大学六级-113及答案解析.doc
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1、大学六级-113 及答案解析(总分:495.50,做题时间:90 分钟)一、BPart Writing(总题数:1,分数:106.00)1.1. 有些人对电视选秀节目持肯定态度; 2. 另一些人则反对电视选秀节目; 3. 我的观点。(分数:106.00)_二、BPart Reading (总题数:1,分数:10.00)BTHE BLENDING OF THE UNITED STATES/BFor years, Jorge Del Pinals job as assistant chief of the Census Bureaus Population Division was to fit
2、people into neat, distinct racial and ethnic boxes: white, black, Hispanic, Asian or Native American. As the son of an Anglo mother and a Hispanic father, however, he knew all along that the task was not always possible.For the 2000 decennial census, that will no longer be the case. For the first ti
3、me, the census forms will allow people to check off as many races as apply. As a result, the Census Bureau should obtain a better picture of the extent of intermarriage in the United States.In the absence of such a direct method, a few years ago ,veteran demographer Barry Edmonston used sophisticate
4、d mathematical modeling techniques to calculate how intermarriage is changing the face of the United States as part of an immigration study he directed for the National Research CounciIof the American Academy of Sciences. His research was summarized in a report entitled The New Americans: Economic,
5、Demographic and Fiscal Effects of Immigration. But as the Canadian-born, white husband of sociologist Sharon Lee, a Chinese-American, Edmonsto really needed no computer to understand the transformation under way in this society. He and his family are living, breathing participants.The face of Americ
6、a is changing literally. As former President Clinton has said, “within 30 or 40 years, when there will be no single race in the majority in the United States, we had best be ready for it.“ For his part, Clinton is preparing for that time by talking about racial tolerance and the virtues of multicult
7、uralism. Others are debating immigration policy. Almost all discussion focuses on the potential divisiveness inherent in a nation that is no longer a predominantly white country with a mostly European ancestry.But afoot behind the scenes is another trend that, if handled carefully, could bring the c
8、ountry closer together rather than drive it apart. This quiet demographic counter-revolution is a dramatic upsurge in intermarriage.Edmonstons study projected that by 2050, 21 percent of the U.S. population will be of mixed racial or ethnic ancestry, up from an estimate of seven percent today. Among
9、 third-generation Hispanic and Asian Americans, exogamy-marriage outside ones ethnic group or tribe is at least 50 percent, he and others estimate. Exogamy remains much less prevalent among African Americans, but it has increased enormously, from about 1,5 percent in the 1960s to 8 to 10 percent tod
10、ay.Such a profound demographic shift could take place while no one was watching because, officially, no one was watching. Federal agencies traditionally collected racial data using a formula one person, one race similar to the time-honored voting principle. Thus, the Census Bureau could estimate tha
11、t on census forms no more than two percent of the population would claim to be multiracial. In the absence of a more straightforward count, no one could know for sure what the demographics are.Thats about to change. After the 2000 census, the U.S. Government should have a better idea. In 1997, the O
12、ffice of Management and Budget, which oversees federal statistical practices, approved a directive allowing people to check as many racial boxes as they believe apply to them. The shift was a compromise between the demands of some interest groups that wanted the addition of a “multiracial“ box, and
13、those that objected to any change, fearing dilution of their numbers.Meanwhile, in the absence of Official numbers, with the heightened tension surrounding racial issues, and with the mutual suspicion that exists among competing racial and ethnic interest groups, theres little agreement on what inte
14、rmarriage will mean for U.S. society in the future.BMelting Pot/BTo see the new face of the United States, go to a grocery store and look at a box of Betty Crocker-brand food products. Bettys portrait is now in its eighth incarnation since the first composite painting debuted in 1936 with pale skin
15、and blue eyes. Her new look is brown-eyed and dark-haired. She has a duskier complexion than her seven predecessors, with features representing an amalgam of white, Hispanic, Indian, African and Asian ancestry.A computer created this new Betty in the mid-1990s by blending photos of 75 diverse women.
16、 That process was relatively quick, General Mills Inc. spokesmen explain. But they acknowledge that it took quite a while to spread the new image to the whole range of Betty Crocker products.The slow pace of that process itself could be a metaphor for gradual racial and ethnic intermixing in this co
17、untry. Indeed, its taking a long time for the new bended American to surface in societys consciousness. Tiger Woods, the young golf great, publicized the trend by identifying himself as Cablinasian, a mixture of Caucasian, black, Native American and AsianFor the most part, the market-place-not gover
18、nment is leading the way in this evolution. Mixed-race models, particularly men, are in great demand, according to fashion industry experts. And multiracial child actors are now more likely to be tapped for television advertisements.That serious scholars should be talking about a melting pot is itse
19、lf a reversal. As a metaphor for American diversity, the melting pot was first discredited after World War I, when the European immigrants streaming into American cities formed distinct ethnic and national enclaves that didnt melt together.The timing was off, it turned out, and the metaphorical pot
20、was in the wrong place. Interracial and multiethnic fusion started after World War II and happened in the suburbs. City folk moved from their Italian, Irish, Polish or Jewish urban neighborhoods into diffuse suburban settings, then sent their kids to large public universities, throwing them together
21、 with youngsters from other ethnic backgrounds who, nonetheless, came from families with similar lifestyles.Whether blacks will follow other minorities into the melting pot remains a subject of debate. Skeptics point to the much smaller proportion of black -white marriages and say it wont happen soo
22、n. Others respond that the Statistical base is very small because, until 1967, such marriages were illegal in 19 states.Countervailing ForcesWhile many forces are at work to facilitate intermarriage, others militate against it. This is particularly the case for African Americans.The growing segment
23、of the black community that is going to college, entering the middle class and moving out to the suburbs is also following the general trend toward intermarriage. This tendency is particularly noticeable in California and in cities such as Dallas (Texas), Las Vegas (Nevada) and Phoenix (Arizona), wh
24、ere residential segregation has been less pronounced than in the older northeastern and midwestern U. S. cities, according to Reynolds Farley, who has studied African American residential patterns. In California, for example, among 25-to-34-year-old African Americans, 14 percent of the married black
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