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"Golden week" tests HK Disneyland's popularityHaving over 10 million visitors to Hong Kong

"Golden week" tests HK Disneyland's popularity

Having over 10 million visitors to Hong Kong yearly, the mainland has been deemed as a natural market for the city's Disneyland.

However, the idea is once again put into test when low attendance was reported in the park during the ongoing Labor Day "golden week" holidays.

"Golden Week" Sees Flat Reaction

While Hong Kong expecting to receive about 420,000 visitors from the mainland, Disneyland also announced the seven-day holidays as its "golden week" for guests.

Related publicity activities included custom-made shining golden dresses for Mickey and Minnie Mouses, set meal of Chinese dishes and uplifted ticket price for special dates.

Compared to the aggressive promotion, the theme park's "golden week" kicked off in a quiet and orderly way due to low attendance of visitors.

On Monday, officially the first day of the holidays, neither long lines nor big crowds were formed in the park.

A handful of working reporters and local cable TV's satellite transition disks became so remarkable against an almost empty Main Street USA in the park.

At the entrance of several popular games, it took only five to ten minutes waiting for visitors to have a ride, which on some weekends would have people stand in line for at least half an hour.

Until Wednesday, tickets to the park for the rest of the "golden week" are still available for on-line purchase.

It's a sharp contrast to what occurred in the Chinese New Year holidays only three months ago, when Disneyland closed its gate to hundreds of visitors after the park reaching its maximum reception capabilities soon after opening.

The waiting crowd, mostly tourists from mainland with advance-purchased tickets, turned into rally ramming against the gate, climbing over the rail or passing their kids over the fence.

While local press hinted that memory of the incident caused the low turnout of the "golden week", Disneyland firmly denied the connection.

The park's executive vice-president Bill Ernest said it's just the beginning of the seven-day vacation and the park was expecting" steady buildup of visitors" over the week.

At least, Mr. Zhao and his families from Shanghai were not intimidated by what occurred in Disneyland in the Chinese New Year.

"We know that, but guess many people won't come here for the sake. That's why here we are," he said while taking photos for his daughter in front of a spring with Mickey's stature.

High Price a Concern

However, Mickey Mouse's magic isn't strong enough to get every mainland tourist forget the ticket incident or overcome the high price of Disneyland ticket for holidays.

Out of the gate of Disneyland's rivalry, Hong Kong Ocean Park, a woman named Lai said that her family had no plan to visit Disneyland. "We heard it's over packed and expensive," she said with her child around.

When asked whether her daughter wanted to visit Disneyland and have a close look at the Mickey Mouse, Lai answered for the seven-year-old, "No, we are fine here. Disneyland is no fun." While answering so, the mother clutched the kid's hand and used her body hiding the girl.

Disneyland charged 350 HK do]lam(45 U.S. dollars) for one adult on special dates such as the "golden week" holidays, while one adult ticket of Ocean Park costs only 185 HK dollars(24 U.S. dollars) all the time.

While Disneyland defending its entrance fee with promise of wonderful experience and quality service, the price factor still weighs heavy in mainland visitor's head, or at least those going to the Ocean Park only.

A tourist guide named Qian said that most of her guests chose Ocean Park rather than Disneyland, for the latter's price ticket was "so high

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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更多“"Golden week" tests HK Disneyland's popularityHaving over 10 million visitors to Hong Kong”相关的问题

第1题

请将下面这段话翻译成英文: 黄金周(the Golden Week)是指连续7天的全国性假期。1999年,中国开始

请将下面这段话翻译成英文: 黄金周(the Golden Week)是指连续7天的全国性假期。1999年,中国开始推行黄金周政策。从那以后,黄金周通过鼓励人们旅游和消费,丰富了人们的日常生活,促进了社会经济的发展。然而不可否认,黄金周带来的问题也日益明显:交通拥堵、旅游景点人满为患以及物价上涨。2012年,中国政府宣布重大节假日期间全国高速公路免收通行费,其中就包括春节和国庆两个7天假期,这一政策从某种程度上又导致了出行车辆和人数的增加。

