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Good afternoon, everyone!

The topic of my speech today is ¡°Do trust us¡ªa generation born in the 90s¡±.

Living in an environment full of fiercer competition, we are faced with more problems in entering higher schools and getting employed.

_____________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________

Thank you for your listening.

¡¾´ð°¸¡¿

Good afternoon, everyone!

The topic of my speech today is ¡°Do trust us¡ªa generation born in the 90s¡±.

Living in an environment full of fiercer competition, we, a generation born in the 90s, are faced with more problems in entering higher schools and getting employed. Under these circumstances, we are developing our special manners and values, which have raised people¡¯s concern. They worry we care too much about ourselves and are unwilling to cooperate with others, which makes it hard for us to achieve success in whatever we do. Besides, they consider us as lacking in perseverance, and this is what it takes to do any job well. Without it, we may easily give up in time of difficulty. They are also concerned that we are so eager to win instant fame that we follow fashion blindly, which will in turn ruin our values and future.

However, we, a generation born in the 90s, have our own advantages despite some weaknesses. Firstly, we have the courage to meet challenges and take risks, which helps realize our dreams. In addition, we are quick-minded and creative. We can do our work more efficiently. Yet, we still need to learn more from those experienced.

Please do trust us!

Thank you for your listening!

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿I came to Shawshank when I was just twenty£¬and I am one of the few people in the ______ who is willing to admit what he did£®I ______ murder£®I put a large insurance policy on my wife£¬who was three years older than I was£¬and then I fixed the brakes of the car her father had given us ______ a wedding present£® It worked out ______ as I had planned£¬ ______that I hadn¡¯t planned on her stopping to pick up the neighbour woman and the woman¡¯s son on the way down Castle Hill and into town£®The brakes let go and the car crashed through the bushes£¬_____ speed£®Bystanders said it must have been doing fifty or better when it hit the base of the Civil War statue in the town and burst into ______£®

I ______ hadn¡¯t planned on getting caught£®My state has no death penalty£¬but I was tried for all three ______ and given three life sentences£¬to run one after the other£®That fixed up any ______ of parole(¼ÙÊÍ)I might have£¬for a long£¬long time£®The judge ______ what I had done¡®an extremely evil crime¡¯, and it was ,but it is also in the past now£®

Have I ______ myself£¬you ask? I don¡¯t know what that word means£¬at least as far as prisons and corrections go£®I think it¡¯s a politician¡¯s word£®It may have some other ______£¬and it may be that I will have a chance to find out£¬but that is the ______£®£®£®

I was young£¬good¡ªlooking£¬and from the ______ side of town£®I met a pretty£¬headstrong girl who lived in one of the fine old houses on Carbine Street£®She got pregnant later£®Her father was agreeable to the ______ if I would take a job in the company he owned and _____ my way up£®I found out that what he really had in mind was keeping me in his house and under his thumb£¬like a disagreeable ______ that has not quite been housebroken and which may bite£®Enough hate ____54__ piled up to cause me to do what I did£®

