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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}}
Real policemen, both Britain and the
United States hardly recognize any resemblance between their lives and what they
see on TV—if they ever get home in time. There are similarities, of course, but
the cops don't think much of them. The first difference is that
a policeman's real life revolves round the law. Most of his training is in
criminal law. He has to know exactly what actions are crimes and what evidence
can be used to prove them in court. He has to know nearly as much law as a
professional lawyer, and what is more, he has to apply it on his feet, in the
dark and rain, running down an alley after someone he has to talk to.
Little of his time is spent in chatting to scantily clad ladies or in
dramatic confrontations with desperate criminal. He will spend most of his
working life typing millions of words on thousands of forms about hundreds of
sad, unimportant people who are guilty—or not—of stupid, petty crimes.
Most television crime drama is about finding the criminal; as soon as he's
arrested, the story is over. In real life, finding criminals is seldom much of a
problem. Except in very serious cases like murders and terrorist attacks—where
failure to produce results reflects on the standing of the police—little effort
is spent on searching. The police have an elaborate machinery which eventually
shows up most wanted men. Having made an arrest, a detective
really starts to work. He has to prove his case in court and to do that he often
has to gather a lot of different evidence. Much of this has to be given by
people who don't want to get involved in a court case. So as well as being
overworked, a detective has to be out at all hours of the day and night
interviewing his witnesses and persuading them, usually against their own best
interests, to help him. A third big difference between the drama
detective and the real one is the unpleasant moral twilight in which the real
one lives. Detectives are subject to two opposing pressures: first as members of
a police force they always have to behave with absolute legality, secondly, as
expensive public servants they have to get results. They can hardly ever do
both. Most of the time some of them have to break the rules in small
ways. If the detective has to deceive the world, the world often
deceives him. Hardly anyone he meets tells him the truth. And this separation
the detective feels between himself and the rest of the world is deepened by the
simple mindedness—as he sees it—of citizens, social workers, doctors, law
makers, and judges, who, instead of stamping out crime punish the
criminals less severely in the hope that this will make them reform. The result,
detectives feel, is that nine tenths of their work is reaching people who should
have stayed behind bars. This makes them rather
cynical.
单选题The standardized educational or psychological tests, that are widely used to aid in selecting, assigning, or promoting students, employees, and military personnel have been the target of recent attacks in books, magazines, the daily press, and even in Congress. The target is wrong, for in attacking the tests, critics divert attention from the fault that lies with ill-informed or incompetent users. The tests themselves are merely tools, with characteristics that can be measured with reasonable precision under specified conditions. Whether the results will be valuable, meaningless, or even misleading depends partly upon the tool itself but largely upon the user.
All informed predictions of future performance are based upon some knowledge of relevant past performance. How well the predictions will be validated by later performance depends upon the amount, reliability, and appropriateness of the information used and on the skill and wisdom with which it is interpreted. Anyone who keeps careful score knows that the information available is always incomplete and that the predictions are always subject to error.
Standardized tests should be considered in this context. They provide a quick, objective method of getting some kinds of information about what a person has learned, the skills he has developed, or the kind of person he is. The information so obtained has, qualitatively, the same advantages and shortcomings as other kinds of information. Whether to use tests, other kinds of information, or both in a particular situation depends, therefore, upon the empirical evidence concerning comparative validity, and upon such factors as cost and availability.
In general, the tests work most effectively when the traits or qualities to be measured can be most precisely defined (for example, ability to do well in a particular course of training program) and least effectively when what is to be measured or predicted cannot be well defined (for example, personality or creativity). Properly used, they provide a rapid means of getting comparable information about many people. Sometimes they identify students whose high potential has not been previously recognized, but there are many things they do not do. For example, they don"t compensate for gross social inequality, and thus don"t tell how able an underprivileged younger might have been had he grown up under more favorable circumstances.
单选题What does the phrase "a mixed blessing" (Line 6, Paragraph 3) mean?
单选题Which of the following is NOT included in the prescription of traditional free-market orthodoxy?
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单选题The work of a completely uneducated farmer is as important as a professor because______.
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单选题{{B}}Text 4{{/B}}
Recent years have brought
minority-owned businesses in the United States unprecedented opportunities--as
well as new and significant risks. Civil right activists have long argued that
one of the principal reasons why Blacks, Hispanics and other minority groups
have difficulty establishing themselves in business is that they lack of access
to the sizable orders and subcontracts that are generated by large companies.
