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The M25, the motorway around London, opened in 1986. Today people call it the biggest car park in Europe. Every morning on the radio we hear about jams, and road repairs, and crashes, and which parts of the M25 to avoid. One day soon we will hear “There is a traffic jam all the way round the M25 in both directions. If you are driving to work, we advise you to go back home.”
Winston Churchill described the car as the curse of the twentieth century. This will probably be true of the next century, too. It can be very funny to compare advertisements for cars with the reality of driving them. Cars are symbols of freedom, wealth, and masculinity. But when you are stuck in a traffic jam, all cars are just little metal boxes to sit in.
Cities and towns all over the world have a huge problem, and no government really knows what to do. For once it is not a matter of technology which is stopping us. If we want to build two-level roads, we can do it. If we want trains which can travel at hundreds of miles an hour, we can build them.
The problem is a question of principle. Should we look to road or rail for our transport needs? Should the Government, or private companies, control them? And either way, who should pay?
The people who believe in roads say that cars represent a personal choice to travel when and where you want to. But on trains and buses – public transport – you have to travel when the timetable says you can. These people think that if you build more roads, the traffic will move more quickly, but research shows that if there are more roads, there will be more cars to fill them.
By 2010, the number of cars on our roads will double. Environmentalists are saying that we should put more money into public transport. Cars often carry just one person. If the public transport system works, more people will use it. If trains carry more people, the roads won’t be so crowded, and cars pollute the air more than trains.
One characteristic of the people of the twentieth century is that we are a race on the move. But it is just possible that soon we won’t be able to move another inch, and we’ll have to stay exactly where we are!
1. Today you can
A) park your car on the M25.
B) drive fast on the M25.
C) get stuck up on the M25.
D) avoid traffic jams all the way round the M25.
2. Winston Churchill thought cars were
A) symbols of freedom and wealth.
B) an awful invention.
C) little metal boxes to sit in.
D) easy to drive.
3. We have the technology
A) to build roads.
B) to use trains instead of cars.
C) to find the solution to the traffic problem.
D) to travel fast.
4. If we want to solve the traffic problem
A) the Government should control the traffic.
B) we need to decide what our principles are.
C) private companies should pay for it.
D) we should follow the traffic rules.
5. Some people think that the traffic will move more quickly if
A) we can have a personal choice to travel.
B) there are more trains and buses.
C) there are more cars to fill the roads.
D) there are more roads.
6. Environmentalists think that public transport should
A) be more expensive.
B) be invested money in.
C) carry one person.
D) carry more people.
7. The people of the 20th century are those who
A) stay where they are.
B) don’t move an inch.
C) use public transport.
D) always move
— Hi!
— Hello!
— How are you?
— Fine, and you?
— I moved into a new house.
— Really?
— Yeah.
— And where are you living now?
— On the Main Street, house number 39.
— Where is it?
— If you are going from your house, you'll have to pass one house, turn left, pass four more houses and you'll be in mine home.
— Oh, there is shop nearly, yeah?
— Yeah, and it's close to the theater and for the nearest cinema 10 minutes.
— Cool, so I'll come to you tomorrow, ok?
— Of course, and we can go to the zoo.
— Yeah, nice idea, lad.
1. Kirkgate Market is on Vicar Avenue in the centre of Leeds, England.
2. It has got 800 stalls.
3. You can by everything from food to household objects.
4. In 1822 it was open air market, but when they finished construction in 1875 it has an indoor and outdoor shopping area.
5. This market has the original location.
6. Because, here you can find some good bargains and have a great shopping day.
7. No, I do not. Because, Leeds is such a beautiful city, so I will visit parks or some modern buildings. Also, markets like this are just not for me.