问题 问答题

  海西中学初三某班开展“奥运情·中国心”综合性学习活动,许多同学面对奥运五环标志(见右图),纷纷表达自己对“2008北京奥运”的畅想。假设你是“丙同学”,请任选五环中的一环,从色彩的角度展开联想、想像,发表自己的感言。(不超过100字)

  五环的颜色由左到右为蓝、黄、黑、绿、红

  甲同学说:黑色象征着坚实和厚重,它极富包容性。——2008,中国将以海纳百川的宏大气魄、厚德载物的博大胸怀迎接不同肤色、不同信仰的四方来宾,让“北京奥运”成为目结、和乎与友谊的盛大舞台。

  乙同学说:黄色,这温馨的黄色,让我想到了在雅典橘红色的跑道上划出了一道黄色闪电的刘翔,黄皮肤黑眼睛的刘翔用自己的行动践行了奥林匹克的精神,用自己的实力向世界宣告:中 * * 盐将崛起在世界的东方。

  丙同学说:____________________

答案

【参考示例l】蓝,这充满梦幻的纯净的颜色,它属于高远浩瀚的蓝天。2008,北京将以湛蓝的天空,清新的空气,迎接来自世界各地的运动健将,迎接来自所有国家、所有民族的高朋嘉宾,让“绿色奥运”在奥林匹克的史册上熠熠生辉。

【参考示例2】蓝色是广袤无垠的天空,放飞着炎黄子孙的百年梦想;蓝色是浩瀚无边的大海,诠释着中华文明的博大精深。2008,北京将以海纳百川的气度把奥运办成一场体育的盛宴、华夏的盛典、世界的盛会!

【参考示例3】黄色,是翻滚的麦浪,是飞溅的钢花,是收获的颜色。开放的中华大地,热情的华夏儿女,将以灿烂的笑脸迎来四海宾朋,共同演绎“更高、更快、更强”的奥运精神,共同收获“绿色、人文、科技”的奥运硕果!

【参考示例4】黑色,你是钢铁的本色。你深沉厚重,质朴无华,蕴含着中 * * 丰厚的文化内涵,体现着华夏儿女刚毅的民族精神。八月的北京,向世界敞开中华文明的窗口;北京的八月,让世界领略中华健儿奋勇拼搏的风采!

【参考示例5】绿色,这洋溢着盎然生机的颜色,象征着“2008北京奥运”将是一个充满活力的体育盛会,将让源远流长的中华文明与现代奥林匹克精神完美结台,焕发出勃勃生机,让体育成为世界和平与发展的纽带和桥梁。

【参考示例6】绿色的橄榄枝承载着世界和平、人类和谐的梦想。2008,共同的“奥运梦”让不同肤色、不同语言的体育健儿齐聚绿色北京,心手相连,共筑一座友谊长城,共建一条和平方舟,让彼此不再遥远,让奥运精神永恒。

【参考示例7】红,这火一般的颜色,串起了喜庆的中国结,连结起全球炎黄子孙的心;这火红的中国心啊,点燃了2008的奥运圣火,让鲜艳的五星红旗,高高地飘扬在奥林匹克运动场的上空,让华夏儿女圆了百年的奥运梦想。

【参考示例8】红色,是庄严而又热烈奔放的圣火的颜色。2008,八月的北京将以满怀的激情喜迎八方来宾。如火如荣的赛场上,各国选手将演绎“更高、更快、更强”的奥运精神;中国健儿将会以火红的中国心,谱写出奥运史上的壮丽诗篇。

