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Questions 1-5
Complete the notes below.
Write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER for each answer.
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on
Reading Passage 1 below.
Natural History Museum Expedition 'Poses Genocide
Threat' to Paraguay Tribes Anthropologists and
indigenous leaders have warned that a Natural History Museum expedition to
Paraguay could lead to 'genocide' and are calling for it to be abandoned. They
fear that the scientists and their teams of assistants are likely to make
accidental contact with isolated indigenous groups in the remote region they are
planning to visit and could pass on infectious diseases. The
expedition is due to set off in the next few days for two of the remotest
regions of the vast dry forest known as the Gran Chaco, which stretches over
northern Paraguay, Bolivia and Argentina. The expedition organisers hope to find
several hundred new species of plants and insects. But the two sites where the
British and Paraguayan teams of botanists, biologists and other scientists plan
to stay in for up to a month are known to be home to groups of Ayoreo Indians.
They live in voluntary isolation and reject and avoid all contact with
Westerners, said Benno Glauser, director of leading indigenous peoples'
protection group Iniciativa Amotocodie. Glauser, with the
backing of Ayoreo leaders who have left the forest in the last 20 years, has
sent the museum more than 40 pieces of data showing the presence of isolated
peoples in the Chovoreca and Cabrera Timane regions. 'According to our data, the
expedition you plan constitutes beyond any doubt an extremely high risk for the
integrity, safety and legal rights of life and self-determination of the
isolated Ayoreo, as well as for the integrity and stability of their
territories. There exists a considerable menace and risk also for the safety of
the scientists taking part of the expedition, as well as the rest of expedition
participants,' says Glauser in a letter to the museum. Until
about 1950 it is estimated that around 5,000 Ayoreo lived in the Chaco forest as
isolated hunter-gatherers without contact with the ranchers and religious groups
who were given land by the Paraguayan government. Since then almost all have
left the forest after being targeted by American missionaries. It is estimated
that there are now only six or seven isolated groups numbering around 150 people
in total. It is now the only place in South America outside the Amazon where
uncontacted Indians still live. Ayoreo leaders who have settled
near the town of Filadelfia in northern Paraguay this week appealed to the
president of Paraguay and the Natural History Museum to abandon the expedition,
saying that their relatives were in grave danger. 'Both of these regions belong
to the Ayoreo indigenous territory... We know that our people still live in the
forest and they don't want to leave it to join white civilisation.' He said
there are at least three uncontacted groups in the area. 'If this expedition
goes ahead we will not be able to understand why you prefer to lose human lives
just because the English scientists want to study plants and animals. There is
too much risk: the people in the forest die frequently from catching white
people's diseases. Because the white people leave their rubbish, their clothes,
or other contaminated things. It's very serious. It's like a genocide,' they
said in a statement. According to Survival International, a NGO
that campaigns for the rights of tribal peoples, contact with any isolated
Indians would be disastrous for either party. 'Contact with isolated groups is
invariably violent, sometimes fatal and always disastrous,' said Jonathan
Mazower, a spokesman. 'It is highly likely that there are small groups of
isolated Indians scattered throughout the Chaco. The only sensible thing to do
is err on the side of caution because any accidental contact can be disastrous.
This has happened before [in the Chaco]. On two previous occasions, in 1979 and
1986 expeditions were sent in by U.S. missionaries to bring out Indians and
people were killed on both occasions.' The expedition, one of
the largest undertaken by the museum in more than 50 years, has taken several
years to plan and is believed to be costing more than £300,000. It hopes to map
and record species of thousands of plants and insects, which will then go to
local Paraguayan museums. Until last month, the museum's website had claimed
that the area the scientists will visit 'has not been explored by human beings'.
This created consternation in the Ayoreo communities. 'Some people say they are
going to places in which no human being has ever been. That means we Ayoreo are
not human beings,' said one of the leaders in a statement to the Guardian. 'Our
uncontacted brothers have the right to decide how they want to live—if they want
to leave or not.' The Chaco, known as 'green hell' is one of
the least hospitable but most biologically diverse places on Earth. The barely
populated expanse of almost impenetrable forest is twice the size of the UK, but
home to at least 3,400 plant species, 500 bird species, 150 species of mammals,
120 species of reptiles, and 100 species of amphibians. Jaguars, pumas, giant
anteaters and giant otters are common. In a statement, the
Natural History Museum said it had planned the expedition in conjunction with
the Paraguayan government and would be working with Ayoreo Indians. It
continued: 'We are delighted to be working with representatives of the
indigenous people. This gives us a wonderful opportunity to combine
traditionally acquired knowledge with scientifically acquired knowledge to our
mutual benefit. As with all expeditions, the team is continually reviewing the
situation. Our primary concern is for the welfare of the members of the
expedition team and the people of the Dry Chaco region.'