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第2题

Fifty volunteers were alphabetically divided into two equal groups, Group A to participate
in a 7 week exercise program, and Group B to avoid deliberate (故意的,蓄意的) exercise of any sort during those 7 weeks. On the day before the exercise program began, all 50 men participated in a step-test. This consisted of stepping up and down on a 16-inch bench at 30 steps a minute for 5 minutes. One minute after completion of the step-test, file pulse rate of each subject was taken and recorded. This served as the pretest for tile experiment. For the next 7 weeks, subjects in the experimental group (Group A) rode an Exercycle (a motor-driven bicycle-type exercise machine) for 15 minutes each day. The exercise schedule called for riders to ride relaxed during the first day's ride, merely holding on to the handle bars and foot pedals as tile machine moved. Then, (or the next 3 days, they rode relaxed for 50 seconds of each minute, and pushed, pulled, anti pedaled actively for 10 seconds of each minute. The ratio of active riding was increased every few clays, so that by the third week it was half of each minute, and by the seventh week the riders were performing 15 solid minutes of active riding.

At the end of the 7 weeks, the step-test was again given to both groups of subjects, and their pulses taken. The post-exercise pulse rates of subjects in the experimental group were found to have decreased an average of 30 heart beats per minute, with the lowest decrease 28 and the highest decrease 46. The pulse rates of subjects in the control group remained the same or changed no more than 4 beats, with an average difference between the initial and final tests of zero.

Tile step-test was given ______.

A.after each exercise period

B.at the beginning and at the end of the seven week period

C.only once, at the beginning of the seven week period

D.twice to the men in Group A and once to the men in Group B

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第3题

Summer is almost here, which means it is time to sign(报名) your children up for swim cl
asses again at the Community Pool. Classes begin on Monday, May 1, and will continue throughout the summer. Fifteen swim classes are being offered. Each class lasts ten hours. A new class starts each week of the summer. Each class costs $20. The pool is big enough for six students per class.

Classes will increase in difficulty each week. The first week is for children up to six years old. The last week is for advanced swimmers who want to improve their race and endurance skills.

Students can sign up for as many classes as they like, but they must pass the skills level test. For example, students who sign up for Level 4 (Stroke Readiness) must show their certificate(证书) for completing Level 3 or must demonstrate the front crawl and backstroke. Children cannot sign up for a level they are not ready for. Children who have never attended Community Pool classes must show up April 29 or 30 for a swim skills evaluation(评估). Instructors will rate the students and assign them to a particular skill level.

Swim classes are fun for all. Children learn new skills and make new friends. Parents get to meet other parents in the community. Swimming, like bicycling, is a healthy and valuable skill that, once learned, is never forgotten.

“It's a joy to teach young children,” said Ginger, the lead instructor for swimming programs. “More than half of them are terrified when we put them into the water the first time. Two months later, they're begging their parents to go to the pool every day.”

29、How long will swim classes continue?()

A.The whole summer

B.The whole week

C.Ten hours

D.Fifteen hours

30、How many swim classes are being offered ?()

A.Six

B.Ten

C.Fifteen

D.Twenty

31、What do children have to do before signing up for a swim class?()

A.Take a level test

B.Take all level tests

C.Learn the free style. first

D.Choose a good instructor

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第4题

听力原文:If you've been on campus for very long, I'm certain that you've already heard abo

听力原文: If you've been on campus for very long, I'm certain that you've already heard about this course. You may know that last semester about fifty percent of the students enrolled in my course failed it. Let me explain how this came about before you jump to any conclusion. In the first place, since this is a composition class, I expect my students to follow certain rules of formality. Unfortunately, many students today dislike having to follow rules of any kind, especially those which they may feel to be unnecessary. For example, I ask that each of your papers be typed and centered on the paper correctly. I count off points for various kinds of mistakes. A misspelled word will cost you 5 points. You've lost 25 points if you've misspelled five words. If you write an incomplete sentence, you've lost 10 points. If you give me two complete sentences as one without adequate punctuation, you've lost 15 points. I do not accept late papers. You will receive a zero for any theme which you fail to submit on time. I expect you to read each assignment. To make certain that you have read the assignment, I will give you a short unannounced quiz from time to time. This class meets on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. You will have a total of six major tests throughout the semester. Your final grade will be based on an average of these major tests, the pop tests, and eight written themes. If you have any questions at any time, you can see me on Tuesday. My office is on the second floor of this building. Your assignment for Wednesday is to read Hemingway's short story on page 55. Friday will be the last class day of this week, so you can expect to write a short in-class theme for me then.

