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41)__________. In today's prosperous societies the distinction
has become blurred because so many wants have been turned into needs. A writer,
for instance, can work with paper and pencils. These are legitimate needs for
the task. But the work can be done more quickly and efficiently with a word
processor. Thus a computer is soon viewed as a need rather than a
want. 42) __________. The two main categories are convenience
goods and shopping goods. Two lesser types are specialty goods and unsought
goods. It must be emphasized that all of these types are based on the way
shoppers think about products, not on the nature of the products themselves.
What is regarded as a convenience item in France(wine, for example)may be a
specialty goods in the United States. People do not spend a
great deal of time shopping for such convenience items as groceries, newspapers,
toothpaste, razor blades, aspirin, and candy. The buying of convenience goods
may be done routinely, as some families buy groceries once a week. Such
regularly purchased items are called staples. Sometimes convenience products are
bought on impulse: someone has a sudden desire for an ice cream sundae on a hot
day. 43) __________. Shopping goods are items for which
customers search. They compare prices, quality, and styles, and may visit a
number of stores before making a decision. 44) __________.
Shopping goods fall into two classes: those that are perceived as
basically the same and those that are regarded as different. Items that are
looked upon as basically the same include such things as home appliances,
television sets, and automobiles. Having decided on the model desired, the
customer is primarily interested in getting the item at the most favorable
price. Items regarded as inherently different include clothing, furniture, and
dishes. Quality, style, and fashion will either take precedence over price, or
they will not matter at all. Specialty goods have
characteristics that impel customers to make special efforts to find them. Price
may be no consideration at all. Specialty goods can include almost any kind of
product. Normally, specialty goods have a brand name or other distinguishing
characteristics. Unsought goods are items a consumer does not
necessarily want or need or may not even know about. Promotion or advertising
brings such goods to the consumer's attention. 45) __________.[A] In the
field of marketing, consumer goods are classed according to the way in which
they are purchased.[B] Or they may be purchased as emergency items.[C]
What it really does is give unprecedented insight into the consumer mind. And it
will actually result in higher product sales.[D] The product could be
something new on the market as the Sony Walkman once was or it may be a fairly
standard service, such as life insurance, for which most people will usually not
bother shopping.[E] Buying an automobile is often done this way.[F] The
traditional distinction between products that satisfy needs and those that
satisfy wants is no longer adequate to describe classes of products.[G]
These proprietary annual surveys address shopping frequency, store preference,
shopper profiles, purchase patterns and drivers of shopping behavior.
填空题One morning, a few years ago, Harvard President Nell Rudenstine overslept. 41) ____________________________________ __. Only after a three - month sabbatical--during which he read essayist Lewis Thomas, listened to Ravel and walked with his wife on a Caribbean beach--was he able to return to his post. That week, his picture was on the cover of Newsweek magazine beside the banner head line "Exhausted !" In the relentless busyness of modem life, we have lost the rhythm between action and rest. I speak with people in business and education, doctors and day - care workers, shopkeepers and social workers, parents and teachers, nurses and lawyers, students and therapists, community activist and cooks. Remarkably, there is a universal refrain," I am so busy". The more our life speeds up, the more we feel weary, overwhelmed and lost. 42) ______________________________________.Instead, the whole experience of being alive begins to melt into one enormous obligation. It becomes the standard greeting everywhere, "I am so busy." We say this to one another with no small degree of pride. The busier we are, the more important we seem to ourselves and, we imagine, to others. To be unavailable to our friends and family, to be unable to find time for the sunset ( or even to know that the sun has set at all), to whiz through our obligations without time for a single mindful breath--this has become the model of a successful life. Because we do not rest, we lose our way. We lose the nourishment that gives us succor. We miss the quiet that gives us wisdom. Poisoned by the hypnotic belief that good things come only through tireless effort, we never truly rest. This is not the world we dreamed of when we were young. How did we get so terribly rushed in a world saturated with work and responsibility, yet somehow bereft of joy and delight? We have forgotten the Sabbath. 43) ______________________________________.It is time to be nourished and refreshed as we let our work, our chores and our important projects lie fallow, trusting that there are larger forces at work taking care of the world when we are at rest. If certain plant species do not lie dormant during winter, the plant begins to die off. 44) ____________________________________ __. So "Remember the Sabbath" is more than simply a lifestyle suggestion. It is a commandment, an ethical precept as serious as prohibitions against killing, stealing, and lying. Sabbath is more than the absence of work. Many of us, in our desperate drive to be successful and care for our many responsibilities, feel terrible guilt when we take time to rest. But the Sabbath has proven its wisdom over the ages. Many of us still recall when not long ago, shops and offices where closed on Sundays. Those quiet Sunday afternoons are embedded in our cultural memory. Much of modem life is specifically designed to seduce our attention away from rest. When we are in the world with our eyes wide open, the Seductions are insatiable. 45) ______________________________________.For those of us with children, there are endless soccer practices, baseball games, homework, laundry, housecleaning, errands. Every responsibility, every stimulus competes for Our attention: Buy me . Do me. Watch me. Try me. Drink me. It is as if we have inadvertently stumbled into some horrific wonderland. A. Rest is not just a psychological convenience; it is a biological necessity. B. After 'years of non - stop toil in an atmosphere that rewarded frantic overwork, Rudenstine collapsed. C. Hundreds of channels of cable and satellite television; phones with multiple lines and call - waiting, begging us to talk to more than one person at a time; mail, e - mail and overnight mail, fax machines; billboards; magazines; newspapers; radio. D. Sometimes you can have a rest on Sundays. But your heart and soul is no longer quiet. E. Sabbath is the time that consecrated to enjoy and celebrate what is beautiful and good-time to light candles, sing songs, worship, tell stories, bless our children and loved ones, give thanks, share meals, nap, walk and even make love. F. Once upon a time. Sabbath is our heaven. We often walk in the green parks with friends or have a picnic lunch with the family. Listening to. the birds on the tree makes me feel peaceful. But whatever happened to sunday now? G. Today our life and work rarely feel light, pleasant, or healing.