Now Congress, in apparent agreement, has required by law that businesses awarded
federal contracts of more than $500,000 do their best to find minority
subcontractors and record their efforts to do so on forms filed with the
government. Indeed, some federal and local agencies have gone so far as to set
specific percentage goals for apportioning parts of public works contracts to
minority enterprises. Corporate response appears to have been
substantial. According to figures collected in 1977, the total of corporate
contracts with minority businesses rose from $77 million in 1972 to 1.1 billion
in 1977. The projected total of corporate contracts with minority businesses for
the early 1980's is estimated to be over $ 3 billion per year with no letup
anticipated in the next decade. Promising as it is for minority
businesses, this increased patronage poses dangers for them, too. First,
minority firms risk expanding too fast and overextending themselves financially,
since most are small concerns and, unlike large businesses, they often need to
make substantial investment in new plants, staff, equipment and the like in
order to perform work subcontracted to them. If, thereafter, their subcontracts
are for some reason reduced, such firms can face potentially crippling fixed
expenses. The world of corporate purchasing can be frustrating for small
entrepreneurs who get requests for elaborate formal estimates and bids. Both
consume valuable time and resources, and a small company's efforts must soon
result in orders, or both the morale and the financial health of the business
will suffer. A second risk is that White-owned companies may
seek to cash in on the increasing apportionment through formation of joint
ventures with minority-owned concerns. Of course, in many instances there are
legitimate reasons for joint ventures; clearly, White and minority enterprises
can team up to acquire business that neither could acquire alone. But civil
right groups and minority business owners have complained to Congress about
minorities being set up as "fronts" with White backing, rather than being
accepted as full partners in legitimate joint ventures. Third, a
minority enterprise that secures the business of one large corporate customer
often runs the danger of becoming and remaining dependent. Even in the best of
circumstances, fierce competition from larger, more established companies makes
it difficult for small concerns to broaden their customer bases; when such firms
have nearly guaranteed orders from a single corporate benefactor, they may truly
have to struggle against complacency arising from their current success. (469
words){{B}}Notes:{{/B}} civil rights activists 公民权利激进分子。Hispanics
西班牙后裔美国人。sizable orders 大额订单。subcontract 转包合同。on forms filed with the government
在政府存档备案。percentage goals 指标。apportionment 分配,分派。public works 市政工程。letup
减弱,缓和。promising as it is...这是as引导的让步状语从句,表语倒装了。patronage 优惠。concern n.公司。and the
like 以及诸如此类的。crippling fixed expenses 引起损失的固定开支。the world of 大量的。bid 投标。to cash
in on...靠……赚钱。team up 一起工作,合作。"fronts" 在此处意为“摆门面”。complacency
自满。
单选题By the fourth week of July conditions in the tropics were such that ______.
单选题Narrative crept back into art through a side door marked fashion photography. In April 1967, French Vogue published a spread by Bob Richardson, the American photographer, that soon became a legend Informally christened " the Greek trip " by Richardson's admirers, the spread featured Donna Mitchell, a striking brunet model, hanging out on the Aegean island of Rhodes with a male companion. Of course, narrative never disappeared—it just went to the movies, and stayed, and stayed. But what had caused stories to be exiled from high art? The idea of essence, and the equation of essence with goodness. Can you imagine? Visual art is essentially composed of form, color, materials. Anything to do with content is extraneous and therefore to be associated with badness; therefore to be eliminated. Moreover, content, says this line of thought, is controlling. This means that a rose is the Virgin Mary (depending on what the meaning of " is " is). And art, like society, must be liberated from such hierarchically imposed values. What this argument overlooked, of course, is that narrative is a form in itself, not just a vehicle for content. Indeed, the ideology of formalism originated, in Soviet Russia, with the analysis of old folk tales. Narrative form, the analysis went, typically proceeds from an initial state of equilibrium through a series of destabilizing episodes, concluding with a heightened state of equilibrium at the end. Think Indiana Jones. You can plug whatever content you want in there as long as it creates the form. Each episode simply has to do with the work of creating disequilibrium. A narrative does not, in other words, tell a story. A story is told to give listeners the pleasure of the narrative form. If you were to isolate the form of disequilibrium from the specifics of plot, you might arrive at something resembling the collected work of Cindy Sherman. Initially modeled after movie stills, Sherman's pictures are not, of course, abstract. Over the years, in fact, their content has become increasingly elaborate. I see this as a form of generosity as well as a sign of advanced technical skills. Not since Giuseppe Arcimboldo (1527-1593), perhaps, has an artist contrived to turn the human figure into a more bountiful cornucopia for the eye. Yet even the most visually splendid of Sherman's images are minimalist, in that they reduce the narrative down to the precise moment when the center of gravity shifts. Perhaps some unheard word is spoken. A floorboard squeaks. From upstairs comes a thump. And a tentative state of equilibrium gives way to anxiety or dread. That moment, too, represents essence. What more do you need to know?
