英美报刊文章阅读
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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。
英美报刊选读passage13thedeclineofneatness(含翻译)The Decline of Neatness行为标准的蜕化By Norman Cou s insAnyone with a passion for hanging labels on people or things should have little difficulty in recognizing that an apt tag for our time is the “Unkempt Generation”. 任何一个喜欢给别人或事物贴标签的人应该不难发现我们这个时代合适的标签是“邋遢的一代”。
I am not referring solely to college kids. The sloppiness virus has spread to all sectors of society," People go to all sorts of trouble and expense to look uncombed, unshaved. unpressed.3 我说这话不仅仅是针对大学生。
邋遢这种病毒已经蔓延到社会各个部分。
人们刻意呈现一幅蓬头散发、边幅不修、衣着不整的形象。
The symbol of the times is blue jeans—not just blue jeans in good condition but jeans that are frayed, torn, discolored. They don't get that way naturally. No one wants blue jeans that are crisply clean or spanking new. 如今时代潮流的象征是穿蓝色牛仔裤--不是完好的牛仔裤,而是打磨过的,撕裂开的,和褪色了的牛仔裤。
37“基地”,这个名称近年来正在被人淡忘,至少在“9·11”事件后,美国对阿富汗发动战争取缔“基地”训练营后是这样的。
但是圣战思想有一种特别强的凝聚力,它的追随者越过边境,让概念上的“基地”组织变得无处不在,却又无影可循,更多地成为了一种力量而不是一个具体的组织。
男人和男孩们把他们的生命看得微不足道,却对死后的灵魂和来世抱有极大的憧憬。
他们访问圣战组织的网站,在当地的清真寺里聚会,甚至拜访国外激进的伊斯兰教长,然后——好了,就没有人能说得清楚了。
有些人回到了家,比如加利福尼亚州的洛代,有的到了卡萨布兰卡,有的去了伦敦——最近有逮捕到圣战组织嫌疑人的每一个城市。
而其他人则到伊拉克加入了反政府武装。
很多人被捉拿,被击毙,而另一些则决定在发动袭击前先隐蔽起来。
因此,“基地”组织仍然是既可怕却又潜在着。
那些追查圣战者的人之所以无法预知下一次袭击什么时候,在哪里发生的一个重要的原因就是,西方国家的反恐战争已经让“基地”组织的“领袖”们——甚至是本·拉丹(尤其是他)——丧失了有效的转移和通信能力。
美国情报官员称,“基地”组织的75%的高层人员已经被击毙或逮捕。
今日,法国恐怖主义问题专家罗兰德·雅克卡德就说,“大多数的武装组织是自发形成的,而非在“基地”的号召下才展开的。
……他们当然不会等着法学家来批准他们去袭击平民。
他们知道,他们原先拥有的就已经足够了。
”这是一件“谁都能干”的事。
然而,在伦敦,在马德里,或是更早以前的卡萨布兰卡、利雅得以及巴厘岛爆炸案之后,我们确实掌握了更多关于“基地”组织的行动能力和行动趋势的信息。
也许,要描绘出那些袭击发动者的清晰图像需要很多时间,但是伦敦7·7爆炸案所发生的地点、针对的目标和发生的时间却能多多少少为我们了解今天“基地”组织所带来的威胁的本质和它的变化趋势提供一些经验教训。
下面是主要的三点:启示一:恐怖之火燃烧到欧洲伦敦7·7爆炸案提醒人们,现在的欧洲今非昔比,已是恐怖威胁的中心。
《美英报刊文章阅读》精选本第三版周学艺第一课: Home at last译文叶落归根----对一群美国哈佛大学工商管理学毕业生们来说,返回中国:就意味着有一次为祖国服务的机会,也就意味着有一次致富的机遇。
By brook larmer这是一个通宵达旦的聚会,在醉意朦胧的氛围中,即将毕业的学子们互诉衷情。
然而这却是一个严肃的场合:在1999年5月的一天,11位(哈佛工商大学)的同班同学,聚集在哈佛工商大学校园的一套公寓里,正在与中国之命运努力抗争。
在他们的身边满眼是空空的啤酒瓶和炸薯片的包装袋,这11位同班同学与一帮来自中国大陆的朋友正在讨论他们自己的去留问题。
其实,他们当中的每一位同学都收到了美国顶级公司的邀请函。
但是,自从他们大多数人离开祖国以来,中国大陆在十年内也已经发生了巨大的变化。
现在的中国比以往的任何时候提供了更多的个人自由和经济发展机遇,而且也急需一大批象他们一样的精英管理型人才。
张微,一位活泼的29岁妇女,她的梦想就是要成为中国式的奥普拉·温弗莉,(奥普拉·温弗莉Oprah Winfrey:1954年1月29日生于美国密西西比州的科斯休斯克。
19岁加入那斯威尔市的WVOL广播电台开始她的广播生涯。
大学二年级转学大众传媒,并成为那斯威尔WTVF电视台第一个非洲裔美国人记者。
1984年移居芝加哥主持WLS电视台的早间脱口秀节目—《芝加哥的早晨》。
一个月之后,成为脱口秀节目排行榜首位。
不到一年时间,节目延长到1小时,并更名为《奥普拉·温弗瑞秀》。
奥普拉·温弗莉是一个什么样的人?她的物理特征:“黑人、女人、体重200磅、出身于密西西比、庸俗、粗鄙、市井和有生气的”;她的人生特征:未婚妈妈所生,9岁遭强奸,33岁成为脱口秀女皇,48岁成为亿万富翁。
她的财智特征:美国最受欢迎电视人,哈泼娱乐集团公司董事长,全美50名女强人之一,20世纪最有影响力的100位名人之一,《福布斯》杂志排行榜上的亿万富翁。
英美文学readingreport5篇第一篇:英美文学reading reportReading report on Pride and Prejudice(I)(Chapter1——Chapter12)The first sentence in this book impressed me.It says: “It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife”.The meaning is very clear: the foundation of the marriage at that time is not emotion but possession.As far as I considered, people can’t divide people j ust by rich and poor.As a saying goes”all men are created equal.”Everyone is equal on every aspect.Also,one cannot distinguish good and bad just because the beautiful and ugly appearance.Pride and prejudice are our common weakness and shortcomings.Every person actually is easy to be driven by his own subjective impression.So it can comment easily to other people under incorrectness, then it will cause misunderstandings between each other.A person’s first impression can affect many things.But that is not to say the impression would never change, the deeper you get to understand someone, the more objective points you will have on him or her.Just like Elizabeth, after she read the letter from Darcy, she realized that she misunderstood him all the time.How foolish she was, she felt ashamed.Eventually, she changed her opinion towards him.On the other hand, Darcy noticed that if his pride existed, there will be no happy marriage between him and Elizabeth, he changed himself, and he was no longer pride and became gentle and attentive.As the saying goes, “Men cannot be judged by their looks.” Whether life