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主题 : 2010浙江大学考博听力原文和答案
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楼主  发表于: 2010-06-10   

2010浙江大学考博听力原文和答案

1955: Opening day1 "cGk)s  
An aerial view of Disneyland in 1956. The entire route of the g-k|>-h  
Disneyland Railroad is clearly visible as it encircles the <}Vrl`?h  
park.Disneyland Park was opened to the public on Monday, 【July 18, bs&43Ae  
1955】. However, a special "International Press Preview" event was \K{ z  
held on Sunday, July 17, 1955, which was only open to invited guests qZh/IW  
and the media. The Special Sunday events, including the dedication, 8`{:MkXP  
were televised nationwide and anchored by three of Walt Disney's ;1=1:S8  
friends from Hollywood: Art Linkletter, Bob Cummings, and Ronald gg/-k;@ Rf  
Reagan. ABC broadcast the event live on its network; at the time, it ^CH=O|8j  
was one of the largest and most complex live broadcasts ever.The event  A@('pA85  
did not go smoothly. The park was overcrowded as the by-invitation- Pm?KI<TH~  
only affair was plagued with counterfeit tickets. All major roads nW:C/{n2tG  
nearby were empty. The temperature was an unusually high 101 °F (38 =I5>$}q_&,  
°C), and a plumbers' strike left many of the park's 【drinking A\DCW  
fountains dry】. Disney was given a choice of having working fountains ^ +\d z  
or running toilets and he chose the latter. This, however, generated UDFDJ m$  
negative publicity since Pepsi sponsored the park's opening; enraged 4"ZP 'I;  
guests believed the inoperable fountains were a cynical way to sell G!##X: 6 '  
soda. The asphalt that had been poured just that morning was so soft 2[yd> (`  
that ladies' high-heeled shoes sank in. Vendors ran out of food. A gas W@IQ^ }E  
leak in Fantasyland caused Adventureland,Frontierland, and Fantasyland Dy&i&5E.-l  
to close for the afternoon. Parents were throwing their children over e`s ~.ZF  
the shoulders of crowds to get them onto rides such as the King Arthur >'$Mp<  
Carrousel .Hm>i  
The park got such bad press for the event day that Walt Disney invited /N .b%M] !  
members of the press back for a private "second day" to experience the c6]U E@A  
true Disneyland, after which Walt held a party in the Disneyland Hotel e9tjw[+A  
for them. Walt and his 1955 executives forever referred to the day as |Ez>J+uye(  
【"Black Sunday"】. Every year on July 17, cast members wear pin ajT*/L!0_  
badges stating how many years it has been since July 17, 1955. For Om@;J%u/  
example, in 2004 they wore the slogan "The magic began 49 years ago }<r)~{UV  
today."But for the first twelve to fifteen years, Disney did Q&;9 x?e  
officially state that opening day was on July 18, including in the JbbzV>  
park's own publications. Disneyland referred to July 17, 1955, as +\A,&;!SR  
"Dedication Day" in one of its July, 1967, press releases. On Monday =nS3p6>rZ  
July 18, crowds started to gather in line as early as 2 a.m., and the TdM ruSY  
first person to buy a ticket and enter the park was David MacPherson 0d&6lqTo  
with 【admission ticket】 number 2, as Roy O. Disney arranged to pre- )&O %*@F  
purchase ticket number 1. Walt Disney had an official photo taken with BWrxunHO  
two children instead, Christine Vess Watkins (age 5 in 1955) and tk`v:t!6U  
Michael Schwartner (age 7 in 1955), and the photo of the two carries a GxxW&y  
deceptive caption along the lines of "Walt Disney with the first two. 7}>EJ  
guests of Disneyland." Vess Watkins and Schwartner both received t*u:hex  
【lifetime passes】 to Disneyland that day, and MacPherson was awarded <'*LRd$1  
one shortly thereafter, which was later expanded to every single \b x$i*  
Disney-owned park in the world. vE?G7%,  
W5 y. j: t6 G2 j7 \0 A+ Q! c2 h r19 pZAc  
