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2003
年全国大学生英语竞赛初赛试题

2003 National English Contest for College Students

Preliminary


Part I Listening Comprehension

30 minutes

30 points


Section A Dialogues

10 points


Directions

In this section

you will hear 10 short dialogues

At the end of each dialogue

a question
will be asked about what was said

Both the dialogue and the question will be read only once

After each
question there will be a pause

during the pause

you must read the four choices marked A

B

C and
D

and decide which is the best answer

Then m ark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a
single line through the center


1

A

A sales clerk

B

A police officer


C

A tailor

D

A nurse


2

A

By train

B

She walks


C

By car

D

By bus


3

A

Fish is the only dish left

B

Chicken is the only dish left


C

Vegetarian meals are not offered

D

There aren't any vegetarian meals left


4

A

He starts work next weekend

B

He'll be away


C

He'll be in the mountains

D

He's moving to Florida


5

A

In an elevator

B

At a dress store


C

On the seventh floor

D

At a department store


6

A

They felt it was disorganized


B

They were pleased with its Asian content


C

They felt it lacked Asian content


D

They felt it ignored recent events




7

A

He doesn't have enough time


B

He doesn't have a watch


C

The library doesn't have the articles he wants


D

He can't find the library


8

A

He wants the woman to dine out with them


B

He wants to work tomorrow


C

He wants the woman to finish dinner first


D

He wants to pay for the dinner


9

A

Twice a day

B

Twice a week


C

Once a week

D

Daily


10

A

At two o'clock

B

At four o'clock


C

At three thirty

D

At eight o'clock


Section B News Items

10 points


Directions

In this section

you will hear 10 pieces of short news from BBC or VOA

There will be a
question following each piece of news

Write down the answer to each question in no more than 15
words


11

_______________ ________________________
12

___________________________________ ____
13

_______________________________________
14

___________________________________ ____
15
_______________________________________
16

___________________________________ ____
17

__ _____________________________________
18

___________________________________ ____


19

___________________________________ ____
20
.< br>_______________________________________
Section C Compound Dictation

10 points


Directions

In this section

you will hear a passage three times

When the passage is read for the first
time

you should listen carefully for its general idea

Then listen to the passage again

When the passage
is read for the second time

you are required to fill in the blanks numbered from 21 to 28 with the exact
words you have just heard

For blanks numbered from 29 to 30

you are required to fill in the missing
information

You can either use the exact words you have just heard or write down the main points in your
own words

Finally

when the passage is read for the third time

you should check what you have written
and rewrite the correct answers on the Answer Sheet


Although general Motors and General Electric are large multinational companies with operations around the
globe

there are numerous smaller companies that engage in international trade

Because 95percent of the
world's population and two-thirds of its (21)_____ power are located outside the United States

it is
important for American (22)_____to be present in foreign markets

However

before we explain the
different methods by which a company may (23)_____in international trade

we might first consider some
important (24)_____that

companies often fail to study before they sell products in a foreign
country

These factors are (25)_____with differences in language

in values and attitudes

and in political
(26)_____


When (27)_____Coca- Cola into the Chinese market in 1920

the company used a group of Chinese
symbols that

when spoken

sounded like Coca-Cola

However

when read

these symbols meant
,“
a
female horse fattened with wax
”.
Upon reentering the Chinese market in the 1970s

Coca-Cola used a
series of Chinese (28)_____that translates into

happiness in the
mouth
”.
( 29)_________________________


Culture is the total pattern of human behavior that is practiced by a particular group of
people

(30)_________________________




Part II Vocabulary and Structure

15 minutes

30 points


Section A Multiple Choice

20 points


Directions

Questions 31-50 constitute a complete passage

There are 20blanks in the passage

For each
blank there are four choices marked A

B

C and D

Choose the one that best completes the
sentence

Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the centre


31

Senior Metropolitan police officers tried to dismiss the Noting Hill race riots which raged for five
nights over the August bank holiday in 1958 as the work of

ruffians

both colored and white

hell-bent on
hooliganism

according to _____ official files


A

recent revealed B

newly released
C

previous disclosing D

earlier exposing
32

But police eyewitness reports in the secret papers_____ that they were overwhelmingly the work of a
white working class mob out to get the

niggers
”.

A

contain B

convince
C

consist D

confirm
33

The ferocity of the Noting Hill

racial riots
”,
as the press called them at the time

shocked Britain
into_____ for the first time that it was not above the kind of racial conflict then being played out in the
American deep south


A

realizing B

witnessing
C

watching D

identifying
34

The carnival

which will_____ the streets of west London _____more than million people this
weekend

was started in 1959 as a direct response to the riots


A

crowd

of B

pour

for
C

fill

with D

emerge

in


35

While senior officers tried to play down the racial aspects of the riots

the internal Metropolitan police
files released this month at the public record office confirm that the disturbances were overwhelmingly
_____ by 300 to 400 strong

Keep Britain White

mobs

many of them Teddy boys armed with iron bars

butcher's knives and weighted leather belts

who went

nigger-hunting

among the West Indian residents of
Noting Hill and Noting Dale


A

erupted B

commenced
C

triggered D

inaugurated
36

The first night left five black men _____ on the pavements of Noting Hill


A

lying unconscious B

there died
C

feel faint D

serious hurt
37

The battles raged over the bank holiday weekend as the black _____responded in kind with
counterattacks by large groups of

men of color

similarly armed


A

column B

army
C

brigade D

community
38

Thomas Williams was stopped by the police as he came out of Bluey's Club on Talbot Road

Noting
Hill

He _____a piece of iron down his left trouser leg

a petrol bomb in his right pocket and a razor blade
in his inside breast pocket
:“
I have to protect myself
,”
he told the arresting officer


A

found to have B

was found to have
C

found having D

was found having
39

The _____ files

which were sealed under the 75-year rule but have been released early

show that
senior officers tried to convince the then home secretary
,“
Rab

Butler

that there was not a racial element
to the rioting


A

forbidden B

confidential
C

incredible D

strict


40

In his official report

Detective Sergeant of the Notting Hill police said the national press had been
wrong to portray the

widespread series of street disturbances

as

r acial

riots
:“
Whereas there certainly was
some _____ feeling between white and colored residents in this area

it is abundantly clear much of the
trouble was caused by ruffians

both colored and white

who seized on this opportunity to indulge in
hooliganism
.”

A

ill B

sick
C

painful D

hurt
41

But the police witness statements and private statistics _____


A

told differently B

interpreted in a different way
C

existed m any differences D

told a different story
42

The Met com missioner was told that _____ the 108people who were charged with offences ranging
from grievous bodily harm to affray and riot and possessing offensive weapons

72 were white and 36 were

colored
”.

