单选题After Los Angeles, Atlanta may be America's most car-dependent city. Atlantans sentimentally give their cars names, compare speeding tickets and jealously guard any side-street where it is possible to park. The city's roads are so well worn that the first act of the new mayor, Shirley Franklin, was to start repairing potholes. In 1998, 13 metro counties lost federal highway funds because their air-pollution levels violated the Clean Air Act. The American Highway Users Alliance ranked three Atlanta interchanges among the 18 worst bottlenecks in the country. Other cities in the same fix have reorganized their highways, imposed commuter and car taxes, or expanded their public-transport systems. Atlanta does not like any of these things. Public transport is a vexed subject, too. Atlanta's metropolitan region is divided into numerous county and smaller city governments, which find it hard to work together. Railways now serve the city center and the airport, but not much else; bus stops are often near-invisible poles, offering no indication of which bus might stop there, or when. Georgia's Democratic governor, Roy Barnes, who hopes for reelection in November, has other plans. To win back the federal highway money lost under the Clean Air Act, he created the Georgia Regional Transportation Authority (GRTA), a 15 member board with the power to make the county governments, the city and the ten-county Atlanta Regional Commission cooperate on transport plans, whether they like it or not. Now GRTA has issued its own preliminary plan, allocating $ 4.5 billion over the next three years for a variety of schemes. The plan earmarks money to widen roads; to have an electric shuttle bus shuttle tourists among the elegant villas of Buckhead; and to create a commuter rail link between Atlanta and Macon, two hours to the south. Counties will be encouraged, with generous ten-to-one matching funds, to start express bus services. Public goodwill, however, may not stretch as far as the next plan, which is to build the Northern Arc highway for 65 miles across three counties north of the city limits. GRTA has allotted $270m for this. Supporters say it would ease the congestion on local roads; opponents think it would worsen over-development and traffic. The counties affected, and even GRTA's own board, are divided. The governor is in favor, however; and since he can appoint and fire GRTA'S members, that is probably the end of the story. Mr Barnes has a tendency to do as he wants, regardless. His arrogance on traffic matters could also lose him votes. But Mr Barnes think that Atlanta's slowing economy could do him more harm than the anti-sprawl movement.
单选题In the author's view, the best remedy for coping with the hard conditions in travel in cities would be to
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单选题It's all annual back-to-school routine. One morning you wave goodbye, and that (1) evening you're burning the late-night oil in sympathy. In the race to improve educational standards, (2) are throwing the books at kids. (3) elementary school students are complaining of homework (4) What's a well-meaning parent to do? As hard as (5) may he, sit back and chill, experts advise. Though you've got to get them to do it, (6) helping too much, or even examining (7) too carefully, you may keep them (8) doing it by themselves. "I wouldn't advise a parent to check every (9) assignment," says psychologist John Rosemond, author of Ending the Tough Homework. "There's a (10) of appreciation for trial and error. Let your children (11) the grade they deserve. " Many experts believe parents should gently look over the work of younger children and ask them to rethink their (12) . But "you don't want them to feel it has to be (13) ," she says. That's not to say parents should (14) homework-first, they should monitor how much homework their kids (15) . Thirty minutes a day in the early elementary years and an hour in (16) four, five, and six is standard, says Rosemond. For junior-high students it should be " (17) more than an hour and a half," and two for high school students. If your child (18) has more homework than this, you may want to check (19) other parents and then talk to the teacher about (20) assignments.
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单选题Attempts to understand the relationship between social behavior and health have their origin in history. Dubos (1969) suggested that primitive humans were closer to the animals (1) they, too, relied'upon their instincts to stay healthy. Yet some primitive humans (2) a cause and effect relationship between doing certain things and alleviating (3) of a disease or (4) the condition of a wound. (5) there was so much that primitive humans did not (6) the functioning of the body, magic became an integral component ofthe beliefs about the causes and cures of heath (7) Therefore it is not (8) that early humans thought that illness was caused (9) evil spirit. Primitive medicines made from vegetables or animals were invariably used in combination with some form of ritual to (10) harmful spirit from a diseased body. One of the. earliest (11) in the Western world to formulate principles of health care based upon rational thought and (12) of supernatural phenomena is found in the work of the Greek physician Hippocrates. The writing (13) to him has provided a number of principles underiying modern medical practice. One of his most famous (14) , the Hippocratic Oath, is the foundation of contemporary medical ethics. Hippocrates also argued that medical knowledge should be derived from a (15) of the natural science and the logic of cause and effect relationships. In this (16) thesis, On Air, Water, and Places, Hippocrates pointed out that human well-being is (17) by the totality of environmental (18) : living habits or lifestyle, climate, geography of the land, and the quality of air, and food. (19) enough, concerns about our health and the quality of air, water, and places are (20) very much written in twentieth century.
