首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
考研
[1] To say that the city is a central problem of American life is simply to know that increasingly the cities are American life;
[1] To say that the city is a central problem of American life is simply to know that increasingly the cities are American life;
admin
2017-11-28
17
问题
[1] To say that the city is a central problem of American life is simply to know that increasingly the cities are American life; just as urban living is becoming the condition of man across the world. Everywhere men and women crowd into cities in search of employment, a decent living, the company of their fellows, and the excitement and stimulation of urban life.
[2] Within a very few years, 80 percent of all Americans will live in cities — the great majority of them in concentrations like those which stretch from Boston to Washington, and outward from Chicago and Los Angeles and San Francisco and St. Louis. The cities are the nerve system of economic life for the entire Nation, and for much of the world.
[3] And each of our cities is now the seat of nearly all the problems of American life: poverty and race hatred, stunted education and saddened lives, and the other ills of the new urban Nation — congestion and filth, danger and purposelessness — which afflict all but the very rich and the very lucky.
[4] ...The city is not just housing and stores. It is not just education and employment, parks and theaters, banks and shops. It is a place where men should be able to live in dignity and security and harmony, where the great achievements of modern civilization and the ageless pleasures afforded by natural beauty should be available to all. If this is what we want — and this is what we must want if men are to be free for that "pursuit of happiness" which was the earliest promise of the American Nation — we will need more than poverty programs, housing programs, and employment programs, although we will need all of these. We will need an outpouring of imagination, ingenuity, discipline, and hard work unmatched since the first adventurers set out to conquer the wilderness. For the problem is the largest we have ever known. And we confront an urban wilderness more formidable and resistant and in some ways more frightening than the wilderness faced by the pilgrims or the pioneers.
[5] One great problem is sheer growth — growth which crowds people into slums, thrusts suburbs out over the countryside, burdens to the breaking point all our old ways of thought and action — our systems of transport and water supply and education, and our means of raising money to finance these vital services.
[6] A second is destruction of the physical environment, stripping people of contact with sun and fresh air, clean rivers, grass and trees — condemning them to a life among stone and concrete, neon lights and an endless flow of automobiles. This happens not only in the central city, but in the very suburbs where people once fled to find nature. "There is no police so effective," said Emerson, "as a good hill and a wide pasture... where the boys...can dispose of their superfluous strength and spirits." We cannot restore the pastures, but we must provide a chance to enjoy nature, a chance for recreation, for pleasure and for some restoration of that essential dimension of human existence which flows only from man’s contact with the natural world around him.
[7] A third is the increasing difficulty of transportation — adding concealed, unpaid hours to the workweek, removing men from the social and cultural amenities that are the heart of the city; sending destructive swarms of automobiles across the city, leaving behind them a band of concrete and a poisoned atmosphere. And sometimes — as in Watts — our surrender to the automobile has so crippled public transport that thousands literally cannot afford to go to work elsewhere in the city.
[8] A fourth destructive force is the concentrated poverty and racial tension of the urban ghetto — a problem so vast that the barest recital of its symptoms is profoundly shocking:
Segregation is becoming the governing rule; Washington is only the most prominent example of a city which has become overwhelmingly Negro as whites move to the suburbs; many other cities are moving along the same road — for example, Chicago, which, if present trends continue, will be over 50 percent Negro by 1975. The ghettoes of Harlem and Southside and Watts are cities in themselves, areas of as much as 350, 000 people.
Poverty and unemployment are endemic: from one-third of the families in these areas live in poverty, in some, male unemployment may be as high as 40 percent; unemployment of Negro youths nationally is over 25 percent.
Welfare and dependency are pervasive: one-fourth of the children in these ghettoes, as in Harlem, may receive Federal Aid to Dependent Children; in New York City, ADC alone costs over $ 20 million a month; in our five largest cities, the ADC bill’s over $ 500 million a year.
Housing is overcrowded, unhealthy, and dilapidated: the last housing census found 43 percent of urban Negro housing to be substandard; in these ghettoes, over 10, 000 children may be injured or infected by rat bites every year.
Education is segregated, unequal, and inadequate: the high school dropout rate averages nearly 70 percent, there are academic high schools in which less than 3 percent of the entering students will graduate with an academic diploma.
Health is poor and care inadequate: infant mortality in the ghettoes is more than twice the rate outside, mental retardation among Negroes caused by inadequate prenatal care is more than seven times the white rate; one-half of all babies born in Manhattan last year will have had no prenatal care at all; deaths from diseases like tuberculosis, influenza, and pneumonia are two to three times as common as elsewhere.
[9] Fifth is both cause and consequence of all the rest. It is the destruction of the sense, and often the fact, of community, of human dialog, the thousand invisible strands of common experience and purpose, affection and respect which tie men to their fellows. Community is expressed in such words as neighborhood, civic pride, friendship. It provides the life-sustaining force of human warmth and security, a sense of one’s own human significance in the accepted association and companionship of others.