单选题For Tony Blair, home is a messy sort of place, where the prime minister's job is not to uphold eternal values but to force through some unpopular changes that may make the country work a bit better. The area where this is most obvious, and where it matters most, is the public services. Mr Blair faces a difficulty here which is partly of his own making. By focusing his last election campaign on the need to improve hospitals, schools, transport and policing, he built up expectations. Mr Blair has said many times that reforms in the way the public services work need to go alongside increases in cash. Mr Blair has made his task harder by committing a classic negotiating error. Instead of extracting concessions from the other side before promising his own, he has pledged himself to higher spending on public services without getting a commitment to change from the unions. Why, given that this pledge has been made, should the health unions give ground in return? In a speech on March 20th, Gordon Brown, the chancellor of the exchequer, said that "the something-for-nothing days are over in our public services and there can be no blank cheques." But the government already seems to have given health workers a blank cheque. Nor are other ministries conveying quite the same message as the treasury. On March 19th, John Hutton, a health minister, announced that cleaners and catering staff in new privately-funded hospitals working for the National Health service will still be government employees, entitled to the same pay and conditions as other health-service workers. Since one of the main ways in which the government hopes to reform the public sector is by using private providers, and since one of the main ways in which private providers are likely to be able to save money is by cutting labor costs, this move seems to undermine the government's strategy. Now the government faces its hardest fight. The police need reforming more than any other public service. Half of them, for instance, retire early, at a cost of £1 billion ($1.4% billion) a year to the taxpayer. The police have voted 10--1 against proposals from the home secretary, David Blunkett, to reform their working practices. This is a fight the government has to win. If the police get away with it, other public-service workers will reckon they can too. And, if they all get away it, Mr Blair's domestic policy--which is what voters are most likely to judge him on a the next election--will be a failure.
单选题What has the author never understood?
单选题At the beginning of the century, medical scientists made a surprising discovery: that we are (1) not just of flesh and blood but also of time. They were able to (2) that we all have an internal "body clock" which (3) the rise and fall of our body energies, making us different from one day to the (5) . These forces became known as biorhythms: they create the (5) in our everyday life. The (6) of an internal "body clock" should not be too surprising, (7) the lives of most living things are dominated by the 24-hour night-and-day cycle. The most obvious (8) of this cycle is the (9) we feel tired and fall asleep at night and become awake and (10) during the day. (11) the 24-hour rhythm is interrupted, most people experience unpleasant side effects. (12) , international aeroplane travelers often experience "jet lag" when traveling across time (13) . People who are not used to (14) work can find that lack of sleep affects their work performance. (15) the daily rhythm of sleeping and waking, we also have other rhythms which (16) .longer than one day and which influence wide areas of our lives. Most of us would agree that we feel good on (17) days and net so good on others. Sometimes we are (18) fingers and thumbs but on other days we have excellent coordination. There are times when we appear to be accident-prone, or when our temper seems to be on a short fuse. Isn't it also strange (19) ideas seem to flow on some days but at other times are (20) nonexistent? Musicians, painters and writers often talk about "dry spells".
