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On his deathbed in 1638 John Harvard gav...

    On his deathbed in 1638 John Harvard gave away half of his estate, about £800 and his library of some 400 books to a new college in present-day Cambridge, Massachusetts. Harvard's founders decided to name their new university after its first big benefactor.

About 370 years ago the first Harvard scholarship to help ''some poor scholars'' was set up thanks to £100 donated by Ann Radcliffe. The university continues to be the beneficiary of generous donors. Last year, John Paulson, an investor, donated $400m to Harvard's engineering school, its largest gift ever. Last year it raised more than $1 billion. Some of its graduates think this ought to be sufficient to cancel tuition fees.

Among them are Ralph Nader, a veteran political activist, and Ron Unz, author of a number of searing articles on American meritocracy(英才管理). Both are hoping to win election to the university's board of overseers, from which they want to make Harvard free for all students to attend, and also pressure its admissions office to make data on how it chooses which students to admit known to the public.

America's universities raised a record $40.3 billion last year, according to the Council for Aid to Education. Donations are not usually used to lower tuition fees, but they can be used to provide scholarships and financial aid to students who cannot afford to pay (70% of students at Harvard get some assistance with fees and living costs).

Some lawmakers are wondering whether threats to change the tax-free status of donations might be used to persuade colleges to bring down the cost of tuition, which has increased by 220% in real terms since 1980. Nexus Research and Policy Centre says colleges receive $80 billion in support from state and local governments every year, which ought to give politicians some leverage(影响) in return.

In January Tom Reed, a Republican congressman from New York, proposed a bill requiring donations of more than $1 billion to allocate 25% for financial aid. Two congressional committees, the Senate Finance Committee and the House Ways and Means Committee, have sent letters to the heads of the colleges with the biggest donations asking about spending, conflicts of interest and fee arrangements. The 56 largest private university donations have to explain how they use their tax-free investment earnings.

The colleges have their defenders. ''Most of these places are providing a fair amount of financial aid for students well beyond the poverty line, '' says Kim Rueben of the Tax Policy Centre. Kevin Weinman, Amherst's chief financial officer, says his university's donation offers $90m to the college's budget, $30m more than tuition, room board and various fees combined. This school year, it will spend $50,000 per student funding financial aid, pay faculty and fund student activities. After Congress last examined the topic in 2007, more colleges began to award grants instead of loans. Financial aid has doubled over the past decade. Rhode Island also make voluntary payments in place of property taxes.

In addition to pointing out their generosity, most colleges also argue that forcing them to spend donation money on free tuition might even be illegal. Donors can restrict their tax-free gift to a legally-binding particular purpose, such as creating a chair, establishing a scholarship or building a new lab. Around 70% of donations are restricted funds.

If the wealthiest colleges have already spent so much on financial aid, what is the problem? Mr. Unz argues that endowment-fuelled spending on new buildings, sports facilities and the hiring of administrators has created an arms-race in higher education, pushing up prices at those universities that are not fortunate enough to have lots of generous benefactors. Harvard could cancel tuition payments without damaging its finances or touching the restricted portion of its endowment, he says. Furthermore, the abolition of both complicated financial-aid forms and terrifying sticker prices for tuition could, he argues, do much to encourage applicants from beyond the plutocracy(富豪阶级).

1.The underlined word in Paragraph 1 can be replaced by     .

A.founder B.donor C.defender D.innovator

2.According to the passage, Ralph Nader and Ron Unz hope that they can     .

A.help Harvard to enroll new students

B.learn about how Harvard spends its donations

C.make free education to all students at Harvard possible

D.negotiate with the Harvard's board of overseers about tuition fees

3.What can we infer from Kim Rueben's words in Paragraph 7?

A.The colleges are making full use of their donations.

B.Ordinary families cannot afford the increasing tuition fees.

C.More attention should be paid to students below the poverty line.

D.Property taxes on the colleges ought to be canceled permanently.

4.According to the last but one paragraph, most colleges hold the idea that     .

A.donors should keep a check on where their money goes

B.the financial aid they receive every year is far from enough

C.they shouldn't be forced to spend donation money on free tuition

D.most donations should be used to improve colleges' infrastructure

5.According to the last paragraph, Mr Unz thinks     .

