英美报刊选读_课文word整合版
英美报刊选读Unit1.2.9
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新闻英语的五大特点1. brevity 简洁2. popularity 大众性3. interest 趣味性4. freshness 新颖性5. objectiveness客观性Unit 1 Politics第一单元政治TextThe higher Education of Washington华盛顿高等教育Universities step up lobbying to protect funding interests大学为保护资金利益而大肆游说By Dan MorganWhen the University of California at Los Angeles put Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-Calif.) on the cover of this winter’s alumni bulletin, it was a tribute to a distinguished graduate who is so close to his alma mater that he named his dog Bruin, after UCLA’s r evered symbol.Words: lobbying游说拉票;step up增加,促进,加速;University of California at Los Angeles美国加州大学洛杉矶分校Rep.=Representative众议员;alumni毕业生男校友;bulletin期刊,公告, 公报;tribute贡品, 礼物, 颂词, 殷勤;alma mater母校;Bruin吉祥物熊〔布轮熊〕;revere尊敬,敬畏参考译文:美国加州大学洛杉矶分校在今年冬季毕业生期刊封面刊登美国国会议员杰尔. X易斯〔加州某某党人〕,对与其母校的关系密切得能用美国加州大学洛杉矶分校吉祥物将其宠狗取名为布轮熊的杰出毕业生大肆颂扬。
But the cover story, which was engineered in part by the University of California’s government relation office in Washington, was also a shrewd ploy to cement relations with a key member of the House Appropriations mittee.Words:in part局部地,在某种程度上;shrewd ploy机敏的,精明的,奸诈的计谋,手段;cement水泥,粘结;House Appropriations mittee〔HAC〕美国国会众院拨款委员会参考译文:但是在某种程度上由加州大学华盛顿政府关系办公室策划的这一封面故事也是密切与美国国会众院拨款委员会某一关键委员的精明手段。
英美报刊选读Lesson 16
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英美报刊选读Lesson 8
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Hale Waihona Puke 7.8This is the 1927 Ford Roadster that helps celebrate
Hot Rod Magazine’s 50th ann. iversary.
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This car is called The 1959 Outlaw, a custom creation by Ed
(2). Benefit of conquering rural loneliness
(3). Establishment of a special youth culture
(4). Creation of an ersatz class structure
V. Conclusion (paragraph 10-11)
all of them wanted one. His Model T
brought the automobile to middle class
citizens and was the beginning of
America's love affair. with its cars.
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Car Culture in America
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Outline
IV. Cars’ impact on the
(paragraph 6-9)
(1). Problems of urban decline, criminals’ mobility, mollification of America, breakdown of community
machinery
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American Car Culture Lives At Petersen Automotive Museum
美英报刊阅读教程Lesson2课文
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美英报刊阅读教程Lesson2课文Lesson 2 Who Are America?s Hispanics ?The answers may surprise youBy Michael Barone1. As you walk around the Cisco Brothers, furniture factory in South Central Los Angeles, you?d hardly guess that Francisco Pinedo is the boss. Short and slight[1], wearing jeans and speaking rapid-fire[2] Spanish to his workers, he seems younger than his 35 years. Pinedo came to the United States in 1976 from Jalisco, Mexico, a 13-year-old boy who spoke no English. He dropped out of the 1 1th grade to work for a furniture manufacturer to support his family. Later he and his wife, Alba, borrowed everything they could to buy a one-bedroom, no-windows house for $36,000.2. Today the Pinedos own Cisco Brothers which employs 115 and last year sold more than $9 million worth o f furniture to stores around the world. “Being American offers you almost every opportu nity,” says Pinedo, who speaks English fluently and has applied for U.S. citizenship.3. His is one of the success stories written by what the Census Bureau[3] calls Hispanics: people of Latin American or Spanish origin. Whether recent immigrants or descendants of people who lived in the Southwest before the Pilgrims[4] came to America, they are all members of one of this country?s most important ethnic groups—and one of the least understood. Consider these facts:4. The Census Bureau estimates that there are 28 million Hispanics in the United states today, ap?proximately one in ten of us. That number is projected to reach 53 million in the year2020, or one in six Americans. Most of that growth will not be because of immigration, legal or illegal, but will come from the natural increase among Hispanics already here.5. Like Fransisco Pinedo, most Hispanics come from humble backgrounds —many from unthinkable poverty. But the large majority are not poor or on welfare. Indeed, Hispanic men havea higher labor-force participation rate than the national average.6. Some Hispanics speak only Spanish —but the overwhelming majority growing up in the United States see English as their primary language.7. In recent years the public spotlight on America?s Hispanics has often focused on drug crime, urban poverty and illegal immigration. But beyond these publicized problems are millions of ordinary, and many extraordinary, people. Who are they — and what will be their impact on the nation?s future?8. The Ninth of 12 Children, Danny Villanueva grew up in California and Arizona border towns. His father was a minister and a supporter of Cesar Chavez?s United Farm Workers. His diminutive[5] mother insisted that her sons raise themselves through athletics. After every game, win or lose, she would ask, “Did you give it all you had?[6]“9. Villanueva was, by his own description, “short, fat and slow—but nobody outworked me.” He became the kicker for the Los Angeles Rams[7], then helped found the Spanish-language Univision television network[8]. T oday he is head of the nation?s first Hispanic investment fund[9], its high-rise offices overlooking the mansions of Beverly Hills[10].10. Family ti es, like the strong partnership betweenVillanueva? s parents that gave him a future, re?main important to today? s young Hispanics. Many of the men working in Francisco Pinedo? s factory, for instance, are about the same age as the characters on TV?s “Seinfeld” or “Friends.” [11] But instead of hanging out[12] with contemporaries, most are married with children.11. According to the most recent statistics, 37 percent of Hispanic households are composed of two parents raising minor[13] children—as compared with 25 percent of non-Hispanic Americans. Divorce is significantly less common among Hispanics than among non-Hispanics.12. Sleepless in El Paso. As a boy, Cesar Viramontes crossed the Mexican border to El Paso, Texas, knowing no English. He dropped out of high school to work in a laundry. Then he and his wife saved enough money to buy a laundromat[14] When the fashion for prewashed[15] jeans started, the Viramontes family got into the business. Closing the laundromat at 10 p.m., they? d set the machines spinning with jeans from local manufacturers. Then they? d clean out the blue water and lint[16] before customers arrived at 7 a.m. All for 15 cents a pair.13. When did they rest? “We didn?t,” says Cesar Viramonters. “You can sleep when you?re 60.” Today the family owns International Garment Processors, which employs more than 750 workers at two large plants just outside El Paso. The company processes 50,000 garments a day for Levi Strauss[17] and other makers, and grosses [18] more than $30 million a year.14. America?s Hispanics are known as hard workers. “Latinos[19] have a strong work eth ic[20] and strong loyalty to employers,” says Jose de Jesus Legaspi, a real-estate developer who came to Los Angeles from Mexico as a teen-ager. Theirattitude, he says, is: “I?m asked to do this job, and 1 go and do it. If I need more money, I?ll get an e xtra job.”15. Statistics back up Legaspi? s opinion: the percentage of Hispanic men in the labor force in 1996 was 80 percent, well above the U.S. average of 67 percent. And many are entrepreneurs: the number of Hispanic-owned businesses rose to 863,000 in 1992, with receipts of $77 billion.16. All T ogether Now. In 1994 (the last figures available)[21], Hispanic income per person was only 57 percent of the national average—reflecting low earnings by immigrants with little English and few marketable skills. But often several people in each family work, so average Hispanic household income was 73 percent of the U.S. average.17. This is one way immigrants work themselves up to the middle class. Mexican-born Elena Lomeli is a top assistant to Laurie Gates, a pottery designer whose work appears in leading department stores. Arriving here in 1969 at age 13 and knowing no English, Lomeli baby-sat and did housekeeping. Today sh e helps transform Gates? s designs into finished products. “I surprise myself every day by what we do here,” she says.18. The Language Crisis. When Miami lawyer Nicolas Gutierrez, Jr., was interviewed on Span?ish-language television, his Cuban-born family called him later to “correct what 1 got wrong,”[22] he says. Although he grew up heari ng Spanish at home, he spoke English in school, college and law school—and speaks it today in his business and personal life.19. Today, in many workplaces and with family and friends, Spanish is usually the choice for Hispanic immigrants. As a result, many critics of immigration worry that Hispanic America will become a separate, Spanish-language community.20. It?s an old controversy, one that also raged early this cent ury when Italian, Polish and Jewish immigrants did not learn English. But the second generation did. And the experience of Nick Gutierrez and many others is reason to believe that things are no different today.21. Indeed, more than three-quarters of U.S.-born Hispanics have a solid command of English[23]. And in a 1996 poll conducted for the Center for Equal Opportunity, 51 percent of Hispanic parents said that learning to read, write and speak English was the most important goal of their children? s education; only 11 percent said the same of Spanish.22. Unfortunately, public schools—the great entryway to American success for the children ofearlier immigrants—have not served Hispanic students well. Part of the problem: the “experimental” bilingual educat ion programs started a generation ago. Technically voluntary[24], these programs enlist many Hispanic children regardless of parents? wishes. States such as California and Illinois can keep pupils in bilingual classes for five years. The effect is to hold back children from learning the English that they need and their parents desire.23. And because many Hispanic students are thus ill-prepared when they get to college, bilingual programs have even found a foothold there. Herman Badillo, a former New York City Congressman of Puerto Rican descent, spoke to one student from Hostos Community College, a bilingual branch of the City University of New York. The woman had failed a required English-proficiency test twice. “She couldn …t speak fluent English, and she?d majored in gerontology and gotten a job in a nursing home,” Badillo said. “If she?s working with elderly people whodon?t speak Spanish, it will be a calamity.”24. Clearly, reform of bilingual education programs is long overdue[25].25. Citizens Who Vote. Eighty years ago it was said that Italian immigrants would never be ab?sorbed into mainstream society. Yet in time they became unequivocally American. Today, writes cultural critic John Leo[26], ” Hispanics are blending into the general population at l east as fast as earlier white ethnic groups did.”26. In the past two years Hispanics have become U.S. citizens at a record pace[27]. Already the largest ethnic minority, they will in time be the largest voting bloc—maybe even the majority—in several of our largest metropolitan areas. And competition for Hispanic votes is becoming as politically crucial as past battles for immigrants? votes.27. Texas and California, the nation?s two largest states, with the two largest Hispanic populations, have already de veloped very different Hispanic politics. Hispanics in Texas? s Congressional delegation, for example, include a conservative Republican as well as both conservative and liberal Democrats. In California—with 54 electoral votes, 20 percent of those needed to win the Presidency—Hispanic voters tend to favor government-spending programs[28] and activism, positions that usually help liberal Democrats. But they are also likely to support capital punishment[29] and oppose abortion, views that help Republicans.28. In any event, the GOP[30] could pay a high price if it is perceived as engaging in immigrant-bashing[31]. In 1994, for example, one in four Hispanics voted for California?s Proposition 187[32], which barred state aid to illegal immigrants. But manyresented Republican Governor Pete Wilson? s ads for the measure, which they thought labeled all Hispanics as lazy. Two years later the Republicans? share of the Hispanic vote sharply declined.29. Whatever they may be in the future, Hispanic preferences and priorities are likely to strongly influence the direction of our politics and government. But it will be American politics.30. Consider Texas Congressman Silvestre Reyes. Growing up in a small Texas town, he learned English at school, served in Vietnam and then got a job with the Border Patrol[33]. In 1993 he devised Operation Hold the Line[34], which stationed agents at the border along the Rio Grande and vastly reduced the flow of illegal immigrants. In 1996 he was elected to Congress.31. A reporter once a sked him, “How do you guys celebrate independence day?”32. “With fireworks and a picnic,” Reyes replied.33. The writer was surprised. “I had no idea you celebrated the 16th of September [Mexico's independence day] that way,” he said.34. Reyes explained: “I?m talking about the Fourth of July.”From Reader?s Digest, January, 1998V. Analysis of Content1. Hispanics may refer to____________.A. Americans of Latin American or Spanish originB. recent immigrants to America from South AmericaC. descendants of people who lived in the Southwest before the Pilgrims came to AmericaD. immigrants from Spain2. From the article, we know that ___________A. the number of Hispanics will reach 53 million in 2020because of increasing immigrationB. most Hispanics are poor and on welfareC. the employment rate of Hispanic men is higher than the national averageD. the Hispanics see Spanish as their primary language3. Which of the following statement is wrong ?A. Family ties remain important to today? s you ng Hispanics.B. All Hispanic men are likely to hang out with their contemporaries.C. Divorce among Hispanics is not so common as among non-Hispanics.D. Hispanic families are relatively stable.4. What?s the effect of the “experimental” bilingual edu cation programs to Hispanic children?A. They can speak both Spanish and English fluently.B. It holds back children from learning the English that they need and their parents desire.C. It has well prepared Hispanic students.D. It helps the children to learn English.5. In 1996 the Republicans? share of the Hispanic vote sharply declined because___________A. Hispanics in California are against the Republicans? platformB. Hispanics in California are for liberal Democrats? platformC. California?s Proposition 187 is unreasonableD. the Republican Governor Pete Wilson had bashed HispanicsVI. Questions on the Article1. Why does the author say one would hardly guess that Francisco Pinedo is the boss?2. In recent years, what have been the publicized problems with Hispanics?3. Can you tell how Cesar Viramontes succeeded in his business?4. Will Hispanic America become a separate, Spanish language community as many critics worry?5. Why is the competition for Hispanic votes becoming as politically crucial as past batties for immigrants? votes?VII. Topics for Discussion1. How do you interpret Pi nedos? words “Being American offers you almost every oppor-tunity”?2. Is bilingual education necessary for Hispanics?。