______ a second chance I would not do it again£¬but I'm not sure that means I am transformed£®

¡¾1¡¿A. prison B. town C. city D. situation

¡¾2¡¿A. attempted B. committed C. made D. admitted

¡¾3¡¿A. for B.with C.over D. as

¡¾4¡¿A.eventually B.roughly C. exactly D. especially

¡¾5¡¿A.besides B. except C. beside D. despite

¡¾6¡¿A.reducing B.building C. gathering D. rising

¡¾7¡¿A. flames B. crying C. laughter D. ruins

¡¾8¡¿A.even B.ever C.therefore D. also

¡¾9¡¿A. murderers B. deaths C. persons D.crimes

¡¾10¡¿A. chance B. choice C. case D. ability

¡¾11¡¿A. assumed B.regarded C. ensured D. called

¡¾12¡¿A. transformed B.skipped C.enjoyed D.resigned

¡¾13¡¿A. responsibility B. aspect C. meaning D. occasion

¡¾14¡¿A.case B. future C.problem D. dream

¡¾15¡¿A.rich B.other C. poor D.wealthy

¡¾16¡¿A. marriage B. relationship C. ownership D.engagement

¡¾17¡¿A. wind B. come C. work D.walk

¡¾18¡¿A. animal B. dog C. cat D. pet

¡¾19¡¿A. occasionally B. eventually C. permanently D. cautiously

¡¾20¡¿A. Given B.Considering C.Having D. Assuming

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿People are increasingly discontent£¨²»ÂúµÄ£© with the rich people, as is said in a new online poll£¨Í¶Æ±£©. The poll by the China Youth Daily in cooperation with Sina.com has highlighted£¨Í»³ö£¬Ç¿µ÷£© the apparent discontent over the country's widening income gap. Nearly 8,000 people filled in online questionnaires last week, and when asked to use three words to describe society's rich, the top responses were "extravagant"£¨Éݳ޵ģ©, "greedy" and "corrupt¡±. About 57 percent of those polled said that "extravagant" was the best word to describe the rich, followed closely by "greedy¡±.

Sarcastically£¨·í´ÌµÄÊÇ£©, despite their dissatisfaction, 93 percent of those polled wished they could be rich too, and that richer people should be "socially responsible¡±. Some 33 percent of respondents also praised rich people for being "smart¡±. Nearly 90 percent of respondents agreed that most people in society, including themselves, were willing to speak up for the poor but were reluctant to take action and actually do something for them.

The survey comes on the heels of a heated debate over comments made by renowned economist Mao Yushi, who said he was "speaking for the rich and working for the poor¡±. A report released by the Asian Development Bank last Wednesday revealed that China's Gini coefficient ¡ª¡ª an indicator of the wealth divide ¡ª¡ª rose from 0.407 in 1993 to 0.473 in 2004.

An earlier CASS report said that the richest 10 percent of Chinese families now own more than 40 percent of all private assets, while the poorest 10 percent share less than 2 percent of the total wealth. The income disparity£¨²»Ò»Ö¡¢²îÒ죩 of the country is close to that of Latin America, the report which came out in January, said.

It is hoped that the richer should be more socially responsible to give aid to those who need help to make this income disparity smaller and smaller and that the poorer should have a friendlier attitude towards the rich.

I. ¡¾1¡¿__________

People are more and more discontent with the rich people.

II. Details about the poll

It was ¡¾2¡¿_____________ by the China Youth Daily and sina.com

Nearly 8,000 people filled in questionnaires ¡¾3¡¿____________ last week.

There is an increasing dissatisfaction tendency toward the rich people.

Ironically, although they ¡¾4¡¿_________, 93 percent of the polled wished they could be rich too, and richer people should take ¡¾5¡¿________.

¢ó. A report ¡¾6¡¿._________ by the Asian Development

China¡¯s Gini coefficient increased by ¡¾7¡¿ ________ in 2004 when compared with that of 1993.

The richest 10 percent of Chinese families now possess more than 40 percent of private assets, while ¡¾8¡¿_________ 10 percent share less than 2 percent of the total wealth.

The income disparity of the country nearly approaches that of ¡¾9¡¿_________.

¢ô. ¡¾10¡¿___________

The rich can work together to shorten the income disparity.

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Sports account for a growing amount of income made on the sales of commercial time by television companies. Many television companies have used sports to attract viewers from particular sections of the general public£¬and then they have sold audiences to advertisers.

An attraction of sport programs for the major U. S. media companies is that events are often held on Saturday and Sunday afternoons¡ªthe slowest time periods of the week for general television viewing. Sport events are the most popular weekend programs, especially among male viewers who may not watch much television at other times during the week. This means the television networks are able to sell advertising time at relatively high prices during what normally would be dead time for programming.

Media corporations also use sports to attract commercial sponsors that might take their advertising dollars elsewhere if television stations did not report certain sports. The people in the advertising departments of major corporations realize that sports attract male viewers. They also realize that most business travelers are men and that many men make family decisions on the purchases of computers, cars and life insurance.

