时间:2019-01-30 作者:英语课 分类:自然探索


英语课

52 美国大无畏航母博物馆参观记


DATE=8-8-01
TITLE=EXPLORATIONS#1964 - The Intrepid 1 Museum
BYLINE= Paul Thompson


VOICE ONE:
This is Shirley Griffith.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Steve Ember with the VOA Special English program "EXPLORATIONS." Today, we visit the Intrepid Sea-Air-and Space Museum in New York City. It is an unusual museum that seeks to preserve old ships as an educational experience and as a memorial to peace.
((THEME))
VOICE ONE:
A visit to the (1)Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum begins with a ship that carried fighter planes. This aircraft carrier 2 is the U-S-S Intrepid. The Intrepid is a very honored 3 name among ships of the United States (2)Navy 4. The huge aircraft carrier is the fourth ship to have that name. The first was a small wooden sailing ship that was built in Eighteen-Oh-Three. It was lost a year later in battle against (3)pirates.
The U-S-S Intrepid that visitors see today in New York City sailed during World War Two. Few ships are as famous as the Intrepid. It was so successful in battles during World War Two in the Pacific Ocean that the Japanese Navy began calling it "The (4)Ghost Ship."
The Japanese believed they had sunk the Intrepid several different times. The ship may have been seriously damaged, but it always came back to fight again and again.
The Intrepid took part in many battles. The most famous of these may have been the battle of Leyte (5)Gulf, near the Philippines. It was the largest naval 5 battle in history. The ship also supported the landings of Allied 7 troops in their effort to free the Philippine Islands from Japanese control.
VOICE TWO:
During the last months of World War Two, the Japanese military (6)attacked American ships by (7)crashing airplanes into them. The Japanese (8)pilots gave their lives in an effort to cause as much damage as possible.
The U-S-S Intrepid was one of the first American aircraft carriers 8 to suffer this kind of an attack. On October twenty-ninth, Nineteen-Forty-Four, a Japanese aircraft crashed into the left side of the ship. Ten American sailors were killed.
That was only the first time this kind of attack would happen to the Intrepid. To better understand happened during these attacks, imagine for a few moments we are on the U-S-S Intrepid on November twenty-fifth, Nineteen-Forty-Four.
((CUT ONE: MUSIC AND SOUND EFFECTS))
VOICE ONE:
It is a bright clear day in the Phillipines. It is a little after one in the afternoon. High above the Intrepid, a group of several Japanese airplanes flies over the American force. The Intrepid's (9)crewmembers are at their battle stations. They quickly begin (10)shooting at the small Japanese planes. The crew of the Intrepid knows that an aircraft carrier is the first choice of the Japanese pilots who want to crash their planes into American ships.
One Japanese pilot points the front of his airplane down. He increases his speed. He is (11)aiming his plane at the Intrepid.
Faster and faster he (12)dives toward 9 the large carrier. (13)Gunfire from the ship hits his airplane many times. But the pilot continues toward the carrier and his sure death.
High above the ship, another Japanese pilot pushes the control that aims his airplane toward the large carrier.
Within five minutes, the two Japanese airplanes crash into the Intrepid. One explodes below the huge carrier's landing 6 area. This area is called a (14)hanger 10 (15)deck 11. It is where aircraft are kept when they are not flying.
Huge fires begin (16)immediately. Smoke fills the sky. The ship burns for about six hours. Sixty-nine crew members of the Intrepid are killed. Another eighty-five are seriously (17)injured. The Intrepid can no longer (18)take part in the battle.
The skill and (19)bravery of the crew saves the Intrepid. Slowly, the carrier leaves the battle area to return to the United States for repairs. When the repairs are completed, the U-S-S Intrepid and its crew return to battle again.
((CUT TWO: MUSIC AND SOUND EFFECTS))
VOICE TWO:
The U-S-S Intrepid also took part in battles during the (20)Korean War and the War in Vietnam. But not all of its working life was in battle. It was used in the American space program. It recovered some space vehicles that landed in the ocean after their flights into space.
The Intrepid was the ship that (21)rescued American (22)astronaut Scott Carpenter after his flight in May of Nineteen-Sixty-Two. Later it was the recovery 12 ship for Astronauts Gus Grissom and John Young as part of the Gemini space program.
