VOA Special English 英语学习研讨班 网站工作通报:商务礼仪美语,美语咖啡屋,常速英语已经上线了!请点击下面的“VOA 英语学习资源”访问。
VOA英语学习资源
VOA英语学习研讨班
英语专项能力论坛
英语考试论坛
英语教学论坛
英语学习圈
英语休闲娱乐论坛
网站服务指南
VOA Special EnglishWORDS AND THEIR STORIES - Rocket Scientist: You Do Not Have to Be Extremely Intelligent to Understand This
编辑:Webmaster -  创建:2007年10月23日 -  阅读: <推荐给好友> <加入收藏> <打印正文> <发表评论(0)> <上篇> <下篇>
WORDS AND THEIR STORIES - Rocket Scientist: You Do Not Have to Be Extremely Intelligent to Understand This
VOA Special English配套节目资料下载  配套节目资料下载 VOA Special English配套节目资料下载常见问题解答 下载常见问题解答
节目资料名称下载位置
mp3.gif MP3 声音下载 (2.25 M) 中国电信·南京
ram.gif Real 声音下载 (766 K) 中国电信·南京
pdf.gif PDF 文件下载 (14 K) 中国电信·南京
下载提示:请用右键点下载链接,在弹出菜单上选“目标另存为...”

Hello. I'm Phil Murray with Words and Their Stories, a program in Special English.

(MUSIC)

"You do not need to be a rocket scientist. . . " Americans hear these words often. People say them in schools, offices and factories. Broadcasters on radio and television use them.

This is how you might hear the words used.

Workers in an office are afraid to try to use their new computer system. Their employer tells them not to be foolish. "You do not need to be a rocket scientist to learn this," he says.

Or, high school students cannot seem to understand something their teacher is explaining. "Come on," she says. You do not need to be a rocket scientist to understand this."

Or, a company that makes soap is trying to sell its product on television. "You do not need to be a rocket scientist to see that our soap cleans better," the company says.

These words send a strong message. They say that you do not need to be extremely intelligent to understand something.

How did the expression begin?

No one seems to know for sure. But an official of the American space agency, NASA, says the expression just grew. It grew, he says, because rocket scientists probably are the most intelligent people around.

Not everyone would agree.

Some people might be considered more intelligent than rocket scientists. For example, a person who speaks and reads fifteen languages, or a medical doctor who operates on the brain.

Still, many people would agree that there is something special about scientists who build rockets. Maybe it has to do with the mystery of space travel.

Moving pictures from before World War Two showed a man named Buck Rogers landing on the planet Mars. He was a hero who could defeat any enemy from outer space.

The rocket scientist is a different kind of hero. He or she makes space travel possible.

Rocket scientists, however, can have problems just like everyone else.

A Washington rocket scientist tells about a launch that was postponed many, many times. Finally, everything seemed right. Mechanical failures had been repaired. The weather was good.

The scientists had planned that part of the rocket would fall into the ocean after the launch. All ships and boats within many kilometers of the danger area had been warned. But in the last few seconds a small boat entered the area. Once again, the launch was postponed.

When the work goes well, most rocket scientists enjoy their jobs. One scientist said, "As a child I loved to build rockets. Now I am grown. I still love to build rockets. And now I get paid for it."

(MUSIC)

This program, Words and Their Stores, was written by Jeri Watson. I'm Phil Murray.









UNSV.COM 淘宝网店
版权所有©2003-2008 Ultra Network Service 保留所有权利。 苏ICP证:苏B2-20070025