2003年6月试卷
Part I Listening Comprehension
(20 minutes)
Section A
Directions: In this section, you
will hear 10 short conversations.
At the end of each conversation,
a question will be asked about
what was said. Both the conversation
and the question will be spoken
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 center.
Example: You will hear:
You will read:
A) 2 hours.
B) 3 hours.
C) 4 hours.
D) 5 hours.
From the conversation we know
that the two were talking about
some work they will start at
9 o’clock in the morning and
have to finish at 2 in the afternoon.
Therefore, D) “5 hours” is the
correct answer. You should choose
[D] on the Answer Sheet and
mark it with a single line through
the center.
Sample Answer [A] [B] [C] [D]
1. A) Riding a horse.
B) Shooting a movie.
C) Playing a game.
D) Taking a photo.
2. A) She’ll type the letter
for the man.
B) She’ll teach the man to operate
the computer.
C) She doesn’t think his sister
is a good typist.
D) She thinks the man should
buy a computer.
3. A) John can share the magazine
with her.
B) She wants to borrow John’s
card.
C) She’ll let John use the journal
first.
D) John should find another
copy for himself.
4. A) She promised to help the
man.
B) She came a long way to meet
the man.
C) She took the man to where
he wanted to go.
D) She suggested a way out of
the difficulty for the man.
5. A) The train seldom arrives
on time.
B) The schedule has been misprinted.
C) The speakers arrived at the
station late.
D) The company has trouble printing
a schedule.
6. A) To find a better science
journal in the library.
B) Not to miss any chance to
collect useful information.
C) To buy the latest issue of
the magazine.
D) Not to subscribe to the journal.
7. A) She wants to borrow the
man’s student ID card.
B) The tickets are less expensive
than she expected.
C) She won’t be able to get
any discount for the ticket.
D) The performance turned out
to be disappointing.
8. A) Do the assignments towards
the end of the semester.
B) Quit the history course and
choose another one instead.
C) Drop one course and do it
next semester.
D) Take courses with a lighter
workload.
9. A) The organization of a
conference.
B) The cost of renting a conference
room.
C) The decoration of the conference
room.
D) The job of cleaning up the
dining-room.
10. A) Meet his client.
B) Prepare the dinner.
C) Work at his office.
D) Fix his car
Section B
Directions: In this section,
you will hear 3 short passages.
At the end of each passage,
you will hear some questions.
Both the passage and the questions
will be spoken only once. 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 center.
Passage one
Question 11 to 13 are based
on the passage you have just
heard.
11. A) One of the bridges between
North and South London collapsed.
B) The heart of London was flooded.
C) An emergency exercise was
conducted.
D) 100 people in the suburbs
were drowned.
12. A) 50 underground stations
were made waterproof.
B) A flood wall was built.
C) An alarm system was set up.
D) Rescue teams were formed.
13. A) Most Londoners were frightened.
B) Most Londoners became rather
confused.
C) Most Londoners took Exercise
Floodcall calmly.
D) Most Londoners complained
about the trouble caused by
Exercise Floodcall.
Passage Two
Questions 14 to 16 are based
on the passage you have just
heard.
14. A) It limited their supply
of food.
B) It made their eggshells too
fragile.
C) It destroyed many of their
nests.
D) It killed many baby bald
eagles.
15. A) They found ways to speed
up the reproduction of bald
eagles.
B) They developed new types
of feed for baby bald eagles.
C) They explored new ways to
hatch baby bald eagles.
D) They brought in bald eagles
from Canada.
16. A) Pollution of the environment.
B) A new generation of pest
killers.
C) Over-killing by hunters.
D) Destruction of their natural
homes.
Passage Three
Questions 17 to 20 are based
on the passage you have just
heard.
17. A) Whether it can be detected
and checked.
B) Whether it will lead to widespread
food shortage.
C) Whether global warming will
speed up in the future.
D) Whether it will affect their
own lives.
18. A) Many species have moved
further north.
B) Many new species have come
into existence.
C) Many species have developed
a habit of migration.
D) Many species have become
less sensitive to climate.
