Lesson 110 Part Ⅰ
Lesson 110
PartⅠ Warming-up Exercises
Note-taking: Leaving a Message
Telephone Message
To_______________________________________________
From_____________________________________________
Caller's Telephone Number
Message___________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
Received By_________________________________________
Telephone Message
ELMHURST PLUMBING COMPANY
To_______________________________________________
From_____________________________________________
Address___________________________________________
Phone Number______________________________________
Message___________________________________________
Received By Elizabeth_________________________________
Score: ____
Lesson 110 Part Ⅱ
Part Ⅱ Congratulatory Telegram
Exercises:
Ⅰ.
Ⅱ.1.The telegram rate is_______________________________
__________________________________________________.
2.The rate for a letter telegram is__________________________
___________________________________________________.
3.The telegram sender's telephone number is _________________.
Lesson 110 Part Ⅲ
Part Ⅲ Communication In Modern Times
Exercises:
Outline
Ⅰ.A. Introduction
Communication has become a highly developed art.
B. Telephone has new possibilities.
1.Direct dialing----between most large cities in the U.S.A. and into parts of Canada
2. 90 million phones and some 287 million calls a day in the United States(Americans----second most talkative people in the world)
3. Dialing certain numbers to find the correct time and to hear the weather report----possible in many cities.
C. Movies were dealt a hard blow by television.
1. Attendance at movies----cut in half overnight
2. Old movies----sold to television networks
3.Half the old theaters---- converted into bowling alleys or garages
4.Movies being made today on a grand scale---- paying big money
D. Television has reached into all homes and spilled out all sorts of programs.
1.News and top sports events
2.Presidential campaigns
3.Commercial advertisements
4.Crime shows, mediocre Westerns and comedies
5.Educational programs
Ⅱ.E.
F.
Lesson 110 Part I
Lesson 110
Part Ⅰ Warming-up Exercises
Note-taking: Leaving a Message
Training Focus:
Note-taking: important points of telephone conversations
Directions: You are going to hear two short telephone conversations. Listen carefully. Note down the information you need to fill in the blanks in the telephone slips.
Key:
1. A: Operator. B: I want to make a long-distance call to New York please. “the number is area code (212) 271----1107. A: Is that “personto-person?” B: No, make it station-to-station. By the way, make it collect. I don't have enough change in my hand. A: Your name and telephone number, please. B: My name is Newcomb, telephone number is 586----4136. A: Thank you. Hold on, please. (Telephone rings) C: Hello! A: Are you willing to accept a long-distance call from Mrs Newcomb? C: Yes! A: Co ahead! B: Steve, is your mother home? C: Mother is not home at this moment. Who is this? B: Auntie Sundi. How are you, Steve? C:I'm fine, thank you. Where are you? B: In Alaska now. C: Alaska-wow! B: Tell your mother that I'll be arriving tomorrow night at Kennedy .Airport. C: Which time, ours or yours? B: Your time. C: What airline and which flight? B: North West Orient Airline, Flight number 61. It's due to arrive at 7∶35. Write it down so you don't forget. C: Yes, I did it. B: Good! It's so great to hearyour voice! How is everybody? C: They are all OK. Thanks. We miss you. We'll be at the airport to meet you. B: That will be fun! Love you. Bye now. C: See you later.
2. A: Elmhurst Plumbing Company. May I help you? B: Yes, please. We have a leaky faucet. Could you send someone to repair it? A: Your address and phone number, please. B: 90----40 54th Avenue, Elmhurst. Phone number is 271----1107. A: Name, please? B: Li is my name. .Steve is my given name. Is a plumber available now? A: Not at this moment, sir. They are all in the field. B: Tomorrow? A: Possibly. Let me check his schedule. How about tomorrow afternoon? B: We don't get out of school until 3∶00 p. in. Maybe late afternoon. A: Will you be home after 3∶00 p.m. then? B: Yes, there will be someone here. A: Our repairman will call before he comes. B: That's just fine, thanks.
Lesson 110 Part Ⅱ Congratulatory Telegram
Lesson 110
Part Ⅱ Congratulatory Telegram
Ex. Ⅰ
Directions: Write down the telegram receiver's name and address and then record the message.
Key: (Envelope)
Yuko Sasaki, 421 Magnolia Street, Los Angeles (Message)
CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR WEDDING DAY. THINKING OF YOU. HOPE TO SEE YOU SOON. KOMI.
Ex. Ⅱ
Directions: Complete the statements according to what you hear on the tape.
Key: (see tapescript)
Tapescript:
Congratulatory Telegram (1'24")
A: Western Union.
B: Yes. I'd like to send a telegram to someone in Los Angeles, California.
A: May I have the name and address?
B: Her name is Yuko Sasaki. She lives at 421 Magnolia Street, Los Angeles.
A: Can you spell the name, please?
B: The last name's Sasaki, S-A-S-A-K-I. Her first name's Yuko, Y-U-K-O.
A: Thank you. What is the message?
B: Could you first tell me the rate?
A: Two dollars and thirty-eight cents for the first seven words and thirty-four cents for each additional word.
B: I see. And how much is it to send a letter telegram?
A: It's three dollars and seventy-four cents for the first twenty two words and seventeen cents for each additional word.
