Two factors weigh heavily against the effectiveness of scientific research in industry. One is the general atmosphere of secrecy in which it is ___1___, the other is the lack of freedom of the individual research worker. ____2____ any inquiry is a secret one, it naturally limits all those engaged in carrying it out ___3___ effective contact with their fellow scientists either in other countries or in universities, or ___4___ , often enough, in other departments of the same firm.
The degree of secrecy naturally ____5___ considerably. Some of the bigger firms are ___6___ in researches which are ___7____ such general and fundamental nature that it is a positive ___8___ to them not to keep them secret. ___9___ a great many processes depending on such research are sought for with complete secrecy___10 ___the stage at which patents can be ____11___ . Even more processes are never patented ___12___ but kept as secret processes. This ___13___ particularly to chemical industries, where chance discoveries play a much larger part ___14___ they do in physical and mechanical industries.
Sometimes the secrecy goes to such an ___15___ that the whole nature of the research cannot be mentioned. Many firms, for instance, have great difficulty in ____16___ technical or scientific books from libraries ___17___ they are unwilling to have their names entered ___18___ having taken out such and such a book, ___19___ the agents of other firms should be able to trace the kind of research they are likely to be ____20___ . (269 words)
1. A. kept up B. carried out C. set up D. worked out
2. A. In so far as B. For all that C. Just as D. As far as
3. A. to B. within C. from D. for
4. A. so B. else C. still D. even
5. A. varies B. revises C. modifies D. alters
6. A. participated B. embarked C. engaged D. dedicated
7. A. with B. of C. in D. beyond
8. A. fault B. failure C. merit D. advantage
9. A. Yet B. Furthermore C. Consequently D. Otherwise
10. A. when B. until C. unless D. after
11. A. taken out B. made out C. turned out D. searched out
12. A. at large B. at stake C. at all D. at once
13. A. fits B. suits C. conforms D. applies
14. A. which B. than C. as D. that
15. A. excess B. exception C. extreme D. extent
16. A. attaining B. acquiring C. obtaining D. achieving
17. A. because B. though C. if D. where
18. A. for B. before C. into D. as
19. A. much as B. for fear C. even if D. as though
20. A. understanding B. undermining C. undergoing D. undertaking
II. x}
Directions: You are going to read a list of headings and a text about divorce and alternative lifestyles. Choose the most suitable heading from the list A--F for each numbered paragraph (41-45). The first and last paragraphs of the text are not numbered. There is one extra heading which you do not need to use. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points)
[A] The problems divorce has brought about
[B] Does high divorce rate mean refusal to marry?
[C] Childrens rights are well protected
[D] The root of high divorce rate in America
[E] Sex equality is apparent in American divorces
[F] Certain marriages are more likely to break
During the traditional wedding ceremony, the bridal couple promise each other lifelong devotion. Yet, about one out of four American marriages ends in divorce. Since 1940, the divorce rate has more than doubled, and experts predict that, of all marriages that occurred in the 1970s, about 50% will end in divorce. The U.S.A. has one of the highest divorce rates in the world, perhaps even the highest.
41
What goes wrong? The fact that divorce is so common in the United States does not mean that Americans consider marriage a casual, unimportant relationship. Just the opposite is true. Americans expect a great deal from marriage. They seek physical, emotional, and intellectual compatibility. They want to be deeply loved and understood. It is because Americans expect so much from marriage that so many get divorced. They prefer no marriage at all to a marriage without love and understanding.
42
Which marriages are most likely to end in divorce? Marriages between people with low incomes or limited education and marriages between teenagers are at greatest risk. The number of divorces between couples with children under the age of 18 is declining, and almost 45% of divorcing couples are childless.
