John Brown Raids Harpers Ferry

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[美]R·格伦·哈伯德《宏观经济学》R.GlennHubbard,AnthonyP

[美]R·格伦·哈伯德《宏观经济学》R.GlennHubbard,AnthonyP

Macroeconomics R. GLENN HUBBARD COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY ANTHONY PATRICK O’BRIEN LEHIGH UNIVERSITY MATTHEW RAFFERTY QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY Boston Columbus Indianapolis New York San Francisco Upper Saddle RiverAmsterdam Cape Town Dubai London Madrid Milan Munich Paris Montreal Toronto Delhi Mexico City So Paulo Sydney Hong Kong Seoul Singapore Taipei TokyoAbout the AuthorsGlenn Hubbard Professor Researcher and Policymaker R. Glenn Hubbard is the dean and Russell L. Carson Professor of Finance and Economics in the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University and professor of economics in Columbia’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences. He is also a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research and a director of Automatic Data Processing Black Rock Closed- End Funds KKR Financial Corporation and MetLife. Professor Hubbard received his Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University in 1983. From 2001 to 2003 he served as chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers and chairman of the OECD Economy Policy Commit- tee and from 1991 to 1993 he was deputy assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury Department. He currently serves as co-chair of the nonpar-tisan Committee on Capital Markets Regulation and the Corporate Boards Study Group. ProfessorHubbard is the author of more than 100 articles in leading journals including American EconomicReview Brookings Papers on Economic Activity Journal of Finance Journal of Financial EconomicsJournal of Money Credit and Banking Journal of Political Economy Journal of Public EconomicsQuarterly Journal of Economics RAND Journal of Economics and Review of Economics and Statistics.Tony O’Brien Award-Winning Professor and Researcher Anthony Patrick O’Brien is a professor of economics at Lehigh University. He received a Ph.D. from the University of California Berkeley in 1987. He has taught principles of economics money and banking and interme- diate macroeconomics for more than 20 years in both large sections and small honors classes. He received the Lehigh University Award for Distin- guished Teaching. He was formerly the director of the Diamond Center for Economic Education and was named a Dana Foundation Faculty Fel- low and Lehigh Class of 1961 Professor of Economics. He has been a visit- ing professor at the University of California Santa Barbara and Carnegie Mellon University. Professor O’Brien’s research has dealt with such issues as the evolution of the U.S. automobile industry sources of U.S. economiccompetitiveness the development of U.S. trade policy the causes of the Great Depression and thecauses of black–white income differences. His research has been published in leading journals in-cluding American Economic Review Quarterly Journal of Economics Journal of Money Credit andBanking Industrial Relations Journal of Economic History Explorations in Economic History andJournal of PolicyHistory.Matthew Rafferty Professor and Researcher Matthew Christopher Rafferty is a professor of economics and department chairperson at Quinnipiac University. He has also been a visiting professor at Union College. He received a Ph.D. from the University of California Davis in 1997 and has taught intermediate macroeconomics for 15 years in both large and small sections. Professor Rafferty’s research has f ocused on university and firm-financed research and development activities. In particular he is interested in understanding how corporate governance and equity compensation influence firm research and development. His research has been published in leading journals including the Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis Journal of Corporate Finance Research Policy and the Southern Economic Journal. He has worked as a consultantfor theConnecticut Petroleum Council on issues before the Connecticut state legislature. He has alsowritten op-ed pieces that have appeared in several newspapers including the New York Times. iii Brief Contents Part 1: Introduction Chapter 1 The Long and Short of Macroeconomics 1 Chapter 2 Measuring the Macroeconomy 23 Chapter 3 The Financial System 59 Part 2: Macroeconomics in the Long Run: Economic Growth Chapter 4 Determining Aggregate Production 105 Chapter 5 Long-Run Economic Growth 143 Chapter 6 Money and Inflation 188 Chapter 7 The Labor Market 231 Part 3: Macroeconomics in the Short Run: Theory and Policy Chapter 8 Business Cycles 271 Chapter 9 IS–MP: A Short-Run Macroeconomic Model 302 Chapter 10 Monetary Policy in the Short Run 363 Chapter 11 Fiscal Policy in the Short Run 407 Chapter 12 Aggregate Demand Aggregate Supply and Monetary Policy 448 Part 4: Extensions Chapter 13 Fiscal Policy and the Government Budget in the Long Run 486 Chapter 14 Consumption and Investment 521 Chapter 15 The Balance of Payments Exchange Rates and Macroeconomic Policy 559 Glossary G-1 Index I-1ivContentsChapter 1 The Long and Short of Macroeconomics 1WHEN YOU ENTER THE JOB MARKET CAN MATTER A LOT ........................................................ 11.1 What Macroeconomics Is About........................................................................... 2 Macroeconomics in the Short Run and in the Long Run .................................................... 2 Long-Run Growth in the United States ............................................................................. 3 Some Countries Have Not Experienced Significant Long-Run Growth ............................... 4 Aging Populations Pose a Challenge to Governments Around the World .......................... 5 Unemployment in the United States ................................................................................. 6 How Unemployment Rates Differ Across Developed Countries ......................................... 7 Inflation Rates Fluctuate Over Time and Across Countries................................................. 7 Econo mic Policy Can Help Stabilize the Economy .. (8)International Factors Have Become Increasingly Important in Explaining Macroeconomic Events................................................................................. 91.2 How Economists Think About Macroeconomics ............................................. 11 What Is the Best Way to Analyze Macroeconomic Issues .............................................. 11 Macroeconomic Models.................................................................................................. 12Solved Problem 1.2: Do Rising Imports Lead to a Permanent Reductionin U.S. Employment. (12)Assumptions Endogenous Variables and Exogenous Variables in EconomicModels ........................................................................................................ 13 Forming and Testing Hypotheses in Economic Models .................................................... 14Making the Connection: What Do People Know About Macroeconomicsand How Do They KnowIt .............................................................................................. 151.3 Key Issues and Questions of Macroeconomics ............................................... 16An Inside Look: Will Consumer Spending Nudge Employers to Hire................................ 18Chapter Summary and Problems ............................................................................. 20 Key Terms and Concepts Review Questions Problems and Applications Data Exercise Theseend-of-chapter resource materials repeat in all chapters.Chapter 2 Measuring the Macroeconomy 23HOW DO WE KNOW WHEN WE ARE IN ARECESSION ........................................................... 23Key Issue andQuestion .................................................................................................... 232.1 GDP: Measuring Total Production and Total Income ..................................... 25 How theGovernment Calculates GDP (25)Production and Income (26)The Circular Flow of Income (27)An Example of Measuring GDP (29)National Income Identities and the Components of GDP (29)vvi CONTENTS Making the Connection: Will Public Employee Pensions Wreck State and Local Government Budgets.................................................................... 31 The Relationship Between GDP and GNP........................................................................ 33 2.2 Real GDP Nominal GDP and the GDP Deflator.............................................. 33 Solved Problem 2.2a: Calculating Real GDP . (34)Price Indexes and the GDP Deflator (35)Solved Problem 2.2b: Calculating the Inflation Rate ..........................................................36 The Chain-Weighted Measure of Real GDP ....................................................................37 Making the Connection: Trying to Hit a Moving Target: Forecasting with “Real-Time Data” .................................................................................. 37 Comparing GDP Across Countries................................................................................... 38 Making the Connection: The Incredible Shrinking Chinese Economy ................................ 39 GDP and National Income .............................................................................................. 40 2.3 Inflation Rates and Interest Rates ....................................................................... 41 The Consumer Price Index .............................................................................................. 42 Making the Connection: Does Indexing Preserve the Purchasing Power of Social Security Payments ................................................................ 43 How Accurate Is theCPI ............................................................................................... 44 The Way the Federal Reserve Measures Inflation ............................................................ 44 InterestRates .................................................................................................................. 45 2.4 Measuring Employment and Unemployment .. (47)Answering the Key Question ............................................................................................ 49 An Inside Look: Weak Construction Market Persists.......................................................... 50 Chapter 3 The Financial System 59 THE WONDERFUL WORLD OFCREDIT ................................................................................... 59 Key Issue and Question .................................................................................................... 59 3.1 Overview of the Financial System ...................................................................... 60 Financial Markets and Financial Intermediaries ................................................................ 61 Making the Connection: Is General Motors Making Cars or Making Loans .................... 62 Making the Connection: Investing in the Worldwide Stock Market . (64)Banking and Securitization (67)The Mortgage Market and the Subprime Lending Disaster (67)Asymmetric Information and Principal–Agent Problems in Financial Markets...................68 3.2 The Role of the Central Bank in the Financial System (69)Central Banks as Lenders of Last Resort ..........................................................................69 Bank Runs Contagion and Asset Deflation ....................................................................70 Making the Connection: Panics Then and Now: The Collapse of the Bank of United States in 1930 and the Collapse of Lehman Brothers in2008 (71)3.3 Determining Interest Rates: The Market for Loanable Funds and the Market forMoney .......................................................................................... 76 Saving and Supply in the Loanable Funds Market ........................................................... 76 Investment and the Demand for Loanable Funds ............................................................ 77 Explaining Movements in Saving Investment and the Real Interest Rate (78)CONTENTS .。

