1977-01-10 — Page 20

華僑日報 All

報日僑$

-期星

WAH KIU YAT PO

黃四鹕張五第一日一廿月

|

疏河免水患

七七

..

盘公開拍驚,詳如下 下午二時半在元朗大 本月十五日(星期二) 中心有官地一幅,定於 政署公告,新界元朗市 (新潮社)新界民

致下開啟成地段內之 所之地上用羅色)一人二大戦( 查下關地段哎地段一一IERC

三期工程關係-猳荽收「部份),一七九五部 有利害關係或有任何榴 份),一八〇〇(部各辦事處李開。 一份),一八二八號除段 CNAROBEER RUBECHERSJONOR 利拟地段阻之人士。, 份)-101號(部一幅位於新界

進行二期三期工程 部份之業主與該等地段,一七九九號、部,客爾則亦可在上述的 可樾禮士昨已發出通告 份),一七九號屯門,茲灣- 大埔、 闾一批土地事-硎稹獍份,一七九六八部可向新界民政署元朗 俄段(部份)及二三七出售。

-通-爲進行第二低及第九三號一七九四號,但二百萬元之上蓋。 出舸脊將魌河道予以疏七路一七年2月卅一日建築完成 民房受水落,當局已撥 大六號(部份),一七投得者最强於一九八〇一 盡,免除影响農作物及【誠、部份心·一七五方呎,只限非工業用, 决大唤山東涌演常期過份】七八號,一七市中心,面積九八八 (特銃】爲徹底解 四號,一七二七號、 市地段】三四號,元朗 港督頒令一月生效 丈秀的份,元朗城 「三三號一部份),一七途,毎年地稅三百元, 二、上午十時半在西式 ,定本月十八日(星期

FKALJETEKE

詳細地規則

份份份份份份部

KER

· 11/PK - KRA

一段成地段內之部份之號 在東涌丈量約份第一〇號(部份)。

號號1

KESEISCE

|)-10410

1 $6) - 10<0SC

(B) TOKKSE

(S) - TOKHS

(部份),一〇六四號

(#) -10KS

(部份),一〇四七號段內之部份收商。

(E) TOKKE

(部份),一〇四六號後,將各地段及地一日起针酸去最後三樂 (部份),一〇三五號於各地六日起一個月期 年,由一八九八年七月。 (部份),I〇四號 刃漵命令於本通告張貼 稅三百元,批期九十九 (86)--1011 RECOUP *** *<UPER · BUF 號(部份-),九八八號决定,因公用之故。桩 三十點三方公尺,限作 大號 (部份) - 九八七;現超耦懾會同行政局鄉山道。面積三千五百 號(部份),九人|隔地段及地段內之部份七二號,位於清水灣海 通告最後稱:在上一量約份第二約地段一九

|郚份),一一四二號尬 民諺、南姝、度加坡、

| 部份),一〇九二號C、參加者有日本、中器。一千元有轉良出,

部份)、一○九一號、日在香港會需中心聯行 植旺,陳兆琦,王傑士 | 部份 2,一〇九〇號(大會,定四月一日至九,寬-郭麥少痛,文

| 部份),○元二航∈主辦第七屆亚洲洋服棠「马迹,袋國彬,遇交楚

K#BE

【特訊 香港首次,周虹,陳浩民,

亞洲洋服業大會

·並舉辦國際紳士洋服展覽

| 航(部份) - 一四二三,代表沉六百人帶來本浩 - 找冖部份) - 一四二!馬來西靈、崁國、印度

部份,一四四,旅游箂可觀之收益。

四號,一四

七、||號僚段(部份) 者有何鴻森,何,英 十耦,電話:七 七二三號餘段-一七米千,到此衍;路一辏售來取麥格。宇)

·七四號(勝):一千元導志民,二千元: 本港莊士頓道東興大夏

| 二六號,一四二七號(大會主席,莫實爲組織 | 七三號部份] [會經交响應熱烈邓树三以先到先得方式,根據 七號(群);交流。國席徵求贊助大 列出品,因難位有限, J七〇一號(部份),故剪示範及技術研討與位,歡迎各网棠树打陳 一六九六號(部份)會開幕禮,時裝表演,日-會場設有十二個攤 一六九五號一部份),寬,及會乘中心舉行大景時裝,爲各國代惠眼 群」、「那對婚繃岀祥服泥絨展- 采出一九七七年最新。 傷心,一五六號(首麟,决在海運大厦,泰運大厦主辦粹服 部份),一、二五號(作昨夕假洋服商會舉行地位,四月一至九日在 勝區號、委會主席,康係湯俊工水準,在國際上有崇高

医餲,陽衰 - 潘展開,

冗有羅三民,黃郁生,

,馮卓生,潘根縮五百

中壯,郭炳,黃榜

EKRE SER-GEST. KENDLERE

1977中學會考試題預習專欄

明德社主鳊

英文(+)、番榮光

2

English

ANSWERS

Pxercise 1

Precis

He wrote more careful --

because he realised.

his poor handwriting.