A Harvard Extension School class at Boylston Hall. Through the 1950s, S\=Nn7"  
most Extension courses cost $5 each (slightly more than two bushels of abjQ)=u  
wheat). Now any Harvard staff member can take a graduate-level course Y3b *a".X  
for $40 a semester, making it possible to earn a master’s degree for ;_(4Q*Yx  
$400. It was 1835, and John Lowell Jr., the wealthy young scion of a TeM|:o  
prominent Boston family, sat by the Nile River in Luxor, a cradle of R/YqyT\SM  
Egyptian civilization. Sick with fever, he drafted a long revision to iBa A9  
his will and mailed it home to a cousin. Months later, Lowell was e"<OELA  
dead.That revamped will included a bequest that has rippled ever wider GTd,n=  
across almost two centuries. Most notably, it led to creation of the rILYI;'o  
Harvard Extension School, which is celebrating its centennial year, fHFE){  
with the official anniversary in February.8 ]+ Lowell’s idea was 0H:X3y+  
simple, but brilliant. Everyday people wanted to learn, he thought, 7[)E>XRE  
and just needed a forum that allowed them to do so. In the 19th fJg+Ryo  
century, that method mostly involved public lectures. In the 20th PW0LG^xp`  
century, it was usually classroom study, and in the 21st, the trend is Zh~'9 JH  
toward 【distance learning on the Web】. But what has been true of the HRA |q  
Extension School from its earliest incarnation is its devotion to =s6 opL)  
public learning, and its students’ fierce desire to be B+`g> h  
taught.Evolving far beyond its origins as a lecture series, the uY To 9A  
Extension School is now a degree-granting institution with 14,000 9 68Ez  
students that this year is offering close to 【700】undergraduate and L/K(dkx  
graduate courses across 65 fields, taught by faculty from nine of ^\m![T\bX  
Harvard’s 10 Schools. The modern Extension School has embraced video f o3}W^0  
learning and podcasts. One hundred and fifty courses are available :3 mh@[V  
online, expanding the School’s reach to students in 122 countries. "AqB$^S9t  
About 20 percent of its students take courses exclusively online.! k #'`{Qv0,  
! t+ V9Increasingly, said Michael Shinagel, the Extension School’s <P<z N~i9j  
longtime dean, “the lectern is electronic.” Yet it was the forward- t uX|\X  
thinking Lowell, born in 1799 near the dawn of the American republic, yHaGkm  
who launched this thriving Harvard institution. Half of his wealth — !4!~L k=  
the princely sum, in those days, of $250,000 — in 1839 established -{vD: Il=6  
the Lowell Institute, the Extension’s precursor. His bequest is a %C]>9."  
trust, active to this day, charged with offering public lectures in 7 tp36TE  
Boston on the arts, sciences, and natural history, to students P+}h$ _x  
regardless of gender, race, or age. The first Lowell lecture, on zbiLP83  
geology, was held in 1840, in an era of rising working-class clamor /dHF6yW  
for education. The public’s response was tumultuous, with tickets e3\T)x &=  
being distributed amidst near-mob scenes. The institute’s collegiate k5)om;.w  
“courses” — which were lecture series on a single topic — rm_Nn8p,  
sometimes drew 10,000 applicants.By 1898, more than 4,400 free b.938#3,  
lectures and courses had been offered through the Lowell Institute. dh\P4  
Around that time, Boston schoolteachers were looking for ways to earn mE[y SrV  
a bachelor’s degree at night. The Lowell lectures and the lobbying jEwIn 1  
teachers created a perfect storm of sorts, and by 【1910】 University Q2> gU#  
Extension at Harvard was founded.Another visionary with the Lowell F'Z,]b'st3  
surname created the modern school. Harvard-educated government scholar 2AdDIVYC  
A. Lawrence Lowell became trustee of the institute in 1900, and by CC`JZ.SO  
1906 was promoting “systematic courses on subjects of liberal d(K +);!  