Golf and tennis are special cases for television programming. These sports attract few viewers, and the ratings (ÊÕÊÓÂÊ)are unusually low. However, the audience for these sports is attractive to certain advertisers. It is made up of people from the highest income groups in the United States, including many lawyers and business managers. This is why television reporting of golf and tennis is sponsored by companies selling high-priced cars£¬business and personal computers£¬and holiday trips. This is also why the networks continue to carry these programs regardless of low ratings. Advertisers are willing to pay high fees to reach high-income consumers and those managers who make decisions to buy thousands of ¡° company cars¡± and computers. With such viewers£¬these programs don't need high ratings to stay on the air.

¡¾1¡¿Television sport programs on weekend afternoons __________.

A. result in more sport events

B. get more viewers to play sports

C. make more people interested in television

D. bring more money to the television networks

¡¾2¡¿Why would weekend afternoons become dead time without sport programs?

A. Because there would be few viewers.

B. Because the advertisers would be off work.

C. Because television programs would go slowly.

D. Because viewers would pay less for watching television.

¡¾3¡¿In many families, men make decisions on __________.

A. holiday trips

B. sports viewing

C. television shopping

D. expensive purchases

¡¾4¡¿The ratings are not important for golf and tennis programs because __________.

A. their advertisers are carmakers

B. their viewers are attracted by sports

C. their advertisers target at rich people

D. their viewers can afford expensive cars

¡¾5¡¿What is the passage mainly about?

A. Television ratings are determined by male viewers.

B. Rich viewers contribute most to television companies.

C. Sports are gaining importance in advertising on television.

D. Commercial advertisers are the major sponsors of sport events.

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ It is a bright morning in the Ethiopian countryside. Yohannes walks beside a pair of donkeys that are pulling a two-wheeled cart. They arrive at the agricultural town of Awassa where Yohannes opens the sides of the cart to display, not the usual vegetables or tools, but children¡¯s books. This is the Donkey Mobile Library, the first of its kind in Ethiopia and one of only a few in the world.

Yohannes was born in Ethiopia, North Africa, but trained to be a librarian in the USA and returned to Ethiopia years ago. The cart is full of picture books donated by American libraries, teachers and school children.

Yohannes arranges small painted benches in the shade of the trees, and suddenly Ethiopian children come shouting and racing down every road and path. It¡¯s mobile library day! They circle the bookshelves with great excitement. Until the Donkey Mobile Library began its regular two-monthly visits, many of these children had never seen a book.

¡°Without books, education is very dull, like food without salt. You can survive but you can¡¯t really come alive,¡± says Yohannes. ¡°The ability to read is the basis for greater productivity, better health and longer life. Even though the children lack material goods, with books they can imagine a world of possibilities.¡±

Yohannes first worked in the children¡¯s section of the main library in America. Surrounded by books he had never seen before, he realized how joyful and imaginative children¡¯s literature is. He says, ¡°I always thought of Ethiopia. But how could I bring children¡¯s books to my home country when it had almost no libraries to keep the books in?¡±

He contacted Jane Kurtz, a writer born in America but brought up in Ethiopia, and together they created the Donkey Mobile Library. The children say that the Library has given them ideas about what they might do in the future. A child called Dareje wants to be a scientist and find a cure for life-threatening diseases. An eleven year-old girl, Fikerte, wants to do research about the moon and discover new facts about outer space. Tamrat, aged 10, comes every time.

¡°What brings you back here time and time again?¡± the librarian asks him.

¡°The stories,¡± Tamrat replies instantly.

¡¾1¡¿How do the children feel when they see the Donkey Mobile Library?

A. Curious. B. Surprised.

C. Interested. D. Excited.

¡¾2¡¿We can conclude from the passage that .

A. Ethiopian children have no idea about their future

B. Yohannes and Kurtz share similar life experiences

C. donkey carts in Awassa usually carry vegetables and tools

D. most books in the Donkey Mobile Library were bought in America

¡¾3¡¿According to the passage, the Donkey Mobile Library .

A. visits the countryside every day

B. benefits Ethiopian children a lot

C. was created by Yohannes himself

D. was the first of its kind in the world

¡¾4¡¿Where is the passage most likely to have been taken from?

A. A news report. B. A book review.

C. A historical story. D. An advertisement.

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