单选题I hope you are not_____that I obtained this money dishonestly.
单选题The crucial years of the Depression, as they are brought into historical focus, increasingly emerge as the decisive decade for American art, if not for American culture in general. For it was during this decade that many of the conflicts which had blocked the progress of American art in the past came to a head and sometimes boiled over. Janus-faced, the thirties look backward, sometimes as far as the Renaissance; and at the same time forward, as far as the present and beyond. It was the moment when artists, like Thomas Hart Benton, who wished to turn back the clock to regain the virtues of simpler times came into direct conflict with others, like Stuart Davis and Frank Lloyd Wright, who were ready to come to terms with the Machine Age and to deal with its consequences. America in the thirties was changing rapidly. In many areas the past was giving way to the present, although not without a struggle. A Predominantly rural and small town society was being replaced by the giant complexes of the big cities; power was becoming increasingly centralized in the federal government and in large corporations. Many Americans, deeply attached to the old way of life, felt disinherited. At the same time, as immigration decreased and the population became more homogeneous, the need arose in art arid literature to commemorate the ethnic and regional differences that were fast disappearing. Thus, paradoxically, the conviction that art, at least, should serve some purpose or carry some message of moral uplift grew stronger as the Puritan ethos lost its contemporary reality. Often this elevating message was a sermon in favor of just those traditional American virtues, which were now threatened with obsolescence in a changed social and political context. In this new context, the appeal of the paintings by the regionalists and the American Scene painters often lay in their ability to recreate an atmosphere that glorified the traditional American values-self-reliance tempered with good-neighborliness, independence modified by a sense of community, hard work rewarded by a sense of order and purpose. Given the actual temper of the times, these themes were strangely anachronistic, just as the rhetoric supporting political isolationism was equally inappropriate in an international situation soon to involve America in a second world war. Such themes gained popularity because they filled a genome need for a comfortable collective fantasy of a God-fearing, white-picketfence America, which in retrospect took on the nostalgic appeal of a lost Golden Age. In this light, an autonomous art-for-art's sake was viewed as a foreign invader liable to subvert the native American desire for a purposeful art. Abstract art was assigned the role of the villainous alien; realism was to personify the genuine American means of expression. The arguments drew favor in many camps: among the artists, because most were realists; among the politically oriented intellectuals, because abstract art was apolitical; and among museum officials, because they were surfeited with mediocre imitations of European modernism and were convinced that American art must develop its own distinct identity. To help along this road to self-definition, the museums were prepared to set up an artificial double standard, one for American art, and another for European art. In 1934, Ralph Flint wrote in Art News, "We have today in our midst a greater array of what may be called second-, third-, and fourth string artists than any other country. Our big annuals are marvelous outpourings of intelligence and skill; they have all the diversity and animation of a fine-ring circus./
单选题In August 2004, Duke University provided free iPods to its entire freshman class. The next month, a Korean education firm offered free downloadable college entrance exam lectures to students who purchased an iRiver personal multimedia player. That October, a financial trading firm in Chicago was reportedly assessing the hand-eye coordination of traders" using GameBoys. Yet while such innovative applications abound, the use of technology in education and training is far from new, a fact as true in language classrooms as it is in medical schools.
Practically since their availability, a succession of audiovisual recording devices ( e. g. , reel-to- reel, VCRs, PCs) has been used to capture language samples, and myriad playback and broadcast devices (e. g. , phonographs, radios, televisions) have provided access to authentic speech samples. The espousal of audiolingual theory in the 1950s brought the widespread use of the language laboratory in educational settings. Influenced by behaviorism, the lab was progressively replaced in the 1960s by drill-based computer-assisted instruction, which decades later was itself surpassed by a more intelligent, interactive and multimedia computer-assisted language learning. The popular acceptance of the Internet in the 1990s advanced the development of computer-mediated communications.
As technologies continue to evolve, so does their propensity to shrink in size. "Other technologies that hold the capacity for language learning include PDAs, multimedia cellular phones, MP3 players, DVD players, and digital dictionaries. " Such portable media—referred to in popular and scholarly literature as mobile, wireless, handheld or nomadic—are now social staples. Mobile learning, or m-learning, is a burgeoning subdivision of the e-learning movement, further evidenced by European initiatives such as m-learning and Mobilearn. In this paper, applied fusions of m-learning and language learning follow, after which their benefits and challenges are reviewed.
单选题He reminded me of what I should have forgotten. ______
单选题Being born in the summer could give you a sunny disposition for life. And a winter birthday might cast a permanent shadow your happiness, scientists believe. A. through B. cross C. beneath D. over
单选题They were more than glad to leave their cars parked and walked ________ a change.
