(The Economist--Corporate volunteering )
Big-hearted Blue
IBM reinvents voluntary work
Oct 28th 2010 | NEW YORK
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[Model Essay]
This bar chart shows the figures with regard to imprisonment from 1930 to 1980 in the five countries as Great Britain, Australia, New Zealand, the United States and Canada.
Generally speaking, the U.S. kept more prisoners than the other countries. It topped the figures of the five countries in 1940, 1960, 1970 and 1980, which reached the highest in the the 1980 at nearly 140 thousand. Great Britain kept less people in prison than the other countries before 1980. In 1980, it ranked fourth place, surpassing Austraila. allenyellow 發表在 痞客邦 留言(0) 人氣(1,554)

WHEN George W. Bush referred to “rumours on the, uh, internets” during the 2004 presidential campaign, he was derided for his cluelessness—and “internets” became a shorthand for a lack of understanding of the online world. But what looked like ignorance then looks like prescience now. As divergent forces tug at the internet, it is in danger of losing its universality and splintering into separate digital domains.
The internet is as much a trade pact as an invention. A network of networks, it has grown at an astonishing rate over the past 15 years because the bigger it got, the more it made sense for other networks to connect to it. Its open standards made such interconnections cheap and easy, dissolving boundaries between existing academic, corporate and consumer networks (remember CompuServe and AOL?). Just as a free-trade agreement between countries increases the size of the market and boosts gains from trade, so the internet led to greater gains from the exchange of data and allowed innovation to flourish. But now the internet is so large and so widely used that countries, companies and network operators want to wall bits of it off, or make parts of it work in a different way, to promote their own political or commercial interests.
Walled wide web Related items
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The chart shows the percentage of commuters using different modes of transport in London in1960,1980 and 2000.
Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features and make comparisons where relevant.
The graph shows the changing patterns in commuting by train, car, tube or bus for commuters in London in the years 1960, 1980 and 2000.allenyellow 發表在 痞客邦 留言(0) 人氣(3,848)
The diagram shows the process of recycling bottles.
Summarise the information by selecting and reporting the main features and make comparisons where relevant.
Sample (A)
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Reading help Haiti children through quake trauma
When the first story began only a handful of kids sat in the wet ground,l watching and listening intently as a woman read aloud to them in the Port-au-Prince neighbor of Tabarre.
Soon a crowd of 60 formed as curious chikdren carrying baby siblings were joined by adults, eager for diversion from the tedium that has seettled into Haiti's sprawling camps since the January earthquake.
The scene repeats itself daily in the 15 tent cities where a program called Li Li Li! (Creole for Read Read Read) works to promote literacy and help kids overcome the trauma from a catastrophe that left up to 300,000 dead.
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(Reuters) - The amount of time children spend reading books for enjoyment decreases as they use cell phones and other mobile technology, but e-books might just bring them back to literature, according to a report released on Wednesday.
The study, which was conducted by educational and media company Scholastic and Harrison Group, a marketing and research consulting firm, also found parents are concerned that greater access to technology would limit time reading or with family.
About 40 percent of parents believed that time spent online or on mobile devices would reduce time for books or engaging in physical activities. Thirty-three percent were concerned technology would lead to less time spent with family.
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How important is the patient's mental attitude towards his/her treatment in determining the effectiveness of the treatment?
No matter what kind of medical treatment a patient chooses, it is the patient’s mental attitude that determines the effectiveness of the treatment. The attitude includes the cooperation with doctors and the faith in them, particularly keeping the optimistic attitude during the treatment period.
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