单选题Professor Johnson will come to give a lecture ______ next month.
单选题The world is full of new horrors and there's no place to hide. Who says so? Disaster psychologists, for a start. They are the people who take in the big picture of our collective reactions to human-created disaster, the ways these reactions are caused, and our coping mechanisms. And research into disaster psychology is growing fast. Among the big issues being addressed by these researchers are understanding the terrorists' weapons, assessing the full impact of terrorism—and, crucially, working out which psychological approaches actually work. It's a deeply controversial area. Take the work of Dennis Embry as an example. He argues that we have overlooked the obvious. the purpose of terrorism is to create terror. This works best "if the very symbols of everyday life become conditioned fear and anxiety stimulant". The top targets will be the most symbolic of a nation's daily life, preferably served up for prime-time television. Crashing planes from United and American Airlines into the Twin Towers and the Pentagon from 8.46 am on met those objectives all too perfectly. After the attacks, people stopped flying. Why? Not because they had made a rational risk assessment but because the mere thought of flying made their palms sweat. From terrorism to rail crashes, counseling and "debriefing” are the standard response to help those caught up in disasters. But there are growing doubts about their effectiveness. What might be going wrong? Debriefing focuses on getting people to talk through the trauma(创伤)and its emotional consequences soon after the incident. Could it be that some people are better by distancing themselves from what happened, rather than retelling it?
单选题He went to the small stable where his horse was, harnessed it,
mounted
, and rode out to the beach.
单选题
The United States has historically had
higher rates of marriage than those of other industrialized countries. The
current annual marriage {{U}}(56) {{/U}} in the United States--about 9
new marriages for every 1,000 people--is {{U}}(57) {{/U}} higher than it
is in other industrialized countries. However, marriage is {{U}}(58)
{{/U}} as widespread as it was several decades ago. {{U}}(59) {{/U}}
of American adults who are married {{U}}(60) {{/U}} from 72 percent in
1970 to 60 percent in 2002. This does not mean that large numbers of people will
remain unmarried {{U}}(61) {{/U}} their lives. Throughout the 20th
century, about 90 percent of Americans married at some {{U}}(62) {{/U}}
in their lives. Experts {{U}}(63) {{/U}} that about the same proportion
of today's young adults will eventually marry. The timing of
marriage has varied {{U}}(64) {{/U}} over the past century. In 1995 the
average age of women in the United States at the time of their first marriage
was 25. The average age of men was about 27. Men and women in the United States
marry for the first time an average of five years later than people did in the
1950s. {{U}}(65) {{/U}}, young adults of the 1950s married younger than
did any previous {{U}}(66) {{/U}} in U.S. history. Today's later age of
marriage is {{U}}(67) {{/U}} the age of marriage between 1890 and 1940.
Moreover, a greater proportion of the population was married (95 percent) during
the 1950s than at any time before {{U}}(68) {{/U}}. Experts do not agree
on why the "marriage rush" of the late 1940s and 1950s occurred, but most social
scientists believe it represented a {{U}}(69) {{/U}} to the return of
peaceful and prosperity after 15 years of severe economic {{U}}(70)
{{/U}} and war.
单选题Woman: Nobody told me that Bill was in hospital.Man: Sorry, I meant to give you a call when I found out, but it slipped my mind.Question: What does the man mean?
单选题
单选题He (was caught) (cheating) in the examination. If he had had (a tail), he (would put) it between his legs.
单选题Factors leading to the crisis included poor regulation, mismanagement and deception in the industry, and competition from other types of financial firms.
单选题Only when you have accumulated enough credits will you be ______ to apply for the degree.
单选题No form of government in the world is ______ ; each system reflects the history and present needs of the region or the nation.