单选题One______needed when making a cake is flour; another is sugar.
单选题The early retirement of experienced workers is seriously harming the US economy, according to a new report from the Hudson Institute, a public policy research organization. Currently, many older experienced workers retire at an early age. According to the recently issued statistics, 79 percent of qualified workers begin collecting retirement benefits at age 62; if that trend continues, there will be a labor shortage that will hinder the economic growth in the twenty-first century.
Older Americans constitute an increasing proportion of the population, according to the US Census Bureau, and the population of those over age 65 will grow by 60% between 2001 and 2020. During the same period, the group aged 18 to 44 will increase by only 4%. Keeping older skilled workers employed, even part time, would increase US economic output and strengthen the tax base; but without significant policy reforms, massive early retirement among baby boomers seems more likely.
Retirement at age 62 is an economically rational decision today. Social Security and Medicaid earnings limits and tax penalties subject our most experienced workers to marginal tax rates as high as 67%. Social Security formulas encourage early retirement. Although incomes usually rise with additional years of work, any pay increases after the 35-year mark result in higher social Security taxes but only small increases in benefits.
Hudson Institute researchers believe that federal tax and benefit policies are at fault and reforms are urgently needed, but they disagree with the popular proposal that much older Americans will have to work because Social Security will not support them and that baby boomers are not saving enough for retirement. According to the increase in 401 (k) and Keogh retirement plans, the ongoing stock market on Wall Street, and the likelihood of large inheritances, there is evidence that baby boomers will reach age 65 with greater financial assets than previous generations.
The Hudson institute advocates reforming government policies that now discourage work and savings, especially for older worker. Among the report"s recommendations: Tax half of all Social Security benefits. regardless of other income; provide 8% larger benefits for each year beyond 65; and permit workers nearing retirement to negotiate compensation packages that may include a lower salary but with greater healthcare benefits. However, it may take real and fruitful planning to find the right solution to the early retirement of older experienced workers; any measures taken must be allowed to prolong the serviceability of older experienced workers.
单选题(略){{B}}Part Ⅱ Reading Comprehension{{/B}}Each passage is
followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each or them there are
four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice and then
mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.
I have had just about enough of being treated like a
second-class citizen, simply because I happen to be that put-upon member of
society--a customer. The more I go into shops and hotels, banks and post
offices, railway stations, airports and the like, the more I am convinced the
things are being run solely to suit the firm, the system, or the union. There
seems to be a deceptive new motto for so-called "service" organizations--Staff
Before Service. How often, for example, have you queued for what
seems like hours at the Post office or the supermarket because there were not
enough staff on duty to man all the service grilles or checkout counters? Sure?
in these days of high unemployment it must be possible to hire cashiers and
counter staff. Yet supermarkets, hinting darkly at higher prices, claim that
uncovering all their cash registers at any one time would increase overheads.
And the Post office says we cannot expect all their service grilles to be
occupied "at times when demand is low". It is the same with
hotels. Because waiters and kitchen staff must finish when it suits them, dining
rooms close earlier or menu choice is cut short. As for us guests, we just have
to put up with it. There is also the nonsense of so many friendly hotel night
porters having been thrown out of their jobs in the interests of "efficiency"
(i. e. profits) and replaced by coin--eating machines which offer everything
from lager to laxatives. Not to mention the creeping threat of the tea-making
kit in your room: a kettle with a mixed collection of tea bags, plastic milk
cartons and lump sugar. Who wants to wake up to a raw teabag? I do not,
especially when I am paying for "service". Can it be stopped,
this worsening of service, this growing attitude that the customer is always a
nuisance? I angrily hope so because it is happening, sadly, in all walks of
life. Our only hope is to hammer home our anger whenever and
wherever we can and, if all else fails, bring back into practice that other,
older slogan--Take Our Custom Elsewhere.
单选题
The nuclear age in which the human race
is living, and may soon be dying, began for the general public with the dropping
of an atom bomb on Hiroshima on 6 August 1945. But for nuclear scientists and
for certain American authorities, it had been known for some time that such a
weapon was possible. Work towards making it had been begun by the United States,
Canada and Britain very soon after the beginning of the Second World War. The
existence of possibly explosive forces in the nuclei of atoms had been known
ever since the structure of atoms was discovered by Rutherford.