《英美文学选读》word版
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英美文学选读英美文学选读1.课程性质与学习目的英美文学选读课是全国高等教育自学考试英语语言文学专业本科段的必修课程,是为培养和检验自学应考者英美文学的基本理论知识和理解、鉴赏英美文学原著的能力而设置的一门专业理论课程.设置本课程旨在使英语自学者对英美两国文学形成与发展的全貌有一个大概的了解;并通过阅读具有代表性的英美文学作品,理解作品的内容,学会分析作品的艺术特色并努力掌握正确评价文学作品的标准和方法.由于本课程以作家作品为重点,因此考生需仔细阅读原作.通过阅读,努力提高语言水平,增强对英美文学原著的理解,特别是对作品中表现的社会生活和人物思想感情的理解,提高他们阅读文学作品的能力和鉴赏水平.2.课程内容与考核目标本课程的考试要求为全日制普通高等学校英语语言文学专业《英美文学选读》课程本科的结业水平.课程的内容和考核目标是根据本课程的性质、学习目的以及自学考试的特点编制而成的.本课程由英国文学和美国文学两部分组成.主要内容包括英美文学发展史及代表作家的简要介绍和作品选读.文学史部分从英美两国历史、语言、文化发展的角度,简要介绍英美两国文学各个历史断代的主要历史背景,文学文化思潮,文学流派,社会政治、经济、文化等对文学发展的影响,主要作家的文学生涯、创作思想、艺术特色及其代表作品的主题结构、人物刻画、语言风格、思想意义等;选读部分主要节选了英美文学史上各个时期重要作家的代表作品,包括诗歌、戏剧、小说、散文等,详见全国高等教育自学考试指导委员会编写的指定用书《英美文学选读》〔X伯香主编,外语教学与研究1999年12月第2版〕.根据本课程考试的大纲,凡要求"识记"的内容,所涉及的知识和理论都与考核点直接相关,考生应熟知其概念和有关知识,理解其原理,并能在语言环境中予以辨认.凡要求"领会"的内容,必须做到掌握有关知识和理论.凡要求"应用"的内容,必须做到在掌握有关知识和理论的基础上使之转换为能力,即能用有关知识和理论来分析解决英美文学中的相关问题,并指导作品的阅读.凡要求"一般识记"的内容,所涉及的知识和理论,一般不直接作为考核时命题的内容,但由于这些内容对于其他相关知识和理论以及作品阅读能力的考核有直接或间接的影响,因此要求考生在自学过程对这些内容也要有所了解.英美文学选读第1章<英国文学>文艺复兴时期第1节Edmund Spenser第2节Christopher Marlowe第3节William Shakespeare第4节Francis Bacon第5节John Donne第6节John Milton第2章新古典主义时期第1节John Bunyan第2节Alexander Pope第3节Daniel Defoe第4节Jonathan Swift第5节Henry Fielding第6节Samuel Johnson第3章浪漫主义时期第1节William Blake第2节William Wordsworth第3节Samuel Taylor Coleridge第4节George Gordon Byron第5节Percy Bysshe Shelley第6节John Keats第7节Jane Austen第4章维多利亚时期第1节Charles Dickens第2节The Bronte Sisters第3节Alfred Tennyson第4节Robert Browning第5节George Eliot第6节Thomas Hardy第5章现代时期第1节George Bernard Shaw第2节John Galsworthy第3节William Butler Yeats第4节T. S. Eliot第5节D. H. Lawrence第6节James Joyce第6章<美国文学>浪漫主义时期第1节Washington Irving第2节Ralph Waldo Emerson第3节Nathaniel Hawthorne第4节Walt Whitman第5节Herman Melville第7章现实主义时期第1节Mark Twain第2节Henry James第3节Emily Dickinson第4节Theodore Dreiser第8章现代时期第1节Ezra Pound第2节Robert Lee Frost第3节Eugene O'Neill第4节F. Scott Fitzgerald第5节Ernest Hemingway第6节William Faulkner<英国文学>文艺复兴时期本章简介<>The Renaissance marks a transition from the medieval to the modern world. Generally, it refers to the period between the 14th and mid-17th centuries. It first started in Italy, with theflowering of painting, sculpture and literature. From Italy the movement went to embrace the rest of Europe. The Renaissance, which means rebirth or revival, is actually a movement stimulated by a series of historical events, such as the rediscovery of ancient Roman and Greek culture, the new discoveries in geography and astrology, the religious reformation and the economic expansion. The Renaissance, therefore, in essence, is a historical period in which the European humanist thinkers and scholars made attempts to get rid of those old feudalist ideas in medieval Europe, to introduce new ideas that exssed the interests of the rising bourgeoisie, and to recover the purity of the early church from the corruption of the Roman Catholic Church. The Renaissance was slow in reaching England not only because of England's separation from the Continent but also because of its domestic unrest. The century and a half following the death of Chaucer is the most volcanic period of English history. The war-like nobles seized the power of England and turned it into self-destruction. The Wars of Roses are examples to show how the energy of England was violently destroying itself. The frightful reign of Richard III marked the end of civil wars, making possible a new growth of English national feelings under the popular Tudors. But it was not until the reign of Henry VIII <from 1509 to 1547> that the Renaissance really began to show its effect in England. With Henry VIII's encouragement, the Oxford reformers, scholars and humanists introduced classical literature to England. Education, based upon the classics and the Bible, was revitalized, and literature, already much read during the 15th century, became even more popular. Thus began the English Renaissance, which was perhaps England's Golden Age, especially in literature. Among the literary giants were Shakespeare, Spenser, Johnson, Sidney, Marlowe, Bacon and Donne. The English Renaissance had no sharp break with the past. Attitudes and feelings which had been characteristic of the 14th and 15th centuries persisted well down into the era of Humanism and Reformation. Humanism is the essence of the Renaissance. It sprang from the endeavor to restore a medieval reverence for the antique authors and is frequently taken as the beginning of the Renaissance on its conscious, intellectual side, for the Greek and Roman civilization was based on such a conception that man is the measure of all things. Through the new learning, humanists not only saw the arts of splendor and enlightenment, but the human values resented in the works. In the medieval society, people as individuals were largely subordinated to the feudalist rule without any freedom and independence; and in medieval theology, people's relationships to the world about them were largely reduced to a problem of adapting to or avoiding the circumstances of earthly life in an effort to pare their souls for a future life. But Renaissance humanists found in the classics a justification to exalt human nature and came to see that human beings were glorious creatures capable of individual development in the direction of perfection, and that the world they inhabited was theirs not to despise but to question, explore, and enjoy. Thus, by emphasizing the dignity of human beings and the importance of the sent life, they voiced their beliefs that man did not only have the right to enjoy the beauty of this life, but had the ability to perfect himself and to perform wonders. Humanism began to take hold in England when the Dutch scholar Desiderius Erasmus <1466-1536> came to teach the classical learning, first at Oxford and then at Cambridge. Thomas More, Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare are the best resentatives of the English humanists. The long reign of Henry VIII was marked not only by a steady increase in the national power at home and abroad but also by the entrance of the religious reformation from the Continent. It was Martin Luther <1483-1546>, a German Protestant, who initiated the Reformation. Luther believed that every true Christian was his own priest and was en学习指导d to intert the Bible for himself. Encouraged by Luther's aching, reformers fromnorthern Europe vitalized the Protestant movement, which was seen as a means to recover the purity of the early church from the corruption and superstition of the Middle Ages. The colorful and dramatic ritual of the Catholic Church was simplified. Indulgences, pilgrimages, and other practices were condemned. In the early stage of the continental Reformation, Henry VIII was regarded as a faithful son of the Catholic Church and named "Defender of the Faith" by the Pope. Only his need for a legitimate male heir, and hence a new wife, led him to cut ties with Rome. But the common English people had long been dissatisfied with the corruption of the church and inspired by the reformers' ideas from the Continent. So they welcomed and sup-ported Henry's decision of breaking away from Rome. When Henry VIII declared himself through the approval of the Parliament as the Sume Head of the Church of England in 1534, the Reformation in England was in its full swing. One of the major results was the fact that the Bible in English was placed in every church and services were held in English instead of Latin so that people could understand. In the brief reign of Edward VI, Henry's son, the reform of the church's doctrine and teaching was carried out. But after Mary ascended the throne, there was a violent swing to Catholicism. However, by the middle of Elizabeth's reign, Protestantism had been firmly established, with a certain extent of compromise between Catholicism and Protestantism. The religious reformation was actually a reflection of the class struggle waged by the new rising bourgeoisie against the feudal class and its ideology. Strong national feeling in the time of the Tudors gave a great incentive to the cultural development in England. English schools and universities were established in place of the old monasteries. With classical culture and the Italian humanistic ideas coming into England, the English Renaissance began flourishing. And one of the men who made a great contribution in this respect was William Caxton, for he was the first person who introduced printing into England. In his lifetime, Caxton printed about one hundred books in English, including Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales <1483> and Malory's Morte Darthur <1485>. Thus, for the first time in history it was possible for a book or an idea to reach the whole nation in a speedy way. With the introduction of printing, an age of translation came into being. And lots and lots of continental literary works both ancient and modern were translated and printed in English. For instance, Plutarch's Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans was translated by North, Ovid's etamorphoses by Golding, Homer's The Iliad by Chapman, and Montaigne's Essays by Florio. As a result, the introduction of printing led to a commercial market for literature and provided numerous books for the English people to read, thus making everything ready for the appearance of the great Elizabethan writers. The first period of the English Renaissance was one of imitation and assimilation. Academies after the Italian type were founded. And Petrarch was regarded as the fountainhead of literature by the English writers. For it was Petrarch and his successors who established the language of love and sharply distinguished the love poetry of the Renaissance from its counterparts in the ancient world. Wyatt and Surrey began engraving the forms and graces of Italian poetry upon the native stock. While the former introduced the Petrarchan sonnet into England, the latter brought in blank verse, i.e. the unrhymed iambic pentameter line. Sidney followed with the sestina and terza rima and with various experiments in classic meters. And Marlowe gave new vigor to the blank verse with his "mighty lines. "From Wyatt and Surrey onwards the goals of humanistic poetry are: skillful handling of conventions, force of language, and, above all, the development of a rhetorical plan in which meter, rhyme, scheme, imagery and argument should all be combined to frame the emotional theme and throw it into high relief. Poetry was to be a concentrated exercise of the mind, of craftsmanship, and of learning. Spenser'sThe Shepheardes Calender showed how the pastoral convention could be adopted to a variety of subjects, moral or heroic, and how the rules of decorum, or fitness of style to subject, could be applied through variations in the diction and metrical scheme. In "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love," Marlowe spoke with a voice so innocent that it would be very difficult for us to connect it with the voice in his tragedies. In the early stage of the Renaissance, poetry and poetic drama were the most outstanding literary forms and they were carried on especially by Shakespeare and Ben Jonson. But the poetry written by John Donne, George Herbert and others like them <who were later labeled as the metaphysical poets by Dryden and Johnson> resented a sharp break from the poetry by their decessors and most of their contemporaries. The Elizabethan drama, in its totality, is the real mainstream of the English Renaissance. It could be dated back to the Middle Ages. Interludes and morality plays thriving in the medieval period continued to be popular down to Shakespeare's time. But the development of the drama into a sophisticated art form required another influence- the Greek and Roman classics. Lively, vivid native English material was put into the regular form of the Latin comedies of Plautus and Terence. Tragedies were in the style of Seneca. The fusion of classical form with English content brought about the possibility of a mature and artistic drama. The most famous dramatists in the Renaissance England are Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare, and Ben Jonson, who wrote plays with such universal qualities of greatness. By imitating the romances of Italy and Spain, embracing the mysteries of German legend, and combining the fictions of poetic fancy with the facts of daily life, they made a vivid depiction of the sharp conflicts between feudalism and the rising bourgeoisie in a transitional period. And with humors of the moment, abstractions of philosophical speculation, and intense vitality, this extraordinary drama, with Shakespeare as the master, left a monument of the Renaissance unrivaled for pure creative power by any other product of that epoch. Francis Bacon <1561-1626>, the first important English essayist, is best known for his essays which greatly influenced the development of this literary form. He was also the founder of modern science in England. His writings paved the way for the use of scientific method. Thus, he is undoubtedly one of the resentatives of the English Renaissance.