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【每日阅读训练——速度3系列】【速度3-3】&【越障3-3】附赠【难度LSAT02】

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楼主
发表于 2011-7-28 00:06:13 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
我们每日阅读训练走过了一、二系列,现在走到三了,大家都在坚持,很厉害啊,继续一起加油~~
欢迎很多战友们加入噢!
难度练习等抓抓美女迟点贴上~~


速度越障汇总帖子:
http://forum.chasedream.com/GMAT_RC/thread-562296-1-1.html

【速度3-3】
计时1
Google Hits the Road
I’d like to say that my fascination with driverless cars has nothing to do with my son having a learner’s permit. I’d also like to say my hand gestures to other drivers are meant as a sign of peace.
Not that my son’s a bad driver; he’s actually pretty good. But there still are times when we’d both be happier if the potential for human error wasn’t in the mix. I wouldn’t be pushing my phantom brake pedal to the floor. And he wouldn’t have to keep reminding me that my co-braking was helping neither his confidence nor his ability to slow down the car.
So I was intrigued to read that Nevada has passed a law requiring the state’s Transportation Department to develop regulations for the operation of “autonomous vehicles.” This is not about the altered states of visitors to Vegas, but rather a way for Nevada to get a leg up in becoming the proving ground for robot cars.
Google hired a lobbyist to push for the law. The company built on fine-tuning technology to help us navigate modern life is now mobilizing machines to take on more daunting challenges, things like gridlock, drunk driving and road rage. Quietly, over the past few years, Google has become a leader in designing vehicles in which humans are along for the ride. And its models do way more thanparallel park.
(字数 230)
计时2
To see just what’s possible with a car outfitted with the latest sensors, cameras, lasers, GPS and artificial intelligence, watch the recent TED talk by Sebastian Thrun, who’s been refining the systems since his Stanford team of students and engineers won a self-driving car contest organized by the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency back in 2005. To see a tricked-out Prius, sans driver, winding down San Francisco’s Lombard Street, is to believe.
When robots rule
So the technology works. But now comes the tricky part, where innovation runs the gauntlet of cost/benefit analysis, legal murkiness and, in this case, fear of robots—or more accurately, the fear of them making us lesser humans.
Thrun, now working with Google, says his motivation was the death of his best friend in a car accident. His goal is to someday save a million lives a year by taking our hands off the wheel. But he sees other benefits, too, such as making cars and trucks more energy efficient and traffic jams less likely.
Others suggest Google’s motives are less altruistic. Free my hands, the thinking goes, and I have that whole long commute to go online and use some Google product. Still others speculate that the search behemoth is thinking bigger, preparing to build a fleet of shared robot cars, like Zipcars without drivers.
Wherever this goes, it’s likely to take a while to get there. Lawyers haven’t even started to get involved. What happens to the car insurance business? Would the carmaker be liable an accident? Or, since a human occupant would have the capability to take over in an emergency, would he or she be on the hook?
(字数 278)
计时3
Then there’s this thing a lot of us Americans have about driving. Taking the wheel on the open road is still seen as some kind of a personal declaration of independence. I mean, would Thelma and Louise have blasted off in a Google convertible?
Or imagine Steve McQueen doing this in a robot car?

From Smithsonian: http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/ideas/2011/07/26/google-takes-its-show-on-the-road/

