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d like to often You should write about 100 words. Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter. Use Li Ming instead. You do not need to write the address. Part B 52. Directions: Write an article to an English newspaper discussing laidoff workers and reemployment in China. In your article you should 1) describe briefly the present situation of unemployment. 2) analyze the causes of it. 3) give advice on reemployment. You should write 160200 words neatly on ANSWER SHEET 2. (20 points) 。 deeper understanding will require greater and greater efforts of the imagination to achieve: and a wider grasp of the structure of systems of huae plexity will require more and more powerful Computers. The seam of gold that is useful science may one day be mined out, leaving only a few nuggets to be uncovered here and there by everincreasing effort. (4) Of course, we may not realize that the mine is exhausted: no banner will appear in the sky to tell us that further fundamental advances will require a huge leap for Mankind, rather than a gradual shuffle. Scientists alone do not dictate the future course of science. (5) When their activities bee very expensive and have no direct technological or military relevance to the state, then their continued support will be determined by other great problems that confront society. In the future, we might expect that the development of what we will call the problem sciences — those studies needed to solve the great environmental, social, and medical problems that threaten humanity39。t have an artistic element to it, whereas this is exciting and creative, he says. I really enjoy the design side. (42) . Graham also keeps plenty of traditional designs in stock, since they prove as popular as the oneoffs. It seems that people are attracted to handcrafting, Graham says. They wele the opportunity to acquire something a little bit different. (43) . I have found my place in the market. People love the individuality and I get a lot of satisfaction from seeing a nondescript shape turn into something almost lifelike, he says. (44) . And nowadays, with more and more people moving to the country, individuals want to put an exclusive finishing touch to their properties. It has been a boost to crafts like mines, (45) . American and Danish buyers in particular are showing interest. Pricing, he explains, depends on the intricacy of the design.”His most recent request was for a curlycoaled dog. Whatever the occasion, Graham can create a gift with a difference. [A] Graham has bee increasingly busy, supplying flatpacked weathervanes to clients worldwide. [B] Graham decided to concentrate his efforts on a weathervane business. He, had served an apprenticeship as a precision engineer and had worked in, that trade for 15 years when he and his wife, Liz, agreed to swap rolesshe went out to work as an architectural assistant and he stayed at home to look after the children and build up the business. [C] Last month, a local school was opened with his galleon ship weathervane hoisted above it. [D] For centuries, weathervanes have kept munities in touch with the elements, signaling those shifts in wind direction that bring about changes in the weather, he explains. [E] Graham has no plans for expansion, as he wants to keep the business as a rural craft. [F] Graham has now perfected over 100 original designs. He works to very fine detail, always seeking approval for the design of the silhouette from, the customer before proceeding with the handcutting. Part C Directions: Read the following text carefully and then translate the underlined segments into Chinese. Your translation should be written clearly on ANSWER SHEET 2. (10 points)..... During: the past thirty years, science has steadily mopped up lots of problems that were opened up by new technologies. (1) New knowledge has invariably meant new gadgets and ways of transferring information which require everdecreasing amounts of time and energy. But wilt new knowledge always have new practical consequences? Or will the frontiers of the doable lag further and further behind those of the conceivable? Present theories of physics lead us to believe that there are surprising few fundamental laws of Nature. (2) Nevertheless. there seems to be an endless array of different states and structures that those laws permitiust as there are a very small number of rules and pieces defining a game like chess, yet an endless number of different games that could be played out. Physicists are fairly confident that they are not missing something in between the forces that they have already found. When it es to the outes of those discoveries and a growing appreciation of how plex anized structures e about and evolve in tandem with their environments. Some scientists and philosophers have taken the view that science as a whole has experienced a Golden Age that will eventually draw to a close. (3) Truly new discoveries will bee harder and harder to make。s business or leisure interests. It39。 experience in handling real apparatus. [C] con