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1、 PAGE PAGE 8 / 8光華管理學(xué)院 2010 2011 學(xué)年第二學(xué)期期末考試試題(A 卷)課程名稱(chēng):商務(wù)英語(yǔ)(閱讀)任課教師:考試日期年6 月日考試時(shí)間:1.5 小學(xué)生類(lèi)別:本科年級(jí)班號(hào):考生姓名:考生學(xué)號(hào):考試方式:閉卷試題(注意:答案一律寫(xiě)在答題紙,否則不計(jì)分)I.Reading comprehension (60 points in total; paraphrasing items in Passage Four: 3 points each; others: 1.5 pointseach)Passage ONEWHEN Parliament decided, in 1709
2、, to create a law that would protect books from piracy, the London-based publishers and booksellers who had been pushing for such protection were overjoyed. When Queen Anne gave her assent on April 10th the following year300 years ago this weekto “An act for the encouragement of learning” they were
3、less enthused. Parliament had given them rights, but it had set a time limit on them: 21 years for books already in print and 14 years for new ones, with an additional 14 years if the author was still alive when the first term ran out. After that, the material would enter the public domain so that a
4、nyone could reproduce it. The lawmakers intended thus to balance the incentive to create with the interest that society has in free access to knowledge and art. The Statute of Anne thus helped nurture and channel the spate of inventiveness that Enlightenment society and its successors have sinceenjo
5、yed.Over the past 50 years, however, that balance has shifted. Largely thanks to the entertainment industrys lawyers and lobbyists, copyrights scope and duration have vastly increased. In America, copyright holders get 95 years protection as a result of an extension granted in 1998, derided by criti
6、cs as the “Mickey Mouse Protection Act”. They are now calling for even greater protection, and there have been efforts to introduce similar terms in Europe. Such arguments should be resisted: it is time to tip the balance back.Lengthy protection, it is argued, increases the incentive to create. Digi
7、tal technology seems to strengthen the argument: by making copying easier, it seems to demand greater protection in return. The idea of extending copyright also has a moral appeal. Intellectual property can seem very like real property, especially when it is yours, and not some faceless corporations
8、. As a result people feel that once they own itespecially if they have made itthey should go on owning it, much as they would a house that they could pass on to their descendants. On this reading, protection should be perpetual. Ratcheting up the time limit on a regular basis becomes a reasonable wa
9、y of approximating thatperpetuity.The notion that lengthening copyright increases creativity is questionable, however. Authors and artists do not generally consult the statute books before deciding whether or not to pick up pen or paintbrush. And overlong copyrights oftenlimit, rather than encourage
10、, a works dissemination, impact and influence. can be difficult to locate copyright holders to obtain the rights to reuse old material. As a result, much content ends up in legal limbo (and in the case of old movies and sound recordings, is left to deterioratecopying them in order to preserve them m
11、ay constitute an act of infringement). The penalties even for inadvertent infringement are so punishing that creators routinely have to self-censor their work. Nor does the advent of digital technology strengthen the case for extending the period of protection. Copyright protection is needed partly
12、to cover the costs of creating and distributing works in physical form. Digital technology slashes such costs, and thus reduces the argument forprotection.The moral case, although easy to sympathize with, is a way of trying to have ones cake and eat it. Copyright was originally the grant of a tempor
13、ary government-supported monopoly on copying a work, not a property right. From 1710 onwards, it has involved a deal in which the creator or publisher gives up any natural and perpetual claim in order to have the state protect an artificial and limited one. So itremains.The question is how such a de
14、al can be made equitably. At the moment, the terms of trade favor publishers too much. A return to the 28-year copyrights of the Statute of Anne would be in many ways arbitrary, but not unreasonable. If there is a case for longer terms, they should be on a renewal basis, so that content is not locke
15、d up automatically. The value society places on creativity means that fair use needs to be expanded and inadvertent infringement should be minimally penalized. None of this should get in the way of the enforcement of copyright, which remains a vital tool in the encouragement of learning. But tools a
16、re not ends in themselves. (713 words)Decide whether the following statements are true (T) or false (F) or not mentioned(NM).The booksellers and publishers at Queen Annes time were opposed to the Statute ofAnne.The writer does not think that copyrights should be possessed for ever though he agrees w
17、ith the protectionists that copyright resembles realproperty.The writer thinks that digital technology reduces the costs of creating and distributing works in physical form and thus cannot be the excuse for stronger protection forcopyrights.The writers understanding of the 1709/1710 law concerning p
18、iracy is that copyright holders have exchanged everlasting rights to their own creation for limited state protection ofit.The writer neither thinks the current copyright laws favor the learners enough nor suggests a return to the statute ofAnne.Choose the right meanings of the underlined words in th
19、epassage.spate:a.sentimentb. spiritc. enthusiasm d.outpouringderided:a.mockedb. criticizedc. nicknamedd. denouncedlimbo:a.trapb. lawsuitc.helplessnessd. complicationinadvertent: a. insignificant b. inconspicuousc. unintentionald. unavoidableadvent:a.improvingb.advancingc. progressingd. comingends:a.
