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[主观题]

When Donald Olayer enrolled in nursing school nine years ago, his father took it hard. "He

re's my father, a steelworker, hearing about other steelworkers' sons who were becoming welders or getting football scholarships, "Mr. Olayer recalls. "The thought of his son becoming a nurse was too much."

Today, Mr. Olayer, a registered nurse trained as an anesthetist, earns about $ 30 000 a year at Jameson Memorial Hospital in New Castle, Pennsylvania. His father, he says, has "done an about face". Now he tells the guys he works with that their sons, who can't find jobs even after four years of college, should have become nurses.

That's not an unusual turnabout nowadays. Just as women have gained a footing in nearly every occupation once reserved for men, men can be found today working routinely in a wide variety of jobs once held nearly exclusively by women. The men are working as receptionists and flight attendants, servants, and even "Kelly girls".

The Urban Institute, a research group in Washington, recently estimated that the number of male secretaries rose 24% to 31 000 in 1978 from 25000 in 1972. The number of male telephone operators over the same span rose 38%, and the number of male nurses94 %. Labor experts expect the trend to continue.

For one thing, tightness in the job market seems to have given men an additional incentive to take jobs where they can find them. Although female-dominated office and service jobs for the most part rank lower in pay and status, "they're still there, "says June O'Neill, director of program and policy research at the institute. Traditionally male blue-collar jobs, meanwhile, aren't increasing at all.

At the same time, she says, "The outlooks of young people are different. "Younger men with less rigid views on what constitutes male or female work "may not feel there's such a stigma to working in a female-dominated field".

Although views have softened, men who cross the sexual segregation line in the job market may still face discrimination and ridicule. David Anderson, a 36-year-old former high school teacher, says he found secretarial work "a way out of teaching and into the business world". He had applied for work at 23 employment agencies for "management training jobs that didn't exist", and he discovered that "the best skill I had was being able to type 70 words a minute".

Mr. Anderson's boss was a woman. When she asked him to fetch coffee, the other secretaries' eyebrows went up. Sales executives who came in to see his boss, he says, "couldn't quite believe that I could and would type, take dictation, and answer the phones."

He took a job as a secretary to the marketing director of a New York publishing company. But he says he could feel "a lot of people wondering what I was doing there and if something was wrong with me".

Males sometimes find themselves mistaken for higher-status professionals. Anthony Shee, a flight attendant with U. S. Air Inc. , has been mistaken for a pilot. Mr. Anderson, the secretary, says he found himself being "treated in executive tones whenever I wore a suit".

In fact the men in traditional female jobs often move up the ladder fast. Mr. Anderson actually worked only seven months as a secretary. Then he got a higher-level, better-paying job as a placement counselor at an employment agency. "I got a lot of encouragement to advance, "he says, "including job tips from male executives who couldn't quite see me staying a secretary."

Experts say, for example, that while men make up only a small fraction of elementary school teachers, a disproportionate number of elementary principals are men. Barbara Bergmann, an economist at the University of Maryland who has studied sex segregation at work believes that's partly because of "sexism in the occupational structure" and partly because men have bee

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更多“When Donald Olayer enrolled in nursing school nine years ago, his father took it hard. "He”相关的问题

第1题

In 1933 an unknown American called Clarence Nash went to see the filmmaker Walt Disney
. He had an unusual voice and he wanted to work in Disney's cartoon(动画片) film for children. When Walt Disney heard Nash's voice, he said,"Stop! That's our duck!"

The duck was the now-famous Donald Duck, who first appeared in 1934 in the film The Wise Little Hen. Donald lived in an old houseboat and wore his sailor jacket and hat. Later that year he became a star after an eight-minute Mickey Mouse film. The cinema audience liked him because he was lazy and greedy, and because he lost his temper very quickly. And they loved his voice when he became angry with Mickey's eight nephews. Soon Donald was more popular than Mickey Mouse himself, probably because he wasn't a goody-goody like Mickey.

In the 1930s, 40s and 50s Donald and his friends Mickey, Goofy and Pluto made hundreds of Disney cartoons. He also made educational films about the place of the USA in the world and safety in the home. Then in 1966 Donald Duck and his voice disappeared---there were no more new cartoons.

Clarence Nash died in February, 1985. But today's children can still see the old cartoons on television and hear that famous voice.

