Unit 8
Task 1
【答案】
A.
1)
interest rates; third time
2)
shrunk; first time
3) A
fall; employment
4)
higher
B.
News Items
|
Figures
|
Possible Causes or Effects
|
1
|
1) The
overnight bank lending rate rose by 0.25 percent. And the
current rate was 5.5 percent.
2) The
discount rate increased by 0.25 percent to 5
percent.
|
The
increase would reduce the danger of inflation.
|
2
|
The total
value of goods and services produced in the
US fell by four tenths of 1 percent (0.4 percent) between
July and September.
|
|
3
|
US bonds
fell nearly two points.
|
More
jobs had been
created in March than had been expected.
|
4
|
The Dow
Jones Industrial Average was up nearly 1 percent or
89 points at 10,205.
|
Some analysts believed some signs indicated the US
inflation was under control.
|
【原文】
News Item 1
The United States central bank, the Federal Reserve, has raised
interest rates for the third time this year. The Federal Reserve
raised the overnight bank lending rate by 0.25 percent (one fourth
of one percent) to 5.5 percent. It raised the discount rate also by
0.25 percent to 5 percent. The Federal Reserve said it had no plans
to raise interest rates again any time soon. It said the increase
today should reduce the danger of inflation.
News Item 2
The Commerce Department says the American economy has shrunk for
the first time in eight years. The total value of goods and
services produced in the United States fell by four tenth of one
percent (0.4 percent) in the period of July through September. A
recession is commonly defined as at least six months where the
economy shrinks.
News Item 3
A fall in the New York market had been widely predicted following
Friday's better than expected US employment figures. US bonds from
which the government funds long-term borrowing fell nearly two
points on the news that more jobs had been created in March than
had been expected. The Dow Jones Index was closed on Friday for the
Easter holiday, so today was the first chance for the share market
to react.
News Item 4
And we go straight to Wall Street where share prices closed higher.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up nearly 1 percent or 89
points at 10,205. Shares made up for some of the losses they
incurred in the past week, thanks to what was interpreted as "signs
the US inflation is under control".
Task 2
【答案】
A.
1) F
2) F
3) T
B.
manned; third; the Soviet Union; a person;
Shenzhou
ⅴ; the Gobi Desert; Inner Mongolia;
Thursday; 14; about 20; importance; modernity
【原文】
News Item 1
China has launched a manned space flight, becoming the third
country to do so 40 years after the Soviet Union and the United
States. A single astronaut was on board the Shenzhou V Craft, which took off
from the Gobi Desert. It's expected to go round the earth 14 times
during a 24-hour period before landing in Inner Mongolia. President
Hu Jintao watched the launch, a sign of the importance China
attaches to its space programme. Francis Margnez reports from
Beijing.
Half an hour after the spacecraft blasted off, China's state
television showed footage of the
launch,
the rocket climbing slowly into the clear blue sky. And many
Chinese will feel their country has taken a proud step towards
modernity.
News Item 2
China's first man in space has returned to Earth. Reports say
Chinese officials declared the space flight a success. Astronaut
Yang Liwei is also reported to be in good health. On Tuesday, China
became only the third nation to send a person into orbit. Astronaut
Yang and his spacecraft landed in China's Inner Mongolia early
Thursday. He had orbited the earth 14 times in about 20 hours. The
United States and Russia praised China for the launch. Russia and
the United States were the first two nations to send people into
space.
Task 3
【答案】
A.
1) d
2) b
3) a
4) a
B.
1) ban
2) tobacco taxes
3) substance
4) Health warning
5) treatment programs
6) Education
7) secondhand smoke
C.
1) Reference: Negotiations→proposed
treaty→approved by the WHO meeting→individual approval by the WHO
members→coming into effect when at least 40 members have ratified
the treaty
【原文】
Negotiators have
agreed to the wording of a proposed international treaty on tobacco
control. Delegates from more than 170 countries approved the final
wording earlier this month in Switzerland. This came after four
years of negotiations. The proposed treaty is called the Framework
Convention on Tobacco Control. It will be presented in May at the
yearly meeting of the World Health Organization, a UN agency. The
final version approved there will also require individual approval
by WHO members. Once 40 nations have approved it, the treaty will
go into effect in those countries.
Member states cannot make any amendments once the WHO approves a
final version of the treaty. They must either accept or reject the
agreement as it is written. The proposed Framework Convention on
Tobacco Control is part of the efforts to reduce deaths and
diseases from smoking.
