单选题In order to "change lives for the better" and reduce "dependency", George Osborne, Chancellor of the Exchequer, introduced the "upfront work search" scheme. Only if the jobless arrive at the job centre with a CV, register for online job search, and start looking for work will they be eligible for benefit—and then they should report weekly rather than fortnightly. What could be more reasonable?
More apparent reasonableness followed. There will now be a seven-day wait for the jobseeker"s allowance. "Those first few days should be spent looking for work, not looking
to sign on
," he claimed. "We"re doing these things because we know they help people stay off benefits and help those on benefits get into work faster" Help? Really? On first hearing, this was the socially concerned chancellor, trying to change lives for the better, complete with "reforms" to an obviously indulgent system that demands too little effort from the newly unemployed to find work, and subsidises laziness. What motivated him, we were to understand, was his zeal for "fundamental fairness"—protecting the taxpayer, controlling spending and ensuring that only the most deserving claimants received their benefits.
Losing a job is hurting: you don"t skip down to the job centre with a song in your heart, delighted at the prospect of doubling your income from the generous state. It is financially terrifying, psychologically embarrassing and you know that support is minimal and extraordinarily hard to get. You are now not wanted; you are now excluded from the work environment that offers purpose and structure in your life. Worse, the crucial income to feed yourself and your family and pay the bills has disappeared. Ask anyone newly unemployed what they want and the answer is always: a job.
But in Osborne land, your first instinct is to fall into dependency—permanent dependency if you can get it—supported by a state only too ready to indulge your falsehood. It is as though 20 years of ever-tougher reforms of the job search and benefit administration system never happened. The principle of British welfare is no longer that you can insure yourself against the risk of unemployment and receive unconditional payments if the disaster happens. Even the very phrase "job seeker"s allowance" is about redefining the unemployed as a "jobseeker" who had no fundamental right to a benefit he or she has earned through making national insurance contributions. Instead, the claimant receives a time-limited "allowance," conditional on actively seeking a job; no entitlement and no insurance, at £71.70 a week, one of the least generous in the EU.
单选题Mr Phillips' thought is made unconvincing by
单选题Last week, Utah federal Judge Paul G. Cassell handed a 22-year sentence to a man who beat an elderly woman to death with a log. A few hours later, Judge Cassell sentenced a 25-year-old first-time drug offender to 55 years. If you think Judge Cassell liked sentencing a small-change drug dealer to more time than a violent killer, guess again. The judge had no choice. Federal law demanded the sentence, despite Judge Cassell's pointed questioning if there was a "rational basis" for sentencing Weldon H. Angelos, the father of two young children, to more time than he could sentence a hijacker, murder or rapist. Blame federal mandatory minimum sentencing rules. A jury found Angelos guilty on three separate charges of possessing a firearm while he sold a half-pound of marijuana for $ 350. The first charge of possessing a gun during a drug transaction brought a five-year sentence--the second two charges brought 25 years each. That adds up to 55 years, so even if Angelos were found guilty of selling $1,050 of drugs, Judge Cassell had to follow the rules and sentence him to 55 years on the gun charges. (The judge did use a recent federal ruling in reducing the sentence for the drug-selling crimes to one day. ) Judge Cassell was right to impose the draconian sentence. If he ignored federal law, he would place himself above it. Instead, Judge Cassell sentenced Angelus as the law directed, even as he righteously hectored Congress to rewrite federal drug laws so first-time offenders don't serve more time than dangerous career criminals. The judge also urged Angelus' attorney, Jerome H. Mooney, to appeal the sentence and, if appeals fail, seek a presidential commutation. While civil-rights advocates across America protested the sentence, the Utah US Attorney's office defended the system. To prosecutors, Angelus is no Buy Scout. Officials found some 26 empty duffel hags with marijuana residue. Local feds believed Angelus was a big drug dealer, Assistant US Attorney Robert Lund told me, and associated with a violent street gang. Let me say this: Angelus never was a good poster boy for the movement to humanize draconian federal drug laws. Angelus turned down a plea-bargain sentence of 16 years. He is considered a first-time offender only because a juvenile gun conviction was expunged from his record. And even if Angelos didn't wave his gun in people's faces, he nonetheless brought a gun with him during the transactions. But Angelos has become a national cause celebre because of Judge Cassell. There are more egregious examples of first-time offenders sentenced to decades for petty dealing, but they didn't come before a judge vocally opposed to the heavy handed nature of federal drug sentencing. That said, it simply doesn't make sense that federal sentences often are tougher on small-time drug offenders than on violent criminals. But it happens all the time.
