Television is rapidly becoming the literatures of our periods. | 1. time/times/period | |
Many of the arguments having ud for the study of literature | 2. /___________ | |
as a school subject are valid for ∧ study of television. | 3. the___________ | |
One major decision which faces the American student ready to | ||
begin higher education is the choice of attending a large | ||
university or a small college. The large university provides a | ||
wide range of specialized departments, as well numerous | 71. __________ | |
cours within such departments. The small college, therefore, | 72. __________ | |
generally provides a limited number of cours and | ||
specializations but offer a better student-faculty ratio, thus | 73. __________ | |
permit individualized attention to student. Becau of its large | 74. __________ | |
student body (often exceeding 20,000) consisting in many | 75. __________ | |
people from different countries the university expos its | ||
students to many different culture, social and out-of-class | 76. __________ | |
brazuca programmes. On the other hand, the smaller, more | ||
homogeneous(同性质的) student body of the big college | 77. __________ | |
affords greater opportunities in such activities. Finally, the | ||
university cloly approximates the real world and which | 78. __________ | |
provides a relaxed, impersonal, and sometimes anonymous | ||
(隐姓埋名的) existence, on the contrast, the intimate | 79. __________ | |
atmosphere of the small college allows the student four years of | ||
structural living in which to expect and preparing for the real | 80. __________ | |
world. In making his choice among educational institutions the | ||
student must, there fore, consider a great many factors. | ||
Thomas Malthus published his "Essay on the Principle | ||
of Population" almost 200 years ago. Ever since then, | ||
forecasters have being warning that worldwide famine was | S1. _____ | |
just around the next corner. The fast-growing population's | ||
demand for food, they warned, would soon exceed their | S2. _____ | |
supply, leading to widespread food shortages and starvation. | ||
But in reality, the world's total grain harvest has rin | ||
steadily over the years. Except for relative isolated trouble | S3. _____ | |
spots like prent-day Somalia, and occasional years of | 英文地址写法 | |
good harvests, the world's food crisis has remained just | S4. _____ | |
around the corner. Most experts believe this can continue | ||
肩宽的女生穿衣搭配even as if the population doubles by the mid-21st century, | S5. _____ | |
although feeding I0 billion people will not be easy for | ||
politics, economic and environmental reasons. Optimists | S6. _____ | |
point to concrete examples of continued improvements | ||
in yield. In Africa, by instance, improved ed, more | S7. _____ | |
fertilizer and advanced growing practices have more than | ||
double corn and wheat yields in an experiment. Elwhere, | S8. _____ | |
rice experts in the Philippines are producing a plant with few | S9. _____ | |
stems and more eds. There is no guarantee that plant | ||
breeders can continue to develop new, higher-yielding | ||
crop, but most rearchers e their success to date as reason | S10. _____ | |
for hope. | ||
The Seattle Times Company is one newspaper firm that | ||
has recognized the need for change and done something about | ||
it. In the newspaper industry, papers must reflect the diversity | ||
of the communities to which they provide information. | ||
It must reflect that diversity with their news coverage or risk | S1. _________ | |
losing their readers’ interest and their advertirs’ support. | 六级 考试时间 | |
Operating within Seattle, which has 20 percents racial | S2. _________ | |
minorities, the paper has put into place policies and | ||
procedures for hiring and maintain a diver workforce. The | S3. _________ | |
underlying reason for the change is that for information to be | ||
fair, appropriate, and subjective, it should be reported by the | megapixelS4. _________ | |
same kind of population that reads it. | ||
A diversity committee compod of reporters, editors, and | ||
photographers meets regularly to value the Seattle Times’ | S5. _________ | |
content and to educate the rest of the newsroom staff about | ||
diversity issues. In an addition, the paper instituted a content | S6. _________ | |
audit (审查) that evaluates the frequency and manner of | ||
reprentation of woman and people of color in photographs. | S7. _________ | |
Early audits showed that minorities were pictured far too | ||
infrequently and were pictured with a disproportionate | ||
number of negative articles. The audit results from | S8. _________ | |
improvement in the frequency of majority reprentation and | S9. _________ | |
their portrayal in neutral or positive situations. And, with a | S10. _________ | |
result, the Seattle Times has improved as a newspaper. | ||
The diversity training and content audits helped the | ||
Seattle Times Company to win the Personal Journal | ||
Optimas Award for excellence in managing change. | ||
秘密英文 |
A great many cities are experiencing difficulties which | ||
are nothing new in the history of cities, except in their scale. | ||
Some cities have lost their original purpo and have not found | ||
new one. And any large or rich city is going to attract poor | S1. __________ | |
immigrants, who flood in, filling with hopes of prosperity | S2. __________ | |
which are then often disappointing. There are backward towns | ||
on the edge of Bombay or Brasilia, just as though there were | S3. __________ | |
on the edge of venteenth-century London or early nine- | ||
teenth-century Paris. This is new is the scale. Descriptions | 烧包 | S4. __________ |
written by eighteenth-century travelers of the poor of Mexico | ||
City, and the enormous contrasts that was to be found there, | S5. __________ | |
are very dissimilar to descriptions of Mexico City today—the | be my slaveS6. __________ | |
poor can still be numbered in millions. | ||
The whole monstrous growth rests on economic prosper- | ||
ity, but behind it lies two myths: the myth of the city as a | S7. __________ | |
promid land, that attracts immigrants from rural poverty | S8. __________ | |
and brings it flooding into city centers, and the myth of the | S9. __________ | |
country as a Garden of Eden, which, a few generations late, | S10. __________ | |
nds them flooding out again to the suburbs. | ||
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