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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
HOST:
Welcome to AMERICAN MOSAIC1, in VOA Special English.
(MUSIC)
I'm Doug Johnson. On our show this week:
We answer a question about the term baby boomers ...
Play some music from the Beatles ...
And report about changes to a traditional American board game.
Monopoly3
Monopoly: Here & Now
It is the middle of the winter holiday shopping season in the United States. Stores are crowded with people buying gifts for family members and friends. One of the new gifts this year is an updated version4 of the board game Monopoly. Barbara Klein tells us about it.
BARBARA KLEIN:
The Parker Brothers company began selling Monopoly in nineteen thirty-five. Players move pieces around a board to buy and sell property. The first Monopoly game represented streets in Atlantic City, New Jersey5. Since then, more than two hundred fifty million copies of Monopoly have been sold in eighty countries around the world. It is the best selling board game in the world.
The Hasbro company bought Parker Brothers in nineteen ninety-one. The company's Web site says more than two hundred different versions6 of Monopoly have been created over the years. They show streets in different American cities, places at universities and areas in national parks.
Earlier this year, the Hasbro company announced a contest to create a new and different version of Monopoly. It would represent famous places in America. The company wanted help in choosing the properties that would appear on the board. So it asked Monopoly lovers7 to use their computers to vote for popular places in twenty-two cities. The votes also would decide where each place would appear on the board. The place with the largest number of votes would have the most important space on the board.
Three million votes were counted to help develop the new game, called Monopoly Here and Now. These are some of the places in the new game: The White House in Washington, D.C. Wrigley Baseball Field in Chicago, Illinois. The Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, California. Las Vegas Boulevard in Las Vegas, Nevada. And, Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida. New York City's Times Square received the most votes, so it occupies the highest rent property space on the new board.
Monopoly Here and Now also has new and improved pieces that the players move around the board to play the game. The old pieces included a top hat and an old shoe. Some of the new ones include a cell phone and a laptop computer.
Baby Boomers
HOST:
Our listener question this week comes from Nepal. Amrit Rai wants to know the meaning of the term baby boomers.
Baby boomers are Americans who were born between nineteen forty-six and nineteen sixty-four. World War Two ended in nineteen forty-five. The number of babies born increased sharply8 after soldiers came home from the war.
The baby boom2 describes the growth of American families and the economy during this period. Population experts say a law called the GI Bill helped create the baby boom. It gave soldiers who served in World War Two and the Korean War the financial support they needed to start families. It also provided9 education, training, loans10, unemployment payments11 and other aid to former soldiers. Millions of them paid for their college educations or bought homes.
Two members of the baby boom generation: George W. Bush and Bill Clinton
The baby boomers were such a large group that they had a major influence on American culture. This year, the oldest members of the baby boom generation turned sixty. They include President George W. Bush and former president Bill Clinton. The two men were born within sixty days of each other in nineteen forty-six. They are the country's first and second baby boomer presidents.
Some experts believe baby boomers will continue to have power in Washington for many years. For example, a great number of baby boomers will be serving in Congress12. And another boomer may also be elected president.
The two newest members of the Supreme13 Court are both baby boomers. Chief Justice John Roberts was born in nineteen fifty-five; Justice Samuel Alito, in nineteen fifty. In addition to politics, many of the cultural and business leaders in the United States are baby boomers.
The population of the United States includes more than seventy-eight million baby boomers. That is more than one quarter of the American population. And this country continues to feel the social effects of the baby boom. For example, many companies make products or offer services that promise to make people look and feel younger. Right now, baby boomers are either planning for their retirement14, taking care of their aging parents or worrying about their teenage children.
The Beatles' Love
HOST:
The Beatles have released15 a new album, called Love. It contains twenty-six Beatles songs that have been remixed and combined to produce something completely new. Katherine Cole has our story.
KATHERINE COLE:
The Beatles album Love began as the soundtrack for the Canadian Cirque Du Soleil show that opened a few months ago in Las Vegas, Nevada. Cirque Du Soleil means Circus of the Sun. The show combines acrobatics16, dance, theater and music.
The Beatles
The surviving Beatles and their families had asked the Beatles' producer, George Martin, to create the music for the show. Martin and his son, Giles, made the experimental17 mixes from the master tapes, recorded in the studio, that were used to make the Beatles' records.
The famous Beatles songs on Love are edited18 together, taken apart and changed in new and creative ways. The album is part of a new musical method called a mash-up. This song on Love combines three Beatles songs. See if you can identify them.
(MUSIC)
Those songs were Drive My Car, The Word and What You're Doing.
In this song, Because, the background instrumental19 music has been removed. What remains20 are the Beatles singing acapella. You can hear their voices combine beautifully with each other.
(MUSIC)
Paul McCartney, one of the two surviving Beatles, had this to say about Love: This album puts the Beatles back together again, because suddenly there's John and George with me and Ringo. It's kind of magical.
There is only one song on the album to which new music was added. George Martin added new music by stringed instruments to George Harrison's singing. We leave you with While My Guitar Gently Weeps.
(MUSIC)
HOST:
I'm Doug Johnson. I hope you enjoyed our program today.
This show was written by Shelley Gollust, Jill Moss21 and Nancy Steinbach. Caty Weaver22 was the producer. To read the text of this program and download audio23, go to our Web site, www.unsv.com.
Join us again next week for AMERICAN MOSAIC, VOA's radio magazine in Special English.
1 mosaic | |
n./adj.镶嵌细工的,镶嵌工艺品的,嵌花式的 | |
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2 boom | |
n.隆隆声;vt.发隆隆声 | |
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3 monopoly | |
n.垄断,专卖,垄断物(商品),专卖商品 | |
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4 version | |
n.版本;型号;叙述,说法 | |
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5 jersey | |
n.运动衫 | |
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6 versions | |
n.译本( version的名词复数 );版本;(个人对事件的)描述;(原物的)变体 | |
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7 lovers | |
爱好者( lover的名词复数 ); 情人; 情夫; 情侣 | |
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8 sharply | |
adj.锐利地,急速;adv.严厉地,鲜明地 | |
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9 provided | |
conj.假如,若是;adj.预备好的,由...供给的 | |
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10 loans | |
n.借出物,借款( loan的名词复数 )v.借出,贷与(尤指钱)( loan的第三人称单数 );出借(贵重物品给博物馆等) | |
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11 payments | |
n.支付,付款,缴纳,报酬( payment的名词复数 );付出的[要付出的]款项;报答,报偿 | |
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12 Congress | |
n.(代表)大会;(C-:美国等国的)国会,议会 | |
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13 supreme | |
adj.极度的,最重要的;至高的,最高的 | |
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14 retirement | |
n.退休,退职 | |
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15 released | |
v.释放( release的过去式和过去分词 );放开;发布;发行 | |
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16 acrobatics | |
n.杂技 | |
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17 experimental | |
adj.实验的,用作实验的,根据实验的 | |
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18 edited | |
编辑( edit的过去式和过去分词 ); 剪辑(电影、录音磁带、无线电或电视节目、书等); 主编(报纸、杂志等) | |
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19 instrumental | |
adj.仪器的,器械的,乐器的,起作用的,有帮助的 | |
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20 remains | |
n.剩余物,残留物;遗体,遗迹 | |
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21 moss | |
n.苔,藓,地衣 | |
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22 weaver | |
n.织布工;编织者 | |
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23 audio | |
n./adj.音频(响)(的);声音(的),听觉(的) | |
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