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
Anyone coming within 50 kilometers of these two nations-which, at their closest point, is all the ocean that separates them-can
Anyone coming within 50 kilometers of these two nations-which, at their closest point, is all the ocean that separates them-can
admin
2011-03-10
52
问题
Anyone coming within 50 kilometers of these two nations-which, at their closest point, is all the ocean that separates them-can sense the social ripples, and the inevitable loss of face, that defeat in this bidding war will bring. At the heart of it, there are Koreans and Japanese capable of a purer appreciation of sporting values than the largely corrupted Western ideal; yet even they cannot separate sport from politics, cannot ignore the brooding enmity that still lingers from the 35-year Japanese occupation of the Korean peninsula, that only ended with World War II.
When the verdict is announced at midday on June 1 in Zurich, Switzerland, the impact will be felt in both the presidential Blue House in Seoul and the prime minister’s official residence in Tokyo. The desire on both sides to host the World Cup Finals is almost beyond price. Witness Republic of Korea’s proposal to give away all of its profits from the event, (anything from US $78 million to US $420 million) to the world’s 194 foot balling nations; or Japan’s plan to fill empty stadiums around the country with hi-tech, 3-D "virtual reality" screenings, using the income to set up a fund to promote soccer far and wide into the 21st century.
First, though, they have to win a majority vote from the 21 members of the executive committee of FIFA, football’s world governing body. The moment the verdict is announced, I’m sure my mind will spin back to his proverb spoken by a famous Republic of Korean in 1979: "Even if the rooster is strangled, the dawn will still arrive without fail."
They were the words of then jailed dissident Kim Young-sam, now president of Republic of Korea. Like most Koreans, President Kim is a football fan.
In Japan. where the rise of soccer, and with it the J. League, has been a relatively recent phenomenon, the quest for World Cup 2002 is summed up by the slogan: "four million spectators, 40 billion viewers"-a reference to the projected television audience for the 64 games involving 3 nations, and the three weeks of global exposure the tournament will bring for the host nation’s trade and technology, its lifestyle, and its potential for everything from tourism to political acceptance.
Put bluntly, Japan and Republic of Korea are competing to be the future hub of the East Asian region, and World Cup 2002 is a catalyst that money alone cannot buy. The beauty of sport, and of the contagious spread of soccer in particular, lies in its ability to cross all boundaries of race creed or religion and to impose a common set of principles on all players. The danger is that, if wrongly used, it can have widely divisive repercussions, certainly far beyond those of the territorial dispute that resurfaced this year over a tiny, barely inhabited island that lies between Japan and Republic of Korea.
The claims to fishing rights, to marine wealth, to ownership of a dot that the Koreans call Tokdo and the Japanese know as Takeshima, are local differences. The competition to stage the World Cup brings the focus of international attention and curiosity to the region. Both sides will tell you the real event, the measure of how far Asia has advanced in world esteem and global importance, is that a World Cup should come here at all; that it is Asia’s prize, not that of one nation or the other. If that were truly so, the two sides would have embraced early, tentative suggestions for a joint Japan-Korea hosting, with the two countries-sharing the mammoth costs. The building of new stadiums alone will cost US $1.33 billion in South Korea.
They did not. Neither did FIFA seriously offer to broker a share tournament. So there will be a winner and loser on June l, and some people will have to be immensely statesman-like to avoid crowing on the one side, and overreacting to potential humiliation on the other.
Which of the following is a correct conclusion to be drawn from the second paragraph?
选项
A、Japan would spend more for the games than Republic of Korea.
B、Republic of Korea would donate more of the profits from the games than Japan.
C、Japan would gain more profits from the games.
D、Both countries would spend any amount of money needed for hosting the games.
答案
D
解析
本题属于信息理解题。题干问:下面哪一个是可由第二段得出的正确结论?可由第二段得知,双方想举办世界杯的愿望都是很强烈的,而从中所获收益也是难以估计的,所以应选D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/FRYO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Whyshouldanyonebuythelatestvolumeintheever-expandingDictionaryofNationalBiography?Idonotmeanthatitisbad,as
WhimsicalNatureendowedtheMonctonregioninSoutheasternNewBrunswickwithanenviablebonanzaofoddities.Ontheseashore
WhimsicalNatureendowedtheMonctonregioninSoutheasternNewBrunswickwithanenviablebonanzaofoddities.Ontheseashore
WhimsicalNatureendowedtheMonctonregioninSoutheasternNewBrunswickwithanenviablebonanzaofoddities.Ontheseashore
InaforestofmixedgrowthsomewhereontheeasternspursoftheKarpathians,amanstoodonewinternightwatchingandlisten
ThinkallofKansasisflat)Thinkagain.TheFlintHills.intheeasternpartofthestate,fanoutover183milesfromnortht
ThinkallofKansasisflat)Thinkagain.TheFlintHills.intheeasternpartofthestate,fanoutover183milesfromnortht
随机试题
“教师讲、幼儿听”是灌输式的机械教育。
矩形风管边长大于或等于630mm和保温风管边长大于或等于800mm,其管段长度在()以上均应采取加固措施。
为了保证建筑物的换气次数,降低空气渗透造成的能量损失,要求外窗及阳台门具有良好的气密性,下列选项正确的是______。
某建筑高度为36m、耐火等级为二级的商场,设有自动喷水灭火系统和火灾自动报警系统,该商场建筑外墙外保温和外墙装饰的下列做法中,不符合现行国家标准的有()。
经营战略具有()的特征。Ⅰ.全局性Ⅱ.长远性Ⅲ.目标性Ⅳ.纲领性
移情有两种类型()。
某房地产开发公司(以下简称A公司)在某市商业街开发了一幢商品楼,售价4000元/m2。某甲选中了其中一套三居室,双方签订了购房合同并于2004年2月1日办理了付款交房的手续,并且约定一年之内办理所有权证书。某甲因公需要出国一年,为了方便房屋的维护
英国博物学家、进化论的奠基人达尔文提出的生物进化论,被恩格斯列为19世纪自然科学的三大发现之一。下列选项中属于其他两大发现之一的是()。
如果录用你,你能在本单位服务多久?
由于IP地址难以记忆,人们采用域名来表示网上的主机,互联网的域名结构由TCP/IP协议集中的()进行定义。
最新回复
(
0
)