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昂立版2008年12月大学英语六级真题试题及答案(A卷)
来源:优易学  2011-12-21 15:47:21   【优易学:中国教育考试门户网】   资料下载   外语书店

52. How do people ofen measure progress in agriculture?

  A) By its productivity C) By its impact on the environmet

  B) By its sustainability D) By its contribution to economic growth

  53. Specialisation and the effort to incease yields have esulted in________.

  A) Localised pollution C) competition from overseas

  B) the shrinking of farmland D) the decrease of biodiversity

  54.What does the author think of traditional farming practices?

  A)They have remained the same over the centuries

  B)They have not kept pace with population growth

  C)They are not necessarily sustainable

  D)They are environmentally friendly

  55.What will agriculture be like in the 21st century

  A) It will go through radical changes

  B) It will supply more animal products

  C) It will abandon traditional farming practices

  D) It will cause zero damage to the environment

  56 What is the author’s purpose in writing this passage?

  A) To remind people of the need of sustainable development

  B) To suggest ways of ensuring sustainable food production

  C) To adance new criteria for measuring farming progress

  D) To urge people to rethink what sustainable agriculture is

  Passage Two

  Questions 57 to 61 are based on the following passage

  The percentage of immigrants(including those unlawfully present) in the United states has been creeping upward for years. At 12.6 percent, it is now higher than at any point ince the mid1920s

  We are not about to go back to the days when Congress openly worried about inferior races polluing America’s bloodstream. But once again we are wondering whether we have too many of the wrong sort fo necomers.Their loudest citecs argue that the new wave of immigrants cannot,and indeed do not want to, fit in as previous generations did.

  We now know that these racist views were wrong.In time, Italians, Romanians and members of other so-called inferior races became exemplary Americans and contributed greatly, in ways too numerous to detail , to the building of this magnificent nation. There is no reason why these new immigrants should not have the same success.

  Although children of Mexican immigrants do better, in terms of educational and professional attainment, than thir parents UCLA sociologist Edward Telles has found that the gains don’t continme. Indeed, the fouth generation is marginally worse off than the third James Jackson,of the University of Michigan,has foud a simila rend among black Caribbean immigrants,Tells fears that Mexican-Americans may be fated to follow in the footsteps of American blacks-that largeparts of the community may become mired in a seemingly state of poverty and Underachievement . Like African-Americans, Mexican-americans are increasingly relegated to (降入)segregated, substandyrd schools, and their dropout rate is the highest for any 儿童会nic group in the country.

  We have learned much about the foolish idea of excluding people on the presumption of the ethnic/racial inferiority. But what we have not yet learned is how to make the process of Americanization work for all. I am not talking about requiring people to learn English or to adopt American ways; those things happen pretty much on their own, but as arguments about immigration hear up the campaign trail, we also ought to ask some broader question about assimilation, about ho wto ensure that people , once outsiders , don’t fovever remain marginalized within these shores.

  That is a much larger question than what should happen with undocumented workers, or how best to secure the border, and it is one that affects not only newcomers but groups that have been here for generations. It will have more impact on our future than where we decide to set the admissions bar for the lasest ware of would-be Americans. And it would be nice if we finally got the answer right。

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