小学上册第十四次英语第1单元测验试卷

小学上册第十四次英语第1单元测验试卷

小学上册英语第1单元测验试卷考试时间:100分钟(总分:140)A卷一、综合题(共计100题共100分)1. 填空题:I like to collect ________ (玩具名称) from my favorite shows.2. 听力题:The cake is ______ (frosted) with vanilla icing.3. 填空题:A rabbit's ______ (牙齿) keep growing.4. 选择题:What do we use to write on a blackboard?A. PenB. ChalkC. PencilD. Marker答案:B5. 填空题:The ancient Maya developed a complex ________ (日历).6. 填空题:I have a pet ______ (兔子) named Fluffy. It is very soft and loves to be ______ (抚摸).7. 填空题:The __________ was an important event in the history of Europe. (工业革命)8. 选择题:What is the largest mammal in the ocean?A. SharkB. WhaleC. DolphinD. Octopus答案: B9. 听力题:The _______ of light can create shadows of different shapes.10. 听力题:The grass is ________ and green.11. 听力题:The toy is _____ (expensive/cheap).12. 听力题:The garden has many _____ (flowers/plants).13. 听力题:The chemical formula for ethylene is ______.14. 填空题:I like to _______ (和朋友一起)去旅行.15. 填空题:My ___ (小狗) barks at the mailman.16. 选择题:What do you call a young antelope?A. CalfB. FawnC. KidD. Lamb答案:A17. 听力题:The __________ can help in predicting natural events.18. 选择题:What is the opposite of "up"?A. DownB. LeftC. RightD. Forward19. 填空题:This ________ (玩具) is perfect for sharing with others.20. 选择题:What is the main purpose of a teacher?A. To entertainB. To educateC. To superviseD. To judge答案: B. To educate21. 填空题:We have a ______ (丰富的) schedule for learning activities.22. 填空题:The capital of Latvia is ________ (里加).23. 填空题:A ________ (有机农业) avoids chemicals.24. 听力题:We will go to the ___ tomorrow. (museum)25. 听力题:The process of ______ occurs when rocks are worn away.26. 填空题:我的朋友喜欢 _______ (活动). 她觉得这很 _______ (形容词)27. 听力题:Lava flows can create new ______ when they cool and harden.28. 选择题:What is the name of the famous inventor of the light bulb?A. Nikola TeslaB. Thomas EdisonC. Alexander Graham BellD. Henry Ford答案:B29. 填空题:The __________ (历史的声音) speaks to us.30. 选择题:What is the name of the process of making something less clean?A. PollutingB. ContaminatingC. DirtyingD. Soiling答案: AThe chemical symbol for niobium is ______.32. 听力题:A __________ is formed by the melting of ice over time.33. 填空题:I can ______ (处理) difficult situations calmly.34. 听力题:The capital of Afghanistan is _______.35. 听力题:Some plants are _______ and can climb walls.36. 听力题:Flowers need ______ to grow.37. 填空题:My cousin is a __________ (演员).38. 选择题:What do you call a person who helps sick people?A. DoctorB. TeacherC. NurseD. Scientist答案:A39. 选择题:What is the opposite of deep?A. ShallowB. WideC. NarrowD. Vast40. 填空题:My _____ (姑妈) is visiting us this weekend.41. 听力题:Chemical bonds can be ionic or _______.42. 填空题:________ (生态补偿) supports conservation efforts.The first modern Olympics were held in ________ (雅典).44. 选择题:What is the largest desert in the world?A. SaharaB. GobiC. ArabianD. Antarctic答案: D. Antarctic45. 填空题:A __________ (草坪) can be soft and green.46. 听力题:The process of changing from a gas to a liquid is called _______.47. 填空题:A ____(social equity) ensures fair treatment for all.48. 填空题:The ________ has many different shapes.49. 填空题:We built a _____ (沙堡) at the beach.50. 填空题:The __________ (历史的记载) preserves knowledge for future generations.51. 填空题:A sea urchin has a hard, spiky ______ (外壳).52. 听力题:My favorite fruit is ______ (strawberry).53. 填空题:My cat catches ______ (小虫) in the house.54. 填空题:I love drawing illustrations of my ________ (玩具名) and their adventures.55. community innovation lab) develops creative solutions. 填空题:The ____How many colors are in a rainbow?A. 5B. 6C. 7D. 857. 填空题:My ________ (玩具名称) is a fun way to explore different stories.58. 填空题:The _______ (猪) rolls in mud.59. 填空题:The first recorded Olympic champion was a ______ (摔跤手).60. 听力填空题:I think kindness can change the world. Small acts of kindness can have a ripple effect and inspire others. I try to spread kindness by __________.61. 听力题:We are going to a ______ (circus) next month.62. 听力题:The sun is shining ___. (brightly)63. 填空题:The __________ (历史遗址) tell stories of the past.64. 选择题:What is the largest organ in the human body?A. HeartB. BrainC. LiverD. Skin答案: D65. 填空题:Penguins waddle when they _________ (走).66. 选择题:What do you call the process of creating a new plant from a seed?A. GerminationB. PollinationC. FertilizationD. PropagationWe need _____ (to study/to play) for the test.68. 听力题:The study of how rocks change over time is known as ______.69. 选择题:What do you call the science of studying the stars and planets?A. BiologyB. ChemistryC. AstronomyD. Geology答案:C70. 选择题:What is the opposite of "hot"?A. ColdB. WarmC. CoolD. Heat答案: A. Cold71. 听力题:My ______ helps organize community events.72. 听力题:Bees communicate through a dance called the ______ dance.73. 选择题:What is the name of the famous American landmark known for its colorful canyon?A. Grand CanyonB. Zion National ParkC. Bryce CanyonD. Arches National Park答案: A. Grand Canyon74. 选择题:What do you call the process of making something new?A. CreatingB. InnovatingC. DesigningD. Inventing答案: A75. 选择题:What do we call the layer of gases surrounding the Earth?A. AtmosphereB. StratosphereC. LithosphereD. Hydrosphere答案: A76. 选择题:What is the name of the famous river in Germany?A. RhineB. ElbeC. DanubeD. Main77. 选择题:What is the currency used in the USA?A. EuroB. YenC. DollarD. Pound78. 填空题:I can ______ (处理) conflicts peacefully.79. 填空题:My dad taught me how to ride a ________ (摩托车). It was a thrilling ________ (体验).80. 填空题:The __________ (历史的探讨) fosters understanding.81. 听力题:The ______ is very inspiring.82. 听力题:The Earth's rotation causes the cycle of day and ______.83. 填空题:I like to play with my ______. (我喜欢和我的______玩。

