单选题The longest bull run in a century of art-market history ended on a dramatic note with a sale of 56 works by Damien Hirst, Beautiful Inside My Head Forever, at Sotheby"s in London on September 15th 2008. All but two pieces sold, fetching more than £70m, a record for a sale by a single artist. It was a last victory. As the auctioneer called out bids, in New York one of the oldest banks on Wall Street, Lehman Brothers, filed for bankruptcy.
The world art market had already been losing momentum for a while after rising bewilderingly since 2003. At its peak in 2007 it was worth some $65 billion, reckons Clare McAndrew, founder of Arts Economics, a research firm—double the figure five years earlier. Since then it may have come down to $50 billion. But the market generates interest far beyond its size because it brings together great wealth, enormous egos, greed, passion and controversy in a way matched by few other industries.
In the weeks and months that followed Mr. Hirst"s sale,
spending of any sort became deeply unfashionable
. In the art world that meant collectors stayed away from galleries and salerooms. Sales of contemporary art fell by two-thirds, and in the most overheated sector, they were down by nearly 90% in the year to November 2008. Within weeks the world"s two biggest auction houses, Sotheby"s and Christie"s, had to pay out nearly $200m in guarantees to clients who had placed works for sale with them.
The current downturn in the art market is the worst since the Japanese stopped buying Impressionists at the end of 1989. This time experts reckon that prices are about 40% down on their peak on average, though some have been far more fluctuant. But Edward Dolman, Christie"s chief executive, says: "I"m pretty confident we"re at the bottom."
What makes this slump different from the last, he says, is that there are still buyers in the market. Almost everyone who was interviewed for this special report said that the biggest problem at the moment is not a lack of demand but a lack of good work to sell. The three Ds—death, debt and divorce—still deliver works of art to the market. But anyone who does not have to sell is keeping away, waiting for confidence to return.
单选题 Come on-Everybody's doing it. That whispered message, half
invitation and half forcing, is what most of us think of when we hear the words
peer pressure. It usually leads to no good-drinking, drugs and casual sex. But
in her new book Join the Club, Tina Rosenberg contends that peer pressure can
also be a positive force through what she calls the social cure, in which
organizations and officials use the power of group dynamics to help individuals
improve their lives and possibly the word. Rosenberg, the
recipient of a Pulitzer Prize, offers a host of example of the social cure in
action: In South Carolina, a state-sponsored antismoking program called Rage
Against the Haze sets out to make cigarettes uncool. In South Africa, an
HIV-prevention initiative known as LoveLife recruits young people to promote
safe sex among their peers. The idea seems promising, and
Rosenberg is a perceptive observer. Her critique of the lameness of many
pubic-health campaigns is spot-on: they fail to mobilize peer pressure for
healthy habits, and they demonstrate a seriously flawed understanding of
psychology. " Dare to be different, please don't smoke!" pleads one billboard
campaign aimed at reducing smoking among teenagers-teenagers, who desire nothing
more than fitting in. Rosenberg argues convincingly that public-health advocates
ought to take a page from advertisers, so skilled at applying peer
pressure. But on the general effectiveness of the social cure,
Rosenberg is less persuasive. Join the Club is filled with too much irrelevant
detail and not enough exploration of the social and biological factors that make
peer pressure so powerful. The most glaring flaw of the social cure as it's
presented here is that it doesn't work very well for very long. Rage Against the
Haze failed once state funding was cut. Evidence that the LoveLife program
produces lasting changes is limited and mixed. There's no doubt
that our peer groups exert enormous influence on our behavior. An emerging body
of research shows that positive health habits-as well as negative ones-spread
through networks of friends via social communication. This is a subtle form of
peer pressure : we unconsciously imitate the behavior we see every
day. Far less certain, however, is how successfully experts and
bureaucrats can select our peer groups and steer their activities in virtuous
directions. It's like the teacher who breaks up the troublemakers in the back
row by pairing them with better-behaved classmates. The tactic never really
works. And that's the problem with a social cure engineered from the outside: in
the real world, as in school, we insist on choosing our own friends.
