单选题{{B}}Text 3{{/B}}
The mental health movement in the
United States began with a period of considerable enlightenment. Dorothea Dix
was shocked to find the mentally ill in jails and almshouses and crusaded for
the establishment of asylums in which people could receive humane care in
hospital-like environments and treatment which might help restore them to
sanity. By the mid-1800s 20 states had established asylums. But during the late
1800s and early 1900s, in the face of economic depression, legislatures were
unable to appropriate sufficient funds for decent care. Asylums became
overcrowded and prison-like. Additionally, patients were more resistant to
treatment than the pioneers in the mental health field had anticipated, and
security and restraint were needed to protect patients and others. Mental
institutions became frightening and depressing places in which the fights of
patients were all but forgotten. These conditions continued
until after World War Ⅱ. At that time, new treatments were discovered for
some major mental illnesses considered untreatable (penicillin for
syphilis of the brain and insulin treatment for schizophrenia and depressions),
and a succession of books, motion pictures, and newspapers called
attention to the plight of the mentally ill. Improvements were made, and Dr.
David Vail's Humane Practices Programme is a beacon for today. But changes were
store in coming until the early 1960s. At that time, the Civil Rights Movement
led lawyers to investigate America's prisons, which were disproportionately
populated by blacks, and they in turn followed prisoners into the institutions
that were worse than the hospitals for the criminally insane. The prisons were
filled with angry young men who, encouraged by legal support, were quick to
demand their fights. The hospitals for the criminally insane, by contrast, were
populated with people who were considered "crazy" and who were often kept
obediently in their place through the use of severe bodily restraints and large
dose of major tranquillizers. The young cadre of public interest lawyers liked
their role in the mental hospitals. The lawyers found a population that was both
passive and easy to champion. These were, after all, people who, unlike
criminals, had done nothing wrong. And in many states, they were being kept in
horrendous institutions, an injustice, which, once exposed, was hound to shock
the public and, particularly, the judicial conscience. Judicial
interventions have had some definite positive effects, but there is growing
awareness that courts cannot provide the standards and the review mechanisms
that assure good patient care. The details of providing day-to-day care simply
cannot be mandated by a court, so it is time to take from the courts the
responsibility for delivery of mental heath care and assurance of patient fights
and return it to the state mental health administrators to whom the mandate was
originally given. Though it is a difficult task, administrators must undertake
to write rules and standards and to provide the training and surveillance to
assure that treatment is given and patient rights are
respected.
单选题The New Madrid fault is______.
单选题
单选题Judging from the context, the word "they" (Line 2, Paragraph 4) might refer to
单选题We have known for a long time that the organization of any particular society is influenced by the definition of the sexes and the distinction drawn between them. But we have realized only recently that the identity of each sex is not so easy to pin down, and that definitions evolve in accordance with different types of culture known to us, that is, scientific discoveries and ideological revolutions. Our nature is not considered as immutable, either socially or biologically. As we approach the beginning of the 21st century, the substantial progress made in biology and genetics is radically challenging the roles, responsibilities and specific characteristics attributed to each sex, and yet, scarcely twenty years ago, these were thought to be "beyond dispute".
We can safely say, with a few minor exceptions, that the definition of the sexes and their respective functions remained unchanged in the West from the beginning of the 19tb century to the 1960s. The role distinction, raised in some cases to the status of uncompromising dualism on a strongly hierarchical model, lasted throughout this period, appealing for its justification to nature, religion and customs alleged to have existed since the dawn of time. The woman bore children and took care of the home. The man set out tc conquer the world and was responsible for the survival of his family, by satisfying their needs in peacetime and going to war when necessary.
The entire world order rested on the divergence of the sexes. Any overlapping or confusion between the roles was seen as a threat to the time-honored order of things. It was felt to be against nature, a deviation from the norm.
Sex roles were determined according to the "place" appropriate to each. Women"s place was, first and foremost, in the home. The outside world, i.e. workshops, factories and business firms, belonged to men. This sex-based division of the world (private and public) gave rise to a strict dichotomy between the attitudes, which conferred on each its special identity. The woman, sequestered at home, "cared, nurtured and conserved". To do this, she had no need to be daring, ambitious, tough or competitive. The man, on the other hand, competing with his fellow men, was caught up every day in the struggle for survival, and hence developed those characteristics which were thought natural in a man.
Today, many women go out to work, and their reasons for doing so have changed considerably. Besides, the traditional financial incentives, we find ambition and personal fulfillment motivating those in the most favorable circumstances, and the wish to have a social life and to get out of their domestic isolation influencing others. Above all, for all women, work is invariably connected with the desire for independence.