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填空题At picnics, ants are pests. But they have their uses. In industries such as mining, farming and forestry, they can help gauge the health of the environment by just crawling around and being antsy. It has been recognized for decades that ants--which are highly sensitive to ecological change—can provide a near-percent barometer of the state of an ecosystem. Only certain species, for instance, will continue to thrive at a forest site that has been cleared of trees. (41) And still others will move in and take up residence. By looking at which species populate a deforested area, scientists can determine how "stressed" the land is. (42) Ants are used simply because the>; are so common and comprise so many species. Where mine sites are being restored, for example, some ant species will recolonize the stripped land more quickly than others. (43) Australian mining company Capricorn Coal Management has been successfully using ant surveys for years to determine the rate of recovery of land that it is replanting near its German Creek mine in Queensland. Ant surveys also have been used with mine-site recovery projects in Africa and Brazil, where warm climates encourage dense and diverse ant populations. "We found it worked extremely well there,' says Jonathan Majer, a professor of environmental biology. Yet the surveys are perfectly suited to climates throughout Asia, he says, because ants are so common throughout the region. As Majer puts it. "That's the great thing about ants.' Ant surveys are so highly-regarded as ecological indicators that governments worldwide accept their results when assessing the environmental impact of mining and tree harvesting. (44) . Why not? Because many companies can't afford the expense or the laboratory time needed to sift results for a comprehensive survey. The cost stems, also, from the scarcity of ant specialists. (45) .[A] This allowed scientists to gauge the pace and progress of the ecological recovery.[B] Yet in other businesses, such as farming and property development, ant surveys aren't used widely.[C] Employing those people are expensive.[D] They do this by sorting the ants, counting their numbers and comparing the results with those of earlier surveys.[E] The evolution of ant species may have a strong impact on our ecosystem.[F] Others will die out for lack of food.'[G] Gretaceous ants shared a couple of wasp-like traits together with modern ant-like characteristics.
填空题Science develops through objective analysis, instead of through personal belief. Knowledge gained in science accumulates as time goes by, building on work performed earlier. Some of this knowledge-such as our understanding of numbers-stretches back' to the time of ancient civilizations, when scientific thought first began. Other scientific knowledge such as our understanding of genes that cause cancer or of quarks (the smallest known building block of matter) -dates back less than 50 years. However, in all fields of science, old or new, researchers use the same systematic approach, known as the scientific method, to add to what is known. 41__________. For example, in 1676, the English physicist Robert Hooke discovered that elastic objects, such as metal springs, stretch in proportion to the force that acts on them. Despite all the advances that have been made in physics since 1676, this simple law Still holds true. 42__________. Sometimes scientific predictions go much further by describing objects or events that are not yet known. An outstanding instance occurred in 1869, when the Russian chemist Dmitry Mendeleyev drew up a periodic table of the elements arranged to illustrate patterns of recurring chemical and physical properties. 43__________. At the time, most geologists discounted Wegener's ideas, because the Earth's crust seemed to be fixed. But following the discovery of plate tectonics in the 1960s, in which scientists found that the Earth's crust is actually made of moving plates, continental drift became an important part of geology. Through advances like these, scientific knowledge is constantly added to and refined. As a result, science gives us an ever more detailed insight into the way the world around us works. 44__________. However, with the dawn of the Industrial Revolution in the 18th century, this rapidly changed. Today, science has a profound effect on the way we live, largely through technology--the use. of scientific knowledge for practical 45__________. The refrigerator, for example, owes its existence to a discovery that liquids take in energy when they evaporate, a phenomenon known as latent heat.A. Scientists utilize existing knowledge in new scientific investigations to predict how things will behave. For example, a scientist who knows the exact dimensions of a lens can predict how the lens will focus a beam of light. In the same way, by knowing the exact makeup and properties of two chemicals, a researcher can predict what will happen when they combine.B. For a large part of recorded history, science had little bearing on people's everyday lives. Scientific knowledge was gathered for it sown sake, and it had few practical applications.C. During scientific investigations, scientists put together and compare new discoveries and existing knowledge. In most cases, new discoveries extend what is currently accepted, providing further evidence that existing ideas are correct.D. Tile principle of latent heat was first exploited in a practical way in 1876, and the refrigerator has played a major role in maintaining public health ever since. Tile first automobile, dating from the 1880s, made use of many advances in physics and engineering, including reliable ways of generating high-voltage sparks, while the first computers emerged in the 1940s from simultaneous advances in electronics and mathematics.E. Some forms of technology have become so well established that it is easy to forget the great scientific achievements that they represent.F. In science, important advances can also be made when current ideas are shown to be wrong. A classic case of this occurred early in the 20th century, when the German geologist Alfred Wegener suggested that the continents were at one time connected, a theory known as continental drift.G. Other fields of science also play an important role in the things we use or consume every day. Research in food technology has created new ways of preserving and flavoring what we eat.
