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历年考研英语真题 阅读篇.pdf

1、1997年全国硕士研究生入学统一考试英语试题Text 1It was 3:45 in the morning when the vote was finally taken.After six months of arguing and final 16 hours of hot parliamentary debates,Australias Northern Territory became the first legal authority in the world to allow doctors to take the lives of incurably ill patients

2、who wish to die.The measure passed by the convincing vote of15 to 10.Almost immediately word flashed on the Internet and was picked up,half a world away,by John Hofsess,executive director of the Right to Die Society ofCanada.He sent it on via the groups on-line service,Death NET.Says Hofsess:We post

3、ed bulletins all day long,because of course this isn5t just something that happened in Australia.It5s world history.The full import may take a while to sink in.The NT Rights of the Terminally III law has left physicians and citizens alike trying to deal with its moral and practical implications.Some

4、 have breathed sighs of relief,others,including churches,right to life groups and the Australian Medical Association,bitterly attacked the bill and the haste of its passage.But the tide is unlikely to turn back.In Australia where an aging population,life extending technology and changing community a

5、ttitudes have all played their part other states are going to consider making a similar law to deal with euthanasia.In the US and Canada,where the right to die movement is gathering strength,observers are waiting for the dominoes to start falling.Under the new Northern Territory law,an adult patient

6、 can request death probably by a deadly injection or pill to put an end to suffering.The patient must be diagnosed as terminally ill by two doctors.After a“cooling off period of seven days,the patient can sign a certificate of request.After 48 hours the wish for death can be met.For Lloyd Nickson,a

7、54 year old Darwin resident suffering from lung cancer,theNT Rights of Terminally III law means he can get on with living without the haunting fear of his suffering:a terrifying death from his breathing condition.4tFm not afraid of dying from a spiritual point of view,but what I was afraid of was ho

8、w Id go,becauseIve watched people die in the hospital fighting for oxygen and clawing at their masks,“he says.Text 2A report consistently brought back by visitors to the US is how friendly,courteous,and helpful most Americans were to them.To be fair,this observation is also frequently made of Canada

9、 and Canadians,and should best be considered NorthAmerican.There are,of course,exceptions.Small minded officials,rude waiters,and ill-mannered taxi drivers are hardly unknown in the US.Yet it is an observation made so frequently that it deserves comment.For a long period of time and in many parts of

10、 the country,a traveler was a welcome break in an otherwise dull existence.Dullness and loneliness were common problems of the families who generally lived distant from one another.Strangers and travelers were welcome sources of diversion,and brought news of the outside world.The harsh realities of

11、the frontier also shaped this tradition of hospitality.Someone traveling alone,if hungry,injured,or ill,often had nowhere to turn except to the nearest cabin or settlement.It was not a matter of choice for the traveler or merely a charitable impulse on the part of the settlers.It reflected the harsh

12、ness of daily life:if you didnt take in the stranger and take care of him,there was no one else who would.And someday,remember,you might be in the same situation.Today there are many charitable organizations which specialize in helping the weary traveler.Yet,the old tradition of hospitality to stran

13、gers is still very strong in the US,especially in the smaller cities and towns away from the busy tourist trails.I was just traveling through,got talking with this American,and pretty soon he invited me home for dinner amazing.Such observations reported by visitors to the US are not uncommon,but are

14、 not always understood properly.The casual friendliness of many Americans should be interpreted neither as superficial nor as artificial,but as the result of a historically developed cultural tradition.As is true of any developed society,in America a complex set of cultural signals,assumptions,and c

15、onventions underlies all social interrelationships.And,of course,speaking a language does not necessarily mean that someone understands social and cultural patterns.Visitors who fail to“translate“cultural meanings properly often draw wrong conclusions.For example,when an American uses the word“frien

16、d,“the cultural implications of the word may be quite different from those it has in the visitors language and culture.It takes more than a brief encounter on a bus to distinguish between courteous convention and individual interest.Yet,being friendly is a virtue that many Americans value highly and

17、 expect from both neighbors and strangers.Text 3Technically,any substance other than food that alters our bodily or mental functioning is a drug.Many people mistakenly believe the term drug refers only to some sort of medicine or an illegal chemical taken by drug addicts.They dont realize that famil

