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
外语
James Michener In his long writing life, James Michener aimed to donate at least 90 percent of what he earned from his 43 nov
James Michener In his long writing life, James Michener aimed to donate at least 90 percent of what he earned from his 43 nov
admin
2013-10-08
32
问题
James Michener
In his long writing life, James Michener aimed to donate at least 90 percent of what he earned from his 43 novels. He seems to have more than made his goal; at his death, in October 1997, his assets were estimated at less than US $ 10 million. He had given away US $ 117 million.
Michener makes a good example for other philanthropists, not just in how much he gave, but in his style of giving. The writer worked hard at doing good, following up his donations to see how the money was used. He gave to things for which he had a passion, and he had a lot of fun in doing so.
Michener was 90, when he died. He was on Fortune magazine’s list of America’s top 25 philanthropists-the only writer in a crowd of tycoons. Asked, shortly before his death, whether he ever wished he had his millions back, he said sure, so that he should have the pleasure of giving them away again.
Too often, says Nelson Aldrich, editor of The American Benefactor, a magazine about philanthropists, the rich give without much imagination. “They give to the college they went to, and the hospital where they’ 11 die,” Aldrich says. “And most of the rich are stingy; few give even as much as 10 percent, the traditional title. They hold on to the myth of not dipoing into capital.”
Michener did, in fact, give to his college - US $ 7.2 million to Swarthmore, in Pennsylvania. He called it a repayment for the US $ 2,000 basketball scholarship they gave him in 1925. As he wrote to the college president in 1969,”Coming as I did from a family with no income at all, and with no prospects whatever,’ college was the harrow door that led from darkness into light.”
His will leaves almost everything to Swarthmore, including future royalties from his books. Michener al- ways described himself as a founding, born in New York City and raised by Mabel Michener, a Quaker widow, in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. She lived, he said, by taking in other people’s children and other people’s laundry. For his last 15 years, Michener lived modestly in Austin, Texas, where he has moved to write the 1,000 -page saga Texas. Each of his big best sellers, including Texas, Hawaii and Covenant made about US $ 5 million. And there were 20 of them. What’s more, he still collected royalties from the musical and movie South Pacific, which was inspired by his first book, Tales of the South Pacific, written when he was 40.
Frail from kidney disease in his last years, Michener was pretty much confined to a reclining chair in a small study, simply decorated. There were few personal possessions besides some photos of himself and his last wife, and as unframed faded poster of Tahiti.
A source of pleasure and company in those years was the Texas Centre for Writers. His largest gift, to- tailing US $ 64.2 million, went to the University of Texas, with US $ 18 million going to found and support the writers’ centre. He got a lot back, he said--” You meet bright people, you can consult with anybody there, and there are 23 libraries on campus.”
Every year Michener would meet with the 10 incoming students ,one by one, and he went out with them every fall to the salt Lick barbecue restaurant. He often ate at the college cafeteria, centre director James Magnuson recalls. He enjoyed their barbecue chicken special.
His gift to the Texas Centre included hundreds of modem American paintings worth a total of US $ 31 million. His US $ 25 million collection of Japanese prints had already been donated to Honolulu’s city art gallery. His next largest gift was $ 11.5 million to two museums and the library in his hometown of Doylestown.
Michener’s smaller gifts also reveal a lot about where his affections lay. And they reveal that it was a very good thing to have James Michener working in your vicinity. While researching Alaska, for example, he lived in a log cabin near the tiny Sheldon Jackson College in Sitka. He used the campus library and sat and talked to students in the cafeteria. After he left, he gave the college US $ 750,000 for scholarships.
After living in Houston on write Space, he endowed a college scholarship fund for the children of Nasa employees pursuing careers in science or engineering. Since 1982,73 scholarships have been given out.
After writing Centennial, on the settling of the West, Michener donated US $ 50,000 to help pay for the Nebraska National Trails Museum. The University of Miami, where Michener did his research for Caribbean, got US $ 1 million for a writing programme for graduate students, especially those from the islands. Similarly, after finishing Poland, Michener established a US $ 400,000 fund to support Polish writers.
Michener considered himself a professional writer, not an author; “author” struck him as a pretentious term. Like his writing, his philanthropy was intended to educate; thus this support of colleges, libraries and museums.