(1)Walt Disney made Donald Duck film.()

(2)The first Donald Duck film was made in 1934.()

(3)Clarence Nash was a film-maker.()

(4)The underlined word "audience" in the second paragraph means readers.()

(5)The underlined word "goody-goody" in the second paragraph means a person who likes to appear to be faultless in behavior.()

此题为判断题(对,错)。

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第2题

听力原文:During a 1995 roof collapse, a firefighter named Donald Herbert was left brain da

听力原文: During a 1995 roof collapse, a firefighter named Donald Herbert was left brain damaged. For ten years, he was unable to speak. Then, one Saturday morning, he did something that shocked his family and doctors. He started speaking. "I want to talk to my wife" Donald Herbert said out of the blue. Staff members of the nursing home where he has lived for more than seven years, raced to get Linda Herbert on the telephone. "It was the first of many conversations the 44-year-old patient had with his family and friends during the 14 hours stretch," Herbert's uncle Simon Menka said. "How long have I been away?" Herbert asked. "We told him almost ten years," the uncle said, "he thought it was only three months."

Herbert was fighting a house fire December 29, 1995, when the roof collapsed, burying him underneath. After going without air for several minutes, Herbert was unconscious for two and a half months and has undergone therapy ever since. News accounts in the days and years after his injury, described Herbert as blind and with little if any memory. A video shows him receiving physical therapy but apparently unable to communicate and with little awareness of his surroundings. Menka declined to discuss his nephew's current condition or whether the apparent progress is continuing. "The family was seeking privacy while doctors evaluated Herbert", he said. As word of Herbert's progress spread, visitors streamed into the nursing home. "He's resting comfortably," the uncle told them.

(33)

A.He suffered a nervous breakdown.

B.He was wrongly diagnosed.

C.He was seriously injured.

D.He developed a strange disease.

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第3题

Donald operates an accounting firm and has an annual summer party for the employees and
their families. He believes the party benefits his employees. The cost of the food and beverages served at the party was $4,000. Donald also pays a band $500 to play at the party.. How much of the total cost can Donald deduct?()

A.$0

B.$2,000

C.$2,500

D.$4,000

E.$4,500

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第4题

What best describes the society about which David Donald wrote?

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第5题

What is the main finding of Donald L. McCabe's surveys?A.More undergraduates admitted to c

What is the main finding of Donald L. McCabe's surveys?

A.More undergraduates admitted to copying a few sentences in written assignments.

B.Less undergraduates admitted to copying a few sentences in written assignments.

C.More undergraduates take plagiarism from the Web for granted nowadays.

D.Less undergraduates are copying from the Web than earlier in the decade.

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第6题

2018年发射的PSP卫星是以哪位科学家的名字命名的()。

A.Donald Trump

B.Eugene Parker

C.Ludwig Biermann

D.Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar

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第7题

A.Turner is more interested in the notice of "Open for Devon Cream Teas" than the Town

Hall.

B.Donald does not watch television too often because he believes that television programs do not provide enough background for what happened in the world.

C.Donald thinks that a Devon cream tea is better than a tin of cold beans.

D.Turner asks Donald to get him a newspaper because he wants to know about the weather.

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第8题

听力原文:W: Good morning, sir. Can I help you?M: I want to make enquiries about leaving my

听力原文:W: Good morning, sir. Can I help you?

M: I want to make enquiries about leaving my car with you. You see, I'm going abroad. I don't want to take the car but I'll need it when I get back.

W: I see, sir. Well, we can offer you full parking facilities for as long as you wish.

M: Good. I'm going to Paris for about a couple of weeks.

W: Right, so how long do you want to leave the car with us?

M: Well, I'm flying to Paris on the 5th and coming back on the 19th -- that's fourteen days, isn't it?

W: That works out at fifteen days' parking, sir. Let me show you our ,scale of charges. We have a minimum fee of £ 6.50, but for fifteen days it would only cost you £ 24.75.

M: Hmm — fifteen. Ok.

W: Now, if you'll just come this way, sir, we'll complete the booking form. Could I have your name?

M: Brown. Donald Brown.

W: And the make of car, sir?

M: Just a Mini Metro. Look here, this isn't going to take much longer, is it?

W: Only a minute or so, sir. Your departure date is May 5th, I think you said.

M: Yes, yes, the 5th, that's a Friday.

W: Friday, 5th of May. Well, we like our customers to check their cars in here at least twenty minutes before check-in time. We have a minibus to take you to the airport. It's only about ten minutes drive.

M: So, I ought to be here about ten past eleven.

W: It's safer before that. We do get very busy. And you're returning on the 19th?

M: Yes, that's right...

(20)

A.Selling his car.

B.Leaving his car in a parking service company.

C.Having his car serviced.

D.Hiring a car abroad.

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第9题

Although there are body languages that can cross cultural boundaries, culture is still a s
ignificant factor in all body languages. This is particularly true of personal space needs. For example, Dr. Edward Hall has shown that in Japan crowding together is a sign of warm and pleasant intimacy. In certain situations, Hall believes that the Japanese prefer crowding.