(19)

A.10 points.

B.2 points.

C.15 points.

D.5 points.

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第5题

听力原文: If you've been on campus for very long, I'm certain that you've already heard ab
out this course. You may know that last semester about fifty percent of the students enrolled in my course failed it. Let me explain how this came about before you jump to any conclusions. In the first place, since this is a composition class, I expect my students to follow certain rules of formality. Unfortunately, many students today dislike having to follow rules of any kind, especially those which they may feel to be unnecessary. For example, I ask that each of your papers be typed and centered on the paper correctly. I count off points for various kinds of mistakes. A misspelled word will cost you 5 points. You've lost 25 points if you've misspelled five words. If you write an incomplete sentence, you've lost 10 points. If you give me two complete sentences as one without adequate punctuation, you've lost 15 points. I do not accept late papers. You will receive a zero for any theme which you fail to submit on time. I expect you to read each assignment. To make certain that you have read the assignment, I will give you a short unannounced quiz from time to time. This class meets on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. You will have a total of six major tests throughout the semester. Your final grade will be based on an average of these major tests, the pop tests, and eight written themes. If you have any questions at any time, you can see me on Tuesdays. My office is on the second floor of this building. Your assignment, for Wednesday is to read Hemingway's short story on page 55.Friday will be the last class day of this week, so you can expect to write a short in-class theme for me then. That's all for today. I'll see you on Wednesday.

(30)

A.10 points.

B.2 points.

C.15 points.

D.5 points.

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第6题

Fifty volunteers were alphabetically divided into two equal groups. Group A is to partic
ipate in a 7-week exercise program and Group B is to avoid planned exercise of any sort during those 7 weeks. On the day before the exercise program began, all 50 men participated in a step-test. This consisted of stepping up and down on a 16-inch bench, at 30 steps a minute for 5 minutes. One minute after completion of the step-test, the pulse rate of each subject (被测试者 ) was taken and recorded. This served as the pretest for the experiment. For the next 7 weeks, subjects in Group A rode an Exercycle (机器脚踏车 ) for 15 minutes each day, while Group B remained doing no planned exercises.At the end of the 7 weeks, the step-test was again given to both groups of subjects, and their pulses taken. The post-exercise pulse rates of subjects in the experimental were found to have decreased an average of 30 heart beats per minutes, with the lowest decrease 28 and the highest decrease 46. The pulse rates of subjects in the control group remained the same or changed no more than 4 beats, with an average difference between the initial and final tests of zero.

1).The step-test was given ()

A、after each exercise period

B、at the beginning and at the end of the seven week period

C、only once, at the beginning of the seven week period

D、twice to the men in Group A and once to the men in Group B

2).The post-exercise pulse rates of Group B were found on the average to have ()

A、not changed

B、gone down 28 beats per minute

C、gone down 30 beats per minute?

D、gone down 4 beats per minute

3).How many people were in each group? ()

A、100

B、50

C、25

D、15

4).What did Group A in their program? They ()every day.

A、stepped up and down on a bench

B、pushed and pulled on exercise handles

C、rode on an Exercycle

D、refrained from any exercise

5).When was pulse taken? ()

A、After every exercise period

B、Every day

C、Every time the ratio of active riding was increased

D、After the step-test

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第7题

Manhattan trigonometry (三解法) teacher Terry Webber takes his students to the East River

Manhattan trigonometry (三解法) teacher Terry Webber takes his students to the East River every year and has them measure the distance across with just a ruler and a protractor (量角器).

The students then ride the Staten Island ferry and, knowing only the height of the Statue of Liberty; calculate the distance between Staten Island and Manhattan.