20、 methodsb.terminalsc.purposesd. conclusionsPassage TWOOne of the strangest developments in financial markets this year is the “Lafite effect.” It offers a valuable lesson about investing. This financial crisis has walloped just about everything. It has even pushed down prices for fine wine. The HYPE
21、RLINK /apps/quote?ticker=VWFUNDO%3AKY Vintage HYPERLINK /apps/quote?ticker=VWFUNDO%3AKY Wine Fund, which invests “in fine wine with an objective of steady, high capital growth,” HYPERLINK /images/pdfs/dec08ord.pdf declined 33 percent in 2008.This is newsworthy. In a 2008 HYPERLINK /meetings/Portland
22、2008/programinfo/Sanning_full.pdf paper, economists Lee Sanning, HYPERLINK /search?q=Sherrill%2BShaffer&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date%3AD%3AS%3Ad1 Sherrill Shaffer and Jo Marie Sharratt at the University of Wyomin
23、g demonstrated that wine investments provide enormous positive returns over time, with almost no correlation to the market as a whole. Their study provides a textbook example of the problem with risk analysis. Until that time, the correlation of wine with the overall stock market was essentially zer
24、o. A hedge fund that bet on that remaining true would have lost big, because this time everything movedtogether.One set of wine investors survived unscathed: those who bought and held the fine French wine HYPERLINK / Chateau Lafite Rothschild. According to data compiled by wine exchange HYPERLINK /
25、Liv-ex, the average list price for a bottle of 1982 Lafite was $3,386 in July, the highest ever. Thats about $280 higher than it was last year, and more than $1,100 higher than in 2007. Not bad for a bottle that could have purchased for about $20 back in the 1980s. So strong is the 1982 Lafite that
26、its value largely withstood a downgrade, to 97 from a perfect 100, by U.S. wine maven HYPERLINK /search?q=Robert%2BParker&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date%3AD%3AS%3Ad1 Robert Parker. If you consider how much wealth h
27、as been destroyed in the past year, you would think that such a markdown would have devastated prices. Thinkagain.The run-up appears to have affected all things Lafite, not just the 1982 vintage. The effect is so striking that Liv-ex created a new index to track the prices of the Lafite vintages fro
28、m 2000 to 2006. That index is now only 4.4 percent below its long-term high. Few investments have done better. The question for an investor is this: Is the Lafite price spike yet another bubble, or are there sound fundamental reasons? One sound argument that might explain the increase is that there
29、is a special “Lafite effect” associated with Asia. As wealth has increased there, the demand for luxury commodities such as Lafite has skyrocketed. “Right now, its almost an insult in some places to serve something other than Lafite,” Liv-exs director, HYPERLINK /search?q=James%2BMiles&site=wnews&cl
30、ient=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date%3AD%3AS%3Ad1 James Miles, told me last week. With the Lafite supply limited, this high demand for the supreme trophy wine has pushed prices through theroof.Since Asia will presumably continue to g
31、row in wealth, one might expect that demand will skyrocket and that todays prices will someday look cheap. The Lafite price might just as well drop sharply, and the argument for a decline is probably more compelling. For one thing, prices might be higher now because of a speculative bubble. Also, As
32、ian consumers might become more sophisticated and grow to appreciate other wines, which they now shun, that are close substitutes for Lafite. If they do that, todays prices might be a high water mark for some time. The 2000vintages of both Lafite and HYPERLINK /home/en/fiches/mhb.php La Mission Haut
33、 Brion both received perfect scores of 100 from Parker, for example. Right now Lafite costs more than twice as much.The decision on investing today in Lafite probably turns on this question of whether it will become more socially acceptable to serve fine wines other than Lafite in the wealthiest cor
