Translate the following sentence into Chinese.
Despite all the atrocities of racism and discrimination and the ugliness of big business and greed, baseball is still the National Pastime.
The sport transformed from being a game of amateurs into a sport played by professionals. With that transformation, the innocence of baseball has been lost.
With improved balls, bats, and gloves the sport took off and the dead ball era came to a close. The live ball era increased the role of the audience.
It has become a business and the drama that used to be a part of the game that increased fan participation has been lost.
When people are preoccupied, they almost never keep eye contact.
Listening is the highest for of persuasion. There's no better way to persuade your customers to buy from you than to listen.
If you are truly appreciative, you'll communicate it, verbally or nonverbally.
When people aren't looking into your eyes, it's virtually impossible for them to hear everything you're trying to tell them.
Always cheerfully express your appreciation whether people buy or not. This sets the stage for future success and referrals.
Concentrated eye contact helps you listen more effectively, and customers intuitively respect people who look them in the eyes.
Just as first impressions are memorable, so are last impressions. People carry their feelings with them when they leave you.
When you've greeted customers, valued them, asked how you can help them, and listened to them, it's time to fill their needs.
If the customer says, “I’m just looking,” maybe his body language is saying, “I’m interested in buying.”
People often say the right words, but their eyes betray their true feelings. People who are really listening look into your eyes.
There have been scandal and drugs and steroids infiltrating the game and tainting its purity. The game has become revolved around money.
This enabled Baseball to establish itself as a strange American religion in which people could return to the birthplace of the game to celebrate and remember it.
Players are obsessed about salaries and stock options instead of playing the game for fun. The audience has still remained a vital part of baseball and the game's success.
After the Civil War, baseball became a popular sport and no longer an archaic folk game. Structure and organization were introduced gradually into the game and increased public participation.
The audience of baseball was instrumental in the transformation of baseball. The battling leagues and team rivalries created a sector for the American public to participate in baseball.
This was in fact a farce. Scholars and historians both disprove this myth and trace baseball's origins to old English games of rounders and croquets.