单选题To survive in the intense trade competition between countries, companies must ______ the qualities and varieties of their products to the world-market demand.
单选题In 1995 Martin Luther King, Jr. gained national ______ for his nonviolent methods used in a bus boycott in Montgomery.
单选题Despite so many auspicious indicators, the America depicted in political and intellectual debate is invariably a place we should be building starships to flee. To the left, the United States remains a land of racial repression, corporate oligarchy, and environmental decay; to the right, a country where all things pure are collapsing. Such views hold considerable sway. Whitman's The Optimism Gap reports that 1996 polls showed that only 15 percent of Americans believe the country is getting better. In similar polls, about half said the nation is worse off compared to how it was when their parents were growing up, and 60 percent believed the United States in which their children dwell will be worse still. Though most Americans are today healthier, better housed, better fed, better paid, better educated, better defended, more free, and diverted by a cornucopia of new entertainment products and services, somehow they've managed to convince themselves their parents had it better during the Dust Bowl. As Robert Samuelson noted in his skillful book, the revolution of rising expectations has taken on a life of its own: "There can never be enough prosperity." Polls now suggest that, regardless of how much money an American has, he or she believes that twice as much is required. Samuelson further contends that one reason for all the unfocused anxiety is that the media have gotten so much better at emphasizing things to worry about. Tropical storms that might hit the United States get more network coverage than any favorable turn of events. Television crime coverage, especially, now seems itched to cause civic fright, while movies and network entertainment programming depict violence as far more pervasive than it actually is. As Christopher Jencks, a professor of government at Harvard University. Notes: "When I was growing up there was violence on TV, but it was cowboys having shootouts. I never worried that rustlers world come over the hill into my neighborhood. Now the violence on television is presented as if it's about to get you personally. Every screen you look, at home or in theaters, has something disastrous on it. No wonder people think the country is out of control."Conservative thinkers and politicians seem distressed by the contemporary milieu in part because Americans are more or less willingly adopting gender equality and cultural openness, including a culture in which minority writing and art are being admitted to the canon. The political and academic left can't stand the contemporary milieu in part because class war, economic breakdown, and environmental calamity seem less and less likely. "The left elites talk with obsessive negativism about the religious right because it's one of the few things they can find to still get upset about," notes Orlando Patterson of Harvard. "The right elite is similarly obsessive about the supposed culture war, when all the evidence is that the United States is becoming ever more tolerant and ever more at peace with diversity./
单选题Living in poverty, John sold for 500 dollars the ______ of his mother's first work which made her famous.(2004年上海理工大学考博试题)
单选题The London 2012 sustainability watchdog embroiled in a
row
over the sportsship of the Olympic Stadium by Dow Chemical is to push the International Olympic Committee to appoint an " ethics champion" for future Games.
The Commission for a Sustainable London 2012 has been bruised by criticism over Dow's sponsorship of the wrap that will surround the Olympic stadium, particularly since commissioner Meredith Alexander last month resigned in protest.
Campaigners believe that Dow has ongoing liabilities relating to the 1984 Bhopal disaster that resulted in the deaths of an estimated 20,000 people and the serious injury of tens of thousands more. Dow, which bought the owner of the plant in 2001, insists that all liabilities have been settled in full.
Commission chairman Shaun McCarthy said that its tight sustainability remit did not extend to acting as moral guardian of the Olympic movement but that it would press for such a role to be created when evaluating sponsors for future Games.
In addition to sponsoring the 7m pounds wrap that will surround the Olympic Stadium, Dow has a separate 100m dollars sponsorship deal with the IOC that was signed in 2010.
But McCarthy also defended the commission's role in evaluating the Dow deal, after Amnesty International wrote to London 2012 chairman Lord Coe to raise the issue.
"What has been lost in all of this story is that a really excellent, sustainable product has been procured, we looked at Locog's examination of Dow Chemical's current corporate responsibility policies and, again, Dow achieved that highest score in that evaluation. We verified that. " said McCarthy.
"As far as the history is concerned and issues around Bhopal, there is no doubt Bhopal was a terrible disaster and snore injustice was done to the victims. Who is responsible for that injustice is a matter for the courts and a matter for others. We have a specific remit and terms of reference that we operate under and we have operated diligently under those terms. "
The commission will on Thursday release its annual review. It finds that "good press" has been made to wands many of Locog's sustainability target, but that "major challenges" remain.
In particular, the commission found that there was no coherent strategy to achieve a 20% reduction in carbon emissions after an earlier scheme to use renewable energy feel through when a wind turbine on the site proved impractical.
" We had conversations with Locog over a year ago about this and said they had to demonstrate how they were going to achieve at least 20% carbon reductions through energy conservation if they're not going to do it through renewable energy," said McCarthy. "There are some good initiatives, but quite frankly they just haven't done it. "
单选题Being afraid of the enemy's attack, he ______ motionless in the grass for half an hour. A. lie B. lay C. laid D. lied
单选题Living constantly in the atmosphere of slave, he became infected ______ the unconscious ______ their psychology. No one can shield himself ______ such an influence. A. on...by...at B. by... for...in C. from...in...on D. through...with...from
单选题In order to answer the question: "which are the social tendencies that are general human characteristics?" we have to emphasize on the study of
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单选题The author is primarily concentrated on ______.
单选题The plan for the new office tower went ahead ____________ of local opposition.
