填空题When people are not allowed to dream during sleep, they become _____.
填空题The iPad
1. The iPad is a tablet computer (平板电脑) designed and developed by Apple. It is particularly marketed as a platform for audio and visual media such as books, periodicals (期刊), movies, music, and games, as well as web content. At about 1.5 pounds (680 grams), its size and weight are between those of most contemporary smartphones and laptop computers. Apple released the iPad in April 2010, and sold 3 million of the devices in 80 days.
2. The iPad runs the same operating system as iPod Touch and iPhone. It can run its own applications as well as ones developed for iPhone. Without modification, it will only run programs approved by Apple and distributed via its online store.
3. Like iPhone and iPod Touch, the iPad is controlled by a multitouch display—a break from most previous tablet computers, which uses a pressure-triggered stylus (触控笔). The iPad uses a Wi-Fi data connection to browse (浏览) the Internet, load and stream media, and install software. Some models also have a 3G wireless data connection which can connect to GSM 3G data networks. The device is managed and synchronized (同步) by iTunes on a personal computer via USB cable.
4. An iPad has different features and applications one can use to execute different and interesting things. There are lots of iPad applications that the owner can use to enhance the way they communicate. Some of these are how to use social networking sites and other online options. One of the most common uses is for e-mail services, iPad applications like Markdown Mail allow the adoption of specific and particular options. They enable the owner to personalize their email accounts.
5. While the iPad is mostly used by consumers it also has been taken up by business users. Some companies are adopting iPads in their business offices by distributing or making available iPads to employees. Examples of uses in the workplace include lawyers responding to clients, medical professionals accessing health records during patient exams, and managers approving employee requests. A survey by Frost and Sullivan shows that iPad usage in workplaces is linked to the goals of increased employee productivity, reduced paperwork, and increased revenue.
填空题
下面的短文后有2项测试任务:(1)第23~26题要求从所给的6个选项中为第3~6段每段选择1个最佳标题:(2)第27~30题要求从所给的6个选项中为每个句子确定1个最佳选项。
Face Masks May not Protect from
Super-flu If a super-flu strikes, face masks may
not protect you. Whether widespread use of masks will help, or harm, during the
next worldwide flu outbreak is a question that researchers are studying
furiously. No results have come from their mask research yet. However, the
government says people should consider wearing them in certain situations
anyway, just in case. But it's a question the public keeps
asking while the government are making preparations for the next flu pandemic.
So the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) came up with preliminary
guidelines. "We don't want people wearing them everywhere, " said the CDC. "The
overall recommendation really is to avoid exposure. " When
that's not possible, the guidelines say to consider wearing a simple surgical
mask if you are in one of the three following situations. First, you're healthy
and can't avoid going to a crowded place. Second, you're sick and think you may
have close contract with the healthy, such as a family member checking on you.
Third, you live with someone who's sick and thus might be in the early stages of
infection, but still need to go out. Influenza (流行性感冒) pandemics
(全国流行的) can strike (打击) when the easy-to-mutate flu virus shifts to a strain
that people never have experience D. Scientists cannot predict when the next
pandemic will arrive, although concern is rising that the Asian bird flu might
trigger one if it starts spreading easily from person to person.
During the flu pandemic, you should protect yourself. Avoid crowds, and
avoid close contract with the sick unless you must care for someone. Why can't
mask added to this self-protection list? Because they help trap virus-laden
droplets flying through the air with a cough or sneeze (打喷嚏). Simple surgical
masks only filter the larger droplets (小滴). Besides, the CDC is afraid? masks
may create a false sense of security. Perhaps someone who should have stayed
home would don an ill-fitting (不合的) mask and hop on the subway
instead. Nor does flu only spread through the air. Say someone
covers a sneeze with his or her hand, then touches a doorknob or subway pole. If
you touch that spot next and then put germy hands on your nose or mouth, you've
been exposed. It's harder to rub your nose while wearing a mask and so your face
may get pretty sweaty under masks. You reach under to wipe that sweat, and may
transfer germs caught on the outside of the mask straight to the nose. These are
the problems face masks may create for their users. Whether
people should or should not use face masks still remains a question. The general
public has to wait patiently for the results of the mask research scientists are
still doing.
A. Reasons for Excluding Masks from the Self-protection
List B. Effort to Stop Flu Spreading C. When to
Use Face Masks D. Guidelines on Mask Use E.