A.the competition between universities is necessary

B.Harvard should offer help to those who lack money

C.financial-aid forms offered by universities should be simplified

D.arms-races in higher education may lead to higher tuition fees

6.What can be the best title for this passage?

A.Should Harvard's tuition fees be canceled?

B.How does Harvard make use of its donations?

C.What do Harvard and lawmakers disagree about?

D.Why does Harvard get more donations than other universities?

 

1.B 2.C 3.A 4.C 5.D 6.A 【解析】 这是一篇议论文。文章主要论述了哈佛收到了大量的捐款,导致该校学生认为它可以为学生免除学费。一些高校认为强迫把捐赠款用于免费学费是违法的,但有人持这样的观点,即如果把捐赠款大量用在提高学校硬件设施上,又会导致一场高校的“弹药竞赛”,最终的结果是提高那些没有得到捐赠款的学校的学费。 1.词义猜测题。根据第一段On his deathbed in 1638 John Harvard gave away half of his estate, about £800 and his library of some 400 books to a new college in present-day Cambridge, Massachusetts. Harvard's founders decided to name their new university after its first big benefactor.可知,1638年在John Harvard弥留之际,他捐出了自己一半的庄园、800英镑和图书馆里的400本书给一所新大学,现在位于马赛诸塞州的剑桥大学。哈佛大学的建立者决定用它第一个benefactor的名字来给这所学校命名。根据句意可知,划线部分指的是John Harvard,即该学校的第一个捐赠者。B. donor(捐赠者)符合以上说法,故选B项。 2.细节理解题。根据第三段的Both are hoping to win election to the university's board of overseers, from which they want to make Harvard free for all students to attend, (他们两人都希望在该学校的海外董事长选举中获胜,希望哈佛大学的所有学生都能够免费上学)可知,Ralph Nader和Ron Unz希望让学生们免费上哈佛大学成为可能。C. make free education to all students at Harvard possible(让所有学生免费上哈佛大学成为可能)符合以上说法,故选C项。 3.推理判断题。根据第七段的''Most of these places are providing a fair amount of financial aid for students well beyond the poverty line, '' says Kim Rueben of the Tax Policy Centre.( 税收政策中心的Kim Rueben说:“大多都数地方都为远远超过贫困线的学生提供了相当数量的财政援助。”)可推测,这些大学都在充分利用他们的捐款。A. The colleges are making full use of their donations.(大学在充分利用他们的捐款)符合以上说法,故选A项。 4.细节理解题。根据倒数第二段的In addition to pointing out their generosity, most colleges also argue that forcing them to spend donation money on free tuition might even be illegal. (除了指出他们的慷慨,大多数大学还认为强迫他们把捐赠的钱花在免费学费上是非法的)可知,大多数大学认为他们不应该被强迫把捐赠的钱花在免费学费上。C. they shouldn't be forced to spend donation money on free tuition(他们不应该被强迫把捐赠的钱花在免费学费上)符合以上说法,故选C项。 5.细节理解题。根据最后一段的Mr. Unz argues that endowment-fuelled spending on new buildings, sports facilities and the hiring of administrators has created an arms-race in higher education, pushing up prices at those universities that are not fortunate enough to have lots of generous benefactors.( Mr. Unz认为,花费在新的大楼、体育设施和聘用管理人员上的捐赠基金,在高等教育领域催生了一种“弹药竞赛”,推高了那些资金不足、无法得到大量慷慨捐赠者资金的大学的学费)可知,Mr. Unz 认为高等教育的“弹药竞赛”会导致更高的学费。D. arms-races in higher education may lead to higher tuition fees(高等教育的“弹药竞赛”会导致更高的学费)符合以上说法,故选D项。 6.主旨大意题。根据文章的主要内容,尤其第二段的Last year it raised more than $1 billion. Some of its graduates think this ought to be sufficient to cancel tuition fees.(去年,它筹集了超过10亿美元。它的一些毕业生认为这应该足以取消学费)和最后一段的Harvard could cancel tuition payments without damaging its finances or touching the restricted portion of its endowment, he says.(他说,只要不伤害其财务状况,不触及捐赠基金中受到限制的不份,哈佛可以取消支付学费)可知,本文主要讨论了哈佛大学该不该把收到的捐赠款用来免除学生的学费。A. Should Harvard’s tuition fees be canceled?(哈佛应该取消学费支付吗)可以作为本文标题,故选A项。
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    Of all the components of a good night's sleep, dreams seem to be least within our control. In dreams, a window opens into a world where logic is suspended and dead people speak. A century ago, Freud formulated his revolutionary theory that dreams were the disguised shadows of our unconscious desires and fears; by the late 1970s, neurologists had switched to thinking of them as just ''mental noise''-the random byproducts of the neural-repair work that goes on during sleep. Now researchers suspect that dreams are part of the mind's emotional thermostat(恒温器), regulating moods while the brain is ''off-line''. And one leading authority says that these intensely powerful mental events can be not only harnessed but actually brought under conscious control, to help us sleep and feel better, ''It's your dream'', says Rosalind Cartwright, chair of psychology at Chicago's Medical Center, ''If you don't like it, change it''.