VOICE ONE:
In October, Nineteen-Seventy-Six, the Intrepid was the official Navy and Marine 13 Corps 14 ship used in (23)cerebration of the two-hundredth anniversary 15 of the United States. The ship was (24)retired from active duty in Nineteen-Seventy-Four.
When old ships can no longer continue in active duty, they are sold for the (25)metal that can be taken from them and reused. By Nineteen-Eighty, the Intrepid, which had such a proud past, seemed to have no future.
Then, a number of interested people formed a group called the Intrepid Museum Foundation 16. Their main goal was to save the ship and turn it into a museum. One member of that group became the (26)economic force behind the effort.
That man was Zachary Fisher of New York City. Mister 17 Fisher spent twenty-four million dollars of his own money in order to save the Intrepid. He wanted to make the Intrepid a lasting 18 memorial to those who gave their lives in (27)defense of their country. He also wanted it made into an educational museum.
VOICE TWO:
The United States Navy agreed. The Navy (28)permanently lent the U-S-S Intrepid to the Museum Foundation. In August, Nineteen-Eighty-Two, the Museum opened to the public on the Hudson River on the west side of New York City.
The goal of the Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum is to educate the public about the history of the Intrepid and the men who served as members of the crew. The museum also wants it to represent the peace that these men worked so hard to (29)protect.
Later two other ships were added to the Museum's collection. They are both much smaller than the Intrepid. One is the a (30)submarine 19, the U-S-S Growler. It was in active duty for only six years. The Growler is the only (31)missile submarine open to the public anywhere in the world. It (32)offers visitors a close look at life on a submarine.
Just behind the Growler is the U-S-S Edson. The Edson is a destroyer. It was built in Nineteen-Fifty-Eight. The Edson served as an active ship for more than thirty years. It is named for Marine Corps General Mike Edson, a hero of battles in the Pacific during World War Two.
((MUSIC BRIDGE))
VOICE ONE:
Last year, about six-hundred-thousand people visited the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum. Museum officials say that number is increasing each year.
The first thing these visitors see when they arrive at the Museum is the Intrepid. It is very hard to (33)miss the huge ship. It (34)weighs more than forty-thousand tons and is more than two-hundred-seventy meters long.
On the long flight deck of the carrier are airplanes. Some are very large. Other countries owned several of them. There is a British plane, a French plane, and a Russian built (35)jet fighter that once belonged to the (36)Polish air force.
Perhaps the most famous airplane on the Intrepid is the Lockheed A-Twelve Blackbird. This (37)spy plane could fly higher and faster than any other plane. It could travel faster than three times the speed of sound. One of these planes once flew from Los Angeles, California to Washington D-C in a little more than one hour.
VOICE TWO:
Visitors can move about the Intrepid and see how the crew lived and worked. They can climb the (38)stairs to the room that controlled the ship. Many people bring cameras and have their picture taken with their hands on the (39)wheel that was used to guide the huge aircraft carrier.
On the area called the hanger deck visitors can inspect aircraft used in World War Two. They can also watch movies and see how airplanes (40)took off from and landed on the carrier. They can see pictures of important events in the history of the ship.
Very often visitors can talk to several older men who were members of the crew of the Intrepid. These men give freely 20 of their time to tell the story of the "Ghost Ship."
((THEME))
VOICE ONE:
You can learn more about the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space museum and see pictures of its famous ships by entering the word Intrepid in a World Wide Web search. It is spelled … I-N-T-R-E-P-I-D. That is I-N-T-R-E-P-I-D.
This Special English program was written by Paul Thompson. Our (41)studio (42)engineer was Keith Holmes. It was produced by George Grow. This is Shirley Griffith.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Steve Ember. Join us again next week for another EXPLORATIONS program on the Voice of America.