The WHO estimates that almost five million people die each year
from lung cancer and other tobacco-related diseases. That number
could rise to ten million a year by 2020. Developing nations are
the biggest growth areas for tobacco-related diseases. These
nations are calling for the strongest laws possible to control
tobacco. The treaty would ban advertising and other marketing
campaigns for tobacco products, where doing so would not violate a
country's constitution. It also calls for high tobacco taxes. It
would even require companies to make public all the substances they
use to make cigarettes.
In addition, tobacco companies would have to place health warnings
on at least thirty percent of their products. These warnings could
not include information that might lead people to believe that some
cigarettes are less harmful than others. In addition, governments
would have to support treatment programs to help people stop
smoking. And, there would have to be education campaigns to get
people not to start. The proposed treaty also calls for measures to
protect non-smokers from second-hand smoke, that is, smoke from
other people's tobacco.
Task 4
Thank you. And
thank you for asking me to share in your weekly address to the
American
people.
Britain and America have so much in common: language,
values, belief in family and community, in a real sense of
national pride. We share many problems, too. And it
has been clear from our discussions that we are agreed, in general
terms, about some of the solutions.
You took the tough decisions needed for long-term economic
stability. We are doing so. You have focused on education,
welfare reform, a new approach to crime. So are we.
Together, we are breaking down boundaries of left and right
and creating a new politics of the radical
centre.
Task 5
【答案】
A.
1) b
2) c
B.
1) e)
2) f)
3) b)
4) d)
5) a)
6) c)
C.
1) The award recognizes women's actions in building peace,
protecting women's human rights and supporting community life
during and after war.
2) Because women
can play a very important role in re-establishing normal community
life after peace has been reached
【原文】
Each year, the
Nobel Committee in Oslo, Norway announces the winners of its famous
Nobel Prizes. Most winners of the Nobel Peace Prize have been men.
Only ten percent have been women since the prize was first
presented in 1901.
Now the United Nations Development Fund for Women and the human
rights group International Alert have presented a new award to
honor women peacemakers. It is called the Millennium Peace Prize
for Women. Officials will present the award every three years. The
award recognizes women's actions in building peace, protecting
women's human rights and supporting community life during and after
war.
Experts say women are usually not as involved in the peace process
as men are. However, their work to re-establish normal community
life after peace has been reached is very important. Because of
this, International Alert says women also need to be recognized as
leaders in peace building.
Earlier this month, six women and organizations received the
Millennium Peace Prize for Women. One of the winners is the
Colombian group “Ruta Pacifica de las Mujeres”, or Women's Road to
Peace. This group has organized protests against the violence
between rebel groups and the Colombian government.
The group “Leitana Nehan Women's Development Agency” also won the
peace prize. It helped in the peace process between the military
and rebel forces in Papua New Guinea. Another winner is the group
Women in Black. It is an international organization that organizes
protests against violence, aggression and war.
Flora Brovina also received the peace prize. She organized the
League of Albanian Women of Kosovo. Doctor Brovina has taught
emergency medical skills to people in Kosovo.
Asma Jahangir and Hina Jilani are also peace prize winners. They
worked to support human rights and women's rights in Pakistan. And
the leader of the women's movement in Rwanda also won the
Millennium Peace Prize, after her death. Veneranda Nzambazamariya
helped re-build Rwanda after the mass killings in 1994. She died in
a plane crash last year.
Task 6
【答案】
A.
1) Because of the outbreak of dengue
fever.
2) More than 80,000.
3) Severe headaches, fever and
vomiting.
4) He considers it his government’s
biggest political weakness.
B.
1) The EU has banned all imports of animal
products from the Netherlands.
2) The Dutch government has confirmed four
cases of foot-and-mouth disease.
3) Only Britain and France have been
affected by the disease.
4) Officials have seized some sheep
suspected of having mad cow disease.
【原文】
News Item 1
Brazil's new Health Minister Hosein Selar has sacked two senior
health officials in Rio de Janeiro amid growing concern about the
epidemic of dengue fever. More than 80,000 people in southeast
Brazil have caught the mosquito-born disease which causes severe
headaches, fever and vomiting. In some cases, it can be fatal. Our
Brazil correspondent Steven Switch reports that President Fernando
Henrique Cardoso regards the issue of health care as his
government's biggest political weakness.
News Item 2
In agriculture news. The European Union has banned all imports of
animal products from the Netherlands. The ban was ordered after the
Dutch government confirmed four cases of foot-and-mouth disease
there. Dutch officials have had all infected animals destroyed.
