单选题{{I}}Questions 11~13 are based on the following conversation.{{/I}}
单选题WhatdoesStevesayabouthisjob?
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单选题{{B}}Text 2{{/B}}
I did not know the city at all and,
what is more, I couldn't speak a word of the language. After having spent my
first day sight-seeing in the town-center, I decided to lose my way deliberately
on my second day, since I believed that this was the surest way of getting to
know my way around. I got on the first bus that passed and descended some thirty
minutes later in what must have been a suburb. The first two
hours passed pleasantly enough. I discovered mysterious little book-shops in
back streets and finally arrived at a market-place where I stopped and had
coffee in an open-air calf. Then I decided to get back to my hotel for lunch.
After walking about aimlessly for some time, I determined to ask the way. The
trouble was that the only word I knew of the language was the name of the street
in which I lived — and even that I pronounced badly. I stopped
to asked a friendly-looking newspaper-seller. He smiled and handed me a paper. I
shook my head and repeated the name of the street and he thrust the paper into
my hands. Seeing that it would be impossible to argue about the matter, I gave
him some money and went on my way. The next person I asked was an old lady who
was buying vegetables. She was very hard of hearing and I repeated the word
several times. When she finally heard me, she seemed to take offence and began
shouting and shaking her walking-stick at me. I hurried away quickly and was
relieved to see a policeman on a corner. He certainly would be able to help me.
The policeman listened attentively to my question, smiled and gently took me by
the arm. There was a distant look in his eyes as he pointed left and right and
left again. He glanced at me for approval, and repeated the performance. I
nodded politely and began walking in the direction he pointed. About an hour
passed and I noticed that the houses were getting fewer and green fields were
appearing on either side on me. I had come all the way into the country. The
only thing left for me to do was to find the nearest
railway-station!
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单选题According to the passage, diversity can be achieved in American society by_________.
单选题{{I}}Questions 18~21 are based on the following conversation.{{/I}}
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单选题How did the writer feel when he visited his old neighborhood in Washington D. C. ?
单选题{{B}}Part A{{/B}}{{B}}Text 1{{/B}}
The basic flag of the United States is
one of the world's oldest national flags. Only the basic flags of Austria,
Denmark, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Switzerland are
older. During the discovery and settlement of what is now the
United States, the flags of various European nations were flown over the land,
as symbols of possession. Later, in the Colonial and Revolutionary War periods,
flags representing famous persons, places, and events were flown in the American
Colonies. The first official flag of the United States was
created by Congress on June 14,1777. It consisted of 13 alternate red and white
stripes and 13 white stars in a field of blue, representing the 13 colonies that
had declared their independence in 1776. Congress adopted a new flag of 15 stars
and 15 stripes in 1795, to give representation to the two new states admitted
into the Union, Vermont and Kentucky. By 1817, there were 20
states in the Union, and it became apparent that adding one stripe for each new
state would destroy the shape of the flag. As a result, Congress in 1818
restored the original design of 13 stripes and provided that each state was to
be represented by one star. In 1912 President William H. Taft made the first
official provision for the arrangement of the stars. He ordered that there be
six even rows of eight stars each. Previously the arrangement of the stars had
been left to the flag-maker's fancy. The evolution of the Stars
and Stripes reflected the growth of the United States. After the admission of
Hawaii into the Union in 1959, the flag was officially changed for the 26th time
since its creation. There are many government flags flown in the
United States in addition to the national flag. Among them are the president's
and vice-president's flags and those of federal departments and some federal
agencies. Each state in the Union has an official flag. The United States Navy
uses special flags for signaling.