单选题{{B}}Text 4{{/B}}
It is hard to box against a southpaw,
as Apollo Creed found out when he fought Rocky Balboa in the first of an
interminable series of movies. While "Rocky" is fiction, the strategic advantage
of being left-handed in a fight is very real, simply because most right-handed
people have little experience of fighting left-handers, but not vice versa. And
the same competitive advantage is enjoyed by left-handers in other sports, such
as tennis and cricket. The orthodox view of human handedness is
that it is connected to the bilateral specialization of the brain that has
concentrated language-processing functions on the left side of that organ.
Because, long ago in the evolutionary past, an ancestor of humans (and all other
vertebrate animals) underwent a contortion that twisted its head around 180°
relative to its body, the left side of the brain controls the right side of the
body, and vice versa. In humans, the left brain (and thus the right body) is
usually dominant. And on average, lefthanders are smaller and lighter than
right-handers. That should put them at an evolutionary disadvantage. Sporting
advantage notwithstanding, therefore, the existence of left-handed-ness poses a
problem for biologists. But Charlotte Faurie and Michel Raymond, of
the University of Montpellier Ⅱ , in France, think they know the answer. As they
report in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, there is a clue in the advantage
seen in boxing. As any schoolboy could tell you, winning fights
enhances your status. If, in prehistory, this translated into increased
reproductive success, it might have been enough to maintain a certain proportion
of left-handers in the population, by balancing the costs of being left-hand-ed
with the advantages gained in fighting. If that is true, then there will be a
higher proportion of left-handers in societies with higher levels of violence,
since the advantages of being left-handed will be enhanced in such societies. Dr
Faurie and Dr Raymond set out to test this hypothesis. Fighting
in modern societies often involves the use of technology, notably firearms, that
is unlikely to give any advantage to left-handers. So Dr Faurie and Dr Raymond
decided to confine their investigation to the proportion of left-handers and the
level of violence (by number of homicides) in traditional societies.
By trawling the literature, checking with police departments, and even
going out into the field and asking people, the two researchers found that the
proportion of left-handers in a traditional society is, indeed, correlated with
its homicide rate. One of the highest proportions of left-handers, for example,
was found among the Yanomamo of South America. Rai-ding and warfare are central
to Yanomamo culture. The murder rate is 4 per 1000 inhabitants per year
(compared with, for example, 0.068 in New York). And, according to Dr Faurie and
Dr Raymond, 22.6% of Yanomamo are left-handed. In contrast, Dioula-speaking
people of Burkina Faso in West Africa are virtual pacifists. There are only
0.013 murders per 1000 inhabitants among them and only 3.4% of the population is
left-handed. While there is no suggestion that left-handed
people are more violent than the right-hand-ed, it looks as though they are more
successfully violent. Perhaps that helps to explain the double meaning of the
word "sinister".
单选题{{B}}Part A{{/B}}{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}Reading 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}}
The history of responses to the work of
the artist Sandro Botticelli (1444 ~ 1510) suggests that widespread appreciation
by critics is a relatively recent phenomenon. Writing in 1550, Vasari expressed
an unease with Botticelli's work, admitting that the artist fitted awkwardly
into his evolutionary scheme of the history of art. Over the next two centuries,
academic art historians defamed Botticelli in favor of his fellows Florentine,
Michelangelo. Even when anti-academic art historians of the early nineteenth
century rejected many of the standards of evaluation adopted by their
predecessors, Botticelli's work remained outside of accepted taste, pleasing
neither amateur observers nor {{U}}connoisseurs{{/U}}. (Many of his best
paintings, however, remained hidden away in obscure churches and private homes.
) The primary reason for Botticelli's unpopularity is not
difficult to understand: most observers, up until the midnineteenth century, did
not consider him to be noteworthy, because his work, for the most part, did not
seem to these observers to exhibit the traditional characteristics of
fifteenth-century Florentine art. For example, Botticelli rarely employed the
technique of strict perspective and, unlike Michelangelo, never used
chiaroscuro. Another reason for Botticelli's unpopularity may
have been that his attitude toward the style of classical art was very different
from that of his contemporaries. Although he was thoroughly exposed to classical
art, he showed little interest in borrowing from the classical style. Indeed, it
is paradoxical that a painter of large-scale classical subjects adopted a style
that was only slightly similar to that of classical art. In any
case, when viewers began to examine more closely the relationship of
Botticelli's work to the tradition of fifteenth-century Florentine art, his
'reputation began to grow. Analyses and assessments of Botticelli made between
1850 and 1870 by the artists of the Pre Raphaelite movement, as well as by the
writer Pater (although he, unfortunately, based his assessment on an incorrect
analysis of Botticelli's personality), inspired a new appreciation of Botticelli
throughout the English-speaking world. Yet Botticelli's work, especially the
Sistine frescoes, did not generate worldwide attention until it was finally
subjected to a comprehensive and scrupulous analysis by Home in 1908. Home
rightly demonstrated that the frescoes shared important features with paintings
by other fifteenth-century Florentines features such as skillful representation
of anatomical proportions, and of the human figure in motion. However, Home
argued that Botticelli did not treat these qualities as ends in
themselves--rather, that he emphasized clear depletion of a story, a unique
achievement and one that made the traditional Florentine qualities less central.
