Obituary The Economist Feb15th 2020 Dr. Li Wenliang, one of the eight “whistleblowers” who raised the alarm about the novel coronavirus when it first emerged in Wuhan, died of it on Feb.7 th , aged 33. Busy 1.______ he was as an ophthalmologist (眼科医生) at Wuhan Central hospital, Li Wenliang never missed a chance to share every passing observation online. So it was not 2.______ that on Dec. 30th he put up a post about an odd cluster of pneumonia cases of seemingly person-to-person 3. _______ at the hospital. Therefore, He decided to warn his private WeChat group, all fellow alumni from Wuhan University, to take 4. ________ . Then on January 3 rd , he was summoned to the police station. There he was accused of spreading 5. ________ and subverting the social order. Five days later, Li Wenliang was unfortunately 6. ______ with coronavirus during his work. His fame had spread far and wide. Reporters, even from the New York Times , wanted interviews. These had to be done by text and via WeChat, since from late January he could not breathe on his own and was 7. _______ up to continuous-flow oxygen. It didn’t help as much as he expected—his blood-oxygen saturation levels got no better. But online he could go on making 8. ______ remarks. Dr. Li is a hero, a 9. _______ truth teller. The truth mattered, and public safety mattered. There has to be more 10. _______ . A healthy society should never have just one voice. hooked precautions dominated though sequence infected rumors upbeat courageous compliments transparency surprising adequate transmission essence 建议在电脑上完成本练习