
- •1 Unit 1 At the Customs
- •1.5 Grammar Assignments
- •2 Unit 2 Customs Declaration. Customs Clearing
- •2.1.4 Practice the reading of the following words and guess their meaning:
- •2.1.5 Check up the meaning of the following verbs:
- •3 Unit 3 Customs Bodies of Russia. Сustoms Management
- •3.5 Grammar Assignments
- •4 Unit 4 Customs Reforms in Russia and Abroad
- •4.6 Read the text and translate it using the dictionary
- •4.7 Grammar Assignments
- •5 Unit 5 Customs Control
- •5.1.1 Practice the reading of the following words and guess their meaning:
- •5.2 Read the text and translate it using the dictionary
- •5.2.4 Practice the reading of the following words and guess their meaning:
- •5.2.5 Read the following words and their translation. Try to memorize the vocabulary:
- •5.3 Read the text and translate it using the dictionary
- •6 Unit 6 Transportation Documentation. Forms and Terms of Payment
- •6.1.1 Practice the reading of the following words and guess their meaning:
- •6.1.2 Check up the meaning of the following verbs:
- •6.2 Read the text and translate it using the dictionary
- •6.7 Grammar Assignment
- •7 Unit 7 Fight against Terrorism
- •7.1.1 Practice the reading of the following words and guess their meaning:
- •7.1.2 Check up the meaning of the following verbs:
- •7.2 Read the text and translate it using the dictionary
- •7.3 Read the text and translate it using the dictionary
- •8 Unit 8 Customs Procedures and Regulations Development
- •8.1.1 Practice the reading of the following words and guess their meaning:
- •8.1.2 Check up the meaning of the following verbs:
- •8.2 Read the text and translate it using the dictionary
- •9 Unit 9 Customs Rules Violation
- •9.1.2 Check up the meaning of the following verbs:
- •9.2 Read the text and translate it using the dictionary
- •9.5 Grammar Assignments
- •10 Unit 10 The History of Customs in Russia and in the usa
- •10.1.1 Check up the meaning of the following verbs:
- •10.2 Read the text and translate it using the dictionary
- •10.4 Read the text and translate it using the dictionary
- •10.6 Grammar Assignments
- •11 Unit 11 Why worry about Ethics?
- •11.3.1 Give the initial forms of the following words and state what parts of
- •12 Unit 12 Customs Tariffs and International Trade
- •12.1.1 Practice the reading of the following words and guess their meaning:
- •12.1.3 Read the following words and their translation. Try to memorize the vocabulary:
10.4 Read the text and translate it using the dictionary
Text B
History of the U.S. Customs Service
The U.S. Customs Service has a long history. With ratification by the necessary number of states, the Constitution of the United States went into effect on March 4, 1789. A bit more than four months later, on July 31 of that year, the U.S. Customs Service started operating, among the very first of the federal agencies to come to life. It was given a life-and-death mission.
The young nation was then on the brink of bankruptcy. The first Congress and President Washington agreed that the collection of duties on imported goods was essential if the United States were to survive.
Only a few days after Customs drew its first breath, on August 5, 1789, the power of the service went from theory to reality when Captain James Weeks sailed his brigatine, Persis, into New York harbor with a miscellaneous cargo from Leghorn, Italy. The duty on the cargo - the first such payment ever made to the United States Treasury - was $774.41.
While the payment was modest, it was the initial fiscal prop for a very young and shaky government. More was to come. In its first year of operation, the service collected over $2 million in duties. And for the next 124 years -- until that moment in 1913 when the amendment authorizing the income tax was approved -- customs remained a major source of revenue for the federal government. Thus the Customs Service, especially in the early years of the nation, proved the truth of that profound maxim: "the revenue of the state is the state."
As described in the strategic plan of the U.S.Customs, the agency faces five distinct strategic challenges. They are: the continued threat of narcotics smuggling, terrorists, the growth of world trade, the proliferation of trade agreements and general public resistance to increasing the budget of the federal government. (1500 symbols)
10.4.1 What do these numbers and dates mentioned in the text refer to:
124 $2 million 1913 March 4 $774.41 1789
10.4.2 Match these statements as true or false:
1) The Constitution of the USA went into effect on July31, 1789.
2) The agency faces four strategic challenges.
3) In its first year of operation the service collected over $2 million in duties.
4) Customs remained a major source of revenue for the federal government until the income tax was approved.
5) The U.S. Customs Service was among the very first of the federal agencies to come to life.
10.5 Do you know that on a typical day, U.S. Customs and Border Protection...
Protects more than: Manages:
5,000 miles of border with Canada 317 ports of entry
1,900 miles of border with Mexico 20 sectors with 33 border checkpoints
95,000 miles of shoreline between the ports of entry
Processes more than:
1.1 million passengers and pedestrians, including 724,192 aliens, 64,432 truck,
rail, and sea containers, 2,639 aircraft, 365,079 vehicles, 75,734 merchandise
entries, and collected $74 million in revenue
Executes more than: Refuses entry of:
135 arrests at ports of entry 1,237 non-citizens at our ports of entry
3,179 arrests between ports of entry 54 criminal aliens attempting to enter
the United States
Seizes an average of:
2,313 pounds of narcotics in 131 narcotic seizures at our ports of entry
3,634 pounds of narcotics in 24 seizures between our ports of entry
$205,576 in currency; 193 firearms; 49 vehicles between our ports of entry
4,224 prohibited plant materials or animal products, including 189 significant
agriculture pest interceptions at our ports of entry
Rescues more than: Intercepts more than:
4 illegal crossers in dangerous 210 fraudulent documents
conditions between our ports of entry 1 traveler for terrorism/national
security concerns; 1 stowaway