[英语考试]BBC新闻100篇

[英语考试]BBC新闻100篇

BBC新闻100篇BBC News Item 1 政治:英国首相确定大选时间The BBC has learned that the British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has decided that the British general election will take place on May 6th. Mr. Brown will go to Buckingham Palace tomorrow Tuesday to ask Queen Elizabeth to dissolve parliament, and then make a formal announcement of the election date. That will start the official election campaign, which, a BBC correspondent says, will be dominated by issues of taxation and spending in the wake of the global recession.BBC News Item 2 政治:大选在即,布朗遭遇挑战Less than six months before a general election in Britain, the governing Labour Party is embroiled again in internal strife. Two former cabinet ministers have called for secret ballot of members to decide whether the Prime Minister Gordon Brown should continue as party leader. Mr. Brown has called a general election by June this year. Our political correspondent Rob Watson reports.The two former cabinet ministers Geoff Hoon and Patricia Hewitt had stunned everyone at Westminster with their last-minute efforts to challenge Gordon Brown’s leadership. But Downing Street and Labour Party officials have moved quickly to quash any revolts. Most importantly, current cabinet ministers have come out and backed the prime minister, orbiting some cases with little apparent enthusiasm. So the latest challenge looks likely to be short lift. Although many within the Labour Party doubt Mr. Brown’s leadership qualities, they also seem to think it would only make things worse to get rid of him before the general election.BBC News Item 3 军事:英国核缩减计划The British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is offering to scale back Britain’s nuclear deterrence if an international agreement is reached to cut the world’s nuclear arsenals. Mr. Brown is expected to tell a special session of the United Nations Security Council on Thursday that he’ll be willing to give up one of four royal navy submarines that carry Trident nuclear missiles. Officials are insisting that cost isn’t a factor here. Here’s our defence correspondent Nick Childs.Gordon Brown is saying he’ll be ready to throw part of the trident force into the port in the context of a much bigger global disarmament deal. He said so in general terms before. This offer though is more concrete. There is a growing sense that to avoid what some fear could be a sudden cascade of new nuclear states, the established nuclear powers need to do more in terms of disarmament to keep the proliferation regime intact. The Prime Minister will hope his move will be seen as an important gesture. But the key to the process will be the actions of the big players, the United States and Russia.BBC News Item 4 军事:英国派军阿富汗The British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is expected to confirm that he is sending hundreds more troops to Afghanistan, bringing the total number of British troops there to about 9,500. Britain has the second largest NATO contingent in Afghanistan after the United States. Our defensecorrespondent Caroline Wyatt reports.In his statement on Afghanistan, it’s believed Mr. Brown will say he’s agreed in principle to send around 500 extra British troops to Helmand. The military advice says that extra forces are needed to help maintain progress and dominate the ground more effectively to keep the Taliban out of key areas. However, there will be caveats. The Prime Minister will want assurances from military chiefs that the extra troops will be properly equipped. But he’ll also expect Britain’s NATO partners to follow suit by offering more forces themselves. NATO defense ministers are likely to discuss troop levels on a meeting formally in Bratislava next week.BBC News Item 5 经济:欧美股市大跌Stock markets in Europe and the United States have fallen sharply in response to further signs that the debt crisis in Greece is intensifying and could spread to other countries. Share prices in New York, London, Frankfurt and Paris fell by more than 2% after a major international credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s downgraded Greek debt to a level known informally as junk. Nils Blythe has more.Standard & Poor’s downgraded its assessment of Greek bonds to the so-called junk status because of the growing danger that the bond holders will not be paid back in full. Many big investment funds have rules that forbid them from holding junk bonds, says the move is likely to trigger a further round of selling. Share markets have taken fright, fearing that if Greece does default on its debts, it would hit many European banks which hold Greek bonds and could trigger a wider financial crisis. Already pressure is mounting on Portugal which has also seen its credit rating downgraded today, although it remains above junk status.BBC News Item 6 经济:IMF要求各国进一步稳定全球金融体系The International Monetary Fund has told governments across the world that further action is needed to help return the global financial system to stability. In a fresh estimate of the scale of the problem, the IMF says global losses on toxic assets could total four trillion dollars. Andrew Walker reports.This report does identify what it calls some early signs of stabilization in financial systems, but there are not many of them. And the IMF says further action will be needed if they’re to be sustained. In two key areas, it says that progress by governments has been piecemeal and reactive, dealing with the problem assets held by financial institutions and how to handle banks that need extra capital. For that problem the report says temporary government ownership may sometime be necessary.BBC News Item 7 经济:德国给予希腊财政援助Officials in Germany say the total financial aid package for Greece could be more than double, the 60 billion dollars that is previously expected. The head of the International Monetary Fund Dominique Strauss-Kahn is in Berlin trying to persuade Germany to agree to the financial rescue plan. He said the deal needed to be implemented quickly as the situation was getting worse every day and could affect other European countries. But the German Chancellor Angola Merkel said Berlin needed to be searching that Greece was serious about spending cuts.BBC News Item 8 经济:IMF正努力帮助希腊解决债务问题The head of the International Monetary Fund says Greece has nothing to fear from the organization. At a news conference in Washington, Dominique Strauss-Kahn said the IMF was trying to provide Greece with the advice and resources necessary to help with its debt problem. Andrew Walker reports from Washington.Mr. Strauss-Kahn was responding to a Greek journalist who said the Greek public are demonizing the IMF that they fear things will be worse with IMF involvement. The agency has a reputation for requiring borrowing countries to make deep cuts in popular government spending programs. Mr. Strauss-Kahn said the Greek people should think of the IMF as a cooperative organization where the countries of the world work together to help those in trouble by providing resources and advice on behalf of the international community.BBC News Item 9 经济:G20财政部长达成协议Finance ministers of the world’s leading industrialized and developing countries, the G20, have agreed to continue supporting the global economic recovery. In a statement released after their meeting in Scotland, the ministers said conditions had improved, but economic and financial recovery was uneven and unemployment a worry. Andrew Walker reports.The communiqué avoids complacency. Although economic and financial conditions have improved, they decided they still need to keep up the initiatives intended to restore