Warnings from the CDC F. Danger of Infection through Germy Hands
and Masks
填空题The Value of Motherhood
In shopping malls, the assistants try to push you into buying "a gift to thank her for her unselfish love". When you log onto website, a small pop-up invites you to book a bouquet for her. Commercial warmth and gratitude are the atmosphere being spread around for this special Sunday in May.
1
The popularity of Mother"s Day around the world suggests that Jarvis got all she wanted. In fact, she got more--enough to make her horrified.
2
They buy, among other things, 132 million cards. Mother"s Day is the No. 1 holiday for flower purchases. Then there are the various commodities, ranging from jewelry and clothes to cosmetics and washing powder, that take advantage of the promotion opportunities. Because of this, Jarvis spent the last 40 years of her life trying to stop Mother"s Day. One protest against the commercialization Mother"s Day even got her arrested—for disturbing the peace, interestingly.
3
As Ralph Fevre, a reporter at the UK newspaper "The Guardian", observes, traditionally "motherhood is something that we do because we think it"s right." But in the logic of commercialism, people need something in exchange for their time and energy. A career serves this purpose better.
4
So they work hard and play hard. Becoming a mother, however, inevitably handicaps career anticipation.
5
According to "The Guardian" , there are twice as many child-free young women as there were a generation ago. Or, they put off the responsibility of parenting until later in their lives.
So, Fevre writes that the meaning of celebrating Mother"s Day needs to be updated: "It is to persuade people that parenting is a good idea and to honor people for their attempt to be good people. "
A. Commercial warmth and gratitude are the atmosphere being spread as early as 1905, by Anna Jarvis, as a way of recognizing the real value of motherhood.
B. But what"s more, commercialism changes young people"s attitude towards motherhood.
C. Obviously, the best girl will be a phone call or a visit.
D. According to a research by the US card company Hallmark, 96 percent of American consumers celebrate the holiday.
E. As a result, motherhood has suffered a huge drop in status since the 1950s.
F. In addition, women are being encouraged to pursue any career they desire.
填空题A will be constant B to absorb infrared radiation C is becoming the potential problem D prepare ourselves to be chemists, physicist E increasing capacity of the atmosphere to absorb infrared radiation F escape from the earth much more easily
填空题Today, Extreme Free Diving sinks to depths approaching 400 feet, sing weights to help them descend vertically into the big blue depths of cold and darkness that surround the earth. ______ Extreme Free Diving is truly a breathtaking sport. One day adding the word" Deeper" to the Olympic motto of" Swifter, Higher, Stronger" looks like a sure bet. The legendary Yorgos Haggi Statti would wipe water from his eyes, smile, and nod in approval.A. Free divers like Italian Umberto Pelizzari and Cuban Pipin Ferreras frequently break world records by diving without the use of wet suits, fins, or oxygen tanks.B. Extreme Free Diving has become very competitive and is exploding in popularity with "extreme" divers wherever athletes live near a sea.C. If accepted into the Olympics, EFD could make the Olympics' organizers think about adding a new Latin term into the motto that we could translate as "Deeper,"D. Most of us think of deep water diving as the use of snorkels (通气管), masks, and fins to help us dive down beneath the surface of the water.E. Scuba (水中呼吸器) divers wear wet suits made out of material to protect against the cold; they need oxygen and other equipment that enable them to safely breathe while traveling deep beneath the surface of the sea.F. But is it the ultimate underwater extreme sport for those who like to live on the edge?
填空题Geology and Health
1. The importance of particular metals in the human diet has been realized within the past few decades, and the idea that geology might be related to health has been recognized for a number of elements such as iodine, zinc and selenium. For example, soils with low iodine contents produce crops, and animals deficient in iodine. A lack of iodine in the human diet leads to some serious diseases.
2. The ultimate source of metals within the human body is rocks, which weather into soil, gaining or losing some of their chemical constituents. The crops we eat selectively remove from the soil the elements that they require for growth. The water we drink contains trace elements leached from rock and soil. Thus the geology and geochemistry of the environments have effects on the chemistry and health of plants, animals and people.
3. So far there is no data to suggest that people living on metal-rich soils experience a potential health hazard. The levels of metals within naturally contaminated soils are generally not high enough to cause serious health problems. Living on metal-rich soils does not represent a health risk unless large quantities of soil are digested or metal-rich dust is inhaled. However, small children are particularly exposed to metal-rich topsoil in playgrounds and gardens. They are also the most likely ones to eat potentially dangerous metal-rich soil.
