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发表于 2005-9-23 10:00:12
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24. There were_____
<br> A. about 30 New York women who offered free advice by day
<br> B. three women freelancers about 30 years old who offered advertising advice on Saturday
<br> C. about 30 women advertising freelancers offered advice every Saturday afternoon in New york
<br> D. three women about 30 years old, who did advertising as a job, offered free advice every Saturday afternoon
<br>25. These advisors____
<br> A changed the New York street comers into oracles
<br> B. used the New York street comers as their advice office
<br> C. sat at a street comer to give people free advice
<br> D. made a street comer their place to predict the future to passerS*y
<br>26. New Yorkers came to the Advice Ladies because____
<br> A. the ladies' advice was quick and effective to solve problems
<br> B. New Yorkers felt it was difficult to live in this crazy world
<br> C Medical therapy could net solve people's problems
<br> D. New York was a crazy place and its inhabitants need plenty of help
<br>27. In the seventh paragraph we read that the Advice Ladies won't be strangers for long because____
<br> A. they are dealing with a book together and a TV man is writing a talk show about them
<br> B. they are going to sell a book about themselves and also appear on a TV show
<br> C. they will buy a book through a deal and appear in a film in the coming fall season
<br> D. they will get to know each other better by working on a book and appearing in a TV show together
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<br> Passage Three
<br> The American Presidential Gala of 1993
<br> (1) Mixing populism and celebrity, Clinton dances into office with a week-long multimillion-dollar party full of stars, saxophone music and presidential hugs.
<br> (2) The Party was held m a way never seen since World War II. Many movie and music stars showed up, offering their wishes to a new administration. They sang songs like "You know, Bill's gonna get this Country straight" '93! You and me! U-ni-tee!/Time to partee with Big Bill and Hillaree."
<br> (3) The stars came out in constellation because they recognized in Clinton one of their own. Not just that he plays the saxophone, a little. Or that Hillary is a smart, tough lawyer, like most Hollywood moguls. What matters is that Clinton is a beacon of middle-class charm, a lover of being loved, a believer in the importance of image, metaphor, style. And he is an ace manipulator of media, selling his symbols directly to the people on TV, without the interference of nosy journalists. It all makes far a wondrous '90s blend of show biz and politic.
<br> (4) "This is our time," Clinton said in his Inaugural Address." Let us embrace it." Last week he had an embrace for everyone, and not just the stars. This huggy-bear President needs to feel the public's approval.
<br> (5) At one of the balls of the week, Clinton was like the college student who drops in the night before the exam to show he's one of the guys, then sneaks back to his dorm to cram. Perhaps there is as much Nixon in him (the ambition, the intellect) as Kennedy (the charm, the recklessness, his position as centrist custodian of liberal dreams). He will need to be the best of both men if he is to close, as he said last week, "the gap between our words and our deeds."
<br> (6) During the gala, actor Edward James Olmos quoted Lincoln: "We must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our courntry." Clinton, a good student with a good memory, mouthed the words as Olmos spoke them. Clinton must have realized that, in a different sense and different era, America faces the task of disenthralling itself, of shaking off the Hollywood stardust and facing facts.
<br> (7) In 1992 Clinton vended optimism; now he must be careful in saying so. He sold the nation a miracle product, ALL-NEW HOPE: it gives you cleaner, cheaper government with a fresh minty flavor. But if it doesn't get the stains out, the electorate's high hopes could sour into despair. Then the man called Hope will become the man called Hype. All the big stars and better angels will leave him out in the spotlight, stranded, unmasked.
<br>
<br>28. The meaning of "Clinton dances into his office, with a week-long multimillion-dollar party full of stars, saxophone music and presidential hugs" in the first paragraph is:
<br> A. Clinton held a party and danced with film stars and musicians, and hugged his guests
<br> B. Clinton went into his office followed by rich film stars and musicians who wanted to be hugged by the president
<br> C. Clinton started his term of president's work with a week-long gala of celebrities and music to celebrate the event
<br> D. Clinton spent a great deal of money to give a party of dance and music to please the film stars and important people
<br>29. By saying "Bill's gonna get this Country straight", the party attendants believe that____
<br> A. Money bills are important in getting things done for the United States
<br> B. The president has got to do a wonderful job to save America
<br> C. Clinton will change the United States to a free country
<br> D. Clinton is going to solve the problems of the United States
<br>30. Which of the following statements is True?
<br> A. At one of the balls, Clinton appeared shortly and then left in a quiet way to do his work.
<br> B. Clinton was certainly a combination of both Nixon and Kennedy.
<br> C. Clinton said at the Party that he was going to close his mouth and work harder.
<br> D. When Olmos quoted Lincoln, Clinton repeated the words as Olmos spoke them.
<br>
<br>II. Direction: Read the following passage carefully and then explain in your own English the exact meaning of the numbered an d underlined parts . (15%)
<br> Medical consumerism--like all sorts of consumerism, only more menacingly--is designed to be unsatisfying. (31) The prolongation of life and the search for perfect health (beauty. youth, happiness) are inherently self-defeating, The law of diminishing returns necessarily applies. You can make higher percentages of people survive into their eighties and nineties. But, as any geriatric ward shows, that is not the same as to confer enduring mobility, awareness and autonomy. (32)grows medically feasible, but it is often a life deprived of everything and one exposed to degrading neglect as resources grow over-stretched and polities turn mean.