单选题{{B}}Passage Two{{/B}}
The Pakistani president, Gen. Pervez
Musharraf, announced here today that a delegation of Pakistani officials would
fly to the Taliban's headquarters in the southern Afghan city of Kandahar Monday
to renew demands that the militia surrender Saudi fugitive Osama bin
Laden. U. S. officials have named bin Laden, who has been given
shelter by the Taliban rulers in Afghanistan, as the prime suspect in Tuesday's
terrorist attacks in Washington and New York. "We are aware of
the gravity of the situation and know that in the lives of, nations, such
situations do arise that require making important decisions," Musharraf said at
a meeting with Pakistani newspaper editors. The Taliban's
leader, Mohammad Omar, has refused to give up bin Laden, claiming he is not
responsible for the U. S. attacks. "The Pakistan government is
leaning on the Taliban government to hand over Osama to save this entire region
from catastrophe," said Najam Sethi, editor of the weekly newspaper Friday
Times, who participated in the meeting with Musharraf. "I am not sure whether
there is much chance of that happening, but the pressure is on from the Pakistan
government." Pakistan has been a key supporter of the Taliban,
which controls more than 90 percent of Afghanistan and has enforced a strict
interpretation of Islamic law in the country. Omar, the Taliban
leader, today convened an emergency meeting of clerics (圣职人员) in the Afghan
capital, Kabul. "As regards the possible attack by America on the sacred
soil of Afghanistan, veteran honorable clerics should come to Kabul for a sharia
decision," Omar said in a statement broadcast on the Taliban's Radio Shariat
today. Sharia is Islamic law. Omar, who reportedly left Ms
Kandahar headquarters several days ago in anticipation of a U. S. attack, asked
Afghans to pray and read the Koran to meet what he called a "test", according to
the statement. He indicated he would not attend the meeting of clerics, though
he reportedly met with a small group of senior clerics today. The
Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press reported today it had received a statement
from Bin Laden, dispathed by an aide from an undisclosed location in
Afghanistan, in which he denied involvement in last week's attacks on the World
Trade Center and the Pentagon. "I am residing in Afghanistan,"
the statement said. "I have taken an oath of allegiance to Omar, which does not
allow me to do such things from Afghanistan. We have been blamed in the past,
but we were not involved."
单选题It is raining so ______ that we can ______ go out without an umbrella. A. hard; hard B. hard; hardly C. hardly; hard D. hardly; hardly
单选题The court considers a monetary ______ to be an appropriate way of punishing him.
单选题The protein found by Peter Shiromani ______.
单选题All the questions ______ around what she had been doing on the night of the robbery. A. dissolved B. revolved C. evolved D. devolved
单选题They both watched as the crime scene technicians took samples of various fibers and bagged them,dusted for fingerprints,took pictures and tried to _____what could have happened.
单选题—I went to the museum you introduced to me yesterday.—Oh, did you? ______. A. So I did B. So did I C. Either I did D. Either did I
单选题We had no computer back-up and had to rely on old paper files to ______ the records we lost.
单选题
单选题______ has warmed the waters off Alask
单选题Microsoft founder Bill Gates has ______ about being a parent, stating that 13 is an appropriate age for a child's first cell phone. A. opened up B. taken up C. put up D. held up
单选题The phrase "coincided with" in the first sentence of Para. 2 is closest in meaning to ______.
单选题{{B}}Passage Three{{/B}}
Large, multinational corporations may
be the companies whose ups and downs seize headlines. But to a far greater
extent than most Americans realize, the economy's vitality depends on the
fortunes of tiny shops and restaurants, neighborhood services and factories.
Small businesses, defined as those with fewer than 100 workers, now employ
nearly 60 percent of the work force and are expected to generate half of all new
jobs between now and the year 2000. Some 1.2 million small firm have
opened their doors over the past six years of economic growth, and 1989 will see
an additional 200, 000 entrepreneurs striking off on their own.
Too many of these pioneers, however, will blaze ahead unprepared.
