时间:2019-01-11 作者:英语课 分类:American Mosaic


英语课

AMERICAN MOSAIC 1 -July 19, 2002: Music by Vanessa Carlton / Tennis Greats Venus and Serena
Williams / Question About America’s National Game



HOST:



Welcome to AMERICAN MOSAIC

VOA’s radio magazine in Special English.
(THEME)
This is Doug Johnson. On our program today:
We play songs by Vanessa Carlton ..
.
Answer a listener’s question about America ’s national game ..
.



And report about the American sisters who are the best tennis players in the world.



The Williams Sisters


HOST:


Recently, two young American women played against each other for the top prize in professional tennis --the
Women’s Championship at Wimbledon, England. The two women are sisters. Shep O’Neal tells us about
Serena and Venus Williams.


ANNCR:


Venus Williams is twenty-two years old. Serena is twenty. Earlier this month, Serena defeated Venus to win the
championship at Wimbledon. That victory is perhaps the most important event in professional tennis. And it was
only one of many victories in the past three years. Serena had already won the French Open tennis championship
before her win in England.


Serena’s recent victories mean that one of the Williams sisters has won seven of the last twelve major
international tennis tournaments. Venus won the Wimbledon Championship in two-thousand and two-thousandone.
She also won the United States Open championship both of those years. And the two sisters also won the


women’s doubles match at Wimbledon earlier this month.


Tennis experts say Richard Williams is the main reason that his daughters are the two top players in women’
s


professional tennis. He taught them how to play the game and he taught them well. Both women say their father
is the reason for their success. About fifteen years ago, he told Venus that she was going to be one of the best
tennis players in the world. He then told Venus and Serena that one day they would compete for the
championship of professional tennis at Wimbledon.


No one would have believed Richard Williams at the time. The Williams family lived in a poor area of Los
Angeles, California. And only one other African-American woman had ever won the championship at
Wimbledon. That was Althea Gibson in the nineteen-fifties.


Critics say the two sisters do not play their best tennis against each other. The Williams sisters deny this. But they
say that they know each other’s game extremely well because they have played against each other since they
were children.


Sports reporters say the two Williams sisters are not only great tennis players. They are also intelligent and strong
young women. One reporter asked Serena if Venus was upset or angry about losing to her sister. Serena looked a
little confused. Then she said, “No, Venus is not angry. She is happy for me. We will always be family first, and
then tennis players.



America’s National Game


HOST:


Our VOA listener question this week comes from India. Ranveer Jayani asks what is the national game of the
United States.


Americans enjoy playing and watching many sports, including football, soccer, basketball and hockey. But if you
ask most Americans what is the national game, they would probably answer baseball.


Perhaps no other sport is as deeply rooted in American life. None has created so many
popular traditions. These include poems, songs, books and movies. Famous players of the
past and present are as well-known to Americans as the country’s great scientists, writers
and political leaders. Baseball words have even become part of the language. For example,
Americans may admit to “striking 2 out”
when failing at something.


Part of the reason Americans love baseball is that they have been playing it for more than
one-hundred-fifty years. No one knows for sure when the modern game began. Many people
believe it developed from a game called “rounders”
that was played in the eighteen-
hundreds.


Some history experts say Abner Doubleday invented baseball in eighteen-thirty-nine. Others say it was
Alexander Cartwright in eighteen-forty-five. He developed a list of rules and formed the first baseball team, the
New York Knickerbockers.


Today, Americans of all ages play baseball. Thousands of teams are organized across the country --school teams,
company teams and teams supported by religious groups. And millions of Americans attend professional baseball
games and watch them on television.


More than three-hundred-fifty-thousand people travel each year to the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in
Cooperstown, New York. The Hall of Fame explains the history of baseball. It also honors 3 great players of the
past and present. This year, the museum has put together a traveling show called “Baseball as America.

The
show includes more than five-hundred baseball objects. It explores the relationship between the game of baseball
and American culture.


Vanessa Carlton


Host:


Singer and songwriter Vanessa Carlton released 4 her first album earlier this year. Mary Tillotson tells us about her
and her music.


ANNCR:


Vanessa Carlton’s first album is called “Be Not Nobody.

Listen as she sings “A Thousand Miles.


((CUT ONE -“A THOUSAND MILES”))


Vanessa Carlton is twenty-one years old. She was born in a small town in
Pennsylvania. Vanessa began playing the piano at age two. She wrote her first song
when she was eight years old.


