Lesson 88 Part Ⅰ
Part Ⅰ Warming-up Exercises
WHAT in the News Lead ?
1. More than 100,000 persons ______________________ in London on Sunday.
2. China's labor union newspaper, the Workers' Daily, says the country _______________________________________.
3. An explosion in a chemical factory ____________________________ in the southern state of Louisiana.
4. Malaysia's Minister of Culture, Mokhtar Hasim,_________________________ during the election campaign last April.
5. Two of the astronauts orbiting the earth in America's space shuttle Columbia __________________ Monday.
6. The United States ___________________________________.
7. Work crews ________________ in the western state of Wyoming.
8. Two Canadian pilots _______________ in a one-engine airplane.
Score: ___________
Lesson 88 Part Ⅱ
Part Ⅱ News
Exercises:
Ⅰ.1. Moscow: Soviet leader's call for___________________________
2. Beijing: Arrival of Soviet Deputy Foreign Ministerfor ______________
3. The United Sihanouk's call for ______________________________
Nations:_________________________________________________
4. Harar: Nine African countries' appeal for ______________________
Ⅱ. 1 . What else did the Soviet government ask the UN to do ?
2. What did the Chinese Vice Foreign Minister say at Beijing Airport ?
3. What did Prince Sihanouk tell the UN Assembly about the situation in Kampuchea ?
4. What did the nine African countries need to buy ?
Lesson 88 Part Ⅲ
Part Ⅲ Words And Their Stories
---- Nose
Exercises:
1. to hold up one's nose:
__________________________________________
2. to turn up one's nose:
___________________________________________
3. to be led by the nose:
___________________________________________
4. to have a nose for something:
___________________________________________
5. to put someone's nose out of joint:
___________________________________________
6. to cut off one's nose to spite one's face:
___________________________________________
7. to keep one's nose to the grindstone:
___________________________________________
8. to take a nose dive:
___________________________________________
9. to count noses:
___________________________________________
10. to be on the nose:
___________________________________________
Lesson 88 Part I
Lesson 88
Part Ⅰ Warming-up Exercises
WHAT in the News Lead?
Training Focus:
Identifying wh- words in the news lead: what
Directions: You are going to hear several news leads. Listen carefully. Focus your attention on what in each lead and write down what you hear in the given spaces.
Key:
1.More than 100,000 persons took part in anti-nuclear demonstrations in London on Sunday.
2.China's labor union newspaper, the Workers' Daily, says the country has almost completed plans, for its first nuclear power center.
3.An explosion in a chemical factory has forced about 25,000persons to leave their homes in the southern state of Louisiana.
4.Malaysia's Minister of Culture, Mokhtar Hasim, has been charged with the murder of a politician during the election campaign last April.
5.Two of the astronauts orbiting the earth in America's space shuttle Columbia are preparing for a walk in space Monday.
6.The United States has ordered two Cuban diplomats to leave the country.
7.Work crews are trying to clean up a large oil spill in the western state of Wyoming.
8.Two Canadian pilots are continuing an attempt to break the record for around-the-world flight in a one-engine airplane.
Lesson 88 Part Ⅱ News
Lesson 88
Part Ⅱ News
Ex. Ⅰ
Directions: Complete the summary for each news item.
Key: 1.halt to production of nuclear weapons
2.talks on establishing normal relations between China and Soviet Union
3.withdrawal of Vietnamese forces from Kampuchea
4.aid to deal with long drought
Ex. Ⅱ
Directions: Answer the questions.
Key: (see tapescript)
Tapescript:
News (3'13")
Moscow
The Soviet Union has urged the United Nations to call for an immediate world-wide halt to the production of nuclear weapons. The Soviet government also asked the UN to declare the first use of any nuclear weapon a crime. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko made the proposals in letters sent to UN Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar. The United Nations will consider the proposals. Mr Gromyko said the United States and the Soviet Union could be an example for the rest of the world by being the first to halt all nuclear arms production.
Beijing
Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Leonid Illychev has arrived for talks on establishing normal relations between China and the Soviet Union. The talks reopened later today. Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Qian Qichen welcomed the Soviet official at Beijing Airport. Mr Qian said he hopes for progress in the talks.
The United Nations
Kampuchean opposition leader Prince Norodom Sihanouk has again urged the General Assembly to call for the withdrawal of Vietnamese forces from Kampuchea. Prince Sihanouk told the UN Assembly that the situation in Kampuchea is growing much worse. He said that about 600,000 Vietnamese civilians are in Kampuchea along with Vietnamese occupation forces.The Kampuchean opposition leader said the Vietnamese settlers are destroying his country's society and farmland. But Prince Sihanouk told the General Assembly that his opposition coalition is strong and growing.
Harar
Nine countries in Southern Africa have appealed for $ 300,000,000 in aid to help deal with the effects of a long drought. The nine countries have been suffering from extremely dry weather for more than two years. They said they need the aid to buy food and farm animals. The appeal was made in Harar by the nine members of the Southern African Development Co-ordination Conference.
Lesson 88 Part Ⅲ Words And theirStories ---- Nose
Lesson 88
Part Ⅲ Words And their Stories
---- Nose
Ex.
Directions: Explain the expressions with the information you get from the story.
Key: 1.to express pride
2.to show one is better than others
3.to be controlled by others
4.to have skill for something
5.to turn someone away
6.to injure oneself to get the satisfaction of revenge against another
7.to work very hard
8.to fail, to fall like an uncontrolled plane
9.to list supporters or opponents
10.to be exactly on time
Tapescript:
Words And Their Stories (4'49")
---- Nose
It is not surprising that the human nose has given language some of its most imaginative expressions. Without a nose, how could we breathe or smell? And does any part of a person's face give it more of its special character than the nose, large or small? Cyrano de Bergarac said that a great nose showed a great man ---- courageous, courteous, manly and intellectual. Of course, he was a fanatic when it came to noses. But how true were the words of the poet who said that when she smelled a rose she felt it was a great sorrow that she had only one nose. Clearly the nose has had a major part in man's imagination and then the expression of many different kinds of emotions. For example, the expression“to hold up one's nose”shows one of man's basic feelings ---- pride. On the other hand, a person who thinks he is better than others will“turn up his nose.”
Then we have a number of expressions that show man's weakness. One is“to be led by the nose,”letting others control him. As Shakespeare said,“There are many who are led by the nose by gold.” Other expressions show man's skill, as in a newspaper reporter who“has a nose for news”or a leader who “has a nose for trouble.”And for those who feel rejected, we say that“their noses have been put out of joint.”The expression is about 500 years old. This expression is used to describe someone who has been turned away or another. For example when someone is not invited to a party, or when a child feels rejected when a newborn baby is brought into the home, their noses have been put out of joint, though usually for only a short time.
For the powerful human emotions of revenge and spite, we have the expression“to cut off your nose to spite your face.”A man who will injure himself just to get the satisfaction of revenge against another is cutting off his nose to spite his face.
There are a few other expressions based on the human nose:“to keep one's nose to the grindstone,”to work very hard without looking up, to work long hours to reach a goal;“to take a nose dive,”to fail, to fall like an uncontrolled plane; “to count noses,”to make a list of your supporters or opponents; and “on the nose,”exactly right on time.
You have been listening to the Special English program “Words and Their Stories.”It was written by Harold Berman. This is Morris Joyce.