A

for B

from
C

of D

in
43

It is popularly believed that the riot began on the night of Saturday

August 20

when a 400-strong
crowd of white men

_____

Teds
”,
attacked houses occupied by West Indians


A

they are all B

many of them
C

some were D

most of them belong to
44

Among the _____ was Majbritt Morrison

a young white Swedish bride of a Jamaican


A

offenders B

rioters
C

victims D

residents
45

She was pelted with stones

glass and wood

and _____ in the back with an iron bar as she tried to
get home




A

bruised B

struck
C

patted D

scratched
46

The internal police witness statements provide graphic evidence of the motives of the mobs

at one
point crowds several thousand strong roamed the streets of Notting Hill

_____ homes and attacking any
West Indian they could find


A

plunging into B

breaking into
C

seeking for D

searching for
47

PC Richard Bedford said he had seen a mob of 300 to 400 white people in Bramley Road _____
:“
We
will kill all black bastards

Why don't you send them home


A

shouting B

to cry
C

utter D

announced
48

PC Ian McQueen on the same night said he was told
:“
Mind your own _____

cops

Keep out of
it

We will settle these niggers our way

We'll murder the bastards
.”

A

matters B

affair
C

things D

business
49

The disturbances continued night after night until they finally petered out on September 5

At the Old
Bailey Judge Salmon later handed down exemplary _____ of four years each on nine white youths who had
gone

nigger hunting
”.

A

decisions B

statements
C

trials D

sentences
50

While those dealt with by the courts were overwhelmingly white

the large number of black people
also arrested and the official _____ there had not been a racial motive ensured a legacy of black mistrust of
the Metropolitan police that has never really been eradicated


A

persistence B

perseverance
C

insistence D

instance


Section B Error Correction

10points


Directions

The following passage contains 9 errors

In each case only one word is involved

You should
proofread the passage on the Answer Sheet and correct it in the following way


EXAMPLE
One night

quite late

I was still awake in the room I am shared with 1. am
my husband

I was lying on my right side and can hear a child crying

2. could
Getting up

I went

see if our son was all right

3. to
He was sleeping soundly

breathing deeply and gently

4.


The Zipper
Whatever did we do before the invention of the zipper
In 1893 the world's first zipper was produced in Chicago


Although the inventor claimed that it was a reliable fastening
for clothing

this was not the case

The Chicago zipper sprang 51

______
open without warning

or jammed shut

and it swiftly lost
popularity

Twenty years ago a Swedish-born engineer called 52

______
Sundback solved the problem

He attached tiny cups to the
backs of the interlocked teeth

and this meant that the teeth 53

______
could be enmeshed more firmly and reliably


At first zippers were made of metal

They were heavy

and
if they got stuck it was difficult to free

Then came nylon 54

______
zippers which were lighter and easier to use

and had smaller
teeth

The fashion industry liked the new zippers far better
because they didn

t distort the line of the garment or weighing 55

______
down light fabrics

They were also easier for the machinists
to fit into the garment


Meanwhile a new fastening agent made its appearance at


the end of the twenty century: velcro. Velcro is another product 56

______
made from nylon

Nylon is a very tough synthetic fibre first
developed in the 1930s

and bearing a name to mind the wearer 57

______
of the two places where it was developed

NY for New York and
LON for London

Velcro is made with very small nylon hooks on
one side of the fastening which caught tiny looped whiskers on the 58

______
other side of the fastening

It is strong and durable


Velcro is used on clothing

luggages and footwear

It is quick 59

______
and easy to fasten and unfasten

and has taken a large part of
the zipper's share of the market

It is also used in ways a zipper
cannot be used

for instance as an easily changed fastening on
plaster casts

and to hold furnishing fabrics in a position

60

______
Part III Situational Dialogues

5 minutes

10 points


Directions

Complete the following dialogues by choosing the best answer

Then mark the corresponding
letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the centre


61

Rob

Hey Jill

you're looking great


Jill

Thanks

Rob

__________ __
Rob

Well

you did it

How
Jill

I jog every morning

and I go to aerobics every other day


A

I bought this dress yesterday

Really smart


B

You are looking fine too


C

I'm recovering my strength after the flu


D

My New Year's resolution was to get in shape


62

Bob

Hi Jane

How are you


Jane

____________I didn't sleep a wink last night

The people next door were making a lot of noise
again till very late at night


A

I'm feeling a bit out of sorts this morning


B

Fine

thank you

And you
C

I slept like a log and didn't want to get out of bed


D

It seems a bit unusual

you know


63

Ann

Aah

He's gorgeous

Look at those big

golden paws

When did you get him
Roger

Yesterday

____________
Ann

Oh

right

What kind is she
Roger

A Labrador


A

Susan's got a more beautiful one


B

What's up
C

It's a she actually


D

Isn't it right
64

Tina

Wow

look at all the things on sale

____________
Andrew

Yes

look

this shirt is 50

off


Tina

And look at these shoes

They are 30

off the normal price


A

I'd like to buy a skirt

B

There are some real bargains


C

Are the prices reasonableD

These shoes are the same as mine


65

Woman

Have you finished the packaging
Man

____________
Woman

Good

Because the truck will be coming soon

this is a rush job


A

Don't hurry m or I'll break the glass


B

Almost

I just have to wrap the glass and put it into boxes




C

No

I haven't

Why didn't you help me with it
D

Yes

I have

What else can I do for you
66

Customs Officer

________________________
Mrs

John son

No

nothing at all


Customs Officer

No perfume

alcohol or cigarettes
Mrs

John son

Well

I have 200 cigarettes

that's all


A

Do you have anything in the bag

ma'am
B

Do you have anything to declare

ma'am
C

Do you want to buy something

ma'am
D

Is there anything I can do for you

ma'am
67

Linda

Hello

I'd like to send this package

please


Clerk

____________________________________
Linda

First class

How long will that take
Clerk

About three days


A

How would you like to send it B

Which class are you in
C

Where do you want to send it toD

Which class is it in
68

Assistant

Can I help you
Colin

Yes

it's about this sports shirt

I washed it the other day

The colour ran and it shrank


Assistant

Oh dear

I see

________________________
Colin

I'm afraid not


Assistant

I'm sorry

but I'm not allowed to change anything without a receipt


A

Did you buy it here
B

Would you want to change it
C

Do you have the receipt


D

Could you tell me who sold it to you
69

James

Could I have my bill

pleaseCan I pay by credit card or eurocheque
Receptionist

____________
James

I'll pay by credit card

then


Receptionist

That's fine

I hope you enjoyed your stay here


A

Here's your bill

B

Sorry

we don't take credit card


C

You can pay by eurocheque

D

Yes

we take both


70

Husband

When is our anniversary
Wife

________________________
Husband

No

it's just that I bought these flowers for you and I was hoping today was the day


A

Hmm
...
I can't remember either

Why
B

Hey

are these flowers for me
C

Who caresDo you want to give me a surprise
D

Are you jokingHave you really forgotten again
Part IV Reading Comprehension

25 minutes

40 points


Section A Multiple Choice

10 points


Directions

There is one reading passage in this part

The passage is followed by 5 questions or unfinished
statements

For each of them there are four choices marked A

B

C and D

You should decide on the
best choice and mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the centre


