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L3 076 Czytanie

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egzamin
z języka
obcego
wg
STANAG 6001
poziom 3
język:
sprawność:
czas trwania:
angielski
czytanie
65 min.
Imię:
KOD
Nazwisko:
POZIOM 3
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1
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TASK ONE
You are going to read short texts. Choose the best answer a), b) or c).
1.
Last week a South African judge lifted a domestic ban on trade in rhino horns, in a direct challenge
to a government policy to try to stem rocketing poaching numbers. The government said it
planned to appeal against the ruling. South Africa saw record 1,215 rhinos killed last year for their
horn, yet rhino breeders say lifting the ban and selling legally harvested horns could stifle the
lucrative black market trade and, accordingly, cause the number to decline.
Rhino breeders think that a South African judge’s decision could …
a) harm the official anti-poaching policy
b) decrease the number of killed rhinos
c) fuel the black market trade in horns
2.
They are the galaxy’s equivalent of the graveyard in the attic – except on a much bigger scale.
Astronomers have discovered two huge black holes, which together are ten times the size of our
solar system. To estimate the black holes’ size, scientists used earthbound and celestial telescopes
to record the speeds of stars caught in the holes’ gravitational pull. The sprawling stellar burial
grounds contain billions of stars, some of which weigh as much as 21 billion suns. Since the holes
are located at the centre of galaxies, they could provide hints about how galaxies are formed from
the swirling gases emitted by the stars.
According to the text, the discovery of the black holes may help to …
a) study the size of our solar system
b) establish how galaxies originate
c) examine gases constituting stars
3.
The Environment Agency came under fierce criticism for its handling of the flooding crisis last
week as storms again buttered much of Britain. The chairman, Lord Smith, faced calls to resign
over the failure to protect the Somerset Levels, where some 40 square miles of land have been
under water for a month. In reply, he said the agency had no “bottomless purse”, and he faced
hard choices whether to save “town or country” with its scarce resources. Luckily, the Prime
Minister promised that the authorities would resume the regular dredging of local rivers, the
project abandoned 18 years ago.
Defending himself, Lord Smith put the blame on …
a) the limited funds to cope with the flooding
b) insufficient investing in the river dredging
c) a bigger than expected scale of the flooding
4.
MI6 is to return to the old-school method of “tapping up” recruits as part of a concerted effort to
draw in a new cadre of black and Asian officers and finally dispel the image of British spies as the
preserve of a posh, Oxbridge elite. The initiative has come directly from the agency’s chief, Alex
Younger, who said that MI6, known officially as the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), needed to
reach out to communities that were “selecting themselves out”.
MI6’s new initiative aims at …
a) changing the stereotypical image of agents
b) recruiting more agents among graduates
c) closely observing different minority groups
2
5.
Turkey has been accused of violating academic freedom by rounding up university teachers who
signed a petition denouncing military operations against Kurds. Police detained twenty-seven
academics over alleged “terror propaganda” after they signed a petition calling for an end to
Turkey’s “deliberate massacre and deportation of Kurdish people”. The US ambassador to Turkey
condemned the crackdown as “chilling”. Local media reported that all the group were later
released. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has severely criticized the signatories, including the
political scientist Noam Chomsky and the Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek.
According to the text, the Turkish president criticized …
a) the detention of the university teachers
b) the attempt to show support for Kurds
c) the US remarks about Turkey’s decision
6.
A split in the global Anglican communion over gay rights was averted after the archbishops
agreed to impose sanctions against a liberal US church and issue a statement in support of the
doctrine that marriage should be between a man and a woman. The measures came after days of
“painful” talks aimed at moving the world’s 85 million-strong Anglican fellowship beyond deep
divisions over homosexuality. The statement said the fact that the US Episcopal Church (a
member of the Anglican communion) accepted same-sex marriage was “a fundamental departure
from the faith and teaching held by the majority” on the doctrine of marriage.
The archbishops …
a) supported the US Episcopal church’s doctrine of marriage
b) led to the deeper division within the Anglican communion
c) expressed disapproval of a US Anglican church’s liberalism
7.
Nutritionists don’t approve of them, but fasting diets appear to have a remarkable effect on the
immune system. Scientists have discovered that fasting “flips a regenerative switch” which causes
stem cells to create more of the white blood cells that fight infections. Researchers tested the
effects of keeping to an ultra-low-calorie diet for two to four-day periods. First the fasting lowered
white blood cell counts but then the body bounced back, producing numerous new cells. “If you
start with a system heavily damaged by chemotherapy, fasting cycles can generate, literally, a new
immune system,” said Valter Longo, a professor of gerontology at the University of Southern
California.