That's the kind of out-of-the-box approach that Webber and other critics fear will go out the window with the sweeping school reforms announced this week by Mayor Bloomberg and Schools Chancellor Joel Klein.

"We won't have time," Webber said., "We will have to teach them to memorize certain bits of information, then say, 'Bubble (泡沫,幻想的计划) in this test. '"

The reforms--including a more rigorous tenure (任期) review for new teachers and a system in which the school bureaucracy (官僚机构) is slashed (削减) and principals are freed from administrative supervision--are largely made possible by an "accountability" system that will measure everything that goes on in schools, reducing the data to easy-to-understand letter grades: A, B, C, D or F.

Principals whose schools get Fs could face firing. New teachers whose students aren't scoring well could be denied tenure.

And administrators will be able to survey large swaths of the city's 1,400 schools with greater efficiency.

The letter grades will factor attendance rates and the results of parent and teacher surveys, but will primarily hinge on test scores.

Students also will be tested throughout the school year so their progress can be measured and posted online for parents.

"This online system will track progress in real time and take the guesswork out of what good teaching looks like--thus enabling teachers to tailor instruction to the particular needs of each student," Klein said yesterday.

But teachers like Webber say not all of the things kids need to learn can be reduced to data.

"Some kids are better at making presentations. Some kids are better at analyzing things."

Advocates who oppose testing are furious about the reforms.

"This is totally deprofessionalizing (非专业化的,非职业化的) teachers," said Jane Hirschmann, of Time Out From Testing. "They will be doing data entry. Tests were supposed to be a measure of reform. Instead, tests have become the reform. and they have become the curriculum."

______ makes the students measure the distance across the East River with just a ruler and a protractor.

A.O. Henry

B.Thomas

C.Terry Webber

D.Manhattan

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第8题

Non-slick cookware material Teflon has once again landed in the spotlight after a US indep
endent review board said they believe a chemical used in making it poses more of a cancer risk than previously indicated.

But DuPont, the US-based chemical giant that manufactures Teflon, denied exposure to PFO, an acid, which could pose a health risk to the public.

The findings have not resulted in any substantial impact on the company, a DuPont China Beijing office official, said on Friday.

China's product quality watchdog said on Friday that it knows about the incident and has not yet decided whether to test the safety of the non-stick surface for the second time in less than a year. In a &aft report released earlier this week, an advisory board that reviewed the US Environmental Protection Agency's report concluded that PFOA is "likely" to be carcinogenic to humans. The draft was based on tests conducted on animals, and the advisory board mended the US EPA conduct further testing

But a statement released by DuPont on Tuesday said that the company is conducting an employee health study on PFOA and that partial results indicate no association between PFOA exposure and most of the health parameters that were measured. According to Xu Yang, a public relations official with DuPont's Beijing office, about 5 percent of Chinese families use non-stick flying pans compared with 95 percent in the United States.

Last year, the US EPA said it would fine DuPont for failing to report test results regarding PFOA, but the investigation is under way.

China's General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine ordered a probe last October, but it detected no PFOA in Teflon cookware.

"Landed in the spotlight" (Line 1, Para 1) can be best replaced by______.

A.Entered the market

B.Retreated from the market

C.Become the focus of attention

D.Been prohibited from sales

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第9题

Supporters of the biotech industry have accused an American scientist of misconduct after
she testified to the New Zealand government that a genetically modified (GM) bacterium could cause serious damage if released.

The New Zealand Life Sciences Network, an association of pro GM scientists and organizations, says the view expressed by Elaine Ingham, a soil biologist at Oregon State University in Corvallis, was exaggerated and irresponsible. It has asked her university to discipline her.

But Ingham stands by her comments and says the complaints are an attempt to silence her. "They're trying to cause trouble with my university and get me fired", Ingham told New Scientist.

The controversy began on 1 February, when Ingham testified before New Zealand's Royal Commission on Genetic Modification, which will determine how to regulate GM organisms. Ingham claimed that a GM version of a common soil bacterium could spread and destroy plants if released into the wild. Other researchers had previously modified the bacterium to produce alcohol from organic waste. But Ingham says that when she put it in soil with wheat plants, all of the plants died within a week.