Questions 71 to 75 are based on the following passage


Taking a peep at what's going on in your head
CARL Filer

18

a star salesman at a B

Q hardware store in the UK

was called up for promotion within
one week of starting work

But

instead of being made supervisor

he was sacked

after his employers
saw the results of his psychometric test




You might think that anyone who answers that he

strongly disagrees
he is an over-achiever is asking for
trouble

but Mr Filer already thought he had proved himself more than capable


This year

nearly half of UK firms

46 percent

will use psychometric tests to select trainees

compared
with just 17 percent in 2000

according to a report for GTI

a publisher of graduate career guides


These tests

which rate candidates

ability and gauge their personality

have been used in the UK since the
1980s

But assorted studies have shown most people

graduates in particular

are wholly cynical about
the idea of their personality being

measured


says Clive Fletcher

professor of occupational


People tend to see them as either too silly or too clever

psychology at University of London
.“
But all the evidence indicates the tests do have some value

The first personality test as we know it

was developed by the American army in 1917 to filter out weak
recruits


But it was not until the 1980s that the tests became popular in Britain

With a rising number of graduates
going for a decreasing number of jobs

organizations began to see psychometric testing as a cheap

reliable alternative to the expensive

time- consuming interview


But today the tests are becoming alarmingly sophisticated and are edging towards probing the

dark side

pathology and personality disorders

Increasingly

tests are being used to try to detect promising young
graduates who may

later in life

fly off the rails

go crazy
);
or to stop psychopaths

having mental
disorder

getting recruited


In the future

interviewees could even be given a mouth swab to reveal the genetic and biological markers
of personality
.“
We are heading for the era of genetic screening
,”
warns Carolyn Jones

of the Institute
for Employment Rights
.“
I think these tests are very flawed


And there are other problems with the tests

For starters

it is possible to fake it

even the test producers
agree on this

But they have made it as hard as possible

For example

look at whether you agree or


disagree with the following two statements
:“
New ideas come easily to me
concepts difficult

and

I find generating new
How long did it take you to realize they both could mean the same thing
The main argument

however

is that the tests are invalid and cannot quantify

put a numerical value
on

something as changeable as personality


The golden rule is then

that a psychometric test should never be used as the sole basis of selection

but
should always be followed by interviews


71

Most people's attitude towards the psychometric test is ______


A

contemptuous B

favorable C

tolerant D

confounded
72

Which of the following is one of the reasons why psychometric testing wins an advantage over
interviews
A

It doesn't cost any money

B

It requires no equipment


C

It is time-saving

D

It can be done within seconds


73

Which of the following statements is the author's idea
A

Psychometric tests are defective


B

Psychometric tests should not be the only way to recruit promising young graduates


C

Psychometric tests are invalid and cannot quantify something changeable as personality


D

Psychometric tests are golden rules


74

The test producers make the tests very complicated to ______


A

avoid cheating B

improve genetic screening
C

find out the best ideas D

generate new concepts
75

Which of the following is not true according to the passage
A

The American army developed the first personality test to screen out weak recruits


B

In the future

interviewers could give a mouth swab to reveal interviewees

symptoms


C

There are possibilities for starters to cheat in the psychometric tests




D

Interviews still play an important role in evaluating interviewees


Section B Short Answer Questions

30 points


Directions

In this part there are 3 passages with 15 questions or incomplete statements

Read the passages
carefully

Then answer the questions in the fewest possible words

not exceeding 10
words
).
Remember to rewrite the answers on the Answer Sheet


Questions 76 to 80 are based on the following passage


The 8 Steps of Social Invention
1

Get ready to play


Like other types of creativity

social inventiveness flourishes when you begin thinking outside conventional
boundaries

Charlie Girsch

a St

Paul

Minnesota-based creativity consultant

suggests that you start
by playing with obviously absurd explanations for everyday events
.“
If traffic is slow

you'll be tem pted
to say
,‘
Hmm

Must be an accident up ahead
.’
Instead

try saying
,‘
Must be a family of turtles crossing
the highway

or

I expect there's some kind of alien abduction going on
.’
You'll be amazed how soon you
will be looking at familiar problems in new ways
.”
Girsch's book

Fanning the Creative Spirit

Creativity
Central

1999

has scores of other exercises for limbering up the inventive part of your brain


2

Generate a zillion far-fetched ideas


Concerned about the homeless in your neighborhoodImagine a Homeless Parliament

a Homeless Circus

homeless families forming an orchestra

a homeless museum
...
and on and on

Generate like mad
with no regard for feasibility in order

as social invention pioneer Nicholas Albery advises

to

overcome e
worthy- but-dull ideas
.”
Eventually the two or three best ideas will begin to stand out


3

Take your wildest idea and bring it down to earth


How about that Homeless CircusCould it turn into a forum for homeless people to display their creative
talentsA performance series about homelessnessA neighborhood carnival with the homeless as guests of
honorYour flakiest idea may have a germ of brilliance that actually makes it more attractive

and thus more
feasible

and fundable
),
than its worthy-but-dull cousins




4

Look for in venations that solve more than one problem


The Slow Food Movement

born in Italy

boosts local farmers and regional cuisine traditions and
restaurateurs and the same time that it

feeds

our hunger for authentic tastes

healthy eating

and a more
leisurely

saner style of life


5

Accentuate the positive



A very common question that I get when I work with people in communities is

Why doesn't anybody care
about our problems
’”
notes M chael Patterson

a social inventor and activist in Massachusetts
.“
What a
worthless question
.‘
Why

questions are for ph ilosophers

Ask

How

and

What

questions

they are a lot
more practical
.”
For instance

Patterson asks
,“
What would you do if you knew you couldn't fail


6

Give it a rest


Walk away from your favorite idea for a while

forget about it

let it sleep

With your conscious mind out
of the way

your subconscious gets to fiddle with the concept for a while

and you just might have an
unexpected insight or breakthrough


7

Practice

yes and

in stead of

yes but
”.

No matter how tempted you are to say

Yes

but this will be hard because
,”
or

Yes

but a million other
people are doing this
,”
shift the conjunction to

and

and see what sort of positive refinement or change
emerges
.“
Yes

and we could concentrate on immigrants
.”“
Yes

and we can make it open to all ages
.”

