control over major
economy sectors, such as oil, telecommunications, power, and transport, but from
the end of the 1990s many such companies were partially or fully
privatized.{{B}}
C
Finland{{/B}} Finland's economy is based primarily on
private ownership and free enterprise; in some sectors, however, the government
exercises a monopoly or a leading role. After World War II Finland was still
only semi-industrialized, with a large part of the population engaged in
agriculture, mining, and forestry. During the early postwar decades, primary
production gave way to industrial development, which in turn yielded to a
service and information-oriented economy. The economy grew especially rapidly in
the 1980s, as the country exploited its strong trading relations with both
eastern and western European countries. By the early 1990s, however, the country
was experiencing economic recession, largely because the collapse of the Soviet
Union in 1991 deprived Finland of its chief trading partner. The economy began a
slow recovery in the mid-1990s, as Finland refocused its trade primarily toward
western Europe. The Finnish government derives most of its
revenue from taxes on income and property, sales taxes, and excise duties. About
two-fifths of the government's expenditures are for education and social
services, including housing and health care. This pattern of expenditure
is markedly different from the years following World War II; then much of the
Finnish annual budget went to paying war reparations and to rebuilding the
nation's infrastructure. Finland has subscribed to the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade since 1949 and to the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development since 1969. It became first an associate (1961) and
later a full member (1986) of the European Free Trade Association before leaving
that organization to join the European Union in 1995. Finland also became a
member of the constituent European Community (until 1903 called the European
Economic Community), with which it had maintained a free-trade agreement since
1974.·by the late 1990s its per capita GNP was the highest in Scandinavia?
71. ______.·employees
can enjoy at least five-week-and-two-day annual paid vacation?
72. ______.·its economy is largely dependent on
how successful its petroleum industry is? 73.
______.·the employment rate of its women workers is higher than most other
74.
______.countries?
·it
gained its European Union membership in 1995?
75. ______.·there has once been high reinvestment rate in the
building and construction 76. ______.industry
for many years? ·its economy was gradually converted from traditional
to service-oriented 77. ______.and
information-oriented only after World War Ⅱ?·economic recession occurred in
the early 1990s as the result of the collapse 78.
______.of the Soviet Union?·more and more privatized state-owned
companies have sprung up from
79. ______.the end of the 1990s?·40% of its annual
government budget has been spent on education and
80. ______.social services?
填空题A = LETTER 1 B = LETTER 2 C = LETTER 3 D = LETTER 4 Which letter defends the safety of the vaccination programme? claims that fears about the vaccine were based on unreliable evidence? believes that intellectual freedom is threatened by mistakes made by science and society? emphasizes the difficulties in dealing with health scares? makes a comparison of Iraqi civilian deaths and MMR? says that Melanie Phillip is confused about epidemiology and clinical results? points out that scientists would become less credible if they do not base their conclusion on enough evidence? suggests that readers search the journal mentioned in the debate by using Google? suggests that a neutral organization be established for mediation of scientific controversies? accuses Melanie Phillips of misrepresenting the truth? 1. ______ 2. ______ 3. ______ 4. ______ 5. ______ 6. ______ 7. ______ 8. ______ 9. ______ 10. ______ A LETTER 1 When a vaccine, drug or therapy is marketed as "safe", it is done so on the basis or formally controlled, large-scale, usually blind investigations by qualified professionals. The fact that "a small proportion of parents found that after vaccination their children developed bowel problems, an allergic reaction to various foods and a halt to their behavioural development that produced the symptoms of autism" does not render an entire vaccination programme unsafe any more than it suggests a causal relationship between administration of the vaccine and onset of symptoms. Anybody with even the most basic grasp of scientific principles can understand this. The MMR vaccine in its current form was approved following the same extensive testing as any other clinical prophylaxis. For Melanie Phillips to suggest that the "government and [the] medical