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SECTION BINTERVIEWDirections: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen c

SECTION B INTERVIEW

Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the following five questions.

Now listen to the interview.

听力原文:Bill: Hi, Howard. What are you working now?.

Howard: Hi, Bill. Hi, Lisa. I've just finished a piece of background music.

Lisa: Background music? Oh, like the music they're playing here now.

Howard: Yes. You hear it everywhere--in restaurants, airports, supermarkets, department stores...

Bill: In banks, too. I noticed it while we were at the bank today.

Lisa: Did you? I didn't.

Howard: You're not supposed to notice it. It’s just there, in the background. It's supposed to influence your attitudes, put you in the right mood.

Lisa: I'm not sure I like that idea.

Howard: Well, it seems to work. Companies pay millions of dollars every year for background music. It's supposed to give you a better feeling about yourself and the people around you. Factories use it a lot. It makes the workers happy, and they work better that way. In one factory, music increased production 4.5 percent.

Bill: I should think they'd get tired of hearing music all day.

Howard: They don't, though. One fellow in San Francisco told me, "If the music stops, somebody always runs to the telephone to complain.”

Lisa: Now that I think about it, I can't remember when there wasn't background music in restaurants and stores.

Howard: That shows how young you are. Actually, it all started during World War II when some factories had their own orchestras to keep workers happy and calm. Now, of course, the music is piped in by a machine, and different kinds of music are played at different times during the day. They play faster music at ten in the morning than at eight, for instance, because workers tend to be slower then.

Bill: What about restaurants? Do they play the same music for dinner and lunch?

Howard: I don't know about that, but I do know that hamburger places play fast music. When they started playing faster music, they found that a customer spent only seventeen minutes eating. The time was twenty-two minutes before that.

Lisa: So they have more people coming in and out to buy hamburgers.

Howard: Exactly. And that's good for business. You can see why music has become so popular. In Los Angeles, for instance, thirty different companies are selling background music services.

Lisa: I still think there's something about it that I dolor quite like.

Howard: I know what you mean, but lots of people would not agree with you. The Xerox Corporation in Rochester, N.Y. spends more than $ 80,000 a year for background music. Prisons use it, and farmers use it to keep their cattle calm. It's even supposed to have an effect on plants.

Howard is probably______.

A.an orchestra conductor

B.a music fan

C.a sales manager in a music company

D.a background music composer

提问人:网友liangshang 发布时间:2022-01-07
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第2题
Hamburger places usually play fast background music because______.

A.they think that will make the attendants work faster

B.they believe fast music can make people eat more

C.time spent on eating is less than before and more customers will be coming in and out to buy hamburgers

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第3题
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A.Jabali told a press conference that Israeli army were responsible for the death of the two teenagers.

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第4题
Which is NOT one of the difficulties with coffee as a medium?

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第5题
Which is NOT one of the difficulties with coffee as a medium?

A.It is of sticky and elastic texture.

B.It cannot be used to paint lighter areas.

C.It is difficult to control on paper.

D.It is difficult to preserve.

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第6题
Why are some adults easy to lose their temper according to Dr. Menninger?

A.They probably grow up in poor families.

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C.They probably have been spoiled by indulgent parents.

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第7题
In Smith's view, monopolies ______.

A.will lead to the maximization of production

B.can hardly realize the checks and balances of competition

C.may bring about high production and low demand

D.will not benefit society in the long run

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第8题
Mackintoshes original designs for the Art Lover's House ______.

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B.gave full information about the interior

C.concentrated on external features

D.were incomplete in certain respects

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第9题
SECTION B INTERVIEW

Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the following five questions.

Now listen to the interview.

听力原文:Stan: Hi, Camellia. Have you attended professor Gabriel's lecture?

Camellia: No. What was it about?

Stan: Energy -- energy future and today.

Camellia: Oh, what a pity. You know, I' m writing a paper on this subject. And I have spent a lot of time to collect materials. I shouldn’t have missed this chance.

Stan: Don’t worry. I made a lot of notes. You can take my notebook and have a look.

Camellia: It's very kind of you... (open the notebook).., mmm,., but it seems.., mmm.., that you have written hastily and some parts are not...

Stan: That’s true. The lecture is magnificent, so I tried to write down all the things.,, mmm.., never mind. I' m free now and I can tell you what I can remember.

Camellia: Oh, thank you. You' re really a great friend.

Stan: OK. The professor began with the alternative energy. He said there is a great deal of information mad enthusiasm about the development and increased production for the global energy needs from alternative energy sources.

Camellia: I know that solar energy, wind power and moving water are all sources of alternative energy.

Stan: And they are progressing. It makes many people believe that our future energy demands will easily be met.

Camellia: It’s not So?

Stan: According to the professor, absolutely not. We often mention alternative energy to refer to those energy that is produced from sources other than our primary energy supply: fossil fuels -- coal, oil and natural gas. The problem is, fossil fuels are non-renewable.

Camellia: Yes, you know, fossil fuels were formed from plants and animals that lived hundreds of millions of years ago. So there would be another hundreds of millions of years to reproduce.

Stan: They arc limited in supply and we have mostly depended on them for our energy needs, from home heating and electricity to fuel for our automobiles and mass transportation. They will one day be used up. There is no esca ping this conclusion.

Camellia: How about nuclear energy. Isn’t it a potential source of energy?

Stan: The professor said nuclear energy, which is primarily generated by splitting atoms, only provides 6% of the world’s energy supplies. And it is not likely to be a major source of world energy consumption because of public pressure and the relative dangers associated with unleashing the power of the atom.

Camellia: Did the professor give any information about how much fossil energies provide?

Stan: Let me see.., ah, yes, that’s nearly 88% of the world’s energy needs, or about 350 quadrillion British Thermal Units -- or BTUs. The total world energy demand is about 400 quadrillion BTUs -- each year. A BTU is roughly equal to the energy and heat generated by a match. Of this amount oil, coal and natural gas supply, oil is the king, providing about 41% of the world's total energy supplies, or about 164 quadrillion BTUs. Coal provides 24% of the world’s energy, or 96 quadrillion BTUs, and natural gas provides the remaining 22%, or 88 quadrillion BTUs.

Camellia: Just how limited are our fossil fuel reserves?

Stan: Some estimates say our fossil fuel reserves will be used up within 50 years, while others say it will be 100-120 years.

Camellia: It’s terrible. We are going to run out of fossil fuels for energy and we have no choice but to prepare for the new age of energy production since, most certainly , human demands for energy will not decrease.

Stan: Nobody really knows when the last drop of oil, lump of coal or cubic foot of natural gas will be collected from the Earth. All of it will depend on how well we manage our manage our energy demands and how well we ca

A.The progress in developing alternative energy.

B.The abundant deposit.

C.The development of technology.

D.All of the above.

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第10题

听力原文: American researchers have made a discovery that might help them better understand the mysterious sense of smell. VOA’s Jessica Bermon reports. There are about a thousand protein receptors in the nose that tell the brain what it’s smelling. Each receptor can detect one or more odors but scientists have never before linked a specific odor molecule to a particular receptor. Writing in the journal Science, researchers at New York’s Columbia University report doing just that with a meat odor and a receptor in the noses of rats. Steward Fairstine led the team of investigators. He says humans are capable of deceming something like ten thousand different odors. Mr. Fairstine says the research might also tell scientists more a bout brain chemicals and hormones which are part of the same family as odor receptors. Jessica Bermon, VOA news Washington.

The discovery by American researchers might help them understand ______.

A.human being8

B.the mystery

C.the sense of smell

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