She did not like watch-

ing television as many

programmes were poorly

made.

3.

After Mary had failed in the final examinat-

ion, she regretted her

laziness.

A

John is tall while

Steve, his brother, is

wery short.

5. Although she failed in

the final examination, she did not regret her laziness.

ANSWERS

Exercise 2

Here are the points which you should include

in your precis. In writ- ing the precas, you must not forget that these

points are to be re-arran- ged. You should also use various sentence struct-

Give one word to replace

the words underlined.

1. At the moment I could not

stop the machine, I knew

some thing terrible would

happen.

2. In the first place, we

must gather sufficient

information..

3. We bought some" writing.

materials before we wont

to the library, 4. lle

tried many times. In the end he succeeded

5. I am going to meet

my friend at the air-

port.

6. The man was set free

after he was question-

el,

7. People walking in the

street must look be-

fore they cross

street.

the

9. You should not always

speak severely to

your subordinates.

9. When the car passes by,

water flies about in

drops.

10. There is no one he re

I can confide in.

ANSWERS

Exercise 3

1.

When

ures and appropriate con- Junctions.

2.

First

3.

4.

the Open University offers currespondence

·Courses

students.

2. It has

to_part-time

no campus and

most students are fully

employed aduits,

5. Assignments and routine

administrative work are

hand red by computer.

The university prepares radio and television courses; students can

study at home.

5. Teachers act as a

team'¡

'course

b. Degrees will be awarded

when students have acqu-

ired sufficient points,

so they can work at their own pace.

7. It has no laboratories

lecture-theatres, nor a

permanent centre,

8. One teacher takes care one" hundred and eighty

students, therefore, it is much cheaper,

Exercise

stationery

Finally (eventually)

5. intend

t>.

released

7. Pedestrians

8. rebuke

9.

splashes

10.

trust

世界歷史(九)、胡應亮

WORLD HISTORY (2) -

In view of the fact that students often find it difficult to master Japanese history(allen names and alien people), the following attempte a thematic outline of Japanese history in the early Meiji period. For clarity's sake, the materials are organized in point-form. They do not pretend to substitute your teacher's notes or your textbooks; they simply supplement them.

MEIJI RESTORATION

A. Establishment of Imperial Govt.:

1. accession of Meiji Emperor

(1867).

B'.

2. proclamation of the Charter

Oath (1868), which committed to modernization.

3. transfer of capital from Kyoto

to Tokyo (former Edo).

4. voluntary return of ban land to the new government;aboli- tion of feudal domains.

5. Introduction of land tax (1873)

as basis for modern fiscal policy.

Government Structure & Leadership 1. experimentation in traditional & Western forms of government: eg. reinstitution of 6th-cen-

tury ruling structure; unsuccessful attempt to effect the principle of

C.

separation of executive,

legislative & Judicial powere

2. formation of Meiji ruling.

oligarchy real power exercised by: small group of Court nobles and samurai.

a,court nobles-Iwakura(1825-

-83), Sanjō(1837-91).

b.samurai-kubo(1830-78),

Saigo(1827-77),Kido (1833-77), okuma (1838- 1922)

3. completion of Meiji oligarchy during 1880s; leadership res- tricted to Satsuma and Choshu (hanbatsu).

Abolition

of Tokugawa class system & founding of modern arry, 1. abolition of samurai class; new society classified into aristo- crats, gentry and commoners.

2. commutation of samurai stipends

(1873-76)

3. formation of conscript army

military study mission to Europe (1870),universal conscrip- tion law(1873),formation of army. general stafr(1878),leadership of Yamagata(1838-1922, from Cho- shu).

FOREIGN RELATIONS IN. EARLY MELJI ▲. establishment of Foreign Offiçe (1869) & normalization of relà- tions with major countries. B. uational goal in issue of treaty

revision, to be achieved by modern- izing & civilizing Japan to meet Western standards.

