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Titanic Survivor: the Story of Harold Bride Introduction In 1912 more and more people wanted to cross the Atlantic Ocean from England to the United States of America. The Titanic was the biggest and most famous ship built to make this trip. When Harold Bride joined the ship on its first voyage, his job was to work in the radio room. He didn’t know that he would play a part in one of the worst disasters at sea the world had ever seen. Chapter 1 “Queen of the Seas” People have called me a hero. I don’t know about that, because there were many heroes in the early hours of 15th April 1912. I was only 21that year. I had worked for nearly a year as a ship’s radio operator. In April I started a new job—on the Titanic. My first sight of the ship, in Belfast, took my breath away. Now I understand why people called it the “Queen of the Seas”. The Titanic was the biggest … and the best. Passengers boarded the Titanic in Southampton on 10th April. At noon the great ship set off on its voyage to New York. For first-class passengers the Titanic was like a wonderful floating hotel with fancy restaurants, a library, and even a swimming pool. There were lots of other passengers, too. Many had one-way tickets, looking for a new life in America. Of course, these people weren’t allowed near the higher decks of first class. Jack Phillips was the Senior Radio Operator. He and I had to send lots of messages from rich passengers. We tapped these out in Morse Code. Sometimes it was hard to catch the messages that came back. Jack and I quickly became good friends. That was lucky, because we lived and slept in the radio cabin! Chapter 2 Iceberg! We were especially busy on Sunday, 14th April and it was a long, hard day for Phillips. We received a few warnings from ships about ice ahead. Captain Smith knew about these, but he wasn’t worried—not on the “unsinkable’’ Titanic. Phillips had so many messages to send from passengers that he even interrupted one ice warning. I was supposed to start work late that night, so I went to bed early in the evening. I was asieep when the accident happened. I didn’t feel anything. Around midnight I got up and asked Phillips how everything was. “I think the ship’s damaged,’’ he told me. Minutes later, Captain Smith appeared. “We’ve struck an iceberg,’’ he said. The captain returned a few minutes later. He told us the ship was sinking. “Send the call for assistance,” he said grimly. “Yes, at once!” answered Phillips. He began sending out the ship’s position and a message for help in Morse Code. It was hard to believe. The “unsinkable ship” was going to sink. We weren’t worried yet. “You’ll see your first iceberg,” Phillips joked. Several ships replied to us, but they were all too far away. As Phillips looked for a closer ship, I ran to the bridge with messages. The crew had begun to load passengers into the lifeboats. Women and children were supposed to leave first.. At first, some passengers refused to go. “ How could the Titanic sink?” they thought. So many people couldn’t believe what was happening that some of the first lifeboats were almost empty. But slowly people understood the danger and there was no problem filling the lifeboats. Children cried as their parents put them in the boat. Husbands and wives kissed for the last time. Finally, a ship called the Carpathia replied to our radio call. It was coming to help. We continued looking for other ships and Captain Smith asked what message we were using. Phillips told him it was “CQD”—“Come quick, danger.” I suggested using the new Morse Code signal for help, which was “SOS”. We joked that we were sending the first ever SOS from a sinking ship. Chapter 3 The Terrible Truth The joking stopped when we worked out how long the Carpathia would sink in less than two. No one could rescue us in time. Phillips searched for closer ships and I ran to and from the bridge with news. The decks were steeper now as the front of the ship sank. Some passengers prepared themselves for the end. Other passengers tried to fight their way onto the remaining lifeboats. How many of them knew the terrible truth? There had been more than 2,200passengers and crew on the ship, but there were only enough lifeboats for 1,178! It became more and more difficult for ship’s officers to keep order on the decks. Back in the radio room, I put an overcoat around Phillips’ shoulders and tied a lifebelt round him. It was getting much harder to send and receive messages now because the power was weak. Water was getting into the engine rooms. The noise from the decks was terrible. I don’t know how Phillips continued to work. The captain came to the radio cabin one last time. “You have done your duty,” he told us. “ You can do no more. Now it’s every man foe himself.” The water had reached the deck outside our cabin, but still Phillips did not leave the wireless. He continued