新古典主义时期本章简介<> What we now call the neoclassical period is the one in English literature between the return of the Stuarts to the English throne in 1660 and the full assertion of Romanticism which came with the publication of Lyrical Ballads by Wordsworth and Coleridge in 1798. The English society of the neoclassical period was a turbulent one. Of the great political and social events there were the Restoration of King Charles II in 1660, the Great Plague of 1665 which took 70,000 lives in London alone, the Great London Fire which destroyed a large part of the city, leaving two-thirds of the population homeless, the Glorious Revolution in which King James Il was replaced by his Protestant daughter Mary and her Dutch husband William, Duke of Orange, in 1689, and so on. There was constant strife between the monarch and the parliament, between the two big parties -- the Tories and the Whigs -- over the control of the parliament and government, between opposing religious sects such as the Roman Catholicism, the Anglican Church and the Dissenters, between the ruling class and the laboring poor, etc. In short, it was an age full of conflicts and divergence of values. The eighteenth century saw the fast development of England as a nation. Abroad, a vast expansion of British colonies in North America, India, the West Indies, and a continuous increase of colonial wealth and trade provided England with a market for which the small-scale handproduction methods of the home industry were hardly adequate. This created not only a steady demand for British goods but also standardized goods. And at home in the country, Acts of Enclosure were putting more land into fewer privileged rich landowners and forcing thousands of small farmers and tenants off land to become wage earners in industrial towns. This coming together of free labor from the home and free capital gathered or plundered from the colonies was the essence of the Industrial Revolution. So, towards the middle of the eighteenth century, England had become the first powerful capitalist country in the world. It had become the work-shop of the world, her manufactured goods flooding foreign markets far and near. Along with the fast economic development, the British bourgeois or middle class also grew rapidly. It was the major force of the Revolution and was mainly composed of city people: traders, merchants, manufacturers, and other adventurers such as slave traders and colonists. As the Industrial Revolution went on, more and more people joined the rank of this class. Marx once pointed out that the bourgeois class of the eighteenth-century England was a revolutionary class then and quite different from the feudal aristocratic class. They were people who had known poverty and hardship, and most of them had obtained their sent social status through hard work. They believed in self-restraint, self-reliance and hard work. To work, to economize and to accumulate wealth constituted the whole meaning of their life. This aspect of social life is best found in the realistic novels of the century. The eighteenth-century England is also known as the Age of Enlightenment or the Age of Reason. The Enlightenment Movement was a progressive intellectual movement which flourished in France and swept through the whole Western Europe at the time. The movement was a furtherance of the Renaissance of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Its purpose was to enlighten the whole world with the light of modern philosophical and artistic ideas. The enlighteners celebrated reason or rationality, equality and science. They held that rationality or reason should be the only, the final cause of any human thought and activities. They called for a reference to order, reason and rules. They believed that when reason served as the yardstick for the measurement of all human activities and relations, every superstition, injustice and opssion was to yield place to "eternal truth," "eternal justice" and "natural equality." The belief provided theory for the French Revolution of 1789 and the American War of Independence in 1776. At the same time, the enlighteners advocated universal education. They believed that human beings were limited, dualistic, imperfect, and yet capable of rationality and perfection through education. If the masses were well educated, they thought, there would be great chance for a democratic and equal human society. As a matter of fact, literature at the time, heavily didactic and moralizing, became a very popular means of public education. Famous among the great enlighteners in England were those great writers like John Dryden, Alexander Pope, Joseph Addison and Sir Richard Steele, the two pioneers of familiar essays, Jonathan Swift, Daniel Defoe, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Henry Fielding and Samuel Johnson. In the field of literature, the Enlightenment Movement brought about a revival of interest in the old classical works. This tendency is known as neoclassicism. According to the neoclassicists, all forms of literature were to be modeled after the classical works of the ancient Greek and Roman writers <Homer, Virgil, Horace, Ovid, etc.> and those of the contemporary French ones. They believed that the artistic ideals should be order, logic, restrained emotion and accuracy, and that literature should be judged in terms of its service to humanity. This belief led them to seek proportion, unity, harmony and grace in literary exssions, in an effort to delight, instruct and correct human beings, primarily as social animals. Thus a polite, urbane, witty, and intellectual art developed.Neoclassicists had some fixed laws and rules for almost every genre of literature. Prose should be cise, direct, smooth and flexible. Poetry should be lyrical, epical, didactic, satiric or dramatic, and each class should be guided by its own principles. Drama should be written in the Heroic Couplets <iambic pentameter rhymed in two lines>; the three unities of time, space and action should be strictly observed; regularity in construction should be adhered to, and type characters rather than individuals should be resented. In the last few decades of the 18th century, however, the neoclassical emphasis upon reason, intellect, wit and form was rebelled against or challenged by the sentimentalists, and was, in due time, gradually replaced by Romanticism. But it had a lasting wholesome influence upon English literature. The poetic techniques and certain classical graces such as order, good form, unified structure, clarity and conciseness of language developed in this period have become a permanent heritage. The neoclassical period witnessed the flourish of English poetry in the classical style from Restoration to about the second half of the century, climaxing with John Dryden, Alexander Pope and the last standard-bearer of the school, Samuel Johnson. Much attention was given to the wit, form and art of poetry. Mock epic, romance, satire and epigram were popular forms adopted by poets of the time. Besides the elegant poetic structure and diction, the neoclassical poetry was also noted for its seriousness and earnestness in tone and constant didacticism. The mid-century was, however, dominated by a newly rising literary form -- the modern English novel, which, contrary to the traditional romance of aristocrats, gives a realistic sentation of life of the common English people. This -- the most significant phenomenon in the history of the development of English literature in the eighteenth century -- is a natural product of the Industrial Revolution and a symbol of the growing importance and strength of the English middle class. Among the pioneers were Daniel Defoe, Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding, Laurence Sterne, Tobias George Smollett, and Oliver Goldsmith. And from the middle part to the end of the century there was also an apparent shift of interest from the classic literary tradition to originality and imagination, from society to individual, and from the didactic to the confessional, inspirational and prophetic. Gothic novels -- mostly stories of mystery and horror which take place in some haunted or dilapidated Middle Age castles -- were turned out profusely by both male and female writers; works such as The Castle of Otranto <1765> by Horace Walpole, The Mysteries of Udolpho <1794> and The Italian <1797> by Mrs. Ann Radcliffe, The Champion of Virtue, a Gothic Story <1777> by Clara Reeve, and The Monk <1796> by M.G. Lewis became very popular. Eulogizing or lamenting lyrics by nature poets like James Thomson, William Collins, and William Cowper, and by such sentimentalists as the "GraveyardSchool" were widely read. The romantic poems of the Scottish peasant poet, Robert Burnsand William Blake also joined in, paving the way for the flourish of Romanticism early the century. In the theatrical world, Richard Brinsley Sheridan was the leading figure among a host of playwrights. And of the witty and satiric prose, those written by Jonathan Swift are especially worth studying, his A Modest Proposal being generally regarded as the best model of satire, not only of the period but also in the whole English literary history.浪漫主义时期本章简介<> The movement which we call Romanticism is something not so easy to define, especially concerning its characteristics or dates. For it is a broad movement that affected the whole of Europe <and America>. However, English Romanticism, as a historical phase of literature, is generally said to have begun in 1798 with the publication of Wordsworth and Coleridge's LyricalBallads and to have ended in 1832 with Sir Walter Scott's death and the passage of the first Reform Bill in the Parliament. However, these dates are arbitrary and, to some extent, conventional, for a new current of literature, in fact, had started long before the publication of the Lyrical Ballads. In the works of the sentimental writers, we note a new interest in literatures and legends other than those of Greece and' Rome. It was in effect a revolt of the English imagination against the neoclassical reason which vailed from the days of Pope to those of Johnson. And some of the great imaginative writings in English literature sprang from the confrontation of radicals and conservatives at the close of the 18th century, as the history in England started to move with a new urgency. This urgency was provoked by two important revolutions: the French Revolution of 1789-1794 and the English Industrial Revolution which happened more slowly, but with astonishing consequences. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, a French philosopher, was one of the leading thinkers in the second half of the 18th century. In 1762 he published two books that electrified Europe -- Du Contrat Social and Emile, in which he explored new ideas about Nature, Society and Education. These ideas of Rousseau's provided necessary guiding principles for the French Revolution, for they inspired an implacable resentment against the tyrannical rule in France and an immense hope for the future. In 1789 there broke out the epoch-making French Revolution. The news of the Revolution, especially the Declaration of Rights of Man and the storming of Bastille, aroused great sympathy and enthusiasm in the English liberals and radicals. Patriotic clubs and societies multiplied in England, all claiming Liberty, Equality and Fraternity. Then, in October, 1790, Edmund Burke published his Reflections on the Revolution in France. Burke's pamphlet was designed as a crusade against the sad of such radical innovations and the overthrow of the established privileges he saw enshrined in the church, the hereditary power of the monarchy and the greater landed families. By pouring scorn on the feverish violence of rebellion and prophesying mob-rule and military dictatorship in France, Burke raised the most authoritative voice in Britain in denouncing the Revolution. Burke's Reflections provoked many replies from the radical writers who argued for the rights of the people to fight against tyranny and to overthrow any government of opssion; but none was so effective as Thomas Paine's Declaration of Rights of Man <1791-1792>. Paine knew what he was talking about: he had been in France during the Revolution, and demonstrated conclusively that by 1789 France was so enmeshed in opssion and misery that nothing short of revolution could set her free. William Godwin, who exerted a great influence on Wordsworth, Shelley and other poets, wrote passionately against the injustices of the economic system and the opssion of the poor in his Inquiry Concerning Political Justice <1793>. Fighting against Burke's conservative ideas was also William Cobbet whom Marx once extolled as "an instinctive defender of the masses of the people against the encroachment of the bourgeoisie." If law and government appeared to some contemporaries as one system of injustice, conventional gender roles were another, for women had long been regarded as inferior to men. After the Declaration of Rights of Man was released, Mary Wollstonecraft urged the equal rights for women in her A Vindication of the Rights of Woman <1792>, thus setting out the earliest exposition of feminism based on a comhensive system of ethics. But later when Jacobeans took over power in France and started to push a policy of violent terror at home and aggressive expansion abroad, most of the English sympathizers dropped their support. And the English government even waged wars against France till the fall of Napoleon in 1815. During this period, England itself had experienced profound economic and social changes. The primarily agricultural society had been replaced by a modern industrialized one. The biggest social change in Englishhistory was the transfer of large masses of the population from the countryside to the towns. The prosperous peasant farmers had long been considered the solid base of English society; but by the 19th century they had largely disappeared. As a result of the Enclosures and the agricultural mechanization, the peasants were driven out of their land: some emigrated to the colonies; some sank to the level of farm laborers; and many others drifted to the industrial towns where there was a growing demand for labor. But the new industrial towns were no better than jungles, where the law was "the survival of the fittest." The workers were herded into factories arid overcrowded streets, and reduced to the level of commodities, valued only according to the fluctuating demand for their labor. Women and children were treated no differently in this respect from the men. With the British Industrial Revolution coming into its full swing, the capitalist class came to dominate not only the means of production, but also trade and world market. Though England had increased its wealth by several times, it was only the rich who owned this wealth; the majority of the people were still poor, or even poorer. After the Napoleonic War, the English people suffered severe economic dessions. While the price of food rose rocket high, the workers' wages went sharply down; sixteen hours' labor a day could hardly pay for the daily bread. This cruel economic exploitation caused large-scale workers' disturbances in England; the desperation of the workers exssed itself in the popular outbreaks of machine-breaking known as the Luddite riots. The climax of popular agitation and government brutality came in August 1819 at St. Peter's Field, Manchester, where a huge but orderly group of peaceful protesters were charged by mounted troops who killed nine and wounded hundreds more. This was the notorious "Peterloo Massacre'' which roused indignation even among the upper class. However, the workers' strong demands for reform, for their own political and economic rights did not die down. The industrial bourgeoisie made use of this struggle to fight for its own sumacy in political power against the landed aristocrats. In 1832, the Reform Bill was enacted, which brought the industrial capitalists into power; but the workers who played the major role in the fight got nothing. Consequently, there arose sharp conflicts between capital and labor. The Romantic Movement, whether in England, Germany or France, exssed a more or less negative attitude toward the existing social and political conditions that came with industrialization and the growing importance of the bourgeoisie. The Romantics, who were deeply immersed in the most violent phase of the transition from a decadent feudal to a capitalist economy, saw both the corruption and injustice of the feudal societies and the fundamental inhumanity of the economic, social and political forces of capitalism. They felt that the society denied people their essential human needs. So under the influence of the leading romantic thinkers like Kant and the Post-Kantians, they demonstrated a strong reaction against the dominant modes of thinking of the 18th century writers and philosophers. Where their decessors saw man as a social animal, the Romantics saw him essentially as an individual in the solitary state. Where the Augustans emphasized those features that men have in common, the Romantics emphasized the special qualities of each individual's mind. Thus, we can say that Romanticism actually constitutes a change of direction from attention to the outer world of social civilization to the inner world of the human spirit. In essence it designates a literary and philosophical theory which tends to see the individual as the very center of all life and all experience. It also places the individual at the center of art, making literature most valuable as an exssion of his or her unique feelings and particular attitudes, and valuing its accuracy in portraying the individual's experiences. The Romantic period is an age of poetry. Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley and Keats are the major Romantic poets. They started a rebellion against the neoclassical literature, which。