选择题
单项选择题

If the past couple of weeks are any indication, mainstream media may be primed for a comeback. In July, The Washington Post published its massive "Top Secret America" series, painstakingly detailing the growth of the US intelligence community after 9/11. When it ran, New York Observer editor Kyle Pope crowed (on Twitter, ironically), "Show me the bloggers who could have done this !" The Los Angeles Times recently mobilized a community to action when it broke the news that top city officials in Bell, Caiif. , one of the poorest cities in Los Angeles county, were raking in annual salaries ranging from $100,000 to $ 800,000.
Clearly, if mainstream media is an aging fighter against the ropes, it still has a few punches left to throw. But such make-a-difference journalism requires lots of time and money, something most news outlets don’t have. And it runs counter to the frantic pace of modern, Web-driven newsrooms. So for journalism to survive in the Digital Age, it needs to be simultaneously fast-paced and substantive, snarky and thought-provoking. Or, at the very least, it must find some middle ground where illuminating investigative pieces and Mel Gibson telephone call mash-ups can coexist.
The 24/7 newsroom has become an intractable part of the media landscape, and the Web is the primary battleground news outlets have to win in order to stay competitive. That has forced journalists to become much more mindful of online traffic, which can sap morale. As a recent New York Times piece put it.- "Young journalists who once dreamed of trotting the globe in pursuit of a story are instead shackled to their computers, where they try to eke out a fresh thought or be first to report anything that will impress Google algorithms and draw readers their way. " But the Washington Post and Los Angeles Times pieces demonstrate that, regardless of whether the stories appear in print or online, reporters still need the time and space to be effective watchdogs--to track down sources and slog through financial disclosures, and court documents that often fill the better part of a journalist’s working life.
Right out of college, I spent several years working for a mid-size regional daily newspaper. I covered endless city and county government meetings, reported on crime and education, and learned that reporters should always carry a sensible pair of shoes in their car in case they are sent into the mountains to cover a wildfire. In my relatively short time in the newspaper trenches, I developed a profound respect for the people who do the decidedly unglamorous work of keeping government honest for little pay and even less job security.
The Pew Research Center’s State of the News Media 2010 report found that, while reported journalism is contracting and commentary and analysis is growing, 99 percent of the links on blogs circle back to the mainstream press. (Just four outlets--BBC, CNN, The New York Times, and The Washington Post--account for 80 percent of all links. ) The report concludes that new media are largely filled with debate that is dependent on the shrinking base of reporting coming from old media. The same report included polling data showing that 72 percent of Americans feel that most news sources are biased in their coverage, feel overwhelmed rather than informed by the amount of news and information they’re taking in.
I’m not advocating a return to some supposed halcyon period before the Internet. I’m still a product of my generation. I like the alacrity of the Web and admire its ability to connect people around the world, and to aggregate and spread information at lightning speed. It s warming glow gives me probably 90 percent of the news I consume, and I enjoy commenting on articles that friends post on Facebook.
But I hope it won’t make me sound prematurely aged to say that sometimes the Internet exhausts me. That I’m troubled by how frequently I find myself sucked into the blogging vortex of endless linkage, circuitous kvetching, and petty media infighting. I often emerge from these binges hours later, bleary-eyed and less informed than when I started.
The media need to be quick and smart. They should tell us something new, rather than simply recycle outrage. Some of the watchdog role has been shouldered by nonprofit outfits like the Pulitzer Prize-winning ProPublica--which has recruited a number of top investigative reporters with a mission of producing journalism in the public interest--as well as smaller nonprofit ventures springing up around the country.
Many old-school media outlets are moving, toward a primarily Web-focused model. The "Top Secret America" series may be the best example to date of a deeply reported piece that probably could not have been achieved without the resources and support of a major news operation, but which is also packaged appealingly for the Web. All of this seems to indicate that, despite reported journalism’s painful contractions, a few small inroads are being made toward creating a new model for news. Solid reporting and thoughtful analysis shouldn’t be the sole province of a dying medium.

The author implies at the end of the passage that______.

A. online journalism has little to learn from mainstream media
B. solid reporting and thoughtful analysis is still one major advantage of old media
C. the painful contractions of reported journalism are inevitable and necessary, and mainstream media is dying fast
D. with the coming of the Digital Age, it is almost impossible to inherit the old media’s tradition of effective watchdogs