A. fulfillment
B. achievement
C. establishment
D. accomplishment of maturity
61. After a concert tour in Asia, Canada and the U.S., he will ______ work on a five-languageopera.Z
A. confine
B. indulge
C. resume
D. undergo
62. After briefly ______ the history of the author, Prof. Li turned to the novel itself immediately
A. dipping in
B. dipping at
C. dipping into
D. dipping to
63. After negotiation, the two countries ______ the terms of peace.
A. agreed with
B. agreed in
C. agreed to
D. agreed on
64. After performing a successful operation, the doctor at last pulled the patient
A. back
B. in
C. up
D. through
65. After reading these books, he was ______to the Darwinian theory of evolution
A. changed
B. converted
C. transferred
D. adjusted
Part IV: Reading Comprehension (30%)
in this section there are four reading passages .followed by a total of fifteen multiple-choice questions. Read the passages carefully and then mark your answers on your Answer Sheet.
TEXT A Zero Tolerance
New York was once the murder capital of the world. But its urban canyons are no longer the killing fields that earned the city its unenviable title. The annual death, which soared to a record high of 2,245 in 1990,dropped to 760 in 1997. The last time the murder rate was as low as that was 30 years previously in 1967, the year of peace and love and the flowering ofhippiedom. With the decrease in killing has come a marked reduction in enthusiasm for other crime, such as burglaries, robberies and shootings. The old saying, crime doesn’t pay, has taken on new life, thanks to hard-line policing introduced by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1994. Its success has been such that Giuliani, elected five years ago on a law and order platform, confidently says his city can now be seen as a leader in crime fighting. Such a claim would once have been unimaginable, but the zero-tolerance policing policy introduced by Giuliani and the two men he appointed to run the city’s police force, former commissioner with Bratton and former deputy commissioner John Timoney, has turned the mean streets into clean streets.
New York’s policing is based on a 1983 paper called "Broken Windows," written by American academics Janes Wison and George Kelling, which suggested a clamp-down on low-level crime as a way of lowering all crime, lfa broken window in an apartment block was not fixed, it was a sign that no one cared. Soon more windows would be broken and a sense of lawlessness engendered, encouraging others to commit more crime. Cleaning up minor crime on the streets was like fixing broken windows, it said, and the flow-on effect would curb more serious crime.