4. Heavy metals are persistent: they do not break down to other chemicals in the environment. Industrially polluted sites usually undergo intensive clean-up and rehabilitation because heavy metals are a health concern once they enter the food chain. Some trace metals are alleged to cause cancer and are also known to cause poisoning.
5. In contrast, naturally contaminated soils have not been subject to risk assessment studies and re- habilitation measures, despite the fact that they frequently possess metal concentrations well above those of such polluted by humans and above environmental quality criteria.
6. There is a vital need to understand the potential risks and long-term health effects of living on naturally contaminated soils. Future environmental investigations of naturally polluted soils should concentrate on the potential pathways of metals into the food chain and human body. Geologists should be part of such studies as they can provide the essential background information on rock and soil chemistry as well as the chemical forms of heavy metal pollution.
填空题
Keeping Cut Flowers 1. While
everybody enjoys fresh cut flowers around their house, few people know how to
keep them for as long as possible. This may be done by keeping in mind a few
simple facts. 2. An important thing to remember about cut
flowers is that they are sensitive to temperature. For example, studies have
shown that cut carnations(康乃馨) retain their freshness eight times longer when
kept at 12℃ than when kept at 26℃. Keeping freshly harvested flowers at the
right temperatures is probably the most important aspect of flower
care. 3. Flowers are not intended by nature to live very long.
Their biological purpose is simply to attract birds or insects, such as bees,
for pollination(授粉). After that, they quickly dry up and die. The process by
which flowers consume oxygen and produce carbon dioxide(二氧化碳), called
respiration(呼吸), generates the energy the flower needs to give the flower its
shape and color. The making of seeds also depends on this energy. While all
living things respire, flowers have a high level of respiration. A result of all
this respiration is heat, and for flowers the level of heat relative to the mass
of the flower is very high. Respiration also brings about the eventual death of
the flower. Thus the greater the level of respiration, the sooner the flower
dies. 4. How, then, to control the rate at which flowers die?
By controlling respiration. How is respiration controlled? By controlling
temperature. We know that respiration produces heat, but the reverse is also
true. Thus by maintaining low temperatures, respiration is reduced and the cut
flower will age more slowly. 5. Another vital factor in keeping
cut flowers is the quality of the water in which they are placed. Flowers find
it difficult to "drink" water that is dirty or otherwise polluted. Even when
water looks and smells clean, it almost certainly contains harmful substances
that can endanger the flowers. To rid the water of these unwanted substances,
household chlorine bleach(含氯漂白剂) can be used in small quantities. It is
recommended that 15 drops of chlorine bleach (at 4% solution) be added to each
litre of water. The water and solution should also be replaced each day.
填空题下面的短文有5处空白,短文后有6个句子,其中5个取自短文,请根据短文内容将其分别放回原有位置,以恢复文章原貌。
The Value of Motherhood
In shopping malls, the assistants try to push you into buying "a gift to
thank her for her unselfish love". When you log onto(登录到])website, a small
pop-up(弹出式菜单) invites you to book a bouquet(花束) for her. {{U}}(46)
{{/U}} The American version of Mother's Day was thought up
as early as 1905, by Anna Jarvis, as a way of recognizing the real value of
motherhood. The popularity of Mother's Day around the world suggests that Jarvis
got all she wanted. In fact, she got more -- enough to make her
horrified. {{U}} (47) {{/U}} They buy, among other
things, 132 million cards. Mother's Day is the No. 1 holiday for flower
purchases. Then there are the various commodities, ranging from jewelry and
clothes to cosmetics and washing powder, that take advantage of the promotion
opportunities. Because of this, Jarvis spent the last 40 years of her life
trying to stop Mother's Day. One protest against the commercialization(商品化)
Mother's Day even got her arrested for disturbing the peace,
interestingly. {{U}} (48) {{/U}} As Ralph Fevre, a
reporter at the UK newspaper The Guardian, observes, traditionally "motherhood
is something that we do because we think it's right. " But in the logic of
commercialism, people need something in exchange for their time and energy. A
career serves this purpose better. In addition, women are being
encouraged to pursue any career they desire. So they work hard and play hard.