establishment ... have behaved recklessly and spinelessly" in the aftermath of Wakefield's so-called research is itself an irresponsible misrepresentation of the truth, which contributes to the unnecessary confusion in the general public domain. B LETTER 2 The difficult relationships between science, medicine and public policy are well illustrated by your reports on Iraqi mortality (The media are minimising US and British war crimes in Iraq, November 8) and MMR (The case against me boils down to smear and evasion, November 8). The triggers for these controversies were research papers published in the Lancet. In a lost age, these studies would have been privately discussed in academic circles, their conclusions confirmed, refined or refuted. This environment of intellectual freedom has served science and society well for 400 years. But such freedoms are now under threat from errors made by both science and society. The mistake scientists have made -- and 1 include myself in this criticism -- is to blur their roles as independent investigators and public advocates. It is entirely right that scientists and doctors play a prominent part in social and political debate. But we lose credibility, justifiably, when we go beyond the evidence. Here, the comparison between Iraq and MMR is instructive. On Iraq, the authors of the Lancet report used their results to call for the genuine uncertainty over civilian deaths to be clarified urgently by drawing on further data that only government could provide -- indeed, which government had a duty to provide under the Geneva conventions. This was responsible advocacy in the face of scientific uncertainty. By contrast, Andrew Wakefield used a press conference to subvert the conclusions of his Lancet study by casting doubt on the safety of the MMR vaccine, a doubt that the research paper specifically denied. One could argue that neither study should have seen the light of day. This would be a capitulation to those who would prefer censorship to serious public discussion about controversial ideas. While it is impossible to turn the clock back to a time when science was hidden from the public sphere, there is a need to find better ways to conduct complex debates openly and accountably. An independent body to provide a neutral public space to mediate, investigate and make recommendations about scientific and health controversies, akin to the Food Standards Agency, deserves serious consideration. C LETTER 3 It is a microcosm of the difficulties in dealing with health scares that I can write 850 words on an anti-MMR diatribe by Melanie Phillips, generate 900 words of letters in return as well as an article by Phillips -- all reinforcing her original misconceptions, and raising some new ones. For every unit of energy you put in, you get twice as much back, and so you can never win. She is still amazed that a critical review of the scientific literature on MMR is critical of some of the literature it reviewed and she still thinks this is evidence of guilt or cover-up in the conclusions of the report. I criticised her for claiming that: "Wakefield's discovery of autistic enterocolitis as a completely new syndrome has now been replicated in studies around the world as a new and so far unexplained disease in patients with autism." Her response is to provide references to various speculative research findings on the bowels of people with autism. Such studies exist but few would claim that such early work constitutes wide replication of the discovery of a "new disease". I also encourage any readers who are interested in what Phillips considers to be an appropriate source for ground-breaking, peer-reviewed scientific research to look up the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons on Google and read about this strange esoteric political organisation for themselves. Having said all that, Melanie Phillips of the Daily Mail has misrepresented and attacked me personally: and so whatever the future may bring, I can die a rounded and happy human being. D LETTER 4 Melanie Phillip's rebuttal of Ben Goldacre's criticisms bears out his main points. She claims that the Cochrane report does not say that the fears about the vaccine were based on unreliable evidence. Yes it does. You need go no further than the abstract to read "no credible evidence of an involvement of MMR with either autism or Crohn's disease was found'. She goes on to say that epidemiology cannot establish a causal association, and that Goldacre is confusing epidemiology and clinical results. No, the confusion is hers. Epidemiology can produce overwhelming evidence for a causal connection. What it cannot produce is information about the mechanism of that connection. It is worth adding that clinical studies do not necessarily produce information about the causal mechanism.
