#2018考研真题解析# ,#2018研究生考试#
新东方李剑
阅读部分:新题型
E C G A F
B D
下面的段落已经按照顺序排好顺序
E.
The Eisenhower Executive
Office Building (EEOB) commands a unique position in both our
national history and architectural heritage. Designed by
Supervising Architect of the Treasury, Alfred B. Mullett, it was
built from 1871 to 1888 to house the growing staffs of the State,
War, and Navy Departments, and is considered one of the best
examples of French Second Empire architecture in the
country.
C. The State, War, and
Navy Building, as it was originally known, housed the three
Executive Branch Departments most intimately associated with
formulating and conducting the nation’s foreign policy in the last
quarter of the nineteenth century and the first quarter of the
twentieth century — the period when the United States emerged as an
international power. The building has housed some of the nation’s
most significant diplomats and politicians and has been the scene
of many historic events.
G. The history of the
EEOB began long before its foundations were laid. The first
executive offices were constructed on sites flanking the White
House between 1799 and 1820. A series of fires (including those set
by the British in 1814) and overcrowded conditions led to the
construction of the existing Treasury Building. In 1866, the
construction of the North Wing of the Treasury Building
necessitated the demolition of the State Department
building.
A. In December of 1869,
Congress appointed a commission to select a site and prepare plans
and cost estimates for a new State Department Building. The
commission was also to consider possible arrangements for the War
and Navy Departments. To the horror of some who expected a Greek
Revival twin of the Treasury Building to be erected on the other
side of the White House, the elaborate French Second Empire style
design by Alfred Mullett was selected, and construction of a
building to house all three departments began in June of
1871.
F.
Construction took 17 years as the building
slowly rose wing by wing. When the EEOB was finished in 1888, it
was the largest office building in Washington, with nearly 2 miles
of black and white tiled corridors. Almost all of the interior
detail is of cast iron or plaster; the use of wood was minimized to
insure fire safety. Eight monumental curving staircases of granite
with over 4,000 individually cast bronze balusters are capped by
four skylight domes and two stained glass rotundas.
B. Completed in 1875,
the State Department’s south wing was the first to be occupied,
with its elegant four-story library (completed in 1876), Diplomatic
Reception Room, and Secretary’s office decorated with carved wood,
Oriental rugs, and stenciled wall patterns. The Navy Department
moved into the east wing in 1879, where elaborate wall and ceiling
stenciling and marqetry floors decorated the office of the
Secretary.
D. Many of the most celebrated national
figures have participated in historical events that have taken
place within the EEOB’s granite
walls. Theodore and Franklin
D. Roosevelt, William Howard
Taft, Dwight D.
Eisenhower, Lyndon B. Johnson, Gerald Ford,
and George H. W. Bush all had
offices in this building before becoming President. It has housed
16 Secretaries of the Navy, 21 Secretaries of War, and 24
Secretaries of State. Winston Churchill once walked its corridors
and Japanese emissaries met here with Secretary of State Cordell
Hull after the bombing of Pearl
Harbor.
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