Until now, only Britain and France have been 'affected by the
animal disease. Also, in the American State of Vermont, officials
seized some sheep suspected of having mad cow disease. More than
230 sheep were taken from a farm. The animals will be destroyed and
tested for the disease.
Task 7
【答案】
A.
1) correspondent
2) a Jamaican town
3) the cruise liner
4) an island in the Caribbean
5) the Royal Navy vessel
6) the hurricane
B.
1) F
2) F
3) T
4) T
5) T
C.
Reference: In this
exercise, students can use their own imagination and guess what
might happen next.
D.
1) Yes。
2) They had thought the ship would sink,
so they went there for shelter.
3) No.
4) The Royal Navy frigate Steadfast would
take them off the island.
5) No. Apart from a few minor injuries
there were no casualties.
【原文】
Part
One
Announcer: ... in Garderers' Question Time at 2 o'clock. And now
over to Gordon Chartwell in the newsroom.
Newsreader: Here is
the news, read by Gordon Chartwell. The cruise liner, Princess of
Wales, which ran aground last
night off the island of St. Catherine in the Caribbean, is reported
to be sinking. Here's a report from our correspondent in Jamaica,
Graham Smith.
Graham Smith:
A weak radio signal was received here in Kingston a few hours ago
from the radio operator on the 28,000-ton luxury cruise ship, the
Princess of Wales. According to this message, the ship is taking in
water and is starting to sink. All the passengers have been ordered
into the lifeboats and told to make for the nearby island of St.
Catherine, the coast of which is some 20 miles from the scene of
the accident. In normal circumstances this would be an easy 3-hour
trip, but with Hurricane Zelda approaching fast and blowing away
from the island, it's feared that some boats may not make it in
time to the safety of the island. Once on the island, it would be
possible for passengers and crew to shelter from the wind and await
rescue. The Royal Navy frigate Steadfast is heading for St.
Catherine at full speed but it may take her up to 24 hours to get
there. So things look pretty grim for the 700 passengers and 420
crew at the moment. This is Graham Smith in Kingston,
Jamaica.
Newsreader: As soon
as we have any further news we, will interrupt our programmes to
bring it to you. And now the rest of the news. In Liverpool today
the Prime Minister said in a speech...
Part Two
Announcer: We interrupt this programme to take you over to the
newsroom for a newsflash.
Newsreader: This is
Gordon Chartwell in the newsroom with a further report from our
correspondent Graham Smith in Jamaica about the stranded liner,
Princess of Wales.
Graham Smith:
A further signal has been picked up from the Princess of Wales
within the past few minutes. According to this, the ship is now out
of danger. Apparently the damage to the liner is not as serious as
was originally thought and she is still completely seaworthy and
out of danger. However, before this was realized, 5 of the
lifeboats had been launched and about 200 passengers and crew had
made their way to the island of St. Catherine where they are
reported to be safe. For the time being they are likely to remain
on the island. The remaining 920 people are still on board the
liner and in no danger. Although Hurricane Zelda has reached the
island, the wind seems to have blown itself out to some extent and
although there are heavy seas, there is no danger for a ship of the
size of the Princess of Wales. The ship is now clear of the rocks.
The passengers and crew sheltering on the island will be brought
off by the Royal Navy frigate Steadfast, which is now close to the
area. Apart from a few minor injuries there are no casualties. This
is Graham Smith returning you to the studio.
Newsreader: There
will be a further report in our main news at one o'clock. And now
back to Down Your Way...
Task 8
【答案】
A.
1) c
2) c
3) a
B.
Countries
|
Attitudes Towards the
Treaty
|
The
US
|
It was one
of the first countries that signed the treaty, but has
withdrawn from it on the grounds that the treaty would
weaken/harm American economy.
|
The
EU
|
It
strongly supports the treaty, and is also trying to
push/persuade other countries to accept it.
|
Japan
|
It wants
flexible rules allowing it to plant more trees rather
than cut its pollution greatly, and to impose weaker
penalties if it fails to fulfill its obligations.
|
Russia
|
It has not
made the final decision, but wants firm guarantees of foreign
investment in clean technology before ratifying
it.
|
【原文】
News Item 1
The European Union has officially approved the Kyoto Treaty on
climate change. Officials from all 15 EU states attended a ceremony
Friday at the United Nations in New York. However, the treaty still
needs the approval of more countries to come into effect. The
treaty limits the release by Industrial countries of gases blamed
for trapping heat in the atmosphere. The United States was one of
the first countries to sign the Kyoto Treaty, but has since
withdrawn. President Bush says the treaty could harm the American
economy.
