单选题He scarcely cares for anything, ______?
单选题Which of the following cities is closest to Berlin in weather conditions?
单选题I can't decide whether to go sailing or, because of the bad weather forecast, ______ at home. A. stay B. staying C. to stay D. whether stay
单选题
QUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES TO THE FAR EAST!
Airline
Destination
Travel Dates
Fares from
Atlantic
Hong Kong
26 Aug. 07 - 30 Sep. 07
25 Oct. 07 - 14 Dee. 07
25 Dee. 07 - 20 Mar. 07
£284
Cathy Pacific
Hong Kong
20 Aug. 07 - 31 Aug. 07
£670
Air New Zealand
Hong Kong
26 Aug. 07 - 30 Sep. 07
25 Oct. 07 - 14 Dec. 07
25 Dee. 07 - 20 Mar. 07
27 Mar. 07 - 31 Mar. 07
£282
China Eastern
Shanghai
20 Aug. 07 - 30 Nov. 07
24 Dec. 07 - 12 Mar. 07
24 Mar. 07 - 31 Mar. 07
£260
Lufthansa
Beijing
20 Aug. 07 - 31 Dec. 07
£233
Austrian
Beijing
20 Aug. 07 - 31 Aug. 07
15 Dec. 07 - 31 Dec. 07
£445
China Eastern
Beijing
20 Aug. 07 - 30 Nov. 07
24 Dee. 07 - 12 Mar. 07
24 Mar. 07 - 31 Mar. 07
£300
Singapore Airlines
Singapore, Hanoi
20 Aug. 07 - 30 Nov. 07
£425
Thai
Bangkok
Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City
20 Aug. 07 - 30 Nov. 07
£335
£395
ALL TAXES AND CHARGES ARE NOT INCLUDED
For any other alternative dates please call our reservation hotline: 0207 484 8900. All tours can be tailor-made for individual/group travel therefore please call our tour department on 0207 484 8925 for further details.
单选题The earthquake ______ not have come at a worse time for the war-torn country. A. could B. must C. might D. should
单选题
单选题At the International Snow Sculpture Championships in Colorado on January 27, people will carve the white stuff into art. Planning begin mouths before the first snow falls. Teams submit applications and sketches of their sculptures in July. Then, a panel of judges chooses 14 teams for the championship.
The rules are simple: Electric tools are not allowed. Teams carve snow with everything but the results are not entirely in the sculptors" hands, "if it is extremely sunny and warm." DeWall, the competition"s director of public relations, explained, "we will erect old sail from sail boats into the air to block the sun from melting the sculptures." If it snows, she continued, teams have to work extra hard to scrape (刮掉) the new snow off their work.
The judges look for creativity, technical skill, and overall impact on the viewer. The winner does not receive any money. "There is no cash prize because the event began with the concept of global camaraderie(情谊)." DeWall explained. Instead of focusing on money, she continued, "winners revel (纵情) in the friendship, the art, and the hard work."
单选题
单选题 A scientist who wants to predict the way in which
consumers (消费者) will spend their money must study consumer behavior. He must
obtain data both on the resources of consumers and on the motives that tend to
encourage or discourage money spending. If an economist were asked
which of three groups borrow most--people with rising incomes, stable incomes,
or decreasing incomes--he would probably answer, those with decreasing
incomes. Actually in the years 1947--1950, the answer was: people with
rising incomes. People with decreasing incomes were next and people with
stable incomes borrowed the least. This shows us that traditional
assumptions (假设) about earning and spending are not always reliable.
Another traditional assumption is that if people who have money expect prices to
go up they will hasten to buy. If they expect prices to go down, they will
postpone buying. But research surveys have shown that this is not always
true. The expectations of price increases may not stimulate
buying. One typical attitude was expressed by the wife of a mechanic in an
interview at a time of rising prices. "In a few months," she said, "we'll
have pay more for meat and milk;we'll have less to spend on other things. " Her
family had been planning to buy a new car but they postponed this
purchase. Furthermore, the rise in prices that has already taken place may
be disliked and buyer's resistance may be produced. This is shown by the
following typical comment. "I just don't pay these prices; they are too high. "
The investigations mentioned above were carried out in America. The
condition most helpful to spending appears to be price stability. If
prices have been stable and people consider that they are reasonable, they are
likely to buy. Thus, it appears that the common business policy of
maintaining stable prices is based on a correct understanding of consumer
psychology.
