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Какое должностное лицо или орган имеет право принять решение о признании физического лица безвести пропавшим?
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Какое должностное лицо или орган имеет право принять решение о признании физического лица безвести пропавшим?
Правоохранительные органы
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Text B
#Higher education
Only about one third of school leavers receive post- -school education.
compared with over 80 per cent in Germany, France, the United States, and Japan.
However, it must be borne in mind that once admitted to university
relatively fewer (15 per cent) British students fail to complete their degree course
Fourteen per cent of 18- and 19-year-olds enter full-time courses (degree or
#t other advanced courses higher than A level) and it is hoped that this will rise to
#about 20 per cent by the end of the century. These courses are provided #in
A universities, polytechnics. Scottish central institutions, colleges of higher (HIE) a# d
яра
further (FE) education, and technical, art and agricultural colleges. In 1985 86, tor
s * example, a million students were enrolled in full-time courses, of whom
Were at universities, 300000 (on advanced courses outside universities, and another
400000 were on non-advanced vocational training and educational courses
#r (addition there were 32 million part-time students. of whom half a million
released by their employers. (over 90 per cent of full-time students receive gr! Is
to assist with their tuition and cost of living. However in September 1990. #le
government, while still providing tuition fees, froze the grant for cost of liv i ту
s expenses. and set up a new system whereby students were to take out loans to
*e Cover the short fall.
Today there are forty-seven universities in Britain, Compared with
venteen in 1945 They fa! into four broad categories: the ancient Eng! h
(uncial! ions. the ancient Scottish ones, the redbrick- universities, and
plategiass ones. They are ll private institutions, receiving direct grants (rt n
central government. Oxford and Cambridge, founded i! the thirteenth fourteenth centuries respectively, are easily the most famous of Britain
universities. Today Oxbridge, as the two together are known, educate less than
one tenth of Britain’s total university student population. But they continue
attract many of the best brains, and to mesmerise a greater number, partly: on
account of their prestige but also on account of the seductive beauty of many к!
their buildings and surroundings.
Уравнение движения гармонического колебания x =0,02cosПt. Определить частоту период амплитуду
1. Traditional delivery
2. Loss of popularity
3. Money above privacy
4. The best-known newspapers
5. Focus on different readers
6. The successful competitor
7. Size makes a difference
8. Weekend reading
A. As in many other European countries, Britain’s main newspapers are losing their readers. Fewer and fewer people are buying broadsheets and tabloids at the newsagent’s. In the last quarter of the twentieth century people became richer and now they can choose other forms of leisure activity. Also, there is the Internet which is a convenient and inexpensive alternative source of news.
B. The ‘Sunday papers’ are so called because that is the only day on which they are published. Sunday papers are usually thicker than the dailies and many of them have six or more sections. Some of them are ‘sisters’ of the daily newspapers. It means they are published by the same company but not on week days.
C. Another proof of the importance of ‘the papers’ is the morning ‘paper round’. Most newsagents organise these. It has become common that more than half of the country’s readers get their morning paper brought to their door by a teenager. The boy or girl usually gets up at around 5:30 a.m. every day including Sunday to earn a bit of pocket money.
D. The quality papers or broadsheets are for the better educated readers. They devote much space to politics and other ‘serious’ news. The popular papers, or tabloids, sell to a much larger readership. They contain less text and a lot more pictures. They use bigger headlines and write in a simpler style of English. They concentrate on ‘human interest stories’ which often means scandal.
E. Not so long ago in Britain if you saw someone reading a newspaper you could tell what kind it was without even checking the name. It was because the quality papers were printed on very large pages called ‘broadsheet’. You had to have expert turning skills to be able to read more than one page. The tabloids were printed on much smaller pages which were much easier to turn.
F. The desire to attract more readers has meant that in the twentieth century sometimes even the broadsheets in Britain look rather ‘popular’. They give a lot of coverage to scandal and details of people’s private lives. The reason is simple. What matters most for all newspaper publishers is making a profit. They would do anything to sell more copies.
G. If you go into any newsagent’s shop in Britain you will not find only newspapers. You will also see rows and rows of magazines for almost every imaginable taste. There are specialist magazines for many popular pastimes. There are around 3,000 of them published in the country and they are widely read, especially by women. Magazines usually list all the TV and radio programmes for the coming week and many British readers prefer them to newspapers.