题目内容
“If you live each day as if it were your last, someday you’ll most certainly be right.” It was the quote that 36 me deeply when I was 17, and since then, for the past 34 years, I have looked 37 the mirror every morning and asked myself: “ If today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I am about to do today?” And whenever the answer has been “ 38 ” for too many days in a 39 , I know I need to change something.
Remembering that I’ll be 40 soon is the most important thing I’ve ever known to help me to make a 41 in life because almost everything falls away in the face of death, 42 only what is truly important.
About a year ago the doctor 43 my illness as cancer and he even advised me to go home and get my affairs in 44 . I lived with that diagnosis all day. 45 , at last an 46 test showed that it was a very rare cancer which was 47 with surgery. After the surgery I feel and look fine now.
Death is the destination we all 48 . no one has ever escaped it, though. And that is __49__ it should be because death is very like the single best invention of life. It clears out the old to make way for the new. Right now the new is you, but someday not too long from now, you will __50__ become the old and be 51 away.
Your time is 52 , so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don't be 53 by dogma(教条), otherwise that means 54 with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner 55 . And most importantly, have the courage to follow your heart.
36. A. impressed B. worried C. discouraged D. disappointed
37. A. out B. into C. after D. over
38. A. Yes B. No C. Right D. Wrong
39. A. hurry B. moment C. line D. row
40. A. successful B. right C. missing D. dead
41. A. will B. fortune C. promise D. choice
42. A. proving B. leaving C. gaining D. abandoning
43. A. diagnosed B. confirmed C. doubted D. suspected
44. A. charge B. ruins C. order D. control
45. A. However B. But C. So D. Therefore
46. A. elementary B. advanced C. experienced D. experimental
47. A. incurable B. curable C. fatal D. changeable
48. A. want B. avoid C. share D. hate
49. A. whoever B. who C. as D. so
50. A. practically B. actually C. gradually D. eventually
51. A. cleared B. put C. died D. washed
52. A. limited B. limiting C. lacking D. rare
53. A. followed B. cheated C. excited D. trapped
54. A. fighting B. living C. dealing D. playing
55. A. voice B. sound C. love D. direction
ABBDD DBACA BBCCC AADBA
Why are we addicted to upgrades? According to Donald Norman, American author of the book The Design of Everyday Things, “planned obsolescence”(计划性报废) is the trick behind the upgrading culture of today’s consumer electronics industry.
The New York Times cited Norman last month, saying that electronics manufactures strategically release new upgrades periodically, both for hardware and software, so that customers on every level feel the need to buy the newest version.
“This is an old-time trick– they’re not inventing anything new,” he said.
Thomas Wensma, a Dutch designer, despises the “planned obsolescence” of companies, as recently reported by UK-based The Guardian.
Wensma said this is a wasteful system through which companies – many of them producing personal electronics – release shoddy products simply because “they know that, in six months or a year, they’ll put out a new one”.
But the new psychology of consumers is part of this system, as Wensma said to the newspaper: “We now want something new, something pretty, the next shiny thing.”
____________________
“It’s to the damage of the consumer and the environment,” as the New York Times quoted Norman. “But perhaps to the betterment of the stockholder.”
In its most recent fiscal(财务的) year, Apple’s profit margin was more than 21 percent, reported the Los Angeles Times. At Hewlett-Packard, the world’s biggest PC manufacturer, it was only 7 percent.
“Steven Jobs pushed the principle of ‘planned obsolescence’ to new heights,” the newspaper commented on the company’s profits and marketing strategy. “Apple’s annual upgrades of its products generate sales of millions of units as owners of one year’s MacBook or iPhone line up to buy the newest version, even when the changes are incremental.”
Peer pressure
As to Li Jijia, the need for upgrading his smart phone comes mainly from friends and classmates. When the majority of friends are switching to the latest devices, he worries about feeling left out.
“Some apps and games require better hardware to run,” said Li. “If you don’t join in, you lose part of the connection to your friends.”
【小题1】Donald Norman believes that electronics makers strategically release new upgrades periodically because __________.
A.customers need the latest version | B.technology is developing so fast |
C.they want to invent something new | D.they can make a lot of money |
A.positive | B.negative | C.indifferent | D.neutral |
A.Huge profits | B.Apple’s principle |
C.Environmental damage | D.Marketing strategy |
A.the new psychology of consumers is also to blame for the wasteful system |
B.young people are always fond of something new, pretty and shiny |
C.if you don’t upgrade your smart phone, you will lose contact with your friends |
D.needs of consumers help to promote the development of electronics industry |
Happy birthday
The China Nation Opera (CNO)will give a concert to celebrate its 50th birthday.
Different generations of CNO vocalists(歌手), like Li Guangxi, Yao Hong and Ma Mei, will present the concert which will feature both songs from famous Chinese operas like “The White-haired GM “and “The Hundredth Bride”, as well as, arias (咏叹调) of such Western opera classics as “Madame Butterfly”, “La Traviata” and “Rigoletto”.
Time/date : 7:30 pm, September 7, 8
Location : Tianqiao Theatre
Tel : 6551-4787, 8315-6170
Tickets : 60—50 yuan (US $7.2-60.2)
Folk music
A concert will be held to feature some recently-composed traditional Chinese music works.
The concert, given by the Folk Orchestra of the China Opera and Ballet Theatre, will include such pieces as “Memory of Childhood”, “Memorial Ceremony for God” and “Wine Song”.
Time/date : 7:30 pm, September 13
Location: Concert hall at the National Library of China
Tel: 6848-5462, 6841-9220
Tickets : 30-200 yuan (US $ 3.6—24.1)
Moon music
A concert of traditional Chinese music will be given on the eve of the Moon Festival which falls on September 21st this year.
The concert will feature a number of famous pieces centered on this theme of the moon, such as “Moonlight”, “Spring Night on a Moonlit River” and “Lofty Mountain and Flowing River.”
A number of established traditional Chinese music performers, like Zhou Yaokun and Fan Weiqing, will play solos(独奏)as well as collaborate(合奏)with the folk music orchestra.
Time/ date: 7:30 pm, September 21st
Location: Grand Theatre of the Cultural Palace of Nationalities
Tel: 6606-8888, 6606-9999
1. If you want to buy tickets for listening to the music “Memory of Childhood”, you will dial .
|
A. 6551-4787 |
B. 6848-5462 |
C. 8315-6170 |
D. 6606-9999 |
2. “Madame Butterfly” is .
|
A. a Chinese opera |
B. a song |
C. a piece of music |
D. a Western opera |
3. The passage will most probably appear in the column “ ”of a newspaper.
|
A. Animals |
B. People |
C. Entertainment |
D. Sports |