单选题{{B}}Passage Three{{/B}}
The United States in the 1990s has had
seven years of economic boom with low unemployment, low inflation, and low
government deficit. Amid all of this good news, inequality has increased and
wages have barely risen. Common sense knowledge seems to be right in this
instance, that is, the rich get richer, the poor get poorer, and the middle
class is shrinking. Though President Clinton boasts that the number of people on
welfare has decreased significantly under his regime to 8 million, a 44% decline
from 1994, he forgets that there are still 36.5 million poor people in the
United States, which is only a 2% decline in the same amount of time. How is it
possible that we have increasing inequality during economic
prosperity? This contradiction is not easily explained by the
dominant neoclassical economic discourse of our time. Nor is it resolved by
neoconservative social policy. More helpful is the one book under review: James
K. Galbraith's Created Unequal, a Keynesian analysis of increasing wage
inequality. James K. Galbraith provides a multicausal analysis
that blames the current free market monetary policy for the increasing wage
inequality. He calls for a rebellion in economic analysis and policy and for a
reapplication of Keynesian macroeconomics to solve the problem. In Created
Unequal, Galbraith successfully debunks the conservative contention that wage
inequality is necessary because the new skill-based technological innovation
requires educated workers who are in short supply. For Galbraith, this is a
fantasy. He also critiques their two other assertions: first, that global
competition requires an increase in inequality and that the maintenance of
inequality is necessary to fight inflation. He points to transfer payments that
are mediated by the state: payment to the poor in the form of welfare is minor
relative to payment to the elderly in the form of social security or to the rich
in the form of interest on public and private debt. Galbraith
minimizes the social indicators of race, gender, and class and tells us that
these are not important in understanding wage inequality. What is important is
Keynesian macroeconomics. To make this point, he introduces a sectoral analysis
of the economy.. Here knowledge is dominant (the K-sector) and the producers of
consumption goods (the C-sector) are in decline. The third sector is large and
low paid (the S-sector). The K-sector controls the new technologies and wields
monopoly power. Both wages and profit decline in the other two sectors. As a
result of monopoly, power inequality increases.
单选题 OUR KIDS ARE AMAZING -especially compared with
everybody else's (who seem to cry all the time). How do you show your love for
your kids this holiday season? With toys that are smooth and colorful,
interactive and exciting. And with ones that have educational value - because
you are the boss. 1. FLAX ART HOSPITAL PUZZLE AND PLAY
SET Here is a toy that doesn't need power -and the bike have to
put it together themselves. This 50-piece puzzle set is made of soft-edged
hardwood and makes a complete hospital, with an X-ray room. It also includes
eight patients, a car and a driver. MYM 135; flaxart.com. 2.
TINY LOVE ACTIVITY BALL Sure, it's cool, but this colorful baby
toy also develops problem solving and motor skills. It has a head and legs, a
magnetic hand and a tail. Suitable for little ones from 6 to 36 months. MYM
19.95; tinylove.com. 3. ROBOSAPIEN This small,
remote-control robot is really powerful. It performs 67 preprogrammed
functions, including throwing, kicking, picking up and dancing. You can even
program your own function -- which, sadly, does not include doing windows. MYM
99; robosapienonline.com. 4. MINI PEDAL CAR
Want a Mini Cooper but can't fit the family inside? Get one for the kids. They
can jump into this Mini car, which comes in hot orange with a single adjustable
seat, and ride away. But it could spoil them for that used car they'll be
driving when they turn 16. For ages 3 to 5. MYM 189; miniusabc.com ( click on
"gear up" then "Mini motoring gear" )
单选题Throughout the nation"s more than 15,000 school districts, widely differing approaches to teaching science and math have emerged. Though there can be strength in diversity, a new international analysis suggests that this variability has instead contributed to lackluster (平淡的) achievement scores by U.S. children relative to their peers in other developed countries. Indeed, concludes William H. Schmidt of Michigan State University, who led the new analysis, "no single intellectually coherent vision dominates U.S. educational practice in math or science. " The reason, he said, "is because the system is deeply and fundamentally flawed. " The new analysis, released this week by the National Science Foundation in Arlington, Va., is based on data collected from about 50 nations as part of the Third International Mathematics and Science Study. Not only do approaches to teaching science