单选题In November 1970 Yukio Mishima, together with some of his fanatical followers from the ultra nationalistic Shield Society which he had founded in 1966, broke into the headquarters of Japan's Eastern Defense Forces armed with swords and daggers, overpowered some aides, tied up the commanding general, and demanded that the troops be assembled to hear a speech. Mishima addressed the troops for ten minutes, inciting them to rebel against the constitutional government imposed by the United States that had, in his words, "turned Japan spineless. " Receiving only ridicule in response, he returned to the general's office and there, before the general's unbelieving eyes, proceeded to kill himself in strict accordance with the traditional samurai ritual of seppuku. After Mishima had driven a dagger deep into left abdomen, one of his aides severed his head with a sword. The aide likewise killed himself and was beheaded; the others surrendered. In 1936 there had been a similar revolt and, though equally unsuccessful, it had foreshadowed the repressive regime of General Tojo that was to stage the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. That earlier revolt is the one referred to in Patriotism, one of Mishima's most powerful stories. Here life and fiction become joined. The act of seppuku was for Mishima a fulfillment, "the ultimate dream of my life. " Born of an ancient samurai family, he longed to die a hero's death in accordance with the ancient samurai code; but his weak body kept him from service in the war, and he had to compensate through body building (he became expert at karate and kendo) and, most important, through the discipline of writing. In his short lifetime he turned out twenty novels, thirty plays, many essays, and more than eighty stories; he also produced, directed, and acted in movies, and even sang on stage. His first book of stories, A Forest in Flower, appeared in 1943, but it was Confession of a Mask (1948), dealing with the meditations of a young man of homosexual leanings in a repressive society, that brought him fame. Mishima has been called "Japan's Hemingway", while others have compared him to "aesthetic" writers like Walter Peter and Oscar Wilde.
单选题After the war, the state gained her full
autonomy
with the signing of a peace treaty.
单选题Which of the following is not true about samba?
单选题Which of the following best summarizes the U. S. economic situation today?
单选题Although his mother ______ with the judge for him, he was sentenced to life imprisonment.
单选题For decades, researchers have grappled with the problem of creating a machine that can tell, definitively, whether a person is lying. Until recently, their work has been far from successful. The past generation of lie-detection technologies has been put under scientific scrutiny and found wanting. But science, ever resourceful, is coming up with new ideas. The problem with past lie detectors is that it relies on second-hand signs of lying, such as a person's breathing rate, pulse, blood pressure which a good actor can suppress. Furthermore, someone who is telling the truth might exhibit just these signals, because the very act of being questioned by the authorities is stressful. Instead, current research is looking directly at the source of lies, the brain itself. Daniel Langleben uses a brain-scanning technique called functional magnetic-resonance imaging to probe his subjects' honesty. The lie which those subjects are asked to tell is a small one: they have to persuade Dr. Langleben that they are holding a particular playing card when often they are actually holding a different one. Each successful deception earns a subject $20. The researchers have not had to hand out much cash, though. The brains of lying subjects light up in particular places in ways that they do not in the honest. Another brain-probing lie-detection technique, based on electroencephalography (EEG), has actually made it out of the laboratory and into the courtroom. Lawrence Farwell calls it MERMER (memory and encoding related multifaceted electroencephalographic response). MERMER works by hooking someone up to an EEG machine and asking him about specific details of, for example, a crime scene. Lack of a brainwave called P300 denotes lack of familiarity with the details in question, suggesting any denial should he taken at face value. The technique has already stood up to legal scrutiny twice. It will soon be used again, in the appeal by Jimmy Slaughter against his conviction for murdering his ex-girlfriend, Melody Wuertz. MERMER suggests that Mr. Slaughter had no recollection of important facts about the murder, such as which rooms the victim' body was located in. Although not yet foolproof, these methods do offer possible alternatives to the antiquated techniques of the polygraph. The truth is out there. It is just a question of finding it.
单选题I became conscious of the ______between play and sport when I helped organize a sandlot football team at the age of 12.
单选题The
altitude
here at the mountain-top was so great that I breathed with difficulty.
单选题When a man knows that he will be put into prison if he uses a potentially {{U}}deadly {{/U}}object to rob or do harm to another person, he will think twice about it.
单选题Woman: I haven't seen such a fantastic movie for ages. Don't you enjoy k?Man: I have to admit that I slept through it.Question: How did the man like the movie?