—Guardian
Questions
3-4 Choose the correct letter from A-C for each
answer.
The Flavour Industry
A. Read through the nutritional information on the food in your freezer, refrigerator or kitchen pantry, and you are likely to find a simple, innocuous-looking ingredient recurring on a number of products: "natural flavour". The story of what natural flavour is, how it got into your food, and where it came from, is the result of more complex processes than you might imagine.
B. During the 1980s, health watchdogs and nutritionists began turning their attention to cholesterol, a waxy steroid metabolite that we mainly consume from animal-sourced products such as cheese, egg yolks, beef, poultry, shrimp and pork. Nutritionists blamed cholesterol for contributing to the growing rates of obesity, heart disease, diabetes and several cancers in Western societies. As extensive recognition of the matter grew amongst the common people, McDonalds stopped cooking their French fries in a mixture of cottonseed oil and beef tallow, and in 1990 the restaurant chain began using 100% vegetable oil instead.
C. This substantially lowered the amount of cholesterol in McDonalds" fries, but it created a new dilemma. The beef tallow and cottonseed oil mixture gave the French fries high cholesterol content, but it also gifted them with a rich aroma and "mouth-feel" that even James Beard, an American food critic, admitted he enjoyed. Pure vegetable oil is bland in comparison. Looking at the current ingredients" list of McDonalds" French fries, however, it is easy to see how they overcame this predicament. Aside from a few preservatives, there are essentially three main ingredients: potato, soybean oil, and the mysterious component of "natural flavour".
D. Natural flavour also entered our diet through the rise in processed foods, which now make up over 90% (and growing) of the American diet, as well as representing a burgeoning industry in developing countries such as China and India. Processed foods are essentially any foods that have been boxed, bagged, canned or packaged, and have a list of ingredients on the label. Sometimes, the processing involves adding a little sodium or sugar, and a few preservatives. Often, however, it is coloured, bleached, stabilised, emulsified, dehydrated, odour-concealed and sweetened. This process typically saps any original flavour out of the product, and so, of course, flavour must be added back in as well.
E. Often this is "natural flavour", but while the term may bring to mind images of fresh barley, hand-ground spices and dried herbs being traded in a bustling street market, most of these natural sources are in fact engineered to culinary perfection in a set of factories and plants off the New Jersey Turnpike outside of New York. Here, firms such as International Flavors & Fragrances, Harmen & Reimer, Flavor Dynamics, Frutarom and Elan Chemical isolate and manufacture the tastes that are incorporated in much of what we eat and drink. The sweet, summery burst of naturally squeezed orange juice, the wood-smoked aroma in barbeque sauces, and the creamy, buttery, fresh taste in many dairy products do not come from sundrenched meadows or backyard grills, but are formed in the labs and test tubes of these flavour industry giants.
F. The scientists—dubbed "flavourists"—who create the potent chemicals that set our olfactory senses to overdrive use a mix of techniques that have been refined over many years. Part of it is dense, intricate chemistry: spectrometers, gas chromatographs and headspace-vapour analysers can break down components of a flavour in amounts as minute as one part per billion. Not to be outdone, however, the human nose can isolate aromas down to three parts per trillion. Flavourists therefore consider their work as much an art as a science, and flavourism requires a nose "trained" with a delicate and poetic sense of balance.
G. Should we be wary of the industrialisation of natural flavour? On its own, the trend may not present any clear reason for alarm. Nutritionists widely agree that the real assault on health in the last few decades stems from an "unholy trinity" of sugar, fat and sodium in processed foods. Natural flavour on its own is not a health risk. It does play a role, however, in helping these processed foods to taste fresh and nutritious, even when they are not. So while the natural flavour industry should not be considered the culprit, we might think of it as a willing accomplice.
{{B}}Questions 11-15{{/B}}Complete the following sentences using {{B}}NO MORE
THAN TWO WORDS{{/B}} for each gap.
According to the text, {{B}}FIVE{{/B}} of the following statements are true.
Write the corresponding letters in answer boxes 18 to 22 in any order.
A. It is not a problem if illegal immigrants buy fake IDs.B. Identity
theft is often hard to discover immediately.C. Symantec is a new firm.D.
Phishing scams involve convincing people to give their details over the
intemet.E. Honest computer security testers tell the software company when
they find zero day exploits.F. Trojan horses only steal online bank account
information.G. People shouldn't respond to emails asking for confidential
information.H. Check for online security measures before buying things
online.