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单选题When Vice President Cheney spoke last year at Westminster College, its president, Fletcher Lamkin, expected a foreign policy address. Winston Churchill delivered his historic "Iron Curtain" speech there, and the school has hosted speeches by other foreign leaders. To Lamkin's surprise, Cheney delivered a speech against Sen. John Kerry. Lamkin, a retired Army brigadier general(准将) and the former dean of academics at West Point, felt he had been misled. He e-mailed the college community to express his disappointment and said that in the interest of balance, he would offer Kerry a chance to speak. Very quickly his email made its way to the national media, and Lamkin found himself in the middle of a coast-to-coast quarrel. Lamkin says he was portrayed as "another college president trying to liberalize his students, and another president who is trying to poison tile minds of students and turn them into flaming liberals." Lamkin needed help in handling the criticism. So, like a growing number of administrators caught up in controversy, he turned to a specialist in crisis management for advice on how to explain his actions to the press and public in a clear and simple way. There are no data on how often colleges use crisis managers, but those in the field say that in a world of emails, blogs and wall-to-wall news coverage, demand is increasing. Christopher Simpson, who assisted Lamkin, says a recent crisis conference he hosted drew representatives of 70 institutions, more than expected. Earlier this year, the University of Colorado turned to Simpson for help. But his hiring led to a short-term controversy of its own, in large part because he is being paid $350 an hour. Typically, crisis consultants charge $2,500 to $3,500 a day. Simpson has since signed a$150,000 one-year contract to assess the university's public relation needs and help improve its discolored image. Not everyone is enthusiastic about crisis consultants. Linda Gray, assistant vice president at the University of Central Florida, says that "to a certain extent, the worse the crisis, the closer to home you should deal with it." Gray, who was in charge of public relations at the University of Florida when a serial killer murdered several students in 1990, says, "You ought to be dealing with the crisis, not explaining things to somebody else./
单选题You will hear four dialogues or monologues. Before listening to each one,
you will have 5 seconds to read each of the questions which accompany it. While
listening, answer each question by choosing A, B, C or D. After listening, you
will have 10 seconds to check your answer to each question. You will hear each
piece ONLY ONCE. Questions
11~13 are based on a conversation about renting an apartment.
单选题Henry Ford regarded history as "bunk". This word probably means _______.
单选题According to the passage, young owlets eat everything EXCEPT ______.
单选题Companies have the legal right to monitor employees' e-mail and instant messaging. Many do, whether they warn their workers or not. Last month the University of Tennessee released the e-mail correspondence between an administrator and a married college president in which the administrator wrote of her love for him, and of her use of drugs and alcohol to deal with her unhappiness. Employers, including The New York Times and Dow Chemical, have fired workers for sending improper e-mail. But the fastest-growing area for Internet spying is the home. SpectorSoft, a leading manufacturer of spyware, at first marketed its products to parents and employers. Sales jumped enormously, however, when the company changed its pitch to target romantic partners. "In just one day of running Spector on my home PC, I was able to identify my boyfriend's true personality," a message on the company's website declares. What can you expect if someone puts SpectorSoft's Spector 2.2 on your computer? It will take hundreds of records an hour of every website and e-mail that appears on your screen, and store them so that someone who is spying on you can review them later. A new product, SpectorSoft's eBlaster, will send the spy detailed e-mail reports updating your computer activities frequently. These products keep the people being spied on totally unaware. SpectorSoft has sold 35 000 copies of its spyware, and it has only a piece of a flourishing market. WinWhatWhere, another big player, sells primarily to businesses, but what it calls the "discontented family member" market has been finding WinWhatWhere. Many smaller companies have sites that sell relatively crude "key-loggers", software that records every keystroke typed on a computer. Isn't all this spying on loved ones a little creepy? Not to SpectorSoft president Doug Fowler. "If you're in a committed relationship and you get caught because of evidence online, as far as I'm concerned you deserve to be caught," he says. Richard Eaton, president of WinWhatWhere, recognizes that in a perfect world users would reveal that they have placed monitoring software on a computer. But WinWhatWhere Investigator has a feature that allows it to be completely hidden. "Our customers demanded it," he says.
单选题Whatdoesthemanimply?
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