8

Get your idea into the world


This is the tough part

You might seek out the help of activists who will take a shine to your ideas

Or
become an organizer yourself

Paul Glove

a New York social inventor

coun-sels
:“
If you have an idea
you believe in

write a pamphlet with your phone number on it and post it in Laundromats and
bookstores

If three people call you

have lunch with them and call yourselves an organization

If five
people call

meet with them and issue a press release
.”
Presto

you're launched


76

To generate far- fetched ideas helps to ______




77

Michael Patterson wants us to come up with

How

and

What
”< br>instead of

Why

questions because he
considers they are more practical than ______


78

The purpose to practice

yes and

instead of

yes but

is to make yourself more ______


79

According to the article

when one has difficulty developing his favorite idea

he should ______


80

One should not only generate far-fetched ideas but also ______ because the latter step is the nearest to
reality


Questions 81 to 85 are based on the following passage


Thin Slice of TV Has Big Market
It is too early to write an obituary for bulky picture tubes

which will remain the most affordable TV sets
for years to come


But

analysts and industry executives insist that thin screens already have started to become the dominant
format for TV sets in the digital era


Sharp price cuts have brought plasma sets and other thin

flat televisions out of high-end electronic
boutiques and into thousands of mass-market outlets such as Cosco

a wholesale buying club in the US

best known for offering members bulk items and big discounts


The least expensive plasma sets still cost a hefty US

3

000or more

yet sales are growing so rapidly
that many manufacturers are racing to boost production


That increase

combined with expanding production capacity and improved technology

could push the
price of plasma sets down by one-third next year

according to analyst Richard Doherty of Envisioneering
Group

a US research firm


But manufacturers are not just competing with each other

they are also trying to fend off challenges from
competing thin-screen technologies

such as liquid crystal displays

LCD
).

The demand for thin screens is fuelled in part by the advent of DVDs and digital TV broadcasts

which
offer more detailed pictures and more lifelike colors than conventional analog TV signals




To see the difference

consumers need a set that can pack more information onto the screen than their
current TVs can


This sharpness is most vivid on screens that are 40inches diagonal or larger

At that size

however

traditional direct view and projection TVs are so bulky that many consumers have trouble finding a place for
them at home


Hence the interest in thin screens

models slender and light enough to hang on a wall


The glass panels at the heart of plasma and LCD sets come mainly from about a dozen companies with
factories in Japan

South Korea and

increasingly

China

About 800

000 plasma panels will be
shipped this year around the world

analysts say


That is a tiny amount compared with the overall market for TVs

which was about 140 million sets last
year

But

industry experts said 2003would be a

breakout year

or plasma because shipments should
double


Helping drive the growth are new or expanded manufacturing facilities

For example

Japanese
electronics giant NEC last year doubled the capacity of its Japanese factory

reaching 300

000to 400

000 plasma panels

And it plans to double it again in 2003

officials said


As competition has heated up during the last four years

prices have fallen more than 50
percent

According to

NPD Tec world
”,
the average price of a plasma display sold in the US dropped
from US

12

700in January 1999 to US

6

100in October 2002


The best markets for plasma screens have been in Asia

and about half of the sets have gone to businesses
instead of homes


LCD TVs carry a premium price

they can be 10 times as expensive as a comparable tube- driven television

that knocks them out of most buyers

budgets


But LCD panels are quickly taking over the market for computer monitors

and the tens of millions of
panels being produced for that segment will help push down prices for LCD TVs

analysts predicted




Sharp Electronics

for one

is betting heavily on LCDs

Its chairman

Toshiaki Urushisako

has
predicted that Sharp will switch completely from conventional tube sets to LCD TVs in Japan by 2005


Flat-panel refers to wafer- thin

3 inches or less

TVs

whereas flat-screen may actually describe
traditional cathode-ray-tube sets

CRTs

whose glass front lacks the distorting curve that TVs have had for
50 years


Be aware of two things

One

flat-panel technology may not be high-definition TV

for eventual HDTV
reception

some of these sets will require a separate HD tuner

Two

some flat-panel TVs are just the
panel and lack speakers and sometimes a built-in tuner


Price range

US

700

2

000
LCD vs plasma
In general

LCD technology is used for smaller screens because of the enormous number of transistors
needed to turn the glasslike liquid crystals into color images

The larger the display

the more
transistors

the more chance of failed connections


A plasma screen is found in TV sets larger than 20 inches

Color is comparable to an LCD's

LCDs do not
deteriorate over time

while a plasma display averages 30

000 hours

a traditional TV screen can go for
20

000
),
after which it fades over a period of years

Earlier problems with the quality of plasma's
contrast have been addressed

and current screens are cleaner and better defined


Price range

US

600

2

800
HDTV
Simply put

high-definition TV is 10 times as sharp as traditional TV

and the sound is digital

like CD
sound

not FM

which is what traditional TV provides

HD technology achieves its visual clarity with
more immage lines on the screen

Where analog TVs have 480 horizontal lines

HDTV has 720 or 1

080lines

Be aware

m any HDTV sets being sold now are in fact only HDTV monitors

offering a crisp
picture

To receive genuine high-definition television signals

owners must buy a separate HDTV
receiver




Price range

US

1

000

6

000
LOS ANGELEST IMES
81

According to the article

TV sets with _____will still be the most popular in the coming years


82

The factors that stimulate the thin screens to be more and more popular include _____

_____

and_____


83

The rapidly expanding market for LCD panels and their large-scale production will help lower _____


84

When a wealthy customer wants to buy a very large TV

he should select _____and _____according
to the passage


85

We can infer from the passage that among all kinds of TV sets _____is of the best quality


Questions 86 to 90 are based on the following passage


Dell Does Domination
Over the years I've spent a fair amount of time hanging out with Michael Dell

and what I noticed during
my latest visit with him in Austin is how things have changed

Yes

he is still unflappable

And yes

he
greets me in his new glossy offices with the same Stamford Wife-like grin he has always had

But he
appears thinner now

as if he's lost baby fat

While he's still slow-moving

as if he's conserving energy

he now cuts to the quick in conversation

And when he zeroes in on the point he wants to make

when he
reiterates why Dell Computer is in a better position than any other PC maker in the world

you realize that
the 36-year-old has lost what was once one of his greatest advantages

no one underestimate ates him
anymore


Instead

Michael Dell looms over the PC landscape like a giant

casting a shadow over all his unfortunate
com petitors

This is a terrible time in a difficult business

PC sales were down for the first time last
year

Dell's sales will be down

too

also for the first time

Yet even with that

even with recession

even with the threat of a Hewlett-Packard

Com paq Goliath

this is the only PC maker you can count on
to grow and grow and grow

Almost single-handedly

Dell is forcing this industry to consolidate

Could


this mean

game over

in the PC biz

Game over

he looks back at me incredulously
.“
No way

We only
have 14

global market share
.”