填空题Long before man lived on the Earth, there were fishes, reptiles, birds, insects, and some mammals. Although some of these animals were ancestors of kinds living today, others are now extinct, that is, they have no descendants alive now. (66) Very occasionally the rocks show impression of skin, so that, apart from color, we can build up a reasonably accurate picture of an animal that died millions of years ago. That kind of rock in which the remains are found tells us much about the nature of the original land, often of the plants that grew on it, and even of its climate. (67) Nearly all of the fossils that we know were preserved in rocks formed by water action, and most of these are of animals that lived in or near water. Thus it follows that there must be many kinds of mammals, birds, and insects of which we know nothing. (68) There were also crablike creatures, whose bodies were covered with a horny substance. The body segments each had two pairs of legs, one pair for walking on the sandy bottom, the other for swimming. The head was a kind of shield with a pair of compound eyes, often with thousands of lenses. They were usually an inch or two long but some were 2 feet. (69) Of these, the ammonites are very interesting and important. They have a shell composed of many chambers, each representing a temporary home of the animal. As the young grew larger it grew a new chamber and sealed off the previous one. Thousands of these can be seen in the rocks on the Dorset Coast. (70) About 75 million years ago the Age of Reptiles was over and most of the groups died out. The mammals quickly developed, and we can trace the evolution of many familiar animals such as the elephant and horse. Many of the later mammals though now extinct, were known to primitive man and were featured by him in cave paintings and on bone carvings. A.The shellfish have a long history in the rock and many different kinds are known. B.Nevertheless, we know a great deal about many of them because their bones and shells have been preserved in the rocks as fossils. From them we can tell their size and shape, how they walked, the kind of food they ate. C.The first animals with true backbones were the fishes, first known in the rocks of 375 million years ago. About 300 million years ago the amphibians, the animals able to live both on land and in water, appeared. They were giant, sometimes 8 feet long, and many of them lived in the swampy pools in which our coal seam, or layer is formed. The amphibians gave rise to the reptiles and for nearly 150 million years these were the principal forms of life on land, in the sea, and in the air. D.The best index fossils tend to be marine creatures. These animals evolved rapidly and spread over large over large areas of the world. E.The earliest animals whose remains have been found were all very simple kinds and lived in the sea. Later forms are more complex, and among these are the sea lilies, relations of the star fishes, which had long arms and were attached by a long stalk to the sea bed, or to rocks. F.When an animal dies, the body, its bones, or shell, may often be carried away by streams into lakes or the sea and there get covered up by mud. If the animal lived in the sea its body would probably sink and be covered with mud. More and more mud would fall upon it until the bones or shell become embedded and preserved.
填空题A = University of Wollongong
B = The University of Adalaide
C = Murdock University
D = Monash University
Which university/universities...
● offer double-major programs ?
1
2
● lays stress on research?
3
● claims its students will have the highest income upon graduation?
4
● boasts a system of learning according to the situation?
5
● has won the most awards in recent years?
6
● opened its first overseas campus?
7
● trained students who became leaders in their professions throughout
the world?
8
● have a close relationship with industry?
9
10
A
University of Wollongong
The University of Wollongong signalled a new mood in higher education when it was established in 1951: flexible, highly-motivated and responsive to students" needs. Today, its energetic, entrepreneurial style is increasingly popular.
The University of Wollongong breaks with tradition, valuing practical and applied skills in the context of a strong theoretical and ethical base; a strategy employers appreciate. The figures speak for themselves. University of Wollongong graduates enter the workforce in the highest starting-salary bracket according to the Graduate Careers Council of Australia.
The University of Wollongong was the first to have compulsory student-evaluation of teaching: the first to insist that new staff undertake teaching-skills courses; the first to make Information Technology skills compulsory for students; and among the first with flexible double-degree programs. Students are encouraged to map career-paths from enrolment day. The University of Wollongong has strong industry links, and its world-class research program attracted $6 million in Australian Research Council grants last year. For example, the Institute for Telecommunications Research is a key centre for international firms seeking a foothold in the Asia-Pacific region.
B
The University of Adelaide
Established in 1874, the University of Adelaide has a strong research focus. On almost any index chosen, Adelaide is ranked in the top group of Australian universities for research output, teaching and curriculum design, staff-student ratios and positive graduate outcomes. It also ranks very well among other universities in the Asia-Pacific region.
Adelaide"s strengths lie in the biological and agricultural sciences, engineering (including information technology and telecommunications), medicine, dentistry, the physical science, environmental science and management, and the social sciences (especially Asian studies, international economics and human geography).
The University has produced graduates who are leaders in the professions, government and industry in Australia and around the world. These include Lord Florey, who received the Nobel Prize for his discovery of penicillin, and Dr. Andrew Thomas, Australia"s first astronaut.
Adelaide has extensive and growing international linkages in Europe, North America and the Asia-Pacific, involving student and staff exchange, research, teaching and consultancy. Links with international governments, research organizations and industry are also expanding rapidly, as a consequence of the University"s capabilities and expertise on a world scale.