and math vary among individual U. S. communities, the report finds, but there appears to be little strategic focus within a school district"s curricula, its textbooks, or its teachers" activities. This contrasts sharply with the coordinated national programs of most other countries. On average, U.S. students study more topics within science and math than their international counterparts do. This creates an educational environment that "is a mile wide and an inch deep," Schmidt notes. For instance, eighth graders in the United States cover about 33 topics in math versus just 19 in Japan. Among science courses, the international gap is even wider. U.S. curricula for this age level resemble those of a small group of countries including Australia, Thailand, Iceland, and Bulgaria. Schmidt asks whether the United States wants to be classed with these nations, whose educational systems "share our pattern of splintered (支离破碎 的) visions" but which are not economic leaders. The new report "couldn"t come at a better time", says Gerald Wheeler, executive director of the National Science Teachers Association in Arlington. "The new National Science Education Standards provide that focused vision," including the call "to do less, but in greater depth". Implementing the new science standards and their math counterparts will be the challenge, he and Schmidt agree, because the decentralized responsibility for education in the United States requires that any reforms be tailored and instituted one community at a time. In fact, Schmidt argues, reforms such as these proposed national standards "face an almost impossible task, because even though they are intellectually coherent, each becomes only one more voice in the babble (嘈杂声). " (411 words)
单选题The whole place was ______ with tourists.
单选题The headmaster warned him to ______his ways if he wanted to stay at the school.
单选题I regret ______ him a thief, but I regret even more his stealing my watch! A. to call B. to have called C. having called D. called
单选题We can't expect ______ the habits of a lifetime in a short time. A. for one to change B. one change C. one to change D. one to be changed
单选题I need new-heels on these shoes, the present ones are_____.
单选题When college students ______ future employment, they often consider
status, income, and prestige.
A. demand
B. assume
C. apply
D. anticipate
单选题People tend to underestimate their life expectancy, and it's not surprising. It's the look around problem again: You generalize from life spans of older friends and family members and figures that's what's in store for you, too. But in an era of rapidly improving life expectancy, the look-around method once again gives the wrong answer. Life expectancy at age 65 today is 15.6 additional years for woman. For both sexes, this represents an increase of more than two years just since 1970. By the time the youngest baby boomers turn 65, the Social Security Administration projects that life expectancy at that age could be as high as 18 more years for men and 21 years for women. Note that everyone runs very nearly a 50 percent "risk" of living longer than their life expectancy. That reality makes retirement planning exceptionally difficult. On the day a husband and wife turn 65, they may have only a year or two of living between them to finance, or they may have 70. A good rule of thumb(单凭经验来做的方法) might be to plan against the possibility that you will outlive three quarters of the people in your age group — an actuarial(保险核计的) calculation our Web site calculator allows you to make. You may not want to deny a child a college education just so you are sure to have enough money to celebrate your 95th birthday, but you also don' t want to become a burden on your children just because you unexpectedly live to be 10 years older than the average life expectancy for people of your age.
单选题Smoking, which may be a pleasure for some people, is a serious source of discomfort for their fellows. Medical authorities express their (31) about the effect of smoking on the health not only (32) those who smoke but also of those who do not. In fact, nonsmokers who must involuntarily inhale the air polluted by the tobacco smoke may (33) more than the smokers themselves. As you are doubtless aware, a considerable number of our students have (34) an effort to (35) the university to ban smoking in the classrooms. I believe they are entirely right in their aim. (36) , I would hope that it is possible to achieve this by (37) on the smokers to use good judgment and show concern for others rather than (38) regulation. Smoking is prohibited by city laws in theaters and in halls used for showing films as well as in laboratories (39) there may be a fire hazard. Elsewhere, it is up to your good sense. I am therefore asking you to maintain "No Smoking" in the auditoriums and classrooms. This will prove that you have to keep nonsmokers' health and well-being (40) , which is very important to a large number of our students.
