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"Jupiter" is 40 percent owned by individual shareholders. "" 40 .

... 125 passengers and 5 crew 125 5 .

1. - \:


Philip Riley

John Swales

Merrill Bloor

Joshua Myers

Dudley-Evans

Brian Cohen

Morris Woodley

Lynne Wrilght

Iris Murdock

George Ogden

Jim Caswel

Gene Flowers

Alan Headbloom

Heather Griswold

Stephen Swan

David Banks

Cheryl Hymes

Sheila Stone

Ian Abercrombie

Dorothy McNeil

Maxwell Burt

Walter Dyer

Todd Lawrence

Sam Oakland

Joan Morley

Garry Sweeney

J. Middleton

Walter Hartright

Eugene O'Neil

Hugh Cotter


 

Los Angeles Times Daily Mirror

Daily Telegraph The Guardian

The Christian Science Monitor Readers Digest

U.S. News and World Report Fortune


Waterhouse Corporation

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development

Crysler Corp.

Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)

Thomas Cook & Bros.

Kentucky Fried Chicken Corp. (KFC)

Vintage Books

Eastman Kodak Company

Symantec Corporation

UNIX System Laboratories

Hitachi, Ltd.

CompuServ, Inc.

Trace Analytical Laboratories, Inc.


 

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Economic level

Error level

Skill level

Liability for breakage

Limited liability company

Validity of licence

Advanced training

Long-term treaty

Cost value

Compact disk

Disk driver

Bonus


3. , :

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1. Things look promising!

2. The meal was served at 6 p.m.

3. It will take me about an hour to drive there.

4. Milk goes up.

5. He felt his seat before the curtain went off.

) :

1. Two persons were reported shot.

2. The dog sniffed every inch of the ground.

3. A 120-voice choir was performing in the open air.

4. The five-minute meeting with reporters was over.

5. It was a nice-looking young man, about six feet tall, with a pleasant smile.

) :

1. Their attitude was not unfriendly.

2. She had not left the reception until after her driver came to pick her up.

3. They had little to say to each other.

4. The permission is not given unless authorized by the dean.

5. Her name does not sound unfamiliar to me.

) :

1. Sleep on it, tomorrow is a new day.

2. Robbing Peter to pay Tom.

3. It's easy to be wise after the event.

4. No gain without pain.

5. When in Rome, do as the Romans do.

) -

1. There was widespreadhostility yesterday when the details of the plan became known to the public.

2. In Northern Ireland the Conservative Party carry on in the same disastrous and bloodthirsty way as they have had for the past 50-60 years.

3. It seems inevitable that we will face a prolonged period of high unemployment, vicious inflation and increasingly bitter social division.

4. Facts and figures about the escalation of crime are fired remorselessly at the public, but what it wants to know is why.

5. The long-suffering British housewife needs a bottomless purse to cope with this scale of inflation.

) ( )

1. I don't blame them.

2. He' s dead now.

3. He always made you say everything twice.

4. A lot of schools were home for vacation already.

5. Do not drink any coffee before you go to bed!

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1. The flowers carpeted the hills and fields.

2. She has never travelled internationally.

3. They watched the criminal out of the court room.

4. Professionally, he can be completely relied on.

5. According to the company's president, the reorganization is inevitable.

6. There were no villagers nearby to ask the way.

:

1. He jumped to his feet and ran after them.

2. The invaders came to kill and murder civil population.

3. Working men and women deserve a better life.

4. We were sick and tired of waiting for hours and hours.

5. Students have charged the police with harassment and intimidation.

6. The proposal was rejected and repudiated.

5. , :

1. The spendthrift years have marked him.

2. Mr. Bell had the ghost of an Irish brogue.

3. In one of his whistle-stop speeches the Presidential nominee briefly outlined his attitude towards the programme.

4. Nobody predicted such an electoral landslide.

5. The coroner ordered an investigation into the mans death.

6. , . , .

1. Price rise is not unlikely to remain in the forthcoming period.

2. The operation was carried out neatly and smartly.

3. The final result was a minor matter for him.

4. In the country of one-eyed be one-eyed.

5. Meeting such results is vital for the company's development.

6. They also have committed themselves to reforming the costly agricultural policy.

7. The one-minute shock was over, and all returned to their duties.

8. That's a 25% jump over the year-earlier period.

9. The models of development are now struggling.

10. Most of the company's output is sold domestically.

11. All of the company's offices around the world are staffed with locals.

12. Two dozen countries that kiss the Caribbean Sea seem to be a dream.

13. When it comes to the environment, big American companies like to appear green.

14. Actually the decision had been taken hours before the Intel news went public.

15. It'll be a good thing if they are able to stabilize the situation.

6. , - . .

"I am a lover of truth, a worshipper of freedom, a celebrant at the altar of language and purity and tolerance. That is my religion, and every day I am sorely, grossly, heinously and deeply offended, wounded, mortified and injured by a thousand different blasphemies against it. When the fundamental canons of truth, honesty, compassion and decency are hourly assaulted by fatuous bishops, pompous, illiberal and ignorant priests, politicians and prelates, sanctimonious censors, self-appointed moralists and busy-bodies, what recourse of ancient laws have I? None whatever. Nor would I ask for any. For unlike these blistering imbeciles my belief in my religion is strong and I know that lies will always fail and indecency and intolerance will always perish."





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