A young man finished law school He opened a law office, but he had no clients. One day the young lawyer heard a knock at the door of his office. He was very happy. He picked up the telephone and pretended he was talking to a client. Then he said to the woman at the door, "come in. I’m busy talking to a client right now, but I’ll be with you in a minute."
The young lawyer hung up the phone and said to the woman, "Thank you for waking. What can I do for you "
"I don’t know." The woman said. "I’m from the telephone company. I came to connect your phone."
Television has opened windows to everybody. Young men will never again go to war as they did in 1914. Millions of people now have seen the effects of a battle. And the result has been a general dislike of war, and perhaps more interest in helping those who suffer from all the terrible things that have been shown on the screen.
Television has also changed politics. The most remote can now follow state affairs, see and hear the politicians before an election. Better informed, he is more likely to vote, and so to make his opinion count.
Unfortunately, television’s influence has been greatly harmful to the young. Children do not have enough experience to realize that TV shows present an unreal world; that TV advertisements lie to sell products that are sometimes bad or useless. They believe and want to practise what they see. They do believe that the violence they see is normal and acceptable. All educators agree that the "television generations" are m
A. children should keep away from TV
B. TV programs should be improved
C. children’s books should have pictures
D. TV has a deep influence on the young
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