growth. The meeting was, however, rather overshadowed by a statement from the British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, suggesting a tax on financial transactions as one of a number of options for making banks pay for the crisis. His calls have been received politely by the finance ministers but several made remarks which suggest that other ways of tackling the problem are rather more likely to be adopted.BBC News Item 10 经济:欧盟达成协议,终止了香蕉贸易争端The European Union has initialed an agreement to end one of the world’s longest-running trade disputes over bananas. The EU, the world’s biggest importer of bananas, is to cut the duty it imposes on Latin American producers of the fruit, while bananas grows in former European colonies will gradually lose the preferential terms they’ve enjoyed. Andrew Walker reports.The deal signed in Geneva commits the European Union to gradually lowering the tariffs it imposes on bananas imported mainly from Latin America. The cut will be over a third by 2017. That will reduce the competitive advantage of a group of countries, mainly former colonies of EU states in Africa and Caribbean, which enjoyed tariff-free access. The EU plans to provide those countries with some compensation, in a shape of nearly 300,000 dollars in additional aid.BBC News Item 11 科技:太阳能飞机The long-awaited take-off of the Solar Impulse was greeted with delight by those who have spent the last seven years working on it.The solar-powered plane has the wing-span of a jumbo jet, but weighs less than a family car.It doesn’t use a single drop of aviation fuel, instead its giant wings are covered with solar cells.The project is the brainchild of Swiss adventurer Bertrand Piccard —he sees the SolarImpulse as a sign of things to come.BBC News Item 12 教育:英国学校开设学普通话课程It’s the world’s fastest growing economy and shows no sign of slowing down, so striking deals with Chinese businesses is now the top priority for every British company that wants to stay ahead in global trade. Now schools in the United Kingdom want to give their students a head start by teaching them Mandarin —and they are making it compulsory.Brighton College is a fee paying private school on the south coast of Britain and already teaches Latin, Spanish and French to its 1,200 pupils. Students can choose between these languages, but from the autumn, which is the beginning of the new academic year in British schools, every student must study Mandarin whether they like it or not.BBC News Item 13 娱乐:奥斯卡大赢家英国The cast and crew of British movies will no longer be hailed as the underdogs at awards ceremonies. At the recent 81st Oscars ceremony, British actors and movies won no less than 11 awards.The list of Oscar winners is usually dominated by American films and actors but 2009 has seen a more international flavour to the ceremony. British actors and actresses have long awaited such global recognition. Kate Winslet was nominated six times for an Oscar before she eventually won the Best Actress award at this year’s ceremony.Slumdog Millionaire lived up to its status as a global success and movie phenomenon. The low-budget movie swept the board winning eight Oscars, including Best Director and Best Picture. The movie, which documents the life of a young Indian boy after he wins a TV game show, has definitely helped to raise the profile of the British film industry.Summarising the national feeling, British Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, issued a statement saying “Britain is showing it has the talent to lead the world”.BBC News Item 14 人物:英女王也是网民It might seem like an unlikely match —an ancient institution getting to grips with cutting edge technology —but the British royal family has been active online for more than a decade.They launched their own website in 1997. The Queen’s Christmas message is available as a podcast, and a year ago the official Royal Channel was launched on YouTube, showing videos of the family at work.Royal watchers describe the 82 year old Queen as a silver surfer —someone who’s enthusiastic about the internet and who keeps in touch with younger members of her family by email.BBC News Item 15 体育:伦敦马拉松This weekend, around 35,000 runners filled the streets of London, running the 26th annual London Marathon. The course is 26.2 miles long (42 km), and goes past many of London’s landmarks, such as the Tower of London, the famous 19th century ship Cutty Sark, the Houses of Parliament and Buckingham Palace. The runners actually run over Tower Bridge.BBC News Item 16 体育:牛津剑桥划船赛Oxford and Cambridge are the oldest and most famous universities in Britain, and there has always been a great rivalry between the two institutions. But the most public competition between the two is the annual Boat Race. The 2006 Boat Race will take place on 2nd April, and will be the 152nd race of its kind.Both universities are located near rivers, and rowing is a popular and prestigious sport. The very first race took place in 1829, when a Cambridge student challenged a school-friend studying at Oxford. Ever since, the defeated team from the previous year challenges the opposition to a rematch. The only times when no Boat Races took place were during the First and Second World Wars.BBC News Item 17 政治:美国民主党得到参议院60个席位President Obama’s Democratic Party has secured the critical 60 seat majority in the US Senate that can help it override any Republican obstructions on Capitol Hill. This happened when the Democrats won the last undecided senate seat from November’s election after the Supreme Court in the state of Minnesota declared the Democratic candidate Al Franken the winner. Richard Lister reports from Washington.For almost eight months the two candidates had been locked in a bitter fight in the Minnesota Courts over the result of November’s Senate election. Just a few hundred votes separated them after the 2.8 million cast. The initial count favoured the Republican Norm Coleman but the recount gave the majority to his Democratic Party rival Al Franken. And the State Supreme Court is now upheld that verdict. His victory gives the Democrats 60 votes in the senate and the potential to overturn Republican efforts to block legislation.BBC News Item 18 政治:美国和以色列关系面临考验Reports in Israeli media say Israel’s ambassador to the United States Michael Oren told Israeli diplomats that American-Israeli relations were facing a crisis of historic proportions. Washington is furious at last week’s announcement by Israel during a visit by the US Vice President that more new Jewish homes were to be built in occupied East Jerusalem. But on Monday, the Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the Israeli parliament the building project would continue. Paul Wood reports from Jerusalem.Mr. Netanyahu has been presented with a choice, a breach with the right-wing members of his coalition, or with the Americans. With his speech to the Knesset, he seems to have chosen to put the needs of domestic politics first. It seems the Americans are so angry because they believe Mr. Netanyahu went back on an understanding. This was apparently that Israel would not push forward of any big new settlement building projects in East Jerusalem. This was necessary of the Palestinians were to be persuaded to join the long delayed negotiations so painstakingly put together by US mediators.BBC News Item 19 军事:美国将继续驻军阿富汗Leading United States officials have said the American military will continue its presence in Afghanistan for a number of years despite beginning to withdraw in 2011. In a series of mediareappearances, officials stressed that the date should be seen as the beginning of handing