单选题Wherever people have been, they have left waste behind, which can cause all sorts of problems. Waste often stinks, attracts vermin and creates eyesores. More seriously, it can release harmful chemicals into the soil and water when dumped, or into the air when burned. And then there are some really nasty forms of industrial waste, such as spent nuclear fuel, for which no universally accepted disposal methods have thus far been developed. Yet many also see waste as an opportunity. Getting rid of it all has become a huge global business. Rich countries spend some $120 billion a year disposing of their municipal waste alone and another $150 billion on industrial waste. The amount of waste that countries produce tends to grow in tandem with their economies, and especially with the rate of urbanization. So waste firms see a rich future in places such as China, India and Brazil, which at present spend only about $ 5 billion a year collecting and treating their municipal waste. Waste also presents an opportunity in a grander sense: as a potential resource. Much of it is already burned to generate energy. Clever new technologies to turn it into fertiliser or chemicals or fuel are being developed all the time. Visionaries see a world without waste, with rubbish being routinely recycled. Until last summer such views were spreading quickly. But since then plummeting prices for virgin paper, plastic and fuels, and hence also for the waste that substitutes for them, have put an end to such visions. Many of the recycling firms that had argued rubbish was on the way out now say that unless they are given financial help, they themselves will disappear. Subsidies are a bad idea. Governments have a role to play in the business of waste management, but it is a regulatory and supervisory one. They should oblige people who create waste to clean up after themselves and ideally ensure that the price of any product reflects the cost of disposing of it safely. That would help to signal which items are hardest to get rid of, giving consumers an incentive to buy goods that create less waste in the first place. That may sound simple enough, but governments seldom get the roles right. In poorer countries they often have no rules at all, or if they have them they fail to enforce them. In rich countries they are often inconsistent: too strict about some sorts of waste and worryingly lax about others. They are also prone to imposing arbitrary targets and taxes. California, for example, wants to recycle all its trash not because it necessarily makes environmental or economic sense but because the goal of "zero waste" sounds politically attractive.
单选题{{B}}Part A{{/B}}{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}Read the following four texts. Answer
the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on
ANSWER SHEET 1.{{B}}Text 1{{/B}}
When Dr. John W.Gofman, professor of
medical physics at the University of California and a leading nuclear critic,
speaks of "ecocide" in his adversary view of nuclear technology, he means the
following: A large nuclear plant like that in Kalkar, the Netherlands, would
produce about 200 pounds of plutonium each year. One pound, released into the
atmosphere, could cause 9 billion cases of lung cancer. This waste product must
be stored for 500,000 years before it is of no further danger to man. In the
anticipated reactor economy, it is estimated that there will be 10,000 tons of
this material in Western Europe, of which one table-spoonful of plutonium-239
represents the official maximum permissible body burden for 200,000 people.