34、ners of Asia. Todays high prices suggest there are enough people willing to bet that Asian demand for Lafite continues on its trajectory.Its a tempting bet, and a risky one. As Lafite prices have soared away from those of close substitutes, Lafite has begun to look - especially to unsophisticated in
35、vestors, and those who rely on past correlations - like an increasingly safe investment, with steady and predictable returns. In fact, the opposite is true. The risk of Lafite prices plummeting and wiping out your investment has skyrocketed along with the price. It might be possible to make money as
36、 Lafite prices continue to soar. But prudence demands that sensible investors stay on the sidelines. Whether you are buying wine for consumption or investment, Id go with La Mission Haut Brion. (712words)Answer the following questions. The MAXIMUM LENGTH of each of your answer is 10 WORDS.In the sec
37、ond paragraph, what does the second “that” in “A hedge fund that bet on that remaining true would have lost big” referto?all the wine investors badly hurt by the financial crisis? (Dont just say “yes” or“no”.)How would you describe the influence of HYPERLINK /search?q=Robert%2BParker&site=wnews&clie
38、nt=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date%3AD%3AS%3Ad1 Robert Parkers grading of the 1982 Lafite on itsprice?what way is Asia associated withLafite?What changes in Asian consumers might cause the Lafite pricedecline?What is the writers view
39、 on investing in Lafite at the time of writing thearticle? 7 List at least THREE NOUNS from the passage that mean “(of price) goingup”.Passage THREETHE French love to joke about the ghastliness of English food, but in the 1990s Parisians discovered a surprising (1) afor the convenience food by Marks
40、 & Spencer (M&S), a quintessentially British fashion and food (2) r_ _ _ _ _ _. Egg and cress, cheese and cucumber, and cheese and pickle sandwiches were flying off the shelves at the M&S flagship shop on Boulevard Haussmann in the centre of Paris. Even more popular were the ready-made meals that ma
41、de life easier for busy Parisians, many of whom live in tiny flats with even tinierkitchens.When, in March 2001, M&S announced the closure of the store, as well as all its other 38 shops in continental Europe, as part of a (3) rrestructuring, it caused storm of protest. The Paris flagship had its ow
42、n book of condolences for customers to sign while its workers threatened legal action. Even so, M&S went ahead with its retreat from Europeand came to regret it as “a big mistake” in subsequent years, in the words of Stuart Rose, the former chief executive.Ten years after the humiliating retreat, M&
43、S is reported to be making a comeback. It will shortly open a new Parisian flagship store, this time on the Champs according to an article in La Tribune, a French business daily. It will take over number 100 Champs from Esprit, and according to the article, has already told Esprit employees that the
44、y will be offered a new job. M&S is not confirmingor denyingthe report.Unlike most of its rivals, M&S is still overwhelmingly a British business, with 90% of its revenue generated at home. (The domestic market accounts for only 28% of the revenue of Inditex, a big Spanish fashion seller which operat
45、es the Zara chain among others.) is the largest clothing seller in Britain with a market share of 11%, and double that for people over 45. Its market share in food as a whole is 4% but in ready-made meals M&S (4) cs 20% of the market. “What happens next Britain is much more important than internatio
46、nal expansion,” says Philip Dorgan at Altium Securities. The biggest looming challenge is to break out of the “10 billion-and-bust cycle”, the companys tendency to slip up each time it manages to get its annual revenues above this level.Even so, Marc Bolland, the new CEO of M&S, said at the companys
47、 investors day in November that he will give his company a push internationally in his effort to (5) b_ _ _ _ sales by up to 30% in the next three years. He is planning to invest-950m a year in the companys online sales channels and its international operations. M&S has an agreement with Amazon, for