The Dellites may not admit to

game over

aspirations

but clearly they are thinking of a kind of domination
never seen before among PC makers
.“
We think 40

market share is possible
,”
says Dell's No

2

Kevin
Rollins

That's a remarkable goal

what's more remarkable is that it really is attainable

Don't look for
Dell to hit that kind of number anytime soon

Rather

the company's growth will come from grinding out
gains on several existing fronts

while shrewdly expanding into new target markets


The reason is simple

there's no better way to make

sell

and deliver PCs than the way Dell does it

and
nobody executes that model better than Dell

By now most business people can recite the basic tenets of
Dell's direct-sales model

Dell machines are made to order and delivered directly to the customer

There is
no middleman

The customer gets the exact machine he wants cheaper than he can get it from the
competition

The company gets paid by the customer weeks before it pays suppliers

Given all that

the
company that famously started in Austin out of a University of Texas dorm room now dominates the
northern side of this city the way giant steelworks once lorded over old mill towns

Dell has some 24
facilities in and near Austin and employs more than 18

000 local workers

Dell did over

30billion in
sales in 2000

ranking 48th on the FORTUNE 500

ahead of names like Walt Disney

and Du
Pont

Michael is the richest man under 40 in the world

worth

16 billion


Two facts show how well the Dell model is working

even in tough times

Dell is on track to earn over

billion in 2001

taking almost every single dollar of profit among makers of Windows-based PCs

And
Dell is gaining market share

That's not true for any other major PC maker


Quite the contrary

The others are going splat for the same reason that Dell is succeeding

commoditization

The desktop PC has become a commodity

That's great for consumers

who get
standardized

easy-to-use

cheap PCs




Commoditization has been going on in the industry for years

Dell

as master of the direct model

spent
most of the 1990s operating in techno-Nirvana

The PC market was growing by 15

-plus per year

For
its quarter ended January 2000

Dell did a record

6

8 billion in sales

up 31

from the previous year's
quarter

In a sign of things to come

sales growth slowed later in 2000

Then the growth disappeared in
2001


The economic slowdown was bad news for everyone

but Michael Dell and Kevin Rollins

who is
increasingly his equal partner in running this business

made sure it was terrible news for Dell's com
petitors

In late 2000they decided to slash prices
.“
It was advantageous for us

actually

because in
periods of slow demand component prices drop

and

unlike our competition

we can pass those savings
on immediately to customers
,”
explains Rollins

a fine violinist who grew up in a hard-charging Utah
family

his father was an engineering professor at Brigham Young

and came to Dell from the Bain
consulting firm

Dell could make more money selling more computers at lower prices than it could selling
fewer computers at higher prices

The low prices wreaked havoc on competitors

Compaq

HP

and
Gateway all lost market share for the 12 months that ended Sept

30

2001

while Dell's share of the
U

S

market climbed 31
%.

86

_____was once one of Dell's greatest advantages


87

The passage attributes the success of Dell to_____


88

Why did Dell's share of the

market climb 31

in 2001 while the economy slowed down
89

Dell hopes to increase its global market share by _____according to the passage


90

If one wants to buy a Dell computer

who do you think he is supposed to pay
Part V Word Guessing and IQ Test

5 minutes

10 points


Section A Word Guessing

5 points


91

In the western countries

a person who serves the guests in a restaurant expects a gratuity in
appreciation for good service




A

good remark B

letter of thanks C

tip D

promotion
92

In Greek mythology

the hero usually finds himself in a terrible predicament in which he has to face a
fate which has been foretold by the Oracle at Delphi


A

strange phenomenon B

unpleasant situation
C

unusual circumstance D

huge monster
93

A first- class business establishment will fully recompense its customers if there is ever any
dissatisfaction with the service or product


A

compensate B

understand C

inform D

award
94

Our family was truly a matriarchy

because my grandmother had to raise her children and provide for
them all by herself

my grandfather had died when his sons and daughter were quite young


A

family governed by women B

family without the father
C

family depending on the mother D

family with many young children
95

I'd love to help you look for all those things but I'm a bit pushed for time today

Why don't we split up
and meet back in a couple of hours for a quick cuppa and then I can have a look at what you've bought


A

put it aside B

go separately
C

save the time D

do it one by one
Section B IQ Test

5 points


96

What number should replace the question mark

A

10 B

9 C

8 D

7
97

If someone could take a sheet of paper 0

1mm thick

tear it in half

put the pieces on top of each
other

tear these in half

then repeat the process until the paper had been torn 25 times

what would be the
final height of the pile of paper
A

As thick as a book

B

As tall as a man


C

As high as a house

D

As high as a mountain




98

If the pyramid were flattened out would it look like A

B

C or D

99

Only one of the sets of six letter below can be rearranged into a six-letter word in the English
language

Can you find that set
A

LO RIDM B

ETNMIU C

TUBLID D

MIRCEL
100

These are millennium celebrations taking place in 4 different places

Which one occurred first

A. PARIS B. SYDNEY

C. NEW YORK D. GREAT WALL OF CHINA
Part VI Translation

10 minutes

10 points


Directions

Translate the underlined sentences of the following passage into Chinese on the Answer
Sheet


TASTE A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE
Wherever you are in the world

it seems

the billboards and supermarket shelves are saturated with the
same brand names

There are few places left on the planet where you can't buy a Diet Coke

a packet of
Kellogg's cornflakes

or Oxo cubes


But just try tasting them
.(
101

The packaging and the product may look identical

but the flavour
maybe far from familiar

Even the most famous brand names are specially for-mulated to appeal to
individual national palates

Heinz

for instance

insists that its tomato ketchup is

the same recipe
worldwide
”,
but admits that

there maybe very subtle variations in the spicing
”.

Even the ultimate global brand

Coca-Cola

accepts that not all its products are what they appear to
be
.“
We go to great lengths to ensure that Coca-Cola is the same wherever you drink it
,”
says a
spokesman
.“
But Diet Coke may change slightly from country to country

because we use different
sweeteners in different places
.”

Americans prefer many products

particularly chocolate

to be far more sugary than Europeans
do
.(
102

The French perceive strawberry flavour in a different way from the British

so the artificial


flavouring in France will not have a

proper

strawberry taste to Britons

Preferences for saltiness and color
differ as well

and most Japanese consumers dislike the taste of milk


The French in general prefer stronger

fuller-tasting coffee than the British

There is a higher cream
content in a Magnum in Italy than in Britain

because the Italians expect ice- cream to have a much richer
taste

Tea sold in Europe tends to be weaker than the strong tea preferred by Britons
.(
103

Taste
preferences can vary even within countries

at least one well-known soft drink is made according to a
sweeter recipe in the southern states of the United States than that on sale in the north


Local water and soil will affect the taste of home-grown natural ingredients

Some key constituents may
not be available

meaning that alternatives must be found

Sometimes

especially in developing
countries

premium grade components

such as high-grade flour

are replaced with lower-quality
equivalents



104

Extremes in climate will require different additives and preservatives to be used

Chocolate calls
for an alternative recipe in hot countries if it is to maintain its texture and taste


And multinationals must conform to national laws and regulations on additives

flavorings

colorings

and artificial low-calorie sweeteners

Mars and Snickers bars taste slightly different in Australia

since
laws there state that vegetable fat must not be used in chocolate


Local religious sensibilities must also be observed
.(
105

Even McDonald's

which proclaims the
homogeneity of its Big Macs
(巨无霸)
around the globe

has to serve lamb rather than beef burgers in
India

because the sacred status of cows means that the majority of its Indian customers can't eat beef


Part VII Writing

30 minutes

20 points


Directions

The chart below shows the amount of leisure time enjoyed by men and women of different
employment status

Write a report for a university lecturer describing the information shown below

You
should write at least 150 words


Leisure time in a typical week

by sex and employment status

1998

99




2003
年全国大学生英语竞赛初赛赛卷答案

Part I Listening Comprehension (30

)
Section A Dialogues (10

,
每题
1

)
1. C. 2. C 3. C 4. B 5. D 6. C 7. A 8. A 9. B 10. B
Section B News Items (10

,
每题
1

)
11.
The UN Security Council’s resolution.