{{U}}(49) {{/U}} {{U}} (50) {{/U}} According to
The Guardian, there are twice as many child-free young women as there were a
generation ago. Or, they put off the responsibility of parenting until later in
their lives. So, Fevre writes that the meaning of celebrating
Mother's Day needs to be updated : "It is to persuade people that parenting is a
good idea and to honor people for their attempt to be good people."
A. Commercial warmth and gratitude are the atmosphere being spread around
for this special Sunday in May. B. But what's more,
commercialism changes young people's attitude towards motherhood.
C. Obviously, the best girl will be a phone call or a visit.
D. According to a research by the US card company Hallmark, 96 percent of
American consumers celebrate the holiday. E. As a result,
motherhood has suffered a huge drop in status since the 1950s.
F. Becoming a mother, however, inevitably handicaps career
anticipation.
填空题Teach Your Child Science
1 It is important to make your child interested in science from an early age. Most young children ask a lot of questions and you should give careful scientific answers. Don"t only give facts, but try to give explanations as well.
2 Science is not just knowledge; it is a way of thinking, a method of finding out about the world. We see something. We try to explain it, and we test our idea by setting up an experiment. One day you come home and find the plant on the table has fallen over. You think it might be the wind from the open window or the cat, so you close the window, but leave the cat in and see what happens (You can also try leaving the window open and shutting the cat out). Of course, you remember there may be a third explanation.
3 Ask your child to get a piece of string, some salt, a glass of water and an ice cube (冰块). Tell her to put the ice in the water, and then put one end of the string on the ice, leaving the other end over the side of the glass. Put a little salt on the ice. Wait a minute, and then pull the string; it should be attached to the ice. Ask the child: "What has happened?"
4 Probably she won"t know. Ask her whether fresh water or salt water freezes into ice first. If you live near the sea and have a cold winter, she should know fresh water freezes first as she will have seen that happen. Show her how to test the idea by half-filling two paper cups with water, adding salt to one. Then put them in the icebox and check every three minutes. Write the results in a table. The conclusion will be that salt changes the behaviour of water. Thinking about the string, we see the salt turned some of the ice into water. Then the salt went away into the water and the ice froze again leaving the string attached.
5 Then you can ask, "Will water with salt boil at the same temperature as water without salt?" She can think, tell you her idea and (taking care because of the heat) you can test it in the kitchen.
填空题It is believed that the widespread use of the "grid" will become possible in the next ______.
填空题A Different opinion in Britain B The lie detectors are misleadingly attractive C The recognition of a method D The example of using lie detectors E The principle to find a person's guilt F The problem of using lie detectors
填空题阅读下面这篇短文,短文后有2项测试任务:(1)第23~26题要求从所给的6个选项中为规定段每段选择1个正确的小标题;(2)第27~30题要求从所给的6个选项中选择4个正确选项,分别完成每个句子。
While a personal computer should continue to perform
predictably for years, veteran Windows users know all too well that system
instability is a fact of life. Yet you can minimize the glitches that you
experience with your computer by heeding the tips below.2. If
you run Windows 98 or Windows Millennium, your computer should have at least 128
megabytes (MB) of RAM--and more if you find that your hard drive is churning a
lot as you work with your applications. You can also get by with 128 MB of RAM
if you use Windows NT or Windows 2000, but these operating systems will run much
more smoothly if you have 256 MB of RAM or more.3. Beta
software, by its very nature, is pre-release software—meaning that it still has
significant known bugs (or defects). The same goes, unfortunately, for many
shareware programs. The authors of shareware programs, typically, have
much less time and fewer resources available for testing their programs.
Consequently, it' s far more common to find shareware software that is
buggy.4. No-name hardwares may be cheaper and sometimes just
as good as name-brand products, but name-brand products usually became
well-known because of their reliability. It's also wise to buy products from
reputable companies because Windows will more often support the hardware that
you purchase. If you are starting out with computers, it's also a good idea to
buy ready-made systems from major manufacturers. These are likely to have tested
thoroughly with your operating system, and you will generally experience fewer
problems.5. No matter how well your system runs when you get
it, the day will come when it will need to be replaced. Hopefully, you will
replace it because the technology has become outdated, but you may need to
replace it also because the hard drive crashes or you begin experiencing
problems that no one can figure out. That's why it's important to back up your
important files regularly. Whether you use a tape backup device or a CD-RW
drive, it's important to map out a regular backup schedule and to stick to
it.