C
Murdoch University
Murdoch University offers a university education of the highest quality and has been rewarded by a ranking as the best teaching campus of all Australia"s public universities in an independent national survey of university graduates.
The University has won two awards in the Prime Minister"s 1998 Australian Awards for University on teaching (one for the best humanities teacher, one specially-created award for services to students and the community).
The University has also won a top, five-star rating for graduate satisfaction from the 1999 Good University Guide for the fourth consecutive year.
This is a reputation of continuing excellence sustained over a number of years. It is a reputation established by some of the best-qualified academic staff in Australia; an international reputation for a caring and friendly environment; the high quality of the research undertaken and the University"s flexible, academic structure that allows students to design the degree they need for their future.
Murdoch prides itself on being a community-oriented university and as one of Australia"s best teaching universities. It is highly regarded for its flexibility, with the choice of double-majors such as commerce and multi-media available to give students a head-start in their career.
D
Monash University
Studying at Monash University opens the door to new worlds. A strong international focus, constant innovation and engagement with the broader community highlight the University"s pioneering approach to scholarship. With the opening of its first off-shore campus in, Malaysia in 1998, Monash has taken a significant step towards becoming a truly global university. Over the next few years, as plans proceed for other off-shore campuses, Monash students will have an increasing choice about where they obtain their Monash degree.
With a well-founded reputation for excellence in teaching, research and scholarship, Monash is being increasingly recognized, too, for its innovative approach to flexible learning.
The university offers high-quality education and a vibrant, inclusive learning environment to more than 42,000 students across seven campuses.
Its strengths include cooperative research projects with the private sector, links with professional bodies in presenting practical study components, rich performing arts programs and distance education courses which afford learning opportunities to an enormous range of people.
Above all, Monash seeks to deliver a total education experience that equips its students for the future, providing not just academic qualifications, but instilling in them an awareness of their potential to contribute to society.
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
Good school science education is expensive. It requires
specialist teachers, laboratories, equipment, technicians and consumables. Many
countries have made a substantial investment in school science, yet there is
growing evidence that by the time students get to the age 15, most of them have
been turned off science. The most striking findings come from
an ongoing international study whose results show that the higher a country's
ranking according to the UN index of human development, the less. interested its
15-year-old are in school science.66. ______ In countries
such as Bangladesh, Ghana and Uganda, which score low on human development,
15-year-olds are very positive about wanting to continue to study
science—perhaps because of the benefits that they think science can
bring—whereas in Japan and western Europe they are not.67. ______
A number of researchers have found that the ii-year-olds arriving at
secondary school are keen to study science, and enthusiastic about the prospect
of practical work in exciting laboratories. Some maintain this interest over the
next five years, but sadly the majority find science lessons boring and
irrelevant compared with other subjects.68. ______ There are
various ways to address the problem. Some countries have changed their school
science curriculum, often making it more context-based. The teacher starts with
an issue that is of interest to students and uses that as a pathway into the
science one needs to understand in order to deal with such questions.69.
______ This growth reflects a deeper point about the nature and
purposes of school science laboratories. We can think of them as providing
stripped-down versions of reality, where care has been taken to simplify things
to help reveal the underlying science.70. ______ Finally, we
need to reflect on how we assess learning in science. Too often what teachers
teach and, therefore, what students learn is driven by how the students are
assessed It is easier for exams to test factual knowledge than some of the
skills we want the next generations of scientists to develop. Governments need
the confidence to develop assessment regimes that reward what we really want
students to learn and science teachers to teach.A. In real life it's not
easy to show Ii-year-olds the relationship between voltage and current, between
evaporation and condensation or between oxygen concentrations and rates of
respiration. There are the sort of things school science labs are good for. But
we need out-of- the-classroom experiences too, to help children relate such
abstract activities to real-life issues.B. By the standards of educational
research, the relationship is. startlingly tight one: The correlation between a
country's index of development and the stated wish of its 15-year-olds to become
a scientis is -0.93—almost a perfect linear relationship.C. Researches found
it particularly intriguing that 15-year-olds in developing countries remain high
interests in continuing to study science partly because they unrealistically pin
their future on this career. So their motivation is rather pragmatic.D.