12. $$100 million.
13. About a deadly shooting.
14. 14.
15. A way to reduce early births among women at the risk of premature delivery.
16. The Bush administration.
17. A fire in a night club.
18. To seek UN approval for war.
19. Murder and injury.
20. A gunshot.
Section C Compound Dictation (10
分,
21

28< br>题,每题分;
29

30
题,每题
3

)
21. purchasing 22. firms 23. engage 24. factors 25. concerned
26. climate 27. introducing 28. characters
29. This critical problem of proper translating is only one of many cultural differences facing American
corporations overseas
30. Because of their cultural heritage, businesspersons in each country conduct their activities differently.
Part II Vocabulary and Structure (30

)
Section A Multiple Choice (20

,
每题
1

)
31. B 32. D 33. A 34. C 35. C 36. A 37. D 38. B 39. B 40. A
41. D 42. C 43. B 44. C 45. B 46. B 47. A 48. D 49. D 50. C
Section B Error Correction (10

,
每题
1

)
51.

52. ago

later 53. interlocked

interlocking 54. free
∧→
them
55. weighing

weigh 56. twenty

twentieth 57. mind

remind 58. caught

catch
59. luggages

luggage 60. a


删除
a
Part III Situational Dialogues (10

,
每题
1

)
61. D 62. A 63. C 64. B 65. B 66. B 67. A 68. C 69. D 70. D
Part IV Reading Comprehension ( 40

)


Section A Multiple Choice (10

,
每题
2

)
71. A 72. C 73. B 74. A 75. B
Section B Short Answer Questions (30

,
每题
2

)
76. increase your social inventiveness
77. theoretical/philosophical
78. determined
79. give it a rest
80. get them into the world / make them known
81. bulky picture tubes
82. price cuts, convenience, the demands for high definition
83. prices for LCD TVs
84. LCD, HDTV
85. HDTV
86. That he was once underestimated / That someone once underestimated him
87. The direct sales model / commoditization
88. They slashed the prices. / They lowered the prices.
89. 26%
90. The Dell company.
Part V Word Guessing and IQ Test (10

)
Section A Word Guessing (5
分,每题
1

)
91. C 92. B 93. A 94. A 95. B
Section B IQ Test (5
分,每题
1

)
96. C 97. D 98. A 99. B 100. B
Part VI Translation (10 points)
101.
包装和产品也许看起来是完全一样的,但是味道也许跟所熟悉的相差甚远。

102.
法国人对草莓口味的感觉与英国人不同,所以法国产的草莓人工调味剂不合英国人的胃口。

103.
甚至在一国之内,口味偏好也会有极大差别:至少一种指明软饮料,在美国南部地区 是用比在
北方销售的饮料甜味更重的配方制成的。

104.
气候的巨大差别要求使用不同的添加剂和防腐剂。

105.
即使宣称在全 球销售同一种类的巨无霸的麦当劳也不得不在印度提供羊肉汉堡而不是牛肉汉
堡,原因是牛的神圣地位意 味着大多数印度顾客不能食用牛肉。

Part VII Writing (20

)
(参考范文)



The chart shows the number of hours of leisure enjoyed by men and women in a typical week in 1998-99,
according to gender and employment status.
Among those employed full-time, men on average had forty-seven hours of leisure, whereas women had
approximately thirty-seven hours. There were no figures given for male part-time workers, but female part-
timers had thirty- nine hours of leisure time, only slightly more than women in full-time employment,
perhaps reflecting their work in the home.
In the unemployed and retired categories, leisure time showed an increase for both sexes, as might have
been expected. Here too, men enjoyed more leisure time---over eighty hours, compared with less than
seventy hours for women, perhaps once again reflecting the fact women spend more time working in the
home than men.
Lastly, housewives enjoyed approximately fifty- four hours of leisure, on average. There were no figures
given for househusbands! Overall, the chart demonstrates that in the categories for which statistics on male
leisure time were available, men enjoyed at least ten hours of extra time.
2004
年全国大学生英语竞赛初赛试题

2004 National English Contest for College Students
(Preliminary)
Part I Listening Comprehension (30 minutes, 30 points)
Section A Dialogues (10 points)
Directions: In this section, you will hear 10 short dialogues. At the end of each dialogue, a question will be
asked about what was said. Both the dialogue and the question will be read only once. After each
question ,there will be a pause. During the pause, you must read the four choices marked A, B, C and D, and
decide which is the best answer. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line
through the centre.
1. A. In San Francisco. B. At an airport.
C. At a travel agency. D. In a post office.
2. A. The woman is going out to lunch.
B. The woman wants to eat some chocolate.
C. The woman will go to a convenience store.
D. The woman will be back in 30 minutes.
3. A. By car. B. By plane.
C. By train. D. By ferry.
4. A. She had lost her job.

B. She didn’t know the mayor.

C. She was mistaken.
D. The man misunderstood her.
5. A. He needs some tomato juice.
B. His shirt is stained.
C. He needs his shirt by tomorrow.
D. His shirt is missing.
6. A. To a meeting. B. To the office.
C. To a restaurant. D. To a bowling class.
7. A. Give the woman some medicine.