Michener was generous to writers whose books were very different from him. For exapmle, he endowed a US $ 30,000 as year fellowship at the University of Houston named for Donald Barthelme, a notably surreal and sophisticated fiction writer.
Michener endowed eight fellowships a year for graduates of the Univeristy of Iowa Writers’ Workshop, where the books produced tend to be slimmer, subtler and moodier than the typical Michener. The money was to support the young poets and novelists for a year while they struggled to get published. Frank Conroy, work- shop director, remembers, “It wasn’t just a case of, here’s some money, go and do good. He was a man who knew it was not easy to do good. You have to think, and think hard, to do good.”
Which of the following is true according to the text?
选项
A、James Michener is an industrious and successful writer, and also an industrious and successful philanthropist.
B、Shortly before his death, James Michener wished he had his millions back.
C、James Michener graduated from the University of Texas.
D、Michener gave generously to the writers whose styles were very similar to his.
答案
A
解析
文中表明:James Michener will be remembered as an industrious and successful writer.But he was also an industrious and successful Philarthropist.“philanthropist”为“a person enjoying a charitable activity on institution”。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/E2ZO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Underexistinglaw,anewdrugmaybelabeled,promoted,andadvertisedonlyforthoseconditionsinwhichsafetyandeffectiven
MotivationforWordsMotivationdealswiththeconnectionbetweennameandsense.Basically,therearethreemotivationsforwor
WhichofthefollowingstatementsisINCORRECTaccordingtothenewsitem?
Howmanypeoplewerekilledintheplanecrash?
Howmanypeoplewerekilledintheplanecrash?
TheOldManandtheSeaiswrittenby______.
Law-and-orderisthelongest-runningandprobablythebest-lovepolitical(1)_____issueinU.S.history.Yetitispainfullya
Law-and-orderisthelongest-runningandprobablythebest-lovepolitical(1)_____issueinU.S.history.Yetitispainfullya
Tobecalledbeautifulisthoughttonamesomethingessentialtowomen’scharacterandconcerns.(Incontrastbymen—whoseessen
记忆是人类有别于禽兽的标志之一。对心灵,它有时是沉重的负担,有时又是无法估价的财富。人们时而巴不得没有它,时而又十分稀罕。它能冲破时空局限,使生活从平面变为多棱多角。一个人可以游遍天下山山水水,然而梦境里出现的,往往不是什么名川佳境,而是幼年走过
随机试题
患者,女性,60岁,因心力衰竭卧床已3周,体形消瘦,两下肢水肿,家庭病床护士访视发现其骶尾部皮肤出现炎性浸润期压疮。
资产负债表只需编制年度报表,而利润表需要每月都编制。()
A公司在2014年1月1日用银行存款33000万元从证券市场上购入B公司发行在外80%的股份从而能够控制B公司。当日,B公司所有者权益账面价值为40000万元(与可辨认净资产公允价值相等),其中:股本为30000万元,资本公积为2000万元,盈余公积为80
已知一公司拟于2×20年初用自有资金购置设备一台,需一次性投资100万元。经测算,该设备使用寿命为5年,税法也准许按5年计提折旧,设备投入运营后每年可新增息税前利润20万元。假定,该设备按直线法折旧,预计的净残值率为5%,不考虑设备的建设期和公司所得税。
满足成就需要的行为不包括()
全球总体经济形势的发展变化要求我们加快实现经济增长方式的转变,经济增长方式的变化一般是指()。
很多人说:什么是意境?意境就是“隋”“景”交融。其实这种解释应该是从近代开始的。王国维在《人间词话》中所使用的“意境”或“境界”,他的解释就是情景交融。但是在中国传统美学中,情景交融所规定的是“意象”,而不是“意境”。中国传统美学认为艺术的本体就是意象,任
设随机变量X的概率密度为求方程3x3-X2x+6=0有正实根的概率。
Whatdoesthepassagefocuson?
A、Talkers.B、Thespeakeasy.C、Thespacemaker.D、Texters.C录音中提到两类人:speakeasy与spacemaker,并说后者在讲电话时需要有自己的空间,不让别人听到白勺那一类人,故C正确。
最新回复
(
0
)