19. A) Storms and floods.
B) Disease and fire.
C) Less space for their growth.
D) Rapid increase of the animal
population.
20. A) They will gradually die
out.
B) They will be able to survive
in the preserves.
C) They will have to migrate
to find new homes.
D) They will face extinction
without artificial reproduction.
Part II Reading Comprehension
(35 minutes)
Direction: There are 4 passages
in this part. Each passage is
followed by some 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 center.
Passage One
Questions 21 to 25 are based
on the following passage:
In the villages of the English
countryside there are still
people who remember the good
old days when no one bothered
to lock their doors. There simply
wasn’t any crime to worry about.
Amazingly, these happy times
appear still to be with us in
the world’s biggest community.
A new study by Dan Farmer, a
gifted programmer, using an
automated investigative program
of his own called SATAN, shows
that the owners of well over
half of all World Wide Web sites
have set up home without fitting
locks to their doors.
SATAN can try out a variety
of well-known hacking (黑客的)
tricks on an Internet site without
actually breaking in. Farmer
has made the program publicly
available, amid much criticism.
A person with evil intent could
use it to hunt down sites that
are easy to burgle (闯入…行窃).
But Farmer is very concerned
about the need to alert the
public to poor security and,
so far, events have proved him
right. SATAN has done more to
alert people to the risks than
cause new disorder.
So is the Net becoming more
secure? Far from it. In the
early days, when you visited
a Web site your browser simply
looked at the content. Now the
Web is full of tiny programs
that automatically download
when you look at a Web page,
and run on your own machine.
These programs could, if their
authors wished, do all kinds
of nasty things to your computer.
At the same time, the Net is
increasingly populated with
spiders, worms, agents and other
types of automated beasts designed
to penetrate the sites and seek
out and classify information.
All these make wonderful tools
for antisocial people who want
to invade weak sites and cause
damage.
But let’s look on the bright
side. Given the lack of locks,
the Internet is surely the world’s
biggest (almost) crime-free
society. Maybe that is because
hackers are fundamentally honest.
Or that there currently isn’t
much to steal. Or because vandalism
(恶意破坏) isn’t much fun unless
you have a peculiar dislike
for someone.
Whatever the reason, let’s enjoy
it while we can. But expect
it all to change, and security
to become the number one issue,
when the most influential inhabitants
of the Net are selling services
they want to be paid for.
21. By saying “…owners of well
over half of all World Wide
Web sites have set up home without
fitting locks to their doors”
(Line 3-4, Para.2), the author
means that ______.
A) those happy times appear
still to be with us
B) there simply wasn’t any crime
to worry about
C) many sites are not well-protected
D) hackers try out tricks on
an Internet site without actually
breaking in
22. SATAN, a program designed
by Dan Farmer, can be used ______.
A) to investigate the security
of Internet sites
B) to improve the security of
the Internet system
C) to prevent hackers from breaking
into websites
D) to download useful programs
and information
23. Farmer’s program has been
criticized by the public because
______.
A) it causes damage to Net browsers
B) it can break into Internet
sites
C) it can be used to cause disorder
on all sites
D) it can be used by people
with evil intent
24. The author’s attitude toward
SATAN is ______.
A) enthusiastic
B) critical
C) positive
D) indifferent
25. The author suggests in the
last paragraph that ______.
A) we should make full use of
the Internet before security
measures are strengthened
B) we should alert the most
influential businessmen to the
importance of security
C) influential businessmen should
give priority to the improvement
of Net security
D) net inhabitants should not
let security measures affect
their joy of surfing the Internet
Passage Two
Questions 26 to 30 are based
on the following passage:
I came away from my years of
teaching on tile college and
university level with a conviction
that enactment (扮演角色), performance,
dramatization are the most successful
forms of teaching. Students
must be incorporated, made,
so far as possible, an integral
part of the learning process.