Yet Vanessa Carlton wanted to be a professional dancer. At the age of fourteen she
was accepted at the School of American Ballet in New York City. She became one
of the top students. But she was very unhappy with the intense 5 training that is
required to become a ballet dancer.


Instead, she found a piano at her school and started playing and writing songs. After completing high school,
Vanessa decided 6 to be a singer instead of a dancer. Here is another of her songs. It is called “Unsung.




((CUT TWO – “UNSUNG ”))


Music experts are saying good things about Vanessa Carlton’s music. They praise her voice. They say her
training as a piano player can be heard in her songs.
We leave you now with a song from her album “Be Not Nobody.”.. Here is Vanessa Carlton performing


“Ordinary Day.

((CUT THREE – “ORDINARY DAY”)
)
HOST:
This is Doug Johnson. I hope you enjoyed our program today. And I hope you will join us again next week for



AMERICAN MOSAIC—VOA’s radio magazine in Special English.
This AMERICAN MOSAIC program was written by Lawan Davis, Nancy Steinbach and Paul Thompson. Our
studio engineer was Keith Holmes. And our producer was Paul Thompson



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n./adj.镶嵌细工的,镶嵌工艺品的,嵌花式的
  • The sky this morning is a mosaic of blue and white.今天早上的天空是幅蓝白相间的画面。
  • The image mosaic is a troublesome work.图象镶嵌是个麻烦的工作。
adj.显著的,惹人注目的,容貌出众的
  • There is a striking difference between Jane and Mary.简和玛丽之间有显著的差异。
  • What is immediately striking is how resourceful the children are.最令人注目的是孩子们的机智聪明。
n.礼仪;荣典;礼节; 大学荣誉学位;大学优等成绩;尊敬( honor的名词复数 );敬意;荣誉;光荣
  • He aims at honors. 他力求名誉。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • We did the last honors to his remains. 我们向他的遗体告别。 来自《简明英汉词典》
v.释放( release的过去式和过去分词 );放开;发布;发行
  • He was released on bail pending committal proceedings. 他交保获释正在候审。
  • With hindsight it is easy to say they should not have released him. 事后才说他们本不应该释放他,这倒容易。
adj.认真的,专注的;强烈的;紧张的;热情的
  • Susan was an intense young lady.苏珊是一个热情的年轻姑娘。
  • The quarrel caused her intense unhappiness.争吵令她极其不快。
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的
  • This gave them a decided advantage over their opponents.这使他们比对手具有明显的优势。
  • There is a decided difference between British and Chinese way of greeting.英国人和中国人打招呼的方式有很明显的区别。
学英语单词
Accadia
acceptor exhaustion
Adelshofen
afterview
amlapura
antineoplastic drug
appeal against finding
applicature
articular crescent
Batmaniac
beechlike
Bennebroek
beretta
birnbaum-raymond-zuckerman inequality
blancmange
ca1(cornu ammonis 1)
camber ratio
Camellia omeiensis
Cantharellus cinnabarinus
constructive criticism
Dabilja
double aperture core
finance department
Fleischmann's follicle
gite
glowing cloud
ground stake
Harvard Monthly Index Chart
hendawi
herrman
hot driving
hydrocarbon black
i and
in someone's fingers
ingemar
injection therapy of internal hemorroid
international economic order
isurus paucuss
laminar flow extent
legal consultancy service
long-branched
lower ... guard
magnetotelephone set
mardies
mecodium okadai shieh
mesobacterium
muffiny
mulitiparous cyme
needle-leaf forest
net-veined leaf
NSPN
null-hypothesis
OMS (overpressure mitigation system)
on-board modem
ordinal adjective
Ouakaro
overchlorinated
parabolic transformation
Pastia's lines
peak suction
phycoporphyrin
physaloptera massino
playshops
playsong
prepartory grinding
private Idahos
pyramid roof
questionmasters
range of possibility
ratio intelligence quotient
reconsulting
red liquor
River Cocytus
roast chicken
rociclovir
Rokitansky's disease
sandfort
sea crawfish
sebileau's band
shearing effect
silicate binder
silverbells
Simplex stern tube stuffing box
single leaf spring
soldat
sport utilities
steady brace
stepped reflector
stratifications
systemic toxic symptoms
systemise
telarc
transilluminating
transportins
trifocal spectacle
unsuccessive
untweetable
ven? pulmonales
verge escapement
vertical mining
Winside
Yuzuruha-san