Teenagers criticize school science in particular for not enabling genuine
discussion and debate, for not tackling up-to-date issues, and for giving them
little choice—for example, about what practical work to undertake, Though they
are generally think science is important, most feel that a career in it is not
for them but for others who are cleverer than they are.E. In many
well-off countries, the number of students wanting to go on to higher education
to study chemistry and physics--though not biology--has fallen over the past
decade. In the UK this lack of enthusiasm for physical sciences has led to the
closure of some 80 university science departments in the past six years. So why
is school science, especially chemistry and physics, so unpopular in wealthier
countries, and what can we do about it?F. Another tack is to encourage
out-of-the-school learning. Last week, for example, London's Science Museum
reopened its well-known Launchpad gallery. What is particularly notable is the
care the Science Museum has taken to ensure that the exhibits support the
physics that 8 to 14-year-olds will learn in schools as part of the national
curriculum. There has been an explosion in the number of science museums and
centres around the world, making such visits possible for an increasing number
of children.
填空题is now the largest industrial city in the country.
填空题A=Patroclus
B=Achilles
C=Zeus
Which God...
● was slain by Hector?
1
● is the ruler of the Olympian gods?
2
● was made invulnerable by the waters except for the heel?
3
● managed to rescue the Greeks in Achilles" armor?
4
● is the greatest Greek warrior in the Trojan war?
5
● was the protector and ruler of the human race?
6
● killed the king of the Ethiopians?
7
● ruled over the sky?
8
● is the dearest friend of Achilles?
9
● was mortally wounded in the heel by Paris?
10
Patroclus
Patroclus is the dearest friend of the hero Achilles. He accompanied Achilles to the Trojan War. In the tenth year of the conflict Achilles withdrew his troops, the Myrmidons, from combat because of a quarrel with Agamemnon, commander of the Greek forces. Without Achilles, the Greeks began to lose to the Trojans. Finally, as the Trojans began to burn the Greek ships, Patroclus persuades Achilles to allow him to lead the Myrmidons to the rescue. Clad in Achilles" armor, Patroclus led the Greeks to victory, forcing the Trojans back to the walls of their city. In his moment of glory, however, Patroclus was slain by the Trojan commander, Hector. To avenge his friend"s death, Achilles rejoined the battle and killed Hector.
Achilles
Achilles is the greatest of the Greek warriors in the Trojan War. He was the son of the sea nymph Thetis and Peleus, king of the Myrmidons of Thessaly. When he was a child his mother dipped him into the River Styx to make him immortal. The waters made him invulnerable except for the heel by which his mother held him. Achilles fought many battles during the 10-year siege of Troy. When the Mycenaean king Agamemnon seized the captive maiden Briseis from him, Achilles withdrew the Myrmidons from battle and sulked in his tent. The Trojans, emboldened by his absence, attacked the Greeks and drove them into headlong retreat. Then Patroclus, Achilles" friend and companion, begged Achilles to lend him his armor and let him lead the Myrmidons into battle. Achilles consented. When Patroclus was killed by the Trojan prince Hector, the grief-stricken Achilles returned to battle, slew Hector, and dragged his body in triumph behind his chariot. He later permitted Priam, king of Troy, to ransom Hector"s body. Achilles fought his last battle with Memnon, king of the Ethiopians. After killing the king, Achilles led the Greeks to the walls of Troy. There he was mortally wounded in the heel by Paris. The quarrel between Achilles and Agamemnon, the subsequent battle, and the ransoming of Hector"s body are recounted in the Iliad.
Zeus
Zeus in Greek mythology, is the god of the sky and ruler of the Olympian gods. Zeus corresponds to the Roman god Jupiter. He did not create either gods or mortals; he was their father in the sense of being the protector and ruler both of the Olympian family and of the human race. He was lord of the sky, the rain god, and the cloud gatherer, who wielded the terrible thunderbolt. His breastplate was the aegis, his bird the eagle, his tree the oak. Zeus presided over the gods on Mount Olympusin Thessaly (Thessalia). His principal shrines were at Dodona, in Epirus, the land of the oak trees and the most ancient shrine, famous for its oracle, and at Olympia, where the Olympian Games were celebrated in his honor every fourth year. The Nemean games, held at Nemea, northwest of Argos, were also dedicated to Zeus.