The notion that learning should
have in it an element of inspired
play would seem to the greater
part of the academic establishment
merely silly, but that is nonetheless
the case. Of Ezekiel Cheever,
the most famous schoolmaster
of the Massachusetts Bay Colony,
his onetime student Cotton Mather
wrote that he so planned his
lessons that his pupils “came
to work as though they came
to play,” and Alfred North Whitehead,
almost three hundred years later,
noted that a teacher should
make his/her students “glad
they were there.”
Since, we are told, 80 to 90
percent of all instruction in
the typical university is by
the lecture method, we should
give close attention to this
form of education. There is,
I think, much truth in Patricia
Nelson Limerick’s observation
that “lecturing is an unnatural
act, an act for which God did
not design humans. It is perfectly
all right, now and then, for
a human to be possessed by the
urge to speak, and to speak
while others remain silent.
But to do this regularly, one
hour and 15 minutes at a time…
for one person to drag on while
others sit in silence? ... I
do not believe that this is
what the Creator ... designed
humans to do.”
The strange, almost incomprehensible
fact is that many professors,
just as they feel obliged to
write dully, believe that they
should lecture dully. To show
enthusiasm is to risk appearing
unscientific, unobjective; it
is to appeal to the students’
emotions rather than their intellect.
Thus the ideal lecture is one
filled with facts and read in
an unchanged monotone.
The cult (推崇) of lecturing dully,
like the cult of writing dully,
goes back, of course, some years.
Edward Shils, professor of sociology,
recalls the professors he encountered
at the University of Pennsylvania
in his youth. They seemed “a
priesthood, rather uneven in
their merits but uniform in
their bearing; they never referred
to anything personal. Some read
from old lecture notes and then
haltingly explained the thumb-worn
last lines. Others lectured
from cards that had served for
years, to judge by the worn
edges ....The teachers began
on time, ended on time, and
left the room without saying
a word more to their students,
very seldom being detained by
questioners .... The classes
were not large, yet there was
no discussion. No questions
were raised in class, and there
were no office hours.”
26. The author believes that
a successful teacher should
be able to ______.
A) make dramatization an important
aspect of students’ learning
B) make inspired play an integral
part of the learning process
C) improve students’ learning
performance
D) make study just as easy as
play
27. The majority of university
professors prefer the traditional
way of lecturing in the belief
that ______.
A) it draws the close attention
of the students
B) it conforms in a way to the
design of the Creator
C) it presents course content
in a scientific and objective
manner
D) it helps students to comprehend
abstract theories more easily
28. What the author recommends
in this passage is that ______.
A) college education should
be improved through radical
measures
B) more freedom of choice should
be given to students in their
studies
C) traditional college lectures
should be replaced by dramatized
performances
D) interaction should be encouraged
in the process of teaching
29. By saying “They seemed ‘a
priesthood, rather uneven in
their merits but uniform in
their bearing…’” (Lines 3-4,
Para.4), the author means that
______.
A) professors are a group of
professionals that differ in
their academic ability but behave
in the same way
B) professors are like priests
wearing the same kind of black
gown but having different roles
to play
C) there is no fundamental difference
between professors and priests
though they differ in their
merits
D) professors at the University
of Pennsylvania used to wear
black suits which made them
look like priests
30. Whose teaching method is
particularly commended by the
author?
A) Ezekiel Cheever’s.
B) Alfred North Whitehead’s.
C) Cotton Mather’s.
D) Patricia Nelson Limerick’s.
Passage Three
Questions 31 to 35 are based
on the following passage:
Take the case of public education
alone. The principal difficulty
faced by the schools has been
the tremendous increase in the
number of pupils. This has been
caused by the advance of the
legal age for going into industry
and the impossibility of finding
a job even when the legal age
has been reached. In view of
the technological improvements
in the last few years, business
will require in the future proportionately
fewer workers than ever before.
The result will be still further
raising of the legal age for
going into employment, and still
further difficulty in finding
employment when that age has
been attained. If we cannot
put our children to work, we
must put them in school.
We may also be quite confident
that the present trend toward
a shorter day and a shorter
week will be maintained. We
have developed and shall continue
to have a new leisure class.
Already the public agencies
for adult education are swamped
by the tide that has swept over
them since the depression began.