英美报刊文章阅读精选本第五版课文翻译
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Lesson4 Is an Ivy League Diploma Worth It?花钱读常春藤名校值不值?1.如果愿意的话,施瓦茨(Daniel Schwartz)本来是可以去一所常春藤联盟(Ivy League)院校读书的。
他只是认为不值。
2.18 岁的施瓦茨被康奈尔大学(Cornell University)录取了,但他最终却去了纽约市立大学麦考利荣誉学院(City University of New York’s Macaulay Honors College),后者是免费的。
3.施瓦茨说,加上奖学金和贷款的支持,家里原本是可以付得起康奈尔的学费的。
但他想当医生,他觉得医学院是更有价值的一项投资。
私立学校医学院一年的花费动辄就要4 万5 美元。
他说,不值得为了一个本科文凭一年花5 万多美元。
4.助学贷款违约率日益攀升,大量的大学毕业生找不到工作,因此越来越多的学生认定,从一所学费不太贵的学校拿到的学位和从一所精英学校拿到的文凭没什么区别,并且不必背负贷款负担。
5.Robert Pizzo 越来越多的学生选择收费较低的公立大学,或选择住在家里走读以节省住房开支。
美国学生贷款行销协会(Sallie Mae)的一份报告显示,2010 年至2011 学年,家庭年收入10 万美元以上的学生中有近25%选择就读两年制的公立学校,高于上一学年12%的比例。
6.这份报告称,这样的选择意味着,在2010 至2011 学年,各个收入阶层的家庭在大学教育上的花费比上一年少9%,平均支出为21,889 美元,包括现金、贷款、奖学金等。
高收入家庭的大学教育支出降低了18%,平均为25,760 美元。
这份一年一度的报告是在对约1,600 名学生和家长进行问卷调查后完成的。
7.这种做法是有风险的。
顶级大学往往能吸引到那些已经不再去其他学校招聘的公司前来招聘。
在许多招聘者以及研究生院看来,精英学校的文凭还是更有吸引力的。
第二单元英美报刊选读
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Unit Two Information SuperhighwayText AThe Future is Already HereBy Barrett SeamanIt is simple but ingenious, easily accessible —and it gives people what they want without fuss or argument. It is, in short, one of the great conveniences of modern technology, the ATM, or automated teller machine.1Only a few years ago, getting your hands on real money meant waiting in line at the bank, or knowing the corner shopkeeper well enough to cash a personal check. The ATM changed all that, using a fusion of computer chips, telepad, phone line and dispensing mechanism to transform the way people access their money.2Armed with only a plastic card and a functioning index finger, a customer can now obtain cash as easily in Tierra del Fuego as in downtown Brussels.Yet the ATM's great convenience and relatively humble workings should not obscure the fact that it is in the vanguard of the information age, no less than the Internet,3 interactive TV4or video teleconferencing5. By applying technology to people's everyday needs, it epitomizes what Yale University computer scientist David Gelertner calls "the true potential of the information superhighway:6making everyday life for most people somewhat easier and less irritating."To that end, the new age of technology is already well launched, fueled by a long stream of techno-driven goods and services that is flooding the consumer marketplace to change the ways people live and work. So advanced is this transformation that even some of the most recent innovations are already taken for granted.7The heart of the cyberrevolution8 remains, of course, the personal computer. Cheaper, faster, more versatile and easier-to-use PCs are infiltrating America's social fabric.9 Software like Mosaic10 and Netscape11 has made navigating the Internet a lot less daunting for average citizens, who are rushing to buy modems12 and sign up for online services.13The modern, well-wired U.S. home already offers young and old a head-spinning array of computer-borne activities.14Children use CD-ROM15to play games and hear music. Teenagers flock to online services not only to "chat" but also to reach primary schoolwork sources, such as images of original works of art, documents prepared byexperts, even possible exchanges of E-mail with the experts themselves. Adults have access to instant stock-market quotes, to online versions of magazines and to a host of "clubs", where people gather to discuss subjects ranging from astronomy to genealogy to bicycling.16Using online programs and the Internet's increasingly crowded World Wide Web,17 one can find not just information about products and services but help in bringing the transactions to conclusions as well. Real estate agents are discovering online as an efficient ways to sell properties. The Homes and land Publishing Corp's Website lists homes across the U.S.—by state, then by city.18 The Austin Real Estate Connection19 in Texas gives information on the full range of homebuying services, from photographs of the houses to the names of builders and mortgage lenders,20 lawyers and title companies. Using a search program, prospective buyers can enter preferences, such as price range, style, school district and number of bedrooms, and thus narrow the field to homes th at meet those criteria.21In some instances, whole U.S. communities —even states —are building multipurpose computer networks. For the past 18 months, a partnership between the town of Blacksburg, Virginia, Bell Atlantic and Virginia Tech University has operated a communal network called the Blacksburg Electronic Village. By the end of 1994, the project had hooked up a majority of the town's businesses and 36,000 citizens, including 24,000 students at Virginia Tech, whose campus is situated in town.22All these people reach the Internet through a local network that ties Blacksburgians to the town hall, hospitals, stores, restaurants and one anogther. In time, participating merchants hope to do business using Digcash Corp's "E-cash", a form of electronic money.Computer-connected communities, in various stages of development, are operating in dozens of cities in the U.S. and Canada. The entire state of North Carolina has built its own information highway based on a fiberoptic system that links most of the state's departments and services, its public universities and even parts of the penal system.23In Mecklenburg County, for example, a video link permits prisoners to "appear" before judges without actually making the trek24 to the county courthouse.Convenience remains at the core of any technological application, which is a big reason why television, as a conduit of news and entertainment, still commands impressive loyalty. Operating instructions are crystal clear: turn on the set, select a ch annel and watch. Where TV is vulnerable, however, is in the area of choice.25Traditional U.S. network television delivers a packaged product: news at 6:30, sitcom26at 8, movie at 9, a pattern that, VCRs notwithstanding, often does not match individual viewers' needs. Communications giants, including Time Warner,27Viacom and Comcast, are currentlyconducting trials of interactive-TV systems that attempt to merge convenience and choice. In Time Warner's Orlando, Florida, test market, for example, participating families are able to choose from a video menu of movies, shopping catalogs, network programming and news —switching from one to another whenever they choose.28The new services offer more than video entertainment. Telephone giant US West (a partner in the Orlando experiment as well as others) contributes an interactive elaboration of its printed yellow pages.29With the click of a remote, viewers can survey the local restaurant scene, read reviews, peruse the menus and even reserve a table for fo ur at 8,30 or they can check local movie theaters —not only for what's playing and when but for what rating31 a film carries, what the critics are saying and previews of films. Tickets can be bought in advance through a credit-card debit system.32"This is not couch-potato33 stuff," says Sol Trujillo, president of U.S. West Marketing Resources. "It gets the people out."Indeed, a driving force behind most research and development in the communications field today is mobility. Smaller, lighter, multifunctional devices—and programs to run them —are pouring onto the market, with names like Envy, Magic Link, Marco, Simon and Zoomer. Most of these devices combine the two basic technologies of the information age: computing and telephony — a union that promises more than the sum of its parts.34The idea is to stuff as much information and as many communications tools as possible into a small package—called a personal digital assistant, or PDA35—that will perform dozens of tasks for the user. More advanced versions, weighing less than 1 kg can operate off regular phone line or cellular connection and send and receive faxes, voice mail or E-mail. They can be used to keep appointment schedules, expense ledgers,36 addresses and phone numbers, as well as large digitized documents.Some of these devices include (or soon will) so-called intelligent agents:37 programs that sort your E-mail, find you a convenient flight and book a seat or remind you of appointments and anniversaries. Electronic secretarial services38are already in use in sophisticated paging systems39on the market today. Call someone—let's call him Fred—who uses wildfire, and you will be greeted by a "personal receptionist" who asks you to "tell me your name, and I will try to find Fred for you." Half a munute may go by, but if Fred wants to talk to you—even from his raft in the Colorado River—he will get the message on his cell phone and come on the line. If Fred is too busy negotiating the rapids to talk, you can always leave him a voicemail message.The reach of phone systems continues to extend across the planet, as cellular transfer stations are built and communications satellites are launched. If Motorola’s ambitiousIridium satellite project is ever completed, prospectively in 1998, virtually no place on earth will be out of range.40Satellites are also making possible commercial use of the Pentagon-developed global positioning system,41which was employed by soldiers using handheld monitors during the Gulf War to pinpoint their location in the desert. Private-boat owners have been using GPS to fix their position at sea for the past decade.One of the hottest testing grounds for consumer-related technology is the supermarket. Across North America, food stores are erupting with radio and infrared data bursts that track pricing changes, inventory and customer buying patterns.42Battery-powered shelf labels that receive instant price changes via radio transmitter are currently used in 25 Edwards Super Food Stores in Connecticut; more than 40 European stores employ a solar-powered version that receives pricing data43 via infrared.44 Several large food retail operators are exploring the use of “smart cards”45and interactive kiosks46to provide shoppers with information and keep track of the buying habits of their regular customers, using the information to adjust inventories and to price and promote products better.Digital display screens visible above highways, warning of icy bridges ahead and detours, will become even more ubiquitous and varied.47So will the long —awaited telescreen48for seeing and being seen by those you talk with on the telephone. Carl Ledbetter, president of AT&T Consumer Products division, predicts that “in a decade, every phone will have a screen on it.” At Xerox’s Palo Alto Research Center in California, where the PC, on-screen icons and the laser printer originated, Mark Weiser, manager of the computer science laboratory, envisions a world in which flat-panel screens bearing a multitude of images will be household regulars.49 They will range from tiny ones, costing perhaps $5 each and plastered everywhere, to wall-size ones for viewing video. The smaller ones, says Weiser, are “where you’ll plan your grocery list or do your homework. They’ll be the equivalent of post-it notes50on the refrigerator or the crumpled-up notepaper in your pocket.”In Weiser’s world, people will wake up to a tiny bedside screen that gives the time and the weather forecast and even displays news headlines or sports scores. Pocket-size screens would also serve as remote controls for larger screens in the bedroom or living room, where family members will use them variously to watch TV, read the newspapers (which will be customized for each member’s personal interests) or draw up the family grocery list.To get themselves through the day, people will carry pocket-size Personal Assistants, called smart badges or smart cards, encoded with basic information that uniquely identifies them. Simple versions of such devices would allow their carriers to walk through security checkpoints —a concept already being tested in a section of the Paris Metro, wherecommuters need never remove the card from their pockets.51In future supermarkets, consumers will shop without having to pay cash or sign creditcard rec eipts. An infrared or microwave “interrogator” could register each consumer as soon as he or she enters a store and be ready with account information when the time comes to pay. Supermarket futurist Gary Lind, envisions “intelligent carts” that will use optical lasers to scan bar codes automatically as items are moved in or out of a shopping cart, thus enabling customers to keep a running tab.52These carts might even be programmed to organize the customer’s shopping expedition through the store, by scanning a handwritten list and sorting out the fastest route through the aisles.The process of Home Shopping, now a three-part, cable-TV, dedicated phone number and credit-card transaction, is poised to move to higher level of interactivity.53Next: interactive TV programs and in-store kiosks known as “electronic mirrors” with holographic images54that enable buyers to see what clothes look like on them without trying anything on. Computer catalogs of homes will include virtual-reality55“tour” of each room in a house.Far simpler combination of techologies could be used to create highly efficient urban-transportation systems. Buses, subways and private cars would be superfluous under a plan proffered by Nobel laureate Arno Penzias at Bell Laboratories56. In his vision, a fleet of passenger vans, each equipped with a gobal-positioning system and cellular phone would provide total customized coverage of every street and every neighborhood in town, 24 hours a day.Through the computer and the cell phones, drivers would receive destination instructions; using GPS, dispatchers would keep tabs on the real-time progress of each vehicle. Passengers would call up the service, be met with minimum delay, transfer only if necessary and relax while professional drivers took them to their desired destination —say, that quaint little farmers’ market on the far side of town, where the vegetables are always fresh but they don’t take credit cards. In that case, you’d better hope there’s an ATM around.TimeMay 1995 BACHGROUND1. In Neuromancer, a novel written by William Gibson, a young expatriate Americanliving in Canada, cyberspace is computer-generated landscape. What people see when they get there is a three-dimensional representation of all the information stored in “every computer in the human system” —great warehouses and skyscrapers of data.In the years since, there have been other names given to that shadowy space where our computer data reside: the Net, the Web, the Cloud, the Matrix, the Metaverse, the Datasphere, the Electronic Frontier, the information superhighway. By 1989 it had been borrowed by the online community to describe today’s increasingly inter-connected computer systems —especially the millions of computers jacked into the Internet.Now hardly a day goes by without some newspaper article, some political speech, som e