(1)  intrepid [in'trepid] adj. 无畏的, 勇猛的
(2)  navy [‘neivi] n. 海军
(3) pirate [‘pai[r[t] n. 海盗, 盗印者, 盗版者, 侵犯专利权者; vt. 盗印, 盗版, 掠夺, 翻印; vi. 做海盗
(4) ghost [g[Jst] n. 鬼, 幽灵
(5) gulf [gQlf] n. 海湾, 深渊, 漩涡, 隔阂; vt. 吞没, 使深深卷入
(6) attack [['tAk] n. 进攻, 攻击, (用语言)抨击, 批评, 疾病发作, 侵袭; vt. 攻击, 抨击, 动手处理(某事); vi. 攻击
(7) crash [krAF] n. 碰撞, 坠落, 坠毁, 撞击声, 爆裂声; v. 碰撞, 坠落, 坠毁, (指商业公司, 政府等)破产, 垮台
(8) pilot [‘pail[t] n. 飞行员, 领航员, 引水员; vt. 驾驶(飞机等), 领航, 引水; v. 驾驶
(9) crew [kru:] n. 全体人员, (工作)队
(10)  shoot [FU:t] n. 射击, 发射, 摄影, 急流; vt. 射击, 投射, 伸出, 拍摄, 用完, 挥出, 给...注射, 使爆炸; vi. 射出, 射击, 发出, 发芽, 射门, 拍电影
(11)  aim [eim] n. 目标, 目的, 瞄准; v. 对...瞄准, 打算
(12) dive [daiv] vi. 潜水, 跳水, 下潜, 俯冲; n. 潜水, 跳水, 下潜, 俯冲; v. 俯冲
(13) gunfire [‘gQnfai[]n. 炮火
(14) hanger [‘hAN[] n. 绞刑执行者, 衣架
(15) deck [dek] n. 甲板, 舰板, 覆盖物, 一副(纸牌); vt. 装饰, 修饰, 打扮, 装甲板
(16) immediately [i'mi:di[tli] adv. 立即, 马上, 直接地
(17) injure [‘indV[] vt. 损害, 伤害; v. 伤害
(18) take part in  v. 参与, 参加
(19) bravery [‘breiv[ri] n. 勇敢
(20) Korean [k['ri[n] n. 韩国人, 朝鲜人, 韩国语, 朝鲜语; adj. 韩国人的, 朝鲜人的, 韩国语的, 朝鲜语的
(21) rescue [‘reskjU:]vt. 援救, 营救; n. 援救, 营救
(22) astronaut [‘Astr[nR:t] n. 太空人, 宇航员
(23) cerebration [seli'breiF([)n] n. 庆祝, 庆典
(24) retire [ri'tai[] vi. 退休, 引退, 退却, 撤退, 就寝
(25) metal [‘metl]n. 金属
(26) economic [i:k['nRmik] adj. 经济(上)的, 产供销的, 经济学的
(27) defense [di'fens] n. 防卫, 防卫设备; n. [律](被告的)答辩、辩护
(28) permanently [‘p:m[ntli] adv. 永存地, 不变地
(29)  protect [pr['tekt] vt. 保护
(30)  submarine [sQbm['ri:n] n. 潜水艇, 潜艇
(31) missile [‘misail] n. 导弹, 发射物
(32) offer [‘R:f[] n. 出价, 提议, 意图; vt. 提供, 出价, 贡献, 使出现, 企图, 演出; vi. (机会、时机等)出现, 献祭, 提议
(33) miss [mis] n. 过错, 避免, 失败, 小姐, 姑娘; vt. 未得到, 未达到, 未听到, 思念, 未觉察, 错过, 遗漏, 逃脱; vi. 失败, 击不中
(34) weigh [wei] vt. 称...重量, 称; vi. 重(若干)
(35) jet [dVet]n. 喷射, 黑玉; v. 喷射; adj. 黑玉色的, 墨黑的; 喷气机
(36) polish [‘p[JliF] adj. 波兰的; n. 波兰人
(37) spy [spai] n. 特工人员, 间谍, 侦探, 探员, 秘密侦察他人行动者; v. 侦察, 侦察, 发现
(38) stair [ste[r] n. (阶梯的某)一级, 楼梯
(39) wheel [wi:l] n. 轮, 车轮, 轮子
(40) take off  v. 拿掉, 取消, 脱衣, 起飞, 减弱, 离开, 岔开, 复制
(41) studio [‘stjU:di[J] n. 画室, 照相室, 工作室, (无线电或电视节目的)演播室, (制作电影的)摄影棚, (电影公司的)摄影场
(42) engineer [endVi'ni[] n. 工程师, 技师, 火车司机, 轮机员, 工兵


