【单选题】
阅读下面的短文,文中有15处空白,每处空白给出了4个选项,请根据短文的内容从 4个选项中选择1个最佳答案。
{{B}}The Great Newspaper War{{/B}} Up until about 100 years ago, newspapers in the United States appealed only to the most serious readers. They used no illustrations and the articles were{{U}} (51) {{/U}}politics or business. Two men{{U}} (52) {{/U}}that -- Joseph Pulitzer of the New York World and William Randolph Hearst of the New York Morning Journal. Pulitzer{{U}} (53) {{/U}}the New York World in 1883. He changed it from a traditional newspaper into a very {{U}} (54) {{/U}}one overnight (一夜之间). He{{U}} (55) {{/U}}lots of illustrations and cartoons.And he told his reporters to write articles on{{U}} (56) {{/U}}crime or scandal they could finD、And they diD、One of them even pretended she was crazy and then she was{{U}} (57) {{/U}}to a mental hospital. She then wrote a series of articles about the poor{{U}} (58) {{/U}}of patients in those hospitals. In 1895, Hearst{{U}} (59) {{/U}}to New York fromCaliforniA、He wanted the New York Morning Journal to be more sensational (轰动的) and more exciting{{U}} (60) {{/U}}the New York WorlD、He also wanted it to be cheaper, so he{{U}} (61) {{/U}}the price by a penny. Hearst attracted attention because his headlines were bigger than{{U}} (62) {{/U}}. He often said, "Big print makes big news." Pulitzer and Hearst did anything they{{U}} (63) {{/U}}to sell newspapers. For example, Hearst sent Frederic Remington, the famous illustrator (插图画家), to{{U}} (64) {{/U}}pictures of the Spanish-American War. When he got there, he told Hearst that no fighting was{{U}} (65) {{/U}}. Hearst answered, "You furnish (提供) the pictures. I’ll furnish the war." |
B.in
C.with
D.of
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