or anything else, one cannot see its essence only from the appearance.Reading report on Pride and Prejudice(II)(Chapter13——Chapter24)A sentence in chapter 18 is interesting.Darcy told Elizabeth: “Mr.Wickham is blessed with such happy manners as may ensure his making friends— whether he may be equally capable of retaining them, is less certain.”The undertone is very clear: Mr.Wickham was not reliable.” And I think that Darcy was a little jealous.By the way, what he said seemed quite reasonable.Many things come easily, but also lose easily.Only when we know how hard-won the thing is will we cherish it.However people always treasure the ones that haven’t obtained, but forget the ones thathave already had.We won't be conscious of how important something is until the moment we lose it.Why do not we cherish all now have, as long as think about it, you'll know that your life is very good, love their families, teachers and classmates.In fact, our life is very simple.He who is in constant pursuit of happiness will never find it because happiness is not something tangible that one can easily grab but rather a state of mind.True happiness lies in contentment.Another sentence in chapter18 impressed me.Elizabeth said “It is particularly incumbent on those who never change their opinion, to be secure of judging properly at first.”I think this sentence is suitable for the kind of people who is stubborn.Just like me.Reading report on Pride and Prejudice(III) (Chapter25——Chapter36)In chapter31, there is a sentence which impressed me.Elizabeth said: “There is a stubbornness about me that never can bear to be frightened at the will of others.My courage always rises at every attempt to intimidate me.”It showed that Elizabeth had the special character, whichpeople did not have in the 18th century.It is often says, different personalities bring us different kinds of result.And as a general rule, pleasant and humble personality will definitely give better result.Fate changes if we change our personality.A simple example is Elizabeth.She struggled for her own happiness, which needs courage and persistence.And she was strong-minded and makes her own decisions.And this is the same with girls today.She exceeded her time with her thought.Generally speaking, one’s first impression can affect many things indeed, but it does not mean that the impression would never change.The deeper you get to understand someone, the more objective points you will have on him or her.As Elizabeth, after she read the letter from Darcy, she realized that she misunderstood him all the time.How foolish she was, she felt ashamed.Eventually, she changed her opinion towards him.On the other hand, Darcy noticed that if his pride existed, therewill be no happy marriage between him and Elizabeth, he changed himself, and he was no longer pride and became gentle and attentive.Reading report on Pride and Prejudice(IV) (Chapter37——Chapter48)There a sentence in chapter40 is impressive.It said:“ Mr.Darcy has not authorized me to make his communication public.On the contrary, every particular relative to his sister was meant to be kept as much as possible to myself”It showed that Darcy was a very helpful and kind-hearted man.And Elizabeth just was attracted by this kind of character.She is motivated by her feelings not by material things.As far as I considered, one cannot distinguish good and bad just because the beautiful and ugly appearance.Elizabeth hated Darcy because of Darcy's arrogance generating by wealth and Wicker’srumors.Without complete understanding, she prejudice against him.As the saying goes, ”Men cannot be judged by their looks." Whether study, life or anything else, one cannot see its essence only from the appearance.After reading the book, I could not help asking myself: Is it another fairy tale of another Cinderella? Could it be possible that a noble man like Darcy would marry a humble girl in reality? Could there be a man just as handsome, gentle and considerate as Mr.Darcy? I may easily tell it is rarely possible!However, literature can do us a