单选题A: How have you been these days, Jack?B: ______
单选题They have announced that the two failing firms have eventually {{U}}merged{{/U}}.
单选题{{B}}Passage Three{{/B}}
My new home was a long way from the
centre of London but it was becoming essential to find a job, so finally I spent
a whole morning getting to town and putting my name down to be considered by
London Transport for a job on the tube. They were looking for guards, not
drivers. This suited me. I couldn't drive a car but thought that I could
probably guard a train, and perhaps continue to write my poems between stations.
The writers Keats and Chekhov had been doctors. T. S. Eliot had worked in a bank
and Wallace Stevens for an insurance company. I would be a tube guard. I could
see myself being cheerful, useful, a good man in a crisis. Obviously I would be
overqualified but I was willing to forget about that in return for a steady
income and travel privileges those being particularly welcome to someone living
a long way from the city centre. The next day I sat down, with
almost a hundred other candidates, for the intelligence test, I must have done
all right because after half an hour's wait I was sent into another room for a
psychological test. This time there were only about fifty candidates. The
examiner sat at a desk. You were signaled forward to occupy the seat opposite
him when the previous occupant had been dismissed, after a greater or shorter
time. Obviously the long interviews were the more successful ones. Some of the
interviews were as short as five minutes. Mine was the only one that lasted a
minute and a half. I can remember the questions now: "Why did
you leave your last job?" "Why did you leave your job before that?" "And the one
before that?" I can't recall my answers, except that they were short at first
and grew progressively shorter. His closing statement, I thought, revealed a
lack of sensitivity which helped to explain why as a psychologist, he had risen
no higher than the underground railway. "You have failed the psychological test
and we are unable to offer you a position." Failing to get that
job was my low point. Or so I thought, believing that work was easy. Actually,
such jobs--being a postman is another one I still desire--demand exactly the
sort of elementary yet responsible awareness that the habitual dreamer is least
qualified to give. But I was still far short of full self-understanding. I was
also short of cash.
单选题The way people shop ______
单选题According to the last paragraph, the service quality of American service personnel may depend on ______
单选题A survey earlier this year found that about 50 percent of South Americans think that "most" or "almost all" government officials are involved in______.
单选题______ being fun and good exercise, swimming is a very useful skill.
单选题The fruit ______ more than half the country's annual exports, according to a recent report.
单选题The first Antarctica Marathon on King George Island indicates that .
单选题It was about 2 p.m. on Mar. 9 when three Nucor Corp. electricians got the call from their colleagues at the Hickman (Ark.) plant. It was bad news: Hickman's electrical grid had failed. For a minimill steelmaker like Nucor, which melts scrap steel from autos, dishwashers, mobile homes, and the like in an electric arc furnace to make new steel, there's little that could be worse. The trio immediately dropped what they were doing and headed out to the plant. No supervisor had asked them to make the trip, and no one had to. They went on their own. There wasn't any direct financial incentive for them to blow their weekends, no extra money in their next paycheck, but for the company their, contribution was huge. What's most amazing about this story is that at Nucor it's not considered particularly remarkable. "It could have easily been a Hickman operator going to help the Crawfordsville [Ind. ] mill," says Executive Vice-President John J. Ferriola "It happens daily." Nucor has nurtured one of the most dynamic and engaged workforces around. The 11 300 nonunion employees at the Charlotte (N. C. ) company don't see themselves as worker bees waiting for instructions from above. Nucor's flattened hierarchy and emphasis on pushing power to the front line lead its employees to adopt the mindset of owner-operators. Nucor gained renown in the late 1980s for its radical pay practices, which base the vast majority of most workers' income on their performance. An upstart nipping at the heels of the integrated steel giants, Nucor had a close-knit culture that was the natural outgrowth of its underdog identity. Legendary leader F. Kenneth Iverson's radical insight: that employees, even hourly clock-punchers, will make an extraordinary effort if you reward them richly,treat them with respect ,and give them real power. Nucor is an upstart no more, and the untold story of how it has clung to that core philosophy even as it has grown into the largest steel company in the U, S. is in many ways as compelling as the celebrated tale of its brash youth. Iverson retired in 1999. Under CEO Daniel R. DiMicco, a 23-year veteran, Nucor has snapped up 13 plants over the past five years while managing to instill its unique culture in all of the facilities it has bought, an achievement that makes him a more than worthy successor to Iverson.
单选题His most important ______ was the introduction of the seminary (大学的研究班) method of instruction for advanced students.
单选题Because of Uadverse/U weather conditions, the travelers stopped to camp.
单选题Man: This television cost me sixty pounds. Woman: Only sixty? Mine cost me a fortune. Question: What does the woman mean?
单选题Do you think capital punishment should be
done away with
?
单选题A: Could you run me over to the office? I'm late. My clock must be slow. B: ______
单选题He ______ his failure to bad luck.
单选题Although he is recognized as one of the most brilliant scientists in his field, Professor Jefferson cannot seem to make his ideas understood in class.
单选题We want you to describe all the events of that morning in Usequence/U without any delay.
单选题The government ______ him of his estates by confiscation (没收,充公).
单选题There are some things in the class the teachers will not {{U}}put up with{{/U}}.