Norway attacks: 'Breivik acted alone
Norwegian domestic intelligence chief Janne Kristiansen has told the BBC no evidence has so far been found linking Anders Behring Breivik with far-right extremists in Norway or elsewhere.
Mr Breivik admits Friday's bomb and gun attacks that killed at least 76 people.
He has said he was part of a wider movement and written about UK contacts.
But Ms Kristiansen said she thought he had acted completely on his own. She also cast doubt on suggestions by Mr Breivik's lawyer that he was insane.
The bomb in the capital Oslo targeted buildings connected to Norway's Labour government, while the mass shooting occurred at an annual Labour Party youth camp on a small island, Utoeya.
Mr Breivik has said he had wanted to inflict maximum damage on the party, which he accuses of failing the country on immigration, according to his lawyer.
Ms Kristiansen, who heads Norway's Police Security Service, told the BBC: "We don't have indications that he has been part of a broader movement or that he has been in connection with other cells or that there are other cells."
But she added that the possible existence of accomplices was being investigated. "I don't think there is any limits to the evil in this person's head," she said. "We can't take any chance with this person."
(字数 276)
计时4
About contacts with right-wing activists in the UK or other countries, she said: "We are in close contact with our sister services in Europe, America and elsewhere."
Victims named
Denying suggestions that Mr Breivik was insane, Ms Kristiansen described him as calculating and someone who sought the limelight.
The lawyer, Geir Lippestad, said it was too early to say if his client would plead insanity, even though "this whole case indicated that he is insane".
"He believes that he's in a war and he believes that when you're in a war you can do things like that without pleading guilty," Mr Lippestad said on Tuesday.
In her BBC interview, Ms Kristiansen also defended the actions of Norwegian police - who have been accused of being slow to reach Utoeya after the shooting began.
She said the island was "quite a way away" from Oslo, and that police had got there as quickly as they could.
Early on Wednesday, parts of the city's central station were briefly evacuated after a suitcase was left on a bus. Police later said nothing suspicious had been found in it.
The police also retracted an earlier statement saying officers were looking for a "dangerous" ex-convict who identified with Mr Breivik. The man had no links with the suspect, they said.
Meanwhile police say they have detonated a cache of explosives found at a farm north of Oslo which Mr Breivik had rented.
Friday's massacre prompted up to a quarter of a million people to take to the streets of Oslo on Monday to commemorate the victims.
The names and addresses of the first four confirmed victims were published on Tuesday on the Norwegian police's website.
(字数 280)
计时5
They were listed as Gunnar Linaker, 23; Tove Ashill Knutsen, 56; Hanna M Orvik Endresen, 61; and Kai Hauge, 32.
It is also known that Crown Princess Mette-Marit's stepbrother, Trond Berntsen, an off-duty police officer, was among those killed at the youth camp, as was Tore Eikeland, 21, who was named by Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg at a memorial service on Sunday.
Police chief Sveinung Sponheim said names would continue to be released at 1800 local time (1600 GMT) each day until all the victims had been identified and all relatives informed.
Mr Breivik, an anti-Muslim extremist, is facing terrorism charges and police are considering also charging him with crimes against humanity, which carry a possible 30-year sentence, a prosecutor has said.
He appeared in court on Monday to face charges of destabilising vital functions of society, including government, and causing serious fear in the population.
He accepted responsibility for the attacks but denied the terrorism charges, and was remanded in custody for eight weeks, the first four in full isolation and on suicide watch.
From BBC NEWS: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14303363

Brains Gain From Physical Activity by Older People
Increasing evidence suggests that being active can reduce a person's risk of dementia. Dementia is the name for the effects of Alzheimer's disease, stroke and other brain disorders.
People may be considered to have dementia if they lose abilities in two or more areas such as memory and language skills. Other signs of dementia include a loss of ability to think clearly or control emotions.
The World Health Organization says about thirty-five million people worldwide are living with dementia.
Most studies of exercise and dementia depend on self-reporting -- asking people to report their levels of physical activity. Laura Middleton is a researcher at the Sunnybrook Research Institute and the University of Waterloo in Canada. She says there are problems with self-reporting.
(字数 297)
自由阅读
LAURA MIDDLETON: "It does a very good job of capturing jogging, or biking or tennis but does a relatively poor job of capturing low-intensity activity like walking or daily chores, which may also be important to the risk of cognitive impairment."
So, Professor Middleton led a team in a new study to measure activity levels scientifically. The study lasted five years. Almost two hundred people took part. Their average age was seventy-five.
The people drank small amounts of what scientists call doubly labeled water. It contains forms of hydrogen and oxygen that can mark, or label, these elements within body water. This way scientists can measure energy use through urine tests.
Laura Middleton says the research showed that even low-intensity activity reduced the risk of thinking problems and memory loss.
LAURA MIDDLETON: "Those with higher activity energy expenditure had ninety percent reduced risk of incident cognitive impairment over the follow-up period compared to those with very low activity energy expenditure."
The study is published in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
In a second study, French researchers reported on exercise and dementia in women with heart risks like obesity or diabetes.
Marie-Noel Vercambre of the Foundation for Public Health in Paris led the study. The findings suggest that even a half-hour walk at a quick speed every day could lower the risk of cognitive impairment.
Dr. Eric Larson of the Group Health Research Institute in Seattle, Washington, wrote a commentary about the studies. He says the findings add to the evidence about the mental value of physical activity.
ERIC LARSON: "It's not obvious to people that exercise would make your brain healthier. And as each study does more detailed analyses of special groups or a different way of making the measurements, it just makes the scientific basis for this relationship a lot more convincing."