An atom consists of a tiny core called the "nucleus" with attendant
electrons circling round it. The hydrogen atom, which is the simplest and
lightest, has only one electron. Heavier atoms have more and more as they go up
the scale. The first discovery that had to do with what goes on in nuclei was
radioactivity, which is caused by particles being shot out of the nucleus. It
was known that a great deal of energy is locked up in the nucleus, but, until
just before the outbreak of the Second World War, there was no way of releasing
this energy in any large quantity. A revolutionary discovery was that, in
certain circumstances, mass can be transformed into energy in accordance with
Einstein's formula which states that the energy generated is equal to the mass
lost multiplied by the square of the velocity of light. The
A-bomb, however, used a different process, depending upon radioactivity. In this
process, called "fission", a heavier atom splits into two lighter atoms. In
general, in radioactive substances this fission proceeds at a constant rate
which is slow where substances occurring in nature are concerned. But there is
one form of uranium called "U235" which, when it is pure, sets up a chain
reaction which spreads like fire, though with enormously greater rapidity. It is
this substance which was used in making the atom bomb. The
political background of the atomic scientists' work was the determination to
defeat the Nazis. It was held--I think rightly--that a Nazi victory would be an
appalling disaster. It was also held, in Western countries, that German
scientists must be well advanced towards making an A-bomb, and that if they
succeeded before the West did they would probably win the war. When the war was
over, it was discovered, to the complete astonishment of both American and
British scientists, that the Germans were nowhere near success, and as everybody
knows, the Germans were defeated before any nuclear weapons had been made. But I
do not think that nuclear scientists of the West can be blamed for thinking the
work urgent and necessary. Even Einstein favored it. When,
however, the German war was finished, the great majority of those scientists who
had collaborated towards making the A-bomb considered that it should not be used
against the Japanese, who were already on the verge of defeat and, in any case,
did not constitute such a menace to the world as Hitler. Many of them made
urgent representations to the American Government advocating that, instead of
using the bomb as a weapon of war, they should after a public announcement,
explode it in a desert, and that future control of nuclear energy should be
placed in the hands of an international authority. Seven of the most eminent of
nuclear scientists drew up what is known as "The Franck Report" which they
presented to the Secretary of War in June 1945. This is a very admirable and
far-seeing document, and if it had won the assent of the politicians, none of
our subsequent terrors would have arisen.
单选题
单选题in the following paragraphs the author will most probably go on to discuss _____.
单选题Nobody knew how he came up with this ______ idea about the trip.
单选题Radical environmentalists have blamed pollutants and synthetic chemicals in pesticides for the Udisruption /Uof human hormones.
单选题
单选题Most of them had visited the invalid often during the past few months, marveling at his ______ spirit and his unfailing good temper.
单选题Concern with money, and then more money, in order to buy the conveniences and luxuries of modern life, has brought great changes to the lives of most Frenchmen. More people are working than ever before in France. In the cities the traditional leisurely midday meal is disappearing. Offices, shops and factories are discovering the greater efficiency of a short lunch hour in company lunchrooms. In almost all lines of work emphasis now falls on ever-increasing output. Thus the "typical" Frenchman produces more, earns more, and buys more consumer goods than his counterpart of only a generation ago. He gains in creature comforts and ease of life. What he loses to some extent is his sense of personal uniqueness, or individuality. Some say that France has been Americanized. This is because the United States is a world symbol of the technological society and its consumer products. The so-called Americanization of France has its critics. They fear that "assembly-line life" will lead to the disappearance of the pleasures of the more graceful and leisurely old French style. What will happen, they ask, to taste, elegance, and the cultivation of the good things in life--to joy in the smell of a freshly, picked apple, a stroll by the river, or just happy hours of conversation in a local cafe? Since the late 1950's life in France has indeed taken on qualities of rush, tension, and the pursuit of material gain. Some of the strongest critics of the new way of life are the young, especially university students. They are concerned with the future, and they fear that France is threatened by the triumph of the competitive, goods-oriented culture. Occasionally, they have reacted against the trend with considerable violence. In spite of the critics, however, countless Frenchmen are committed to keeping France in the forefront of the modern economic world. They find that the present life brings more rewards, conveniences, and pleasures than that of the past. They believe that a modern, industrial France is preferable to the old.
单选题Our new firm ______ for a credible, aggressive individual with great
skills to fill this position.
A. have looked
B. are looking
C. is looking
D. look
单选题We complain of the darkness in which we live out our lives: we do not understand the nature of existence in general; we especially do not know the relation of our own self to the rest of existence. Not only is our life short, our knowledge is limited entirely to it, since we can see ______ back before our birth ______ out beyond our death, so that our consciousness is as it were a lightning-flash momentarily illuminating the night, it truly seems as though a demon had maliciously shut off all further knowledge from us so as to enjoy our discomfiture. A. either... or B. neither... nor C. both... and D. not only... but also
单选题Which of the following may replace the phrase "trawl through"(Line4, Par
