Unit 1.When today ' high-school seniors are asked what they plan to do after graduation, most say that they intend to get a bachelor's degree. They have been told that their generation has only “ one way fcygetting at least a bachelor 'degree, in the hope that it will eventually lead to a professional job.In a recent survey of high-school seniors conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics,85 per cent of the respondents said they planned to get a bachelor's degree. And, although 20 years ago only 45 per cent of high-school graduates went on to college, today 68 percent actually matriculate, with the majority enrolling in four-year or two-year programs designed to allow them transfer to four-year institutions .According to conventional wisdom, the rapid rise in the number of students attending college is cause for national celebration . But our research suggests that instead , it may be cause for national concern. Why? Because for many young people, the “torueinvaaradigm 例子)is not realistic , given their academic talents and the labor-market projections. Students ranking below the top third oftheir high-school graduating class toooften fail to earn as bachelorpurpose of preventing the US from bombing the place.3. Nobody in the family is more dedicated to operating the real estatebusiness than Judy.— .Because of the economic depression, real estate agents are in the dilemma of whether to lower prices or let sales fall off.5. More often than not, Mr. Smith earns great profits by carefulinvestment of his capital.6. John did not make much of a mark in his studies at school, but heexcelled at sports.7.Ordrly transition of responsibilities is a condition for the long-rangeprosperity of a family business.8. You had better have a clear picture of prospects before formulating aplan for investment.9. Although sculpture is a time-consuming art, there are still somepeople following it as a profession.10. The software company is in the midst of being transformed from anindividual proprietorship to a joint venture.Unit 3 .automobile move America through work and play. Wheels spin, and people drive off to their jobs. Tires turn, and people shop for the week food at the big supermarket down the highway. Hubcaps whirl, and the whole family spends a day at the lake. Each year more wheels crowd the highways as 10 million new cars roll out of the factories. One out of every six Americans works at assembling cars, driving trucks, building roads, or pumping gas. America without cars ? It ' s unthinkable.But even though the majority of Americans would find to imagine what life would be like without a car; some have begun to realize that the automobile is a mixed blessing. Traffic accidents are increasing steadily, and large cities are plagued by traffic congestion. Worst of all, perhaps, is the air pollution caused by the internal-combustion engine. Every car engine burns hundreds of gallons of fuel each year and pumps hundreds of pounds of carbon monoxide and other gases into the air. These gases are one source of the smog that hangs over large cities. Some of these gases are poisonous and dangerous to one ' s health, especially for someone wit a weak heart or a respiratory disease.One answer to the problem of air pollution is to build a car that does not pollute. That ' s what several major automobile manufacturers are trying to do. But building a clean car is easier said than done. So far progress has been slow. Another solution is to eliminate car fume altogether by getting rid of the internal-combustion engine. Inventors are now working on turbine-powered cars, as well as on cars powered by steam and electricity. But most of us won ' t be driving cars run on batteries or boiling water for a while yet. Many auto makers believe that it will take years to develop practical models that are powered by electricity or steam.Key to the translation from Chinese to English:1. The automobile was improved very rapidly after it was invented and soon displaced horses.2. We may have to cut down on the number of privately owned cars and depend more on public mass transit systems because cars pollute and maim or even kill people.3. While wheels (automobiles) have brought with them better or more convenient transportation, they are guilty of many sins, such as air pollution, traffic accidents and traffic congestion.4. Americans are noted for their love for cars and great job mobility.5. If only advances in fuel quality and efficiency and in technology would radically reduce the emissions from automobiles.6. A highly developed highway network has made possible the easy movement from coast to coast in the United States.7. The very thought of the speed at which the beautiful avenue was constructed electrified every visitor; the road had only recently been torncovepyto lay drain-pipes not long ago.8. Environmentalists have denounced automobiles, believing they are a major factor in the production of dirty air.9. Many new residential complexes have risen up in the suburbs ofdrug treatments for specific illness to improving the overall quality of life . To accomplish that mission, Eisai developed a wide array of new products. And that, in turn, would require broad involvement and commitment. He encouraged innovative activity and created an environment in which employees ' efforts would be accepted and rewarded .Soon there were proposals for 130 additional HHC projects and by the end of 1996, 73 projects were under way . Now, the company has moved from sixth to fifth place in the Japanese domestic pharmaceutical industry, and Eisai customers and competitors view the company as a leader in health care. Key to the translation from Chinese to English:1. He is an experienced banker and an acknowledged trade expert, not to mention an excellent managing director.2. Regardless of danger, volunteers from an Italian organization for peace have gone to Baghdad, the capital of Iraq, to form a "body shield" for the transportation.10. Despite their love for cars, many people lend credence to the extensive use of the public transport system, which can cut down on traffic congestion.Unit 4 .Children are now leaving home in late adolescence —an earlier age than in the past. Adolescents are no longer involved in making an economic contributiontcsthe family. In fast, there major economic impact is as consumers. Therefore, the family has little reason to keep the child home as an economic contribution. It is becoming increasingly common for young people to leave home for college or to live with someone else when they become employed. Not only do family have fewer children but they have them in school and out of the home at younger ages than in the past.'s degree if they enroll in college. Th&oday it can be said that wheels run America. The four rubber tires of the cost of such failure ------- i n both dollars and unmet expectations -------- i srising and beginning to erode public confidence in our system of highereducation.Key to the translation from Chinese to English:1. Today's university students are struggling to establish themselves, butthey still have ambiguous feelings about their future.2. A man cannot find himself without finding a center beyond hi. So theidealism of the undergraduate experience must help the student transcendhimself.3. We eagerly hope that the lessons leaned in the