题目内容

M: Yes. I feel a totally different life when I have our company.
W: Could you give me some suggestions on how to be a good leader?
M: I think the biggest mistake many people have is that they don't realize there are two parts of leadership. I think leadership comprises visionary direction and implementation.
W: What are they exactly?
M: [22] Visionary direction part is where we are going. What are we trying to accomplish? And the leaders have to take a major role in setting those. And once the goals are clear, [23] the second part of leadership is how to get there.
W: What's your outlook on those who want to lead and organize their own businesses?
M: Well, I think [24] first of all you have to find something you love to do. Then you have to find out how you can make a business out of that. Then come the big issues in running a business.
W: That is the thing I am most concerned.
M: Not to be eliminated, you need a good finance. You need to have some people to help get off the ground and then you gradually learn about managing and leading people.
W: Say I am someone who is just now entering the work force. I am excited and passionate about what I have chosen to do but somehow I have to keep the passion. How can I maintain that 'kind of excitement so that I can excel?
M: I think [25] the best advice is that when you go to a iob, find somebody who is older than you, who has more experience than you and ask him if he would be your counselor.
(23)

A. The goals of the employees.
B. The objectives of the organization.
C. The structure of the organization.
D. The personal prospect of the leader.

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A.Excreting salt through gill cells.B.Losing more water to their surroundings.C.Drinki

A. Excreting salt through gill cells.
B. Losing more water to their surroundings.
C. Drinking more water.
Diluting the amount of salt.

Section B
Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice.
The Japanese and U. S. governments both studied the concept of "wired cities" using cable TV to deliver entertainment, information and educational services similar to those discussed today in the context of the digital revolution. On the basis of these hopes, the US government allowed the cable companies to set up local monopolies. In the event, these never delivered anything other than television with the understandable justification that user trials found minimal consumer interest in any of the other service, including interactive TV.
What, then, is different this time?
First, computers have become more powerful, cheaper, smaller, easier to use (although they still have a long way to go on this front) and more widely distributed, especially within businesses and especially in the U. S. Many of us now have personal computer (PCs) at home and also interact with computer technology in many other guises-games machines, automatic teller machines (ATMs) and the fifty microcomputers in a typical modern car.
Second, the Internet. The Internet is a loose network of networks which enables PCs in most large organizations and many homes and small businesses (using a standard connection to a telephone line! to communicate with each other around the world at low cost. The Internet belongs to no one (although it uses telecommunication links which do)and has no central authority; it is really a set of "communication protocols", more like a language than a physical network, which means that any computer, whatever its internal language is, can communicate with any other. The Internet has existed for many years as an academic network, but took off as a mass application only in the mid-1990s. This was partly because of the invention of new software (the World Wide Web and "browsers") which made it easier to find useful information and move between different sites.
The Internet exhibits a characteristic crucial for all successful communication networks: that their value to each member increases with the number of other members. The same happened with telephones and, more recently, fax machines: neither would be useful except as a status symbol if no one else had one. Once enough other people were on the Web, it became worthwhile for yet more people. In reality, despite all the talk of Websites, "surfing" and cyber-commerce, the main way most people(including the authors)use the Internet today is for electronic mail (e-mail)-typed messages and documents sent from one PC to another. The e-mail population reached" critical mass" in about the mid-1990s.
The" wired cities" in the United States were not constructed, ______.

A. as the Japanese had monopolized its TV cables
B. as the Americans talked too much without doing any practical work
C. because monopolies did great harm to the otherwise prosperous market
D. because consumers showed little interest in other media than television

By saying that"advertising makes a positive contribution to our pockets", the author means

A. advertisements are informative
B. advertisements are entertaining
C. advertisements save money for consumers
D. advertisements serve the whole community

听力原文: To finish today's program, I want to tell you about the Waterside Shopping Centre, near Northport, which I visited last week. It has something for everyone and 1 would recommend it for a day out. It's taken three years to build [29]and final1y opened three weeks ago, two months later than planned.
Firstly, getting there; there are organized coach trips from most towns in the area but they leave early and come home very late, [30]so I drove. There are 12,000 free parking spaces,so parking is no problem. You can also get there by train, but the station is 15 minutes from Waterside by bus, and the buses are really crowded, so you sometimes have a long wait.
The shopping centre is arranged on three levels. You'll find all your favorites here. In fact if you want to buy a pair of shoes there are 15 different shops to choose from on levels one and two. When you run out of money there are seven different banks, but collect your money before you get to the third level as there aren't any banks up there. [3l]On that level, however, there are several restaurants, as well as a cinema with seven screens. And don't get lost like I did, go to the information desk on the first level and get a map.
Before you go back to your car or the bus—and in fact it might be better to do this before you go shopping and have too much to carry—go and see the lake. [32]Take a walk or have a go at fishing, sailing or windsurfing if you have time. Or you can rest your tired feet and watch the birds and ducks, but you are asked not to feed them.
(33)

A. Last week.
B. Three weeks ago.
C. Two months ago.
D. Three years ago.

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