Evidence from brain imaging supports this view. The brain is as active during REM (rapid eye movement) sleep-when most vivid dreams occur-as it is when fully awake, says Dr. Eric Nofzinger at the University of Pittsburgh. But not all parts of the brain are equally involved; the limbic system (the ''emotional brain'') is especially active, while the prefrontal cortex (the center of intellect and reasoning) is relatively quiet. ''We wake up from dreams happy or depressed, and those feelings can stay with us all day'', says Stanford sleep researcher Dr. William Dement.

The link between dreams and emotions shows up among the patients in Cartwright's clinic. Most people seem to have more bad dreams early in the night, progressing toward happier ones before awakening, suggesting that they are working through negative feelings generated during the day. Because our conscious mind is occupied with daily life we don't always think about the emotional significance of the day's events-until, it appears, we begin to dream.

And this process need not be left to the unconscious. Cartwright believes one can exercise conscious control over recurring bad dreams. As soon as you awaken, identify what is upsetting about the dream. Visualize how you would like it to end instead; the next time occurs, try to wake up just enough to control its course. With much practice people can learn to, literally, do it in their sleep.

At the end of the day, there’s probably little reason to pay attention to our dreams at all unless they keep us from sleeping of ''we wake up in a panic'', Cartwright says. Terrorism, economic uncertainties and general feelings of insecurity have increased people’s anxiety. Those suffering from persistent nightmares should seek help from a therapist. For the rest of us, the brain has its ways of working through bad feelings. Sleep-or rather dream-on it and you'll feel better in the morning.

1.Researchers have come to believe that dreams__________.

A.reflect our innermost desires and fears B.are a random outcome of neural repairs

C.can be modified in their courses D.are vulnerable to emotional changes

2.By referring to the limbic system, the author intends to show __________.

A.its difference from the prefrontal cortex B.its function in our dreams

C.the mechanism of REM sleep D.the relation of dreams to emotions

3.The negative feelings generated during the day tend to __________.

A.emerge in dreams early at night B.develop into happy dreams

C.worsen in our unconscious mind D.persist till the time we fall asleep

4.Cartwright seems to suggest that __________.

A.dreams should be left to their natural progression

B.dreaming may not entirely belong to the unconscious

C.visualizing bad dreams helps bring them under control

D.waking up in time is essential to the ridding of bad dreams

 

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    A few days after dropping off her daughter at college, Andrea got a phone call. Her daughter was ill. Andrea drove there immediately, located a doctor in town, booked a room at the university hotel and put her daughter to bed to recover. The next morning, Andrea went to her daughter's classes, taking notes on her behalf. It was important that her daughter headed into the first semester of college without missing a beat: A future dental career required an extremely good undergraduate academic record of four years.

At the same time, another parent faced a different type of problem. Alexis had handpicked her daughter's new university specifically and aimed to give her daughter an ideal social experience at college. But when she got there, she didn't seem to hit her stride. Alexis blamed it on a working-class roommate who didn't ever want to go out to meet people-and told her daughter, in no uncertain terms, to change roommates.

Both Andrea and Alexis are examples of ''helicopter parents'', defined by their hovering and readiness with supplies, assistance and guidance. Their interventions were costly-requiring time, financial reserves, social understanding and knowledge of higher education-though they had different purposes.