corporate press release invoking Gibson’s imaginary world. suddenly, it seems, everybody has an E-mail address, from Hollywood moguls to the Holy See. Thousands chose to celebrate New Year’s this year with an online get-together called First Night in Cyberspace.In Washington cyberspace has become a political hot button of some potency, first pressed during the 1992 presidential campaign by A1 Gore and Bill Clinton, who rode to the White House in part on the promise that they would build the so-called information superhighway and route it through every voter’s district —if not to his home.The Republicans were quick to grab the initiative. No sooner had House Speaker Newt Gingrich taken office than he made his bid, staging a big press conference to unveil a new House of Representatives computer system. At a Washington confab called “Democracy in Virtual America,” the speaker talked expansively about wiring the world. “Cyberspace is the land of knowledge,” proclaimed an information age Magna Carta issued in his name.Corporations are scrambling to stake out their own claims in cyberspace. Every computer company, nearly every publisher, most communications firms, banks, insurance companies and hundreds of mailorder and retail firms are registering their Intern et domains and setting up sites on the World Wide Web. They sense that cyberspace will be one on the driving forces for economic growth in the 21st century.Cyberspace encompasses the million of personal computers connected by modems —via the telephone system —to commercial online services, as well as the millions more with high-speed links to local area networks, office E-mail systems and the Internet. It includes the rapidly expanding wireless services, microwave towers that carry great quantities of cellular phone and data traffic; communications satellites that will soon crisscross the globe like angry bees, connecting folks too far-flung or too much on the go to be tethered by wires. Someday even our television sets may be part of cyberspace, transforme d into interactive “teleputers.”But these wires and cables and microwaves are not really cyberspace. They are the means of conveyance, not the destination: the information superhighway. Cyberspace, in the sense of being “in the same room,” is an experienc e, not a wiring system. It is about people using the new technology to do what they are genetically programmed to do:communciate with one another. It can be found in electronic mail exchanged by lovers who have never met. It emerges from the endless debates on mailing lists and message boards. It’s that bond that knits together regulars in electronic chat rooms and newsgroups.In a world already too divided against itself —rich against poor, producer against consumer —cyberspace offers the nearest thing to a level playing field. Take, for example, the Internet. Until something better comes along to replace it, the Internet is cyberspace. It may not reach every computer in the human system, as Gibson imagined, but it comes very close.Begun more than 20 years ago as a U.S. Defense Department experiment, the Internet escaped from the Pentagon in 1984 and spread like kudzu during the personal-computer boom, nearly doubling every year from the mid-1980s on. Today 30 million to 40 million people in more than 160 countries have at least E-mail access to the Internet; in Japan, New Zealand and parts of Europe the number of Net users has grown more than 1000% during the past three years.One factor fueling the Internet’s remarkable growth is its resolutely grass-roots structure. The Internet is open (nonproprietary) and democratic. No one owns it. No single organization controls it. It is run like a commune with 4.8 million fiercely independent members (called hosts). It crosses national boundaries and answers to no s overeign. It is literally lawless.Although graphics, photos and even videos have started to show up, cyberspace, as it exists on the Internet, is still primarily a text medium. People communicate by and large through words, typed and displayed on a screen. Yet cyberspace assumes an astonishing array of forms, from the E-mail list to which anyone can contribute to the MUDS, or Multi-User Dungeons (elaborate fictional gathering places that users create one “room” at a time). All these “spaces” have one thing in common: they are egalitarian to a fault.Nowhere is this leveling effect more apparent than on Usenet —more than 10,000 discussing groups (called newsgroups) distributed over the Internet and devoted to every conceivable subject, from conservative U.S. talk-show host Rush Limbaugh to particle physics to the nocturnal habits of ring-tailed lemurs. The Usenet newsgoups are, in their way, the perfect antidote to modern mass media.The Internet is changing rapidly. Lately a lot of the development efforts have shifted form the rough-and-tumble Usenet newsgoups to the more passive and consumer-oriented “home pages” of the World Wide Web.There is a broad consensus in U.S. government and industry that the National Infrastructure, as the Clinton Administration prefers to call the info highway, will be a broadband, switched network. But how it will be structured and how it will be deployed are not so clear. For example, if cable-TV and telephone companies are allowed to roll out the new services in only the richest neighborhoods, that could exacerbate the already growing disparity between those who have access to the latest information and the best intelligence and those who must be content with what they see on TV.Welcome to Cyberspace(Abridged and adapted)TimeMay 19952. On August 24, 1995, Microsoft Corporation announced the launch of Windows 95,a new Windows operating system for personal computers.Windows 95 is backwards compatible. As well as containing many exciting new applications, such as enhanced music CDs and easy-to-use Plug and Play devices, you won’t need new hardware or new software to use it. In fact, you won’t even have to change the file formats of your databases, spreadsheets and documents. Examples of popular products that are compatible with Windows 95 include Word Perfect, Lotus 1-2-3, dBASE, Compuserve, and Flight Simulator.If you’ve got a PC with of RAM (four megabytes of random access memory) and a 386DX processor (a 32-bit microprocessor from Intel) inside it, windows 95 will run as fast or faster than windows 3.1. If you have more memory, you’ll get even better performance. (The Microsoft Network on-line service requires 8MB of RAM.) The first improvement that you will notice is the new user interface. It makes computing even easier for inexperienced users and allows computer “veterans” greater efficiency and flexi bility. A major component of his new interface is the “Start” button and the system “Taskbar” which will make all the functions, files and applications that most users need accessible with a single click of a button. Another improvement is the long filename support.Through the Microsoft Network (MSN), an in-built, on -line service, you have easy access to useful information and communication features. So you don’t need to learn a new application or read a manual to go on-line and access MSM-sponsored forums, bulletin boards and discussion groups, the Internet or E-mail.Through Microsoft Exchange, you can increase the ease, speed and convenience of the different types of electronic mail and fax systems with a single interface.New enhanced music CDs will allow you to access an interactive world where multimedia meets music. The CDs will play music from a stereo’s CD player as normal, but once inserted into a Windows 95-based multimedia PC, they will display information and images provided by the artist as well as play the music. So you can type a document while your favourite music video plays discreetly —or not so discreetly —in the corner of the screen.As technology, Windows 95 is little more than a belated catch-up to Apple’s Macintosh software. But Windows 95 is less about technology than about industry leadership.3. As businesses big and small wire themselves into high-speed electronic communications systems, their reliance on traditional mail will inevitably lessen. In thelong run, that could leave the U.S. Postal Service, with its 40,000 branches, 780,000 employees and $50 billion annual budget, as one giant piece of roadkill on the information highway.While the total volume of mail delivered by the U.S. post office has actually risen 5% since 1988, business-to-business mail during that same period dropped an alarming 33%. Most of that, the post office acknowledges, has been lost to fax machines, E-mail sent via the Internet arrives instantly, provided it is addressed correctly, while the post office is lucky to deliver 80% of first-class letters within three days —an average that has caused the netheads of cyberspace to dub it “snail mail.” Moreover, one never reads about thousands of electronic messages being misplaced for years and turning up at th e wrong address.Even before the loss of traffic to the Internet and related technologies, government-operated mail service was losing the overnight letter-and parcel-delivery businesses to firms such as Federal Express and United Parcel Service. So far th e post office has held its own because of the growing volume of mail between businesses and homes, mainly catalogs, credit-card offers, bills and payments. But as more private citizens get computer-connected, even that revenue source will face fierce competition from electronic shopping and banking services. America Online, for example, gives its members access to a service called 2Market, allowing them to browse for products online and order electronically. Since purchased goods are delivered by either FedEx or U.P.S., these transactions entirely circumvent the Postal Service.U.S. Postal officials counter that their service is truly universal, whereas their electronic predators are unduly optimistic about how widespread the new communications infrastructure will become. Faithful human couriers still haul letters by mule train to the Havasupai tribe in Arizona and don Santa Claus suits to deliver cards and presents at Christmastime. Besides, the 206-year-old service is planning for its survival —experimentin g with ventures ranging from stamp collectors’ services on CD-ROM to the certification of business-related electronic communications, similar to what it now does for postmarked, certified and registered mail. Another scheme would locate electronic kiosks in post offices, allowing Americans without private Internet connections to exchange E-mail and tap into online services offered by a growing number of government agencies, including the Social Security Administration and the Federal Communications Commission.The trick will be to keep up with the competition while maintaining universal delivery. That famous promise —“Neither snow, nor rain, nor heat, nor gloom of night stays these couriers …” —engraved on New York City’s main post office has a more reass uring ring to a citizen whose new 100-megahertz multimedia Power PC just crashed for the third time.TimeMay 1995NOTES1. automated teller machine (ATM) 自动取款机2. The ATM changed all that, using a fusion of computer chips, telepad, phone line anddispensing mechanism to transform the way people access their money. 自动取款机改变了一切,它综合使用计算机芯片、电信盘、电话线和行动分配装置,改变了人们取款的方式。
(完整word版)英美报刊选读教学大纲董慧敏
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英美报刊选读教学大纲课程英文名称: Journalistic Reading Course学分:2总学时:36授课对象:大学英语四级学生开课学期:2011年9月一.课程的性质、目的与任务本课程是大学英语选修课.在通识教育理念和以内容依托教学的指导下,把学生从枯燥乏味的以语言形式为主体的学习中解放了出来,实现了以语言形式为主体向以内容为主体教学的转化,把英语学习融入了现实的生活之中,实现了以教师为主体向以学生为主体的转化,使学生学有生活,学有内容,学有意义,学有兴趣,学有动力,学有所思,学有话说,学有深度,学有所获的教学效果。
本课程拟实现的目标是:1.学生通过本课程的学习,掌握常见报刊词汇,报刊文章标题的翻译,学会看懂较简单的英美报刊文章,提高阅读和理解英美报刊的能力,了解外刊的语言风格与特色,培养独立阅读外刊的基本功。
2.学习现代语言,增加语言感知的敏锐性,提高英语综合应用能力,增加社会认知能力,培养跨文化交流意识和掌握多学科知识,提高综合人文素质。
3。
通过大量的阅读和讨论,了解国际时事,了解各国的政治、经济、文化、科技等,加强分析能力、思辨能力和创新能力,提高独立思考、解决问题的能力。
通过分组学习,查阅资料,跟踪热点,提高学生自主学习、自治、合作和管理能力。
二.课程主要内容和基本要求本课程要求教学内容选材广泛,选自近两年英美报刊杂志,以热点话题为线,并且文章要有每个教学单元包括:问题(与文章相关导入);课文(以专题为线的专题报导);背景(介绍专题的历史、背景、新动向及前景);注释(针对课文中的词汇、习语、语法、文化知识的难点及对课文的理解给予解释);阅读理解题;讨论;补充阅读。
导学1。
“英美报刊选读课"目的和全球化人才培养目标(通识教育,内容依托,英语是工具,全球化第三阶段,国际化人才)for information;for enjoyment;for reading ability目的:获得多种多样、多方位多角度的信息;扩大知识面,了解文化,获得乐趣;培养学生用英语进行思维的能力;通过读报,让学生获得更多与人沟通的能力。
最新英美报刊选读—Unit 1
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最新英美报刊选读_Unit 1 serving Languages Is About More Than Words
Language Features Background Information WarmingWarming-up Questions Organization Analysis Detailed Reading PostPost-Reading
最新英美报刊选读_Unit 1 Focus
WarmingWarming-up Questions
What can we do to preserve dying language?
• Already, after only a few weeks of work, the students are well on their way to reaching their first-year goal to create a dictionary with 1,500 entries and a lesson plan to be used throughout the year. • They have also begun teaching classes to many of the community’s children and adults. Beier said that an average of 20 adults and 35 youth, ranging in age from 6 to 16, attend their classes—a significant portion of San Antonio’s total population of about 400 people.
最新英美报刊选读_Unit 1 Focus
英美报刊
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英美报刊
《英美报刊选读》所选篇目大多为2010年以来的美英报刊文章,内容涵盖美英社会的若干方面,地理范围覆盖广阔。
读报知识涉及美英文化的若干方面,还有新闻语言的特点,修辞方法和背景知识介绍,力争在最大限度上满足高校英语教学的要求。
我们的目的是通过开设本课程,把学习者引导到一个从未系统涉猎过的英语语言及文化的层面,让学生关注英语报刊,并把浏览英语报刊变成学习知识、培养语言运用技能和了解英语国家文化的一个平台。
1内容提要
本书按文章内容分为10个单元,共计30篇文章。
各单元内容分为:焦点透视、婚姻家庭、政治军事、文教体育、青春驿站、科学技术、观念信仰、财政经济、世界报道、社会问题。
每篇文章后有生词表和难点注释帮助读者理解正文。
本书可作为大学本科“英美报刊”选修课教材,亦可作为研究生英语阅读教材,同时也可作为英语专业学生或广大英语爱好者提高英语阅读水平的参考书。
2编辑推荐
本书按文章内容分为10个单元,共计30篇文章。
各单元内容分为:焦点透视、婚姻家庭、政治军事、文教体育、青春驿站、科
学技术、观念信仰、财政经济、世界报道、社会问题。
每篇文章后有生词表和难点注释帮助读者理解正文。
本书可作为大学本科“英美报刊”选修课教材,亦可作为研究生英语阅读教材,同时也可作为英语专业学生或广大英语爱好者提高英语阅读水平的参考书。
【精选】英美报刊选读
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英美报刊选读湖南教育出版社,黎秀石编著,王宗炎审校,1985年第1版读《许国璋文集2》,居然看到一个很熟悉的书,黎秀石编著王宗炎审校的《英美报刊选读》。
我不知道有没有人知道这个书,或者对这个书有印象。
至少,这个书引起了我不少美好回忆。
这个书是很早的一个书了。
后来的十多年里,各个大学,各个出版社出版的相同题目的这类书很多。
但我我看过的同类型的书里面没有一本给我印象深刻过于此书的。
买这个书十分偶然。
大概是读大二期间,学校食堂前临时弄起了个跳蚤市场,专门卖大四即将离校的师兄师姐的书籍磁带等物品。
去转了转,带回两本书。
一本是《顾准文集》,一本就是《英美报刊选读》。
不知道辗转多少人的手了。
大概也是一代传一代吧。
可惜传到我,就放在我的书架上,没有再传下去。
有点惭愧了。
但是也不知道是否有人会看这本书,看了之后还觉得此书真的很不错。
人很多时候是不能一相情愿的。
太早的书了,纸质有点泛黄。
但还好不是那种黄而粗糙并且味道很重的纸(这种书目前图书馆很多见)。
纸张没有味道,也还算细腻。
印刷油墨质量也还好。
也确实经过好几个人的手了,前面的一百页,留有多个人的笔迹。
单词的读音,意义,都在旁边备注着。
字写的很整齐,整个书也就不让人觉得脏。
后几百页就几乎没什么字了。
大概前面几个主人也是读了一些,就没有毅力读下去了。
买的时候就想,晚自修的时候每天读一点吧。
后来每次晚自修就都带着这本书,大概到9、10点的时候,脑袋就会大,有点头疼,教科书什么的,是看不进了。
就拿出《英美报刊选读》,读个10页或者更多。
选文有难有易,有长有短。
关键是注释十分详尽,读的很有兴味。
一个学期下来,一本500多页(回忆,可能有误)的书也就读完了。
以前英文总是上课课文读完了事,第一次读这么多英文。
并且,读的这么有意思。
现在工作生活都和英语无关,但有时候还会拿起英文书读读,也和那时候读此书很有关系。
现在回想起来,此书的优点还真不少。
第一是选材。
当然,限于当初形式和认识的不足,选入的一些篇目有意识形态的限制。
英美报刊选读unit 1
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参
考
资
料
1.新编英语报刊导读
2.英语报刊阅读教程
延边大学教案
第1周,第1次课
章节
名称
Unit One Introduction to English News
授课
方式
全日制教学
教 学
时 数
2学时
教学
目的
要求
1.To learn about the basic concepts in Englishjournalism.
Blurring demarcation line:
Is a story about the private life of a politician "politics" or "entertainment"?
Is an article about“Tycoon buys looted treasure for nation”a "business" story or a "cultural legacy" story? Judging solely on subject matter, it can be difficult to tell
(4)Newspapers and magazines.
(5)An academic course training students in journalism.
(6)Written material of current interest or wide popular appeal.