university will revealthemselves in our performance in the workplace and further education.4. It cannot go unchallenged to say that the 4-year undergraduateexperience is the only path to success in life.5. We run the risk of making critical decisions, not on the basis of what weknow, the findings of investigations, and the data of experiments, but on thebasis of blind faith in professed experts.6. Our task needs a large group of well-informed, caring young people whocan band together, learn from each other, and actively participate in the fourmodernizations.7. If it is to endure, the new school should help the students not onlyacquire a sold basic education and become competent in a specific field, butalso be ready to commit themselves to others.8. It is not too much to say that if undergraduates excessively devotethemselves to examinations, the will push competence and commitment to thefringes.9. I didn't even speak to him; much less discuss the reconstruction of yourschool with him.10. Some people think examinations are second to none, but some thinkexaminations have a lot of disadvantages. Examinations leave us an openessential question --- what influence do examinations exert on education? Unit2 .A small family-owned company, Eisai, was one of the original manufacturers ofvitamin E, and it maintained a strong research commitment to naturalpharmaceuticals. Over the years, it developed drugs for the treatment ofcardiovascular, respiratory, and neurological diseases. The companyexperienced steady, modest growth, and in 1992 sales reached 197 billion yenand profits approached 13 billion yen. Although it was the sixth-largestJapanese pharmaceutical company, Eisai was a relatively small player in anindustry in which global competition was increasing while growth in thedomestic market was slowing down.In 1993, Haruo Naito took over as president from his father. Before that, hehad chaired Eisai -ys^ivsirategic planning committee. During thattime, he had become convinced that the company ' focus on the disand manufacture of pharmaceuticals was not sustainable for long-term growthagainst large, global competitors .Two years after becoming president , Naitoformulated a radical new vision for Eisai that he called Human Health Care . Itextended the company'focus from manufacturmetropolitan cities because of the availability of convenient publicThe most suprising findings with regard to children show a negativeimpact on marriage due to children. There has been much evidence that children contribute to greater conflict and uncertainty in a marriage.Studies show that general life satisfaction is the highest for people when they are young, married, and childless. Other studies show that American couples with children at home tend to have lower marital satisfaction than those without children. For both men and women, reports of happiness and satisfaction drop ----and don ' t rise again until the children are grown and about to leave the nest.Key to the translation from Chinese to English:1.Some professional observers believe that young people today are no longer interested in politics and causes, but rather, have become increasingly preoccupied with issues closer to themselves.2. The higher a woman ' s educational attainment, the more likely she is to go out of the private setting of the nuclear family and to realize herself inthe community.3. As far as I am concerned, what really lies behind the decision of some married couples not to start a family is that they are so narcissistic and have no margin of love to spare others.4. The company put on the market a registered invention even without asking the inventor ' s permission, which goes against the patent law.5. Urged by some other countries, the United Nations has pressured the country to give up developing and using nuclear weapons.6. According to the rule that every member should remain childless, Mr. And Ms white have no alternative but to withdraw from the Non-Parent Association, for they will attain parenthood soon.7. He expects to reveal, by presenting a soap opera, the complexity implicit in real life.8. In virtually every country, drug abuse, alcohol abuse and child abuse loon as most challenging social problems.9. When interviewed, these elderly people rationalized why they were ambivalent about today ' s young people.10. Many college students are far more concerned with how to get a highly-paid job on graduation and how to receive a quick promotion in the competitive society.Unit 5 .In the world ' s rich countries, when you retire at 65 you can expect to live on average, for another 15 or 20 years. A hundred yesrs ago you would, on average, have been already dead .the late 20th century has brought to many the ultimate gift; the luxury of aging. but like any luxury, aging isexpensive .governments are fretting about the cost already ;but they also know that far worse is to come :over the next 30 or 40 years,the demographic changes of longer lives and fewer births will force most countries to rethink in fundamental ways their arrangements for paying for and looking after older people.In 1990 18% people in oecd countries were aged over 60. by 2030 that figure will have risen to over 30%. The share of the old ” (thbsldest over 80 ),now around 3%, is set to double .the vast majority of these older people will be consumers,not producers .thanks to state thansfers,being old in developed countries mostly no longer means being poor .the old people will expect decent pensions to live on;they will make heavy demands on medical services ;and some will need expensive nursing care. Yet while their numbers are expanding fast, numbers of people at work --- who will have to foot the bill ---will stay much the same ,so each worker will have to carry a much heavier burden.Mass survival to a ripe old age will not be confined to rich countries. Most developing countries,whose populations are now much younger than the developed world ' s, are starting to age fast.Key to the Translation from Chinese into English:1.Generally, people have become more compassionate and quite a few families have taken in an orphan from the municipal orphanage.2.It is a demanding task for a workingwoman to look after her parents and her children while holding down a job.3. At first we were worried about their first stay in a foreign country but things there worked out much better for them.4. Today's middle-aged people have fewer children than their parents did and the aging population problem may weigh on them in about 40 years.5.It is hoped that the current reform in education will better set students up to meet the challenges from society.6. The government intends to transfer some of the health-care burden to the individual family but family members are not always available for the task because they cannot break away from their jobs to look after the sick elderly.7. There is an increasing demand for beds in the nursing home, and we have to try every possible means to free them up.8. With the large elderly population in this country, financing of health care and pensions could care the devil out of the government.9. The young couple has to make some sacrifice to avoid letting their old beloved father down.10. What they had gone through in looking after their sick old father made them more compassionate, and they made a donation to the nursing home。