great favor when our dreams can not realize.That is to say, when the need in reality can not be satisfied or the dream cannot be lived out, literature is another way of continuing our dreams.Reading report on Pride and Prejudice(V)(Chapter49——Chapter61)It’s a romantic love story indeed, but at the same time, the author didn’t confine her aim just to telling love stories.In fact, in most cases, the marriage in her book was not the result of love, but the result of economic needs.There a sentence in chapter 59 is interesting.Elizabeth told Jane: “It has beencoming on so gradually, that I hardly know when it began.But I believe I must date it from my first seeing his beautiful grounds at Pemberley.” This sentence obvious is ajoke.Because, when Elizabeth loathed Darcy, she had already known that he had a lot of property.Therefore, she changed her mind just because of the garden, which seems very funny.Money, love, appearance and so on are considered when involved with marriage.Elizabeth and Darcy consider more about morality than simply the financial factor as well as the appearance of each other.Therefore, even though there is still gap between theirsocial statuses, the marriage of them is sweet and happy.As far as I am concerned,girls are supposed to struggle for their own happiness, which needs courage and persistence.They ought to be strong-minded and make their own decisions.And this is the same with girls today.However, in modern society, although the marriages of economic needs have decreased rapidly, the concept of “money determines everything” is still rooted in some people’s mind.A lot of parents try hard to interfere their children’s cation background, possessions, jobs remains the main reason that may influence one’s marriage.Marry for money is still a big problem in our society. 第二篇:英美文学Analysis of Robinson Crusoe2009级师范三班刘静Robinson Crusoe is written by Defoe(1660 ~ 1731), known as the father of English novel and the periodical literature.He is the father of the English novel and periodical literature, who was born in a family which was against the Anglican Protestant.His father is a businessman, doing business.His article influenced the later development of journal articles and newspaper.Because the speech, he was repeatedly arrested.At the age of 59 Defoe began writing fiction as a novelist, show remarkable ability.Robinson Crusoe Robinson is Defoe's first novel, is also one of the most famous novels.It is based on a British seaman on a deserted island alone for 4 years in exile records and creation.Robinson is the heroine of Defoe works in accordance with their ideals and created the character, he killed out of doing business, living on a desert island for 28 years, overcome all sorts of unimaginable difficulties.He start empty-handed, develop the island, not only to their own survival, and create a new world.He was a pioneer in the image, a real assetclass hero.In this figure embodies the western ocean civilization tradition, with the outward development of curiosity, desire to conquer and spirit of adventure, praised the strength quality and working spirit.The novel opens English realistic novel road.In this novel, there are so many about the Wonderful part, but two points impress: one is the author of the narrative language easy to understand.In front of the book, the author use a lot of space to introduce Robinson in the sea to sea before, whether does not listen to parents' guide, but follow the guidance of the soul, the careful psychological description, the author description most incisive.Two is a fascinating story, the protagonist of nearly thirty years of life vividly in front of us, let our eyes as if emerging from a young life.Robinson Crusoe is to let a person look after all that the most primitive, most of my books, not only because it is the wonderful, and it gives us the modern enlightenment.The most qualities I learn from Robinson Crusoe is not his hard-working and brave, but his amazing mental capacity.One can imagine, a single large living alone on a desert island life ten