News Item 2
Welcome to BBC World News, I'm Nick Gowing. Environment ministers
from 180 countries will start trying to rescue the Kyoto Treaty on
global warming shortly. They join their officials who have been
meeting all week in the German city of Bonn. The 1997 Kyoto
agreement commits industrialized countries to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions. The protocol was undermined in a major way in March when
US President George W. Bush said it would weaken America's
economy.
It's Beethoven who dominates the town square here and it's unlikely
that he'll have to give up his place to a monument celebrating a
conference which halted global warming. Ministers from over 180
countries have already agreed to global cuts in emissions of
greenhouse gases 5 percent below the 1990 levels. But here they
must decide how this will be achieved. Since George Bush pulled out
of the deal, the argument is between Japan and Europe. The Japanese
want flexible rules allowing them to plant more trees in place of
steep cuts in pollution and weaker penalties for missing targets.
Europe doesn't like it but really wants a deal.
News Item 3
A major international conference on climate change is to open in
Moscow shortly with Russia coming under renewed pressure to sign
the Kyoto Protocol. That's the agreement to limit the industrial
pollutants that are believed to contribute to global warming. The
Kyoto Protocol of 1997 can only come into force when 55 percent of
countries have signed up to it. With United States refusing to
sign, ratification by Russia is crucial to the treaty's success.
From Moscow our environment correspondent Tim Hersch
reports.
President Putin himself called this conference in his own capital
to discuss the latest signs of climate change and it had been
thought he might use the opportunity to announce that his
government was finally prepared to sign up to Kyoto, but comments
from senior Kremlin officials have played down expectations, saying
Russia wanted firm guarantees of foreign investment in clean
technology before pressing ahead with ratification. The European
Union and UN bodies have been putting pres-sure on Mr. Putin to end
the delays so that international action against global warming
could finally start six years after the Kyoto agreement was
signed.
Task 9
【答案】
I.
September
19th; three days; child activists; non-government
organizations
A.
actions
2. a good
education for all children
3. the
chance for all children to become an important part of their
communities
B. the
progress
II.
seventy-one heads of state and government; a treaty aimed
at improving the lives of children around the world; the rights of
children
III.
(former)
world leaders; creators
A.
educating children
B.
protecting them from war
C.
fighting AIDS
get
involved; take action; work for change
【原文】
The United Nations
General Assembly will hold a special session on children beginning
September Nineteenth. The meeting will bring together government
leaders, child activists, non-government organizations and many
young people. The three-day gathering will give officials a
valuable chance to change how the world thinks about
children.
Eleven years ago,
the U-N held a similar meeting called the World Summit for
Children. During that conference, seventy-one heads of state and
government signed a treaty aimed at improving the lives of children
around the world. Efforts to reach the goals established in that
treaty have made the rights of children an important
issue.
The UN agency for
children, UNICEF, is supporting the special session. Officials are
expected to produce a plan of action to guarantee that three
important goals are reached. The goals are the best possible start
in life for all children, a good education for all children and the
chance for all children to become an important part of their
communities. The session will also examine progress made since the
Nineteen-Ninety World Summit for Children.
Former South
African President and Nobel Peace Prize winner Nelson Mandela is
working toward these goals. He is joined by his wife Graca Machel
who is an activist for children. They are calling on community,
business and government leaders to form an international movement
aimed at improving the world for young people.
The movement is
hoping to build international support for a public campaign to help
children. Several world leaders have joined the movement. They
include South Korean President Kim Dae-Jung and Queen Rania of
Jordan. Movie stars, professional sports teams, and the creators of
children's television programs and books also have joined the
movement.
The group's public
campaign lists ten ways to improve the lives of young people. These
include educating children, protecting them from war and fighting
the disease AIDS. UNICEF officials say the goal of the movement is
for people around the world to get involved, take action and work
for change. They say that for every child who comes into the world,
the hopes and dreams of the human race are reborn.
Task 10
The United Nations
Food and Agriculture Organization says hunger kills millions of
people each year — especially children . The UN organization says
millions more people will die unless more money is invested to
fight against hunger.
This is based on
the result of a new UN study called “The State of Food Insecurity
in the World, 2002”. It found that more than nine million people
die each year from hunger. Six million of them are children younger
than age five. Researchers also found that the number of starving
people is growing in some parts of the world.
The report
says that about eight hundred and forty million people around the
world are getting enough food to eat. Ninety-five percent of these
people are in developing countries.