单选题By 1929, Mickey Mouse was as popular______children as Coca-Cola. A. for B. in C. to D. with
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Would you stoop to pick up a found
penny? If you believe in the value of money or the possibility of luck, you
would. Unless, of course, you're a teenager. When Nuveen Investments asked
1000 kids age 12 to 17 to name the sum they would bother to pick up, 58 percent
said a dollar or more. "Some won't give pocket space to coins even if they're
already in hand," says Neale Godfrey author of Money Doesn't Grow on Trees. Many
high schoolers throw away the changes. As one boy explained to her, "what
am I going to do with it?" The cavalier attitude is making some
parents rethink the allowance tradition. The weekly stipend is meant to
help kids learn about money, but some experts say too much cash--easily handed
out in these flush times--and too few obligations can lead to a fiscally
irresponsible future. Many kids have a "lack of understanding (of) how hard it
is to earn money," says Godfrey. "That is not OK." Allowances,
done right, are a way to teach children to plan ahead and choose wisely, to
balance saving spending investing, and even philanthropy. Doing it right means
deciding ahead of time how much to give and how often to give it. And it re-
quires determining what the child's responsibilities will be.
"About 50 percent of children between 12 and 18 get an allowance or cash
from their parents," says a survey conducted in 1997 by Ohio State university
for the U. S Labor Department. The median amount they got was a $ 50 a week.
Nationally speaking, about 10 million kids receive a total of around $ 1 billion
every week. The problem with a parental open-wallet policy, says
Godfrey: "If you're always given money, why would it have any value to you?"
Earned money is spent more wisely, she says. "You're teaching them that there is
not an entitlement program in life. The way you get it is you earn
it." Godfrey thinks an allowance should be chore-based, and she
divides work into two categories: citizen-of-the-household chores .and
work-for-pay chores. "The punishment for not doing your workfor-pay chores is
you don't get paid." Other experts including Jayne Pearl, author of Kids and
Money, believe that every family member is entitled to a small piece of the
financial pie and that it shouldn't be tied to work. Doing so "complicates
things unnecessarily and imbues allowance with power struggles and control is-
sues," says Pearl. "I think of an allowance as learning capital...They have to
have some money to practise with." "For many kids 3 is a good
time to begin getting all allowance," experts say. This sounds early, but it's
then that children start understanding the notion of exchanging coins for, say,
candy. Deciding how much to give can be tough. "If the parents can afford
it, I have them pay their age per week," says Godfrey. "A 3-year-old gets
$3." Sound like a lot for a little person? Godfrey's plan takes
10 percent off the top for charity. The remainder is divided into thirds and put
into jars. The quick-cash jar "is for instant gratification". This spend--as
they choose money--means that candy bars, cards, and other impulse buys are no
longer paid for by Mom and Dad, which causes kids to curb many
impulses. The second jar is for medium-term savings, meant to be
spent on medium-ticket luxuries like in-line skates or a CD player. The final
jar is invested for the long term, such as for
college.
单选题Our social behavior is ______.
单选题Whatadifferencebetweenthetwohouseswhichstand_____toeachother.
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单选题Lately, the restaurant chain, which______.mainly to blue-collar diners, has been hurt by competition.
单选题Two main techniques have been used for training elephants, which we may call respectively the tough and the gentle. The former method simply consists of setting an elephant to work and beating him until he does what is expected of him. Apart from any moral considerations this is a stupid method of training, for it produces a resentful animal who at a later stage may well turn man-killer. The gentle method requires more patience in the early stages, but produces a cheerful, good-tempered elephant who will give many years of loyal service. The first essential in elephant training is to assign to the animal a single mahout who will be entirely responsible for the job. Elephants like to have one master just as dogs do, and are capable of a considerable degree of personal affection. There are even stories of half- trained elephant calves who have refused to feed and pained to death when by some unavoidable circumstance they have been deprived of their own trainer. Such extreme cases must probably be taken with a grain of salt, but they do underline the general principle that the relationship between elephant and mahout is the key to successful training. The most economical age to capture an elephant for training is between fifteen and twenty years, for it is then almost ready to undertake heavy work and can begin to earn its keep straight away. But animals of this age do not easily become subservient to man, and a very firm hand must be employed in the early stages. The captive elephant, still roped to a tree, plunges and screams every time a man approaches, and for several days will probably refuse all food through anger, and fear. Sometimes a tame elephant is tethered nearby to give the wild one confidence, and in most cases the captive gradually quietens down and begins to accept its food. The next stage is to get the elephant to the training establishment, a ticklish business which is achieved with the aid of two tame elephants roped to the captive on either side. When several elephants are being trained at one time, it is customary for the new arrival to be placed between the stalls of two captives whose training is already well advanced. It is then left completely undisturbed with plenty of food and water so that it can absorb the atmosphere of its new home and see that nothing particularly alarming is happening to its companions. When it is eating normally, its own training begins. The trainer stands in front of the elephant holding a long stick with a sharp metal point. Two assistants, mounted on tame elephants, control the captive from either side, while others rub their hands over his skin to the accompaniment of a monotonous and soothing chant. This is supposed to induce pleasurable sensations in the elephant, and its effects are reinforced by the use of endearing epithets, such as "ho! my son", or "ho! my father", or "my mother", according to the age and sex of the captive. The elephant is not immediately susceptible to such blandishments, however, and usually lashes fiercely with its trunk in all directions. These movements are controlled by the trainer with the metal-pointed stick, and the trunk eventually becomes so sore that the elephant curls it up and seldom afterwards uses it for offensive purposes.
单选题The phrase "increment, earned though not received" in the third paragraph means ______.
单选题Like most fathers and sons, we fought; it was a cold war lasting from the ______ of my adolescence until I went off to college.
