Добавил:
Upload Опубликованный материал нарушает ваши авторские права? Сообщите нам.
Вуз: Предмет: Файл:
Uchebnik_kafedry_dlya_pechati.doc
Скачиваний:
15
Добавлен:
07.11.2018
Размер:
2.13 Mб
Скачать

Ex. III. Answer the following questions:

  1. The text above describes a number of duties. Which of them are familiar to you in the course of training?

  2. Students are supposed to present their degree papers at the end of the course. What particular field of research would you like to deal with in your degree paper?

  3. Which of the professional fields described above is your future career? Can you list the responsibilities? Would you like to work in a large corporation or in a small private firm? Give you reasons.

Audition: Overdraft.

Ex. I. Listen to the dialogue twice and role play it in class.

Use the following phrases:

  • How about…?

  • How can I pay … back?

  • What preconditions have to be fulfilled…?

  • Up to what amount will I be able to…?

  • How can I do this?

Tapescripts

Unit 1: The Seven Wonders of the World

In the second century B.C., the Greek poet Antipater listed the seven wonders of the world. These seven wonders were the Pyramids of Egypt, the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, the statue of Zeus at Olympia, the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus, the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, the Colossus of Rhodes, and the Pharos of Alexandria. Almost all of these wonders have vanished during the long centuries from Antipater’s time up to the present day although, of course, the Egyptian pyramids remain. We know about the other six wonders only from ruins and from the written descriptions of travellers.

Antipater’s world was very much smaller than ours. The Greek sailed in their small ships along the coast of the Mediterranean and traded with other countries on its shores, but they learned very little about the lands stretching beyond those shores though they heard rumours of other countries and empires. When Antipater listed his seven wonders of the world then, he was selecting wonders from a small sampling of the buildings and creations of the rest of the world.

Today tourists are eager to visit the many wonders of the world that have become famous since Antipater’s time. In addition to the Egyptian pyramids, they visit wonders such as the Mayan pyramids in Mexico and Guatemala, Machu Picchu in Peru, the Taj Mahal in India, the Stupa of Borobudur in Indonesia, the Great Wall in China, the Great Buddha in Nara, the Parthenon in Athens, the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican, the Eiffel Tower in Paris, and the World Trade Center in New York.

No tourist, however, has ever visited the greatest wonder of the world and no tourist ever will. The greatest wonder in the world is the human mind. These other wonders could not have been planned and created without the human mind. Always and everywhere the human mind has produced things of great beauty from the small ivory carvings of the Eskimos to the great buildings of the world.

Unit 2: The Day I Saw Five Loch Ness Monsters

"I didn’t have my camera," says Michael Thompson-Noel, who examines very carefully the evidence supporting Nessie’s existence.

“I was on the banks of Loch Ness the other morning sunning my long legs, when one of those Nessies — those plesiosaur-type monsters that inhabit the loch — surfaced in front of me.

She was 10 or 15 yards away. She had three or four humps and a greenish-brownish skin. A long, graceful neck. Peat coloured eyes. As silent as mist. Not at all threatening.

Within a few seconds, a second monster surfaced and bobbed beside the first one. Then a third and a fourth one — followed by a younger one. I suppose it was young, for it was smaller than the other four.

I reached for my camera, but it was in my car, hundreds of yards away. I couldn’t possibly reach it. So I have no evidence — let alone proof — that what I saw were five Loch Ness monsters”.

At any rate, around the world — Scotland to Canada, Russia to Central Africa and beyond — 265 lakes and rivers are reputed to harbor Loch Ness-type monsters. But there is no place on Earth with as many monster sites as Scotland, which has 24.

The most famous site of all is Loch Ness, which enjoys — because of Nessie, and because of its beauty — a great popularity and a top position among the world’s most famous tourist attractions.

The first recorded surfacing of Loch Ness monster in front of eye-witnesses occurred, allegedly in AD 565, when the Irish missionary-saint, Columba, is said to have met her and spoken to her.

Over the years, there has been a large amount of evidence — all of it disputed — for Nessie’s existence, including surface and under-water photographs and sonar contacts. But no piece of the monster, let alone a whole one, has ever been captured. No hair, skin, or skeleton. No proof whatsoever. Belief in the monster rests entirely on faith.

If you visit Loch Ness today, all you need to do to feel close to the monster is view the excellent audio-visual presentation at the visitors’ center. The presentation lasts half an hour and is balanced and neutral in tone. Visitors are given all the information they need and shown pictures — then invited to judge for themselves whether the creature in the loch is real or imagined.

Соседние файлы в предмете [НЕСОРТИРОВАННОЕ]