From VOA: http://www.51voa.com/VOA_Special_English/Brains-Gain-From-Physical-Activity-by-Older-People-42541.html



【越障3-3】
Law firms
A less gilded future

The legal business has undergone not only recession but also structural change. Ever-growing profits are no longer guaranteed. Nor, for some firms, is survival


TWO years ago Howrey was one of the world’s 100 biggest law firms by revenue, with nearly 700 lawyers in eight countries. Profits exceeded $1m per partner. The American firm, which specialised in intellectual-property suits, had had several spectacular years in a row. But in 2009 profits were much less than expected and angry partners began to leave. Defections continued during the recession. After failed merger talks, Howrey shut its doors this March.

Though Howrey was the only big firm to collapse, the forces that destroyed it hit the whole profession hard. Work on mergers and acquisitions (M&A) dried up and nothing similarly profitable took its place (bankruptcy, securities litigation and regulation were rare bright spots). Clients became keener to query their bills—and to demand alternatives to the convention of charging by the hour, such as flat, capped or contingent fees. Small and innovative firms began obliging them, and big firms increasingly felt forced to follow suit.

All this took a toll on the labour market. After a dozen years of growth, employment in America’s law industry, the world’s biggest, has declined for the past three years (see chart 1). The 250 biggest firms, according to an annual survey by theNational Law Journal, shed more than 9,500 lawyers in 2009 and 2010, nearly 8% of the total. Many also deferred hiring, leaving new graduates in a glutted market. Legal-process outsourcing firms, which do not advise clients but do routine work such as reviewing documents, put further downward pressure on the demand for their talents. The pain was felt in Britain, easily the biggest legal market after America, and other countries too.

Lawyers would like to believe that the worst is over and that no more of them will suffer Howrey’s fate. Work on M&A and initial public offerings has recovered from dismal levels. And according to American Lawyer, profit per partner at America’s 100 biggest firms rose by 8.4% last year, having fallen by 4.3% in 2008 and gone up by a measly 0.3% in 2009.
But not all the trends that have hit the legal industry are cyclical. Some are here to stay even as the economy recovers. One is clients’ determination to keep their bills down. Feeling that they had overpaid vastly for the work of green trainees, they began refusing to have routine work billed to first- and second-year associates (ie, lawyers who are not yet partners). They see no reason to stand for it again. And alternative fee arrangements continue to grow in importance, albeit slowly: they accounted for 16% of big firms’ revenue in 2010.

A second trend is globalisation, which the law is experiencing later than other industries. For lawyers, it holds both promise and peril. Booming emerging markets, especially in Asia, are leading New York and London firms to extend their reach. But the growth of outsourcing to places like India is not lost on money-conscious clients, some of whom are demanding that their lawyers pass certain routine work to cheaper contractors.

A third trend is the growth of technology in an industry long synonymous with trained human judgment. Software that can perform tasks like “e-discovery”, sorting through e-mails and other digital records for evidence, is saving firms money. It has also made it harder to sustain a business model in which partners sit atop a pyramid with a fat base of associates who carry out expensively billed work, some of which is routine and repetitive.

Trends that were not part of the recession will not disappear with the recovery. Some will even strengthen. William Henderson of Indiana University points out just how good and how long a run lawyers had. Spending on legal services grew from 0.4% of America’s GDP in 1978 to 1.8% in 2003. The legal business grew four times faster than the economy. Now, Mr Henderson says, a “hundred-year flood” is hitting the profession. Job growth had begun well before 2008, he points out, so that the labour market was already out of balance when recession struck. Not all firms will survive, and those that do will not all prosper equally.

Howrey’s boss, Robert Ruyak, blamed two new trends for his firm’s demise. Howrey had begun acceding to clients’ demands for flat, deferred or contingent fees, causing income to become clumpy and unpredictable. And the rise of specialised e-discovery vendors hollowed out another source of revenue.