单选题{{B}}Text 3{{/B}}
The first big-name {{U}}hackers{{/U}}
include Steve Wozniak, Bill Gates and Linus Torvalds, all now highly
recognizable names behind many of the computer technologies used today. These
early hackers had a love of technology and a compelling need to know how it all
worked, and their goal was to push programs beyond what they were designed to
do. Back then, the word "hacker" didn’t have the negative connotation it has
today. The original hacker ethic, rooted out of simple curiosity and a
need to be challenged, appears to be dead. The objectives of
early hackers are a far cry from the goals of today's hacker. The motivation of
the new breed of hackers appears not to be curiosity, or a hunger for knowledge,
as it used to be. Instead, most of today's hackers are driven by greed, power,
revenge, or some other malicious intent, treating hacking as a game or sport,
employing the tools that are readily available via the Internet.
The rate of security attacks is actually outpacing the growth of the
Internet. This means that something besides the growth of the Internet is
driving the rise in security attacks. Here are some realities you should
know about: Operating systems and applications will never be secure. New
vulnerabilities will be introduced into your environment every day. And even if
you ever do get one operating system secure, there will be new operating systems
with new vulnerabilities—phones, wireless devices, and network appliances.
Employees will never keep up with security polices and awareness. It doesn't
matter how much you train and educate your employees. If your employees
disregard warnings about the hazards of opening questionable email attachments,
how are you going to educate them about properly configuring firewalls and
intrusion detection systems for their PCs? Managers have more responsibility
than ever. And on top of the realities listed above, security managers are being
asked to support increasing degrees of network availability and
access. There are some good security measures you can take:
Employ a layer 7, full-inspection firewall. Automatically update your anti-virus
at the gateway, server and client. Keep all of your systems and applications
updated. Hackers commonly break into a Web site through known security
holes, so make sure your servers and applications are patched and up to date.
Turn off unnecessary network services. Eliminate all unneeded programs.
Scan network for common backdoor services--Use intrusion detection
systems, vulnerability scans, anti virus
protection.
单选题The author's attitude towards Dr. Farid's work is that of______.
单选题It can be concluded from the text that______.
单选题
单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for
each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points)
Even the Saudis--or rather, the small
number of men who actually rule their troubled country--are giving ground in the
struggle for women's rights. For sure, the recommendations{{U}} (1)
{{/U}}this week to Crown Prince Abdullah at the end of an{{U}} (2)
{{/U}}round of "national dialogue" concentrating on the role of women were
fairly tame. in the reformers-versus-reactionaries{{U}} (3) {{/U}}test
of whether women should, be allowed to drive cars (at present they cannot do so
in the kingdom, nor can they travel unaccompanied, by whatever{{U}} (4)
{{/U}}of motion), the king was merely asked to"{{U}} (5) {{/U}}a
body to study a public-transport system for women to facilitate mobility".{{U}}
(6) {{/U}}mention, of course, of the right to vote--but then that has
been{{U}} (7) {{/U}}to men too, though local elections, on an apparently
universal franchise, are supposed to be held in October. In sum, it is a
tortoise's progress. But the very fact of the debate happening at all is{{U}}
(8) {{/U}}--and hopeful. It is not just in Saudi
Arabia that more rights for women are being demanded{{U}} (9)
{{/U}}across the whole of the Arab and Muslim world. The pushy
Americans have made women's rights part of their appeal for greater democracy
in{{U}} (10) {{/U}}they now officially call the "broader Middle East",
to include non-Arab Muslim countries such as Iran, Turkey and even Afghanistan.
Many Arabs have cautioned the Americans against seeking to{{U}} (11)
{{/U}}their own values on societies with such different traditions and{{U}}
(12) {{/U}}. Many leading Muslims have{{U}} (13) {{/U}}the
culturally imperious Americans of seeking to{{U}} (14) {{/U}}Islam.
The{{U}} (15) {{/U}}for more democracy in the Muslim world issued by
leaders of the eight biggest industrial countries was watered down for fear of
giving{{U}} (16) {{/U}}. Yet, despite the Arabs' prickliness, the
Americans have helped pep up a debate that is now bubbling fiercely in the Arab
world, even{{U}} (17) {{/U}}many Arab leaders, none of whom is directly
elected by the people, are understandably{{U}} (18) {{/U}}of reforms
that could lead to their own toppling. Never before have women's rights in the
Arab world been so{{U}} (19) {{/U}}debated. That{{U}} (20)
{{/U}}is cause to rejoice.
