单选题Few insects have inspired as much fear and hatred as the diminutive fire ants, less than half an inch long but living in colonies of more than 250,000 others. Everyone in the southern United States gets to know fire ants sooner or later by painful experience. Fire ants live in large earthen mounds and are true social insects--that means they have a caste system (division of labor), with a specialized caste that lays eggs (queen) and a worker caste of sterile females. There are several reasons that they are considered pests. About 60% of people living in areas where fire ants occur are stung every year. Of these, about 1% have some degree of allergic reaction ( called anaphylaxis ) to the sting. Their large mounds are unsightly and can damage mowing equipment. Fire ants sometimes enter electrical and mechanical equipment and can short out switches or chew through insulation. Finally, as fire ants move into new areas, they reduce diversity of native ants and prey on larger animals such as ground-nesting birds and turtles. Even though fire ants are pests in many circumstances, they can actually be beneficial in others. There is evidence that their predatory activities can reduce the numbers of some other important pests. In cotton, for example, they prey on important pests that eat cotton plants such as bollworms and budworms. In Louisiana sugarcane, an insect called the sugarcane borer used to be a very important pest before fire ants arrived and began preying on it. Fire ants also prey on ticks and fleas. Whether fire ants are considered pest or not depend on where they are found, but one thing is sure--we had best get used to living with them. Eradication attempts in the 1960s and 1970s failed for a number of reasons, and scientists generally agree that complete elimination of fire ants from the United States is not possible. A new, long-term approach to reducing fire ant populations involves classical biological control. When fire ants were accidentally brought to the United States, most of their parasites and diseases were not. Classical biological control involves identifying parasites and diseases specific to fire ants in South America, testing them to be sure that they don't attack or infect native plants or animals, and establishing them in the introduced fire ant population in the United States. Since fire ants are about 5 to 7 times more abundant here than in South America, scientists hope to reduce their numbers using this approach.
单选题 Transatlantic friction between companies and
regulators has grown as Europe's data guardians have become more assertive.
Francesca Bignami, a professor at George Washington University's law school,
says that the explosion of digital technologies has made it impossible for
watchdogs to keep a close eye on every web company operating in their backyard.
So instead they are relying more on scapegoating prominent wrongdoers in the
hope that this will deter others. But regulators such as Peter
Schaar, who heads Germany's federal data-protection agency, say the gulf is
exaggerated. Some European countries, he points out, now have rules that make
companies who suffer big losses of customer data to report these to the
authorities. The inspiration for these measures comes from America.
Yet even Mr. Schaar admits that the internet's global scale means that
there will need to be changes on both sides of the Atlantic. He hints that
Europe might adopt a more flexible regulatory stance if America were to create
what amounts to an independent data-protection body along European lines. In
Europe, where the flagship Data Protection Directive came into effect in 1995,
the European Commission is conducting a review of its privacy policies. In
America Congress has begun debating a new privacy bill and the Federal Trade
Commission is considering an overhaul of its rules. Even if
America and Europe do narrow their differences, internet firms will still have
to struggle with other data watchdogs. In Asia countries that belong to APEC are
trying to develop a set of regional guidelines for privacy rules under an
initiative known as the Data Privacy Pathfinder. Some countries such as
Australia and New Zealand have longstanding privacy laws, but many emerging
nations have yet to roll out fully fledged versions of their own. Mr. Polonetsky
sees Asia as "a new privacy battleground", with America and Europe both keen to
tempt countries towards their own regulatory model. Canada
already has something of a hybrid privacy regime, which may explain why its
data-protection commissioner, Jennifer Stoddart, has been so influential on the
international stage. She marshaled the signatories of the Google Buzz letter and
took Facebook to task last year for breaching Canada's data privacy laws, which
led the company to change its policies. Ms Stoddart argues that
American companies often trip up on data-privacy issues because of "their
brimming optimism that the whole world wants what they have rolled out in
America." Yet the same optimism has helped to create global companies that have
brought huge benefits to consumers, while also presenting privacy regulators
with tough choices. Shoehorning such firms into old privacy frameworks will not
benefit either them or their users.
单选题Directions: Read the following text. Choose
the best word(s) for each numbered blank.
