[外语类试卷]大学英语六级改革适用(阅读)模拟试卷93及答案与解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级改革适用(阅读)模拟试卷 93及答案与解析 Section C 0 There was a time when big-league university presidents really mattered. The New York Times covered their every move. Presidents, the real ones, sought their counsel. For Woodrow Wilson and Dwight Eisenhower, being head of Princeton and Columbia, respectively,
2、was a stepping-stone to the White House. Today, though, the job of college president is less and less removed from that of the Avon lady(except the house calls are made to the doorsteps of wealthy alums). Ruth Simmons, the newly installed president of Brown University and the first African American
3、to lead an Ivy League school, is a throwback to the crusading campus leaders of the old. She doesnt merely marshal funds; she invests them in the great educational causes of our day. With the more than $300 million she raised as president of Smith College from 1995 to 2001, Simmons established an en
4、gineering program(the first at any women s school)and added seminars focused on public speaking to purge the ubiquitous “likes“ and “urns“ from the campus idiom. At a meeting to discuss the future of Smiths math department, one professor timidly requested two more discussion sections for his course.
5、 Her response: “Dream bigger.“ Her own dream was born in a sharecropper s shack in East Texas where there was no money for books or toys she and her 11 siblings each got an apple, an orange and 10 nuts for Christmas. Though she was called Negro on her walk to school, entering the classroom, she says
6、, “was like waking up.“ When Simmons won a scholarship to Dillard University, her high school teachers took up a collection so shed have a coat. She went on to Harvard to earn a Ph.D. in Romance languages. Simmons has made diversity her No. 1 campus crusade. She nearly doubled the enrolment of black
7、 freshmen at Smith, largely by travelling to high schools in the nations poorest ZIP codes to recruit. Concerned with the lives of minority students once they arrived at school, she has fought to ease the racial standoffs that plague so many campuses. At Smith she turned down a request by students t
8、o have race-specific dorms. In 1993, while vice provost at Princeton, she wrote a now famous report recommending that the university establish an office of conflict resolution to defuse racial misunderstandings before they boiled over. Her first task at Brown will be to heal one such rupture last sp
9、ring after the student paper published an incendiary ad by conservative polemicist David Horowitz arguing that blacks economically benefited from slavery. “Theres no safe ground for anybody in race relations, but campuses, unlike any other institution in our society, provide the opportunity to cross
10、 racial lines,“ says Simmons. “And even if youre hurt, you cant walk away. You have to walk over that line.“ 1 What does the “ones“(Line 2, Para.l)refer to? ( A) Counsellors in the White House ( B) Famous people in a country ( C) Presidents of universities ( D) Presidents of nations 2 Which one of t
11、he following is NOT TRUE on how Simmons spend with the funds she had raised? ( A) She enlarged the number of those students who can win scholarship. ( B) She paid more attention on public speaking by adding more seminars. ( C) An engineering program was established by her. ( D) She encouraged profes
12、sors to practice their ideas. 3 What can we infer from “was like waking up“ in paragraph 3? ( A) Simmons is realistic. ( B) Simmons is creative. ( C) Simmons is coward. ( D) Simmons is optimistic. 4 Why did Simmons reject the request to allow students with same race to live together in one dormitory
13、? ( A) She intended to allow students to make more friends. ( B) She expected students from different races to know more about each other, thus reducing racial misunderstanding. ( C) Students from the same race would be isolated. ( D) She anticipated avoiding quarrels of students from diverse backgr
14、ound. 5 What is a typical role played by colleges from the perspective of Simmons? ( A) A safe ground for students. ( B) A remote area for entertainment. ( C) A place with less discrimination. ( D) A small society for students to get prepared for the future. 5 Roger Rosenblatt s book Black Fiction,
15、in attempting to apply literary rather than sociopolitical criteria to its subject, successfully alters the approach taken by most previous studies. As Rosenblatt notes, criticism of Black writing has often served as a pretext for expounding on Black history. Addison Gayles recent work, for example,
16、 judges the value of Black fiction by overtly political standards, rating each work according to the notions of Black identity which it propounds. Although fiction assuredly springs from political circumstances, its authors react to those circumstances in ways other than ideological, and talking abo
17、ut novels and stories primarily as instruments of ideology circumvents much of the fictional enterprise. Rosenblatt s literary analysis discloses affinities and connections among works of Black fiction which solely political studies have overlooked or ignored. Writing acceptable criticism of Black f
18、iction, however, presupposes giving satisfactory answers to a number of questions. First of all, is there a sufficient reason, other than the facial identity of the authors, to group together works by Black authors? Second, how does Black fiction make itself distinct from other modern fictions with
19、which it is largely contemporaneous? Rosenblatt shows that Black fiction constitutes a distinct body of writing that has an identifiable, coherent literary tradition. Looking at novels written by Black over the last eighty years, he discovers recurring concerns and designs independent of chronology.
20、 These structures are thematic, and they spring, not surprisingly, from the central fact that the Black characters in these novels exist in a predominantly white culture, whether they try to conform to that culture or rebel against it. Black Fiction does leave some aesthetic questions open. Rosenbla
21、tts thematic analysis permits considerable objectivity; he even explicitly states that it is not his intention to judge the merit of the various works yet his reluctance seems misplaced, especially since an attempt to appraise might have led to interesting results. For instance, some of the novels a
22、ppear to be structurally diffuse. Is this a defect, or are the authors working out of, or trying to forge, a different kind of aesthetic? In addition, the style of some Black novels, like Jean Toomers Cane, verges on expressionism or surrealism; does this technique provide a counterpoint to the prev
23、alent theme that portrays the fate against which Black heroes are pitted, a theme usually conveyed by more naturalistic modes of expression? In spite of such omissions, what Rosenblatt does included in his discussion makes for an astute and worthwhile study. Black Fiction surveys a wide variety of n
24、ovels, bringing to our attention in the process some fascinating and little-known works like James Weldon Johnsons Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man. Its argument is tightly constructed, and its forthright, lucid style exemplifies levelheaded and penetrating criticism. 6 In what ways is the book Bl
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