18、iar substances such as alcohol and tobacco are also drugs.This is why the more neutral term substance is now used by many physicians and psychologists.The phrase substance abuse“is often used instead of“drug abuse“to make clear that substances such as alcohol and tobacco can be just as harmfully mis

19、used as heroin and cocaine.We live a society in which the medicinal and social use of substances(drugs)is pervasive:an aspirin to quiet a headache,some wine to be sociable,coffee to get going in the morning,a cigarette for the nerves.When do these socially acceptable and apparently constructive uses

20、 of a substance become misuses?First of all,most substances taken in excess will produce negative effects such as poisoning or intense perceptual distortions.Repeated use of a substance can also lead to physical addiction or substance dependence.Dependence is marked first by an increased tolerance,w

21、ith more and more of the substance required to produce the desired effect,and then by the appearance of unpleasant withdrawal symptoms when the substance is discontinued.Drugs(substances)that affect the central nervous system and alter perception,mood,and behavior are known as psychoactive substance

22、s.Psychoactive substances are commonly grouped according to whether they are stimulants,depressants,or hallucinogens.Stimulants initially speed up or activate the central nervous system,whereas depressants slow it down.Hallucinogens have their primary effect on perception,distorting and altering it

23、in a variety of ways including producing hallucinations.These are the substances often called psychedelic(from the Greek word meaning“mind-manifesting)because they seemed to radically alter ones state of consciousness.Text 4No company likes to be told it is contributing to the moral decline of a nat

24、ion.Is this what you intended to accomplish with your careers?Senator Robert Dole askedTime Warner executives last week.You have sold your souls,but must you corrupt our nation and threaten our children as well?At Time Warner,however,such questions are simply the latest manifestation of the soul sea

25、rching that has involved the company ever since the company was born in 1990.Its a self-examination that has,at various times,involved issues of responsibility,creative freedom and the corporate bottom line.At the core of this debate is chairman Gerald Levin,56,who took over for the late Steve Ross

26、in 1992.On the financial front,Levin is under pressure to raise the stock price and reduce the companys mountainous debt,which will increase to 17.3 billion after two new cable deals close.He has promised to sell off some of the property and restructure the company,but investors are waiting impatien

27、tly.The flap over rap is not making life any easier for him.Levin has consistently defended the companys rap music on the grounds of expression.In 1992,when TimeWarner was under fire for releasing Ice Ts violent rap song Cop Killer,Levin described rap as a lawful expression of street culture,which d

28、eserves an outlet.The test of any democratic society,he wrote in a Wall Street Journal column,lies not in how well it can control expression but in whether it gives freedom of thought and expression the widest possible latitude,however disputable or irritating the results may sometimes be.We wont re

29、treat in the face of any threats.Levin would not comment on the debate last week,but there were signs that the chairman was backing off his hard line stand,at least to some extent.During the discussion of rock singing verses at last months stockholders,meeting,Levin asserted that 4tmusic is not the

30、cause of societys ills“and even cited his son,a teacher in the Bronx,New York,who uses rap to communicate with students.But he talked as well about the balanced struggle between creative freedom and social responsibility,and he announced that the company would launch a drive to develop standards for

31、 distribution and labeling of potentially objectionable music.The 15 member Time Warner board is generally supportive of Levin and his corporate strategy.But insiders say several of them have shown their concerns in this matter.Some of us have known for many,many years that the freedoms under the Fi

32、rst Amendment are not totally unlimited,says Luce.I think it is perhaps the case that some people associated with the company have only recently come to realize this.”Text 5Much of the language used to describe monetary policy,such as“steering the economy to a soft landing or“a touch on the brakes,m

33、akes it sound like a precise science.Nothing could be further from the truth.The link between interest rates and inflation is uncertain.And there are long,variable lags before policy changes have any effect on the economy.Hence the analogy that likens the conduct of monetary policy to driving a car

34、with a blackened windscreen,a cracked rear view mirror and a faulty steering wheel.Given all these disadvantages,central bankers seem to have had much to boast about of late.Average inflation in the big seven industrial economies fell to a mere2.3%last year,close to its lowest level in 30 years,befo