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填空题(1) The maple smoke of autumn bonfires is incense to Canadians. Bestowing perfume for the nose, color for the eye, sweetness for the spring tongue, the sugar maple prompts this sharing of a favorite myth and original etymology of the word maple. (2) The maple looms large in Ojibwa folk tales. The time of year for sugaring-off is "in the Maple Moon." Among Ojibwa, the primordial female figure is Nokomis, a wise grandmother. (3) 41. ______________ (4) Knowing this was s pursuit to the death, Nokomis outsmarted the cold devils. She hid in a stand of maple trees, all red and orange and deep yellow. This maple grove grew beside a waterfall whose mist blurred the trees' outline. As they peered through the mist, slavering wendigos thought they saw a raging fire in which their prey was burning. (5) 42. ______________ (6) For their service in saving the earth mother's life, these maples were given a special gift: their water of life would be forever sweet, and Canadians would tap it for nourishment. (7) 43. ______________ (8) The contention that maple syrup is unique to North America is suspect, I believe. China has close to 10 species of maple, more than any country in the world. Canada has 10 native species. North America does happen to be home to the sugar maple, the species that produces the sweetest sap and the most abundant flow. (9) But are we to believe that in thousands of years of Chinese history, these inventive people never tapped a maple to taste its sap? I speculate that they did. (10) 44. ______________ (11) What is certain is the maple's holdfast on our national imagination. Is leaf was adopted as an emblem in New France as early as 1700, and in English Canada by the mid-19th century. In the fall of 1867, a Toronto schoolteacher named Alexander Muir was traipsing at street a the city, all squelchy underfoot from the soft felt of falling leaves, when a maple leaf alighted to his coat sleeve and stuck there. (12) The word "maple" is from "mapeltreow”, the Old English term for maple tree, with "mapl"--as its Proto-Germanic root, a compound in which the first "m" --is, I believe, the nearly worldwide "ma", one of the first human sounds, the pursing of a baby's lips as it prepares to suck milk from mother's breast. The "ma" root gives rise in many world languages to thousands of words like "mama", "mammary", "maia", and "Amazon." Here it would make "mapl-" mean "nourishing mother tree," that is, tree whose maple sap in nourishing. (13) 45. ______________[A] The second part of the compound, "apl-", is a variant of Indo-European able "fruit of any tree" and the origin of another English fruit word, apple. So the primitive analogy compares the liquid sap with another nourishing liquid, mother's milk.[B] In one tale about seasonal change, cannibal wendigos-creatures of evil-chased through the autumn countryside old Nokomis, who was a symbol for female fertility. Wendigos throve in icy cold. When they entered the bodies of humans, the human heart froze solid.[C] Here wendigos represent oncoming winter. They were hunting to kill and eat poor Nokomis, the warm embodiment of female fecundity who, like the summer, has grown old.[D] Could Proto-Americas who crossed the Bering land bridge to populate the Americas have brought with them a knowledge of maple syrup? Is there a very old Chinese phrase for maple syrup? Is maple syrup mentioned in Chinese literature? For a non-reader of Chinese, such questions are daunting but not impossible to answer.[E] Maple and its syrup flow sweetly into Canadian humor. Quebeckers have developed a special love for such a nutriment.[F] After it resisted several brushings-off, Muir joked to his walking companion that this would be "the maple leaf for ever!" At home that evening, he wrote a poem and set it to music, in celebration of Canada's Confederation. Muir's song, "The Maple Leaf Forever," was wildly popular and helped fasten the symbol firmly to Canada.[G] But it was only old Nokomis being hidden by the bright red leaves of her friends, the maples. And so, drooling ice and huffing frost, the wendigos left her and sought easier prey.