What kind of firm is likely to thrive in the environment in which Howrey failed? On one answer, many experts agree: a group of elite New York-based firms that cover a wide spectrum of legal work. These include Davis Polk & Wardwell; Sullivan & Cromwell; Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton; and Simpson Thacher & Bartlett. Though associated with Wall Street, they have become internationalised, through longish histories in Europe and recent moves into Asia and Latin America. That said, they don’t try to be everywhere, covering mainly the leading financial centres. Nor do they try to do everything, but offer the range of services on which their New York businesses were built: M&A, finance, white-collar defence and so forth. Sullivan & Cromwell is one of seven firms inAmerican Lawyer’s list whose profits per partner top $3m (see chart 2).
Another bunch likely to do well are tightly focused firms that concentrate on only a few fields. Some (“monolines”) specialise in only one. They typically do not try to span the globe, but their work is so good that clients will keep paying handsomely for it. Wachtell Lipton, for example, is a New York firm focused on M&A. It is also the world’s most profitable, with profits per partner of $4.3m last year. Cravath, Swaine & Moore, also known mainly for M&A, joined the $3m club in 2010 after profit per partner went up by one-sixth. Outside America, this group is represented by Slaughter and May, one of the “magic circle” of five London firms that compete with the leading American outfits. Rather than setting up shop abroad such firms build partnerships with local leaders, such as France’s Bredin Prat or Spain’s Uría Menéndez, to gain reach without establishing their own offices and hiring staff.

Cravath and Wachtell have boosted profits in the past two years without shedding any lawyers. Many other firms in American Lawyer’s top 100, lacking their pricing power, maintained profits only by cutting headcount. Even equity partners have not been spared. Firms cut 0.7% of them in 2009 and 0.9% last year.
Anything, anywhere
If revenue is not growing as quickly as it used to, more firms must not only employ fewer lawyers but also compete for market share as never before. With the American market hardly booming, a third class of firms has rushed to expand globally. These are big and well-known, but do not have the glittering reputations of the first two groups. Their promise is that wherever clients want to do business, they will deal with a seamless entity. Jones Day, which began in the American Midwest and is now in 19 countries, exemplifies the type with its slogan, “One Firm, Worldwide”. DLA Piper, product of a three-way Anglo-American merger (and technically a “verein”, an association of partnerships under Swiss law) aims to offer global clients a complete service while keeping prices down by working out of cheaper cities.

Baker & McKenzie, another verein, has the longest history of globalisation of any big firm. It was in Latin America as long ago as the 1950s and in mainland China in 1993. It is also the world’s biggest firm by revenue, pulling in $2.1 billion in 2010, half of it from clients that use the firm in ten or more places. Baker & McKenzie likes to call itself “global”, not “international”, meaning it is not a firm that has simply grown out from New York or London. Its new boss, Eduardo Leite, a Brazilian, is the first person from one of the BRIC economies (Brazil, Russia, India, China) to lead such a big firm. But continuity worldwide remains a priority: Mr Leite says that the firm works constantly to co-ordinate its efforts, with regional and national managing partners regularly travelling to audit each other’s work for quality, for example.

If groups like Baker & McKenzie and lower-cost DLA Piper are doing well, offering anything, anywhere has pitfalls for more expensive integrated firms with a global spread such as Allen & Overy and Clifford Chance, both based in London. During the recession they had to lay off some partners, cut the equity shares of others and thin their layers of junior lawyers. Some pin Howrey’s demise on its rush to spend on foreign offices while betting heavily on antitrust law just as M&A was falling off a cliff. There is money in globalising, but not enough for everyone.

In addition, some countries protect their turf. It is virtually impossible for a foreigner to practise Indian law. Only locals can practise Chinese law. Although flotations and cross-border mergers involving Chinese companies have been good to many firms, the mass rush into China has led to competition on prices. Chinese clients are even more accustomed than American ones to asking for alternatives to the lucrative billable hour. And local firms are becoming more sophisticated. There is no reason to expect they will yield business tamely. Brazil presents similar obstacles to foreign lawyers.

Ultimately, lawyering is becoming more of a business than a profession. Some lawyers decry this. Others welcome it. Few deny it. Because the American market cannot grow as it used to, firms will have to find new strategies and make use of sophisticated branding to stand out.

Mr Leite suggests one way lawyers can guarantee themselves work: by becoming experts in other industries, not just areas of legal practice. Young lawyers can learn from being seconded to clients. And American law schools are slowly trying to instil some business acumen into future lawyers, though in Europe and elsewhere law remains distressingly academic.

Another much-discussed solution for teaching lawyers to be businesspeople is the creation of all-in-one professional-service firms, combining lawyers, management consultants and accountants. But this looks unlikely to succeed for many; the three professions are simply too different in their traditions, training and incentives. A liberalisation of the legal market in England and Wales will allow more non-lawyers to own parts of firms or offer certain services, but at first this is likely to affect mainly the cheaper end of the market, not the richest pickings of corporate work.