 


 



adj.无畏的,刚毅的
  • He is not really satisfied with his intrepid action.他没有真正满意他的无畏行动。
  • John's intrepid personality made him a good choice for team leader.约翰勇敢的个性适合作领导工作。
n.运货人;带菌者;运输军队的交通工具
  • The airplane lifted from the aircraft carrier.飞机从航空母舰上起飞。
  • I applied for the job as a mail carrier.我申请邮差的工作。
adj.光荣的:荣幸的v.尊敬,给以荣誉( honor的过去式和过去分词 )
  • I hope to be honored with further orders. 如蒙惠顾,不胜荣幸。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • This is a time-honored custom. 这是一个古老的习俗。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.海军,海军人员,海军军力,藏青色
  • My brother is in the navy.我兄弟在海军服役。
  • He has transferred from the army to the navy.他从陆军转到海军。
adj.海军的,军舰的,船的
  • He took part in a great naval battle.他参加了一次大海战。
  • The harbour is an important naval base.该港是一个重要的海军基地。
n.登陆;着陆;楼梯平台
  • Owing to engine trouble,the plane had to make a forced landing.由于发动机出了毛病,飞机不得不进行迫降。
  • When are we landing?我们什么时候着陆?
adj.协约国的;同盟国的
  • Britain was allied with the United States many times in history.历史上英国曾多次与美国结盟。
  • Allied forces sustained heavy losses in the first few weeks of the campaign.同盟国在最初几周内遭受了巨大的损失。
(自身不受感染而传播疾病的)带菌者( carrier的名词复数 ); (尤指经营空运的)运输公司; 搬运人; 军输车
  • Mosquitoes are carriers of disease. 蚊子是疾病的传播媒介。
  • The chair carriers arrived at the crack of dawn. 轿是一早就到了。
prep.对于,关于,接近,将近,向,朝
  • Suddenly I saw a tall figure approaching toward the policeman.突然间我看到一个高大的身影朝警察靠近。
  • Upon seeing her,I smiled and ran toward her. 看到她我笑了,并跑了过去。
n.吊架,吊轴承;挂钩
  • I hung my coat up on a hanger.我把外衣挂在挂钩上。
  • The ship is fitted with a large helicopter hanger and flight deck.这艘船配备有一个较大的直升飞机悬挂装置和飞行甲板。
n.甲板;公共汽车一层的车厢;纸牌;vt.装饰
  • Let's have a walk round the deck.我们去甲板上散步吧。
  • The sea wind swept over the deck.海风席卷过甲板。
n.恢复,痊愈;追回,寻回,收复
  • The doctors said that his recovery was a miracle. 医生们说他的复原是件奇事。
  • The quick recovery was truly in response to medication.这次迅速康复确实是对药物治疗的反应。
adj.海的;海生的;航海的;海事的;n.水兵
  • Marine creatures are those which live in the sea. 海洋生物是生存在海里的生物。
  • When the war broke out,he volunteered for the Marine Corps.战争爆发时,他自愿参加了海军陆战队。
n.(通信等兵种的)部队;(同类作的)一组
  • The medical corps were cited for bravery in combat.医疗队由于在战场上的英勇表现而受嘉奖。
  • When the war broke out,he volunteered for the Marine Corps.战争爆发时,他自愿参加了海军陆战队。
n.周年(纪念日)
  • They celebrate their wedding anniversary annually.他们每年庆祝一番结婚纪念日。
  • Today is my parents'30th wedding anniversary.今天是我父母结婚30周年纪念日。
n.[pl.]地基;基础;基金会;建立,创办
  • The foundation of the university took place 600 years ago.这所大学是600年前创办的。
  • The Foundation gives money to help artists.那家基金会捐款帮助艺术家。
n.(略作Mr.全称很少用于书面)先生
  • Mister Smith is my good friend.史密斯先生是我的好朋友。
  • He styled himself " Mister Clean ".他自称是“清廉先生”。
adj.永久的,永恒的;vbl.持续,维持
  • The lasting war debased the value of the dollar.持久的战争使美元贬值。
  • We hope for a lasting settlement of all these troubles.我们希望这些纠纷能获得永久的解决。
n.潜水艇;adj.水底的,海底的;vt.用潜艇袭击;vi.滑入...底下
  • Within a short time,everything on the submarine was buttoned up.不一会儿,潜水艇内所有的东西都扣紧了。
  • The submarine signaled for help.潜水艇发出求救的信号。
adv.自由地,随便地,无拘无束地
  • She was unable to keep back her tears,and wept freely.她抑制不住泪水,痛痛快快地哭了起来。
  • A liquid flows freely and has no fixed shape.液体能自由流动,无固定形态。
学英语单词
A.F.C
Adam's Pk.
Admer
ballsed-up
baltic ice clause
batch-cart
Batulaki
big.LITTLE
bimanual palpation
budgetholder
Bétokar
carbosilane
cell nucleus (brown 1831)
charges against revenue
chinese linguistics
circular diagram
cockle-bread
colaingite
Coliseu
commission rate
computer log sheet
cone type collimator
constant pressure valve
construction project management
corsetieres
designatum
direct actions
direct crossgraphy
disjoint probability
double stream tube
economic colonialism
empeoples
entodermic
exanthems
fasce
fibre concrete
FILDDT
Garnham
genuine issues of material fact
genus myrmecophagas
george meanies
geten
growse
hiltrud
Hoan Lao
hourly quota of handling
hydrodynamic coupling
hypsometric tint diagram
hypural arch
inscriptively
intelligent
interlock code
juazeiro do norte (juazeiro)
junky
knife-edge material
kuhne
lactiferous gland
leapest
Litsea balansae
little prince
m1s
Mahayanism
mirror pair
monthly statement of accounts
mutual acceptance
myocytoma
naphthyridines
Natulan
NBVC
nuclear options
occlusal area
oxidizing phthalic alkyd resin
pagurian
paragalactan
pin and string method
pintman
pipe and wire penetration
plate feeder
play horse with
points of the back
program end
regulator cell
rihid coupling
Sakon Nakhon
sausage cake
secret vote
self-responsibilities
spacks
species
standard reference condition for gases
strapping tool
summer ripened fruit
tearing mode crack
timeworker
toastless
Tornedalen
trading-post
upper inversion
vehicle capacity
vitamine A alcohol
Vranov nad Topl'ou
zoological behavioristics