单选题
单选题Seven years ago, a group of female scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology produced a piece of research showing that senior women professors in the institute"s school of science had lower salaries and received fewer resources for research than their male counterparts did. Discrimination against female scientists has
cropped up
elsewhere. One study—conducted in Sweden, of all places—showed that female medical-research scientists had to be twice as good as men to win research grants. These pieces of work, though, were relatively small-scale. Now, a much larger study has found that discrimination plays a role in the pay gap between male and female scientists at British universities.
Sara Connolly, a researcher at the University of East Anglia"s school of economics, has been analyzing the results of a survey of over 7,000 scientists and she has just presented her findings at this year"s meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in Norwich. She found that the average pay gap between male and female academics working in science, engineering and technology is around £ 1,500 ($2,850) a year.
That is not, of course, irrefutable proof of discrimination. An alternative hypothesis is that the courses of men"s and women"s lives mean the gap is caused by something else; women taking "career breaks" to have children, for example, and thus rising more slowly through the hierarchy. Unfortunately for that idea, Dr. Connolly found that men are also likely to earn more within any given grade of the hierarchy. Male professors, for example, earn over £ 4,000 a year more than female ones.
To prove the point beyond doubt, Dr. Connolly worked out how much of the overall pay differential was explained by differences such as seniority, experience and age, and how much was unexplained, and therefore suggestive of discrimination. Explicable differences amounted to 77% of the overall pay gap between the sexes. That still left a substantial 23% gap in pay, which Dr. Connolly attributes to discrimination.
Besides pay, her study also looked at the " glass-ceiling" effect—namely that at all stages of a woman"s career she is less likely than her male colleagues to be promoted. Between postdoctoral and lecturer level, men are more likely to be promoted than women are, by a factor of between 1.04 and 2.45. Such differences are bigger at higher grades, with the hardest move of all being for a woman to settle into a professorial chair.
Of course, it might be that, at each grade, men do more work than women, to make themselves more eligible for promotion. But that explanation, too, seems to be wrong. Unlike the previous studies, Dr. Connolly"s compared the experience of scientists in universities with that of those in other sorts of laboratory. It turns out that female academic researchers face more barriers to promotion, and have a wider gap between their pay and that of their male counterparts, than do their sisters in industry or research institutes independent of universities. Private enterprise, in other words, delivers more equality than the supposedly egalitarian world of academia does.
单选题According to the second paragraph, which statement is TRUE?
单选题Which of the following most accurately describe the pattern of the text?
单选题
单选题What does the author think of unilateralism?
单选题In 1575--over 400 years ago the French scholar Louis Le Roy published a learned book in which he voiced despair over the changes caused by the social and technological innovations of his time, what we now call the Renaissance. We, also, feel that our times are out of joint; we even have reason to believe that our descendants will be worse off than we are.
The earth will soon be overcrowded and its resources exhausted. Pollution will ruin the environment, upset the climate and endanger human health. The gap in living standards between the rich and the poor will widen and lead the angry, hungry people of the world to acts of desperation including the use of nuclear weapons as blackmail. Such are the inevitable consequences of population and technological growth if present trends continue.
The future is never a projection of the past. Animals probably have no chance to escape from the tyranny of biological evolution, but human beings are blessed with the freedom of social evolution. For us, trend is not destiny (fate). The escape from existing trends is now facilitated by the fact that societies anticipate future dangers and take preventive steps against expected changes.
Despite the widespread belief that the world has become too complex for comprehension by the human brain, modern societies have often responded effectively to critical situations. The decrease in birth rates, the partial prohibition of pesticides and the rethinking of technologies for the production and use of energy are but a few examples illustrating a sudden reversal of trends caused not by political upsets or scientific breakthroughs, but by public awareness of consequences.
Even more striking are the situations in which social attitudes concerning future difficulties undergo rapid changes before the problems have come to pass -- witness the heated arguments about the problems of behavior control and of genetic engineering even though there is as yet no proof that effective methods can be developed to manipulate behavior and genes on a population scale.
One of the characteristics of our times is thus the rapidity with which steps can be taken to change the orientation of certain trends and even to reverse them. Such changes usually emerge from grass root movements rather than from official directives.
单选题The purpose of the website is to
单选题Which of the following can be a disadvantage of U.S. "Big Steel" as pointed out in the text?
单选题What can be inferred from the words of Dave Forney?