over responsibility to Afghan forces. Imtiaz Tyab report from Washington.Speaking on a Sunday morning political chat show, the Defense Secretary Robert Gates said that despite President Obama’s plan to begin withdrawing the troops from the region in July, 2011, the US was likely to maintain a significant military presence in Afghanistan for a number of years. The Defense Secretary said the pullout date was said to underline the urgent need for the Afghans to speed up recruiting and training soldiers and getting them into the field. A comment’s followed criticism from opposition Republicans who say announcing a withdraw date sent a dangerous signal to insurgents.BBC News Item 20 政治:奥巴马推迟访问印尼和澳大利亚President Obama is postponing a trip to Indonesia and Australia, so he can stay in Washington to try to get his health care reforms pass by congress. Mr. Obama had already delayed the long arranged trip once and was due to set off on Sunday. But with the crucial vote on the reform is expected within days, the trip has been put off entirely until June. From Washington Mark Martell reports.The president’s make changes to American health care insurance system, his flagship domestic legislation is dragged on for over a year and divided the country. He will be damaged if he can’t get it through. The climax is near, so far there is no sign of any republicans voting for it, its fate lies in the hands of handful in the president’s own party, who either feel it allows for easier abortion or who simply fear a back lash in November’s elections, if they vote for a measures their constitution dislike.BBC News Item 21 政治:英国新首相After days of political horse-trading the UK finally has a new government and a new Prime Minister, following the resignation of Labour’s Gordon Brown on Tuesday evening.Since last Thursday’s general election resulted in a hung parliament, a situation in which none of the political parties has an overall majority, British politicians have been attempting to form a coalition government.Such a government is comparatively rare in the UK. Indeed this is the first coalition since the Second World War.BBC News Item 22 军事:奥巴马对核安全峰会的评价President Barack Obama says the summit conference on nuclear security which has just ended in Washington was a testament to what is possible when nations come together. He said the 49 countries who attended had come to a four-point plan for future success in securing the security of all nuclear materials produced or stockpiled around the globe. Mr. Obama said the summit had made a real contribution to a safer world.BBC News Item 23 政治:希拉里出访莫斯科The American Secretary of States Hillary Clinton is in Moscow to try to persuade Russia to support American policy on Iran. The US wants Russia to agree to the option of imposingadditional sanctions on Iran if it does not suspend its uranium enrichment program by the end of the year. Richard Galpin reports from Moscow.As a permanent member of United Nations Security Council, Russia has the power to veto resolutions. And Moscow has always said it does not believe sanctions are an effective way of promoting change. But recently, President Medvedev has indicated his government made ultimately accept that sanctions are inevitable. There are other big issues to be discussed while Mrs. Clinton is in Russia, including the plan for Moscow and Washington to sign a new treaty in early December for a further cut in their large arsenals of nuclear weapons.BBC News Item 24 军事:美国和联合国敦促巴以恢复和平谈判The United States and the United Nations are urging Israel and Palestinians to resume peace talks after a day of unrest in Jerusalem. The American Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Washington wanted to insure both sides were fully committed to peace efforts. The UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon condemned as illegal recent Israeli plans to build new settlements in East Jerusalem. Barbara Plett reports from New York.Ban Ki-moon urged restraint in Jerusalem, reminding Israelis and Palestinians of the final statues of the city were supposed to be decided in negotiations. He repeated condemnation of Israeli plans to build 1,600 new homes for Jewish settlers in the occupied eastern part of the city, stating again that such settlements are illegal under international law. On Friday, the Secretary General is set to attend a ministerial meeting of the quartet which groups the UN, the European Union, Russia and America. He said members will discuss additional measures to trying rescue tentative steps to resume Israeli-Palestinian peace talks although he didn’t say what they were.BBC News Item 25 经济:美国8月份汽车销售成绩大好Car manufacturers in the United States reported their best results so far this year in August, in large part due to a government scheme aimed at encouraging people to trade in their old cars for more fuel-efficient new ones. The top results among American carmakers were posted by Ford which saw its sales rise by 17% from August of last year. The results held increase US manufacturing output as a whole for the first time since January of last year. President Obama said the latest figures indicate that the American economy is on the path to recovery.BBC News Item 26 经济:高盛投资被控涉嫌诈骗Financial regulators in the United States have accused the investment bank Goldman Sachs of fraud related to the collapse of the American housing market in 2007. The Securities and Exchange Commission is taking civil action against the bank. Michelle Fleury sent this report from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.The Securities and Exchange Commission alleges the bank sold investors a financial product based on subprime mortgages that was designed to lose value. Goldman Sachs has denied the allegations and says it will defend the firm and its reputation. This is the first time that the US government has explicitly accused one of Wall Street’s premier institutions of fraud relating to the collapse of the US housing market.BBC News Item 27 经济:美国财政官员失职An investigation of United States has found that the country’s top financial regulator, the Securities and the Exchange Commissioner SEC, fail to uncover the 65 billion dollar fraud carried out by the convicted financier Bernard Madoff over a 16-year period, despite 5 separate investigations in his business dealings. Greg Wood reports.The report by the SEC’s expected general David Kotz reads like a catalog of bungled opportunities to catch Bernard Madoff, long before he owned up to the largest fraud in US history. He was investigated five times. SEC staff caught him in lies but failed to follow them up. They rejected offers from whistleblowers to provide additional evidence. Many of the investigators were inexperienced. The scale of the SEC’s incompetence is laid bare by this report.BBC News Item 28 经济:美国银行同意支付罚款了结控诉The Bank of America has agreed to pay 33 million dollars to settle accusations by the US government over billions of dollars of bonuses paid out last year by its investment on Merrill Lynch. Bank of America took over Merrill Lynch to save it from collapse in a deal backed by American taxpayers’ money. John Bithry reports.Bank of America had promised its shareholders that no bonuses would be paid to bankers at Merrill Lynch without its express permission. It’s agreed to buy the struggling investment bank in September. On the same weekend that talks to save Lehman Brothers from collapse failed. Like Lehman, Merrill Lynch was brought to its knees by debt links to the US housing market that became toxic and lost its value. But after Merrill was rescued by BOA, it went ahead and paid its staff 3.6 billion