We learn from the text that after chemotherapy …
a) following a diet low in calories is harmful
b) fasting blocks the development of new cells
c) eating less high-calorie food may be positive
8.
Malaysia’s former prime minister, Mohamad Mahathir, called for a “people power” movement to
secure the removal of his one-time ally, Najib Razak, the country’s current leader. Mr Mahathir
was among tens of thousands of people who joined demonstrations against him. Mr Najib, who
denies any wrongdoing, has been buffeted by corruption allegations.
Mohamad Mahathir …
a) rallied against his successor
b) faced a lot of public opposition
c) demonstrated loyalty to his ally
9.
Police in Arkansas are embroiled in a legal tussle with Amazon over access to data from one of its
Amazon Echo devices, which investigators hope might provide crucial evidence in a murder case.
James Bates, 31, is due to go on trial later this year, accused of killing his friend, Victor Collins,
after a night of heavy drinking at Bates’s home in Bantoville in 2015. A voice-activated Echo
gadget was found close to the hot tub where the victim was found strangled and drowned, and
police think it might have sent sound recordings of the killing to Amazon’s servers.
3
It can be deduced from the text that Amazon ...
a) has refused to give the evidence to the police
b) has agreed to make data available to the police
c) has intentionally posted audio recordings online
10. The French military is literally going where eagles dare in an effort to combat the increasing use
of drones by criminals and terrorists. Following incidents of drones flying over the presidential
palace and restricted military sites – along with the deadly 2015 Paris terror attacks – the French
air force has trained four golden eagles to intercept and destroy the rogue aircraft. Aptly named
d'Artagnan, Athos, Porthos and Aramis – homage to Alexandre Dumas’ “The Three Musketeers” –
the four birds of prey have been honing their attack skills at the Mont-de-Marsan in southwestern
France since mid-2016.
The French want to use “The Three Musketeers” to …
a) capture hostile aircraft
b) monitor terrorist hideouts
c) protect airfields from birds
11. Active protection systems (APS) are being built into Russia's new Armata T-14 tank, posing a
problem for a whole generation of anti-armour weapons, not least the US-supplied Javelin guided
missile, used by the Norwegian Army. Some say this is a problem that most NATO countries have
barely begun to grapple with. APS threatens to make existing anti-tank weapons far less effective.
Norway is one of the first NATO countries to grasp this nettle. Its latest defence procurement plan
envisages spending £18.5-32.5m on replacing its Javelin missiles, "to maintain the capacity to fight
against heavy armoured vehicles; there is a need for an anti-tank missile that can penetrate APS
systems”.
The Norwegian Army is concerned because …
a) its guided missile system is malfunctioning
b) the expenditure on armament is insufficient
c) the usefulness of its weapon is decreasing
12. Scientists replicated a critical step in reproduction for the very first time, growing an artificial
mouse embryo from stem cells. The cells, growing in gel, morphed into primitive embryos that
replicated the internal structures that emerge during normal development in the womb,
University of Cambridge researchers observed. The embryos were kept for seven days when the
cells had organised into two anatomical sections that would go on to form the placenta and
embryonic mouse. Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz, a biologist who led the work, said: “I’m looking at it
as a miracle of nature”.
The experiment has shown that it is possible to grow …
a) mouse embryos outside a uterus
b) two embryos from one stem cell
c) stem cells in an artificial womb
13. After a months-long bidding process, Yahoo, a struggling internet company, announced that it is to
sell its core business to Verizon. Last year the wireless carrier also paid $4.4 billion for AOL,
another former internet darling. Merging AOL and Yahoo will give Verizon more eyeballs to sell to
digital advertisers. The deal will surely bring the curtain down on Marissa Mayer’s tenure at
Yahoo, which is widely regarded as a failure. Between 2012, when Ms Mayer took over, and 2015,
Yahoo’s gross earnings have fallen by 44%. The firm has also written off much of the value of
Tumblr, a social-networking site that it bought for $1.1 billion in cash in 2013.
Verizon …
a) has suffered losses under its current director
b) intends to increase the scope of its business
c) is investing heavily in the digital advertising
4
TASK TWO
You are going to read a newspaper article. Choose the best answer a), b), c) or d).
INDONESIA-AUSTRALIA SPYING ROW
Welcome to the world of full-contact diplomacy. Indonesian foreign minister Marty
Natelagawa’s announced that Indonesia will review its intelligence co-operation with Australia and the
United States unless they provide assurances they won’t spy on Indonesia. These warnings, however,
shouldn’t be over-interpreted; they are just part of the rough-and-tumble world of diplomacy.