填空题[A]Manyofthepartnershipsactasvirtualpharmaceuticalcompanies,bringingtogetherexpertisefromfarafield.TheDrugsforNeglectedDiseasesinitiative,forexample,hasdrawntogetherbasicresearchfromacademicsinVenezuela,moleculesfromJapaneseandFrenchdrugmakers,clinicaltrialsinEthiopiaandmanufacturingbyBrazilianfirms.[B]However,itisnotjustpoorcountriesthataremissingout.Forexample,thereisanurgentneedfornewantibioticsinindustrialisedcountriesasdrag-resistantbacteriaemerge.Yetantibioticdevelopment—oncethecornerstoneofthedrugindustry—hasfallenoutoffavourwithBigPharmafirmsbecauseofscientifichurdlesandregulatoryrequirements.[C]Afewbigdrugmakers,suchasGSKandNovartis,whichinheritedaninterestintropicaldiseasefromtheirparentfirms,havechosentoinvestinatleastearly-stageR&Dinmalaria,tuberculosisanddengue,withaviewtopartneringlateron.Theyaremotivatedmainlybyphilanthropy,butalsowanttopolishtheirimageandhopetoselltotravellersandtoarisingmiddleclassindevelopingcountries.[D]Askabigdrug-companybosswhyheisinthebusinessofmakingpharmaceuticals,andhewillsayhewantsto"addressunmetmedicalneeds".Butnotallmedicalneedsareequallyattractive.Mostofthe7,500-plusmedicinescurrentlyindevelopmentbybiotechandpharmaceuticalcompaniesareforchronicdiseasesoftherichworld.Atthesametime.someofhumanity'snastiestafflictionsgetlittleattention.Tropicaldiseases,suchassleepingsicknessorleishmaniasis,areaturn-offfordrugmakersbecausetheystrikemainlyinpoorcountriesandofferlittlehopeofanattractivereturnoninvestment.Ofthe1.500orsodrugslaunchedoverthepast30years,fewerthan20dealspecificallywithtropicaldisease.[E]Thequestionishowtogettheproductsoutofthepipelineandtothepeoplewhoneedthem.DevelopmentcostscanbelowerthaninBigPharma,inpartbecauseclinicaltrialsfordiseasessuchasmalariacanbesmaller,fasterandthereforecheapertorunthanfor.say,Alzheimer'sdisease.Evenso.ChristopherHentschelheadoftheMedicinesforMalariaVenture.reckonsitwillcostatleast$100tobringjustodeofitsproductstomarket,somuchmoremoneyisneeded.[F]Onewayofgettingattentionforneglecteddiseasesisforpatientstotakeaction.Forexample,theALSTherapyDevelopmentFoundation.startedbyJamesHeywood,whosebrotherwasstruckdownbythisneurodegenerativedisease,isusingitsmodestbudgettotesthundredsofcompoundsinmiceandmenmthehopeoffindingatreatmentforALS.[G]Anotherrouteistolaunchpublic-privatepartnerships.Drugcompaniescontributemolecules,manpowerandmachinestonot-for-profitgroupsthatco-ordinateproductdevelopment,fundedmainlybyprivatesourcessuchastheGatesFoundation,withsomegovernmentmoney.Therearenowabout20suchpartnerships,focusedondevelopingnewdrugs,vaccinesordiagnosticsforparticulardiseasesofthedevelopingworldthatwillmakethemaccessibletopoorpopulations.Order:
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填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} In the following article, some sentences
have been removed. For Question 41--45, choose the most suitable one the list
A--G to fit into each of the numbered blank. There are two extra choices, which
do not fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
Should doctor-assisted suicide ever be a legal option? It
involves the extreme measure of taking the life of a terminally ill patient when
the patient is in extreme pain and the chances for recovery appear to be
hopeless. Those who argue against assisted suicide do so by considering the
roles of the patient, the doctor, and nature in these situations.
Should the patient take an active role in assisted suicide? When a patient
is terminally ill and in great pain, those who oppose assisted suicide say that
it should not be up to that patient to decide what his or her fate will
be. 41 ______. What role should the doctor have?
Doctors, when taking the Hippocratic oath, swear to preserve life at all costs,
and it is their ethical and legal duty to follow both the spirit and the letter
of this oath. It is their responsibilities to heal the sick, and in the cases
when healing is not possible, then the doctor is obliged to make the dying
person comfortable. Doctors are trained never to hasten death.