2.The mass media today
In terms of style:
美英报刊阅读教程课文翻译
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第一篇它在1967年以美国139年获得100万人,而只有52年再增加1亿美元,返现,10月的一天,之后只有39的间隔年,美国将声称300多万灵魂。
瞬间将被喻为美国的无限活力和独特的生命力的又一象征。
它是这样的,当然。
不过,这也是事实美国已经成长人口普查局已经采取了测量,开始于1790年,当时创始人计数今天纽约市的人口不足4百万的同胞的,大约有一半的人口每天的时间。
最近的增长飙升已经不同凡响。
自2000年以来单,国家已经增加了20万人。
与西欧相比,出生率暴跌,还是日本,其人口萎缩,美国只知道增长,增长,更多的增长。
它现在拥有的第三大人口在世界上,中国和印度之后。
“经济增长是一个问题,我们必须要管理,说:”肯尼思·普鲁伊特,人口普查局前负责人,“但它更易于管理比失去你的人口。
”仔细检查号码,三大趋势出现。
首先是迁移。
由于工业基地东北部和中西部的下降,数以百万计的美国人已经转移到南部和西部,现在家里一半以上的人口和不断增长强劲。
移民是下一个。
在过去的四十年里,移民,主要来自墨西哥和拉丁美洲,已经重塑了国家的民族构成;的最新亿美国人,根据皮尤拉美裔中心的杰弗里·帕塞尔,53%要么是移民或他们的后代。
最后是大肆宣传的婴儿潮一代,现在许多人对退休的风口浪尖。
美国说,非营利性的人口资料局,“越来越大,年龄大了,更加多样化。
”的影响都是巨大而多样,影响美国的文化,政治,和经济性。
一个明显的例子就是对移民问题的辩论狂风暴雨涌动大会。
另:由于人口流动不断,国会选区重划会随之而来,引爆电力的地域平衡。
一个显着的年龄较大的美国也将对政府开支,所有这三个问题提供了新国会产生深远的影响,并太久,一个新总统之前,大量的思考。
THE NEW迁移博伊西,落基山山麓之间爱达荷州坐向东北和大盆地沙漠南,大天空和沙漠尘土飞扬之间,博伊西一直是先锋镇。
在19世纪初,传说,法裔加拿大毛皮捕手来到一个树丛,并惊呼“莱斯布瓦!”- 树林。
英美报刊选读4
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At WTO, a growing U.S. record of wins versus China, but an uncertain benefitFrom the Washington Post of August 6,2012The United States has won an impressive string of victories against China at the World Trade Organization in the past few years but U.S. companies have seen only limited benefits, according to a review of the cases and interviews with analysts and officials familiar with them.U.S. challenges, for example, have led to the repeal of Chinese import tariffs on American-made auto parts. But by the time the United States prevailed, China was well on its way— with the help of the protective tariffs — to developing its own industry for manufacturing engines, transmissions and other components, say U.S. auto industry officials. The repeal did little to stem the long-term movement of auto-parts work from America to China.Another WTO case challenging Chinese restrictions on U.S. film exports led to a partial opening of China’s market. But China was able to maintain strict limits on how many majormovie releasesfar below levels that prevail in the United States and other major markets.The Obama administration has put enforcement of trade agreements at the heart of its approach toward China, the world’s second-largest economy and an aggressive economic competitor. The Geneva-based WTO, which oversees the world’s major trade treaties, is central to that effort.The WTO offers a neutral forum where a country can call out another for cheating. This was supposed to help keep nations honest when they trade with one another, f osteringfreer and fairer f ueling economic growth all around. For the United States, the WTO was meant, in part, to help it navigate a thicket of economic challenges from China and other rapidly developing countries.While President Obama and GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney have been swapping accusations over who is tougher in tackling Chinese economic policies, there is more to the debate than scoring political points. The shared concerns over Chinese competition point out the limits of the WTO. Over the decade since China joined the organization, it has become increasingly clear that it is a flawed tool for prying open China’s massive market to American exports.Major sections of the Chinese market, for example, remain out of the WTO’s reach. China was allowed to join the organization in late 2001 without opening its government procurement to foreign companies, and it promised to negotiate a deal on this issue in the future. But China has yet to make an offer that the United States and other WTO members would accept.In other areas of the economy, the Obama administration, like the previous Bush administration, has proven adept at mounting successful challenges. Of 14 complaints brought by the United States against China, 11 have essentially prevailed. Three cases are pending. China has won three cases it brought against the United States and lost a fourth.But winning in the courtroom is often only the start of the battle. What typically follows are negotiations between the two sides that determine what changes the losing side will makein its trade practices. Early cases won discrete benefits for the United States — such as the lifting of tax preferences that China offered its local companies — but later cases have bogged down in settlement talks.The United States recently won a case involving restrictions on the activities of U.S. credit-card companies in China. Now, the matter is likely headed to appeal and protracted negotiations, during which time China’s homegrown electronic payments giant, China Unionpay, can continue solidifying the dominant market position it has built under state protection.A WTO case brought in 2007 against Chin a’s lax intellectual property laws was won by the United States two years later. But U.S. Undersecretary of the Treasury for International Affairs Lael Brainard said recently that theft of U.S. intellectual property in China remains “rampant.”The WTO battle over American film exports also began in 2007 and was won by the United States in 2009. But it was only during this year’s visit by incoming Chinese leader Xi Jinping that a settlement was concluded.Greg Frazier, executive vice president of the Motion Picture Association of America, acknowledged the limits of that deal. Bumping the number of imported first-run films from 20 to 34 per year was hardly a revolution. The increase in studio box-office receipts from 13 percent to 25 percent still falls short of the typical 50-50 split. To get the agreement, the United States also had to agree to leave the government’s China Film Group as the country’s sole film importer.But U.S. business officials say they accept that progress with China will always be grudgingly step by step.“The view was, use the WTO to crack restrictions, which had been in place for 20 years, and try to set up a dynamic that will feed into commercial changes that are taking place,” Frazier said. “People look at this market, and they wa nt to transform it. It’s not in the cards. You do what is politically feasible.”Some U.S. executives say American companies should stay engaged in China and cut deals as they can. “China is going to be the world’s biggest economy, and U.S. companies have to figure out how to do business there,” said John G. Rice, G eneral Electric’s vice chairman.Experts say it is unlikely that WTO enforcement will broadly change China’s policies. The Chinese “think they have a pretty good model, and they don’t see the W TO as an institution that can make major changes. Modest changes. Minor changes. But not major systemic change,” said Gary Hufbauer, a trade expert at the Peterson Institute of International Economics who follows U.S.-China economic relations.Obama administration officials say they hope that recent WTO cases will hit at the core of China’s industrial policy. This means, for example, challenging China’s export restrictions on rare-earth minerals critical to high-tech manufacturing, and other industrial raw materials. U.S. officials say they hope that persistence — increasing the number and complexity of cases filed in Geneva —will pay off and prompt China’s policymakers to avoid adopting trade measures that they know will be successfully challenged.“Ther e has been a seminal shift under this administration in how the United Statesenforces trade agreements with respect to China and other countries,” said Timothy Reif, general counsel at the U.S. trade representative’s office. “Our role is to make clear tha t if they are going to engage in inconsistencies, we will fight it and, when necessary, litigate it.”Reif hired three Mandarin-proficient lawyers over the past year to work with Katherine Tai, the office’s chief counsel for China trade enforcement, and the pace of case filings has increased. A new Interagency Trade Enforcement Center is focusing on China and has drawn in personnel from other agencies. The rare-earths challenge was considered soAgency, the State Departmentthe White House.WTO challenges are not the only tool the United States has to try to open China’s market. The Commerce Department has imposed dozens of tariffs on Chinese products considered unfairly priced or subsidized. The United States also holds regular high-level talks with China to push trade and economic issues.But in the 10 years since China joined the WTO membership, the group has become the venue for a steady series of trade battles.China was quick to settle the first cases brought against it, said Henry Gao of the Shanghai Institute of Foreign Trade, but is now fighting back more aggressively and negotiating tougher when it loses.The country has sent promising young lawyers to programs such as Georgetown University’s Institute of International Economic Law, begun sending more participants to world trade forums and panels, and expanded Chinese organizations such as the Shanghai Institute to press its viewpoint.The Chinese “don’t like litigation, and there was a lack of experience with the WTO system,” in the early years, Gao said. But the country recognizes that the WTO is one field in “the competition for economic supremacy.”。
英美报刊选读1
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The Sino-Japanese Naval War of 2012OK, it's probably not going to happen. But if it did, who would win?From Foreign Policy of August 24,2012Lord Wellington depicted the allied triumph(盟军的胜利)at Waterloo as "the nearest-run thing(最势均力敌的较量)you ever saw in your life." Wellington's verdict would describe the likely outcome should Chinese and Japanese forces meet in battle over theSenkaku/Diaoyu Islands, or elsewhere off the Northeast Asian seaboard. Such a fight appeared farfetched(牵强的,靠不住的)before 2010, when Japan's Coast Guard apprehended(逮捕)Chinese fishermen who rammed one of its vessels off the disputed islands, but it appears more likely now. After Japan detained and deported(扣押并遣送)Chinese activists who landed on the disputed islands in mid-August, a hawkish(鹰派的)Chinese major general(少将), Luo Yuan, called on China to dispatch(派遣)100 boats to defend the Diaoyus. In an op-ed(专栏版)published Aug. 20, the nationalistic Chinese broadsheet Global Times(环球时报的大幅纸张)warned, "Japan will pay a price for its actions ... and the result will be far worse than they anticipated."This is more than mere posturing(故作姿态). In July, China's East Sea Fleet(舰队)conducted an exercise simulating an amphibious(水陆两栖的)assault on the islands. China's leaders are clearly thinking about the unthinkable(未雨绸缪). And with protesters taking to the streets(上街游行)to smash(砸碎)Japanese cars and attack sushi restaurants, their people may be behind them(民众可能是政府强有力的后盾). So who would win the unlikely prospect of a clash of titan s in the Pacific(两位太平洋巨人): China or Japan?Despite Japan's latter-day(当今的)image as a military pushover(军事小国), a naval war would not be a rout(溃败)for China. While the Japanese postwar "peace" constitution (和平宪法)"forever renounces war as a sovereign right of the nation and the threat or use of force as means of settling international disputes,"(永远放弃自己作为主权国家使用武力解决国际纠纷的权力)the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) has accumulated several pockets of material excellence,(存有几幅好牌)such as undersea warfare, since World War II. And Japanese mariners(海员)are renowned for their professionalism. If commanders manage their human, material, (调兵遣将)and geographic advantages artfully, Tokyo could make a maritime war(海战)with China a close-run thing(旗鼓相当)-- and perhaps even prevail(更胜一筹).Past naval wars between the two rivals set the stage for today's island controversy. During the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895, a fleet engagement turned Asia's Sinocentric order upside down in an afternoon. The Imperial Japanese Navy, hurriedly cobbled together from imported hulls and components following Japan's Meiji Restoration, smashedChina's Beiyang Fleet, a force widely considered superior in material terms. The September 1894 Battle of the Yalu River was won by the navy with superior seamanship,gunnery, and morale. While Japan is no longer a rising power, the JMSDF has preserved a culture of human excellence.If a rerun of the Battle of the Yalu takes place, how would Japan's navy match up against China's? This is admittedly an improbable scenario. A straightforward China-on-Japan war is doubtful unless Beijing manages to isolate Tokyo diplomatically -- as wise practitioners of limited war attempt to do -- or Tokyo isolates itself through foolish diplomacy. Barring that, a conflict would probably ensnare the United States as an active combatant on the Japanese side. War is a political act -- "statesmanship directing arms," as naval historian Alfred Thayer Mahan puts it -- but let's discount politics for now and look at the prospects of war in strictly military terms, as a contest between Chinese and Japanese sea power.In raw numerical terms, there is no contest. Japan's navy boasts 48 "major surface combatants," ships designed to attack enemy main fleets while taking a pounding themselves. For the JMSDF these include "helicopter destroyers," or light aircraft carriers; guided-missile destroyers equipped with the state-of-the-art Aegis combat system, a combination radar, computer, and fire-control system found in frontline U.S. Navy warships; and an assortment of lesser destroyers, frigates, and corvettes. A squadron of 16 diesel-electric submarines augments the surface fleet. Juxtapose this against the PLA Navy's 73 major surface combatants, 84 missile-firing patrol craft, and 63 submarines, and the bidding appears grim for Japan. China's navy is far superior in sheer weight of steel.But raw numbers can be misleading, for three main reasons. First, as strategist Edward Luttwak has observed, weapons are like "black boxes" until actually used in combat: no one knows for sure whether they will perform as advertised. Battle, not t echnical specifications, is the true arbiter of military technology's value. Accurately forecasting how ships, planes, and missiles will perform amid the stresses and chaos of combat thus verges on impossible. This is especially true, adds Luttwak, when conflict pits an open society against a closed one. Open societies have a habit of debating their military failings in public, whereas closed societies tend to keep their deficiencies out of view. Luttwak was referring to the U.S.-Soviet naval competition, but it applies to Sino-Japanese competition as well. The Soviet Navy appeared imposing on paper. But Soviet warships on the high seas during the Cold War showed unmistakable symptoms of decay, from slipshod shiphandling to rusty hulls. The PLA Navy could be hiding something as well. The quality of the JMSDF's platforms, and its human capabilities, could partially or wholly offset the PLA's advantage of numbers.Second, there's the human variable in warfare. In his classic account, The Naval War of 1812, Theodore Roosevelt explained the U.S. Navy's success in single-ship duels against Britain's Royal Navy as a product of quality ship design and construction and superior fighting prowess: in other words, of material and human factors. The latter is measured in seamanship, gunnery, and the myriad of traits that set one navy apart from others. Mariners hone these traits not by sitting in port and polishing their equipment but by goingto sea. JMSDF flotillas ply Asian waters continually, operating solo or with other navies. The PLA Navy is inert by comparison. With the exception of a counter-piracy deployment to the Gulf of Aden that began in 2009, Chinese fleets emerge only for brief cruises or exercises, leaving crews little time to develop an operating rhythm, learn their profession, or build healthy habits. The human edge goes to Japan.And three, it's misleading to reduce the problem solely to fleets. There will be no purely fleet-on-fleet engagement in Northeast Asia. Geography situated the two Asian titans close to each other: their landmasses, including outlying islands, are unsinkable aircraft carriers and missile firing platforms. Suitably armed and fortified, land-based sites constitute formidable implements of sea power. So we need to factor in both countries' land-based firepower.Japan forms the northern arc of the first island chain that envelops the Asian coastline, forming the eastern frontier of the Yellow and East China seas. No island between the Tsushima Strait (which separates Japan from Korea) and Taiwan lies more than 500 miles off China's coast. Most, including the Senkakus/Diaoyus, are far closer. Within these cramped waters, any likely battleground would fall within range of shore-based firepower. Both militaries field tactical aircraft that boast the combat radius to strike throughout the Yellow and East China seas and into the Western Pacific. Both possess shore-firedanti-ship cruise missiles (ASCMs) and can add their hitting power to the mix.There are some asymmetries, however. PLA conventional ballistic missiles can strike at land sites throughout Asia, putting Japanese assets at risk before they ever leave port or take to the sky. And China's Second Artillery Corps, or missile force, has reportedly fielded anti-ship ballistic missiles (ASBMs) able to strike at moving ships at sea from the mainland. With a range estimated at more than 900 miles, the ASBM could strike anywhere in the China seas, at seaports throughout the Japanese islands, and far beyond.Consider the Senkakus, the hardest assets to defend from the Japanese standpoint. They lie near the southwestern tip of the Ryukyu chain, closer to Taiwan than to Okinawa or Japan's major islands. Defending them from distant bases would be difficult. But if Japan forward-deployed Type 88 ASCMs -- mobile, easily transportable anti-ship weapons -- and missile crews to the islets and to neighboring islands in the Ryukyu chain, its ground troops could generate overlapping fields of fire that would convert nearby seas into no-go zones for Chinese shipping. Once dug in, they would be tough to dislodge, even for determined Chinese rocketeers and airmen.Whoever forges sea, land, and air forces into the sharpest weapon of sea combat stands a good chance of prevailing. That could be Japan if its political and military leaders think creatively, procure the right hardware, and arrange it on the map for maximum effect. After all, Japan doesn't need to defeat China's military in order to win a showdown at sea, because it already holds the contested real estate; all it needs to do is deny China access.If Northeast Asian seas became a no-man's land but Japanese forces hung on, the political victory would be Tokyo's.Japan also enjoys the luxury of concentrating its forces at home, whereas the PLA Navy is dispersed into three fleets spread along China's lengthy coastline. Chinese commanders face a dilemma: If they concentrate forces to amass numerical superiority during hostilities with Japan, they risk leaving other interests uncovered. It would be hazardous for Beijing to leave, say, the South China Sea unguarded during a conflict in the northeast.And finally, Chinese leaders would be forced to consider how far a marine war would set back their sea-power project. China has staked its economic and diplomatic future in large part on a powerful oceangoing navy. In December 2006, President Hu Jintao ordered PLA commanders to construct "a powerful people's navy" that could defend the nation's maritime lifelines -- in particular sea lanes that connect Indian Ocean energy exporters with users in China -- "at any time." That takes lots of ships. If it lost much of the fleet in a Sino-Japanese clash -- even in a winning effort -- Beijing could see its momentum toward world-power status reversed in an afternoon.Here's hoping China's political and military leaders understand all this. If so, the Great Sino-Japanese Naval War of 2012 won't be happening outside these pages.。