Many bosses of law firms realise that the profession is changing in ways that will be uncomfortable for some. They are adjusting to this, but Howrey’s fall shows just how fragile even a 55-year-old firm can be. Since a firm’s only real assets are its partners, when a few departures turn into an exodus, the end can be shockingly quick.

From The Economist: http://www.economist.com/node/18651114




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沙发
发表于 2011-7-28 00:42:12 | 只看该作者

【难度LSAT02】

LSAT第02套 SECTION I


There is substantial evidence that by 1926, with the publication of The Weary Blues, Langston Hughes had broken with two well-established traditions in African American literature. In The Weary Blues, Hughes chose to modify the traditions that decreed that African American literature must promote racial acceptance and integration, and that, in order to do so, it must reflect an understanding and mastery of Western European literary techniques and styles. Necessarily excluded by this decree, linguistically and thematically, was the vast amount of secular folk material in the oral tradition that had been created by Black people in the years of slavery and after. It might be pointed out that even the spirituals or “sorrow songs” of the slaves—as distinct from their secular songs and stories—had been Europeanized to make them acceptable within these African American traditions after the Civil War. In 1862 northern White writers had commented favorably on the unique and provocative melodies of these “sorrow songs” when they first heard them sung by slaves in the Carolina sea islands. But by 1916, ten years before the publication of The Weary Blues, Hurry T. Burleigh, the Black baritone soloist at New York’s ultrafashionable Saint George’s Episcopal Church, had published Jubilee Songs of the United States, with every spiritual arranged so that a concert singer could sing it “in the manner of an art song.” Clearly, the artistic work of Black people could be used to promote racial acceptance and integration only on the condition that it became Europeanized.
Even more than his rebellion against this restrictive tradition in African American art, Hughes’s expression of the vibrant folk culture of Black people established his writing as a landmark in the history of African American literature. Most of his folk poems have the distinctive marks of this folk culture’s oral tradition: they contain many instances of naming and enumeration, considerable hyperbole and understatement, and a strong infusion of street-talk rhyming. There is a deceptive veil of artlessness in these poems. Hughes prided himself on being an impromptu and impressionistic writer of poetry. His, he insisted, was not an artfully constructed poetry. Yet an analysis of his dramatic monologues and other poems reveals that his poetry was carefully and artfully crafted. In his folk poetry we find features common to all folk literature, such as dramatic ellipsis, narrative compression, rhythmic repetition, and monosyllabic emphasis. The peculiar mixture of irony and humor we find in his writing is a distinguishing feature of his folk poetry. Together, these aspects of Hughes’s writing helped to modify the previous restrictions on the techniques and subject matter of Black writers and consequently to broaden the linguistic and thematic range of African American literature.


1.    The author mentions which one of the following as an example of the influence of Black folk culture on Hughes’s poetry?
(A) his exploitation of ambiguous and deceptive meanings
(B) his care and craft in composing poems
(C) his use of naming and enumeration
(D) his use of first-person narrative
(E) his strong religious beliefs


2.    The author suggests that the “deceptive veil” (line 42) in Hughes’s poetry obscures
(A) evidence of his use of oral techniques in his poetry
(B) evidence of his thoughtful deliberation in composing his poems
(C) his scrupulous concern for representative details in his poetry
(D) his incorporation of Western European literary techniques in his poetry
(E) his engagement with social and political issues rather than aesthetic ones


3.    With which one of the following statements regarding Jubilee Songs of the United States would the author be most likely to agree?
(A) Its publication marked an advance in the intrinsic quality of African American art.
(B) It paved the way for publication of Hughes’s The Weary Blues by making African American art fashionable.
(C) It was an authentic replication of African American spirituals and “sorrow songs”.
(D) It demonstrated the extent to which spirituals were adapted in order to make them more broadly accepted.
(E) It was to the spiritual what Hughes’s The Weary Blues was to secular songs and stories.


4.    The author most probably mentions the reactions of northern White writers to non-Europeanized “sorrow songs” in order to
(A) indicate that modes of expression acceptable in the context of slavery in the South were acceptable only to a small number of White writers in the North after the Civil War
(B) contrast White writers earlier appreciation of these songs with the growing tendency after the Civil War to regard Europeanized versions of the songs as more acceptable
(C) show that the requirement that such songs be Europeanized was internal to the African American tradition and was unrelated to the literary standards or attitudes of White writers
(D) demonstrate that such songs in their non-Europeanized form were more imaginative
(E) suggest that White writers benefited more from exposure to African American art forms than Black writers did from exposure to European art forms


5.    The passage suggests that the author would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements about the requirement that Black writers employ Western European literary techniques?
(A) The requirement was imposed more for social than for aesthetic reasons.
(B) The requirement was a relatively unimportant aspect of the African American tradition.
(C) The requirement was the chief reason for Hughes’s success as a writer.
(D) The requirement was appropriate for some forms of expression but not for others.
(E) The requirement was never as strong as it may have appeared to be.