42. ______ Doctors are also, by virtue of their humanness,
capable of making mistakes. Doctors could quite possibly say, for instance, that
a cancer patient was terminal, and then the illness could later turn out not to
be so serious. There is always an element of doubt concerning the future outcome
of human affairs. 43. ______ These general
concerns of those who oppose assisted suicide are valid in certain contexts of
the assisted-suicide question. For instance, patients cannot always be certain
of their medical conditions. Pain clouds judgment, and so the patient should not
be the sole arbiter of her or his own destiny. Patients do not usually choose
the course of their medical treatment, so they shouldn't be held completely
responsible for decisions related to it. Doctors are also fallible, and it is
understandable that they would not want to make the final decision about when
death should occur. 44. ______ I believe that
blindly opposing assisted suicide does no one a service. If someone is dying of
cancer and begging to be put out of his or her misery, and someone gives that
person a deadly dose of morphine that seems merciful rather than criminal. If we
can agree to this, then I think we could also agree that having a doctor close
by measuring the dosage and advising the family and friends is a reasonable
request. 45. ______ Life is indeed precious, but
an inevitable part of life is death, and it should be precious, too. If life has
become an intolerable pain and intense suffering, then it seems that in order to
preserve dignity and beauty, one should have the right to end her or his
suffering quietly, surely, and with family and friends nearby.
[A] If one simply withholds treatment, it may take the patient longer to
die, and so he may suffer more than he would if more direct action were taken
and a lethal injection given. [B] The third perspective to
consider when thinking about assisted suicide is the role of nature. Life is
precious. Many people believe that it is not up to human beings to decide when
to end their own or another's life. Only nature determines when it is the right
time for a person to die. To assist someone in suicide is not only to break
criminal laws, but to break divine laws as well. [C] Since
doctors are trained to prolong life, they usually do not elect to take it by
prescribing assisted suicide. [D] There are greater powers at
work that determine when a person dies, for example, nature. Neither science nor
personal preference should take precedence over these larger forces.
[E] Without the doctor’s previous treatment, the person would surely be
dead already. Doctors have intervened for months or even years, so why not
sanction this final, merciful intervention? [F] There is no
single, objectively correct answer for everyone as to when, if at all, one’s
life becomes all things considered a burden and unwanted. If self-determination
is a fundamental value, then the great variability among people on this question
makes it especially important that individuals control the manner,
circumstances, and timing of their death and dying. [G] Those
who oppose assisted suicide believe that doctors who do help terminally ill
patients die are committing a crime, and they should be dealt with
accordingly.
填空题[A]ThegoldstandardcollapsedinthewakeofWorldWarI.Wartimefinancingwithunbackedpapercurrencyledtowidespreadinflation.Europeannationstriedtoresumethegoldstandardinthe1920s,butthegoldsupplywasinsufficientandinelastic.AferociousmonetarysqueezeandcompetitionacrosscountriesforlimitedgoldreservesfollowedandcontributedtotheGreatDepression.AfterWorldWarII,nationsadoptedthedollar-exchangestandard.TheU.S.dollarwasbackedbygoldat$35perounce,whiletherestoftheworld'scurrencieswerebackedbydollars.Theglobalmoneystockcouldexpandthroughdollarreserves.[B]Thisspecialroleofthedollarintheinternationalmonetarysystemhascontributedtotheglobalscaleofthecurrentcrisis,whichisrootedinacombinationofoverlyexpansionarymonetarypoliciesbytheFederalReserveandlaxfinancialregulations.Easymoneyfedanunprecedentedsurgeinbankcredits,firstintheU.S.andthenelsewhere,asinternationalbanksfundedthemselvesintheU.S.moneymarkets.Asbankloansflowedintoothereconomies,manyforeigncentralbanksintervenedtomaintaincurrencystabilitywiththedollar.ThesurgeintheU.S.moneysupplywasthusmatchedbyasurgeinthemoneysuppliesofcountrieslinkedtotheU.S.dollar.Theresultwasatemporaryworldwidecreditbubble,followedbyawaveofloandefaults,fallinghousingprices,bankinglossesandadramatictighteningofbanklending.[C]ThePeople'sBankofChinajoltedthefinancialworldinMarchwithaproposalforanewglobalmonetaryarrangement.TheproposalinitiallyattractedattentionmostlyforitssignalofChina'srisingglobaleconomicpower,butitscontentalsohasmuchtocommendit.[D]TheU.S.responsetotheChineseproposalwasrevealing.TreasurySecretaryTimothyGeithnerinitiallydescribedhimselfasopentoexploringtheidea;hiscandorquicklycausedthedollartoweakeninvalueIwhichitneedstodoforthegoodoftheU.S.economy.Thatweakening,however,ledGeithnertoreversehimselfwithinminutesbyunderscoringthattheU.S.dollarwouldremaintheworld'sreservecurrencyfortheforeseeablefuture.[E]Chinahasnowproposedthattheworldmovetoamoresymmetricalmonetarysystem,inwhichnationspegtheircurrenciestoarepresentativebasketofothersratherthantothedollaralone.The"specialdrawingrights"oftheInternationalMonetaryFundissuchabasketoffourcurrencies(thedollar,pound,yenandeuro),althoughtheChineserightlysuggestthatitshouldberebasedtoreflectabroaderrangeofthem,includingChina'syuan.U.S.monetarypolicywouldaccordinglyloseitsexcessiveglobalinfluenceovermoneysuppliesandcreditconditions.Onaverage,thedollarshoulddepreciateagainstAsiancurrenciestoencouragemoreU.S.netexportstoAsia.TheeuroshouldprobablystrengthenagainstthedollarbutweakenagainstAsiancurrencies.[F]Acenturyagoalmostalltheworld'scurrencieswerelinkedtogoldandmostoftheresttosilver.Currencieswerereadilyinterchangeable,goldanchoredexchangeratesandthephysicalSupplyofgoldstabilizedthemoneysupplyoverthelongterm.[G]Geithner'sfirstreactionwasright.TheChineseproposalrequiresstudybutseemsconsistentwiththelong-termshifttoamorebalancedworldeconomyinwhichtheU.S.playsamonetaryrolemorecoequalwithEuropeandAsia.Nochangeofglobalmonetarysystemwillhappenabruptly,butthechangesaheadarenotunderthesolecontroloftheU.S.WewillprobablymoveovertimetoaworldofgreatermonetarycooperationwithinAsia,arisingrolefortheChineseyuan,andgreatersymmetryinoverallworldmonetaryandfinancialrelations.[H]PresidentRichardNixondelinkedthedollarfromgoldin1971(tooffsettheU.S.'sexpansionarymonetarypoliciesintheVietnamera),andmajorcurrenciesbegantofloatagainstoneanotherinvalue.Butmostglobaltradeandfinancialtransactionsremaineddollar-denominated,asdidmostforeignexchangereservesheldbytheworld'scentralbanks.Theexchangeratesofmanycurrenciesalsoremainedtightlytiedtothedollar.
