logo
КЛИМЕНКО_РЕМЕСЛО ПЕЕРВОДА

Упражнения

I. Переведите заголовки:

1. Havoc by U.S. Tornado. 2. New Flu Attacks GB Navy. 3. Canadian Cabinet Sworn in. 4. Free Trade Plan Opposed. 5. Jamaica Rail Crash Inquiry. 6. New Glider Record Claimed. 7. Price of Coal Going up. 8. Unions and Court on Prices. 9. Oil Makes Way for Atom. 10. Glasgow Dockers to Resume Work. 11. Attempting to Form Cabinet. 12. Liberals Look to Home Front. 13. Four Explosions Boy Injured. 14. M.P.s Anxiety over Inflation. 15. Electricity Rates up in Scotland. 16. Increased Postal Charges Likely. 17. 200 to 300 Believed Dead in Hurricane. 18. General Norstad Bitterly Attacked. 19. Keeping an Eye on Widening Trade Gap. 20. T.U.C. Seeks Details.

II. Переведите газетные заметки с заголовками:

POLES APART

The Conference in London on disarmament is at the end of its second month of meetings.

So far no compromise is in view as the distance separating the two sides is still very great with no prospects of bridging the gap in the near future.

“SUMMIT” CONFERENCE

The East-West Conference on the highest’ level took place in Geneva in 1955.

The “Spirit of Geneva” has undergone since then a number of serious set-backs.

CYPRIOTS STONE TROOPS

Greek-Cypriot women and children stoned British troops who were ordering their men to remove slogans painted on the walls of the village.

PROTECTING X-RAY WORKERS

For the first time a comprehensive manual on the protection of staff engaged in radiological work is now available to all hospitals in this country.

BOAC CAUSES ANXIETY

The British Overseas Airways Corporation has decided to order in the USA 30 jet driven air liners of a new model. The news has created considerable anxiety among the British manufacturers.

JAPANESE SP TO SEND MISSIONS TO U.S., USSR

The Japanese Socialist Party is planning to send parliamentary goodwill missions to the U.S. and the USSR next month, it was reported today.

The missions hope to discuss with American and Soviet officials various problems of current international concern such as prohibition of nuclear tests.

SUMMIT TALKS “YES” BY USSR

The Soviet Union would favour a summit ‘conference on disarmament, a Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister told a questioner at a New York Press Conference yesterday.

BREACH OVER CHINA

A breach between GB and the USA over the embargoes on trade with China now seems almost certain. The Government has made it clear that if no agreement is reached in the current talks in Paris, it will have to decide what action to take on its own. The latest word is that the Committee in Paris at the end of its second week of meetings has advanced no nearer to a compromise.

A further meeting is being held and great efforts have been made to reach an agreement. But the distance separating the two sides is so great that the chances that it will be bridged must be reckoned slim.

The consequences of this failure are likely to be that Britain, together with other European countries in NATO and with Japan, will decide to place their trade with China on the same footing as trade with the rest of the Eastern bloc.

As the United States is determined to maintain its own restrictions, the whole machinery that controls the export of strategic goods to Communist Countries will be in danger of breaking down.