使用者工具

網站工具


learning_from_doing:english_learning:bbc_world_news_english

差異處

這裏顯示兩個版本的差異處。

連向這個比對檢視

Both sides previous revision 前次修改
下次修改
前次修改
learning_from_doing:english_learning:bbc_world_news_english [2012/05/21 21:24]
lucien [Unit 13 Queen Elizabeth Ⅱ on her Jubilee Tour]
learning_from_doing:english_learning:bbc_world_news_english [2019/01/16 04:44] (目前版本)
行 1: 行 1:
 ======Volume 3====== ======Volume 3======
 +
 +  *Unit 01 Tate Britain Art Gallery
 +  *Unit 02 Art Exhibition by Former Beatle
 +  *Unit 03 Edinburgh Festival
 +  *Unit 04 The Greatest Britons Ever
 +  *Unit 05 Preparations for Wimbledon
 +  *Unit 06 Regulating British TV
 +  *Unit 07 Royal Skiing Trip
 +  *Unit 08 School Exam Overload
 +  *Unit 09 Oxford University Grant Scheme
 +  *Unit 10 Church Weddings for Divorcees
 +  *Unit 11 Donkey Taxis
 +  *Unit 12 Parenting Classes
 +  *Unit 13 Queen Elizabeth Ⅱ on her Jubilee Tour
 +  *Unit 14 Auction of Czech Town
 +  *Unit 15 Discount Designer Bargains
 +  *Unit 16 British Airways Job Losses
 +  *Unit 17 Drop in Mobile Phones Sales
 +  *Unit 18 New Laws for UK Customs
 +  *Unit 19 New Plans for UK Postal Service
 +  *Unit 20 Screening for Bowel Cancer
 +  *Unit 21 The Benefits of Gardening
 +  *Unit 22 GM Crops
 +  *Unit 23 Vitamins Against Crime
 +  *Unit 24 Storms Batter Britain
 +  *Unit 25 UK Energy Sources
 +  *Unit 26 Breast Cancer Treatment Delays
 +  *Unit 27 Riots in Argentina
 +  *Unit 28 British PM in Africa
 +  *Unit 29  Asylum Seekers in Channel Tunnel
 +  *Unit 30 ID Cards
 +  *Unit 31 Electronic Tagging
 +  *Unit 32 HIV and AIDS in Ukraine
 +  *Unit 33 Plane-spotters in Greece
 =====Unit 1 Tate Britain Art Gallery===== =====Unit 1 Tate Britain Art Gallery=====
 ===T1=== ===T1===
行 46: 行 80:
  
 -Jennie Bond, 6 June 2002. -Jennie Bond, 6 June 2002.
 +=====Unit 26 Breast Cancer Treatment Delays=====
 +===T1===
 +DARREN JORDON: Doctors are warning that some women with suspected breast cancer are facing unacceptable delays for treatment. The Government wants women to wait no longer than two weeks to see a consultant, but researchers at a London hospital say it can be as long as three months, and warned that lives could be at risk.
 +===T2===
 +SOPHIE HUTCHINSON: 45-year-old Maggie Kay is almost fully recovered, after undergoing surgery to remove breast cancer. An urgent case, she was referred by her GP to a specialist, and seen within two weeks.
 +
 +MAGGIE KAY: Your life suddenly is turned upside-down,​ and nothing seems real, nothing seems the same any more. So the stress of that, and , you know, you, you feel like you're in a vacuum, in a bubble almost, and you want some normality, and you want something to be done, and you want something to be done now.
 +===T3===
 +SOPHIE HUTCHINSON: A report using data from King's College Hospital in London, is warning half of all women with breast cancer are facing delays of up to 12 weeks. It says that's because of a Government grading system, which fast-tracks urgent cases. The report'​s author insists this is leading to unacceptable delays in treatment for non-urgent cases, which can be critical.
 +
 +DOCTOR: The quicker we can get there, the more options we have as, as surgeons, and radiotherapists,​ and oncologists,​ and the more options women have in terms of deciding what kind of treatment to have.
 +===T4===
 +SOPHIE HUTCHINSON: Hospital staff say simple organisational changes can really mean the difference between a two week and a 12 week wait. For example, this fax machine is constantly monitored. When a GP sends through a request for an appointment,​ they'​re guaranteed a reply with a date, within 10 minutes. The Govenment has welcomed today'​s report, and says speeding up the way cancer patients are diagnosed and treated is central to its programme of modernisation. Sophie Hutchinson, BBC News.
 +
 +-Sophie Hutchinson, 24 May 2002.
 +=====Unit 31 Electronic Tagging=====
 +===T1===
 +MICHEAL BUERK: Children as young as twelve could be electronically tagged even before they'​re convicted of a crime, under a new Government initiative. It's designed to stop them committing more crime while on bail. Young offenders are responsible for much street crime, which has risen dramatically over the last year.
 +===T2===
 +
 +MARGARET GILMORE: As a skills centre in Birmingham, teenagers convicted of crimes are tagged. Under the new scheme, young people could be tagged before they are convicted if they'​re ex-offenders,​ or there'​s a suspicion they'​ll re-offend while waiting for their court case to come up. One here who is now reformed and doesn'​t want his face shown, says being locked up didn't work but tagging did. His past offences include mobile phone theft, possession of drugs and causing grievous bodily harm.
 +
 +BOY: I was enjoying it so much. It gave me a buzz doing all kinds of things. Robbing people, doing all kinds of things.
 +
 +MARGARET GILMORE: Did the tagging then make any difference rather than locking you up?
 +
 +BOY: Yeah. It did good, man. It did good.
 +===T3===
 +MARGARET GILMORE: The government'​s targeting young offenders because they commit nearly half all street crime. For robbery, 42% cautioned or convicted are under 18. For mobile phone thefts in London, 65% of those accused are under 18. For mobile phone thefts in London, 65% of those accused are under 18. The police blame street crime on a hard core of 20 or 30 young offenders in every inner city area. The Home Secretary out on patrol with the police today says the statistics also show most once freed will re-offend, hence the tagging while on bail.
 +===T4===
 +DAVID BLUNKETT: I am very clear indeed that the new technology needs to be backed up by intensive supervision. Once people know that the fun is gone out of this, that they can't leave their home, or they can't leave the secure accommodation,​ I think they'​ll get the message.
 +
 +FRANCES CROOK: These are children first and they should be treated as children. They haven'​t been convicted of any offence and they should be treated as if they were innocent and they could even wear an electronic shackle as a badge of honour and show off with it to their friends in it, and perhaps a gang.
 +===T5===
 +MARGARET GILMORE: Today'​s pilot is part of a wider scheme to keep offenders of all ages out of jail and overcrowded young offenders institutions. With this latest scheme the Government'​s tackling two things. One is our critically overcrowded prisons, the other street crime, which is rising in many cities. They'​re big problems; the Government believes it must be seen to be doing something. Margaret Gilmore, BBC News, Birmingham.
 +
 +-Margaret Gilmore, 26 February 2002.
learning_from_doing/english_learning/bbc_world_news_english.1337653464.txt.gz · 上一次變更: 2019/01/16 03:42 (外部編輯)