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填空题Among the celebrated pantheon of Hollywood royalty, few are as well-respected and universally adored as Gregory Peck. For more than fifty years, he has been a major presence in the theater, on television, and most importantly, on the big screen. (41)________________________As General MacArthur, Melville's Captain Ahab, and Atticus Finch, he has presented audiences with compelling stories of strength and masculinity. Eldred Gregory Peck was born on April 5,1916, in La Jolla, California. By the time he was six, his parents had divorced. For a number of years he lived with his maternal grandmother, but at the age of ten was sent to St. John's Military Academy in Los Angeles. The four years he spent there were important in forming his sense of personal discipline. After the Academy, he returned to live with his father, a local pharmacist, and to attend public high school. (42)________________________ There, his abilities were almost immediately recognized. In 1942, Peck made his debut on Broadway with The Morning Star. Though many of his early plays were doomed to short runs, it seemed clear that Peck was destined for something bigger. In 1944 that "something bigger" arrived in the form of his first two Hollywood roles, as Vladimir in Days of Glory and Father Francis Chisholm in The Keys of the Kingdom. (43)________________________This early success provided him the rare opportunity of working with the best directors in Hollywood. Over the next three years he appeared in Alfred Hitchcock's Spellbound (1945), King Vidor's Duel in the Sun (1946), and Elia Kazan's Gentleman's Agreement (1947). Despite concerns over public acceptance of the last one, a meditation on American anti Semitism, it surprised many by winning an Oscar for Best Picture and a nomination for Best Actor. This success seemed not only a validation of Peck's abilities as an artist but of his moral convictions as well. (44)________________________Tough and caring, he was the quintessential mid-century American man—the good-looking romantic lead across from Audrey Hepburn as well as the rugged World War Ⅱ bomber commander. For many, the actor and the characters he portrayed were inseparable; the authority of his passionate yet firm demeanor was attractive to post-war Americans who longed for a more stable time. (45)________________________ While continuing to act on television and in Hollywood throughout the 1980sand 1990s, Peck has focused much of his energy on spending time with his wife, children, and grandchildren. For Peck, life as a father and as a public figure have been inseparable; he was simultaneously a major voice against the Vietnam war, while remaining a patriotic supporter of his son who was fighting there. If years of breathing life into characters such as Captain Keith Mallory and General MacArthur taught him anything, it was that life during wartime was profoundly complex; and rarely has there been a time free from war or struggle. In his more than fifty films, Peck has continually attempted to investigate these complex struggles, and in doing so has created a library of stories that shed light on human possibility and social reality. [A] Though an amiable and fun-loving man at home, Peck's stern presence made him one of the screen's great patriarchs. [B] For many, Peck is a symbol of the American man at his best—a pillar of moral courage and a constant defender of traditional values. [C] During the 1960s and 1970s, Peck continued to challenge himself as an actor, appearing in thrillers, war films, westerns and in his best known film, To Kill A Mockingbird (1962). Based on the book by Harper Lee, To Kill A Mockingbird addresses problems of racism and moral justice in personal and powerful ways. As Atticus Finch, a lawyer in a small Southern town, Peck created a character that remains a great example of an individual's struggle for humanity within deeply inhumane conditions. It seems clear however, that the reason for Peck's constant assertion that To Kill A Mockingbird is his best ( and favorite) film, was the film's attention to the lives of children and the importance of family. [D] Gregory Peck passed away on June 12th, 2003, at the age of 87. [E] While Days of Glory was coolly received, his role as the taciturn Scottish missionary in The Keys of the Kingdom was a resounding triumph and brought him his first Oscar nomination for Best Actor. [F] After graduating, Peck enrolled at the University of California, Berkeley. Greatly influenced by his father's desires for him to be a doctor, Peck began as a premed student. By the time he was a senior, however, he found his real interests to be in writing and acting. Peck soon realized that he had a natural gift as both an expressive actor and a storyteller. After graduating, in 1939, he changed his name from Eldred to Gregory and moved to New York.[G] At 85, Peck turned his attention back to where he got his start, the stage. He traveled the country visiting small play houses and colleges, speaking about his life and experiences as a father, a celebrity, and as an actor.