C. mission by Iwakura to USA & Europe

(1871-73) for treaty revision, unsuccessful,

D. Jurisdictional questions:

1. with China over Korea

a.unsuccessful attempts to open normal diplomatic relations with Korea. b.debate over plans to invade

Korea (1873),defeat of leaders advocating invasion & their withdrawal from oligarchie ruling circles. c.commercial' Treaty of Kanghwa (1876):opening Korean ports. d.Tientsia(Li-Ito) Convention (1885) Sino-Japanese agres- ment for joint renaval of troops from Korea.

2. with china over Ryukyus:Japan-

ese expedition to Formosa (1874) agreement by. China to pay In- demnity & tacit acknowledgement of Japanese control over Ryukyus Ryukyus became Okinawa Prefec- ture in 1879 (a Japanese provin- co).

3, with Russia over Sakhalin &

Kurilea treaty (1875) assigning Sakhalin to Russia & Kuriles to Japan.

OFPOSITION TO MEIJI OLIGARCHY A. Armed rebellion

1. 2. Satsuma Rebellion in 1877 B. Demand for representative govt.

1. memorial by samurai & others for popular assembly(1874):criticism of monopoly of power by Satsuma- Choshu ministers, beginning of debate over broadening partici- pation in government

Saga Rebellion in 1874

2. Itagaki(1837-1919;from Toss)

first organized organization; restrictive policies of govt. in regard to freedoms of press, assembly, speech etc.

3. Hokkaido colonization scandal

discredited new govt.;promise of national assembly la 1881 to be convened in 1890.

4. formation of political parties;

personalities more important than issues or ideologies in the party movament.

a. Liberal Party (Jiyütōjof

Itagaki:influence of ideals of French Revolution(eg,Housseau) but highly. "feudal" content; support from rural landlord class.

b. Reform Party (Kaishintö) of

Ökuna; committed to British- style political gradualism (eg.J.S.Mill & utilitarianism) support. from urban commercial interests. EARLY MODERNIZATION & INDUSTRIALIZA ΤΙΟΝ

4. First phase: government planned and

monopolized Industry (1868-80)

1. employment of foreign advisero

& adoption of foreign techniques. 2. heavy taxation of agriculture &

favouring of industrial sector of всоподу.

3. priority for foreign exports over

domestic consumption.

B. Second phase: withdrawal of govt.

from direct participation in indus- try,sale of govt. industries to private owners (after 1880).

1. financial retrenchment,satablish-

ment of a modern banking system, increase of taxes under Matsukata (1835-1924, from Satsuma).

日十月一年七七九一层公年六十六國民拳中

量產業各農漁港本

成兩供够只

給自部全幾·多最魚水鹹

而粮

消費額百分之二十左右而已。

ESKESK

東涌收地一批

BERKERNATIL® (K) 萍生產(鹹水魚盤佔全部自給 生產亦鹚百分之四十三,生豬則確及百分之 十二 --淡水魚不及一成,做爲百分之九。游 面,約可達自給率百分之四十五 - 而家禽之 促供嚥居民所布业百分之一。幸好在蔬菜方 EVENUE-S

生產,只能供粉

渡一個愉快的下午。

-分百及僅 少最米地本

(#613

魚米 日粮食之需要 九及新界〕人.

本 據有關方面笳計 香港(包括港

+ 頭;牛約六百 頓,生豬約八千 蔬菜一千一百公 一千三百公响, 盘,計爲食米

-雙,魚類(包括

師主持幸運抽獎,向小 KRESE - HEAR 戲,大乳山耆英 會 節目 並有楽遊 大會安排多項遊獎 ,招待四百多名兒童。 午二時,在聖匠堂舉行

「處,聯合主辦「兒童 「紙會」昨〔九日下

服務中心,紅磡民政分

兒童聯歡會】

大理山服務中心

KEE

3約四百公報。 上述大部份.

朋友致送禮物,兒童歡

有教版界新

灣水清朗元

投開地官兩

宗首年今界新

2. growth of financial combinés.

(Zaibateu R).

3. importance given to cotton and:

silk textiles;more production for foreign exchange.

4. development of shipping industry- C. Third phase: maturation of modern

industrial complex by World War I.

RELIGION, EDUCATION, & THE IMPACT OF WESTERN CULTORE

A. early efforts to institutionalize

Shinto es state religion & to dis- establish Buddhism.

B. emphasis on scientific methods of

inquiry movement for "civilization & enlightenment"; utilitarian, pragmatic and largely secular atti- tudea of leaders & intellectuals, like Fukuzawa (1834-1901) C. extensive translation of Western

literature & technical studies into Japanese;more vernacular newspapers and periodicals from 1870

D. rapid advances in education

1. universal literacy as goal:

establishment of national ele- mentary school system; employ- ment of American advisers.