years, no one to accompany him, even the most basic, and a person simply talk for a while to do.The deserted island there is no house, no rice, can only rely on his own hard to create a piece of heaven and earth.The first nonwhite character to be given a realistic, individualized, and humane portrayal in the English novel, Friday has a huge literary and cultural importance.Recent rewritings of the Crusoe story, like J.M.Coetzee’s Foe and Michel Tournier’s Friday, emphasize the sad consequences of Crusoe’s failure to understand Friday and suggest how the tale might be told very differently from the native’s perspective.Besides his importance to our culture, Friday is a key figure within the context of the novel.Friday’s sincere questions to Crusoe aboutthe devil, which Crusoe answers onlyindirectly and hesitantly, leave us wondering whether Crusoe’s knowledge of Christianity is superficial and sketchy in contrast to Friday’s fullunderstanding of his own god Benamuckee.In short, Friday’s exuberance and emotional directness often point out the wooden conventionality of Crusoe’s personality.Despite Friday’s subjugation, however, Crusoe appreciates Friday much more than he would a mere servant.Crusoe does not seem to value intimacy with humans much, but he does say that he loves Friday, which is aremarkable disclosure.Crusoe may bring Friday Christianity and clothing, but Friday brings Crusoe emotional warmth and a vital ity of spirit that Crusoe’s own European heart lacks.This novel shows that we need to believe ourselves, where there is a will, there is e our hands, then see a new world.What is more, we are not only live ourselves in the world, we need to care about others.Be brave, andnever lose hope.第三篇:英美文学《英美文学》复习方法一、找到《英美文学》的辅导书,例如《自考一本通》《自考直通车》等类型的汉语版辅导书。
主题:美英报刊文章阅读lesson9一、引言美英报刊文章阅读是提高英语阅读能力的有效途径之一,通过学习美英报刊文章,我们不仅可以了解国外的新闻和时事,还可以提高阅读理解能力和词汇量。
在本文中,将介绍lesson9的美英报刊文章阅读内容,并分析其中的语言特点和阅读技巧。
二、lesson9的主题lesson9的主题是关于环境保护和气候变化的文章,涉及到环境问题、气候变化和可持续发展等方面的内容。
这个主题在当今社会备受关注,对于英语学习者来说,了解这些内容不仅可以增加知识,还可以锻炼阅读能力和理解能力。
三、语言特点分析1. 专业词汇丰富lesson9的文章涉及到环境科学领域的内容,因此在文章中会出现大量的专业词汇,如environmental protection(环境保护)、climate change(气候变化)、sustainable development(可持续发展)等。
对于学习者来说,需要通过阅读来积累这些专业词汇,从而提高专业词汇的识别和理解能力。
2. 复杂句式较多在lesson9的文章中,作者往往会使用较为复杂的句式和结构,如定语从句、状语从句、倒装句等。
这些句式的使用能够提高文章的表达能力,但也增加了阅读的难度。
学习者需要通过阅读来熟悉这些句式,从而提高对复杂句式的理解和使用能力。
3. 逻辑推理严谨lesson9的文章通常会采用严谨的逻辑推理,通过提出问题、分析原因、阐述观点、给出建议等步骤,来为读者呈现一个完整的论证结构。
学习者需要通过阅读来理解作者的观点和论证过程,从而提高逻辑推理能力。
四、阅读技巧1. 查词典积累词汇在阅读lesson9的文章时,学习者需要经常使用词典来查询生词,通过积累专业词汇和短语,提高对文章的理解能力。
2. 分段阅读整理思路文章较长的lesson9的内容,阅读时需要采取分段阅读的方式,将每个段落的主要内容整理成思维导图或摘要,帮助加深对文章的理解和记忆。
3. 善用标注和注释在阅读lesson9的文章时,学习者可以通过标注和注释的方式,将不理解或者重要的内容加以标记,便于后续的复习和查漏补缺。
英美报刊选读_课文word整合版Unit2 Gender IssuesMen turn to jobs women usually do 1.HOUSTON - Over the last decade, Americanmen of 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 ofg 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 paperjams all 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 previousdecade. 7.That does not mean that men are displacing women - 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 national teacher 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"has been accelerated by recession, the change may reversewhen 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 werefar harder 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, but database 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,"because I 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 theones to embrace change the fastest. In Kenya, a service called M-Pesa (pesa is money in Swahili) acts like a banking system for those who may not have a bank account. With a rudimentary cellphone, M-Pesa users can send and receivemoney 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,are busy 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 afree iPhone 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 tomake payments 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 thefastest-growing segment of eBay, its parent company.12."The physical wallet, which had no