The specialist understands one field; his concern is with technique and tools. He is a "trained" main and his educational background is properly technical or professional. The generalists and especially the administrators deal with people; his concern is with leadership, with planning, and with direction giving. He is an "educated" man; and the humanities are his strongest foundation. Very rarely is a specialist capable of being an administrator. And very rarely is a good generalist also a good specialist in a particular field. Any organization needs both kinds of people, though different organizations need them in different proportions. It is your task to find out, during your training period, into which of the two kinds of jobs you fit, and to plan your ca-leer accordingly.
Your first job may turn out to be the right job for you but this is pure accident. Certainly you should not change jobs constantly or people will become suspicious of your ability to hold any job. At the same time, you must not look upon the first job as the final job. It is primarily a training job, a chance to understand yourself and your fitness for being an employee.
There is an increasing demand for ______.
A. all round people in their own fields
B. generalists who are capable of making general judgment
C. people whose educational background is either technical or professional
D. specialists whose chief concern is to provide administrative guidance to others
查看答案
【34】
A. had been encouraged by
B. had encouraged
C. was encouraged by
D. encouraged
【31】
A. having established
B. establishing
C. being established
D. established
What does the woman require of her next apartment?
A. It must be a high rise.
B. It must near the university.
C. It must be quiet.
D. It must be new and functional.
听力原文:M: Hi, I heard you're looking for a different apartment.
W: Yeah. The place I'm in now is really terrible.
M: It was OK when I was there.
W: The boiler keeps breaking and when it does, we lose the heat for several days at the time.
M: Why doesn't the owner replace it?
W: Well, she said it's cheaper to keep fixing it. She is a nice enough person, just sort of stingy in any case. I'm sick of being cold.
M: Can you get your deposit back if you move?
W: If I give one-month notice, I can get the whole thing back.
M: So what kind of place are you looking for?
W: I think I'll try to get into one of those high rises near the university. There is nothing really special but at least they are new and functional.
M: I heard those buildings are pretty noisy. The walls are thin and you can hear everything going on in the other apartment.
W: Oh. That will never do. I need some place quiet to finish my thesis. I guess I'll have to look at some more ads. Maybe new isn't necessarily better.
M: Why don't you try some of those apartment at Windsor? They're supposed to be nice.
W: Oh, aren't they awfully expensive?
M: Not really. You'll be surprised at how reasonable some of them are. The problem with being out there is the bus doesn't run that way.
W: That definitely won't be a problem I can afford a car right now. I guess I'd better check a few places here in the city before I make a decision.
What is wrong with the woman's current apartment?
A. It's too noisy,
B. The walls are too thin.
C. The buses don't go in that direction,
D. The boiler often goes wrong.