Donald Keene, who wrote Living Japan, notes the fact that in the Japanese language there is no word for privacy. Still, this does not mean that there is no concept of the need to be apart from others. To the Japanese, privacy exists in terms of his house. He considers this area to be his own, and he dislikes invasion of it. The fact that he crowds together with others does not contradict his need for living space.

Dr. Hall sees this as a reflection of the Japanese concept of space. Westerners, he believed, see space as the distance between objects; to them space is empty. The Japanese, on the other hand, see space as having as much meaning as their flower arrangements and art, and the shape of their gardens as well, where units of space balance the areas containing flowers or plants.

Like the Japanese, the Arabs too prefer to be close to one another. But while in public they are crowded together, in privacy, they prefer a great deal of space. The traditional or wealthy Arab house is large and empty, with family often crowded together in one small area of it. The Arabs do not like to be alone, and even in their spacious houses they will huddle together.

The difference between the Arab huddling and the Japanese crowding is a deep thing. The Arabs like to touch his companion. The Japanese, in their closeness, preserve a formality and a cool dignity. They manage to touch and still keep rigid boundaries. The Arabs push these boundaries aside.

Along with this closeness, there is a pushing and shoving in the Arab world that many Westerners find uncomfortable, even unpleasant. To an American, for example, there are personal boundaries even in a public place. When he is waiting in line, he believes that his place there is his alone, and may not be invaded by another. The Arab has no concept of privacy in the public place, and if he can rush his way into a line, he feels perfectly within his rights to do so. To an American, the body is sacred; he dislikes being touched by a stranger, and will apologize if he touches another accidentally. To an Arab, bodily contact is accepted.

Hall points out that an Arab needs at times to be alone, no matter how close he wishes to be, physically, to his fellow men. To be alone, he simply cuts off the lines of communication. He retreats into himself, mentally and spiritually, and this withdrawal is respected by his companions. If an American were with an Arab who withdrew in this way, he would regard it as impolite, as lack of respect, even as an insult.

What's the main idea of the passage?

A.Arabs and Japanese have different ideas of privacy.

B.Body languages reflect cultural concepts.

C.Cultural differences between the West and the East.

D.People in different cultures have different concepts of space.

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第10题

Some of the concerns surrounding Turkey's application to join the European Union, to be vo
ted on by the EU's Council of Ministers on December 17th, are economic—in particular, the country's relative poverty. Its GDP per head is less than a third of the average for the 15 pre-2004 members of the EU. But it is not far off that of one of the ten new members which joined on May 1st 2004 (Latvia), and it is much the same as those of two countries, Bulgaria and Romania, which this week concluded accession talks with the EU that could make them full members on January 1 st 2007.

Furthermore, the country's recent economic progress has been, according to Donald Johnston, the secretary-general of the OECD, "stunning". GDP in the second quarter of the year was 13.4% higher than a year earlier, a rate of growth that no EU country comes close to matching. Turkey's inflation rate has just fallen into single figures for the first time since 1972, and this week the country reached agreement with the IMF on a new three-year, $10 billion economic program that will, according to the IMF's managing director, Rodrigo Rato, "help Turkey... reduce inflation towards European levels, and enhance the economy's resilience (弹性)".

Resilience has not historically been the country's economic strong point. As recently as 2001, GDP fell by over 7%. It fell by more than 5% in 1994, and by just under 5% in 1999. Indeed, throughout the 1990s growth oscillated like an electrocardiogram recording a violent heart attack. This irregularity has been one of the main reasons (along with red tape and corruption) why the country has failed dismally to attract much-needed foreign direct investment. Its stock of such investment (as a percentage of GDP) is lower now than it was in the 1980s, and annual inflows have scarcely ever reached $1 billion (whereas Ireland attracted over $25 billion in 2003, as did Brazil in every year from 1998 to 2000).

One deterrent to foreign investors is due to disappear on January 1 st 2005. On that day, Turkey will take away the right of virtually every one of its citizens to call themselves a millionaire. Six naughts will be removed from the face value of the lira; one unit of the local currency will henceforth be worth what lm is now--i.e., about C0.53 ($0.70).

Goods will have to be priced in both the new and old lira for the whole of the year, but foreign bankers and investors can begin to look forward to a time in Turkey when they will no longer have to juggle mentally with indeterminate strings of zeros.

The mood of the workers was pessimistic in that______.

A.their plant would go to bankruptcy

B.they would be unemployed temporarily

C.new models and investment would bring about jobs cut

D.they are confronting the threat of losing jobs

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