单选题 The simple act of surrendering a telephone number to a
store clerk may seem innocuous—so much so that many consumers do it with no
questions asked. Yet that one action can set in motion a cascade of silent
events, as that data point is acquired, analyzed, categorized, stored and sold
over and over again. Future attacks on your privacy may come from anywhere, from
anyone with money to purchase that phone number you surrendered. If you doubt
the multiplier effect, consider your e-mail inbox. If it's loaded with spam,
it's undoubtedly because at some point in time you unknowingly surrendered your
e-mail to the wrong Web site. Do you think your telephone
number or address are handled differently? A cottage industry of small companies
with names you've probably never heard of—like Acxiom or Merlin—buy and sell
your personal information the way other commodities like corn or cattle futures
are bartered. You may think your cell phone is unlisted, but if you've ever
ordered a pizza, it might not be. Merlin is one of many commercial data brokers
that advertises sale of unlisted phone numbers compiled from various
sources—including pizza delivery companies. These unintended, unpredictable
consequences that flow from simple actions make privacy issues difficult to
grasp, and grapple with. In a larger sense, privacy also is
often cast as a tale of "Big Brother"—the government is watching you or a big
corporation is watching you. But privacy issues don't necessarily involve large
faceless institutions: A spouse takes a casual glance at her husband's
Blackberry, a co-worker looks at e-mail over your shoulder or a friend glances
at a cell phone text message from the next seat on the bus. While very little of
this is news to anyone—people are now well aware there are video cameras and
Internet cookies everywhere—there is abundant evidence that people live their
lives ignorant of the monitoring, assuming a mythical level of privacy. People
write e-mails and type instant messages they never expect anyone to see. Just
ask Mark Foley or even Bill Gates, whose e-mails were a cornerstone of the
Justice Department's antitrust case against Microsoft. And
polls and studies have repeatedly shown that Americans are indifferent to
privacy concerns. The general defense for such indifference is summed up a
single phrase: "I have nothing to hide. " If you have nothing to hide, why
shouldn't the government be able to peek at your phone records, your wife see
your e-mail or a company send you junk mail? It's a powerful argument, one that
privacy advocates spend considerable time discussing and strategizing
over. It is hard to deny, however, that people behave different
when they're being watched. And it is also impossible to deny that Americans are
now being watched more than at any time in history.
单选题To which of the following is the author most likely to agree?
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单选题Virtually everything astronomers know about objects outside the solar system is based on the detection of photons-quanta of electromagnetic radiation. Yet there is another form of radiation that permeates the universe: neutrinos. With (as its name implies) no electric charge, and negligible mass, the neutrino interacts with other particles so rarely that a neutrino can cross the entire universe, even traversing substantial aggregations of matter, without being absorbed or even deflected. Neutrinos can thus escape from regions of space where light and other kinds of electromagnetic radiation are blocked by matter. Not a single, validated observation of an extraterrestrial neutrino has so far been produced despite the construction of a string of elaborate observatories, mounted on the earth from Southern India to Utah to South Africa. However, the detection of extraterrestrial neutrinos are of great significance in the study of astronomy. Neutrinos carry with Their information about the site and circumstances of their production; therefore, the detection of cosmic neutrinos could provide new information about a wide variety of cosmic phenomena and about the history of the universe. How can scientists detect a particle that interacts so infrequently with other matter? Twenty-five years passed between Pauli's hypothesis that the neutrino existed and its actual detection; since then virtually all research with neutrinos has been with neutrinos created artificially in large particle accelerators and studied under neutrino microscopes. But a neutrino telescope, capable of detecting cosmic neutrinos, is difficult to construct. No apparatus can detect neutrinos unless it is extremely massive, because great mass is synonymous with huge numbers of nucleons (neutrons and protons), and the more massive the detector, the greater the probability of one of its nucleon's reacting with a neutrino. In addition, the apparatus must be sufficiently shielded from the interfering effects of other particles. Fortunately, a group of astrophysicists has proposed a means of detecting cosmic neutrinos by harnessing the mass of the ocean. Named DUMAND, for Deep Underwater Muon and Neutrino Detector, the project calls for placing an array of light sensors at a depth of five kilometers under the ocean surface. The detecting medium is the sea water itself: when a neutrino interacts with a particle in an atom of seawater, the result is a cascade of electrically charged particles and a flash of light that can be detected by the sensors. The five kilometers of seawater above the sensors will shield them from the interfering effects of other high-energy particles raining down through the atmosphere. The strongest motivation for the DUMAND project is that it will exploit an important source of information about the universe. The extension of astronomy from visible light to radio waves to x-rays and gamma rays never failed to lead to the discovery of unusual objects such as radio galaxies, quasars, and pulsars. Each of these discoveries came as a surprise. Neutrino astronomy will doubtlessly bring its own share of surprises.
单选题Which of the following is NOT correct according to the third paragraph?