Weak dollar or no, $ 46,000-the price
for a single year of undergraduate instruction amid the red brick of Harvard
Yard-is{{U}} (1) {{/U}}But nowadays cost is{{U}} (2)
{{/U}}barrier to entry at many of America's best universities. Formidable
financial-assistance policies have{{U}} (3) {{/U}} fees or slashed them
deeply for needy students. And last month Harvard announced a new plan designed
to{{U}} (4) {{/U}}the sticker-shock for undergraduates from middle and
even upper-income families too. Since then, other rich
American universities have unveiled{{U}} (5) {{/U}}initiatives.
Yale, Harvard's bitterest{{U}} (6) {{/U}}, revealed its plans on
January 14th. Students whose families make {{U}}(7) {{/U}}than $60,000 a
year will pay nothing at all. Families earning up to $ 200,000 a year will have
to pay an average of 10% of their incomes. The university will{{U}} (8)
{{/U}}its financial- assistance budget by 43%, to over $ 80m.
Harvard will have a similar arrangement for families
making up to $180,000. That makes the price of going to Harvard or Yale{{U}}
(9) {{/U}}to attending a state-run university for middle-and
upper-income students. The universities will also not require any student to
take out{{U}} (10) {{/U}}to pay for their{{U}} (11) {{/U}}, a
policy introduced by Princeton in 2001 and by the University of Pennsylvania
just after Harvard's{{U}} (12) {{/U}}. No applicant who gains admission,
officials say, should feel{{U}} (13) {{/U}}to go elsewhere because he or
she can't afford the fees. None of that is quite as
altruistic as it sounds. Harvard and Yale are, after all, now likely to lure
more students away from previously{{U}} (14) {{/U}}options, particularly
state-run universities, {{U}}(15) {{/U}}their already impressive
admissions figures and reputations. The schemes also
provide a{{U}} (16) {{/U}}for structuring university fees in which high
prices for rich students help offset modest prices for poorer ones and families
are less{{U}} (17) {{/U}}on federal grants and government-backed loans.
Less wealthy private colleges whose fees are high will
not be able to{{U}} (18) {{/U}}Harvard or Yale easily. But America's
state-run universities, which have traditionally kept their fees low and stable,
might well try a differentiated{{U}} (19) {{/U}}scheme as they raise
cash to compete academically with their private{{U}} (20) {{/U}}.
Indeed, the University of California system has already started to implement a
sliding-fee scale.
单选题Many people of agencies disagree to the abstinence-only education NOT because
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单选题"Popular art" has a number of meanings, impossible to define with any precision, which range from folklore to junk. The poles are clear enough, but the middle tends to blur. The Hollywood Western of the 1930's for example, has elements of folklore, but is closer to junk than to high art or folk art. There can be great trash, just as there is bad high art. The musicals of George Gershwin are great popular art, never aspiring to high art. Schubert and Brahms, however, used elements of popular music--folk themes--in works clearly intended as high art. The case of Verdi is a different one: he took a popular genre-bourgeois melodrama set to music (an accurate definition of nineteenth-century opera) and, without altering its fundamental nature, transmuted it into high art. This remains one of the greatest achievements in music, and one that cannot be fully appreciated without recognizing the essential trashiness of the genre. As an example of such a transmutation, consider what Verdi made of the typical political elements of nineteenth-century opera. Generally in the plots of these operas, a hero or heroine--usually portrayed only as an individual, unfettered by class--is caught between the immoral corruption of the aristocracy and the doctrinaire rigidity or secret greed of the leaders of the proletariat. Verdi transforms this naive and unlikely formulation with music of extraordinary energy and rhythmic vitality, music more subtle than it seems at first hearing. There are scenes and arias that still sound like calls to arms and were clearly understood as such when they were first performed. Such pieces lend an immediacy to the otherwise veiled political message of these operas and call up feelings beyond those of the opera itself. Or consider Verdi's treatment of character. Before Verdi, there were rarely any characters at all in musical drama, only a series of situations which allowed the singers to express a series of emotional states. Any attempt to find coherent psychological portrayal in these operas is misplaced ingenuity. The only coherence was the singer's vocal technique: when the cast changed, new arias were almost always substituted, generally adapted from other operas. Verdi's characters, on the other hand, have genuine consistency and integrity. Even if, in many casals, the consistency is that of pasteboard melodrama, the integrity of the character is achieved through the music: once he had become established. Verdi did not rewrite his music for differenf singers or countenance alterations or substitutions of somebody else's arias in one of his operas, as every eighteenth-century composer had done. When he revised an opera, it was only for dramatic economy and effectiveness.
