[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷131及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 131 及答案与解析Part B (10 points) 0 A feature already built-in to most cell phones could be used to alert every mobile phone user in a specific region to impending disasters, such as the tsunami that devastated Southeast Asia on 26 December, say experts.【R1】 _At an emergency summit held in J
2、akarta, Indonesia, on Thursday, world leaders called for the development of such an early-warning system. One such system already guards the shores of the Pacific Ocean, though without the text message component.【R2】 _The GSM cell phone standard already enables phones to receive short data messages
3、from the nearest cell phone base station on a separate channel from normal voice and text message communications. The Cellular Emergency Alerts System Association(CEASA), a non-governmental organisation based in the UK, is campaigning to have the system turned into a disaster warning service.The “Ce
4、ll Broadcast“ or “Area Information System“ was originally designed to let network operators offer location based services, but is now rarely used. To turn it into an early warning service, a customised PC needs to be installed at the headquarters of each network operator. This contains the geographi
5、cal co-ordinates of all phone masts, enabling operators to target emergency messages to all phones in the required region.“We can define an area very clearly and its scalable to any degree you like,“ says Mark Wood, the secretary general of CEASA who has previously worked as an emergency coordinator
6、 for the United Nations. “You could send a warning to a small village that is about to be washed out, or you could tell an entire region theres a tsunami coming.“ As these messages are delivered separately from other traffic, they ought to get through even when a network is jammed with normal traffi
7、c.【R3】 _But perhaps the biggest obstacle faced is government acceptance, Wood says. “It has to be a system that can only be used by someone with authority and it has to be secure,“ he adds. So far only the Dutch government has given backing to the scheme which is scheduled to go live in the Netherla
8、nds in March 2005. A limited-scale demonstration has also been performed in the US.【R4】 _Unlike voice communications, text messages still get through with a weak and inconsistent signal. For example, Sanjaya Senanayake, a Sri Lankan television worker was able to relay updates about the disaster via
9、text messages which were then posted to his online diary.Another project reverses the use of text messages in emergencies, allowing those on the ground to send calls for help to a single number, which would then be routed via the Internet to the relevant authority.【R5】 _But mobile phones may form on
10、ly part of an overall warning system strategy, says Reid Basher, head of the UNs International Strategy for Disaster Reduction. “You need multiple systems,“ he told New Scientist. “The more systems the better, because it reaches more people.“Word count: 479A. Early warning sensors would be relativel
11、y simple and, at a cost of about $20 million, relatively inexpensive to set up. But experts say these must be combined with an effective means of alerting the population to imminent danger.B. In developing countries cell phone networks are often cheaper and easier to build than landline infrastructu
12、re. And regular text messaging has already proved an effective communication method in some areas during the chaos that followed the tsunamis impact.C. Setting up such a system could prove expensive because most people do not have cell phones. This would mean that the government would have to buy mi
13、llions of them for people in danger zones. Poor countries simply cannot afford to do this, so it is unlikely that any such system will actually be implemented, despite all the optimistic talk that has been going on.D. Text messaging is already popular in East Asia and, to a lesser extent, Europe and
14、 North America. It is also cheap, costing only a few cents per message sent. Text messaging is also fast, reducing crucial warning times.E. The combination of a tsunami warning system for the Indian Ocean and the ability to broadcast text messages to every mobile phone in the area has the potential
15、to save many lives should another tsunami strike.F. The programmers behind the project, called the Alert Retrieval Cache, say even in remote communities people typically have access to at least one cell phone, making this a vital communications link.G. Wood estimates that it would cost less than $2
16、million and take a couple of months to add this messaging capability to the four major phone networks that operate in the UK. Users would then need to change the settings on their phone to enable the service, which would require a public education campaign.1 【R1 】2 【R2 】3 【R3 】4 【R4 】5 【R5 】5 In 199
17、4, the Las Vegas police reported that a man had met an attractive woman at a local bar and then blacked out. When he awoke he was lying in a hotel bathtub, covered in ice. He called an ambulance and was rushed to the hospital, where the doctors told him that he had undergone massive surgery in which
18、 one of his kidneys had been removed, most likely by a gang selling human organs on the black market.【R1 】_This story is an urban legend, an incredible tale passed from one person to another as truth.Generally speaking, an urban legend is any modern, fictional story, told as truth that reaches a wid
19、e audience by being passed from person to person. Urban legends are often false, but not always.【R2】 _Folklorists have come up with a number of definitions for urban legend. To most it should be a story with characters and a plot. Others also call widely dispersed misinformation, or facts, urban leg
20、end. For example, the belief that you will automatically pass all of your college courses in a semester if your roommate kills himself is generally considered to be an urban legend.【R3】 _Thematically, there is great variety in urban legends, but several elements show up again and again. Typically, u
21、rban legends are characterized by some combination of humor, horror, warning, embarrassment, morality or appeal to empathy. They often have some unexpected twist that is crazy, but just plausible enough to be taken as truth.【R4 】_The story also includes a moral lesson, in that the businessman ended
22、up in the mess only after flirting with a mysterious woman at a bar.【R5 】_Another is of temporary tattoos coated with drugs being given to children so that they will become addicted, new customers for evil dealers. Despite announcements that this is not true, concerned people continue to spread the
23、word cautioning others about drug-laced tattoos.So regardless of the truth, urban legends will continue. It is human nature to tell bizarre stories, and there will always be an audience waiting to believe them. The urban legend is part of our make-up.A. While these “facts“ dont always have the eleme
24、nts of a story, they are passed from person to person and have the elements of caution, horror or humor found in legends. Urban legends may therefore be a fact or a story. For example, someone could tell you that there are giant alligators in New Yorks sewers, and then tell a riveting story about a
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