Why does educational and professional success today seem to require financial and emotional parental support? In large part, it reflects the shifting relationship between families and the university in America in the past century. Slowly after WWI and rapidly after WWII, many public universities were in fact free, as the government offered universities the resources to help families battle economic depression and poverty. However, in the 1980s, the government shifted financial aid largely from grants to loans. Soon, universities entered a period of heavy and expensive administrative growth as they faced new and intensive pressures. Without the support of the state, families eventually came to absorb many of these costs.

Universities now rely, in part, on parents, particularly those with money, time, and connections to meet their basic needs. However, paying parents bring more than funds alone. They often help promote the university; conduct admissions interviews; interface with donating alumni; assist with their own students’ emotional, cognitive and physical needs and help place graduates(both related and not) in valuable internships and jobs.

But the new family-university partnership exacts a toll. Parents are pushed to extend major parenting responsibilities into doing heavy financial lifting for their children who are supposed to be building their own financial security. There is also some truth to the notion that the helicoptered children are slow to adapt to adulthood, make decisions about their careers, and manage friendships without calling on their parents for help.

1.What does the underlined sentence ''she didn't seem to hit her stride'' in Paragraph 2 mean?

A.Alexis' daughter's social competence wasn't promoted.

B.Alexis' daughter found she herself had financial difficulties.

C.Alexis' daughter disagreed with Alexis about her working-class roommate.

D.Alexis' daughter found university life was different from what she had expected.

2.What's the author' attitude towards ''helicopter parents''?

A.Critical. B.Cautious. C.Doubtful. D.Objective.

3.What's this passage mainly about?

A.Troubles faced by universities in America.

B.The partnership between colleges and '''helicopter parents''.

C.The troubled relationship between parents and their children.

D.The fierce competition among the career-minded generation.

 

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1.Which of the following is NOT the feature of the Amazon.com Rewards visa card?

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    Being given the opportunity to travel to the United States and work in a Summer Camp was a truly unique experience. And for that I will always be ____. It would also be a(n) ____ for me to write about it and recommend this camp to those who desire to ____ their vision and improve themselves.

I ____ the International Sports Training Camp in the summers of 2004 and 2009. The reason why there was a gap of 4 years ____ visits is that I made the decision to begin and complete an Education Degree(PE). The majority of the reason I ____ this career path is largely due to the high level of staff training that I received as part of the camp orientation program and also the development of personal qualities and improved self-confidence I ____ along the way. The camp orientation program ____ over 7 days and was ____ by our camp directors and senior staff (many of them are international staff). Through this program we were trained and educated in problem solving, communications kills and many other ____ aspects of camp life. ____, this kind of training is presented in many other forms of employment and ____ I feel that I have already got a(n) ____ in life that others may not have the chance to experience.

Summer Camps have provided so many ____ and international staff with unique life experiences, resources, education and professional relationships that are impossible to ____. Many of us have become really good friends and share sorrow and joy online. ____, many friends have become ____ staff members at these camps and are ____ every year for training the new staff that arrive at camp.

Everyone should have the opportunity to work in a summer camp for the ____ they have there that I believe would ____ them for a lifetime.

1.A.relieved B.thankful C.admirable D.desirable

2.A.challenge B.concern C.pleasure D.inspiration

3.A.extend B.polish C.block D.outline

4.A.organized B.followed C.sponsored D.attended

5.A.after B.for C.between D.beyond

6.A.decided on B.took on C.counted on D.touched on

7.A.went B.came C.struggled D.gained

8.A.ran B.ended C.occurred D.consisted

9.A.privileged B.presented C.previewed D.revised

10.A.abundant B.important C.elegant D.brilliant

11.A.Still B.Instead C.Thus D.Again

12.A.at best B.in time C.as such D.in tune

13.A.lesson B.advantage C.ground D.reward

14.A.modest B.intelligent C.domestic D.tentative

15.A.copy B.recognize C.promote D.record

16.A.After all B.Above all C.Also D.Thus

17.A.considerate B.temporary C.permanent D.flexible

18.A.responsible B.desperate C.famous D.honoured

19.A.experience B.routine C.timetable D.statement

20.A.conclude B.protect C.transfer D.benefit

 

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— Stop criticizing everyone! You should ______ and admit that you aren’t perfect either!

—Maybe you’re right. But I don’t know what makes you think so.

A.kill the fatted calf B.have eggs on your face

C.get down off your high horse D.wash your hands off

 

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