"Employeeshavetheresponsibilitytosayhere
Thereseemsnevertohavebeenacivilizationwi
Itisnotunusualforchiefexecutivestocollec
II.2阅读理解Leseverstndnis2ArbeitsrauschDera
A:Doyouthinkyoucouldlendmesomeofyourreco
TheUntiedStatesandCanadaarelandsof______
"Youtrytogetsomesleep.I'll______thepatie
案例二:五达公司下年度生产单位售价为12元的甲产品,该公司有两个生产方案可供选择
Therocketengine,withitssteadyroarliketha
Thetelevisionstationissupportedby______f
Hedoesabitofwriting,butfirstand______he'
{{B}}PassageThree{{/B}}Musiciansarefasci
Musicians are fascinated with the possibility that music may be found in nature; it makes our own desire for art seem all the more essential. Over the past few years no less a bold musical explorer than Peter Gabriel has been getting involveD、At the ResearchCenter inAtlanta, Georgia, he has been making music together with Kanzi, one of the bonobo apes (倭黑猩猩) involved in the long-term language acquisition studies of Sue andDuane Savage-Rumbaugh. I have seen the video of Kanzi picking notes out on a piano-like keyboard, with Gabriel and members of his band playing inside the observation booth in the laB、 (They did it this way because Kanzi had bitten one of his trainers a few days previously—interspecies communication is not without its dangers. ) The scene is beautiful, the ape trying out the new machine and looking thoughtfully pleased with what comes out. He appears to be listening, playing the right notes. It is tentative but moving, the animal groping for something from the human world but remaining isolated from the rest of the banD、It is a touching encounter, and a bold move for a musician whose tune Shock the Monkey many years ago openly condemned the horrors of less sensitive animal experiments than this. What is the scientific value of such a jam session The business of the ResearchCenter is the forging of greater communication between human and animal. Why not try the fertile and mysterious ground of music in addition to the more testable arena of simple language The advantage of hearing music in nature and trying to reach out to nature through music is that, though we don’t fully understand it, we can easily have access to it. We don’t need to explain its workings to be touched by it. Two musicians who don’t speak the same language can play together, and we can appreciate the music from human cultures far from our own. Music needs no explanation, but it clearly expresses something deep and important, something humans cannot live without. Finding music in the sounds of birds, whales and other animals makes the farther frontiers of nature seem that much closer to us. |
{{B}}PassageTwo{{/B}}Itisreportedthatalc
It is reported that alcohol abuse on college campuses is on the rise.But alcohol abuse is only one symptom of a larger campus crisis. There is a growth in racism, sexism, assault, attempted suicide, theft, property damage and most disappointing of all, cheating on exams. A、generation has come to college quite fragile, not very secure about who it is, fearful of its lack of identity and without confidence in its future. Many students are ashamed of themselves and afraid of relationships. It is happening because the generation now entering college has experienced few authentic connections with adults in its lifetime. I call this the "Culture of Neglect", and we--parents, teachers, professors and administrators--are the primary architects. It begins at home, where social and economic factors result in less family time for adults. Most children and teenagers are being reared without mothers’ being around, with television as their only supervisor, and there is little expectation that they learn personal responsibility. Immersed in themselves, they are left to their peers. We have failed to model a culture of responsibility. We have created a culture characterized by marriage failures, mass schooling that demands only minimal effort and media idols subliminally (下意识的)teaching disrespect for authority and wisdom. When the children do wrong, it is not their fault. On the contrary, it’s our fault. It seems that the children are always owned something by the busy parents and by the overworked teachers. The children take it for granted that we should take responsibility for their acts. How could college students reared in the culture of neglect have any notion of obligation and responsibility A、nation of individuals who can’t read or write well, with no sense of major human questions, who can’t think critically or show interest in learning and who are unable to act responsibility will be ill equipped to compete in any new world order.A、generation of neglect will shape our future. Let’s wait and see. |
A:Idon'tknowaboutyou,butIthougtthatfilmw
{{B}}PassageThree{{/B}}Predictingthefutu
Predicting the future is risky business for a scientist. It is safe to say, however, that the globalAIDS epidemic will get much worse before it gets any better. Sadly, this modern plague will be with us for several generations, despite major scientific advances. As of January 2000, theAIDS epidemic had claimed 15 million lives and left 40 million people living with a viral infection that slowly but relentlessly erodes the immune system.Accounting for more than 3 million deaths in the past year alone, theAIDS virus has become the deadliest microbe in the worlD、InAfrica nearly a dozen countries have a rate higher than 10%, including four southernAfrican nations in which a quarter of the people are infecteD、This is like condemning 16 000 people each day to a slow and miserable death. Fortunately, theAIDS story has not been all {{U}}gloom and doom{{/U}}. Less than two years afterAIDS was recognized, the guilty agent—human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV—was identifieD、We now know more about HIV than about any other virus, and 14AIDS drugs have been developed and licensed in the U.S. and WesternEurope. The epidemic continues to rage, however, in SouthAmerica,EasternEurope and sub-SaharanAfricA、By the year 2025,AIDS will be by far the major killer of youngAfricans, decreasing life expectancy to as low as 40 years in some countries and single-handedly erasing the public health gains of the past 50 years. It isAsia, with its huge population at risk, that will have the biggest impact on the global spread ofAIDS. The magnitude of the incidence could range from 100 million to 1 billion, depending largely on what happens in India andChinA、Four million people have already become HIV-positive in India, and infection is likely to reach several percent in a population of 1 billion. Half a millionChinese are now infected; the path ofChina’s epidemic, however, is less certain. An explosiveAIDS epidemic in the U.S. is unlikely. Instead, HIV infection will continue to plague in about 0.5% of the population.But the complexion of the epidemic will change. New HIV infections will occur predominantly in the underclass, with rates 10 times as high in minority groups. Nevertheless,American patients will live quality lives for decades, thanks to advances in medical research.Dozens of powerful and well-toleratedAIDS drugs will be developed, as will novel means to restore the immune system. A、cure forAIDS by the year 2025 is not inconceivable.But constrained by economic reality, these therapeutic advances will have only limited benefit outside the U.S. and WesternEurope. |
Panicsweptthroughtheswimmersastheycaught
A:WouldyoulikesomemoresoupB:______.Itisd
Theproblemsthemselvesarestillnottrulystr
Thegovernmentistryingtohelptheseenterpri
“学习很认真”是主谓结构还是述补结构为什么