dollars in bonuses anyway. Shortly afterwards Bank of America was forced to go to the government for billions of dollars in extra taxpayer support, and the revelation of the payments caused a public outcry.BBC News Item 29 经济:加州财政预算出了问题After weeks of negotiations, the governor of California Arnold Schwarzenegger has reached an outline agreement with legislative leaders on a plan to tackle the state’s massive budget shortfall. The deal, which will have to be approved by the state legislature, includes plans for billions of dollars in budget cuts, but no tax rises. Peter Bolger reports.California has a budget shortfall of 26 billion dollars. State workers have been put on short time and many social and education services have been cut. The state has even resorted to issuing IOUs to companies it does business with and to individuals who are owed tax refunds. Governor Schwarzenegger described the comprised deal as a basic agreement to close the state’s huge deficit. He and fellow Republicans have refused to raise taxes, all the opposition Democrats said fought to preserve social services.BBC News Item 30 军事:美国德州军事基地枪击案The United States army has formally charged the military officer accused of carrying out last week’s mass shooting at the Fort Hood military base in Texas. The officer, Major Nidal Malik Hasan, an army psychiatrist, has been under armed guard in a hospital since being wounded in the shooting. Mathew Prize reports from New York.There are still many questions surrounding the mass shooting at the America’s largest military base, but one of them has now been answered. Major Nidal Hasan, an army psychiatrist who was due to be deployed to Afghanistan, has been charged with 13 counts of murder. That could rise if prosecutors decide also to charge him with the murder of an unborn child being carried by one of his victims. He will be prosecuted in a military court. If convicted, he could face the death penalty, although no one has actually been executed under the US military justice system for almost 50 years.BBC News Item 31 军事:奥巴马就军事基地枪击案发言President Barack Obama has told memorial service at the Fort hood army base in Texas that United States must never forget the 13 men and women who died in the shooting there last week. He said the killings couldn’t be justified.“It may be hard to comprehend the twisted logic that led to this tragedy. But this much we do know no faith justifies these murderous and craven acts. No just and loving god looks upon them with favor. For what is done we know the killer will be met with justice in this world and the next.”The president paid tribute to those who’d been not able, as he put it, “to escape the horror of war, even in the comfort of home.”BBC News Item 32 科技:美国奋进号航天飞机升空The American Space Shuttle Endeavor has blasted off from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on its sixth attempt after more than a month of delays caused by fuel leaks and thunderstorms. Bill Gerstenmaier of NASA said finally the weather had been favorable and the shuttle crew were looking ahead to completing the installation of the Japanese Kibo laboratory on the space station.We had a great launch today. We were ready. The weather finally cooperated and we had just an awesome launch today. Again, I would caution you that the mission is very challenging in front of us. The five EV As, the robotic activities will take the absolute best the teams have both in Houston and in orbit. And the teams are fully prepared they are ready to go do what they need to go do and we look forward to the exciting activities as we install the Exposed Facility out on the Kibo module.BBC News Item 33 科技:登月飞行A panel of experts appointed by the White House has warned that current plans to send astronauts back to the moon in preparation for manned missions to Mars are just not viable. One of the panel members Li Ruoqiao says the space agency NASA hasn’t been given enough funds to realize the plans.“That is when the visions for space aspirations were first announced in 2004 there was expectation of a certain budget level of the next several years. In fact over the last five years those numbers are nothing realized. So because of that we are in a pickle that we are in now.”The experts say the current budget of the space agency NASA would need to be increased by billions of dollars. Without the extra money, the experts say, NASA would have to work with private companies now trying to embark on commercial space flights.BBC News Item 34 灾难:美国加州森林大火Wildfires are a feature of the California Summer but it’s unusual for them to break out so close to major centers of population. It’s hot here and getting hotter which is driving the brush making it all the more in cindery, and forecast is such that there has been a speculation it could take firefighters a week to bring this blaze under control. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is pleading with people in the path of the flames to evacuate as soon as they’re told to do so.BBC News Item 35 政治:抗议苏丹总统选举Most of the main opposition parties in Sudan are withdrawing from all the elections this month —the first multi-party elections since 1986. They won’t take part because of concerns about fraud and security. On Wednesday, the presidential candidate for the former southern rebels Yassir Arman pulled out. President Obama’s Special Envoy General Scott Gration has been in Khartoum trying to save the elections. James Copnall sent this report from Khartoum.Several major opposition parties have announced they will boycott the Sudanese elections at every level. Earlier today, they told the BBC they would boycott the presidential elections in protest of what they believe will not be free and fair polls. Now several of the parties have decided not to compete in the parliamentary or state elections either. The decision strikes a real blow at the credibility of elections which were meant to hold the democratic transformation in Sudan.BBC News Item 36 军事:苏丹达尔富尔问题In what’s been seen as a significant step towards peace in Darfur, the Sudanese government has signed a temporary ceasefire agreement with JAM, one of the main rebel factions. The other main rebel group has so far refused talks with the government. James Copnall reports from Khartoum.The deal is believed to include a temporary ceasefire and a framework agreement for future talks. The Sudanese President Omar Al Bashir said the death sentence against the JAM fighters convicted of attacking Omdurman had been quashed, and 30% of them had been released as a goodwill measure. His act details of the agreement are not yet clear, but the fact has just been signed is a significant step forward in the peace process in Darfur. United Nations estimates that 300,000 people have died in Darfur, but the Sudanese government puts the figure at 10,000.BBC News Item 37 军事:沙特的武装计划袭击石油装置The authorities in Saudi Arabia say they’ve arrested more than 100 militants suspected of links to Al-Qaeda who were planning to attack oil installation in the kingdom. The Saudi Interior Ministry says half of those attained are Saudis and the others are from Yemen, Bangladsh, Somalia and Retrea. Official say security forces seized weapons, cameras, computers and documents. Shahzeb Jillani has more.The latest round of arrests suggest militants are crossing from neighbouring Yemen and using Saudi connections to block attacks. The Saudi Interior Ministry spokesman Mansur al-Turki said that the two cells dismantled by the security forces were cooperating Al-Qaeda and Yemen. In addition he said a network of militance specializing and targeting security personnel has been。