2. founding of private institutions of higher learning: Relo Univer- sity by Pukuzawa; Weseda Univer- sity by Okuma etc.

E. reaction to Westernization &

beginning of educational orthodoxy (1880s)

1. increased govt.participation in all phases of national education.

2. stress on morals courses at

elementary school level (1882). 3. Mori (1847-89) & Education Act of 1886 aim of education to enhance state, not individual 4. Imperial Bescript on Education

(1890): Emperor, state and socie- by all stressed Confucian virtues of loyalty & filial piety.

5. Tokyo Imperial University:place for governmental training and preferment.

F. renewal of Christian influence(ban

on Christianity removed 1873)

1. missionary activities; especially in fields of education, medicine. FOUNDING OF CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT" A. Preparatory steps

1. Constitutional study mission by Ito Hirobumi (1841-1909, from Choshu) to Europe in 1882; concentration on German model.

2. Formation of nobility ranks in 1884 in preparation for the future House of Peers.

3. Founding of a modern Cabinet

system in 1885: Ito the first Prime Minister;nine ministries (foreign, home, finance,war,navy, justice education, agriculture, & commerce and communications) 4. Establishment of Privy Council

in 1888 to review the Constitu- tion: Ito was the first bead.

B. Meiji Constitution (1889)

1. Reaffirmation of imperial sovereignty: Constitution Been as changing form of government, but leaving ua- changed Japan's Emperor- centered national polity.

2. Bicameral legislature (Diet)

consisting of the House of Peers and the House of Repre- sentatives with equal lav- making powers.

3. Ministers individually res- ponsible and accountable to Emperor, not the Dist.

C. Early Cabinets dominated by Meiji oligarchy:Prime Ministers were

selected by a group of elder ståte- smen (genre)

附加數學(九)·岑俊彦

Additional Mathematics(9)

Trigonometry (1)

worked examples:

1. If A,B,C are the angles

OF A ABC. Drove that

=

sin2A + sin2B + sin 20 www 4sinAsinBsinC.

Solution:

1..H.S.

= 2sin(A+B) cos(A-B)+sin2C =sin(180°-C) cos(A-B)+

2sinccoSC

2sinccos(A-B)+2sing

(cos (180°-(A+B))]

= 2sinc cos(A-B)+

(-cos (A+B)]}

2sinc

(A+B)

cos (A-B) - (cos

2sinc -2sin2sin(2)

- 4sinAsinBsinC

R.H.S.

(Ans.)

2. Solve the following

equations for 0°4x360°.

C

a) General equation of type

a sin3x

+ b sinx = a cosx + b cosx C. e.g. 2 secx + sec2x

1.

b) General equation of type

a cosx + b sin x = e.g. 3cosx + 4sinx = 5.

С

c) General equation solved by making use of the factor formulae

e.c. COSX cos2x = sin3x

a) secx + 3secx

(secx+2)(2secx-1)

secx = -2 or

- 2

о

Q

1

COSX

1/24

.". x =

(secx

=

b)

1200 or 240°

is rejected)

5

Ecosx + 4sinx =

}

1 cosxcose + sinxsin✪ = cos(x-9) = 1

tan

X-53° 8' = 0° or 360°

x = 53°8'

=53°87.

(4138 isrejected).

c) 2sinin 2sincosx

-

2sinh, sinh - cosx

2sinsin

..sin-0 3-09180°

2

i.e. x = 0° 120°,

or sin = cos3x

= sin (90°

= 90°

X = 45°

Exercise 6

240°

3x)

3x

45°, 120°,

1. Prove the following

identi tes:

siny

a) sinx +

(x + y + z

+ sinz

240° (Ans.)

-

sin

= 4sin(**)sin(+2) sin

(Z+X)

0

b) cos2x + cos2y + cos2z + 1

= 4cos2x cos2y cos2z, if

x+y+z = 180°

c) cos2x+cos2y+cos2z

1-2cosxcosycosz, if x+y+z = 180°.

2. Solve the following equa-

tions for 0° x 5·360° a) zsin2x = 1+ COSX

b) tan2x tanx +/3,

3 tanx.

3. Solve the following equa-

tions for 0° ≤ x ≤.360° a) V3 cosx

b) 2sinx

1

=

sinx

COSX

4. Solve the following equa- tions for 0° x 360%

a) cosx + cos2x + cos3x= 0 b} cosxsin2x+cos3x sin4x=0

Page 20Page 21

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