更多"The new-technology revolution in Am"的相关试题:
[单项选择]The new-technology revolution in American newspapers has brought increased circulations, a wider range of publications and an expansion of newspaper jobs in spite of reduced manning in the composing rooms.
Payrolls in the publishing industry more than doubled in a decade from $3.1 billion in 1972 to $6.3 billion in 1981. Capital investment, largely as a result of re-equipment with new technology, doubled from $554m in 1972 to $1.02 billion in 1981.
Circulation of weekly newspapers has grown from 21m in 1960 to 49m in 1985. Big city dailies have remained relatively static, with total circulation going from 58m to 63m. Sunday papers, though, have grown more dramatically from 8.6m to 56m. This reflects the trend toward specialisation. Growth has been especially strong in the number and circulation of suburban and small-community newspapers. In 1965 there were only 357 semi-weekly papers; in 1982, 508.
There has also been a dramatic rise in newspapers circulating natio
A. City dailies.
B. Sunday papers.
C. Weekly newspapers.
D. Suburban newspapers.
[单项选择]The new technological revolution on American newspapers has brought increased ______ , a wider range of publications and an expansion of newspaper jobs.
A. manipulation B. reproduction C. circulation D. penetration
[单项选择]What type of revolution was the American Revolution( ).
A. A sudden and violent revolution.
B. An accelerated revolution.
C. An outright revolution.
D. A breathtaking revolution.
[单项选择]American Blacks experienced a revolution after 1945, a revolution in expectations. Following World War Ⅱ, the steady movement toward first-class citizenship for Black people quickened, with significant actions taking place in courts of law, in voting booths, in restaurants and in the streets of the nation.
A decade of intense civil rights activity was launched in 1954 when the United States Supreme Court declared segregated schools to be unconstitutional. In 1955, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. , effectively organized the Blacks of Atlanta, Georgia, in a bus boycott. The boycott lasted two years, and when it was over, Blacks no longer were degraded by being forced to sit or stand in the rear of buses.
In 1960, a group of Black college students decided that they, sis well as white persons, had the right to eat at a lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina. This sit-in sparked an aggressive national movement and, in the next few years, thousands of young men and women -- Black
A. Black college students and whites.
B. First-class citizens.
C. The Blacks of Atlanta.
D. Young men and women in Greensboro.
[单项选择]After the American Revolution, ______ became the first capital of the United States, being already the largest city in North America.
A. Philadelphia
B. New York
C. Boston
D. Virginia
[单项选择]
On British Newspapers
Besides the daily newspapers, there are a number of Sunday newspapers in Britain. Many of them are connected with the "dailies", though not run by the same editor and his members. The Sunday papers are larger than the daily papers and usually contain more articles concerned with comment (评论) and general information rather than news. The national daily and Sun day papers have the largest circulation(发行) in the world. Of the Sunday papers, the Observer and the Sunday Times are the best known.
It is a regrettable fact that the number of magazines of a literary or political nature has dropped down since the war. This has probably been caused by the ever-wider use of radio and television. The most successful magazines are those published for women. Their covers are designed to catch the eye, and they certainly succeed in doing so! They offer their readers articles on cookery (烹饪法), fashion, needlework, and many other matters of wo
A. Right
B. Wrong
C. Not mentioned