B. Find out more about the woman’s injury.


C. Test the strength of the woman’s shoulder.

D. Go skiing with the woman.
8. A. Excited.


B. Thankful.
C. Somewhat disappointed.
D. Somewhat bothered.
9. A. When her family celebration is over.
B. After the man graduates from school.
C. After they have some pictures taken together.
D. When she has bought her cap and gown.
10. A. By continuous assessment.
B. By giving a per cent.
C. By giving grade.
D. By means of exams.
Section B News Items (10 points)
Directions: In this section, you will hear 10 short pieces of news from BBC or VOA. After each news item
and question,there will be a pause. During the pause, you must read the three choices marked A, B and C,
and decide which is the best answer. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single
line through the centre.
11. A. Under the age of four.
B. Under the age of five.
C. Under the age of six.
12. A. Beijing’s
successful bid for the 2008 Olympic Games.
B. The Organizing Committee of the 2008 Olympic Games.
C. The large market of the Olymic brand.
13. A. To keep the code for its Windows operating system a secret.
B. To design some new computer software.
C. To persuade more PC users to adopt the Windows operating system.
14. A. One. B. Ten. C. Thirty.
15. A. No. B. Yes. C. Not mentioned.
16. A. More than 500 dollars.
B. A little more than three dollars.
C. Less than three dollars.
17. A. Because the Iraqi economy has gradually risen after the war.
B. Because Iraqi people trust the new dinar more.
C. Both A and B.
18. A. Five. B. Six. C. Seven.
19. A. Low fruit and vegetable intake.
B. Smoking and little exercise.
C. Unhealthy diet.
20. A. The euro has risen in value.
B. The US dollar has risen in value.
C. German economy has slided into recession.
Section C Passages (10 points)
Directions:In this section, you will hear 2 passages. At the end of each passage, you will hear 5 questions.
After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A, B, C and D.
Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the centre.
Passage One
21. A. Jazz. B. Indian. C. Country. D. Pop.
22. A. Their hairstyles. B. Their humor.


C. Their clothing. D. All of the above.
23. A. America. B. England.
C. Italy. D. Canada.
24. A. The Beatles were formed in England.
B. The Beatles had a successful movie career.
C. The Beatles are regarded as one of the finest jazz groups.
D. The Beatles first recorded music in 1962.
25. A. Seventeen. B. Twenty-eight.
C. Twenty-two. D. Twelve.
Passage Two
26. A. Because he regarded the bear as his friend.
B. Because the bear was beautiful.
C. Because he considered it poor sportsmanship to shoot a tied-up animal.
D. Because bears are not dangerous animals.
27. A. Because Teddy is the nickname for Theodore Roosevelt.
B. Because it was then the usual practice to do so.
C. Because it was the first time to name toy bears Teddy Bears.
D. Because the toy bear was made to look a bit like the President.
28. A. People collect Teddy Bears.
B. Teddy Bears can be found in museums.

C. The first Teddy Bear was made by Mr. Mitchtom’s wife.

D. President Roosevelt shot the black bear in 1902.
29. A. Seven. B. Six. C. Two. D. Five.
30. A. He moved to Florida.
B. He became President.
C. He drew cartoons.
D. He started a toy company.
Part II Vocabulary and Structure (10 minutes, 20 points)
Section A Multiple Choice (10 points)
Directions:There are 7 incomplete sentences and 3 incomplete dialogues in this section. For each blank there
are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that best completes the sentences and dialogues.
Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the centre.
31. Never________the power of your actions. With one small gesture you can change a person’s life.

A. underestimate B. overvalue
C. misuse D. dismiss
32. Scientists have warned that penguins in the Antarctic could be very________to changes in climate and
could be threatened by any long-term temperature shifts.
A. superstitious B. acceptable
C. suspicious D. susceptible
33. Since settling in Scotland I ________ golf as a hobby.
A. have taken up B. took up
C. have taken in D. took in
34. She often thinks that her six years in Italy were wasted, ________she________ that time learning more
Italian.
A. but that; might have taken
B. for that; should have found
C. in that; could have spent


D. with that; would have used
35. He constantly________his proposal that________of the budget surplus be used to offer a voluntary
prescription drug benefit to seniors.
A. views; many B. reiterates; a part
C. complains; a great amount D. thinks; lots
3
6. ________Alan’s amazement, the passport office was closed when he arrived.

A. With B. For C. To D. Of
37. I was asked the other day whether high and low pressure systems were________the central pressure.
A. maintained to B. determined by
C. generated within D. preserved to
38. Bob: What are you reading, Frank
Tom: It’s this week’s New Scientist, why

Bob: I was just wondering
—________, but I’ve never actually read it myself. Is it aimed at real scientists or
can ordinary people like me understand it
A. it’s for anyone really B. where I can buy it

C. it seems very expensive D. it looks interesting
39. Girl: Hi Paul

looking forward to your holiday
Boy: Oh, yeah
—it’s going to be great. Though I’m a bit worried that I’ve packed the wrong clothes. I don’t
think the weather’s going to be as good as I hoped.

Girl:________
Boy: That’s right—
my first flight.
A. Everything will be OK, isn’t it

B. You’re flying on Saturday, aren’t you

C. It’s far from here, as everybody knows.

D. That’s a good idea, an
yway.
40. John: What plastic products do you have in mind that are easy to recycle
Tom: Shampoo bottles, detergent bottles, medicine bottles, food containers, etc. They are all easily
collectable and reusable.
John: ________, but actually I think you ar
e missing the point of recycling. It doesn’t just mean using old
bottles again and again for the same purpose. What it means these days is melting the plastics down and
building them up again into some completely new product.
A. Not too bad B. Something is wrong
C. You’re right there D. It’s a new idea

Section B Cloze-Test (10 points)
Directions: There are 10 blanks in the passage. For each blank there are four choices marked A, B, C and D.
Choose the one that best completes the sentence. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet
with a single line through the centre.
Ask most people for their list of Top Ten fears, and you’ll be sure to find being burgled fairly high on the
list. An informal survey I carried out among friends at a party last week (41)________that eight of them had
their homes broken into more than twice, and two had been burgled five put the record (42)________, none
of my friends owns valuable paintings or a sideboard full of family silverware. Three of them are students,
in fact. The most (43)________burglary, it seems, involves the theft of easily transportable items

the
television, the video, even food from the freezer. This may have something to do with the fact that the
average burglar is(44)________his (or her) late
teens, and probably wouldn’t know what to do with a
Picasso, (45)________selling a Walkman or a vacuum cleaner is a much easier matter. They are perhaps not
so much (46)________criminals as hard-up young people who need a few pounds and some excitement.
(47)________that this makes having your house turned upside down and your favourite things stolen any


easier to accept. In most cases, the police have no luck (48)________any of the stolen goods. Unless there is
any (49)________evidence, they are probably un
able to do anything at all. And alarms or special locks don’t
seem to help either. The only advice my friends could (50)________up with was “Never live on the ground
floor” and “Keep two or three very fierce dogs”.

41. A. released B. revealed C. reclaimed D. redeemed
42. A. straight B. clear C. apparent D. correct
43. A. typical B. abnormal C. hazardous D. vicious
44. A. near B. in C. beyond D. out of
45. A. whereas B. whenever C. however D. once
46. A. serious B. professional C. efficient D. perfect
47. A. Given B. Even C. Not D. Despite
48. A. seizing B. withdrawing C. seeking D. recovering
49. A. distinguishable B. obscure C. outstanding D. definite
50. A. come B. catch C. keep D. put
Part III Word Guessing and IQ Test (5 minutes, 10 points)
Section A Word Guessing (5 points)
51. Social capital has become a mantra for politicians and policy makers: they see it as a bulwark against
society’s ills and a means of multiplying the effects of financial investment in social projects.

