7.What Elizabeth Whelan
says means that ____ .
A.smoking makes people
poor and hopeless
B.smoking is very popular
with poor people
C.poor people should give
up smoking
D.rich people in America
never smoke
C
London-A morning's train ride away,across the channel,English
kids discuss the fact of Liverpool's football team in a Paris pub.
Some Parisians(巴黎人)even started to travel to work in London.
In the 19th century,Charles
Dickens compared the two cities,London and Paris,in“A Tale of Two Cities”.These
days,it might be“A Tale of One City”.
As jobs grew scarce(not
equal to the demand)at home over recent
years,perhaps 250,000 Frenchmen moved
across the channel.With an undersea tunnel,they could travel between cities in three hours.The European Union freed them from immigration and customs.
Paris,rich in beauty,is more stylish.But
London feels more full of life,and more fun until the
pubs shut down.
“For
me,the difference is that London is real,alive,” said Trevor Wheeler,a finacial consultant.
Chantal Jaouen,a
professional designer,agrees.“I am French,but I'll stay in London,”she said.
There is,of course,the other view.Julie
Lenoux is a student who moved to London two years ago.“I think people laugh more in Paris,”she said.
“Both
cities have changed beyond recognition,”said
Larry Collins,an author and sometimes
a Londoner.
Like most people who know both well,he finds the two now fit together comfortably.
“I
first fell in love with Paris in the 1950s.Things
are so much more ordered,and life is better.”
But certainly not cheaper.
In some parts of London,rents
can be twice those on Avenue Foch in Paris.
Deciding between London and Paris requires a lifestyle choice.
Like Daphne Benoit,a
French journalism student with perfect English,many young people are happy to be close enough so they don't
have to choose.
“I
love Paris,my little neighborhood,the way I can walk around a centre,but life is so organized,”she
said.“In London,you can be who you want.No one cares.”