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单选题{{B}}Text 4{{/B}}
Companies have embarked on what looks
like the beginnings of a re-run of the mergers and acquisitions (M&A) wave
that defined the second bubbly half of the 1990s. That period, readers might
recall, was characterized by a collective splurge that saw the creation of some
of the most indebted companies in history, many of which later went bankrupt or
were themselves broken up. Wild bidding for telecoms, internet and media assets,
not to mention the madness that was Daimler's $40 billion motoring takeover in
1998-1999 of Chrysler or the Time-Warner/AOL mega-merger in 2000, helped to give
mergers a thoroughly bad name. A consensus emerged that M&A was a great way
for investment banks to reap rich fees, and a sure way for ambitious managers to
betray investors by trashing the value of their shares. Now
M&A is back. Its return is a global phenomenon, but it is perhaps most
striking in Europe, where so far this year there has been a stream of deals
worth more than $600 billion in total, around 40% higher than in the same period
of 2004. The latest effort came this week when France's Saint-Gobain, a
building-materials firm, unveiled the details of its£3.6 billion ($6.5 billion)
hostile bid for BPB, a British rival. In the first half of the year,
cross-border activity was up threefold over the same period last year. Even
France Telecom, which was left almost bankrupt at the end of the last merger
wave, recently bought Amena , a Spanish mobile operator.
Shareholder's approval of all these deals raises an interesting question
for companies everywhere, are investors right to think that these mergers are
more likely to succeed than earlier ones? There are two answers. The first is
that past mergers may have been judged too harshly. The second is that the
present rash of European deals does look more rational, but-and the caveat is
crucial-only so far. The pattern may not hold. M&A 's poor
reputation stems not only from the string of spectacular failures in the 1990s,
but also from studies that showed value destruction for acquiring shareholders
in 80% of deals. But more recent studies by economists have introduced a note of
caution. Investors should look at the number of deals that succeed or fail
(typically measured by the impact on the share price), rather than (as you might
think) weighing them by size. For example, no one doubts that the
Daimler-Chrysler merger destroyed value. The combined market value of the two
firms is still below that of Daimler alone before the deal. This single deal
accounted for half of all German M&A activity by value in 1998 and 1999, and
probably dominated people's thinking about mergers to the same degree. Throw in
a few other such monsters and it is no wonder that broad studies have tended to
find that mergers are a bad idea. The true picture is more
complicated.
单选题{{B}}Text 4{{/B}}
Eco-tourism—travel that preserves the
environment and promotes the welfare of local people— continues to gain force.
Impressed by the success of countries like Costa Rica and Ecuador, which have
lured flocks of travelers for mountain treks and jungle safaris, a growing
number of regions across tile globe are turning to eco-tourism as a strategy'
for economic growth. Omar Bongo, the president of Gabon, a
developing country in west central Africa, bas set aside about 10 percent of the
country's landmass for 13 national parks. Green Visions, a tourism and
environment protection company, based in Sarajevo. Bosnia-Herzegovina, is
pioneering an eco-tourism development plan in Central Europe with "green
adventures" that promote environmental principles and support local businesses.
Even Greece, better known for its pumping night life and archaeological
monuments, devotes a section of its national tourism' Web site to "Greek nature"
and eco-tourism. Over the last four years, at least 48
countries, from Puerto Rico to Portugal, have created or started to define a
national strategy for eco-tourism development, according to a 2004 eco-tourism
report by Mintel International Group, a market-research company based in
Britain. Though eco-tourism has long conjured images of
biodiversity hot spots in countries like Belize, parts of the United States are
starting to embrace the trend too. For example, the Wisconsin Department of
Tourism will begin testing a new certification program in March called Travel
Green Wisconsin. Designed to encourage hotels and tour operators to reduce their
environmental impact, the program is aimed at protecting the natural areas that
play a significant role in defining the state as a tourist destination. If.
successful, the program will be rolled out statewide next year.
