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Going Back to Its Birthplace
No sporting event takes hold of the world’s attention and imagination like the Olympic Games The football world Cup fascinates fans in Europe and South America; baseball’s World Series is required viewing in North America; and the world table Tennis Championships attracts the most interest in Asia.
But the Olympics belong to the whole world. Now, after travelling to 17 countries over 108 years, the summer Games are returning to Athens, the place where the first modern Olympics was held.
Participation in the Games is looked on not only as an achievement, but also as an honour. The 16 days between August 13 and 29 will see a record that 202 countries compete up from Sydney’s 199. Afghanistan is back, having been banned from Sydney because the Taliban government didn’t let women do sports. There is also a place for newcomers East Timer and Kiribati.
A total of 10,500 athletes will compete in 28 spo
A. Right
B. Wrong
C. Not mentioned
[填空题]Does a bee know what is going on in its mind when it navigates its way to (47) food sources and back to the hive, using polarized sunlight and the tiny magnet it carries as navigational aid Or is the bee just a machine, unable to do its mathematics and dance its language in any other way To use Donald Griffin’s term. does a bee have "awareness", or to use a/an (48) I like better, can a bee think and imagine
There is an experiment for this, or at least a/an (49) , made long ago by Karl Von Frisch and more recently (50) by James Gould at Princeton. Biologists who wish to study such things as bee navigation, language, and behavior in general have to (51) their bees to fly from the hive to one or another special place. To do this, they begin by placing a source of sugar very close to the hive so that the bees (considered by their trainers to be very dumb beasts) can learn what the game is about. Then, at regular intervals, the