education,” as he called them, taught by Harvard faculty.His vision 8Fub<UhJ  
of transforming a lecture program into a school of public education pCG}Z Ka  
gained traction in 1909 when he was named president of Harvard. His UxBpdm%dvP  
first step in office was not the curricular reform for which he later Dp:BU|r  
became famous. (Among other things, Lowell invented the idea of S jj6q`  
“concentrations.”) Instead, he 【pressed to create a University Y-9I3?ar  
Extension】.His desire, according to Shinagel, who has written a new (k P9hcV  
history of the School called “The Gates Unbarred,” was “to carry /{2,zW  
out more completely the idea of John Lowell Jr.” u? EN  
John Grisham was born on February 2, 1955, in Jonesboro, Arkansas, in rM SZ"  
the USA. His father was a construction worker and moved his family all Ul#  r  
around the southern states of America, stopping wherever he could find D+c>F5  
work. Eventually they settled in Mississippi. Graduating from law A}w/OA97RO  
school in 1981, Grisham practiced law for nearly a decade in x~sBzTa  
Southaven, specializing in criminal defense and personal injury `@%LzeGz  
litigation (诉讼). In 1983, he was elected to the state House of -RLOD\ZBh  
Representatives and served until 1990.7 i+ V% One day at the Dessoto [><Tm \(:  
County courthouse, Grisham heard the horrifying testimony of a 12- 3$/IC@+  
year-old rape victim. He decided to write a novel exploring what would d'ifLQ\  
have happened if the girl’s father had murdered her attackers. He #;S*V"  
proceeded to get up every morning at 5 a.m. to work on the novel, NlXimq  
called A Time to Kill, which was published in 1988. Grisham’s next _ dg\\c  
novel, The Firm, was one of the biggest hits of 1991, spending 47 yQrD9*t&g  
weeks on The New York Times bestseller list. Grisham lives with his vD4*&|8T#  
wife and two children, dividing their time between their Victorian ( 5~h"s   
home on a 67 acre farm in Mississippi and a 204 acre plantation near !m$jk2<  
Charlottesville, Virginia.When he’s not writing, Grisham devotes time $ Q0n  
to charitable causes, including mission trips with his church group. P2Y^d#jO  
As a child he dreamt of becoming a professional baseball player, and R-Sym8c  
now serves as the local Little League commissioner. He has built six 8Y?;x}  
ballfields on his property and hosts children from 26Little League 'q.!|G2U  
teams. Mi hg:  
47. What inspired Grisham to write his first novel? }7X%'Bg=M  
A. A case of murder. $xQL]FmS  
B. A case of rape $!Dpj N  
C. His father’s experience x"g&#Vq ~  
D. His life on the farm <Gsu Z  
49. Which of the following is NOT true of the novel The Firm ? n`KY9[0 U=  
.It was popular at the time of publication  _4f;<FL  
 It earned Grisham great fame. 9FX-1,Jx  
C. It brought Grisham wealth svSVG:48  
D. It was carried by The New York Times as a series.3 y3 i6 L' Z& x. gFh*eCo   
S! H) W _-\#i  
50. It can be inferred from the passage that Grisham has built tVjsRnb{  
ballfields on his property ________. =Sv/IXX\di  
答案应该为 C. to see his childhood dream being realized in the 7 d vnupLh  
children P*o9a  
My surprise over the past few winters has been the personality *`U~?q}  
transformation my parents go through around mid-December as they q:(%*sY>  
change from Dad and Mom into Grandpa and Grandma. Yes, they become w(rE`IgW  
grandparents and are completely different from the people I know the b]y2+A.n  
other eleven and a half months of the yearThe first sign of my parents *8Z32c+C  
’ change is the delight they take in visiting toy and children’s Yz bXuJ4  
clothing stores. These two people, who usually dislike anything having "oD[v  
to do with shopping malls, become crazy consumers. While they tell me :%.D78&  
to budget my money and shop wisely, they are buying up every doll and O84i; S+-p  
dump truck in sight. And this is only the beginning of the holidays A's{j7  
When my brother’s children arrive, Grandpa and Grandma come into full }*-@!wc-N  
form. First they throw out all ideas about a balanced diet for the 7Wno':w8  
grandkids. While we were raised in a house where everyone had to take rKn~qVls  
two bites of corn, beets(甜菜), or liver (foods that appeared quite ,)XLq8  
often on our table despite constant complaining), the grandchildren "8RSvT<W^5  
never have to eat anything that does not appeal to them. Grandma Z7#+pPt!  
carries chocolate in her pockets to bribe(贿赂)the littlest ones into w &(ag$p'  
following her around the house, while Grandpa offers “surprises” of <m m[S  
candy and cake to them all day long. Boxes of chocolate-pie disappear {FG j]*  
while the whole-wheat bread get hard and stale. The kids love all the ?0SEMmp`H  
sweets, and when the sugar raises their energy levels, Grandma and ( =$ x.1  
Grandpa can always decide to leave and do a bit more shopping or go to rZF*q2?  
bed while my brother and sister-in-law try to deal with their highly ~BF&rx5Q  
active kids. G3 m Z($y  
Once the grandchildren have arrived, Grandma and Grandpa also seem to Kgv T"s.  
forget all of the responsibility lectures I so often hear in my daily ?(PKeq6  
life. If Mickey screams at his sister during dinner, he is ]yu:i-SfP  
“developing his own personality”; if Nancy breaks Grandma’s mirror, 4JEpl'5^Q  
she is “just a curious child”. But, if I track mud into the house Mhu*[a=;x  
while helping to unload groceries, I become “careless”; if I scold ;j7#7MN2_E  
one of the grandkids for tearing pages out of my textbook, I am OVJ0}5P*  
“impatient”. If Paula talks back to her mother, Grandma and Grandpa So;<6~  
smile at her spirit. If I say one word about all of this excessive 92c HwWZ!  