For businesses, eco-friendly initiatives not only offer marketing
advantages but can help with the bottom line. Hotels can cut costs by doing
everything from installing energy-saving light bulbs to asking travelers to
reuse their towels. And some 58.5 million U.S. travelers, or 38 percent, would
pay more to use travel companies that strive to protect and preserve the
environment, according to a study by the Travel Industry Association of America
sponsored by National Geographic Traveler. Of those travelers. 61 percent said
they would pay 5 to 10 percent more to use such companies.
However. selecting among the growing number of eco-friendly choices can be
frightening, especially given the ever-broadening category, which now
encompasses everything from basic campsites to high-end mountain lodges, lama
trekking to motorcycle tours through the jungle. Enter the Sustainable Tourism
Certification Network of the Americas—a partnership of certification programs,
environmental groups, government organizations and others, led by the
Rainforest. Alliance and the International Ecotourism Society—which aims to
promote sustainability and higher environmental and social standards for
tourism. In September, the network designed a series of baseline criteria for
certification to help generate credibility among members and promote local
conservation. This year, the document will be put up for public consultation
before being fully ratified. "Certification is a way for us to
avoid green washing," the practice of promoting something as ecotourism while
behaving in an environmentally irresponsible way, said Ronald Sanabria. director
of sustainable tourism at the Rainforest Alliance. "Certification for us is a
tool to avoid that and to ensure third-party assessments of requirements and
really prove the company."
单选题What our society suffers from most today is the absence of consensus about what it and life in it ought to be; such consensus cannot be gained from society's present stage, or from fantasies about what it ought to be. For that the present is too close and too diversified, and the future too uncertain, to make believable claims about it. A consensus in the present hence can be achieved only through a shared understanding of the past, as Homer's epics informed those who lived centuries later What it meant to be Greek, and by what images and ideals they were to live their lives and organize their societies. Most societies derive consensus from a long history, a language all their own, a common religion, common ancestry. The myths by which they live are based on all of these. But the United States is a country of immigrants, coming from a great variety of nations. Lately, it has been emphasized that an asocial, narcissistic personality has become characteristic of Americans, and that it is this type of personality that makes for the lack of well-being, because it prevents us from achieving consensus that would counteract a tendency to withdraw into private worlds. In this study of narcissism, Christopher Lash says that modern man, "tortured by self-consciousness, turns to new therapies not to free himself of his personal worries hut to find meaning and purpose in life, to find something to live for". There is widespread distress because national morale has declined, and we have lost an earlier sense of national vision and purpose. Contrary to rigid religions or political beliefs, as are found in totalitarian societies, our culture is one of the great individual differences, at least in principle and in theory; but this leads to disunity, even chaos. Americans believe in the value of diversity, but just because ours is a society based on individual diversity, it needs consensus about some dominating ideas more than societies based on uniform origin of their citizens. Hence, if we are to have consensus, it must be based on a myth--a vision about a common experience, a conquest that made us Americans, as the myth about the conquest of Troy formed the Greeks. Only a common myth can offer relief from the fear that life is without meaning or purpose. Myths permit us to examine our place in the world by comparing it to a shared idea. Myths are shared fantasies that form the tie that binds the individual to other members of his group. Such myths help to ward off feelings of isolations, guilt, anxiety, and purposelessness--in short, they combat isolation and the breakdown of social standards and values.
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单选题What will the succeeding paragraph, should there be one, most probably discuss?
