Text 2 Whatever happened to the death of newspaper?A year ago the end seemed near.The recession threatened to remove the advertising and readers that had not already fled to the Internet.Newspapers l

题目
Text 2 Whatever happened to the death of newspaper?A year ago the end seemed near.The recession threatened to remove the advertising and readers that had not already fled to the Internet.Newspapers like the San Francisco Chronicle were chronicling their own doom.America's Federal Trade Commission launched a round of talks about how to save newspapers.Should they become charitable corporations?Should the state subsidize them?It will hold another meeting soon.But the discussions now seem out of date.In much of the world there is little sign of crisis.German and Brazilian papers have shrugged off the recession.Even American newspapers,which inhabit the most troubled corner of the global industry,have not only survived but often returned to profit.Not the 20%profit margins that were routine a few years ago,but profit all the same.It has not been much fun.Many papers stayed afloat by pushing journalists overboard.The American Society of News Editors reckons that 13,500 newsroom jobs have gone since 2007.Readers are paying more for slimmer products.Some papers even had the nerve to refuse delivery to distant suburbs.Yet these desperate measures have proved the right ones and,sadly for many journalists,they can be pushed further.Newspapers are becoming more balanced businesses,with a healthier mix of revenues from readers and advertisers.American papers have long been highly unusual in their reliance on ads.Fully 87%of their revenues came from advertising in 2008,according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation&Development(OECD).In Japan the proportion is 35%.Not surprisingly,Japanese newspapers are much more stable.The whirlwind that swept through newsrooms harmed everybody,but much of the damage has been concentrated in areas where newspapers are least distinctive.Car and film reviewers have gone.So have science and general business reporters.Foreign bureaus have been savagely cut off.Newspapers are less complete as a result.But completeness is no longer a virtue in the newspaper business.
Compared with their American counterparts,Japanese newspapers are much more stable because they______

A.have more sources of revenue
B.have more balanced newsrooms
C.are less dependent on advertising
D.are less affected by readership
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相似问题和答案

第1题:

He said, “I ________ a lot of new words by the end of last year.”

A.had already learnt

B.have already learnt

C.would have already learnt

D.already learnt


参考答案:C

第2题:

_________

[A] tended [B] feared [C] happened [D] threatened


正确答案:A

第3题:

Last year we had no rain for weeks _________, so there was a serious drought.

A.in end

B.on end

C.at end

D.by end


参考答案:B;

第4题:

What apparently had happened, three years ago, was that Kate _____ to a different building.

A:went

B:has gone

C:had gone

D:would go


正确答案:C

第5题:

By the end of last year they _____ 1,000 machines.

A. turned out

B. had turned out

C. would turn out

D. had been turned out


参考答案: B

第6题:

Mr. Hodges was the owner and editor of a small newspaper.He always tried to bring his readers the latest news.

One day, he received an exciting telephone call from someone who claimed that he had just come through a big flood in a village it in his paper that evening. He was delighted to see that no other paper had got hold of the story.

Unfortunately, however, angry telephone calls soon showed that he had been tricked, so in the next day's paper he wrote: "We were the first and only newspaper to report yesterday that the village of Greenbridge had been destroyed by a flood. Today, we are proud to say that our newspaper is the first one to bring our readers the news that yesterday's story was quite false."

6.Mr. Hodges always tries to bring to his readers a lot of pleasure.

A.T

B.F

7.A big flood up in the mountains was the news that someone gave Mr. Hodges one day.

A.T

B.F

8.After Mr. Hodges received the news, he published it right away.

A.T

B.F

9.Mr. Hodges found later the flood was really terrible.

A.T

B.F

10.Mr. Hodges is a good editor.

A.T

B.F


参考答案:BAABB

第7题:

在窗体上从左到右有Text1、Text2两个文本框(见图),要求运行程序时在Text1中输入—个分数后按回车键,则判断分数的合法性,若分数为0~100中的—个数,则光标移到Text2中;否则光标不动,并弹出对话框“分数错”。下面程序中正确的是______。

A.Private Sub Text1_KeyPress(KeyAscii As Integer) IfKeyAscii=13 Then '回车符的ASCII码是13 a=Va1(Text1) If a>=0 Or a<=100 Then Text2.SetFocus Else Text1.SetFocus : MsgBox("分数错") End If End If End Sub

B.Private Sub Text1_KeyPress(KeyAscii As Integer) IfKeyAscii=13 Then '回车符的ASCII码是13 a=Val(Text1) Ifa>=0 And a<=100 Then Text1.SetFocus Else Text2.SetFocus : MsgBox("分数错") End If End If End Sub

C.Private Sub Text1_KeyPress(KeyAscii As Integer) IfKeyAscii=13 Then '回车符的ASCII码是13 a=Val(Text1) If a<0 And a>100 Then Text2.SetFocus Else Text1.SetFocus : MsgBox("分数错") End If End If End Sub

D.Private Sub Text1_KeyPress(KeyAscii As Integer) IfKeyAscii=13 Then '回车符的ASCII码是13 a=Val(Text1) If a>=0 And a<=100 Then Text2.SetFocus Else Text1.SetFocus : MsgBox("分数错") End If End If End Sub


正确答案:D
解析:本题要求的条件是0~100,那么条件表达式应该是a>=0 And a=100。If语句的执行方式是当“条件”为真的时候,执行Then后面的语句;“条件”为假,执行Else后面的语句。

第8题:

Ever since the Smiths moved to the lake area a year ago, they ______ better health.

A.could have enjoyed

B.had enjoyed

C.have been enjoying

D.are enjoying


参考答案:C

第9题:

We didn't know what had happened to her until we () the accident in the newspaper.

A、read

B、read of

C、read over

D、read from


参考答案:B

第10题:

The goods ()shipped already if your L/C had arrived by the end of December last.

A、would be

B、must have been

C、had been

D、would have been


参考答案:D

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