sending more and more messages. I went into one of the other rooms for a minute. When I looked out, I saw a man from the engine rooms behind Phillips. The radio operator was too busy to notice him, but the man was trying to steal his lifebelt! I charged out angrily. Together Phillips and I fought the man off. Finally, with water pouring in, we abandoned the cabin. Phillips and I said goodbye. It was the last time I saw my friend alive. The deck was very steep now, but the ship’s band were still playing! Some people were trying to free the last lifeboat. I ran and began to help them. Chapter 4 The End of the Titanic The ship sank lower and suddenly a huge wave rolled up the deck towards us. It swept the boat, still upside-down, right off the ship. I grabbed hold of a rowlock and was pulled with it. The next thing I knew, everything was dark and I was plunged into the icy water. I was inside the lifeboat, but the lifeboat was upside-down! I struggled for air as the freezing water of the Atlantic splashed me. I didn’t know it, but more than 20 people were above, on top of the boat. Finally, somehow, I managed to drive out from under the lifeboat. Hundreds of people were in the water all around me. Their cries were terrible. I looked back at the remains of the ships. It was sticking right up out of the sea. It looked like a duck diving under the water. Incredibly, the band still played! I began to swim with all my strength. I was afraid I might be sucked down along with the ship when it sank. The ship’s lights went out in its last few minutes. My fears of being pulled down went away as the last of the great ship disappeared slowly under the water. At 2.20a.m. the Titanic was gone. I was very cold and tired by now. Luckily, there was a boat near to me. It was the upside-down lifeboat-the same one I had been trapped under. I was pulled up out of the water. But we weren’t safe yet. There were too many people in the boat and it was losing air. We were slowly sinking. An officer on the lifeboat, Charles Lightoller, shouted instructions and everyone had to move so that the water didn’t sink us. Everyone except me… My legs hurt so much that I couldn’t move them. We prayed and waited for dawn. Chapter 5 Lights in the Distance The Carpathia still hadn’t arrived. Where was it? Luckily, another lifeboat saved us. Even though it was already full, they let all of us on board. It was in the boat that I finally saw lights in the distance. It was the Carpathia! It was a long slow job picking up all the survivors. At last the people in my lifeboat climbed the rope ladder, one by one, onto the Carpathia. My feet hurt terribly as I climbed up, but at the top, hands reached out to help me. That’s when I passed out I woke up in a room on the Carpathia. I had survived the most terrible disaster at sea the world had ever seen. But I could not be happy. Many others were less lucky than me. My good friend Jack Phillips had lost his life. Although my legs were injured, I knew that the radio operator on the Carpathia needed help. People on land were eager for news of their loved ones. Who had survived? Who had not? I spent the rest of the trip to New York in the radio room, sending messages to passengers’ families and friends on land. Years later, what I remember most about that terrible night are the acts of bravery. I remember the band playing until the very end. And I remember Jack Phillips staying at the wireless. In my mind, he was the hero who saved us all. (Harold Bride live for more than 40 years after the night the Titanic sank. ) 3、通过活动,使学生养成博览群书的好习惯。 B比率分析法和比较分析法不能测算出各因素的影响程度。√ C采用约当产量比例法,分配原材料费用与分配加工费用所用的完工率都是一致的。X C采用直接分配法分配辅助生产费用时,应考虑各辅助生产车间之间相互提供产品或劳务的情况。错 C产品的实际生产成本包括废品损失和停工损失。√ C成本报表是对外报告的会计报表。× C成本分析的首要程序是发现问题、分析原因。× C成本会计的对象是指成本核算。× C成本计算的辅助方法一般应与基本方法结合使用而不单独使用。√ C成本计算方法中的最基本的方法是分步法。X D当车间生产多种产品时,“废品损失”、“停工损失”的借方余额,月末均直接记入该产品的产品成本 中。× D定额法是为了简化成本计算而采用的一种成本计算方法。× F“废品损失”账户月末没有余额。√ F废品损失是指在生产过程中发现和入库后发现的不可修复废品的生产成本和可修复废品的修复费用。X F分步法的一个重要特点是各步骤之间要进行成本结转。(√) G各月末在产品数量变化不大的产品,可不计算月末在产品成本。错 G工资费用就是成本项目。(×) G归集在基本生产车间的制造费用最后均应分配计入产品成本中。对 J计算计时工资费用,应以考勤记录中的工作时间记录为依据。(√) J简化的分批法就是不计算在产品成本的分批法。(×) J简化分批法是不分批计算在产品成本的方法。对 J加班加点工资既可能是直接计人费用,又可能是间接计人费用。√ J接生产工艺过程的特点,工业企业的生产可分为大量生产、成批生产和单件生产三种,X K可修复废品是指技术上可以修复使用的废品。错 K可修复废品是指经过修理可以使用,而不管修复费用在经济上是否合算的废品。X P品种法只适用于大量大批的单步骤生产的企业。× Q企业的制造费用一定要通过“制造费用”科目核算。X Q企业职工的医药费、医务部门、职工浴室等部门职工的工资,均应通过“应付工资”科目核算。X S生产车间耗用的材料,全部计入“直接材料”成本项目。X S适应生产特点和管理要求,采用适当的成本计算方法,是成本核算的基础工作。(×) W完工产品费用等于月初在产品费用加本月生产费用减月末在产品费用。对 Y“预提费用”可能出现借方余额,其性质属于资产,实际上是待摊费用。对 Y引起资产和负债同时减少的支出是费用性支出。X Y以应付票据去偿付购买材料的费用,是成本性支出。X Y原材料分工序一次投入与原材料在每道工序陆续投入,其完工率的计算方法是完全一致的。X Y运用连环替代法进行分析,即使随意改变各构成因素的替换顺序,各因素的影响结果加总后仍等于指标的总差异,因此更换各因索替换顺序,不会影响分析的结果。(×) Z在产品品种规格繁多的情况下,应该采用分类法计算产品成本。对 Z直接生产费用就是直接计人费用。X Z逐步结转分步法也称为计列半成品分步法。√ A按年度计划分配率分配制造费用,“制造费用”账户月末(可能有月末余额/可能有借方余额/可能有贷方余额/可能无月末余额)。 A按年度计划分配率分配制造费用的方法适用于(季节性生产企业)
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