Unit 8
Task 1
【答案】
A.
1)
interest rates; third time
2)
shrunk; first time
3) A
fall; employment
4)
higher
B.
News Items
|
Figures
|
Possible Causes or Effects
|
1
|
1) The
overnight bank lending rate rose by 0.25 percent. And the
current rate was 5.5 percent.
2) The
discount rate increased by 0.25 percent to 5
percent.
|
The
increase would reduce the danger of inflation.
|
2
|
The total
value of goods and services produced in the US fell by four
tenths of 1 percent (0.4 percent) between July and
September.
|
|
3
|
US bonds
fell nearly two points.
|
More
jobs had been
created in March than had been expected.
|
4
|
The Dow
Jones Industrial Average was up nearly 1 percent or
89 points at 10,205.
|
Some analysts believed some signs indicated the US
inflation was under control.
|
【原文】
News Item 1
The United States central bank, the Federal Reserve, has raised
interest rates for the third time this year. The Federal Reserve
raised the overnight bank lending rate by 0.25 percent (one fourth
of one percent) to 5.5 percent. It raised the discount rate also by
0.25 percent to 5 percent. The Federal Reserve said it had no plans
to raise interest rates again any time soon. It said the increase
today should reduce the danger of inflation.
News Item 2
The Commerce Department says the American economy has shrunk for
the first time in eight years. The total value of goods and
services produced in the United States fell by four tenth of one
percent (0.4 percent) in the period of July through September. A
recession is commonly defined as at least six months where the
economy shrinks.
News Item 3
A fall in the New York market had been widely predicted following
Friday's better than expected US employment figures. US bonds from
which the government funds long-term borrowing fell nearly two
points on the news that more jobs had been created in March than
had been expected. The Dow Jones Index was closed on Friday for the
Easter holiday, so today was the first chance for the share market
to react.
News Item 4
And we go straight to Wall Street where share prices closed higher.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up nearly 1 percent or 89
points at 10,205. Shares made up for some of the losses they
incurred in the past week, thanks to what was interpreted as "signs
the US inflation is under control".
Task 2
【答案】
A.
1) F
2) F
3) T
B.
manned; third; the Soviet Union; a person;
Shenzhou
ⅴ; the Gobi Desert; Inner Mongolia;
Thursday; 14; about 20; importance; modernity
【原文】
News Item 1
China has launched a manned space flight, becoming the third
country to do so 40 years after the Soviet Union and the United
States. A single astronaut was on board the Shenzhou V Craft, which took off
from the Gobi Desert. It's expected to go round the earth 14 times
during a 24-hour period before landing in Inner Mongolia. President
Hu Jintao watched the launch, a sign of the importance China
attaches to its space programme. Francis Margnez reports from
Beijing.
Half an hour after the spacecraft blasted off, China's state
television showed footage of the
launch,
the rocket climbing slowly into the clear blue sky. And many
Chinese will feel their country has taken a proud step towards
modernity.
News Item 2
China's first man in space has returned to Earth. Reports say
Chinese officials declared the space flight a success. Astronaut
Yang Liwei is also reported to be in good health. On Tuesday, China
became only the third nation to send a person into orbit. Astronaut
Yang and his spacecraft landed in China's Inner Mongolia early
Thursday. He had orbited the earth 14 times in about 20 hours. The
United States and Russia praised China for the launch. Russia and
the United States were the first two nations to send people into
space.
Task 3
【答案】
A.
1) d
2) b
3) a
4) a
B.
1) ban
2) tobacco taxes
3) substance
4) Health warning
5) treatment programs
6) Education
7) secondhand smoke
C.
1) Reference: Negotiations→proposed
treaty→approved by the WHO meeting→individual approval by the WHO
members→coming into effect when at least 40 members have ratified
the treaty
【原文】
Negotiators have
agreed to the wording of a proposed international treaty on tobacco
control. Delegates from more than 170 countries approved the final
wording earlier this month in Switzerland. This came after four
years of negotiations. The proposed treaty is called the Framework
Convention on Tobacco Control. It will be presented in May at the
yearly meeting of the World Health Organization, a UN agency. The
final version approved there will also require individual approval
by WHO members. Once 40 nations have approved it, the treaty will
go into effect in those countries.
Member states cannot make any amendments once the WHO approves a
final version of the treaty. They must either accept or reject the
agreement as it is written. The proposed Framework Convention on
Tobacco Control is part of the efforts to reduce deaths and
diseases from smoking.