43
When a couple gets divorced, the court may require the man to pay his former wife a monthly sum of money called alimony. The amount of alimony depends on the husbands income, the wifes needs, and the length of the marriage. If the woman is working and earns a good salary, she may receive no alimony at all. Occasionally, the court decides that a woman should pay her husband alimony. About 10% of American women outearn their husbands. If the woman has totally supported her husband during the marriage, the court may decide that she must continue to support him after the divorce. This is a rather new concept in the United States.
44
If a divorcing couple has children, the court must determine which parent the children will live with and who will provide for their support. In most cases, the children live with the mother, and the father pays child support and has visitation rights. However, it is not uncommon for a father to get full custody or joint custody of his children when this arrangement seems to be in the childrens best interest.
45
The high risk of divorce doesnt seem to make Americans afraid to try marriageagain and again. By middle age, about 95% of Americans have been married at least once. About 80% of those who get divorced eventually remarry. Only in Japan is the married proportion of the population as high as it is in the U.S. A. In fact, remarriage and the creation of new families is so common in the United States that one American joke tells of a wife calling to her second husband, Quick, John! Come here and help me! Your children and my children are beating up our children!
Despite the dominance of the married lifestyle, the number of people choosing alternative lifestyles is increasing, and their behavior is increasingly accepted by the general population. The number of unmarried couples living together rose from about 500,000 in 1970 to about 2.6 million in 1988. Many older people are horrified by the growing trend of unmarried couples living together. However, it is not just an American trend. Its even more common in Europe than in the U.S.A.
(n⾚(x) ´no)
Directions: You are going to read a list of headings and a text about Youre Stuck. Choose the most suitable heading from the list A-F for each numbered paragraph (41-45). The first and last paragraphs of the text are not numbered. There is one extra heading which you do not need to use. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points)
[A] Load up on new tools
[B] Be creative
[C] Avoid taking cover
[D] Look beyond your job description
[E] Manage your own PR
[F] Build a circle of allies
As companies continue to cut costs, the days of frequent promotions are a distant memory. So are the days of endless opportunities to show off your skills. Layoff survivors, faced with fewer options are finding themselves in career purgatorytheres no way up and no way out.
After talking to career coaches, manager, recruiters, and psychologists, Fortune put together the following tips to help workers break free from the inertia.
41
Dont hide out behind your computer. You should really work to increase or maintain the visibility that you have, says David Opton, founder and CEO of career management firm ExecuNet. Speak up in meetings, join task forces, and volunteer for difficult projects that co-workers arent willing to tackle.
42
Fortify your current relationships and work on making new ones, both within and outside the office. Allies will be helpful in terms of letting your know information, like if theres a job possibility that comes up, says Dee Soder, founder of the CEO Perspective Group. Who you know can make a big difference, especially in difficult times.
43
This is the perfect time to acquire new expertise. (If the boss cant pay, do it on your own.) Brush up on computer skills, audit a class, or get a certificate or degree in your field C and when jobs do open up, youll be ready.
44
People dont get promotions just because they do their jobs well; they get promotions because they take initiative. Lauren Dolliva, a partner at recruiting firm Heidrick & Struggles International, has a client looking to hire a COO. When someone brought up the VP of operations, who was the obvious candidate for the job, the CEO rejected him outright. He said no because the VP only does whats expected, says Doliva. The CEO didnt see him as someone who would take the risks and the time to do the job better.
45
Doing well is part productivity and part publicity, says Marilyn Moats Kennedy, a managing partner at Career Strategies. Let people know when you put in the extra effort to get a project done early. Without being cheesy, make sure that youre giving off the right vibes by keeping a positive attitude, avoiding emotional outburst, and appearing calm and organized. And dont forget to look the part. Many didnt get promotions because of their professional presencegrooming, clothes, and body language.
III. English-Chinese Translation
How can science be encouraged to flourish and grow? How can the results of science be used to the best purpose for the benefit of humanity? 1) It was to find the answers to these questions, which are not merely academic but practical ones, that this whole inquiry into the place of science in society was undertaken. It can be justified only in so far as it helps to find them.