They will be little better off
when it is over. Their support
must come from the taxpayer.
It is surely too much to hope
that these increases in the
cost of public education can
be borne by the local communities.
They cannot care for the present
restricted and inadequate system.
The local communities have failed
in their efforts to cope with
unemployment. They cannot expect
to cope with public education
on the scale on which we must
attempt it. The answer to the
problem of unemployment has
been Federal relief. The answer
to the problem of public education
may have to be much the same,
and properly so. If there is
one thing in which the citizens
of all parts of the country
have an interest, it is in the
decent education of the citizens
of all parts of the country.
Our income tax now goes in part
to keep our neighbors alive.
It may have to go in part as
well to make our neighbors intelligent.
We are now attempting to preserve
the present generation through
Federal relief of the destitute
(贫民). Only a people determined
to ruin the next generation
will refuse such Federal funds
as public education may require.
31. What is the passage mainly
about?
A) How to persuade local communities
to provide more funds.
B) How to cope with the shortage
of funds for public education.
C) How to improve the public
education system.
D) How to solve the rising unemployment
problem.
32. What is the reason for the
increase in the number of students?
A) The requirement of educated
workers by business.
B) Raising of the legal age
forgoing to work.
C) The trend toward a shorter
workday.
D) People’s concern for the
future of the next generation.
33. The public agencies for
adult education will be little
better off because ______.
A) the unemployed are too poor
to continue their education
B) a new leisure class has developed
C) they are still suffering
from the depression
D) an increase in taxes could
be a problem
34. According to the author,
the answer to the problem of
public education is that the
Federal government _______.
A) should allocate Federal funds
for public education
B) should demand that local
communities provide support
C) should raise taxes to meet
the needs of public education
D) should first of all solve
the problem of unemployment
35. Why does the author say
“Only a people determined to
ruin the next generation will
refuse such Federal funds as
public education may require”
(Lines 10-11, Para. 3)?
A) Only by appropriating adequate
Federal funds for education
can the next generation have
a bright future.
B) Citizens of all parts of
the country agree that the best
way to support education is
to use Federal funds.
C) People all over the country
should make contributions to
education in the interest of
the next generation.
D) Educated people are determined
to use part of the Federal funds
to help the poor.
Passage Four
Questions 36 to 40 are based
on the following passage:
A new high-performance contact
lens under development at the
department for applied physics
at the University of Heidelberg
will not only correct ordinary
vision defects but will enhance
normal night vision as much
as five times, making people’s
vision sharper than that of
cats.
Bille and his team work with
an optical instrument called
an active mirror — a device
used in astronomical telescopes
to spot newly emerging stars
and far distant galaxies. Connected
to a wave-front sensor that
tracks and measures the course
of a laser beam into the eye
and back, the aluminum mirror
detects the deficiencies of
the cornea, the transparent
protective layer covering the
lens of the human eye. They
highly precise data from the
two instruments — which, Bille
hopes, will one day be found
at the opticians (眼镜商) all over
the world — serve as a basis
for the production of completely
individualized contact lenses
that correct and enhance the
wearer’s vision.
By day, Bille’s contact lenses
will focus rays of light so
accurately on the retina (视网膜)
that the image of a small leaf
or the outline of a far distant
tree will be formed with a sharpness
that surpasses that of conventional
vision aids by almost half a
diopter (屈光度). At night, the
lenses have an even greater
potential. “Because the new
lens — in contrast to the already
existing ones — also works when
it’s dark and the pupil is wide
open,” says Bille, “lens wearers
will be able to identify a face
at distance of 100 meters —
80 meters farther than they
would normally be able to see.
In his experiments night vision
was enhanced by an even greater
factor: in semi-darkness, test
subjects could see up to 15
times better than without the
lenses.
Bille’s lenses are expected
to reach the market in the year
2000, and one tentative plan
is to use the Internet to transmit
information on patients’ visual
defects from the optician to
the manufacturer, who will then
produce and mail the contact
lenses within a couple of days.
The physicist expects the lenses
to cost about a dollar a pair,
about the same as conventional
one-day disposable lenses.