The WHO estimates that almost five million people die each year
from lung cancer and other tobacco-related diseases. That number
could rise to ten million a year by 2020. Developing nations are
the biggest growth areas for tobacco-related diseases. These
nations are calling for the strongest laws possible to control
tobacco. The treaty would ban advertising and other marketing
campaigns for tobacco products, where doing so would not violate a
country's constitution. It also calls for high tobacco taxes. It
would even require companies to make public all the substances they
use to make cigarettes.
In addition, tobacco companies would have to place health warnings
on at least thirty percent of their products. These warnings could
not include information that might lead people to believe that some
cigarettes are less harmful than others. In addition, governments
would have to support treatment programs to help people stop
smoking. And, there would have to be education campaigns to get
people not to start. The proposed treaty also calls for measures to
protect non-smokers from second-hand smoke, that is, smoke from
other people's tobacco.
Task 4
Thank you. And
thank you for asking me to share in your weekly address to the
American
people.
Britain and America have so much in common: language,
values, belief in family and community, in a real sense of
national pride. We share many problems, too. And it
has been clear from our discussions that we are agreed, in general
terms, about some of the solutions.
You took the tough decisions needed for long-term economic
stability. We are doing so. You have focused on education,
welfare reform, a new approach to crime. So are we.
Together, we are breaking down boundaries of left and right
and creating a new politics of the radical
centre.
Task 5
【答案】
A.
1) b
2) c
B.
1) e)
2) f)
3) b)
4) d)
5) a)
6) c)
C.
1) The award recognizes women's actions in building peace,
protecting women's human rights and supporting community life
during and after war.
2) Because women
can play a very important role in re-establishing normal community
life after peace has been reached
【原文】
Each year, the
Nobel Committee in Oslo, Norway announces the winners of its famous
Nobel Prizes. Most winners of the Nobel Peace Prize have been men.
Only ten percent have been women since the prize was first
presented in 1901.
Now the United Nations Development Fund for Women and the human
rights group International Alert have presented a new award to
honor women peacemakers. It is called the Millennium Peace Prize
for Women. Officials will present the award every three years. The
award recognizes women's actions in building peace, protecting
women's human rights and supporting community life during and after
war.
Experts say women are usually not as involved in the peace process
as men are. However, their work to re-establish normal community
life after peace has been reached is very important. Because of
this, International Alert says women also need to be recognized as
leaders in peace building.
Earlier this month, six women and organizations received the
Millennium Peace Prize for Women. One of the winners is the
Colombian group “Ruta Pacifica de las Mujeres”, or Women's Road to
Peace. This group has organized protests against the violence
between rebel groups and the Colombian government.
The group “Leitana Nehan Women's Development Agency” also won the
peace prize. It helped in the peace process between the military
and rebel forces in Papua New Guinea. Another winner is the group
Women in Black. It is an international organization that organizes
protests against violence, aggression and war.
Flora Brovina also received the peace prize. She organized the
League of Albanian Women of Kosovo. Doctor Brovina has taught
emergency medical skills to people in Kosovo.
Asma Jahangir and Hina Jilani are also peace prize winners. They
worked to support human rights and women's rights in Pakistan. And
the leader of the women's movement in Rwanda also won the
Millennium Peace Prize, after her death. Veneranda Nzambazamariya
helped re-build Rwanda after the mass killings in 1994. She died in
a plane crash last year.
Task 6
【答案】
A.
1) Because of the outbreak of dengue
fever.
2) More than 80,000.
3) Severe headaches, fever and
vomiting.
4) He considers it his government’s
biggest political weakness.
B.
1) The EU has banned all imports of animal
products from the Netherlands.
2) The Dutch government has confirmed four
cases of foot-and-mouth disease.
3) Only Britain and France have been
affected by the disease.
4) Officials have seized some sheep
suspected of having mad cow disease.
【原文】
News Item 1
Brazil's new Health Minister Hosein Selar has sacked two senior
health officials in Rio de Janeiro amid growing concern about the
epidemic of dengue fever. More than 80,000 people in southeast
Brazil have caught the mosquito-born disease which causes severe
headaches, fever and vomiting. In some cases, it can be fatal. Our
Brazil correspondent Steven Switch reports that President Fernando
Henrique Cardoso regards the issue of health care as his
government's biggest political weakness.
News Item 2
In agriculture news. The European Union has banned all imports of
animal products from the Netherlands. The ban was ordered after the
Dutch government confirmed four cases of foot-and-mouth disease
there. Dutch officials have had all infected animals destroyed.