B: I'll send a letter telegram then. The message is “CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR WEDDING DAY. THINKING OF YOU. HOPE TO SEE YOU SOON. KOML”
A: All right. Now let me read it back “CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR WEDDING DAY. THINKING OF YOU. HOPE TO SEE YOU SOON. KOMI”
B: That's correct. My name is Komi Tanaka and my phone number is 372----7585.
A: Thank you. This will arrive tomorrow morning.
B: Thank you.
Lesson 110 Part Ⅲ Communication In Modern Times
Lesson 110
Part Ⅲ Communication In Modern Times
Ex. Ⅰ
Directions: Study the outline for the first few paragraphs of the passage.
Ex. Ⅱ
Directions: Work out the outline for the second half of the passage.
Key: E. Newspaper is still the most important means of public communication.
1. Privately owned ---- making money by selling papers and ad space
2. No nationwide papers, but some read by many people
3. Only a few new papers ---- high cost of printing and buying modern presses
4. Trend for development ---- papers selling out and merging
F. Postal service handles 62 billion pieces of mail a year.
1. Speed ---- five hours on jet, but several days to deliver
2. New devices ---- Project Turnkey, electronic facsimile
Tapescript
Communication In Modern Times (6')
Communication has come a long way from the time when an Indian beat a drum in the pine forest to the time when a scientist receives messages from a satellite. In America, as elsewhere in this space age, communication has become a highly developed art.It is amazing to hear that the human voice has been bounced off a satellite and that it can be beamed around the world faster than it carries across a field. The ordinary person wonders if what the voice said was worth all the speed. And that is really, after all, what communications is all about.
Even the familiar old telephone has new possibilities If a man in McKeesport, Pennsylvania, wants to telephone a friend in San Diego, California, he has only to pick up his phone and dial 714----555----1212. (In some areas it is necessary to dial 1 before the area code, which in this case is 714.) The 714 will get him to San Diego, the other numbers will reach the information operator there who will give him his friend's number. This part is free. Then all he needs to do is dial again, this time 714 plus the seven numbers that belong to his friend. And he can start the conversation. Direct dialing is now possible all across the United States between most large cities and into parts of Canada.
Even with more than 90 million phones and some 287 million calls a day, Americans are said to be the second most talkative people in the world. Canadians rate first. In many cities it is possible to dial a number to find the correct time and another to hear the weather report.
The movies, which were a highly important form of communications in America and which made an image of America known to people all over the world, were dealt a hard blow by television. Almost overnight attendance at movies was cut in half. While 34 million Americans are said to be looking at movies every night, 28 million of them are watching them at home on television. Motion picture companies have sold countless old movies to the television networks and almost half the old theaters have been converted into bowling alleys or garages. The movies on a grand scale, however, that are being made today by the big movie producers are still paying big money. A movie costing 12 or 15 million dollars to make may still gross 60 or 70 million.
Television, which thus displaced the movies, has reached into homes all across America and spilled out in front of the eyes of the American people more good, bad and indifferent programs than anyone could begin to take in. News and top sports events, which formerly only a few were fortunate enough to see, can be had by turning a dial. Presidential candidates are now able to reach many millions of Americans, and presidential campaigns have been altered radically to meet the demands of television broadcasting. People now have a front seat to history in their living rooms.
In America there is no national television as there is in some countries, All the stations are run commercially. Advertisers sponsor shows, watch to see that they continue to “rate” high in popularity and interrupt the shows every few minutes to advertise the things they are selling. Thus pictures of America's new president taking the solemn oath of office took turns with pictures of an electric can opener.
Television is criticized for its crime shows and its mediocre Westerns and comedies, but there are other, special shows of real value. There are also educational television stations on a small scale that are trying out new types of high quality programs. Some give courses in foreign languages and in literature which people can follow and even take examinations later. Some schools have a regular class on television, such as science, several hours a week. In the Midwest a plane beams such lessons to children in classrooms in several states.
For all the power and appeal of television, the newspaper is still the most important means of public communication. In America the press is privately owned. Newpapers are business organizations making their money by selling papers and advertising space. To be successful the owners must sell enough papers to get the high advertising rates. There are no nationwide papers, though the New York Times, the Christian Science Monitor and the Wall Street Journal are read by people in many parts of the country. Because of the high cost of printing and of buying modern presses, only a few daily papers have started in recent years and very few have succeeded. The trend is in the opposite direction. Papers are selling out and merging. In at least one town the twodaily papers, one strongly liberal, the other strongly conservative, are under the same business management, roll from the same presses and carry the same advertisements.
The U.S. Postal Service handles 62 billion pieces of mail a year. It can send these pieces of written communication on jet planes that cross the country in five hours, but the mail still often takes several days to be delivered. To speed up mail inside the post office new and better automatic devices are being tried out for handling the mail. In Providence, Rhode Island, there is a two-block long post office called “Project Turnkey.” Almost all the workers have to do is to turn the key in the door and switch on the machines. Machines sort and cancel and an “electric brain” separates the letters into 300 bins for different parts of the country. The Postal Service has also experimented with sending mail by electronic facsimile methods. The letter is reproduced almost instantaneously at the receiving city's post office.