36. The new contact lens is
meant for ______.
A) astronomical observations
B) the night blind
C) those with vision defects
D) optical experiments
37. What do the two instruments
mentioned in the second paragraph
(Line 5) refer to?
A) The astronomical telescope
and the wave-front sensor.
B) The aluminum mirror and the
laser beam.
C) The active mirror and the
contact lens.
D) The aluminum mirror and the
wave-front sensor.
38. Individualized contact lenses
(Line 7, Para.2) are lenses
designed ______.
A) to work like an astronomical
telescope
B) to suit the wearer’s specific
needs
C) to process extremely accurate
data
D) to test the wearer’s eyesight
39. According to Bille, with
the new lenses the wearer’s
vision ______.
A) will be far better at night
than in the daytime
B) may be broadened about 15
times than without them
C) can be better improved in
the daytime than at night
D) will be sharper by a much
greater degree at night than
in the daytime
40. Which of the following is
true about Bille’s lenses?
A) Their production process
is complicated.
B) They will be sold at a very
low price.
C) They have to be replaced
every day.
D) Purchase orders can be made
through the Internet.
Part III Vocabulary and Structure
(20 minutes)
Directions: There are 3.0. incomplete
sentences in this part. For
each sentence 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 center.
41. In November 1987 the government
_______ a public debate on the
future direction of the official
sports policy.
A) initiated B) designated
C) induced D) promoted
42. I found it difficult to
_______ my career ambitions
with the need to bring up my
children.
A) consolidate B) amend
C) reconcile D) intensify
43. We all enjoy our freedom
of choice and do not like to
see it _______ when it is within
the legal and moral boundaries
of society.
A) compacted B) restricted
C) dispersed D) delayed
44. It is fortunate for the
old couple that their son’s
career goals and their wishes
for him _______.
A) coincide D) collaborate
B) comply C) conform
45. Allen will soon find out
that real life is seldom as
simple as it is ______ in commercials.
A) permeated B) alleged
C) depicted D) drafted
46. Europe’s earlier industrial
growth was _______ by the availability
of key resources, abundant and
cheap labor, coal, iron ore,
etc.
A) constrained B) detained
C) remained D) sustained
47. As the trial went on, the
story behind the murder slowly
_______ itself.
A) convicted B) released
C) haunted D) unfolded
48. We’ve just installed a fan
to _______ cooking smells from
the kitchen.
A) eject B) exclude
C) expel D) exile
49. Retirement is obviously
a very complex ______ period;
and the earlier you start planning
for it, the better.
A) transformation B) transmission
C) transaction D) transition
50. Mutual respect for territorial
_______ is one of the bases
upon which our two countries
develop relationships.
A) unity B) integrity
C) entirety D) reliability
51. As one of the youngest professors
in the university, Mr. Brown
is certainly on the ______ of
a brilliant career.
A) porch B) edge
C) course D) threshold
52. We work to make money, but
it’s a _______ that people who
work hard and long often do
not make the most money.
A) paradox B) prejudice
C) dilemma D) conflict
53. The design of this auditorium
shows a great deal of _______.
We have never seen such a building
before.
A) invention B) illusion
C) originality D) orientation
54. The damage to my car was
_______ in the accident, but
I have a lingering fear even
today.
A) insufficient B) ignorant
C) ambiguous D) negligible
55. Very few people could understand
the lecture the professor delivered
because its subject was very
_______.
A) obscure B) indefinite
C) dubious D) intriguing
56. Diamonds have little ______
value and their price depends
almost entirely on their scarcity.
A) intrinsic B) eternal
C) subtle D) inherent
57. Doctors are interested in
using lasers as a surgical tool
in operations on people who
are ______ to heart attack.
A) infectious B) disposed
C) accessible D) prone
58. Many countries have adopted
systems of _______ education
in order to promote the average
level of education.
A) compulsory B) cardinal
C) constrained D) conventional
59. I had eaten Chinese food
often, but I could not have
imagined how _______ and extravagant
a real Chinese banquet could
be.