Until now, only Britain and France have been 'affected by the
animal disease. Also, in the American State of Vermont, officials
seized some sheep suspected of having mad cow disease. More than
230 sheep were taken from a farm. The animals will be destroyed and
tested for the disease.
Task 7
【答案】
A.
1) correspondent
2) a Jamaican town
3) the cruise liner
4) an island in the Caribbean
5) the Royal Navy vessel
6) the hurricane
B.
1) F
2) F
3) T
4) T
5) T
C.
Reference: In this
exercise, students can use their own imagination and guess what
might happen next.
D.
1) Yes。
2) They had thought the ship would sink,
so they went there for shelter.
3) No.
4) The Royal Navy frigate Steadfast would
take them off the island.
5) No. Apart from a few minor injuries
there were no casualties.
【原文】
Part
One
Announcer: ... in Garderers' Question Time at 2 o'clock. And now
over to Gordon Chartwell in the newsroom.
Newsreader: Here is
the news, read by Gordon Chartwell. The cruise liner, Princess of
Wales, which ran aground last
night off the island of St. Catherine in the Caribbean, is reported
to be sinking. Here's a report from our correspondent in Jamaica,
Graham Smith.
Graham Smith:
A weak radio signal was received here in Kingston a few hours ago
from the radio operator on the 28,000-ton luxury cruise ship, the
Princess of Wales. According to this message, the ship is taking in
water and is starting to sink. All the passengers have been ordered
into the lifeboats and told to make for the nearby island of St.
Catherine, the coast of which is some 20 miles from the scene of
the accident. In normal circumstances this would be an easy 3-hour
trip, but with Hurricane Zelda approaching fast and blowing away
from the island, it's feared that some boats may not make it in
time to the safety of the island. Once on the island, it would be
possible for passengers and crew to shelter from the wind and await
rescue. The Royal Navy frigate Steadfast is heading for St.
Catherine at full speed but it may take her up to 24 hours to get
there. So things look pretty grim for the 700 passengers and 420
crew at the moment. This is Graham Smith in Kingston,
Jamaica.
Newsreader: As soon
as we have any further news we, will interrupt our programmes to
bring it to you. And now the rest of the news. In Liverpool today
the Prime Minister said in a speech...
Part Two
Announcer: We interrupt this programme to take you over to the
newsroom for a newsflash.
Newsreader: This is
Gordon Chartwell in the newsroom with a further report from our
correspondent Graham Smith in Jamaica about the stranded liner,
Princess of Wales.
Graham Smith:
A further signal has been picked up from the Princess of Wales
within the past few minutes. According to this, the ship is now out
of danger. Apparently the damage to the liner is not as serious as
was originally thought and she is still completely seaworthy and
out of danger. However, before this was realized, 5 of the
lifeboats had been launched and about 200 passengers and crew had
made their way to the island of St. Catherine where they are
reported to be safe. For the time being they are likely to remain
on the island. The remaining 920 people are still on board the
liner and in no danger. Although Hurricane Zelda has reached the
island, the wind seems to have blown itself out to some extent and
although there are heavy seas, there is no danger for a ship of the
size of the Princess of Wales. The ship is now clear of the rocks.
The passengers and crew sheltering on the island will be brought
off by the Royal Navy frigate Steadfast, which is now close to the
area. Apart from a few minor injuries there are no casualties. This
is Graham Smith returning you to the studio.
Newsreader: There
will be a further report in our main news at one o'clock. And now
back to Down Your Way...
Task 8
【答案】
A.
1) c
2) c
3) a
B.
Countries
|
Attitudes Towards the
Treaty
|
The
US
|
It was one
of the first countries that signed the treaty, but has
withdrawn from it on the grounds that the treaty would
weaken/harm American economy.
|
The
EU
|
It
strongly supports the treaty, and is also trying to
push/persuade other countries to accept it.
|
Japan
|
It wants
flexible rules allowing it to plant more trees rather
than cut its pollution greatly, and to impose weaker
penalties if it fails to fulfill its obligations.
|
Russia
|
It has not
made the final decision, but wants firm guarantees of foreign
investment in clean technology before ratifying
it.
|
【原文】
News Item 1
The European Union has officially approved the Kyoto Treaty on
climate change. Officials from all 15 EU states attended a ceremony
Friday at the United Nations in New York. However, the treaty still
needs the approval of more countries to come into effect. The
treaty limits the release by Industrial countries of gases blamed
for trapping heat in the atmosphere. The United States was one of
the first countries to sign the Kyoto Treaty, but has since
withdrawn. President Bush says the treaty could harm the American
economy.
