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人eg 7Zs pgssgge gzの gpsyer 万e 9zes77o725 のe/の必 Im nearly all established democracies, television has become the preeminent mass medium Television is a visual, credible and easily digested format which reaches almost every househod. providing the main source of political information. Im election campaigns。for instance, the teleyision studio has become the main site of batde. The candidates participate through appearing on interviews, debates and talk show: merely appearing on television confers some status and recognition on them. Of course, the political significance of television goes far beyond elections. Huge numbers of ordinary voters watch the evening news and it is here,( A ),that television has most infuence. Through their assumptions about newsworthiness, editors resolve their daily problem of reducing a day's worth of world events to ( 1 ) than 30 minutes on the evening news. Because news programs focus on the exceptional, often negative, their content is always an unrepresentative sample of events. For example, policy failures receive ( 2 ) attenton than policy successes. Similarly, corruption is a story but integrity is not. Necessarily。 television is a distorting mirror on the world. The more Compressed news coverage becomes,the ( 3 ) accurate the 征V lens is bound to be. Despite the primacy of television it would be wrong to discount the political significance of the second mass medium, newWspapers. Today, Television tells us what h in context.

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英語 高校生

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則 の英文を読んで, 下の設問に答えよ。 Hf you have just gone through a Swing door in a public place shop、do you generally hold the door open for the next person behind yo even though a stranger? Most British people do so automaticallY。 and according to my observation most Japanese do not. /// Tn Britain we think of a stranger in the street, or in 4 shop, as a fellow human beingtowhomweshouldbe[l 1 ]. Looking at Japanese behavior in public places, hoWever, it seems that they think of strangerSs aS 2 who must be pushed aside if one is in a hurry. Again、 in a train、Japanese YOung men sometimes SDYaWl acroOSS SeatS. Noonedaresto[ 3 ]. Tn Britain it is very rare: Tdonotsay that it cannot happen、but it is 旧erethereisno[ 4 ]forposters such as the "Spreading Peacocト which was widely displayed in Japan a Ittle time back. ! magnificent peacock sitting in an electric car、SDreading itS t: next seats and inconveniencing the people on each side. Tn an electric train in Britain、 some people are standing because the carriage is full, those sitting yill always adjust their position、so that they take up as ittle[ 5 ]as possible. In this way they create Some SDare FOOm。 and a few of the standing ones can now sit down. In such cases、Japanese tend to disregard the[ 6 ]ofothers. Afew yearS ago 1 saw in a full electric train in Tokyo an elderly man standing、 and a young man SDrawled acrOSS two SeatS jast in front of him. The latter could easily have just sat wp straight, and made room for the old man to sit down, but he dd not move. The elderly man Was holding himself upright. andTcould see by the Way his chin was drawn in that ne might have been a soldier. Finally he said to the youngster: “You should make a room for an elderly man. The young man replied angrily、“"1T am a paSSenger and You are a DaSSenger. 1 am in this seat and I will stay here.′ Phe _elderly man said something [ 7 ]to him、and the other jumped up iR a fr 3 and caught him by the arm. The train was just coming intoa station, and th

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