A. measurement B. defense
C. treatment D. complaint
52. Her desire for anonymity soon became apparent when she refused to answer questions about her identity.
A. recognition B. concealment
C. vanity D. success
53. “Gentlemen,” replied Candide, with a most engaging modesty, “you do me much honor, but upon my
word I have no money.”

A. you help me a lot B. you are great
C. it’s very generous of you to say so

D. that’s a great honor for me

54. When it comes to listening to the opinions of members of your school community, do you think you are
already “all ears”

A. in full strength
B. bearing ideas in mind
C. ready to listen attentively
D. having enough preparation
55. That extremely indolent student will clean out his desk when pigs fly or I am much mistaken as to his
character.
A. soon B. never C. sometime D. often
Section B IQ Test (5 points)
56. Sally had a third again as many as David, who had a third as many again as Francis. Altogether they had
111. How many did David have
A. 27 B. 32 C. 36 D. 48
57. What letter should replace the question mark

A. T B. S C. I D. N
58. BONA FIDE is to genuine as DE FACTO is to________.
A. together B. actual C. reason D. assumed


59. How many revolutions must the largest cog make in order to bring the cogs back to their original
positions

A. 56 B. 48 C. 36 D. 12
60. The diagram shows a small village church. There is a door in the west end, seen in the diagram. There is
a tower at the east end of the church with a window set in its east wall. This wall is hidden in the is also a
door in the tower. Which of these is most likely to be the view of the eastern end of the church




Part IV Reading Comprehension (25 minutes,30 points)
Directions:In this part there are 5 passages with 30 questions or incomplete statements. Read the passages
carefully. Then answer the questions in the fewest possible words(not exceeding 10 words). Remember to
rewrite the answers on the Answer Sheet.
Questions 61 to 66 are based on the following passage:
Centuries ago, man discovered that removing moisture from food helps to preserve it, and that the easiest
way to do this is to expose the food to sun and wind.
Fruit is sun-dried in Asia Minor, Greece, Spain and other Mediterranean countries, and also in California,
South Africa and Australia. The methods used vary, but in general, the fruit is spread out on trays in drying
yards in the hot sun. In order to prevent darkening, pears, peaches and apricots are exposed to the fumes of
burning sulphur before drying. Plums, for making prunes, and certain varieties of grapes for making raisins
and currants, are dipped in an alkaline solution in order to crack the skins of the fruit slightly and remove
their wax coating, so increasing the rate ofdrying.
Nowadays most foods are dried mechanically. The conventional method of such dehydration is to put food
in chambers through which hot air is blown at temperatures of about 110

at entry to about 43

at exit.
This is the usual method for drying such things as vegetables, minced meat, and fish.
Liquids such as milk, coffee, tea, soups and eggs may be dried by pouring them over a heated horizontal
steel cylinder or by spraying them into a chamber through which a current of hot air passes. In the first case,
the dried material is scraped off the roller as a thin film which is then broken up into small, though still
relatively coarse flakes. In the second process it falls to the bottom of the chamber as a fine powder. Where
recognizable pieces of meat and vegetables are required, as in soup, the ingredients are dried separately and
then mixed.
Dried foods take up less room and weigh less than the same food packed in cans or frozen, and they do not
need to be stored in special conditions. For these reasons they are invaluable to climbers, explorers and
soldiers in battle, who have little storage space. They are also popular with housewives because it takes so
little time to cook them. Usually it is just a case of replacing the dried-out moisture with boiling water.
Questions:
61. Fruit is sun-dried generally on________.
62. Why are sulphur fumes used before drying some fruits
63. Where are vegetables commonly dried nowadays
64. If soup requires recognizable pieces of meat, they are________.
65. Dried foods are often used by________, ________and________.
66. Why do housewives like dried foods
Questions 67 to 72 are based on the following passage:
Hollywood writers honor Coppola, “Splendor”



Sunday, February 22, 2004 Posted: 9:56 AM EST (14:56 GMT)
LOS ANGELES, California (Reuters)
—Hollywood’s screenwriters Saturday snubbed the final installment
of the highly acclaimed Lord of the Rings trilogy and instead awarded a key prize to a low-budget film
based on a comic book writer.
American Splendor, which revolves around the travails of comics connoisseur Harvey Pekar, won the
Writers Guild of America
Award for best adapted screenplay, while writer / director Sofia Coppola’s Lost in
Translation, about a pair of mismatched Americans languishing in Tokyo, nabbed the trophy for original
screenplay.
The American Splendor screenplay was written by the film’
s directors, Robert Springer and Shari Springer
Berman, who were not present at the awards. The Writers Guild of America Awards were handed out
simultaneously in Los Angeles and New York.
Coppola said she was excited to be honored by the union.

I find it difficult to write, so it’s very encouraging and exciting to get an award,” Coppola told Reuters after
the event.
Coppola’s competition was Gurinder Chadha, Paul Mayeda Berges and Guljit Bindra for Bend It Like
Beckham, Steven Knight for Dirty Pretty Things, Irish director Jim Sheridan and his daughters Naomi and
Kirsten for In America, and first-time writer / director Tom McCarthy for The Station Agent.
The other adapted screenplay nominees were director Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens for
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, Anthony Minghella for Cold Mountain, Brian Helgeland for
Mystic River, and writer / director Gary Ross for Seabiscuit.
Coppola, Knight and the Sheridans will vie for the Academy Award next week, along with the writers of
The Barbarian Invasions and Finding Nemo.
Apart from Cold Mountain, all the Writers Guild of America adapted screenplay contenders will compete
for the Oscar, along with the Brazilian drama City of God.
In the last 12 years, eight of the Writers Guild of America adapted screenplay winners and seven of its
original screenplay winners have gone on to Oscar glory.
Lost in Translation has already picked up three Golden Globes

an Oscar bell- wether

including best
screenplay. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, which has 11 Oscar nominations, has collected
four Golden Globes and prizes from Hollywood’s producers and directors guilds.

Questions:
67. What does American Splendor mainly write about
68. Sofia Coppola’s Lost in Translation won the Writers Guild of America Award for________.

69. The Writers Guild of America Awards were offered at the same time in________and________.
70. How did Coppola feel about her getting the award
71. List at least 3 movies that competed with Lost in Translation.
72. How many Writers Guild of America screenplay winners have gone on to Oscar glory in the last 12
years
Questions 73 to 78 are based on the following passage:
The need for a surgical operation, especially an emergency operation, almost always comes as a severe
shock to the patient and his family. Despite modern advances, most people still have an irrational fear of
hospitals and anaesthetics.
In the early years of last century there was little specialization in surgery. A good surgeon was capable of
performing almost every operation that had been devised up to that time. Today the situation is different.
Operations are now being carried out that were not even dreamed of fifty years ago. The heart can be safely
opened and its valves repaired. Clogged blood vessels can be cleaned out, and broken ones mended or

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