单选题In the dimly lit cyber-cafe at Sciences-Po, hot-house of the French elite, no Gauloise smoke fills the air, no dog-eared copies of Sartre lie on the tables. French students are doing what all students do: surfing the web via Google. Now President Jacques Chirac wants to stop this American cultural invasion by setting up a rival French search-engine. The idea was prompted by Google's plan to put online millions of texts from American and British university libraries. If English books are threatening to swamp cyberspace, Mr Chirac will not stand idly by. He asked his culture minister, Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres, and Jean-Noёl Jeanneney, head of France' s Bibliothèque Nationale, to do the same for French text—and create a home-grown search-engine to browse them. Why not let Google do the job? Its French version is used for 74% of intemet searches in France. The answer is the vulgar criteria it uses to rank results. "I do not believe", wrote Mr Donnedieu de Vabres in Le Monde," that the only key to access our culture should be the automatic ranking by popularity, which has been behind Google' s success." This is not the first time Google has met French resistance. A court has upheld a ruling against it, in a lawsuit brought by two firms that claimed its display of rival sponsored links (Google' s chief source of revenues) constituted trademark counterfeiting. The French state news agency, Agence France-Presse, has also filed suit against Google for copyright infringement. Googlephobia is spreading. Mr Jeanneney has talked of the "risk of crushing domination by America in defining the view that future generations have of the world. "" I have nothing in paricular against Google, "he told L'Express, a magazine. "I simply note that this commercial cial company is the expression of the American system, in which the law of the market is king. " Advertising muscle and consumer demand should not triumph over good taste and cultural sophistication. The flaws in the French plan are obvious. If popularity cannot arbitrate, what will? Mr Jeanneney wants a "committee of experts". He appears to be serious, though the supply of French-speaking experts, or experts speaking any language for that matter, would seem to be insufficient. And if advertising is not to pay, will the taxpayer? The plan mirrors another of Mr Chirac' s pet projects: a CNNàla francaise. Over a year ago, stung by the power of Englishspeaking television news channels in the Iraq war, Mr Chirac promised to set up a French rival by the end of 2004. The project is bogged down by infighting. France's desire to combat English, on the web or the airwaves, is understandable. Protecting France's tongue from its citizens' inclination to adopt English words is an ancient hobby of the rifling elite. The Académie Francaise was set up in 1635 to that end. Linguists devise translations of cyber-terms, such as arrosage (spam) or bogue(bug). Laws limit the use of English on TV—"Super Nanny" and "Star Academy" are current pests—and impose translations of English slogans in advertising. Treating the invasion of English as a market failure that must be corrected by the state may look clumsy. In France it is just business as usual.
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单选题The problem to be taken up and the point at which the search for a solution will begin are customarily prescribed by the investigator (1) a subject participating in an (2) on thinking (or by the programmer for a computer). (3) , prevailing techniques of (4) in the psychology of thinking have invited (5) of the motivational aspects of thinking. The conditions that determine when the person will begin to think in (6) to some other activity, what he will think about, what direction his thinking will take, and when he will regard his search for a solution as successfully terminated (or abandon it as not worth pursuing further) (7) are beginning to attract investigation. (8) much thinking is aimed at (9) ends, special motivational problems are raised by "disinterested" thinking, in which the (10) of an answer to a question is a source of satisfaction in itself. For computer specialists, the detection of a mismatch between the formula that the program so far has (11) and some formula or set of requirements that (12) a solution is what impels continuation of the search and determines the direction it will (13) . Neo-behaviorists (like psychoanalysts) have made much of secondary (14) value and stimulus generalization; i. e. , the tendency of a stimulus pattern to become a source of satisfaction if it resembles or has (15) accompanied some form of biological gratification. The insufficiency of this kind of explanation becomes apparent, (16) , when the importance of novelty, surprise, complexity, incongruity, ambiguity, and (17) is considered. Inconsistency between beliefs, between items of incoming sensory information, or between one's belief and an item of sensory information (18) can be a source of discomfort impelling a (19) for resolution through reorganization of belief (20) or through selective acquisition of new information.
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}}
Violent lyrics in songs increase
aggression - related thoughts and emotions and could indirectly create a more
hostile social environment, a study released on Sunday by a U. S. psychology
association found. The Washington D.C. -based American Psychological
Association (APA) released the study, resulting from five
experiments involving over 500 college students, in the May issue of the Journal
of Personality and Social Psychology. The violent songs
increased feelings of hostility without provocation or threat, according to the
study. It said the effect was not the result of differences in musical
style, specific performing artist or arousal properties of the songs. Even
the humorous violent songs increased aggressive thoughts, the study
said. The group said the study contradicts a popular notion that
listening to angry, violent music actually serves as a positive catharsis for
people. The music industry came under criticism from lawmakers
in October for failing to use more descriptive parental advisory labels that
specify whether the music contains sex, violence or strong language.