Rather than being biodegradable, plutonium destroys biological
properties. In 1972 the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health
Administration ruled that the asbestos level in the work place should be lowered
to 2 fibers per cubic centimeter of air, but the effective date of the ruling
has been delayed until now. The International Federation of Chemical and General
Workers' Unions report that the 2-fiber standard was based primarily on one
study of 290 men at a British asbestos factory. But when the workers at the
British factory had been reexamined by another physician, 40--70 percent had
X-ray evidence of lung abnormalities. According to present medical information
at the factory in question, out of a total of 29 deaths thus far, seven were
caused by lung cancer. An average European or American worker comes into contact
with six million fibers a day. "We are now, in fact, finding cancer deaths
within the family of the asbestos worker," states Dr. Irving Selikoff, of the
Mount Sinai Medical School in New York. It is now also clear
that vinyl chloride, a gas from which the most widely used plastics are made,
causes a fatal cancer of the blood-vessel cells of the liver. However, the
history of the research on vinyl chloride is, in some ways, more disturbing than
the "Watergate cover-up." "There has been evidence of potentially serious
disease among polyvinyl chloride workers for 25 years that has been incompletely
appreciated and inadequately approached by medical scientists and by regulatory
authorities," summed up Dr. Selikoff in the New Scientist. At least 17 workers
have been killed by vinyl chloride because research over the past 25 years was
not followed up. And for over 10 years, workers have been exposed to
concentrations of vinyl chloride 10 times the "safe limit" imposed by Dow
Chemical Company. (422 words){{B}}Notes:{{/B}} plutonium 钚。asbestos
石棉。polyvinyl chloride 聚氯乙烯。
单选题The author of this passage is mainly concerned with______.
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单选题{{B}}Part A{{/B}}{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} Read the following four
texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your
answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.{{B}}Text 1{{/B}}
The Commercial Revolution was not
confined, of course, to the growth of trade and banking. Included in it also
were fundamental changes in methods of production. The system of manufacture
developed by the craft guilds in the later Middle Ages was rapidly becoming
defunct. The guilds themselves, dominated by the master craftsmen, had grown
selfish and exclusive. Membership in them was commonly restricted to a few
privileged families. Besides, they were so completely choked by tradition that
they were unable to make adjustments to changing conditions. Moreover, new
industries had sprung up entirely outside the guild system. Characteristic
examples were mining and smelting and the woolen industry. The rapid development
of these enterprises was stimulated by technical advances, such as the invention
of the spinning wheel and the discovery of a new method of making brass, which
saved about half of the fuel previously used. In the mining and smelting
industries a form of organization was adopted similar to that which has
prevailed ever since. But the most typical form of industrial
production in the Commercial Revolution was the domestic system, developed first
of all in the woolen industry. The domestic system derives its name from the
fact that the work was done in the homes of industrial artisans instead of in
the shop of a master craftsman. Since the various jobs in the manufacture of a
product were given out on contract, the system is also known as the putting out
system. Notwithstanding the petty scale of production, the organization was
basically capitalistic. The raw material was purchased by an entrepreneur and
assigned to individual worker, each of whom would complete his allotted task for
a stipulated payment. In the case of the woolen industry the yarn would be given
out first of all to the spinners, then to the weavers, fullers, and dyer in
succession. When the cloth was finally finished, it would be taken by the
clothier and sold in the open market for the highest price it would
bring.
单选题Mars Express is mentioned because______.
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单选题
单选题No woman can be too rich or too thin. This saying often attributed to the late Duchess of Windsor embodies much of the odd spirit of our times. Being thin is deemed as such virtue. The problem with such a view is that some people actually attempt to live by it. I myself have fantasies of slipping into narrow designer clothes. Consequently, I have been on a diet for the better--or worse--part of my life. Being rich wouldn't be bad either, but that won't happen unless an unknown relative dies suddenly in some distant land, leaving me millions of dollars. Where did we go off the track? When did eating butter become a sin, and a little bit of extra flesh unappealing, if not repellent? All religions have certain days when people refrain from eating, and excessive eating is one of Christianity's seven deadly sins. However until quite recently, most people had a problem getting enough to eat. In some religious groups, wealth was a symbol of probable salvation and high moral,,;, and fatness a sign of wealth and well-being. Today the opposite is true. We have shifted to thinness as our new mar of virtue. The result is that being fat--or even only somewhat overweight--is bad because it implies a lack of moral strength. Our obsession with thinness is also fueled by health concerns. It is tree that in this country we have more overweight people than ever before, and that, in many cases, being over-weight correlates with an increased risk of heart and blood vessel disease. These diseases, however, may have as much to do with our way of life and our high-fat diets as with excess weight. And the associated risk of cancer in the digestive system may be more of a dietary problem--too much fat and a lack of fiber--than a weight problem. The real concern, then, is not that we weigh too much, but that we neither exercise enough nor eat well. Exercise is necessary for strong bones and both heart and lung health. A balanced diet without a lot of fat can also help the body avoid many diseases. We should surely stop paying so much attention to weight. Simply being thin is not enough. It is actually hazardous if those who get (or already are) thin think they are automatically healthy and thus free from paying attention to their overall life-style. Thinness can be pure vainglory.