What is the International Criminal Court? The International Criminal Court (ICC), based in The Hague, Netherlands and established on July 1, 2002, is the first permanent court that can promote the rule of law and ensure that the gravest international crimes do not go unpunished. It has the power to prosecute serious crimes against humanity no matter who committed them and try people for gross violations of human rights, such as those committed during military conflicts. A total of 18 judges have been elected of which 7 are women. How was the International Criminal Court created? On July 17, 1998, the Rome Statute of the ICC was adopted despite the fact 7 countries, namely the USA, China, Iraq, Israel, Libya, Qatar and Yemen, out of 127 voted against it. Bi-or tri-annual meetings of the United Nations Preparatory Commission for the ICC were held on the subject of the ICC. The Preparatory Commission was responsible for producing a great deal of work on the jurisdiction, structure and functions of the ICC, including a complementary set of rules of procedures and evidence for investigating and prosecuting genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes. After receiving 60 ratifications (now 90) by April 11, 2002, the Statute finally came into force on July 1, 2002. Since then governments that have ratified and acceded to the Statute have convened in the Assembly of States Parties which is the governing body responsible for the political, legislative, financial and management oversight of the ICC. United States and the ICC What most people have found surprising are the actions of the US to oppose the ICC. Human Rights organisations and social justice groups are outraged at the stance that the US has taken. Their main complaint is that the US signed up just before the December 2000 deadline, allowing it to be a State Party that could participate in decision making about how the Court works even though it opposed the ICC from the start. The Bush Administration then unsigned in May 2002. Secondly, the US threatened to use military force if US nationals were held at The Hague. Thirdly, the US will restrict its participation in United Nations peacekeeping unless it obtains immunity from prosecution. Thus, it is a condition of the United States' participation in the ICC that such participation can be waived by the president on 'national interest' grounds. This can be seen as saying "we will help you bring others to justice, but not us". Finally, the US continues to pressure many countries to sign agreements not to surrender US citizens to the ICC. Some methods they have employed to do so are financial incentives, economic sanctions and the withdrawal of military aid (on July 1, 2003, the Bush Administration cut off military aid to 35 friendly countries). According to some of the agreements, the US may use military force to liberate any American or US allied citizen held by the court in The Hague. Some activists have dubbed this act as the "Hague Invasion Act". The US has had some success in gaining impunity agreements to date. It has received 79 signatures to Bilateral Immunity Agreements, 36 State Parties have signed, 27 States have received permanent waivers and they have 14 ratifications of Bilateral Immunity Agreements. On the other hand, 58 of 94 State Parties have not signed, 45 of which have publicly refused signing, and 23 have not signed despite loss of US aid. What work remains to be done to ensure the ICC's effective functioning? Each nation must cooperate with the ICC in the campaign for universal ratification and effective implementation of the Rome Statute. They must adopt complementary national legislation to allow for national-level prosecutions of the same crimes. Furthermore, like the UN and other independent international institutions, the ICC relies on a separate agreement known as the Agreement on Privileges and Immunities to protect the Court and its personnel. Both State Parties and non-State Parties must ratify this agreement to ensure the safe access of ICC staff to their territory and the unimpeded transfer of evidence, witnesses and other information to and from the Court. While every region of the world is represented amongst ratifying countries, further support is needed from key regions, including Asia and the Middle East.
What does the clerk say about deductibles?
According to the text, {{B}}FIVE{{/B}} of the following statements are true.
Write the corresponding letters in answer boxes 18 to 22 in any order.
A Germany has the highest percentage of childless
women. B Italy and Poland have high birth
rates. C Most of the reasons given by Michael Teitelbaum
are not unique to Germany. D Communist governments in
Europe encouraged people to have children. E In 1979,
most families had one or two children. F European women
who have a child later usually have more soon after. G In
2001, people wanted fewer children than in 1979, according to Eurobarometer
research. H Here may be a natural level at which birth
rates stop declining.
判断题The production of fish in many countries, like Denmark, increased due to the environmental restriction.
判断题In order to take Danish fish farming a stage further, several measures would be taken, including the expansion of the modem fish farming.
判断题Population growth need increased building of homes and other structures in areas where were used to be forests.
判断题African farmers would get the same result with European and American ones if they used the same kind of technology.
判断题More than 10 groups and organisations worldwide made food the top priority.
多选题{{B}}Questions 4-8{{/B}}Complete the following information using {{B}}ONE{{/B}}
word for each gap.
Type of laptop
Advantages
Disadvantages
Budget
suitable for routine use cheaper
4.______ processors
5.______features lower screen quality
Workhorse or Multimedia
more built-in devices
6.______ screens better 7.______ and video components
weight battery-efficiency
Slim-and-light
weight
may require external components
Tablet
hand-held use handwriting-recognition 8.______
expensive
多选题Which of the following are the top 3 that hold the largest percentage of the marks?
多选题Geoff Hayward is concerned about A. the quality of students. B. the ability of students to communicate properly. C. there being too much focus on examinations at schools.
多选题Who will be refused by the company?