填空题Conservation or Wasted Effort? The black robin (旅鸫) is one of the world's rarest birds. It is a small, wild bird, and it lives only on the island of Little Mangere, off the coast of New Zealand. In 1967 there were about fifty black robins there; in 1977 there were fewer than ten. (46) Energetic steps are being taken to preserve the black robin. (47) The idea is to buy another island nearby as a special home, a "reserve", for threatened wild life, including black robins. The organizers say that Little Mangere should then be restocked (重新准备) with the robin's food. Thousands of the required plants are at present being cultivated in New Zealand. Is all this concern a waste of human effort? (48) Are we losing our sense of what is reasonable and what is unreasonable? In the earth's long, long past hundreds of kinds of creatures have evolved, risen to a degree of success and died out. In the long, long future there will be many new and different forms of life. Those creatures that adapt themselves successfully to what the earth offers will survive for a long time. (49) This is nature's proven method of operation. The rule of selection—"the survival of the fittest"—is the one by which human beings have themselves arrived on the scene. We, being one of the most adaptable creatures the earth has yet produced, may last longer than most, (50) You may take it as another rule that when, at last, human beings show signs of dying out, no other creature will extend a paw (爪) to postpone our departure. On the contrary, we will be hurried out. Life seems to have grown too tough for black robins. I leave you to judge whether we should try to do anything about it.A. Some creatures, certain small animals, insects and birds, will almost certainly outlast (比……长久)man, for they seem even more adaptable.B. Those that fail to meet the challenges will disappear early.C. Detailed studies are going on, and a public appeal for money has been made.D. Both represent orders in the classification of life.E. Is it any business of ours whether the black robin survives or dies out?F. These are the only black robins left in the worl
填空题A. find the topic sentences B. find out the new words C. keep reading fast D. go to bed every day E. keep a note of their reading speed F. look at your watch every few minutes
填空题The Price of Idleness1.Electrical devices such as CD players, vidoes and burglar alarms are consuming more energy in standby mode than when they are actually being used.2.Maria Sanchez and her colleagues from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Berkeley, California, tested more than 50 small electrical applicances, from computers to doorbells, electric mowers, VCRs, and pool pumps. In the current issue of Energy Policy, they report that about half of all consumer electronics energy is used in standby mode. This costs American consumers $1 billion a year in wasted energy.3.The researchers say that while electronic devices are lying dormant(休眠状态),running their clocks, maintaining internal memories or displaying their settings, they consume aroud 40 terawatt hours of electricity in the U.S. every year--enough to power a city such as Chicago or London. Many machines use almost as much power on standby as when working. For example, it takes 15 watts to play a typical CD, but an average of 11 watts to keep it on standby. Satellite TV systems use 14 watts when active and 14 watts on standby. Given the long hours these systems spend idling, each uses far more power in standby mode than when actually working.4."Bad design is largely to blame," says Sanchez. In a separate survey of CD players last year, her colleague Wolfgang Huber found that two machines with similar features used 28 watts and 2 watts respectively on standby. "For most products, we believe that standby power can be reduced to one watt or less," says Sanchez.5.She backs proposals to set up a national labeling system to promote machines that meet this standard. Such a system could reduce standby power consumption in the U.S. by 50 per cent, says coauthor Alan Meier--more than 20 terawatt hours per year. Last month, electronics company Philips announced the launch of a device that can dramatically reduce the power used in standby mode.
填空题X-rays and gamma rays can be used to detect and treat cancer ______.
填空题 阅读下面的短文,文章中有5处空白,文章后面有6组文字,请根据文章的内容选择
5组文字,将其分别放回文章原有位置,以恢复文章原貌。
{{B}}Should the U.S. halt human space flight?{{/B}}
The Columbia accident has revived the debate on whether the
rewards of
human space exploration are worth the
risks. No. I was a teacher when men first landed on the moon in
1969, and I remember how it moved my students and this country.{{U}} (46)
{{/U}}And we haven't ventured outward since then. That's 30 years too long!