"We would lose terrestrial(陆生的) plants...this is an organism that is potentially deadly to the continued survival of human beings," she told the commission. She added that the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) canceled its approval for field tests using the organism once she had told them about her research in 1999. But last week the New Zealand Life Sciences Network accused Ingham of "presenting inaccurate, careless and exaggerated information" and "generating speculative dooms-day scenarios(世界末日的局面) that are not scientifically supportable". They say that her study doesn't even show that the bacteria would survive in the wild, much less kill massive numbers of plants. What's more, the network says that contrary to Ingham's claims, the EPA was never asked to consider the organism for field trials.

The EPA has not commented on the dispute. But an e-mail to the network from Janet Anderson, director of the EPA's bio-pesticides(生物杀虫剂)division, says "there is no record of a review and/or clearance to field test" the organism.

Ingham says EPA officials had told her that the organism was approved for field tests, but says she has few details. It's also not clear whether the organism, first engineered by a German institute for biotechnology, is still in use.

Whether Ingham is right or wrong, her supporters say opponents are trying unfairly to silence her;

"I think her concerns should be taken seriously. She shouldn't be harassed in this way," says Ann Clarke, a plant biologist at the University of Guelph in Canada who also testified before the commission. "It's an attempt to silence the opposition."

The passage centers on the controversy ______.

A.between American and New Zealand biologists over genetic modification

B.as to whether the study of genetic modification should be continued

C.over the possible adverse effect of a GM bacterium on plants

D.about whether Elaine Ingham should be fired by her university

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第10题

Questions 21~25 are based on the following passage. Supporters of the biotech industry ha
ve accused an American scientist of misconduct after she testified to the New Zealand government that a genetically modified (GM)bacterium could cause serious damage if released.

The New Zealand Life Sciences Network,an association of pro-GM scientists and organisations,says the view expressed by Elaine Ingham,a soil biologist at Oregon State University in Corvallis,was exaggerated and irresponsible. It has asked her university to discipline her.

But Ingham stands by her comments and says the complaints are an attempt to silence her. “They’re trying to cause trouble with my university and get me fired,”Ingham told New Scientist.

The controversy began on 1 February,when Ingham testified before New Zealand’s Royal Commission on Genetic Modification,which will determine how to regulate GM organisms. Ingham claimed that a GM version of a common soil bacterium could spread and destroy plants if released into the wild. Other researchers had previously modified the bacterium to produce alcohol from organic waste. But Ingham says that when she put it in soil with wheat plants,all of the plants died within a week.

“We would lose terrestrial (生的)plants...this is an organism that is potentially deadly to the continued survival of human beings,”she told the commission. She added that the U.S.Environmental Protection Agency (EPA.canceled its approval for field tests using the organism once she had told them about her research in 1999.

But last week the New Zealand Life Sciences Network accused Ingham of “presenting inaccurate,careless and exaggerated information”and “generating speculative doomsday scenarios (世界末日的局面)that are not scientifically supportable”. They say that her study doesn’t even show that the bacteria would survive in the wild,much less kill massive numbers of plants. What’s more,the network says that contrary to Ingham’s claims,the EPA was never asked to consider the organism for field trials.

The EPA has not commented on the dispute. But an e-mail to the network from Janet Anderson,director of the EPA’s bio-pesticides (生物杀虫剂)division,says “there is no record of a review and/or clearance to field test”the organism.

Ingham says EPA officials had told her that the organism was approved for field tests,but says she has few details. It’s also not clear whether the organism,first engineered by a German institute for biotechnology,is still in use.

Whether Ingham is right or wrong,her supporters say opponents are trying unfairly to silence her.

“I think her concerns should be taken seriously. She shouldn’t be harassed in this way,”says Ann Clarke,a plant biologist at the University of Guelph in Canada who also testified before the commission. “It’s an attempt to silence the opposition.”

第21题:The passage centers on the controversy ().

A.between American and New Zealand biologists over genetic modification

B.as to whether the study of genetic modification should be continued

C.over the possible adverse effect of a GM bacterium on plants

D.about whether Elaine Ingham should be fired by her university

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