Zeus was the youngest son of the Titans Cronus and Rhea and the brother of the deities Poseidon, Hades, Hestia, Demeter, and Hera. Upon the birth of Zeus, Rhea wrapped a stone in swaddling clothes for Cronus to swallow and concealed the infant god in Crete, where he was fed on the milk of the goat Amalthaea and reared by nymphs. When Zeus grew to maturity, he forced Cronus to disgorge the other children, who were eager to take vengeance on their father. In the war that followed, the Titans fought on the side of Cronus, but Zeus and the other gods were successful, and the Titans were consigned to the abyss of Tartarus. Zeus henceforth ruled over the sky, and his brothers Poseidonand Hades were given power over the sea and the underworld, respectively. The earth was to be ruled in common by all three.
填空题A = Jancis Robinson B = Anthony Rose C = David Moore D = Malcolm Gluck Which wine critic(s) thinks that consumers have contributed to the situation in UK wine criticism? shows more direct critique on the colleague's writing? can make a good living out of wine critic? share common negative idea on some of their colleagues? believes that honesty is the most important thing? admits that UK wine market is not as well-developed as some other countries? predicts that customers will not have to rely on the recommendations of wine critics? insists on having never been written under the pressure of press? thinks that wine critics must be good at communication? 1. ______ 2. ______ 3. ______ 4. ______ 5. ______ 6. ______ 7. ______ 8. ______ 9. ______ 10. ______ One might easily imagine that wine critics have an enviable lifestyle. They spend much of their time drinking wines, provided, for the most part, for free. It is a respectable job that involves meeting many wealthy and talented individuals. To get the inside view on the world of wine criticism in the UK, I spoke to some of Britain's most influential critics: Jancis Pobinson MW, who writes for the Financial Times; Anthony Rose of the Independent; David Moore, whose book Wine Behind the Label is now in its fifth edition; and Malcolm Gluck, the broadcaster and author who had a regular column about wine in the Guardian for more than 15 years. Summarizing wine criticism is not easy, though Anthony Rose made a good' attempt at it. "Wine tasting is an inadequate science. It requires an objective assessment of the wine and a subjective assessment of the taste, and then a form in which you can communicate this to the reader. It means being an all-round communicator of the enjoyment of wine." It is obviously that it is a fairly closed and yet gregarious world. "Ahhh ... haaa," was how one well-known critic greeted my proposal to discuss their wine-commentating colleagues, as if I'd caught them walking out the door with my favorite Burgundy glass. "So the small upside of alienating all my colleagues in your article is that a couple of people click through to my website?" Clearly I wasn't going to collect too much data on how critics feel about each other. Rose referred to a recent correspondence where one commentator felt it was not a wine critic's duty to criticize his colleagues. Certainly there doesn't appear to be much mud-slinging among the critics in other creative spheres, such as literature and film-making. Still, one might be forgiven for thinking that the world of wine criticism is just a little too cosy. I put that question to Jancis Robinson, who regarded the whole topic as fairly incendiary. Rose, however, felt that integrity ultimately wins out, and he hadn't had any hesitation in panning a recent book published by a colleague, despite the potential awkwardness. "I didn't pull my punches. If he doesn't want to speak to me again, then that's just one of the hazards of the job. If you write an honest opinion on a wine or about a wine book, then that will be respected." Malcolm Gluck agreed wholeheartedly, even deriding his colleagues who form part of a special wine literary circle. "It is all a bit clubby ... It's not something I join in much although I'm a member. It leads to critical blandness." Rose was more mollifying and ventured, "I think we should thank the likes of Hugh Johnson, Oz Clarke and Jancis Robinson for raising the profile of wine criticism generally and giving more people the opportunity to write about wine in publications, getting away from its elitist nature." The famous American wine critic Robert Parker has suggested that UK wine critics aren't as independent as they might be, although Robinson thought this was more true in the past, when those who traded wine also wrote about it. Some feel Parker has gone too far, however, in endorsing a book that libeled a well-known French wine critic and wrongly accused the commentator of working for certain producers. Even if the independence of critics is now more robust, there does seem to be too much opportunity for manipulating the coverage of writing by large retailers and brand owners. Robinson agreed that wine commentating could be improved "if critics got out and about a