48、 its internet operations until 2013 but is planning to take them into their own hands after that. The international expansion, said Mr Bolland, will take the form of more joint (6) v_ _ _ _ _ _s or wholly-owned operations in selected markets. In India, M&S already has two dozen shops collaborating w
49、ith Reliance Industries, an Indian conglomerate, and is planning to add another two dozen. Mr Bolland didnt mention France, but many analysts assumed that he was including France in his expansionplans.If the reported retour Paris turns out a success, it seems likely that M&S will be tempted to try r
50、econquering some of the other European cities it abandoned a decade ago. Even in those dark days, it was actually making money in Franceit was the losses in Germany and elsewhere that forced it to make a Dunkirk-style retreat to Blighty. Its chances this time will be higher given that the Champs is
51、an even better location than was Boulevard Haussmann. M&S will be following in the footsteps of H&M, a Swedish rival, which last October successfully (7) led flagship store on the Champs Elyses designed by Jean Nouvel, a star architect.One worry, according to Fraser Ramzan, an analyst at Nomura, a s
52、tockbroker, is that Parisians are most likely to seek out M&Ss food, rather than the clothing that is a more important (and profitable) part of its offering. Then again, if they can be persuaded to give British nosh a try, perhaps elegant Parisiennes can also be (8) c_ _ _ _ _ed to British chic. (74
53、6 words)Spell the words according to the suggested meanings:love forfoodseller of goods in smallquantitiesthorough, changing the 4 seize,conquerincreaseenterprisestartchange,turnPassage FOUR1 AN annual report sent out in the season when countless companies worldwide are publishing them is at risk of
54、 being filed in the bin. Not so if the company is Huawei and 2 the report is intended to make a company that reflects the best of Chinas manufacturing prowess, while being a prime example of its secretiveness, seem normal.The telecoms-equipment makers financial performance is impressive enough to ma
55、ke the report worth reading: revenues were 185 billion ($27.4 billion), having grown by an annual average of 29% in the past four years. The growth rate for profits has been 56%. 3 Having just passed Nokia and Siemens, Huawei looks on track to overtake Ericsson, the industry leader, this4 But it fac
56、es some big impediments, perhaps the most important being the concerns of many governments, notably Americas and Indias, about a private company suspected of links to the security departments of a country said to be conducting sophisticated hacking. Because of such worries, Huaweis efforts to buy Am
57、erican companies have been blocked and some sales have been lost.The report is clearly an effort by Huawei to lay such concerns to rest. For the first time, its directors are named and given brief biographies. 5 The rags-to-riches story of Ren Zhengfei, the chief executive, is fleshed out: the son o
58、f rural schoolteachers, he left the army in 1983, founding the company with savings of 21,000 yuan four years None of the other directors is said to have military ties. However, a somewhat conspicuous omission from the profile of Sun the chairman, is thataccording to a report in the Financial Timess
59、he used to work for the Ministry of State Security. That three other directors are (according to the Chinese press) closely related to Mr Ren is alsoomitted.6 The report is a bit more forthcoming on the financial help Huawei gets from the state: plentiful cheap loans, some at interest rates of less
60、than 1.7%, and a handy chunk of research grants. The audit of the accounts, by KPMG Huazhen, was unqualified, though the auditor noted that they did not contain all the informationneeded to meet international accounting standards for a full company report.Huawei still has some way to go before it sa
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