单选题Which of the following is Not one of the advantages of superpills?
单选题{{B}}Text 2{{/B}}
Manners nowadays in metropolitan cities
like London are practically non-existent. It is nothing for a big, strong
schoolboy to elbow an elderly woman aside in the dash for the last remaining
seat on the tube or bus, much less stand up and offer his seat to her, as he
ought. In fact, it is saddening to note that if a man does offer his seat to an
older woman, it is nearly always a Continental man or one from the older
generation. This question of giving up seats in public transport
is much argued about by young men, who say that, since women have claimed
equality, they no longer deserve to be treated with courtesy, and that those who
go out to work should take their turn in the rat race like anyone else. Women
have never claimed to be physically as strong as men. Even if it is not agreed,
however, that young men should stand up for younger women, the fact remains that
courtesy should be shown to the old. the sick and the burdened.
Conditions in travel are really very hard on everyone, we know, but
hardship is surely no excuse. Sometimes one wonders what would have been the
behavior of these about young men in a packed refugee train or a train on its
way to a prisoner-camp during the war. Would they have considered it only right
and their proper due to keep the best places for themselves then?
Older people, tired and irritable from a day's work, are not angels,
either--far from it. Many a brisk argument or an insulting quarrel breaks out as
the weary queues push and shove each other to gel on buses and tubes. One cannot
commend this, of course, but one does feel there is just a little more
excuse. If cities are to remain pleasant places to live in at
all, however, it seems urgent, not only that communications in transport should
be improved, but also that communication between human beings should be kept
smooth and polite. All over cities, it seems that people are too tired and too
rushed to be polite. Shop assistants won't bother to assist, taxi drivers shout
at each other as they dash dangerously round corners, bus conductors pull the
bell before their desperate passengers have had time to get on or off the bus.
and so on and so on. It seems to us that it is up to the young and strong to do
their small part to stop such deterioration. {{B}}Notes:{{/B}} much less
更不用说。Continental man 欧洲大陆上的人。rat race 激烈的竞争。be lost to 全然不顾。 all too 实在太。be hard
on sh. 对...... 太严峻。due n.应该得到的东西。communications In transport 运输工具。won't bother
to do sth. 不愿费心去做某事。pull the hell (售票员)拉铃(以便让司机开动车辆)。do one's part
尽某人的责任。
单选题{{B}}Text 4{{/B}}
Despite the general negative findings,
it is important to remember that all children who live through a divorce do not
behave in the same way. The specific behavior depends on the child's individual
personality, characteristics, age at the time of divorce, and gender. In terms
of personality, when compared to those rated as relaxed and easygoing, children
described as temperamental and irritable have more difficulty coping with
parental divorce, as indeed they have more difficulty adapting to life change in
general. Stress, such as that found in disrupted families, seems to impair the
ability of temperamental children to adapt to their surroundings, the greater
the amount of stress, the less well they adapt. In contrast, a moderate amount
of stress may actually help an easygoing, relaxed child learn to cope with
adversity. There is some relationship between age and children's
characteristic reaction to divorce. As the child grows older, the greater is the
likelihood of a free expression of a variety of complex feelings, an
understanding of those feelings, and a realization that the decision to divorce
cannot be attributed to any one simple cause Self-blame virtually disappears
after the age of 6, fear of abandonment diminishes after the age of 8, and the
confusion and fear of the young child is replaced in the older child by shame,
anger, and self-reflection. Gender of the child is also a factor that predicts
the nature of reaction to divorce, The impact of divorce is initially greater on
boys than on girls. They are more aggressive, less compliant, have greater
difficulties in interpersonal relationships, and exhibit problem behaviors both
at home and at school. Furthermore, the adjustment problems of boys are still
noticeable even two years after the divorce. Girls' adjustment
problems are usually internalized rather than acted out, and are often resolved
by the second year after the divorce. However, new problems may surface
for girls as they enter adolescence and adulthood. How can the relatively
greater impact of divorce on boys than on girls be explained? The greater male
aggression and noncompliance may reflect the fact that such behaviors are
tolerated and even encouraged in males in our culture more than they are in
females. Furthermore, boys may have a particular need for a strong male model of
self-control, as well as for a strong disciplinarian parent. Finally, boys are
more likely to be exposed to their parents' fights than girls are, and after the
breakup, boys are less likely than girls to receive sympathy and support from
mothers, teachers, or peers.