bit more, rather than relying on being spoon-fed by the rather mundane press tastings put on by the multiple retailers." When I tried to push her to name names, she rebuffed me before I had even finished asking the question. She confirmed, though, that her newspaper editors have never put any pressure on her to write about any specific wines. The degree to which journalists were being "spoon-fed by the wine trade" was a point I put to Rose. "1 can't speak for other critics but only myself. I go to many vineyards around the world, trade and press tastings, and tasting put on by importers and producers. It's really up to each critic to get out and about as much as possible in order to sift through the hype. The customer isn't stupid. They can soon see if a critic is in the pay of the wine trade. Certainly there are trips offered by individual producers, which puts pressure on the writer to write about those individuals, but I don't go on those." David Moore agreed, "The perception of independence is important." The problem for the critics, as Moore sees them, stem from the tastes of consumer. "Newspaper columns are becoming a reflection of what is happening in the retail market. As a nation, we're not interested in wine the way they are in the United States, France and Italy, and that's reflected in what people are reading about." However, that's not the perception one would have while reading his book, Wine Behind the Label, and Moore confirms that the USA is now a much more important market than the domestic UK market. Even worse, he didn't feel that the UK market is well served. "Too big retailers and too big brand," he said. "It's a shame we don't hear more about what is on offer from specialist retailers, which is partly their fault. The scope for the consumer is pretty poor in terms of what is available for them to drink. A lot of smaller good producers are struggling, and they're not written about, and they're not available in the UK." There is a sense that some critics are unable to write about wines that interests them -- that they are being manipulated by the wine trade -- but at least they're all working hard and enjoying a great lifestyle. This lifestyle perception is not as real as one might think. "There are undoubtedly one or two people at the top," said Rose, "such as Robert Parker, Hugh Johnson, Jancis Robinson and Oz Clarke, who are making a reasonable living from wine because they're popular, they're good and they've successfully branded themselves. Most of the rest of us are in another group that manages to get by. And then there are other people who dabble, who need to supplement their income or they have another job, but they are doing something they love doing." We are back to where we started, and I put the question referring to their colleagues another way: who is the worst king of critic, and what can be done about it? "1 think we're our own worst critics," offered Rose. "We mostly come to wine writing because we love wine, not because we're writers. There are a couple who can write very well, but most of us are just struggling along, doing our best to get our enthusiasm and passion across to our readers." Gluck was more forthright, "It is the person who takes no account of his or her readership and simply parades toffee- nosed views about how much you should spend, implying the more you spend, the better the value -- which is absolute rubbish." According to Robinson, "We should go out and try a bit harder with inspiration for our stories and be more original." But these domestic issues should not be the only concerns for critics -- or, indeed, for consumers. In pensive mood, Rose said, "The world wine glut is posing a severe strain on the social fabric of the wine trade, particularly in France. It is sad that this is happening, and I hope we will begin to see supply and demand achieve more of a balance to eradicate those social and economic problems." Gluck's words were more chilling. "I've always tried to give people confidence to make judgments using their own palate," he said. "I believe that wine critics will eventually write themselves out of existence. Columns are becoming less and less read and less and less relevant, because people are more confident about their purchases, up to a certain price point." Could he be right?
填空题
填空题Whatdidthespeakertalkaboutlasttime?
填空题 Note:Answer each question by choosing A,B,C or D and mark
it on {{B}}ANSWER SHEET 1.{{/B}}Some choices may be required more than once.
{{B}}A=Washington D.C. B= New York City
C=Chicago D=Los Angeles Which city…{{/B}}
·is the headquarter of the Supreme Court?
71.______ ·was discovered as early as 1524?
72.______
·has served as the capital of the country?
73.______ ·is now the largest industrial city in the country?
74.______ ·leads the country in the manufacture of
aircraft and spare parts? 75.______ ·is
the largest city?
76.______ ·is the
second largest city in population in U.S.A.?
77.______ ·has become one of
the world's busiest ports?
78.______
·covers an area of over 69 square miles?