6.    Which one of the following aspects of Hughes’s poetry does the author appear to value most highly?
(A) its novelty compared to other works of African American literature
(B) its subtle understatement compared to that of other kinds of folk literature
(C) its virtuosity in adapting musical forms to language
(D) its expression of the folk culture of Black people
(E) its universality of appeal achieved through the adoption of colloquial expressions








答案(本行全选可见):CBDBA D
板凳
发表于 2011-7-28 06:34:56 | 只看该作者
又来了?刚做完一套,留着明天吧。。得先关注一下CR了,荒废太久题目都读不懂了。。
加油加油~~~
地板
发表于 2011-7-28 20:24:15 | 只看该作者
【速度3-3】
47s
6行,82s
65s
66s
3行,71s
5#
发表于 2011-7-28 21:11:26 | 只看该作者

速度3-3

1. 53s
2. 2.5line       72s
3. 3.5line       70s
4. 1.5line       66s
5. 4line          80s

完全不在状态,不知道读了什么,和抓抓一样,不过我得检讨自己折腾了一夜的新手机功能。。强烈的好奇心促使~唉~~
6#
发表于 2011-7-28 21:41:56 | 只看该作者
80s
92s
90s
78s
98s

我依旧不在一个档位上T T
7#
发表于 2011-7-28 21:42:57 | 只看该作者
原谅我今晚不读越障。。教室没空调,跑回宿舍。。明早有空补上。。不过我LSAT读完了~哇哈哈。。尽管第二篇的文章看的我云里雾里的。。。词汇量啊。。。
8#
发表于 2011-7-28 22:34:26 | 只看该作者
【速度3-3】
4
8
1
4
2
没怎么看懂,心不在焉,哎。
9#
 楼主| 发表于 2011-7-28 23:53:01 | 只看该作者
60s
2 75s
4 79s
2 67s
4 75s
63s

11:29
一、通过H法律公司业务的失败来引出法律行业面临危机的现象。
二、法律行业发展的三大潮流:
1. 就业率逐渐降低,招人门槛更高
2. 全球化,把文书等基本事务分配到其他成本更低的国家完成
3. 随着科技发展要有与之相匹配的人文素养
三、H失败是不是就代表其他法律公司不能成功?
举了很多成功的例子。法律业还是有兴盛的趋势的。
把成功的公司分成了两类。a. 业务范围广阔,全球化水平高  b. 业务专一,发展空间限于国家内。
全球化时好像说了印度、中国这些亚洲国家的适用情况。
四、H运营的失败预示法律业也要汲取一些成功的商业模式
说了两种解决法律业问题的方法:a. 法律学生学习的法律要专一点,专长在某一种类。
b. 法律学生应该学一点商业课程,法律行业也需要商业的眼光来得到更好的发展。
10#
发表于 2011-7-29 01:12:54 | 只看该作者
LSAT-2

有难度,第一段读完了,脑子就开始糨糊了.

现介绍了一下history origin,然后开始讲“sorrow songs”最初是由欧洲人发起的,此歌曲有非常强的spirits,后来说由于Africa-American开始创作这种“sorrow song”,起初并不被人广泛接受,民主战争以后人们不太顾及这些歌曲并非欧洲起源的事实,而开始对于他们所创作的歌曲给予好评。第二段以举例形式给与正面评价,并以Huges的作品作为例子说明他的作品将美国非裔的种族文化汇集到他的作品当中,其作品运用排列对比和街头说唱等等形式混合在一起造就了真正的艺术。虽然huges本人从来不承认自己的作品具有深思熟虑的特性,但却被人们认为是经过多番考量的有价值的艺术作品。作者最后提出这种技术和表现形态的融合很好的将作品以语言的特有形式表达出来。

就第二段还记得清楚点,wowowo。
错了两个,这还是反复回原文找答案的结果。。。
我的答案:CCDEAD

一会回来看解释,我是一看到literature或是music起源或是远古艺术发展之类的就短路,大家有没有我这种痛苦还是就我一个这样?
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