innovationin the 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 to become "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."Unit4Cultural ExchangeAsia’s Endangered Species: the Expat1.Forget expats. Western companies doingbusiness in Asia are now looking to locals to fill the most important jobs in the region.2.Behind the switch, experts say, are severalfactors, 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./doc/2216449449.html,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 hiredin Asia 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 bydifferent 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 executiveroles, 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 localculture 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 orraised 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, bothfirms said the first category is by far the mostsought-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 2010hired Mei-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 subsidiaries of Ford Motor Co. and General Electric Co. GE12.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 ofhuman 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 appointmentof Daniel Saw as its first-ever president of Asia operations, while Canadian conglomerate Bombardier Inc. BBD.B.T hired Albert Li to filla new role overseeing its aerospace business inChina. 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. "Ittakes 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.based in 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 whendealing 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, headded.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.Unit5Auto-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 begana revolution in personal mobility. Almost abillion 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,stricter regulations 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 marketsare demanding deep cuts in the carbon dioxide emitted from car exhausts. 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 busy trying 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, predictsthat driverless cars will be ready for sale tocustomers within five years. That may be optimistic, but the prototypes that Google already uses to ferry its staff (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 filminghim 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 formfuel-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 t hey? 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 theroad, because a child may be chasing it. G oogle’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。
英美报刊阅读精选以下是一些英美报刊中的精选文章:1. "The Guardian" - "Why the world needs an economic system rethink"这篇文章讨论了为什么世界需要重新思考经济体系,以解决当前面临的挑战。
2. "The New York Times" - "The role of technology in shaping our future"这篇文章探讨了技术在塑造我们未来中的作用。
3. "The Wall Street Journal" - "The impact of Brexit on global markets"这篇文章讨论了英国脱欧对全球市场的影响。
4. "The Times" - "Climate change and the urgent need for action" 这篇文章着重讨论了气候变化和迫切需要采取行动的问题。
5. "The Economist" - "The challenges and opportunities of globalization"这篇文章探讨了全球化带来的挑战和机遇。
6. "Time" - "The importance of mental health in today's society" 这篇文章强调了当今社会中心理健康的重要性。
7. "USA Today" - "The future of healthcare and the role of technology"这篇文章讨论了医疗保健的未来以及技术的作用。
英美报刊文章阅读教学设计一、背景介绍英美报刊文章阅读教学在高等英语教育中占据重要地位。
通过阅读英美报刊文章,学生可以拓宽视野,提升阅读能力,并了解更多关于英美社会、文化等方面的知识。
因此,如何设计有效的英美报刊文章阅读教学方案,是每一位英语教育工作者所面临的重要问题。
本文将为大家介绍一种实用的英美报刊文章阅读教学设计,希望能对广大英语教育工作者提供参考和帮助。
二、教学目标1.掌握英美报刊文章的阅读技巧,提高阅读能力;2.了解英美社会、文化以及热点话题等方面的知识;3.提高英语口语和写作能力;4.培养学生的团队合作和自主学习能力。
三、教学内容与步骤1.阅读与主题相关的英美报刊文章。
–建议选择题材广泛、内容深入、语言通俗易懂的文章;–要求学生阅读完整篇文章,并做好阅读记录和笔记。
2.形成小组讨论。
–要求学生以小组为单位进行讨论,共同探讨文章中的内容、观点和争议点等;–每个小组应该有固定的讨论时间,一般为20-30分钟。
3.总结和汇报。
–每个小组需要将讨论的结果进行总结,形成报告并进行汇报;–汇报时间一般为5-10分钟,以确保所有小组均有充分的时间进行汇报。
4.口语训练和写作练习。
–针对讨论内容,安排口语训练和写作练习;–口语训练直接将讨论结果变为对话形式,加强口语表达;–写作练习则根据讨论结果要求学生完成相应的英文写作作业。
5.考核和反思。
–安排考核,对学生的阅读能力、口语表达和写作能力进行考核;–学生完成考核后,进行教学反思,进一步总结经验,开展教学改进。
四、教学评价本教学方案注重学生的参与与互动、团队合作和自主学习,可以有效地提高学生的英语语言能力、思维能力和读写能力,并为学生的终身学习打好基础。