79.______ ·is now considered the center of
industry,transportation,commerce and finance in the mid-west area?
80.______ A
Washington D.C. Washington,the capital of the United States,is
in Washington D.C. and is situated on the Potomac River between the two states
of Maryland and Virginia.The population of the city is about 800,000 and it
covers an area of over 69 square miles(including 8 square miles of water
surface).The section was named the District of Columbia after Christopher
Columbus,who discovered the continent.The city itself was named Washington after
George Washington,the first president of U.S.A. The building of
the city was accomplished in 1800 and since that year,it has served as the
capital of the country.Thomas Jefferson was the first president inaugurated
there.In the War of 1812,the Britain army seized the city.burning the White
House and many other buildings. Washington is the headquarters
of all the branches of the American federal system:Congress,the Supreme Court
and the Presidency. Apart from the government buildings,there
are also some other places of interest such as the Washington Monument,the
Lincoln Memorial,the Jefferson Memorial,the Literary of the Congress and
Mt.Vernon,home of George Washington. B New
York City New York City.located in New York State, is the
largest city and the chief port of the United States.The city of New York has a
population of over 7 million(1970)and Metropolitan,12 million.
The city with its good harbor was discovered as early as 1524,and it was
established by Dutch who named the city New Amsterdam.In 1664,the city was taken
by the English and it got the name New York as it bears now.During the American
Revolution in 1776,George Washington had his head-quarters for a time in New
York City.The Declaration of Independence was first read there in July
4th,1776.The city remained the nation's capital until 1790. New
York became an important port early in the last century.A large portion of the
national exports passed through New York Harbor.New York has become one of the
world's busiest ports and also the financial,manufacturing,and travel center of
the country.Some of the places of interest in the city are:the State of
Liberty(152 meters high)which was given by the French people to the American
people as a gift in 1877.It was erected on Liberty Island in the middle of New
York Harbor.Broadway.Wall Street and Fifth Avenue are a few of New York's most
famous streets.Wall Street,where many famous banks are centered,is the financial
center of America and has become a symbol of the American monopoly
capitalism.Fifth Avenue is the street with famous stores and shops.Time Square
is in the center of New York City,at Broadway and 42nd Street.Greenwich Village
is an art center.Many American artists and writers have lived and worked
there.The group of the third largest city buildings of the United Nations stands
along the East River at the end of the 42nd Street.
C Chicago Chicago,the second largest
city in population in me United States,lies on the southwestern shore of the
Lake Michigan at a point where the Chicago River enters the lake.
The city is now the largest industrial city in the country Both heavy and
light industries are highly developed, particularly the former. Black
metallurgical industry and meat processing are assumed to be the head in the
U.S..It is now considered the center of industry,transportation,commerce and
finance in the mid-west area. The working class in Chicago has
a glorious revolutionary tradition.On May 1st,1886,thousands upon thousands of
workers in the city and the country went on strike for the eight-hour workday
and succeeded.Since 1890, May 1st has been observed every year as an
International Labor Day. On March 8th,1909,women workers in
Chicago held a big strike for freedom and equal rights with men and since
1910,March 8th has been celebrated each year as an International Working Women's
Day. D Los Angeles Los
Angeles is situated near the Pacific coast in California.It is an important
center of shipping.industry and communication. The city was
first founded by a Spanish explorer in 1542 and turned over to the US in 1846.
The city leads the country in the manufacture of aircraft and
spare parts and the area has become all aviation center.California is a leading
state in the production of electronic products and the area of Los Angeles has
grown into an important electronic center. Since the first
American movie was made in Los Angeles in 1908,the city has remained the film
center of the United States.Hollywood,the base of the film industry in the
city,is a world famous film producing center.
填空题
填空题·has a large red gate with a significant bronze lion which marks the entrance to the ground?
填空题
填空题 You'll hear a talk on how to make oral presentations. As
you listen,you must answer Questions 21~30 by writing NO MORE THAN THREE words
in the space provided for you. You'll hear the conversation TWICE.
填空题{{B}} Which article…{{/B}}
{{B}}A{{/B}} The Government is going to give new "job
splitting" grants lo 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 full-time 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 pm-time 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 these 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 docs not reduce
unemployment?
80. ______