America's human space-flight program is adrift, with no clear vision or goals
beyond the completion of the International Space Station. I want
NASA to establish a phased series of goals over the next 20 years, including
human visits to asteroids that cross the Earth's orbit, establishing a research
and living facility for humans on the moon, and human expeditions to the surface
of Mars and its moons.{{U}} (47) {{/U}}. An astronaut is
today's Christopher Columbus, who sailed into the unknown and discovered the
Americas. The knowledge we gain from having actual people exploring can never be
replaced by robots.{{U}} (48) {{/U}}Robots are useful, but humans can do
things that robots can't. The real obstacle we face in
overcoming the drift in the nation's human space-flight program is not
technological and it's not financial.{{U}} (49) {{/U}}.
The lesson from the Columbia accident is not that humans don't belong in
space. {{U}}(50) {{/U}}.A Instead, we should honor the memory
of the lost astronauts by pushing our exploration of space future.B
Astronauts are key to this expanded exploration.C It's the lack
of commitment to get started.D Until then, we should stop risking
people's lives by sending them into space.E It is now more than 30
years since the last American left the surface of the moon and returned to
Earth.F Our ability to send humans into space and have them return
gives us amazing information about ourselves and our universe.
填空题
阅读下面的短文,文章中有5处空白,文章后有6组文字,请根据文章的内容选择5组文字,将其分别放回文章原有位置,以恢复文章原貌。
{{B}}The Joy of Living
Alone{{/B}} More and more Americans are living alone. Some live
alone because of divorce or the death of a partner.{{U}} (1)
{{/U}}According to a recent US census (人口普查), 25 percent of all households
in the US are made up of just one person. This is a dramatic change from the
extended families of just a couple of generations ago. The
typical person living alone is neither old nor lonely.{{U}} (2)
{{/U}}The majority of these people have chosen to live alone. They are
responding to decreasing social pressure to get married and have a
family. It's now socially acceptable, even fashionable, to live
alone. As people get better jobs and become financially independent, it becomes
possible for them to maintain a one-person household.{{U}} (3)
{{/U}}However, people who do get married are marrying at.a later age and
divorcing more often. The number one reason given by most
people for living alone is that they simply enjoy doing what they want when they
want to do it. "Living alone is a luxury,"says Nina Hagiwara, "Once you do it,
you can't ever go back to living with others." David C. Debaca, agrees.{{U}}
(4) {{/U}}Children think that being grown up means being able to do
exactly as they please.{{U}} (5) {{/U}}The chance to discover whether
that freedom is as wonderful as it sounds is a chance more and more Americans
are taking. A. There's more pressure to get married
nowadays. B. The growing number of women with good jobs has done
much to increase the number of people living alone. C. However,
even more people are living alone because they have chosen to.
D. It seems that many grown-ups today are realizing that childhood
dream. E. In fact, a quarter of the 23 million single people in
the US are under the age of 35. F. He says, "I like being by
myself."
填空题Memory Test 1."I am going to give you five techniques that will enable you to remember anything you need to know at school," promised lecturer lan Robinson to a hundred schoolchildren. He slapped his hand down on the table. "When I've finished in two hours' time, your work will be far more effective and productive. Anyone not interested, leave now. " The entire room sat still. 2.Robinson calls himself the Mind Magician (魔术师). He specializes in doing magic tricks that look totally impossible, and then he reveals that they involve nothing more mysterious than good old-fashioned trickery (骗术). "I have always been interested in tricks involving memory-being able to reel off (一口气说出) the order of cards in a pack, that sort of thing," he explains. 3.Robinson was already lecturing to schools on his magic techniques when it struck him that students might find memory techniques even more valuable. "It wasn't a difficult area to move into, as the stuff's all there in books. " So he summarized everything to make a two-hour lecture about five techniques. 4."You want to learn a list of a hundred things? A thousand No problem," says Robinson. The scandal is that every child is not taught the techniques from the beginning of their school life. The schoolchildren who were watching him thought it was brilliant. "I wish I'd been told this earlier," commented Mark, after Robinson had shown them how to construct "mental journeys". 5.Essentially, you visualize (想象) a walk down a street, or a trip round a room, and pick the points where you will put the things you want to remember—the lamppost, the fruit bowl. Then in each location you put a visual representation of your list—phrasal verbs, historical dates, whatever—making them as strange as possible. It is that simple, and it works. 6.The reaction of schools has been uniformly enthusiastic. "The pupils benefited enormously from lan's presentation," says Dr. Johnston, head of the school where Robinson was speaking. "Ideally we should run a regular class in memory techniques so pupils can pick it up gradually. /