填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} You are going to read a text about
Programs, followed by a list of examples. Choose the best example from the list
A-F for each numbered subheading (41-45). There is one extra example which you
do not need to use. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
Though hardly as unwelcome as death or taxes, college entrance
exams are just as inevitable and almost as dreaded by high school
students. As the testing dates loom for juniors and seniors for
the SAT (formerly called the Scholastic Assessment Test) and the American
College Test, or ACT, most students are looking for an edge, any edge, in the
competition. And as the number of homes with computers continues
to rise, test publishers and software developers have been quick to recognize a
growing niche. With the market for test preparation materials at all levels
estimated at $540 million annually, they have jumped on the tech bandwagon to
produce computerized tutorials that promise to boost scores.
(41){{B}}"We believe that it's important for a student to be prepared to
take the tests," notes Don Powers, a research scientist at the Educational
Testing Service in Princeton, N. J. , the organization that administers the SAT
for the College Board.{{/B}} "It's important to know how to take the test so that
you won't get a score that's lower than you deserve." But, he adds, "none of the
rigorous scientific evidence that we have seen supports these promises" to raise
test scores. (42) {{B}}Several points, however, do weigh in favor
of software as opposed to traditional test-preparation.{{/B}} Cost is a big
one. (43) {{B}}Convenience is another, as the College Board points
out in touting its new sofware.{{/B}}Afew points to remember when evaluating
various test-prep software packages: (44) {{B}}The exams, though
they may seem mystical to the test taker, are not magic and certainly not
random.{{/B}} There is little variation in the strategies the programs use to
boost test scores because there is little variation in how the test are
developed. Largely, what differentiates one program from another
is the computer interface, which can make the software more—or
less—user-friendly, and such features as automated tracking of student
progress. (45){{B}} A crash course with test prep software is
never an alternative to careful, long-term preparation for taking the exams.{{/B}}
Some students are better equipped to respond to the self-paced, self-motivated
approach software offers than others, Powers notes. Although
parents may be in the market for what they consider "serious" study aids, their
children, who are the ones taking the tests, may appreciate the programs that
offer a little humor. Finally, as programs frequently point out,
the SAT and ACT, while important to college admissions officers, are only one
element of a successful college application. [A] A test prep
course with a live instructor can cost as much as $700. Test-prep software costs
$30 to $80. [B] Most of the programs, in fact, emphasize the
importance of "guessing strategies" and eliminating unlikely answers to improve
scores. [C] Unlike many programs, this one can give you a quick,
easy and comfortable way to achieve a high score. [D] "I would
rather use the program than take a preparation course, because I could do this
on my own time and in my own home," notes one student in the College Board
materials. [E] Although at least one of the test programs asks
you how long you have to prepare to take the examination in order to customize
the learnign curve, all recommend spending a period of weeks, not hours, using
the software. [F] But though many programs offer money-back
guarantees, professional test writers tend to scoff at those claims.
填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}You are going to read a list of headings and a text about
preparing in the academic community. Choose the most suitable heading from the
list A-G for each numbered paragraph (41-45). The first and last paragraphs of
the text are not numbered. There is one extra heading which you do not need to
use. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. A.
Physical Changes B. Low Self-Esteem C.
Conflicts with parents D. Emerging Independence and Search for
Identity E. Emotional Turbulence F. Interest
in the Opposite Sex G. Peer Pressure and Conformity
The transition to adulthood is difficult. Rapid physical growth begins in
early adolescence—typically between the ages of 9 and 13—and thought processes
start to take on adult characteristics. Many youngsters find these changes
distressing because they do not fully understand what is happening to them.