教师可以通过考核结果和课堂反馈,全面评价学生的语言水平和学习态度,并根据学生的不同情况进行个性化的教学辅导。
五、教学反思本教学方案注重了小组讨论、口语训练和写作练习等实践教学环节,加强了学生的实际应用能力和自主学习能力。
英美报刊阅读精选Introduction:In an increasingly interconnected world, staying well-informed about global affairs is essential. One effective way to broaden our perspectives and deepen our understanding is by reading news articles from reputable English-language newspapers and magazines. This article presents a selection of compelling articles from renowned publications in the United Kingdom and the United States. By exploring a range of topics, readers can gain valuable insights into the current issues shaping societies on both sides of the Atlantic.1. The Guardian - "Climate Change: Urgent Action Needed"The Guardian, a UK newspaper known for its progressive stance, offers a thought-provoking article on the urgency of tackling climate change. It highlights the devastating consequences of rising temperatures, emphasizing the need for immediate and decisive action by governments, corporations, and individuals alike. Through compelling statistics and expert testimonials, this article serves as a call to arms for combating one of the greatest challenges of our time.2. The New York Times - "The Changing Landscape of Technology"The New York Times, an acclaimed American newspaper, sheds light on the ever-evolving world of technology. This engaging article explores the impact of innovative advancements on various industries, such as artificial intelligence, virtual reality, and renewable energy. It examines both the potential benefits and risks associated with these developments, providingreaders with a comprehensive overview of the changing technological landscape.3. BBC News - "Rising Populism: Examining its Global Reach"BBC News, a renowned British broadcasting corporation, delves into the rise of populism across the globe. With in-depth analysis and insightful commentary, this article examines the factors contributing to the growing popularity of populist movements in different countries. It also explores the potential consequences of these political shifts, highlighting the challenges they pose to established democratic norms and institutions.4. The Washington Post - "Immigration Policies: A Nation Divided"The Washington Post, a prominent American publication, presents an engaging article on the contentious issue of immigration policies. Through personal narratives, expert opinions, and historical context, this thought-provoking piece explores the complex realities faced by immigrants and the impact of various policies on both individuals and societies. It encourages readers to reflect on the challenges of striking a balance between national security and humanitarian concerns.5. Financial Times - "The Impact of Global Trade Wars on the Economy"The Financial Times, a respected UK-based newspaper focusing on business and economics, provides valuable insights into the impact of global trade wars on the global economy. This informative article analyzes the ripple effects of trade disputes between major economies and assesses the potential risks and opportunities they present. By examining theinterconnectedness of international trade, it offers readers a better understanding of the intricate dynamics shaping global markets.Conclusion:By actively engaging with English-language newspapers and magazines from the UK and the US, readers can access diverse perspectives on a wide range of issues. The selected articles from The Guardian, The New York Times, BBC News, The Washington Post, and the Financial Times exemplify the breadth and depth of quality journalism available today. By regularly immersing oneself in these publications, readers can stay informed, broaden their horizons, and navigate the complexities of our ever-changing world.。
《美英报刊文章阅读》复习第一题:将15个英语名词短语翻译成中文(15×1)不好说,不难,自己看书。
最好把书上的单词弄懂意思。