But the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has said that
current CD labels give parents enough information without violating the right to
free expression. The RIAA is the trade group for the world's five big
labels, including AOL Time Warner Inc. , EMI Group Plc., Bertelsmann AG, Vivendi
Universal's Universal Music and Sony Corp.. Results of the APA's
experiments showed that violent songs led to more aggressive interpretations of
ambiguously aggressive words and increased the relative speed with which people
read aggressive versus non-aggressive words. "Such aggression-biased
interpretations can, in turn, instigate a more aggressive response, verbal or
physical, than would have been emitted in a nonbiased state, thus provoking an
aggressive escalatory spiral of antisocial exchanges," said researcher Craig
Anderson, in a statement. While researchers said repeated
exposure to violent lyrics could indirectly create a more hostile social
environment, they said it was possible the effects of violent songs may last
only a fairly short time.
单选题{{B}}Text 4{{/B}}
Trying to get Americans to eat a
healthy diet is a frustrating business. Even the best-designed public-health
campaigns cannot seem to compete with the tempting flavors of the snack-food and
fast-food industries and their fat-and sugar-laden products. The results are
apparent on a walk down any American street—more than 60% of Americans are
overweight, and a full quarter of them are overweight to the point of
obesity. Now, health advocates say, an ill-conceived
redesign-has taken one of the more successful public-health campaigns--the Food
Guide Pyramid--and rendered it confusing to the point of uselessness. Some of
these critics worry that America' s Department of Agriculture caved to pressure
from parts of the food industry anxious to protect theft products.
The Food Guide Pyramid was a graphic which emphasizes that a healthy diet
is built on a base of gains, vegetables and fruits, followed by ever-decreasing
amounts of dairy products, meat, sweets and oils. The agriculture department
launched the pyramid in 1992 to replace its previous program, which was centered
on the idea of four basic food groups. The "Basic Four" campaign showed a plate
divided into quarters, and seemed to imply that meat and dairy products should
make up haft of a healthy diet, with grains, fruits and vegetables making up the
other half. It was replaced only over the strenuous objections of the meat
and dairy industries. The old pyramid was undoubtedly imperfect.
It failed to distinguish between a doughnut and a whole-grain roll, or a
hamburger and a skinless chicken breast, and it did not make clear exactly how
much of each foodstuff to eat. It did, however, manage to convey the basic idea
of proper proportions in an easily understandable way. The new pyramid, called
"My Pyramid", abandons the effort to provide this information. Instead, it has
been simplified to a mere logo. The food groups are replaced with unlabelled,
multi-colored vertical stripes which, in some versions, rise out of a cartoon
jumble of foods that look like the aftermath of a riot at a grocery store.
Anyone who wants to see how this translates into a healthy diet is invited to go
to a website, put in their age, sex and activity level, and get a
custom-designed pyramid, complete with healthy food choices and suggested
portion sizes. This is free for those who are motivated, but might prove too
much effort for those who most need such information.
Admittedly, the designers of the new pyramid had a tough job to do. They
were supposed to condense the advice in the 84-page United States' Dietary
Guidelines into a simple, meaningful graphic suitable for printing on the back
of a cereal box. And they had to do this in the face of pressure from dozens of
special interest groups--from the country' s Potato Board, which thought
potatoes would look nice in the picture, to the Almond Board of California,
which felt the same way about almonds. Even the National Watermelon Promotion
Board and the California Avocado Commission were eager to see their products
recognized. Nevertheless, many health advocates believe the new
graphic is a missed opportunity. Although officials insist industry pressure had
nothing to do with the eventual design, some critics suspect that political
influence was at work. On the other hand, it is not clear how much good even the
best graphic could do. Surveys found that 80% of Americans recognized the old
Food Guide Pyramid--a big success in the world of public-health campaigns. Yet
only 16% followed its advice.
单选题Based on the text, people have reached a consensus that
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