Q1. Computers have already revolutionized the way we live and work. But it is early days for computers.
We do not know how much they are still changing the world. Already, Internet users can buy things and
study holiday offers. It’s much easier to edit and print documents using a PC. More computer wonders are
yet to come.
Q2. Only a few years before men were walking on the moon, reputable scientists declared that it was
impossible. But in 1969 Neil Armstrong stepped out of his space capsule and made his famous statement,
‘That’s one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.’ However, progress in this area is slower
now. Not as much money goes into research as in the 1960s.
Q3. Surely nothing has done more for the comfort and happiness of mankind than the advance of medical
knowledge! Lots of people have benefited from the aspirin and lots of lives have been saved by penicillin.
Surgeons can perform the most amazing operations. Average life expectancy in Europe has risen
dramatically over the last hundred years.
Q4. In the past, a holiday used to mean simply a day when you did not work. Now millions of
holidaymakers travel to all parts of the world. Perhaps, not all people like to see lots of tourists in their
countries, but we must admit that a phenomenon which sees the population of Greece treble is a wonder of
the world.
Q5. It is true that the Olympic Games are now commercialized and there is greed and drug abuse.
However, it is a competition in which every country of the world takes part. Every four years, for a brief
moment, we see these countries come together in peace and friendship. We see people from warring
countries shake hands. We feel hope again for the future of mankind.
Q6. In 1724, Jonathan Swift wrote, ‘Whoever makes two blades of grass or two ears of corn grow where
only one grew before serves mankind better than the whole race of politicians’. In Europe farmers have
done it and we produce enough food to feed the world. If only politicians could find a way to share it with
those parts of the world where there is still famine.