美英报刊阅读教程Lesson13课文
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美英报刊阅读教程Lesson13课文Lesson 13 Ban Sparks Smoking WarSleepers are mad at bar patrons, and owners are mad at city By Charisse Jones1. NEW YORK-David Rabin doesn’t do cigarettes. In fact, he can’t stand smoke.2. But the co-owner of Lotus, one of the hottest night spots in Manhattan[1], says he now spends a good part of his time fighting a law that prohibits lighting up in bars and pushes smokers onto the street.3. “This is supposed to be the city that never sleeps,” says Rabin, 42. “It’s now the city that never sleeps because smokers are huddled beneath a four-story walk-up talking. Where else are they going to go?”4. New York City is still coming to terms with smoke-free night life[2] three months after a ban took effect outlawing smoking in nearly all work-places, including restaurants and bars.5. Five states—New York, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine and California—have passed similar smoking restrictions that include bars and taverns. Ne w York State’ s ban, which echoes the city’ s anti-smoking law, goes into effect July 24.6. Just last week, Maine’s governor signed into law a ban on smoking in taverns, pool halls, lounges and some off-track betting[3] sites that goes into effect Jan. 1. Smoking is already outlawed in restaurants. On May 23, Connecticut’s governor signed a m easure that will prohibit smoking in cafes, taverns, restaurants and public facilities by April 2004.7. On Tuesday, Florida began a smoking ban that’s slightly less restrictive. It bans smoking in all enclosed workplaces,including restaurants and bars where food sales make up at least 10% of their business.Business is off8. New York City’s law has sparked a million “butts” jokes in the tabloids and turned celebrities such as Britney Spears into alleged scofflaws for illegally puffing away.[4] And it has stirred fear and loathing among some residents and businesses that say customers don’t want to drink and nosh where they can’ t light up.9. One New York City councilman recently called on the city and state to consider amending the anti-smoking laws—a move other city officials say is unlikely. Owners and managers of cafes and bars from Queens[5] to Manhattan say that business is off as much as 40% and that they have been forced to lay off employees. Some community representatives say noise complaints have risen since pub denizens began lighting up on the sidewalk.10. “If what I’m hearing is correct, this is having a devastating effect on the city’s economic recovery,[6]” says Queens councilman Tony Avella, who says he reluctantly voted for the ban but thinks the council should revisit the issue[7].11. His office is receiving a dozen complaints a week about litter, noise and occasional rights among smokers outside nei ghborhood bars. “We need to find out if there’s a way to preserve public health and allow people to drink and smoke at the same time,” he says.12. Those who have studied the impact of anti-smoking measures say such laws protect the health of bartenders, waitresses and patrons and also bring in customers who were reluctant to socialize where smoking was allowed.[8]13. “What the data show is that no smoke-free air acts haveever hurt business,” says Tom Frieden, New York City’ s health commissioner. He says four out of five New Yorkers do not smoke.14. In a city of apartment dwellers, where people live above restaurants and pubs, some say long-standing tensions between businesses and residents have only risen since smokers were forced to congregate outside.15. “We have found that our number of complaints have increased regarding noise on the st reet, particularly when it conies to smokers,” says Kyle Merker, chairman of one of Manhattan’s community boards. “Realistically, are they going to repeal the law? N o. But maybe we can refine it.”Earlier closing time?16. Some club owners fear that anger about the excessive noise could make it harder for businesses to get liquor licenses, or it may lead to forcing businesses to close at 2 a.m. rather than 4, which Rabin fears would make New York no different than other cities.17. “This has brought about a civil war between night life and residents, both of whom have a legitimate right to exist,”[9] says Rabin, president of the New York Nightlife Association.18. Ciar an Staunton, owner of O’Neill’s in Manhattan, says business is off 20% as former patrons head home to Connecticut or New Jersey, where they can still smoke in a bar.19. I’ve met some of my patrons coming out of liquor stores with six-packs[10] saying, “We’re going to drink where we can smoke,” he says. “The original legislation was put in to he lp employees, to provide them with clean air…. Well, we’ve laid off three employees because of the smoking ban.”20. Others note that the sour economy could be one reason some bars and restaurants may be struggling.21. “These ordinances don’t have any eff ect on the hospitality business[11], and in the long term are very positive because they expand the market,” says Stanton Glantz of the University of California San Francisco, who has studied the economic impact of smoking bans.22. On the streets of the c ity, feelings about the smoking ban are mixed, but many say there’ s no more noise than before. And they appreciate the smoke-free air inside bars.23. “The noise is relatively low, and I only mind it when I’ m trying to go to sleep because of work in the morning,” says Tracy Wallach, 20, who lives next to The Coffee Shop bar and restaurant in Union Square.24. Even some bar managers have made their peace.[12]25. “The first few weeks, (fewer) people came in,” says Barry Brodsky, manager of Bar None in the East Village, “ Then they gave in.”From USA Today, June 3, 2003。
英美报刊选读
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A Newspaper is any published paper that reports news of interest to a local community or to a specialized group (like lawyers or stockbrokers).Headline- the words printed in large type across the top of a newspaper article to catch the reader’s attentionDateline- the words at the beginning of a news article that tell you when and where the story was writtenNews Article- In a newspaper, a story about an event that has just taken placeLead Article- The story on the front page is often called a “lead”or “splash” story. This is the story that the greatest number of people will find interesting, and is positioned on the front cover in order to promote a high number of sales. It is usually a story which will be of national, rather then local interest.Feature article- In a newspaper, a detailed report on a person, and issue, or an event.Editor- One of the people who is in charge of the content of the newspaper.Editorial- An article in which the people who run a newspaper give their opinion on an important issue.Parts of a Newspaper•International- The international section of a newspaper tells you about news from different continents, such as Africa, the Americas, and Europe.•Business Section- The business section is for things that are happening business-wise. For example, the business section might contain media and advertising, world business, the economy of the country that you live in, the stock market listings, mutual funds, company research, and stock portfolios.Parts of a Newspaper•Technology- The technology section contains things that are going in and out of style in the technology world, such as new smart phones, electronic tablets, and personal computers. •Science- The science section in a newspaper contains the latest discoveries in science. For example, a science section might describe astronomical events happening in outer space, and environmental events here on Earth.Parts of a Newspaper•Health- The health section in a newspaper would usually contain the things that are happening to a modern person’s health. For example, doctors might have developed a new medicine for people suffering from allergies. In a health section, there might be news containing things about fitness and nutrition, new health care policies, and mental health and behavior.Parts of a Newspaper•Sports- In a sports section, you might find out about the results of last night’s baseball, basketball, and football games. It will also report on a player who has been injured and cannot play. •Education- In the education section you might find the overall average for students in a particular school, and maybe even a couple of awards that a student worn for the school that they attend.Parts of a Newspaper•Weather- The weather section covers both local and national weather reports. •Obituaries- In an obituary, you can find out about people who have passed on recently, especially if people think that their death should be mentioned to the community. When you go to this section in a newspaper, you can most likely find a picture about someone and a short biography. Parts of a Newspaper•Lifestyle pages- Includes horoscopes, cartoons, Dear Abby, crossword puzzle, and short stories. •The Cover Page Story- In this section, you’d just find the story that started on the front page.It has more detail, and is usually found in the first few pages of the newspaper.Parts of a Newspaper•Table of Contents- This is the most important part of the newspaper. This part of thenewspaper shows where to find all of the newspaper sections. Without it, reading the newspaper could take many hours.Parts of a Newspaper•Advertisements- Because newspapers cannot survive just by sales alone, they also carryadvertising. Advertising is usually divided into “showcase” or “display” ads that can t ake two pages, a whole page, half a page, a quarter of a page, ect… and “classified” ads that are only a few lines each, and a lot less expensive then the display ads.Parts of a Newspaper•Modern newspapers also carry things to entice people who don’t ca re for the news, but are interested in entertainment, self-improvement, ect…•To provide more stimulus for people to buy their papers, many also carry “op-ed” columns- which are opinion pieces written by people who are known and respected for their opinions. Parts of a Newspaper•Many local newspapers also carry items like obituaries, foreclosures, bankruptcies, court proceedings, police blotters, ect… out of a feeling that they are “ newspapers of record” and have a duty to report this information so members of the community know what is happening in the community.。
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Unit2 Gender IssuesMen turn to jobs women usually do 1.HOUSTON - Over the last decade, American menof all backgrounds have begun flocking to fields such as teaching, nursing and waiting tables that have long been the province of women.2."The way I look at it is that anything, basically,that a woman can do, a guy can do," said Miguel Alquicira, who graduated from high school when construction and manufacturing jobs were scarce and became a dental assistant.3.The trend began well before the crash,andappears to be driven by a variety of factors, including financial concerns, quality-of-life issues and a gradual erosion of g ender stereotypes.4.In interviews, about two dozen men played downthe economic considerations, saying that the stigma associated with choosing such jobs had faded, and that the jobs were appealing not just because they offered stable employment, but because they were more satisfying.5."I.T. is just killing viruses and clearing paper jamsall day," said Scott Kearney, 43, who tried information technology and other fields before becoming a nurse in the pediatric intensive care unit at Children's Memorial Hermann Hospital in Houston.6.An analysis of United States census data by TheNew York Times shows that from 2000 to 2010,occupations that are more than 70 percent female accounted for almost a third of all job growth for men, double the share of the previous decade.7.That does not mean that men are displacingwomen - those same jobs accounted for almost two-thirds of women's job growth. But in Texas, for example, the number of men who are registered nurses nearly doubled in that time period.8.The shift includes low-wage jobs as well.Nationally, two-thirds more men were bank tellers, almost twice as many were receptionists and two-thirds more were waiting tables in 2010 than a decade earlier.9.Even more striking is the type of men who aremaking the shift. From 1970 to 1990, according to a study by Mary Gatta, senior scholar at Wider Opportunities for Women, an organization based in Washington, D.C., and Patricia A. Roos, a sociologist at Rutgers University in New Jersey, men who took so-called pink-collar jobs tended to be foreign-born, non-English speakers with low education levels.10.Now, though, the trend has spread among men ofnearly all races and ages, more than a third of whom have a college degree. In fact, the shift is most pronounced among young, white, college-educated men like Charles Reed, a sixth-grade math teacher at Patrick Henry Middle School in Houston.11.Mr. Reed, 25, intended to go to law school after atwo-year stint with Teach for America, a nationalteacher corps of recent college graduates who spend two years helping under-resourced urban and rural public schools. But Mr. Reed fell in love with teaching. He says the recession had little to do with it, though he believes that, by limiting prospects for new law school graduates, it made his father, a lawyer, more accepting.12.To the extent that the shift to "women's work" hasbeen accelerated by recession, the change may reverse when the economy recovers. "Are boys today saying, 'I want to grow up and be a nurse?'"asked Heather Boushey, senior economist at the Center for American Progress. "Or are they saying, 'I want a job that's stable and recession-proof?'"13.Daniel Wilden, a 26-year-old Army veteran andnursing student, said he had gained respect for nursing when he saw a female medic use a Leatherman tool to save the life of his comrade."She was a beast," he said admiringly.14.More than a few men said their new jobs were farharder than they imagined. But these men can expect success. Men earn more than women even in female-dominated jobs. And white men in particular who enter those fields easily move up to supervisory positions, a phenomenon known as the glass escalator, said Adia Harvey Wingfield,a sociologist at Georgia State University.15."I hated my job every single day of my life," saidJohn Cook, 55, who got a modest inheritance that let him drop a $150,000-a-year database consultant's job to enter nursing school.16.His starting salary will be two thirds lower, butdatabase consulting does not typically earn hugs like the one Mr. Cook received from a girl after he took care of her premature baby sister. "It's like, people get paid for doing this kind of stuff?" Mr.Cook said, tears coming to his eyes as he recounted the episode.17.Several men cited the same reasons for seekingout pink-collar work that have drawn women to such careers: less stress and more time at home.At John G. Osborne Elementary School, Adrian Ortiz, 42, joked that he was one of the few Mexicans who made more in his native country, where he was a hard-working lawyer, than he did in the United States as a kindergarten teacher in a bilingual classroom. "Now," he said, "my priorities are family, 100 percent."18.Betsey Stevenson, a labor economist at theUniversity of Pennsylvania, said she was not surprised that changing gender roles at home, where studies show men are shouldering more of the domestic burden, are showing up in career choices. "We tend to study these patterns of what's going on in the family and what's going on in the workplace as separate, but they're very much intertwined," she said. "So as attitudes in the family change, attitudes toward the workplace have changed."19.In a classroom at Houston Community College,Dexter Rodriguez, 35, said his job in tech support had not been threatened by the tough economy.Nonetheless, he said, his family downsized the house, traded the new cars for used ones and began to live off savings, all so Mr. Rodriguez could train for a career he regarded as more exciting.20."I put myself into the recession," he said, "becauseI wanted to go to nursing school."Unit3 E-CommerceThe Post-Cash Economy1.In London, travelers can buy train tickets withtheir phones - and hold up the phones for the conductor to see. And in Starbucks coffee shops in the United States, customers can wave their phones in front of the cash register and pay for their soy chai lattes.2.Money is not what it used to be, thanks to theInternet. And the pocketbook may soon be destined for the dustbin of history - at least if some technology companies get their way.3.The cellphone increasingly contains theessentials of what we need to make transactions."Identification, payment and personal items," as Hal Varian, the chief economist at Google, pointed out in a new survey conducted by the Pew Research Center in Washington, D.C. "All this will easily fit in your mobile device and will inevitably do so."4.The phone holds and records plenty more vitalinformation: It keeps track of where you are, what you like and who your peers are. That data can all be leveraged to sell you things you never knew you needed.5.The survey, released last month by the PewResearch Center's Internet and American Life Project along with Elon University's Imagining the Internet Center in North Carolina, asked justover 1,000 technologists and social scientists to opine on the future of the wallet in 2020. Nearly two-thirds agreed that "cash and credit cards will have mostly disappeared" and been replaced with "smart" devices able to carry out a transaction.But a third of the survey respondents countered that consumers would fear for the security of transactions over a mobile device and worry about surrendering so much data about their purchasing habits.6.Sometimes, those with fewer options are the onesto embrace change the fastest. In Kenya, a service called M-Pesa (pesa is money in Swahili) acts likea banking system for those who may not have abank account. With a rudimentary cellphone, M-Pesa users can send and receive money through a network of money agents, including cellphone shops. And in India, several phone carriers allow their customers to pay utility bills and transfer small amounts of money over their cellphones. 