英语作文新闻类高一 英语作文新闻类高一1 More than seven percent of university studentssurveyed said that they have experiencedharassment from unidentified people on theircollege campuses. The survey, which polled 601 students from over100 Chinese universities, revealed that 7.58 percentof the respondents had experienced harassment,according to an article in last Mondays edition ofChina Youth Daily. Moreover, about 65.24 percent said they had heard of similar situations experienced by theirclassmates. However, the article quoted some students as saying that in many cases victims dare not todirectly confront their harassers and many felt ashamed to tell their families or teachers. Students surveyed also said that enhanced security is required on university campuses. A total of 58.81 percent of the students said their campuses allow members of the public toenter freely, while 81.38 percent said universities should take measures to control entry. 英语作文新闻类高一2 For a nation that has remained relatively insulatedfrom the terrorist violence that roiled the continentin recent years, the sight of British troops patrollingmainland UK streets — one consequence of theterror threat level rising to “critical” — will come asa particular shock. It will raise the spectre of 20__ ,when Tony Blair sent 400 soldiers with armouredvehicles to Heathrow, and the dangerous years thatfollowed, when security services feared that theywere losing their grasp on the problem. The bombingof Manchester Arena on Monday night is redolent ofthat period. It is the worst terrorist attack on Britain since the July 7 London bombings morethan a decade ago and the worst-ever attack on Manchester and the north. But how new andadvanced was this atrocity? Former officials of the National Counter Terrorism Office (NCTO) have suggested that the attackwas “sophisticated”. This is true, insofar as it represents a step up from the low-technologyvehicle and knife attacks seen in the UK over the past 12 years. Building a bomb is significantlyharder than procuring a van or a blade, and entails several steps — research, acquisition ofmaterials, and perhaps collaboration — that increase the probability of detection by theintelligence services. Yesterday’s decision by MI5’s Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre (JTAC) to raise the threat levelfor international terrorism, meaning that an attack is expected imminently, probably reflectshome secretary Amber Rudd’s acknowledgment that 22-year-old Salman Abedi “likely?.?.?.?wasn’t doing this on his own”, that such a bomb would have required assistance, and that oneor more accomplices therefore remain on the loose. The search for such individuals may be protracted: recall that Salah Abdeslam, participant inthe Paris attacks in November 20XX, was only caught four months later, across the border inBrussels. After the 20XX Brussels bombings, it took 17 days for police to arrest severalsuspects. There is a strong possibility that the threat level will remain elevated through thegeneral election. At the same time it is useful to assess this attack in a broader perspective. There was justone attacker, compared with the nine involved in Paris. There was one bomb, compared with thethree used in Brussels. The bomb, though designed to maximise shrapnel, and thereforeindicating more than rudimentary knowledge, was not one of the highly advanced non-metallic devices, capable of bypassing security screening, developed by al-Qaeda’s Yemenbranch in recent years, and which has prompted the most recent ban on laptops in cabinbaggage. The perpetrator was not carrying an assault rifle that might have allowed him tomaximise casualties before detonation. “As an island,” noted the National Crime Agency inNovember, “the UK is insulated from the relatively free flow of firearms which exists incontinental Europe”. British police and intelligence agencies have also quietly signalled to gangs that eveninadvertent provision of weapons to jihadis would bring down crushing pressure. It isprofoundly troubling that a young man should have been able to build an explosive devicewithout the knowledge of his local community or the authorities, but in the context of moderninternational terrorism, this ranked midway on the scale of sophistication. appears to have a preference for soft targets,” noted Europol’s 20XX terrorist trend report, “because they are more effective than attacks on critical infrastructure, the military, policeand other hard targets”. British security f orces have factored in this risk for well over a decade. Finally, Abedi could hardly be more typical of the modern European terrorist: a young, male,second-generation immigrant, drawn into gangs, and known to the authorities. This is a classicprofile. As the French scholar Olivier Roy has observed in the French context, there is a riskthat “second-generation immigrants neither want the culture of their parents nor a westernculture — both have become sour。