第二题:用英语写出5所著名大学或政府机构名字(5×2)美国大学:Yale University:耶鲁大学Harvard University:哈佛大学Princeton University:普林斯顿大学Stanford University:斯坦福大学Brown University:布朗大学University of Pennsylvania:宾夕法尼亚大Columbia University:哥伦比亚大学……美国政府机构:白宫(The White House)农业部(ministry of Agriculture)商务部(Commerce Department) 国防部(Ministry of National Defense)联邦调查局(Federal Bureau of Investigation)教育部(Ministry of Education)国防部(Department of Defense Administration) ……第三题:写出5个英语缩写的全称(5×2)FOR EXAM:UN=United Nations第四题:翻译15个报刊杂志或出版社名字成中文(15×1)美国The New York Times 《纽约时报》The Washington Post 《华盛顿邮报》Los Angeles Times 《洛杉矶时报》USA Today 《今日美国报》The Wall Street Journal .《华尔街日报》International Herald Tribune .《国际先驱论坛报》The Christian Science Monitor..《基督教科学箴言报》Time ...《时代》周刊Newsweek …《新闻周刊》U.S. News & World Report ..《美国新闻与世界报道》Reader’s Digest ..《读者文摘》Fortune .《财富》Business Week .《商业周刊》Far Eastern Economic Review .《远东经济评论》英国The Times . 《泰晤士报》Financial Times 《金融时报》The Guardian 《卫报》The Daily Telegraphy .《每日电讯报》The Independent .《独立报》The Economist 《经济学家》The Spectator 《旁观者》New Statesman 《新政治家》The Associated Press (AP):美国联合通讯社Reuters:英国路透社United Press International(UPI):美国合众国际社第五题:回答与课文相关的5个问题(5×3)答案见下页。
英美報刊文章閱讀外國語學院英語師範三班何宇201040330231.The inverted pyramid should put the most important point at the top of the article,followed by your next most important point, and so on, in diminishing order of importance. The lead includes the five “W”( what where why when and who).that made the readers read the article immediately.The writer then provides the rest of the information and supporting contextual details in descending order of importance, leaving the least essential material for the very end. This gives the completed story the form of an inverted pyramid, with the most important elements, or the 'base' of the story, on top.For example, if I write, 'Two children were injured when fire swept through the First Community Church, Detroit, Michigan, on May 10. The fire is believed to have started from unattended candles.' That's complete, but a lot of details can be added in succeeding paragraphs. If space is tight, an editor can cut from the bottom and still save the essential elements."2.To create an inverted pyramid structure, follow these guidelines: 1, Use clear,meaningful headings or lists at the beginning of a topic. 2. Create separate paragraphs or topics to emphasize important points. 3, Do not bury your main point in the middle of a paragraph or topic..3.the journalist English has three important features :firstly-the reporters aresammilar to the article of the report content ,so the reporters can apply to appropriate words and express the relative contents which including some professional words. second :the news usually used the short and active voice sentence third , the structure of news is always loose, at the same time, there is closely among the paragraphs.4.- A museum commemorating the Flying Tigers, a US air squadron that helped theChinese fight the Japanese in World War II, opened to the public in central China's Hunan Province on Tuesday. The Flying Tigers Museum, located at the Shining Airport in Shining County, houses 1,387 pieces of historical artifacts from the Flying Tigers, which are on public display for the first time. The Shining Airport was an important base for the Flying Tigers under the leadership of Claire Lee Chennai, a retired US Army Air Corps officer who started working in China in 1937. Construction of the museum took five years. During this time, the museum received precious items from living members of the Flying Tigers and their families, including Anna Chan Chennault, wife of Claire Lee Chennault, said Wu Jonahing, curator of the museum. The cultural relics in the museum will help younger generations remember the glorious history of the Flying Tigers andcherish the peace that did not come easy, said Chen Canapé, who contributed items to the museum. The 1st American V olunteer Group, which the Chinese nicknamed the Flying Tigers for their courage, was formed in 1941 to help China drive out invading Japanese troops. An estimated 2,264 Flying Tigers and more than 900 Chinese airmen who fought alongside them died in the war.Hear America‟s leading economic critic talk with New Y ork Times op-ed columnist, Frank Bruin, about the state of the economy today, the current presidential campaign and prospects for the future. Those two newspaper have almost same style, the serious topic and critic sense and they all make a great effects in their own country. they are the popular and quality paper.yes,there are some substantial differences ,such as, the china daily represents the party‟s benefits ,but the New York time maybe more objective.5.a, e and f are correct sentences. b.