7.Several technology companies, big and small, arebusy trying to make it easier for us to buy and sell all kinds of things without our wallets. A start-up, WePay, describes itself as a service that allows the smallest merchant - say, a dog walker - to get paid;the company verifies the reputations of payers and sellers by analyzing, among other things, their Facebook accounts.8. A British start-up, called Blockchain, offers a freeiPhone application allowing customers to use a crypto-currency called bitcoins, which users can mint on their computers.9. A company called Square began by offering asmall accessory to enable food cart vendors and other small merchants to accept credit cards on phones and iPads. Square's latest invention allows customers to register an account with Square merchants and pay simply by saying their names.The customer's picture pops up on the merchant's iPad.10.Google Wallet has been designed to sit in yourphone, be linked to your credit card, and let you pay by tapping your phone on a reader, using what is known as near field technology. But Google Wallet works on only four kinds of phones, and not many merchants are equipped for near field technology.11.Meanwhile, PayPal, which allows people to makepayments over the Internet, has quietly begun to persuade its users to turn to their cellphones.PayPal posted about $118 billion in total transactions last year and became the fastest-growing segment of eBay, its parent company. 12."The physical wallet, which had no innovation inthe last 50 years, will become an artifact," John J.Donahoe, the chief executive of eBay, told me recently. The wallet would move into the cloud, and ideally, from his perspective, into PayPal. No more would the consumer worry about losing a wallet. Everything, he declared, would be contained within PayPal. It would also enable the company to collect vast amounts of data about customer habits, purchases and budgets.13.Mr. Donahoe said he wanted his company tobecome "a mall in your pocket."14.I recently described PayPal's plans to AlessandroAcquisti, an economist who studies digital privacy at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. Mr. Acquisti smiled. If today all you need to do is enter your phone number and PIN when you visit a store, perhaps tomorrow, he said, that store will be able to detect your phone by its unique identifier. Perhaps, you won't have to shop at all. Your shopping data would be instead collected, analyzed and used to tell you exactly what you need: a motorcycle from Ducati or purple rain boots in the next size for your growing child. Money will be seamlessly taken from your account. A delivery will arrive at your doorstep."In the future, maybe you won't have to pay," Mr.Acquisti offered, only half in jest."The transaction will be made for you."Unit4 Cultural ExchangeAsia’s Endangered Species: the Expat1.Forget expats. Western companies doing businessin Asia are now looking to locals to fill the most important jobs in the region.2.Behind the switch, experts say, are several factors,including a leveled playing field in which Western companies must approach newly empowered Asian companies and consumers as equals and clients—not just manufacturing partners.panies now want executives who can securedeals with local businesses and governments without the aid of a translator, and who understand that sitting through a three-hour dinner banquet is often a key part of the negotiating process in Asia, experts say.4.In fact, three out of four senior executives hired inAsia by multinationals were Asian natives already living in the region, according to a Spencer Stuart analysis of 1,500 placements made from 2005 to 2010. Just 6% were noncitizens from outside of Asia.5."It's a strategic necessity to be integrated in theculture. Otherwise, the time to learn all of it takes forever," said Arie Y. Lewin, a professor of strategy and international business at Duke University's Fuqua School of Business. He adds that locals may better navigate a business culture where copycats and competitors often play by different rules.6.What's more, a failed expatriate hire can be acostly mistake and slow a firm's progress in the region, said Phil Johnston, a managing director at recruiter Spencer Stuart.7.To help companies fill Asia-based executive roles,at least two search firms—Spencer Stuart and Korn/Ferry International—say they have begun classifying executives in four broad categories: Asia natives steeped in local culture but educated in the U.S. or Europe; the foreigner who has lived or worked in Asia for a long time; a person of Asian descent who was born or raised in a Western country but has had little exposure to Asia; and the local Asian executive who has no Western experience.8.For companies seeking local expertise, both firmssaid the first category is by far the most sought-after. But Mr. Johnston said those candidates are difficult to find and retain, and they can command salaries of $750,000 to $1 million—on par with, and sometimes more than, their expat counterparts.9.German conglomerate Siemens AG in 2010 hiredMei-Wei Cheng, a China-born Cornell University graduate, to head its Chinese operations—a role previously held by European executives.10.While Siemens's European executives had madeinroads with Chinese consumers—building sales in the region to nearly one-tenth of global revenue—the firm realized it needed someone who could quickly tap local business partners.11.After an extensive search, Siemens hired Mr.Cheng, formerly CEO at the Chinese subsidiariesof Ford Motor Co. and General Electric Co. GE 12.The decision to hire locally seems to have paidoff for Siemens: In his first 18 months on the job, Mr. Cheng forged two wind-power jointventures with Shanghai Electric Group Co.13.Mr. Cheng communicates easily with localofficials, a major advantage when it comes to selling energy technology to individual cities, says Brigitte Ederer, head of human resources for Siemens and a member of the company's managing board. Many local officials don't speak English.14.Bob Damon, president of recruiter Korn/FerryInternational's North American operations, said the current talent pool for executive roles is so limited that most top Asian executives simply rotate from one Western company to another, as Mr. Cheng did.15.Other companies are adding to the demand bycreating new positions in Asia. Campbell Soup Co.CPB last week announced the appointment of Daniel Saw as its first-ever president of Asia operations, while Canadian conglomerate Bombardier Inc. BBD.B.T hired Albert Li to fill a new role overseeing its aerospace business in China. Both executives were born in Asia and have worked as regional managers for Western multinationals.16.Meanwhile, younger Chinese professionals arepositioning themselves to meet the need for executive talent in the years to come. Nearly four in 10 American M.B.A. programs say China was their fastest-growing source of foreign applicants last year, according to the Graduate Management Admission Council, which administers the Graduate Management Admission Test.17.Foreigners with no Asia experience, on the otherhand, need not apply, recruiters said. Spencer Stuart's Mr. Johnston said he occasionally receives inquiries from Western middle managers, proclaiming that they are finally ready to make a career move to the region. He advises them that "there is nothing about their experience that is interesting or relevant to Asia."18.In hubs like Singapore and Hong Kong, expatsreceive as much as $200,000 a year in subsidies for housing, transportation and private schooling, Mr. Johnston said. Payments to offset taxes for these benefits add up to another $100,000.Altogether, a bad match can cost a company as much as $1 million, after figuring in relocation costs, he said.19.Monster Worldwide Inc. Chief Executive SalIannuzzi said the company has been hiring locally for several years, in part because he found deploying expatriates cost too much. "It takes them six months to figure out how to take a ferry, they're there for 12 months, and then they spend the next six months figuring out how to get home," he said.20.Like some other companies, Monster now tracksits own workers to ensure a pipeline of talent.21.The online job-search company's current head ofChina operations, Edward Lo, a former fraternity brother of Mr. Iannuzzi, understands the local scene, is well connected in China and knows how to recruit, Mr. Iannuzzi said. Among Mr. Lo's duties: finding his own successor before he retires.22.Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. basedin White Plains, N.Y., also develops its own leaders for Asia, plucking people who have come up through the company ranks. For example, the head of Asia Pacific started in the 1970s on the finance team in Hong Kong, and the head of the Middle East region was a hotel manager who worked his way up.23.Having grown up in their markets, managersunderstand customer needs, said Starwood CEO Frits van Paasschen. Regional heads in China, for instance, know that when dealing with land owners or developers, deals are less "transactional," and more "trust-based," he said.They also know that Chinese travelers—who now comprise the majority of hotel guests in the region—feel more at home when they're supplied with tea kettles, slippers and chopsticks, he added.24.For fast-food company Yum Brands Inc. CEODavid Novak calls his Asia-bred regional head and executive team "our single biggest competitive advantage." China has become the company's biggest earnings driver, comprising more than 40% of operating profit.25.Thanks to Yum's China leaders, Mr. Novak says,KFC in China began serving rice porridge and soy milk for breakfast, and Pizza Hut now offers an afternoon tea menu—both of which have been big hits among local customers.Unit5 Auto-WorldThe Future of the Car :Clean, Safe and it Drives itselfCars have already changed the way we live. They are likely to do so again1.SOME inventions, like some species, seem tomake periodic leaps in progress. The car is one of them. Twenty-five years elapsed between Karl Benz beginning small-scale production of his original Motorwagen and the breakthrough, by Henry Ford and his engineers in 1913, that turned the car into the ubiquitous, mass-market item that has defined the modern urban landscape. By putting production of the Model T on moving assembly lines set into the floor of his factory in Detroit, Ford drastically cut the time needed to build it, and hence its cost. Thus began a revolution in personal mobility. Almost a billion cars now roll along the world’s highways.2.Today the car seems poised for another burst ofevolution. One way in which it is changing relates to its emissions. As emerging markets grow richer, legions of new consumers are clamouring for their first set of wheels. For the whole world to catch up with American levels of car ownership, the global fleet would have to quadruple. Even a fraction of that growth would present fearsome challenges, from congestion and the price of fuel to pollution and global warming.3.Yet, as our special report this week argues, stricterregulations and smarter technology are making cars cleaner, more fuel-efficient and safer than ever before. China, its cities choked in smog, is following Europe in imposing curbs on emissions of noxious nitrogen oxides and fine soot particles.Regulators in most big car markets are demanding deep cuts in the carbon dioxide emitted from carexhausts. And carmakers are being remarkably inventive in finding ways to comply.4.Granted, battery-powered cars have disappointed.They remain expensive, lack range and are sometimes dirtier than they look—for example, if they run on electricity from coal-fired power stations. But car companies are investing heavily in other clean technologies. Future motorists will have a widening choice of super-efficient petrol and diesel cars, hybrids (which switch between batteries and an internal-combustion engine) and models that run on natural gas or hydrogen. As for the purely electric car, its time will doubtless come.Towards the driverless, near-crashless car 5.Meanwhile, a variety of “driver assistance”technologies are appearing on new cars, which will not only take a lot of the stress out of driving in traffic but also prevent many accidents. More and more new cars can reverse-park, read traffic signs, maintain a safe distance in steady traffic and brake automatically to avoid crashes. Some carmakers are promising technology that detects pedestrians and cyclists, again overruling the driver and stopping the vehicle before it hits them.A number of firms, including Google, are busytrying to take driver assistance to its logical conclusion by creating cars that drive themselves to a chosen destination without a human at the controls. This is where it gets exciting.6.Sergey Brin, a co-founder of Google, predicts thatdriverless cars will be ready for sale to customers within five years. That may be optimistic, but the prototypes that Google already uses to ferry itsstaff (and a recent visitor from The Economist) along Californian freeways are impressive.Google is seeking to offer the world a driverless car built from scratch, but it is more likely to evolve, and be accepted by drivers, in stages.7.As sensors and assisted-driving softwaredemonstrate their ability to cut accidents, regulators will move to make them compulsory for all new cars. Insurers are already pressing motorists to accept black boxes that measure how carefully they drive: these will provide a mass of data which is likely to show that putting the car on autopilot is often safer than driving it. Computers never drive drunk or while texting.8.If and when cars go completely driverless—forthose who want this—the benefits will be enormous. Google gave a taste by putting a blind man in a prototype and filming him being driven off to buy takeaway tacos. Huge numbers of elderly and disabled people could regain their personal mobility. The young will not have to pay crippling motor insurance, because their reckless hands and feet will no longer touch the wheel or the accelerator. The colossal toll of deaths and injuries from road accidents—1.2m killed a year worldwide, and 2m hospital visits a year in America alone—should tumble down, along with the costs to health systems and insurers.9.Driverless cars should also ease congestion andsave fuel. Computers brake faster than humans.And they can sense when cars ahead of them are braking. So driverless cars will be able to drive much closer to each other than humans safely can.On motorways they could form fuel-efficient “road trains”, gliding along in the slipstream of the vehicle in front. People who commute by car will gain hours each day to work, rest or read a newspaper.Roadblocks ahead10.Some carmakers think this vision of the future is(as Henry Ford once said of history) bunk. People will be too terrified to hurtle down the motorway in a vehicle they do not control: computers crash, don’t they? Carmakers whose self-driving technology is implicated in accidents might face ruinously expensive lawsuits, and be put off continuing to develop it.11.Yet many people already travel, unwittingly, onplanes and trains that no longer need human drivers. As with those technologies, the shift towards driverless cars is taking place gradually.The cars’ software will learn the tricks that humans use to avoid hazards: for example, braking when a ball bounces into the road, because a child may be chasing it. Google’s self-driving cars have already clocked up over 700,000km, more than many humans ever drive;and everything they learn will become available to every other car using the software. As for the liability issue, the law should be changed to make sure that when cases arise, the courts take into account the overall safety benefits of self-driving technology.12.If the notion that the driverless car is round thecorner sounds far-fetched, remember that TV and heavier-than-air flying machines once did, too.One day people may wonder why earlier generations ever entrusted machines as dangerous as cars to operators as fallible as humans.Unit6 RomanceThe Modern Matchmakers现代红娘Internet dating sites claim to have brought scienceto the age-old question of how to pair offsuccessfully. But have they?互联网相亲网站声称已经将科技运用如何成功配对的问题之上。