<br> What an ignominious destiny for medicine if its future tamed into one of bestowing meager increments of unenjoyed life! It would mirror the fate of athletics, in which disproportionate energies and resources--not least medical ones, like illegal steroids--are now invested to shave records by milliseconds. And, it goes without saying, the logical extension of longevism--the "abolition" of death--would net be a solution but only an exacerbation. (33) To air these predicaments is not anti-medical spleen--a churlish reprisal against medicine for its victories--but simply to face the growing reality of medical power not exactly without responsibility but with
<br>dissolving goals,
<br> (34) Hence medicine's finest hour becomes the dawn of its dilemmas For centuries, medicine was impotent and hence unproblematic, From the Greeks to the Great War, its job was simple to struggle with lethal diseases and gross disabilities, to ensure live births, and to mintage pain. It performed these uncontroversial tasks by and large with meager success. Today, with mission accomplished, medicine's triumphs are dissolving m disorientation, (35) Medicine has led to vastly inflated expectations, which the public has eagerly swallowed. Yet as these expectations grow unlimited, they become unfulfillable. The task facing medicine in the twenty-first century will be to redefine its limits even as it extends its capacities.
<br>
<br>Part Three: Cloze Test
<br>Direction: Fill in each numbered blank in the following passage with ONE suitable word to complete the passage Put your answers in the ANSWER
<br>SHEET. (10%)
<br> For______(36) the bloodshed and tragedy of D-Day, the beaches of Normandy will always evoke a certain ______(37): a yearning for a time when nations in the civilized world buried their differences and combined to oppose absolute evil, when values seemed clearer and the retable consequences of war stopped ______ (38) of the annihilation of humanity. But over half a century after the Allies hit those wave-battered sand flats and towering cliffs, the Normandy invasion stands as a feat _______ (39) to be repeated.
<br> There will never be ____ (40) D-Day. Technology has changed the conditions of warfare in ways that none of the D-Day participants could have __(41), Ali-out war in the beginnings of this century would surely spell all-out _____ (42) for the belligerents, and possibly for the entire human race. No credible scenario for a future world war would allow time for the massive buildup' of conventional forces that occurred in the 1940s. The moral equivalent of the Normandy invasion in the nuclear age would involve a presidential decision to put tens of millions of American lives at _____ (43). And the possible benefits for the allies would be uncertain at best
<br>European defense experts often ask whether the U.S. would be willing to "trade PittS*urgh for 'Dusseldorf.” In practice, the question may well be whether it is worth ____ (44) American cities to avenge a Europe already _____ (45) to rubble.
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<br>Part Four: Proofreading
<br>Directions: This part consists of a short passage. In this passage, there are altogether l0 mistakes, one in each underlined sentence or part. of a sentence. You may have to change a word, add a word or just delete a word. lf you change a word, cross it out with a slash(\) and write the correct word. lf you add a word, write the missing word between the words (in bracket3) immediately before and after it. If you delete a word, cross it out with a slash (\), Put your ,answers in the
<br>ANSWER SHEET. (10%)
<br>
<br>Examples:
<br>eg. 1 (46) The meeting begun 2 hours ago
<br> Correction in the ANSWER SHEET: (46) begun began
<br>eg.2 (47) Scarcely they settled themselves in their seats in the theatre when the curtain went up.
<br> Correction in the ANSWER SHEET: (47) (Scarcely) had (they)
<br>eg. 3 (48) Never will I not do it again.
<br> Correction in the ANSWER SHEET: (48) not
<br> (46) A state university president was arrested today and charged with impersonate a police officer because, the authorities say, he pulled over a speeding driver here last month. (47) Using flashing headlights, Richard L. Judd, 64, the president of Central Connecticut State University. made the driver, Peter Baba 24. of Plainville. pull on Jan, 23. the state police said. (48) He then flashed a gold badge and barked at him for speed, they said.
<br> (49) Mr. Judd is New Britain's police commissioner from 1981 to 1989 and from I993 to 1995. (50) But Detective Harold Gannon of the New Britain police said today that the job involved more policy as police work, and did not include the authority to charge or chide criminals. (51) The gold badge was mere a university award. (52) The governor said he would not ask for a resignation because Mr. Judd had made a "misjudgment" and had written a letter of apologizing.
<br> (53) Later, Mr. Judd's lawyer, Paul J. Mcouillan, issued a long apology from his superior, whom he described as "the best thing to happen to New Britain." (54) "My experience and instinct as an E.M.T. and former police commissioner prompted me to involve myself with this matter," Mr. Judd said in the statement. (55) "In hindsight, I see it was mine to manage."
<br>
<br>Part Five: Writing
<br>Direction: Write a short composition of about 250 to 300 words on the topic
<br>given below: (15%)
<br>Topic: Write m 250-300 words about China’s auto industry.
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