The revelations about the collection of signals intelligence at Australian missions in regional
capitals are the work of an American whistleblower and Australian journalists, not neighbouring
governments. If foreign governments are genuinely surprised and shocked that the US and Australia
spy on them, they are naive in the extreme. Personally, I would argue that stealing secrets has been a
part of statecraft since time immemorial, and probably makes the world a safer place by minimising
the chances that governments will catch each other unawares.
In reality, Jakarta is well aware that Australia is part of the most potent eavesdropping
partnership in the world. Indonesia has been a beneficiary of Australia’s intelligence capabilities in its
fight against terrorism, just as Australia has benefited from intelligence cooperation with Jakarta.
Against this background, Natelagawa’s threatened “review” takes on a Yes, Minister slant – something
that’s done in order to look decisive, while leaving things pretty much as they are.
The Indonesian foreign minister is responding loudly because he and his president don’t want
to seem to be passive in response to allegations of Australian eavesdropping. Indonesia is in the
countdown to a presidential election next year, and one way for the opposition to discredit the ruling
party politicians is to accuse them of selling out to western interests. President Yudhoyono is already
criticised by nationalists for being too nice to Canberra; and even though he can’t run again, he can’t
dismiss his party being punished if he isn’t seen to be outraged by this apparent assault on Indonesia’s
integrity.
There’s another element to Natelagawa’s response that can’t be ignored either. Diplomacy is
not all about smooth talk and cocktail parties; it’s often a brutal competition, even between apparent
friends and allies. The ability to exploit the slightest weakness can be worth its weight in gold as
governments manoeuvre against each other.
Natelagawa, who studied in Australia, has probably watched the odd State of Origin game. He
knows the first 10 minutes of the match are known as the “softening up period” – a display of
aggressive physicality in which each side tries to put the opposition into a disadvantageous state of
mind. Right now, there's a new government in Australia, and neighbouring governments, including
Indonesia, are keen to test its determination. The odd diplomatic jab can give Natelagawa a better
sense of what can be expected from a new government than years of polite cocktail discussions. New
Australian governments over the past two decades have had some rocky foreign policy starts – think of
the Howard and Rudd governments’ run-ins with Beijing early on – which makes one think that a bit of
softening up may have become part of the regional diplomatic scene.
Remember, this is not the first time Natelagawa has muscled up to the Abbott government.
More than a few eyebrows were raised in Canberra in September last year when he disclosed the
contents of private discussions with Julie Bishop to the media – on the foreign minister’s first overseas
trip no less. For this reason, the government’s latest neither-confirm-nor-deny, steady-as-she-goes
response is spot-on. The last thing they want to do is to look unsettled.
Does all of this add up to a new attitude of antagonism in Jakarta? No. Indonesia has
demonstrated over several years that it well understands the value of building a strong and pragmatic
relationship with Australia. Sometime earlier this year, a decision was made in Jakarta that it needed
to do more to meet Australia half-way on the asylum seeker issue – and it has done so, under a
distracting cover of grim warnings about Australian policy positions. So the current protestations
should be taken as a bit of Indonesian wayang theatre, while the real business of collaboration carries
on behind the curtains.
5
14. The Indonesian foreign minister’s warnings are …
a)
b)
c)
d)
a part of the political game
a protest against spying
a threat against Australia
an asset in negotiations
15. According to the author, spying …
a)
b)
c)
d)
leads to mistrust among allied countries
is necessary to improve security services
is unnecessary among coalition countries
reduces the risk of being taken by surprise
16. In reality Minister Natelagawa’s threat means …
a)
b)
c)
d)
limiting capabilities of fight against terrorism
no real change in the countries’ cooperation
no further intelligence cooperation with Australia
stopping spying on each other by both countries
17. At the national level, the real reason for the foreign minister’s protest is to …
a)
b)
c)
d)
lower the country’s president’s chances for re-election
discredit the opposition’s candidate for the president
increase the governing party’s chances in the elections
show the opposition is selling out to western interests
18. When it comes to relations with Australia, Netalagawa wants to …
a)
b)
c)
d)
check the new government’s reaction
get advantage in bilateral relations
weaken the ally’s position in the region
find weaknesses in his foreign policy
19. After the latest Natelagawa’s statement, the Australian government …
a)
b)
c)
d)
criticised the leak to the media
admitted to eavesdropping
publicized its official denial
showed hardly any reaction
20. Jakarta …
a)
b)
c)
d)
refuses to accept Australian policy on asylum seekers
has adopted a new antagonistic attitude to Australia
continues the cooperation with Australia as before
rejects the idea of compromise in bilateral relations
6
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