(A 19 years old bicyclist is critical but stablecondition after being hitted by a semi-trsiler truck Friday afternoon while crossing Broadway Rd. 5th Ave.)c:(WASHINGTON(AP)-you say that you are in this together and you will never give up until he can reverse a House vote denying $100 million dollars inmilitary and other aid to the insurgents.)d:( SACRAMENTO, Calif (AP)-today, California officials reported that lucky Stores inc. is calling three flavor of lady Lee ice cream because of glass found in three half-gallon contains.)6.At 4: 40 a. m on Saturday, a house in Mt Prospet took place a fire which made a88 years old woman dead at 5:34.7.The largest bank, First National Bank was involved in the investigation of FBIbecause there is $450,000 turned up missing during a routine, but the bank official still believed that electric transfers embezzled their money.8.a. “A new football coach will be hired by Friday,” said Athletic Director CliffGibson.b. “This is a great day for Geneva,” said Mayor Johnson.c. According to Smith, there are several first-rate prospects: Charles Mays, Richard Kile, John Harig and Stanley Kelly.d. The teacher asked: “ what is the capital of Delaware?”e. John wondered: “why every teacher always expected us to know all the state capitals?”f. “My professor quoted Benvolio from Romeo and Juliet who said, …why, Romeo, art thou mad?‟ ” said Susan.g. “The President will hold a press conference Thursday evening at 6 o‟clock,” said Johnson.h. “The problem,” Smith said, “is that nobody seems to know what is happening.”i. Smith said:“Journalists often work long hours. However, the extra hours are worth it if a solid story can be gained. The best journalists are more than willing to take theextra time.”9. Girl frozen alive on her own door step: 1. the distinctive linguistic(“like a block of ice” this a description to that girl, from this a lively expression we can get the main information to the girl and guessing what real happened to her.)2. the stylistic features(the whole reports is very simple and lively and the whole effects to the affairs is correct and important .just like the word ”frozen” made us get the main information to the main story. at the same time, the report‟s structure is simplify and made some direct speech. and the report‟s materials are from the informal place.The ice girl who came bake from the death: 1. the distinctive linguistic( compared with the the fore one, the linguistic also made some same effects, lively, simple,) 2. the stylistic features(the whole report‟s structure is flexible and changeable. the report did not give much explanation to the interviewer. the most information can attract the readers)10. Gloucester garden yield grisly secrets to police:( the way of report mainly providing the information and express the public replies. In a word the report‟s linguistic style is very formal and proper; actually, the whole report just made a detail narration for whole affairs. On some key points, the reporter gave some repeated expression that helps the readers know more information to the news. About the article, which is a complete sentence and the information expressed by the article is very clear and did not make any ambiguity )DEATH HOUSE: HORROR GROWS: ( firstly, about the article is very attractive which is a phrase and made a very deep impression to the readers; this report has a lot of similar with the fore one. in the report there is no direct speech ,it just state the whole process of the affirms .in the whole report‟s selecting words which is common and acceptable. about the relative person‟s social position which did not give any details.)。