A) prominent B) fabulous
C) handsome D) gracious
60. They are ______ investors
who always make thorough investigations
both on local and international
markets before making an investment.
A) implicit B) conscious
C) cautious D) indecisive
61. In addition to the rising
birthrate and immigration, the
_______ death rate contributed
to the population growth.
A) inclining B) increasing
C) declining D) descending
62. Because of the _______ noise
of traffic I couldn’t get to
sleep last night.
A) prevalent B) perpetual
C) provocative D) progressive
63. Don’t let such a _______
matter as this come between
us so that we can concentrate
on the major issue.
A) trivial B) partial
C) slight D) minimal
64. If you go to the park every
day in the morning, you will
_______ find him doing physical
exercise there.
A) ordinarily B) invariably
C) logically D) persistently
65. Although she’s a(n) _______
talented dancer, she still practices
several hours every day.
A) traditionally B) additionally
C) exceptionally D) rationally
66. The cut in her hand has
healed completely, without leaving
a _______.
A) defect B) sign
C) wound D) scar
67. The idea is to _______ the
frequent incidents of collision
to test the strength of the
windshields.
A) assemble B) simulate
C) accumulate D) forge
68. Most people in the modern
world ______ freedom and independence
more than anything else.
A) embody B) cherish
C) fascinate D) illuminate
69. I told him that I would
_______ him to act for me while
I was away from office.
A) authorize B) justify
C) rationalize D) identify
70. Over the past ten years,
natural gas production has remained
steady, but _______ has risen
steadily.
A) dissipation B) disposal
C) consumption D) expenditure
Part IV Error Correction (15
minutes)
Directions: This part consists
of a short passage. In this
passage, there are altogether
10 mistakes, one in each numbered
line. You may have to change
a word, add a word or delete
a word. Mark out the mistakes
and put the corrections in the
blanks provided. If you change
a word, cross it out and write
the correct word in the corresponding
blank. If you add a word, put
an insertion mark (∧) in the
right place and write the missing
word in the blank. If you delete
a word, cross it out and put
a slash (/) in the blank.
Example:
Television is rapidly becoming
the literatures of our periods.
1. time/times/period
Many of the arguments having
used for the study of literature.
2. /___________
As a school subject are valid
for ∧ study of television. 3.
the___________
The Seattle Times Company
is one newspaper firm that
has recognized the need for
change and done something about
it. In the newspaper industry,
papers must reflect the diversity
of the communities to which
they provide information.
It must reflect that diversity
with their news coverage or
risk S1. _________
losing their readers’ interest
and their advertisers’ support.
Operating within Seattle, which
has 20 percents racial S2. _________
minorities, the paper has put
into place policies and
procedures for hiring and maintain
a diverse workforce. The S3.
_________
underlying reason for the change
is that for information to be
fair, appropriate, and subjective,
it should be reported by the
S4. _________
same kind of population that
reads it.
A diversity committee composed
of reporters, editors, and
photographers meets regularly
to value the Seattle Times’
S5. _________
content and to educate the rest
of the newsroom staff about
diversity issues. In an addition,
the paper instituted a content
S6. _________
audit (审查) that evaluates the
frequency and manner of
representation of woman and
people of color in photographs.
S7. _________
Early audits showed that minorities
were pictured far too
infrequently and were pictured
with a disproportionate
number of negative articles.
The audit results from S8. _________
improvement in the frequency
of majority representation and
S9. _________
their portrayal in neutral or
positive situations. And, with
a S10. _________
result, the Seattle Times has
improved as a newspaper.
The diversity training and content
audits helped the
Seattle Times Company to win
the Personal Journal
Optimas Award for excellence
in managing change.
Part V Writing (30 minutes)
Directions: For this part, you
are allowed thirty minutes to
write a composition on the topic
Changes in the Ownership of
Houses. You should write at
least 150 words, and base your
composition on the chart and
the outline given below:
Ownership of Houses in a Big
City in China
1. 根据上图描述该市住房产权的变化
2. 分析产生这些变化的原因
3. 说明这些变化对个人和社会产生的影响
Changes in the Ownership of
Houses