Idealists will overestimate the clamor for their products or fall to factor in
the competition. Nearly everyone will underestimate, often fatally, the
capital that success requires, Mid-career executives, forced by a takeover or a
restructuring to quit the corporation and find another way to support
themselves, may savor the idea of being their own boss but may forget that
entrepreneurs must also, at least for a while, be bookkeeper and receptionist,
too. According to Small Business Administration data, 24 of every, 100
businesses starting out today are likely to have disappeared in two years, and
27 more will have shut their doors four years from now. By 1995, more than
60 of those I00 start-ups will have folded. A new study of 3,000 small
businesses, sponsored by American Express and the National Federation of
Independent Business, suggests slightly better odds: Three years after start-up,
77 percent of the companies surveyed were still alive, Most credited their
success in large part to having picked a business they already were comfortable
in. Eighty percent had worked with the same product or service in their
lest jobs. Thinking through an enterprise before the launch is
obviously critical. But many entrepreneurs forget that a firms health in
its pulse. In their zeal to expand, small-business owners often ignore
early warning signs of a stagnant market or of decaying profitability. They
hopefully pour more and more money into tile enterprise, preferring not to
acknowledge eroding profit margins that mean the market for their ingenious
service or product has evaporated, or that they must cut the payroll or vacate
their lavish offices. Only when the financial well runs dry do they see the
seriousness of the illness, and by then the patient is usually too far-gone to
save. Frequent checks of your firm's vital signs will also guide
you to a sensible rate of growth. To snatch opportunity, you must spot the
signals that it is time to conquer new markets, add products or perhaps
franchise your hot idea.
单选题This month is expected to see that seminal(有创意的)moment when digital cinema will outstrip the 35mm technology that has been the dominant projection format in movie theatres for over 120 years. In 2009, digital accounted for only 15% of global screens. But the movie Avatar changed all that. 3D movies required digital, and Avatar's phenomenal success with 3D pushed cinemas to adopt digital screens. IMS Screen Digest Cinema Intelligence Service estimates that by the end of 2012, digital will account for 63% of screens, and by 2015, 83% . A majority of those screens will be based on Texas Instruments' digital light processing(DLP)technology, a technology that uses millions of tiny mirrors on a tiny chip, each of them capable of moving thousands of times per second to create a digital image. That same technology today is also beginning to be used in cellphones and digital cameras to project images in those devices onto ordinary surfaces. That will be a bigger opportunity, says Kent Novak, Texas Instruments' senior VP for DLP products, who was in Bangalore recently. Cinemas are moving rapidly to digital screens. Why? The first digital movie was premiered(首演)in 1999. Initially it was thought moving to digital would givebetter picture quality and cost savings, but it took many years for a few systems to get deployed. And then Avatar happened. That was really the tipping point. In 2008, 153D movies were released; in 2009, it was close to 50. Theatres were able to get more people and get a higher price for the ticket, so it became a significant revenue generator. We have seen more conversion of film to digital in the last two years than in the previous ten. You are now bringing the technology to smaller devices. We are moving to put these chips into cellphones, digital still cameras, camcorders, laptop accessories, tablets, docking stations, media players. We've been hearing of pico(handheld)projectors for some time now. But we don't really see products in the market. The technology has only recently reached a tipping point in terms of lighting efficiency and total brightness. Three years ago, 1 watt of power could get the brightness measurement of about 5 lumens. Today that 1 watt can give 20 lumens(making the projected image brighter). We designed the chip to be more efficient. Also, the industry driver for efficiency is LED. The amount of investment going into LED is enormous. As technology has improved, volumes have gone up, and cost has come down. Micromax and Spice in India have put projection even in some of their feature phones; Samsung has put projection on some of their phones. Nikon has DLP embedded in some of their digital still cameras; Sony has them in camcorders. What are the use cases that you see? You can use your phone to show video clips, pictures, power point presentations, and make it a shared experience. India has been more progressive in adopting the technology because feature phones are a phone during the day and become the primary entertainment source in the evenings. India also has mobile TV phones with pre-loaded Bollywood movies that can be projected out of the phone.
单选题If he told his wife about their plan, she
was bound to
agree.
单选题David always had a bedtime story at 7 o'clock______.
单选题A travel company wants to charter a plane to the Bahamas. Chartering the plane costs $8,000. So far, 18 people have signed up for the trip. If the company charges $300 per ticket, how many more passengers must sign up for the trip before the company can make any profit on the charter? A. 7 B. 9 C. 13 D. 27 E. 45
单选题