单选题
单选题{{B}}Text 3{{/B}}
If you are a tourist interested in
seeing a baseball game while in New York, you can find out which of its teams
are in town simply by sending a message to AskForCents. com. In a few minutes,
the answer comes back, apparently supplied by a machine, but actually composed
by a human. Using humans to process information in a machine-like way is not
new: it was pioneered by the Mechanical Turk, a famed 18th-century chess-playing
machine that was operated by a hidden chessmaster. But while computers have
since surpassed the human brain at chess, many tasks still baffle even the most
powerful electronic brain. For instance, computers can find you
a baseball schedule, but they cannot tell you directly if the Yankees are in
town. Nor can they tell you whether sitting in the bleachers is a good idea on a
first date. AskForCents can, because its answers come from people. "Whatever
question you can come up with, there' s a person that can provide the
answer—you don't have the inflexibility of an algorithm-driven system," says
Jesse Heitler, who developed AskForCents. Mr. Heitler was able to do this thanks
to a new software tool developed by Amazon, the online retailer, that allows
computing tasks to be farmed out to people over the internet. Aptly enough,
Amazon's system is called Mechanical Turk. Amazon' s Turk is
part toolkit for software developers, and part online bazaar: anyone with
internet access can register as a Turk user and start performing the Human
Intelligence Tasks (HITs) listed on the Turk website (mturk. com). Companies can
become "requesters" by setting up a separate account, tied to a bank account
that will pay out fees, and then posting their HITs. Most HITs pay between one
cent and $ 5. So far, people from more than 100 countries have performed HITs,
though only those with American bank accounts can receive money for their work;
others are paid in Amazon gift certificates. Mr. Heitler says he
had previously tried to build a similar tool, but concluded that the
infrastructure would be difficult to operate profitably. Amazon already has an
extensive software infrastructure designed for linking buyers with sellers,
however, and the Turk simply extends that existing model. Last November Amazon
unveiled a prototype of the system, which it calls "artificial artificial
intelligence". The premise is that humans are vastly superior to computers at
tasks such as pattern recognition, says Peter Cohen, director of the project at
Amazon, so why not let software take advantage of human strengths?
Mr. Cohen credits Amazon' s boss, Jeff Bezos, with the concept for the
Turk. Other people have had similar ideas. Eric Bonabeau of Icosystem, an
American firm that builds software tools modeled on natural systems, has built
what he calls the "Hunch Engine" to combine human intelligence with computer
analysis. The French postal service, for example, has used it to help its
workers choose the best delivery routes, and pharmaceutical researchers
are using it to determine molecular structures by combining their gut
instincts with known results stored in a database. And a firm called Seriosity
hopes to tap the collective brainpower of the legions of obsessive players
of multiplayer online games such as "World of War- craft", by getting them to
perform small real-world tasks (such as sorting photographs ) while playing, and
paying them in the game' s own currency.
单选题
单选题The author quotes Dr. Samuel Johnson's words to
单选题In the wake of September 11th, the construction techniques of skyscrapers are innovated so as to make them