bloomsbury group英国文学

bloomsbury group英国文学

《Bloomsbury Group:英国文学的先锋》一、介绍1. Bloomsbury Group的概念Bloomsbury Group是20世纪初在伦敦Bloomsbury区聚集的一群杰出作家、艺术家和知识分子,他们在文学、艺术和社会思潮上发挥了重要作用。

这个群体包括弗吉尼亚·伍尔夫、E·M·福斯特、约翰·梅斯菲尔德等。

2. Bloomsbury Group的背景与影响Bloomsbury Group在其成员的作品和思想中展现出对当时社会、文化和政治的高度关注,他们在文学、艺术和道德观念上扮演着前卫的角色,对现代主义文学产生了深远的影响。

二、Bloomsbury Group成员的代表作1. 弗吉尼亚·伍尔夫弗吉尼亚·伍尔夫是Bloomsbury Group的核心人物之一,她的代表作品《到灯塔去》和《一位自杀的女士》等作品,以其流畅的叙事风格和对内心世界深刻的观察而闻名。

2. E·M·福斯特E·M·福斯特以《间谍游戏》、《畸恋》等作品塑造了众多富有个性特征的角色,通过对社会和人性的探讨展现了他独特的文学风格。

三、Bloomsbury Group的思想与影响1. 对传统文学的颠覆Bloomsbury Group成员在文学创作中大胆挑战传统观念,他们将主题文学融入到日常生活和个人情感中,并对现实主义文学提出了新的挑战。

2. 对性别和阶级问题的关注Bloomsbury Group成员在作品中多次提及性别和阶级议题,他们呼吁性别平等和对阶级歧视提出质疑,这一观点在当时令人耳目一新。

四、个人观点1. Bloomsbury Group的文学对当今仍有启发Bloomsbury Group的作品中对人性、情感、道德等议题的深入探讨,仍然对当代文学有着重要的启发作用。

现代读者依然可以从中受益,从而更加深刻地理解人类的多样性和复杂性。

约翰·谢泼德·巴伦简介-约翰·谢泼德·巴伦详细信息 -

约翰·谢泼德·巴伦简介-约翰·谢泼德·巴伦详细信息 -

约翰·谢泼德·巴伦简介|约翰·谢泼德·巴伦详细信息-摘要约翰·谢泼德·巴伦,被称为ATM机之父,居住在苏格兰北部的农场,在伦敦为巴克莱银行制造了世界上第一台自动取款机,因此这台ATM机只靠检测放射性碳-14的踪迹来识别账户,检测完成后,客户需要输入4位密码。

巴伦在2005年跻身“新年荣誉名单”,被授予一枚英帝国勋章。

2010年5月15日约翰·谢泼德·巴伦病逝,享年84岁。

约翰·谢泼德·巴伦-概述约翰·谢泼德·巴伦为巴克莱银行制造了世界上第一台自动取款机约翰·谢泼德·巴伦,苏格兰发明家,居住在苏格兰北部的农场,约翰·谢泼德·巴伦在伦敦为巴克莱银行制造了世界上第一台自动取款机,其设计理念源于一台巧克力自动售货机,由于当时塑料卡并没出现,因此这台ATM机只靠检测放射性碳-14的踪迹来识别账户,检测完成后,客户需要输入4位密码。

约翰·谢泼德·巴伦-发明灵感在位于苏格兰北部的农场中,谢泼德·巴伦说海豹是一群聪明的无赖。

本来我发明了一种装置,想利用虎鲸的叫声把它们吓跑,但却引得它们更频繁的光顾我的大马哈鱼。

显然这个装置的失败和他最伟大的发明——ATM机的成功形成了鲜明的对比。

谢泼德-巴伦在浴室洗澡时突然来了灵感。

他说我突然想,肯定有一种设备让我能在世界或英国的任何地方取出自己的钱。

我想到了巧克力自动售货机,但是我的设备用现金替换了巧克力。

谢泼德·巴伦的想法很快得到了巴克莱银行的认可。

一杯苦味杜松子酒下肚后,巴克莱银行当时的负责人和谢泼德·巴伦先生匆匆签下了一份合同。

那个时候,巴伦还在为迪拉卢印刷公司工作。

约翰·谢泼德·巴伦-发明ATM机当时塑料卡片还没有发明出来,所以谢泼德-巴伦的ATM机使用注入碳-14的支票,碳-14是一种略带放射性的物质。

山西省太原市第二十一中学2024_2025学年高一英语上学期期中试题

山西省太原市第二十一中学2024_2025学年高一英语上学期期中试题

山西省太原市其次十一中学2024-2025学年高一英语上学期期中试题听力(共两节,满分15分)第一节(共5小题;每小题1分,满分5分)听下面5段对话,每段对话后有一个小题。

从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。

听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。

每段对话仅读一遍。

1. Where is the man’s bike now?A. Under the stairs.B. At the gate.C. In the garden.2. Who is playing soccer now?A. Bill.B. Mario.C. Carla.3. How many students got 90?A. Ninety.B. Fifty.C. Thirteen.4. Whose phone is this?A. Jack’s.B. Mike’s.C. Jason’s.5. What did Jane think of the concert?A. Fantastic.B. Awful.C. Wonderful.其次节(共10小题;每小题1分,满分10分)听下面3段对话或独白。

每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。

听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出5秒钟的作答时间。

每段对话或独白读两遍。

听第6段材料,回答第6至8题。

6.Why is Wang Kai so happy?A. He will attend English classes during the summer vacation.B. He will travel to England with his parents.C. He will go to Cambridge to attend an important meeting.7. How long will they be away from China?A. Three days.B. Five days.C. Seven days.8. Which city will they visit first?A. Oxford.B. Cambridge.C. London.听第7段材料,回答第9至11题。

john updike ppt


In an autobiographical essay, Updike famously identified sex, art, and religion as “the three great secret things” in human experience. Among his novels of the 1980s and 1990s are a trilogy retelling The Scarlet Letter from the points of view of three different characters, and a prequel( 前 传 ) to Hamlet, entitled Gertrude and Claudius. In 1991 he received a second Pulitzer Prize for Rabbit at Rest. He was only thห้องสมุดไป่ตู้ third American to win a second Pulitzer Prize in the fiction category.
Rabbit, Run (1960)
The novel depicts five months in the life of a 26-year-old former high school basketball player named Harry 'Rabbit' Angstrom, and his attempts to escape the constraints of his life. Harry is married to Janice and they have a two-year-old son. He believes that his marriage is corrupt and something is missing from his life: Having been a basketball star in high school, Harry finds his middle-class family life unsatisfying. On the spur of the moment, he decides to leave his family and drive south in an attempt to "escape".