News Item 2
Welcome to BBC World News, I'm Nick Gowing. Environment ministers
from 180 countries will start trying to rescue the Kyoto Treaty on
global warming shortly. They join their officials who have been
meeting all week in the German city of Bonn. The 1997 Kyoto
agreement commits industrialized countries to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions. The protocol was undermined in a major way in March when
US President George W. Bush said it would weaken America's
economy.
It's Beethoven who dominates the town square here and it's unlikely
that he'll have to give up his place to a monument celebrating a
conference which halted global warming. Ministers from over 180
countries have already agreed to global cuts in emissions of
greenhouse gases 5 percent below the 1990 levels. But here they
must decide how this will be achieved. Since George Bush pulled out
of the deal, the argument is between Japan and Europe. The Japanese
want flexible rules allowing them to plant more trees in place of
steep cuts in pollution and weaker penalties for missing targets.
Europe doesn't like it but really wants a deal.
News Item 3
A major international conference on climate change is to open in
Moscow shortly with Russia coming under renewed pressure to sign
the Kyoto Protocol. That's the agreement to limit the industrial
pollutants that are believed to contribute to global warming. The
Kyoto Protocol of 1997 can only come into force when 55 percent of
countries have signed up to it. With United States refusing to
sign, ratification by Russia is crucial to the treaty's success.
From Moscow our environment correspondent Tim Hersch
reports.
President Putin himself called this conference in his own capital
to discuss the latest signs of climate change and it had been
thought he might use the opportunity to announce that his
government was finally prepared to sign up to Kyoto, but comments
from senior Kremlin officials have played down expectations, saying
Russia wanted firm guarantees of foreign investment in clean
technology before pressing ahead with ratification. The European
Union and UN bodies have been putting pres-sure on Mr. Putin to end
the delays so that international action against global warming
could finally start six years after the Kyoto agreement was
signed.
Task 9
【答案】
I.
September
19th; three days; child activists; non-government
organizations
A.
actions
2. a good
education for all children
3. the
chance for all children to become an important part of their
communities
B. the
progress
II.
seventy-one heads of state and government; a treaty aimed
at improving the lives of children around the world; the rights of
children
III.
(former)
world leaders; creators
A.
educating children
B.
protecting them from war
C.
fighting AIDS
get
involved; take action; work for change
【原文】
The United Nations
General Assembly will hold a special session on children beginning
September Nineteenth. The meeting will bring together government
leaders, child activists, non-government organizations and many
young people. The three-day gathering will give officials a
valuable chance to change how the world thinks about
children.
Eleven years ago,
the U-N held a similar meeting called the World Summit for
Children. During that conference, seventy-one heads of state and
government signed a treaty aimed at improving the lives of children
around the world. Efforts to reach the goals established in that
treaty have made the rights of children an important
issue.
The UN agency for
children, UNICEF, is supporting the special session. Officials are
expected to produce a plan of action to guarantee that three
important goals are reached. The goals are the best possible start
in life for all children, a good education for all children and the
chance for all children to become an important part of their
communities. The session will also examine progress made since the
Nineteen-Ninety World Summit for Children.
Former South
African President and Nobel Peace Prize winner Nelson Mandela is
working toward these goals. He is joined by his wife Graca Machel
who is an activist for children. They are calling on community,
business and government leaders to form an international movement
aimed at improving the world for young people.
The movement is
hoping to build international support for a public campaign to help
children. Several world leaders have joined the movement. They
include South Korean President Kim Dae-Jung and Queen Rania of
Jordan. Movie stars, professional sports teams, and the creators of
children's television programs and books also have joined the
movement.
The group's public
campaign lists ten ways to improve the lives of young people. These
include educating children, protecting them from war and fighting
the disease AIDS. UNICEF officials say the goal of the movement is
for people around the world to get involved, take action and work
for change. They say that for every child who comes into the world,
the hopes and dreams of the human race are reborn.
Task 10
The United Nations
Food and Agriculture Organization says hunger kills millions of
people each year — especially children . The UN organization says
millions more people will die unless more money is invested to
fight against hunger.
This is based on
the result of a new UN study called “The State of Food Insecurity
in the World, 2002”. It found that more than nine million people
die each year from hunger. Six million of them are children younger
than age five. Researchers also found that the number of starving
people is growing in some parts of the world.
The report
says that about eight hundred and forty million people around the
world are getting enough food to eat. Ninety-five percent of these
people are in developing countries.
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