[10] ...Community demands a place where people can see and know each other, where children can play and adults work together and join in the pleasures and responsibilities of the place where they live. The whole history of the human race, until today, has been the history of community. Yet, this is disappearing, and disappearing at a time when its sustaining strength is badly needed. For other values which once gave strength for the daily battle of life are also being eroded.
[11] The widening gap between the experience of the generations in a rapidly changing world has weakened the ties of family; children grow up in a world of experience and culture their parents never knew.
[12] The world beyond the neighborhood has become more impersonal and abstract. Industry and great cities, conflicts between nations and the conquests of science move relentlessly forward, seemingly beyond the reach of individual control or even understanding.
[13] ...But of all our problems, the most immediate and pressing, the one which threatens to paralyze our very capacity to act, to obliterate our vision of the future, is the plight of the Negro of the center city. For this plight and the riots which are its product and symptom — threaten to divide Americans for generations to come; to add to the ever-present difficulties of race and class the bitter legacy of violence and destruction and fear....
[14] It is therefore of the utmost importance that these hearings go beyond the temporary measures thus far adopted to deal with riots — beyond the first hoses and the billy clubs; and beyond even sprinklers on fire hydrants and new swimming pools as well. These hearings must start us along the road toward solutions to the underlying conditions which afflict our cities, so that they may become the places of fulfillment and ease, comfort and joy, the communities they were meant to be.
The reason why the plight of the Negro is the most immediate and pressing problem is that it threatens______.
选项
A、to paralyze the American economy
B、to divide Americans for generations to come
C、to destroy the vision of the future generations
D、to use violence in overthrowing the old belief and social system
答案
B
解析
事实细节题。根据题干中的the most immediate and pressing problem将本题出处定位于文章第十三段。该段提到,在所有问题中,最紧迫的、麻痹我们行动力、抹杀我们对未来的憧憬的,是内城区黑人的困境,这个困境和骚乱可能将美国的后代分裂开来,由此可知答案为[B]项。其余三个选项文中均未提及。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/fRwUFFFM
本试题收录于:
翻译硕士(翻译硕士英语)题库专业硕士分类
0
翻译硕士(翻译硕士英语)
专业硕士
相关试题推荐
"Thedistinctionbetweenlangueandparole"wasfirstputforwardby().
Penny’s______speechgivenatthestatecompetitionwonherthefirstprize.
Theauthortooka______approachtothetopic.Hepresentedbothsidesoftheissueevenhandedlyanddidnotlethisownfeeling
Theintroductionofgunpowdergraduallymadethebowandarrow______,particularlyinWesternEurope.
TheGreatWallistheplace______almostalltouristswouldliketovisitwhentheycometoChina.
Theroleofgovernmentsinenvironmentalmanagementisdifficultbutinescapable.Sometimes,thestatetriestomanagetheresou
Everymarketactivityisaninvestmentintime,energyandmoney.Fewcompanieswouldspendalargesumofmoneyon,say,apurc
Thelocalauthoritiesrealizedtheneedtomake______totelderlypeopleintheirhousingprograms.
Thehumannoseisanunderratedtool.Humansareoftenthoughttobeinsensitivesmellerscomparedwithanimals,【C1】______this
Mostofusareneitherpilotsnorastronauts.Wearenottrainedtosteerlargehulksofsteelandgasolinewhilemanipulatings
随机试题
脓毒性休克的病因是()
WhenararediseaseALDthreatenedtokillthefour-year-oldboyLorenzo,hisparentsrefusedtogiveuphope.Doctorsexplained
A、250℃,30~45分钟B、100℃,45分钟C、60~80℃,1小时D、180℃干热灭菌1.5小时E、115℃,30分钟,表压68.65kPa破坏热原用
治疗军团菌感染的首选药物是
据《关于贯彻落实抑制部分行业产能过剩和重复建设引导产业健康发展的通知》(环发[2009]127号),下列说法正确的有()。
阅读材料,根据要求完成教学设计。《编排文稿:制作电子小报》是人教版七年级信息技术上册第一单元《图文处理与编排》的第3课。主要学习如何运用Word这一种文字处理工具软件来制作电子小报和设计电子小报的技巧。教学对象:初一学生,已经具备了用Word进行文档编
德育过程中,体现了马克思主义“一分为二”辩证法和认识论的德育原则是()。
在人文教育与科学教育的关系问题上,应坚持的是()。
可持续发展,就是要促进人与自然的和谐,实现经济发展和人口、资源、环境相协调,坚持走生产发展、生活富裕、生态良好的文明发展道路,保证一代接一代地永续发展。由此可见,可持续发展的观念反映了辩证法中的()
A.equippingB.exploreC.presentD.realisticE.noticeablyF.growingupG.interacting
最新回复
(
0
)