单选题 {{B}}Passage Three{{/B}}
An ethics crisis at one of the world's most successful human embryonic stem cell laboratories has plunged the controversial field of research into a new swirl of uncertainty. The accusations surrounding Korean cloning expert Woo Suk Hwang of Seoul National University--the first scientist to grow stem cells inside cloned human embryos--has already killed a spate of planned studies that sought to prove the cells' medical potential. The claims that Hwang may have obtained human eggs for his studies from women who felt pressured to donate are also reigniting a long-smoldering debate in the United States over the ethics of paying young women for their eggs, which are difficult to obtain but essential to the production of stem cells tailored to individuals.
Egg donation, which is generally safe but occasionally leads to serious and even life-threatening complications, has been a wedge issue in the stem cell debates, linking feminists and other liberal thinkers to conservatives who favor tighter limits on stem cell research. "We're in danger of making women into guinea pigs for this research even before there are any treatments to be tested," said Marcy Darnovsky, associate director of the Center for Genetics and Society in Oakland, Calif. "We really need clear rules that someone is enforcing."
With current techniques, it takes dozens of eggs to make a single cloned human embryo, which is destroyed in the process of extracting the stem cells. That means that if the field of therapeutic cloning is to advance--a field involving the creation of cloned embryos as sources of stem cells that would be genetically matched to particular patients--a significant number of eggs will be needed both to fuel the initial research and eventually to satisfy the demands of patients. Scientists at Advanced Cell Technology of Worcester, Mass. , made the decision to pay women only after a long analysis by an ethics board created by the company, said scientific director Robert Lanza. He still thinks it is the right way to go, Lanza said, given the painful injections involved, the uncomfortable egg suction procedure, and the approximately 5 percent chance of a serious case of hormonal over-stimulation, which can require hospitalization. Others say such payments cannot help but be coercive, especially for poor women who might feel compelled to take on those risks just to make ends meet. In April, the National Academies, chartered by Congress to advise the nation on matters of science, released a report that recommended against payments for human eggs beyond expenses incurred by the donors, in part because of the "sensitivities" inherent in the creation of embryos destined for destruction. But the report's impact remains uncertain as research institutions, fertility clinics and the biggest wild card of them all--Congress--mull the Academies' findings.
单选题 What can we learn from the opening paragraph?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】这篇文章的第1段告诉我们一个干细胞实验室里发生的一些事情引起了大家的关注和辩论。一位韩国科学家受到的指控带来了一系列的后果。B对Hwang的起诉再次掀起了美国国内的一场辩论。文中对应的信息是:The claims are also reigniting a long-smoldering debate in the United States,因此是正确的答案。
单选题 What can we learn about the egg donation?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】文章第2段介绍了一些关于egg donation的知识,在文章的其他部分也简单提到了一些。D卵细胞的捐献对干细胞的研究很重要的原因是因为它很稀少。卵细胞是培育人体胚胎的必要物质,没有卵细胞就不可能有人体胚胎。它的重要性是在这,而不是因为它很稀少。因此这道题的答案是B。
单选题 The word "wedge" (Line 2, Para. 2) most probably means ______ .
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】如果辩论中的一个话题是非常有说服力的,或者一个转折点,或者有致命缺陷,那么根本就构不成一个辩论的条件了,因此只有C“一个原因”,一个会引发一场辩论的原因才是符合逻辑的。
单选题 The expression "the biggest wild card" (Last sentence, Para. 3) most probably means ______ .
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】整句话是这样的:研究机构、生育诊所还有它们中最不可预知想法的机构——国会——还在思考研究这一决定。因此这项报告会带来什么样的影响还不确定。因此答案是A。
单选题 From the passage we can infer that ______ .
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】A项“科学家付给卵细胞捐献者的将会超过采集的必要费用”在文中有明确的说法。D项“Hwang的问题很有可能延缓干细胞的研究”在文章第1段就有了描述,已经扼杀了一些计划中的实验。因此完全可以推断干细胞的研究会因此延缓下来,故答案是D。