Fears and anxieties can be put to rest by simply keeping an open line of
communication and preparing for change before it occurs. The main issues that
arise during adolescence are: {{U}} 1
{{/U}}______ A child's self worth is particularly fragile during
adolescence. Teenagers often struggle with an overwhelming sense that nobody
likes them, that they're not as good as other people, that they are failures,
losers, ugly or unintelligent. {{U}} 2
{{/U}}______ Some form of bodily dissatisfaction is common among
pre-teens. If dissatisfaction is great, it may cause them to become shy or very
easily embarrassed. In other cases, teens may act the opposite—loud and angry
—in an effort to compensate for feelings of self-consciousness and inferiority.
As alarming as these bodily changes can be, adolescents may find it equally
distressing to not experience the changes at the same time as their peers. Late
maturation can cause feelings of inferiority and awkwrardness.
{{U}} 3 {{/U}}______ Young people feel more strongly
about everything during adolescence. Fears become more frightening, pleasures
become more exciting, irritations become more distressing and frustrations
become more intolerable. Every experience appears king-sized during adolescence.
Youngsters having a difficult adolescence may become seriously depressed and/or
engage in self-destructive behavior. Often, the first clue that a teenager needs
professional help is a deep-rooted shift in attitude and behavior. Parents
should be alert to the warning signs of personality change indicating that a
teenager needs help. They include repeated school absences, slumping grades, use
of alcohol or illegal substances, hostile or dangerous behavior and extreme
withdrawal and reclusiveness. {{U}} 4
{{/U}}______ There is tremendous pressure on adolescents to
conform to the standards of their peers. This pressure toward conformity can be
dangerous in that it applies not only to clothing and hairstyles; it may lead
them to do things that they know are wrong. {{U}} 5
{{/U}}______ Adolescence marks a period of increasing
independence that often leads to conflict between teenagers and parents. This
tension is a normal part of growing up — and for parents, a normal part of the
letting-go process. Another normal part of adolescence is confusion over values
and beliefs. This time of questioning is important as young people examine the
values they have been taught and begin to embrace their own beliefs. Though they
may adopt the same beliefs as their parents, discovering them on their own
enables the young person to develop a sense of integrity.
Although adolescence will present challenges for young people and their parents,
awareness and communication can help pave the way for a smooth transition into
this exciting phase of life.
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41)__________. But traffic experts say building more roads is
a quick-fix solution that will not alleviate the traffic problem in the long
run. Soaring land costs, increasing concern over social and environmental
disruptions caused by road building, and the likelihood that more roads can only
lead to more cars and traffic are powerful factors bearing down on a 1950s-style
construction program. 42) __________. Proponents of this
advanced technology say electronic detection systems, closed-circuit television,
radio communication, ramp metering, variable message singing, and other
smart-highway technology can now be used at a reasonable cost to improve
communication between drivers and the people who monitor traffic.
Pathfinder, a Santa Monica, California-based smart-highway project in
which a 14-mile stretch of the Santa Monica Freeway, making up what is called a
"smart corridor", is being instrumented with buried loops in the pavement.
Closed circuit television cameras survey the flow of traffic, while
communications linked to properly equipped automobiles advise motorists of the
least congested routes or detours. 43) __________.
"Electronics on the highway addresses just one aspect of the Problem: how
to regulate traffic more efficiently", explains Michael Rennet, senior
researcher at the World watch Institute. "It doesn't deal with the central
problem of too many cars for roads that can't be built fast enough. It sends
people the wrong message: They start thinking 'Yes, there used to be a traffic
congestion problem, but that's been solved now because we have an advanced
high-tech system in place. '" Larson agrees and adds, 44)
"__________". Other traffic problem-solving options being
studied and experimented with include car pooling, rapid mass-transit systems,
staggered or flexible work hours, and road pricing, a system whereby motorists
pay a certain amount for the time they use a highway. 45)
__________.[A] Smart highways are just one of the tools that we will use to
deal with our traffic problems. It's not the solution itself, just part of the
package. There are different strategies.[B] It seems that we need a new,
major thrust to deal with the traffic problems of the next 20 years. There has
to be a big change.[C] It's taking advantage of the technology you use in
your everyday lives and putting it to work on highways.[D] Traffic
statistics paint a gloomy picture. To help solve their traffic woes, some
rapidly growing U.S. cities have simply built more roads.[E] The goal of
smart-highway technology is to make traffic systems work at optimum efficiency
by treating the road and the vehicles traveling on them as an integral
transportation system.[F] Smart highways that will allow a driver to program
a destination on a dashboard computer, then sit back and enjoy the ride.[G]
Not all traffic experts, however, look to smart-highway technology as the
ultimate solution to traffic gridlock. Some say the high-tech approach is
limited and can only offer temporary solutions to a serious problem.