35、re rising slightly to 2.5%thisJuly.This is a long way below the double-digit rates which many countries experienced in the 1970s and early 1980s.It is also less than most forecasters had predicated.In late 1994 the panel of economists which The Economist polls each month said that Americas inflation

36、 rate would average 3.5%in 1995.In fact,it fell to 2.6%in August,and expected to average only about 3%for the year as a whole.In Britain and Japan inflation is running half a percentage point below the rate predicted at the end of last year.This is no flash in the pan;over the past couple of years,i

37、nflation has been consistently lower than expected in Britain and America.Economists have been particularly surprised by favorable inflation figures inBritain and the United States,since conventional measures suggest that both economies,and especially Americas,have little productive slack.Americas c

38、apacity utilization,for example,hit historically high levels earlier this year,and its jobless rate(5.6%in August)has fallen bellow most estimates of the natural rate of unemployment the rate below which inflation has taken off in the past.Why has inflation proved so mild?The most thrilling explanat

39、ion is,unfortunately,a little defective.Some economists argue that powerful structural changes in the world have up-ended the old economic models that were based upon the historical link between growth and inflation.1998年全国硕士研究生入学统一考试英语试题Text 1Few creations of big technology capture the imagination

40、like giant dams.Perhaps it is humankinds long suffering at the mercy of flood and drought that makes the ideal of forcing the waters to do our bidding so fascinating.But to be fascinated is also,sometimes,to be blind.Several giant dam projects threaten to do more harm than good.The lesson from dams

41、is that big is not always beautiful.It doesnt help that building a big,powerful dam has become a symbol of achievement for nations and people striving to assert themselves.Egypts leadership in the Arab world was cemented by the Aswan High Dam.Turkeys bid for First World status includes the giant Ata

42、turk Dam.But big dams tend not to work as intended.The Aswan Dam,for example,stopped the Nile flooding but deprived Egypt of the fertile silt that floods left-all in return for a giant reservoir of disease which is now so full of silt that it barely generates electricity.And yet,the myth of controll

43、ing the waters persists.This week,in the heart of civilized Europe,Slovaks and Hungarians stopped just short of sending in the troops in their contention over a dam on the Danube.The huge complex will probably have all the usual problems of big dams.But Slovakia is bidding for independence from theC

44、zechs,and now needs a dam to prove itself.Meanwhile,in India,the World Bank has given the go-ahead to the even more wrong-headed Narmada Dam.And the bank has done this even though its advisors say the dam will cause hardship for the powerless and environmental destruction.The benefits are for the po

45、werful,but they are far from guaranteed.Proper,scientific study of the impacts of dams and of the cost and benefits of controlling water can help to resolve these conflicts.Hydroelectric power and flood control and irrigation are possible without building monster dams.But when you are dealing with m

46、yths,it is hard to he either proper,or scientific.Tt is time that the world learned the lessons of Aswan.You dont need a dam to be saved.Text 2Well,no gain without pain,they say.But what about pain without gain?Everywhere you go in America,you hear tales of corporate revival.What is harder to establ

47、ish is whether the productivity revolution that businessmen assume they are presiding over is for real.The official statistics are mildly discouraging.They show that,if you lump manufacturing and services together,productivity has grown on average by 1.2%since 1987.That is somewhat faster than the a

48、verage during the previous decade.And since 1991,productivity has increased by about 2%a year,which is more than twice the 1978-1987 average.The trouble is that part of the recent acceleration is due to the usual rebound that occurs at this point in a business cycle,and so is not conclusive evidence

49、 of a revival in the underlying trend.There is,as Robert Rubin,the treasury secretary,says,a disjunction“between the mass of business anecdote that points to a leap in productivity and the picture reflected by the statistics.Some of this can be easily explained.New ways of organizing the workplace a

50、ll that re-engineering and downsizing are only one contribution to the overall productivity of an economy,which is driven by many other factors such as joint investment in equipment and machinery,new technology,and investment in education and training.Moreover,most of the changes that companies make

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