The way to answer the first question is to find the best conditions, external and internal, which have in the past helped the progress of science and to anticipate the changed needs of the present and future. The answer to the second question, which depends on the first, is set out towards the end of this chapter. Some of the external conditions for the flourishing of science in the past have already been discussed. 2) In essence they are provided only in periods of social and economic advance, when science is given social importance and material means and is continually stimulated to new activity by problems presented to it from the economic and social spheres.
3) Now these problems have been essentially, as we have seen, those that touched the interests of the ruling class of the time, whether real, like navigation, or imaginary, like astrology. 4) The opportunity and the honor given to the practitioners of science at any time are a measure of the degree to which they serve at these interests. They are greatest in periods of active advance, because then the people who are occupied with science are closely in touch with the main economic interests, and are often drawn from the directing classes themselves or are brought into their counsels because of their abilities. We have had many examples in these pages such as: Archimedes, Grosseteste, Leonardo, Galileo, Boyle, Davy, Pasteur, Kelvin.
5) But for the secure advance of science it is also essential that those interests should lie along lines which bring the scientists into connection with constructive practical activities. For example, the relative sterility of natural science in the times between Pericles and Alexander is an indication of what able and gifted individuals could fail to do, if divorced from any relation to production through the overriding interests of the political problems of a decaying, small-city, slave society. (386 words)
IV. Writing
Directions:You are working as a part-timer for a foreign enterprise, your boss is asking you to writing a letter for him to John, one of the staff members, to reject a proposal on expanding field operations.
Write a letter to John to:
1) thank him for the proposal,
2) tell him gently but firmly why his offer cannot be accepted,
3) give him some encouragement for future efforts.
Letter of Rejecting
Dear John,
I read with great interest your proposal to expand our field operations. Thanks for taking time to present this idea. @(g)Ӌ(j) e(cu)ǺzĿǰ߀ɲÈ(chng)
As you know, we are making preparations to introduce several new products, and recent figures indicate this operation is going to draw on all our available resources for the next eight months.ֻ҂F(xin)߀]YӖ(xn)չ҂ĵرPYou may be certain Ill remember your suggestion if the right time comes.
ϣյṩ@Nc(din)nj(hu)ʹҵĹ׃øpThanks, John.
Yours sincerely,
Li Ming
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Black Economic Development in Atlanta
Since the early 1970s, Atlanta has enjoyed the reputation as a Mecca for black economic development. Perhaps the most significant boost to this image came when the city elected its first black Mayor, Maynard Jackson, who served two terms from 1974 to 1981, ushered in 18 years of black political leadership at city hall and helped create an environment in which the number of black-owned companies tripled, from 3961 in 1977 to 11804 firms today. Atlanta now ranks sixth among U.S. cities in the number of black-owned businesses.
In 1982, Jackson was succeeded by Andrew Young, who became the citys second elected two-term black mayor. During the Young administration, Atlantas minority participation goal was increased to 35 percent on all city contracts. By this time, the citys Minority and Female Business Enterprise (MFBE) program was a model for the nation C not only because it created greater access to public work, but because it paved the way for Atlantas minority-owned firms to do business in the private sector as well.
Between 1973 and 1988, the city of Atlanta awarded almost 1600 contracts to 612 minority-owned firms. The average value of those contracts was more than $300,000. During the same period, minority firms received 38 percent of the $283 million in joint-venture contracts awarded by the city.
Fair government created an environment for success for all people, says Herman J. Russell, chairman and CEO of H.J. Russell & Co. I was ready to take advantage of opportunities when the doors opened. Thats the key. Russell, who started his construction empire in 1952, won $75.2 million in contracts through the citys MFBE program between 1980 and 1990. In 1972, the company grossed $6 million; in 1991, it posted sales of $143.6 million.
Notes: MeccaԭMecca˹mʥӣָ̎ĵط usher in ӭgross v. post v.
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25X
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