love, Mom and Dad reappear to have a talk with me about petty B[}6-2<>?C  
jealousies. pw#-_  
6.As regards his parents’ shopping for the grandchildren, the author >sF)Bo Lc  
______ . edD)TpmE,  
A. feels jealous                  B. feels amazed  bLL2  
C.thinks it unnecessary    D. thinks it annoying <$YlH@;)`a  
7. What happens after the kids have had all the sweets? "N;EL0=  
A. They get highly energetic.    B. They quiet down.' . me;.,$#  
C. They want more sweets.      D. They go to bed. ^pS~Z~[d/  
Which of the following is NOT true of the visiting children? I'Hf{Erw  
A. They behave very well.  z{543~Og59  
B. They like chocolate very much. %xW"!WbJ|  
C. They receive toys from their grandparents. >_TZ'FT  
The huge growth of global "ecotourism" industry is becoming an [7-?7mp!B  
increasing concern for conservationists with mounting evidence that > !JS:5|  
many wild species do not respond well to contact with human beings. WAqINLdX  
overexposure to tourists has been linked to stress, abnormal behavior 8|^7ai[am  
and adverse health effects in species such as polar bears, dolphins h1RSVp+?n  
and gorillas(大猩猩), says a report in New Scientist./ D! K9 _: K5 D Q59suL   
 ~% X ^OdP4m( >>  
While regulated ecotourism can help conservation efforts by F@t3!bj9  
encouraging people to manage endangered species and their habitats, B?QIN]   
many projects are poorly designed and unregulated, its says. “Many y5r4&~04  
ecotourist projects are unaudited, unauthorized and merely hint they $qiya[&G4  
are based on environmentally friendly policies and operations” #_1`)VS  
While regulated ecotourism can help conservation efforts by ,uvRi)O>a  
encouraging people to manage endangered species and their habitats, “ do_[&  
many projects are poorly designed and hint they are based on =]t| ];c%  
environmentally friendly policies and operations.” gR**@t=;j  
Ecotourism is growing by 10 to 30 percent a year and an estimated 20 #E?4E1bnB  
percent of tourists are thought to visit a conservation-based project. mw!F{pw  
Philip Seddon, of the University of Otago in New Zealand, said that ! if   
although most tourist projects conformed to basic guidelines on land Z;i:](  
use and not scaring wildlife, their full impact was rarely considered. sK{e*[I>W  
In Africa, gorillas have picked up parasites introduced to their 5R-6ji  
habitat by tourists and mongooses(蠓)have caught lung diseases from 4Ig;3 ^%71  
human beings. Experts said that the answer to the problems was better [GR; ?R5  
regulation and supervision of ecotourism. The Galapagos Islands, where .H|-_~Yx|  
visitor numbers are strictly controlled, is a good model uZ5p# M_  
41. Ecotourism is meant to ______. ` A>@]d  
A. have tourists help in the conservation of wildlife" . vV|hSc  
B.have wild species respond well to contact with human  \zkg  
C. make wild species reduce stress and abnormal behavior )UR7i8]!0  
D. make conservationists more concerned with wildlife r" y.KD^  
42. According to New Scientist, many ecotourist Projects ______. Za9qjBH   
A. really encourage people to protect wi1dlife and its habit ;'|Ey  
B. strictly follow environmentally friendly polices | (93gJ  
C. actually lack proper examination and official approval \85i+q:LuA  
D. seriously damage the habitats of endangered species N['  .BN  
43. What will happen to wildlife ultimately if the present [~HN<>L@C  
"ecotourism" practice goes on? {.yB'.k?  
 It will disturb their life. ?  t|[?  
 It will affect their health. ,F|f. 7;  
C. It will increase their stress. vzM ^$V  
D. It will threaten their survivalf ueudRb  
45. According to the passage, a solution to the "ecotourism" problem $i&zex{\  
is to ______. z_HdISy0  
A. encourage people to manage endangered species 1#x0q:6  
B. reduce the exposure of wildlife to human beings^ mt .sucT  
C. help wild animals increase their fitness A "]YM'.  
D. prevent wildlife from catching human disease .nJz G  
答案 BDC BAA ACDB(仅供参考) V88p;K$+  
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