Because of Home's emphasis crucial to any study of art, the twentieth century
has come to appreciate Bottieelli's
achievements.
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单选题{{B}}Text 2{{/B}}
On Mar. 14, when Wal-Mart Stores Inc.
announced its first foray into Japan, the Bentonville (Ark.) retailing giant
placed a big bet that it could succeed where countless other foreign companies
have failed. In the past five years, a number of famous Western brands have been
forced to close up shop after failing to Catch on in Japan, one of the world's
largest—but most variable—consumer markets. May Wal-Mart {{U}}make
a go of{{/U}} it where others have stumbled? One good sign is that the mass
marketer is not rushing in blindly. It has taken an initial 6.1% stake in ailing
food-and-clothing chain Seiyu Ltd., which it can raise to a controlling 33.4% by
yearend and to 66.7% by 2007. That gives Wal-Mart time to revise its strategy—or
run for the exits. The question is whether Wal-Mart can apply
the lessons it has learned in other parts of Asia to Japan. This, after all, is
a nation of notoriously finicky consumers—who have become even more so since
Japan slipped into a decade long slump. How will Wal-Mart bring to bear its
legendary cost-cutting savvy in a market already affected by falling prices?
Analysts are understandably skeptical. "It is uncertain whether Wal-Mart's
business models will be effective in Japan," Standard & Poor's said in a
Mar. 18 report. Much depends on whether Seiyu turns out to be a
good partner. The 39-year-old retailer is a member of the reputed Seibu Saison
retail group that fell on hard times in the early '90s. It also has deep ties to
trading house Sumitomo Corp. , which will take a 15% stake in the venture with
Wal-Mart. Perhaps the best thing that can be said of Seiyu's 400-odd stores is
that they're not as deeply troubled as other local retailers. Still, there's a
gaping chasm between the two corporate cultures. "We've never been known for
cheap everyday pricing," says a Seiyu spokesman. Another potential problem is
Sumitomo, which may not want to lean on suppliers to the extent that Wal-Mart
routinely does. The clock is ticking. Wal-Mart executives say
they need several months to "study" the deal with Seiyu before acting on it, but
in the meantime a new wave of hyper-competitive Japanese and foreign rivals are
carving up the market. If Wal-Mart succeeds, it will reduce its reliance on its
home market even further and—who knows?—it may even revolutionize Japanese
retailing in the same way it has in the U. S.
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单选题For millions of years before the appearance of the electric light, shift work, allnight cable TV and the Internet, Earth's creatures evolved on a planet with predictable and reassuring 24-hour rhythms. Our biological clocks are set for this daily cycle. Simply put, our bodies want to sleep at night and be awake during the day. Most women and men need between eight and eight and a half hours of sleep a night to function properly throughout their lives. (Contrary to popular belief, humans don't need less sleep as they age.) But on average, Americans sleep only about seven and a half hours per night, a marked drop from the nine hours they averaged in 1910. What's worse, nearly one third of all Americans get less than six hours of sleep on a typical work night. For most people, that's not nearly enough. Finding ways to get more and better Sleep can be a challenge. Scientists have identified more than 80 different sleep disorders. Some sleeping disorders are genetic. But many problems are caused by staying up late and sleeping in, by traveling frequently between time zones or by working nights. Dr. James F. Jones at National Jewish Medical and Research Center in Denver says that sleep disorders are often diagnosed as other discomforts. About one third of the patients referred to him with possible chronic fatigue syndrome actually have treatable sleep disorders. "Before we do anything else, we look at their sleep, "Jones says. Sleep experts say that most people would benefit from a good look at their sleep patterns. "My motto is 'Sleep defensively'," says Mary Carskadon of Brown University. She says people need to carve out sufficient time to sleep, even if it means giving up other things. Sleep routines—like going to bed and getting up at the same time every day—are important. Pre-bedtime activities also make a difference. As with Elaner, who used to suffer from sleeplessness, a few lifestyle changes—avoiding stimulants and late meals, exercising hours before bedtime, relaxing with a hot bath—yield better sleep.
单选题The term authority refers to the rights inherent in a managerial position to give orders and expect the orders to be followed. Authority was a major concept for the classical management writers; they (1) it as the glue that held an organization together.It was to be delegated (2) to subordinate managers, (3) them certain rights while providing certain specified limits (4) which to operate. Each management position has certain rights that the position holder (5) just bemuse they hold that position. Authority (6) to one's position within an organization and ignores the personal (7) of the individual manager. It has nothing directly (8) the individual (9) flows from the position that the individual holds. When a person (10) a position of authority, he or she no longer has any authority. The authority remains with the position and (11) new holder. When managers delegate authority, commensurate responsibility must be given (12) . That is, when one is given the "right" to do something, one also (13) a corresponding "obligation" to (14) . Allocating authority (15) responsibility can create (16) for a person, and no one should be (17) responsible for something (18) which he or she has no authority. Classical writers recognized the (19) of equating authority and responsibility.In (20) ,they stated that only authority could be delegated. They supported this contention by noting that the delegate was held responsible for the actions of the people to whom work had been delegated.
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