山东省临沂市2023-2024学年高二上学期11月期中英语试题

2022级普通高中学科素养水平监测试卷英语2023. 11本试卷分为选择题和非选择题两部分。

满分150分。

考试用时120分钟。

注意事项:1. 答卷前,考生务必将自己的姓名、考生号等填写在答题卡和试卷指定位置。

2. 回答选择题时,选出每小题答案后,用铅笔把答题卡上对应题目的答案标号涂黑。

如需改动,用橡皮擦干净后,再选涂其他答案标号。

回答非选择题时,将答案写在答题卡上。

写在本试卷上无效。

第一部分听力(共两节,满分30分)第一节(共5小题;每小题1. 5分,满分7. 5分)听下面5段对话。

每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。

听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。

每段对话仅读一遍。

1. What sites does the woman like to visit?A. News sites.B. Video sites.C. Social networking sites.2. What is the probable relationship between the speakers?A. Classmates.B. Brother and sister.C. Teacher and student.3. Where are the speakers likely to be?A. In a park.B. In a grocery store.C. At a restaurant.4. How old is the boy's cousin?A. 22.B. 17.C. 5.5. What does the man think the woman should do?A. Brush her hair.B. Wash her hair.C. Cut her hair.第二节(共15小题;每小题1. 5分,满分22. 5分)听下面5段对话或独白。

巴菲特在哥伦比亚大学的演讲(英汉)


Is the Graham and Dodd “look for values with a significant margin of safety relative to prices” approach to security analysis out of date? Many of the professors who write textbooks today say yes. They argue that the stock market is efficient; that is, that stock prices reflect everything that is known about a company's prospects and about the state of the economy. There are no undervalued stocks, these theorists argue, because there are smart security analysts who utilize all available information to ensure unfailingly appropriate prices. Investors who seem to beat the market year after year are just lucky. “If prices fully reflect available information, this sort of investment adeptness is ruled out,” writes one of today's textbook authors.
巴菲特在哥伦比亚大学的演讲(英汉双语版)

富兰克林_罗斯福的集体安全思想新解_赵志辉

富兰克林·罗斯福的集体安全思想新解赵志辉(浙江师范大学人文学院历史系,浙江金华321004)摘要:富兰克林·罗斯福对国际联盟的态度表明,他虽然深受威尔逊理想主义的影响,但他是一个务实的理想主义者。

罗斯福设计的战后世界新秩序是由美国领导的大国主宰下的集体安全体系,这一点与威尔逊的集体安全思想具有本质的区别。

罗斯福的集体安全思想不止在于保证美国成为联合国的一员,更重要的是使联合国成为美国参与国际事务、树立美国领导地位的必不可少的工具。

关键词:富兰克林·罗斯福;集体安全;“四警制”作者简介:赵志辉(1965—),男,安徽淮南人,历史学博士,浙江师范大学人文学院历史系教授,从事美国外交史和中美关系史研究。

基金项目:国际哲学社会科学基金项目“战时美国对中国的大国地位政策思想研究”,项目编号:07BSS017中图分类号:K712文献标识码:A文章编号:1000-7504(2008)06-0127-05收稿日期:2008-05-092008年11月求是学刊Nov.,2008第35卷第6期SEEKING TRUTHVol.35No.6□欧美问题研究富兰克林·罗斯福设计的战后世界新秩序是大国主宰下的集体安全体系。

阿瑟·施莱辛格在《外交事务》上撰文指出,罗斯福是一个忠实的威尔逊主义者,他相信集体安全是国家安全的最终目标。

他的战时政策保证了美国成为联合国的一个成员。

作为威尔逊的信徒,罗斯福实现了威尔逊集体安全的理想[1]。

对此,一些历史学家提出了不同的看法,他们力图澄清罗斯福的外交思想与威尔逊主义在集体安全思想上的区别①。

国内学者在研究罗斯福外交思想时,虽然也注意到了其现实主义的方面,但缺乏深入的阐述,笔者在此从国际联盟的建立到联合国的创建过程中,追溯罗斯福对集体安全的看法的演变,以此说明罗斯福集体安全思想和威尔逊集体安全思想的本质区别。

一、“二战”爆发前罗斯福的集体安全思想罗斯福早期的集体安全思想体现在他对国际联盟(以下简称国联)的看法上。

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John Brown Raids Harpers Ferry
In October of 1859, a group of anti-slavery extremists attacked the town of Harpers Ferry. Harpers Ferry was part of Virginia then; today it is located in West Virginia.
A man named John Brown led the attack. His group seized a gun factory and a center where the government kept military equipment. They planned to use the guns and equipment to organize a rebel army of slaves.
John Brown Hoped to Create a Slave Rebellion
John Brown attacked with about twenty men. Several, including two of his sons, were killed by local militia. He and his remaining men withdrew to a small, brick building.
They expected to hold Harpers Ferry until slaves in the area rebelled and joined them. But no one came to their aid. And, the few slaves whom his men had freed refused to fight when the shooting started.
The president of the United States in 1859 was James Buchanan. He sent a force of Marines to Harpers Ferry, under the command of Army Colonel Robert E. Lee.
John Brown refused to surrender. He said he and his men had the right to go free. As soon as Brown spoke, the Marines attacked.
They broke open a small hole in the door of the brick building. One by one, the Marines moved through the hole. They fought hand-to-hand against the men inside. After a brief fight, they won. John Brown's rebellion was crushed.
The Raid Made the Dispute Over Slavery Worse
The raid on Harpers Ferry increased the bitterness of the national dispute over slavery. Members of the Democratic Party called the raid a plot by the Republican Party. Republican leaders denied the charge. They said the raid was the work of one man -- one madman. Still, they said, John Brown had acted for good reason: to end slavery in America.
Many southerners said the North was responsible for the raid. They believed all northerners wanted a slave rebellion in the South. They
declared they would fight to protect their homes from another attack by men like Brown.
John Brown Died for His Cause
Brown went to trial in Charles Town, a few kilometers from Harpers Ferry. He was charged with three crimes: treason, plotting a slave rebellion and murder.
The jury found John Brown guilty of all three charges. The judge sentenced Brown to be hanged.
John Brown was executed on December 2, 1859. His death created a wave of public emotion throughout the country.
In the North, people mourned. In the South, people cheered. But their happiness at Brown's punishment was mixed with anger at those who honored him. As the nation prepared for a presidential election year, the South renewed its promise to defend slavery -- or leave the Union.。

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