单选题What dose the last paragraph imply?
单选题Which of the following best defines the word "doctored" (Para. 1, Line 10) ?
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单选题{{B}}Text 3{{/B}}
Our visit to the excavation of a Roman
fort on a hill near Coventry was of more than archaeological interest. The
year’s dig had been a fruitful one and had assembled evidence of a permanent
military camp much larger than had at first been conjectured. We were greeted on
the site by a group of excavators, some of them filling in a trench that had
yielded an almost complete pot the day before, others enjoying the last-day
luxury of a cigarette in the sun, but all happy to explain and talk about their
work. If we had not already known it, nothing would have suggested that this was
a party of prisoners from the nearby prison. This is not the first time that
prison labor has been used in work of this kind, but here the experiment, now
two years old, has proved outstandingly satisfactory. From the
archaeologists’ point of view, prisoners provide a steady force of disciplined
labor throughout the entire season, men to whom it is a serious day’s work, and
not the rather carefree holiday job that it tends to be for the amateur
archaeologist. Newcomers are comparatively few, and can soon be initiated by
those already trained in the work. Prisoners may also be more accustomed to
heavy work like shoveling and carting soil than the majority of students. When
Coventry’s Keeper of Archaeology went to the prison to appeal for help, he was
received cautiously by the men, but when the importance of the work was fully
understood, far more volunteers were forthcoming than could actually be
employed. When they got to work on the site, and their efforts produced pottery
and building foundations in what until last year had been an ordinary field,
their enthusiasm grew till they would sometimes work through their lunch hour
and tea break, and even carry on in the rain rather than sit it out in the hut.
This was undoubtedly because the work was not only strenuous but absorbing, and
called for considerable intelligence. The men worked always under professional
supervision, but as the season went on they needed less guidance and knew when
an expert should be summoned. Disciplinary problems were negligible: the men
were carefully selected for their good conduct and working on a party like this
was too valuable a privilege to be thrown away. The Keeper of
Archaeology said that this was by far the most satisfactory form of labor that
he had ever had, and that it had produced results, in quantity and quality, that
could not have been achieved by any other means.
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单选题A factory that makes uranium fuel for nuclear reactors had a spill so bad it kept the plant closed for seven months last year and became one of only three events in all of 2006 serious enough for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to include in an annual report to Congress. After an investigation, the commission changed the terms of the factory's license and said the public had 20 days to request a hearing on the changes. But no member of the public ever did. In fact, no member of the public could find out about the changes. The document describing them, including the notice of hearing rights for anyone who felt adversely affected, was stamped "official use only," meaning that it was not publicly accessible. The agency would not even have told Congress which factory was involved were it not for the efforts of Gregory B. Jaczko, one of the five commissioners. Mr. Jaczko identified the company, Nuclear Fuel Services of Erwin, Tenn,, in a memorandum that became part of the public record. His memorandum said other public documents would allow an informed person to deduce that the factory belonged to Nuclear Fuel Services. Such secrecy by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is now coming under attack by influential members of Congress. These lawmakers argue that the agency is withholding numerous documents about nuclear facilities in the name of national security, but that many withheld documents are not sensitive. The lawmakers say the agency must rebalance its penchant for secrecy with the public's right to participate in the licensing process and its right to know about potential hazards. The agency, the congressmen said, "has removed hundreds of in nocuous documents relating to the N. F. S. plant from public view." With a resurgence of nuclear plant construction expected after a 30-year hiatus, agency officials say frequently that they are trying to strike a balance between winning public confidence by regulating openly and protecting sensitive information. A commission spokesman, Scott Burnell, said the "official use only" designation was under review. As laid out by the commission's report to Congress and other sources, the event at the Nuclear Fuel Service factory was discovered when a supervisor saw a yellow liquid dribbling under a door and into a hallway. Workers had previously described a yellow liquid in a "glove box," a sealed container with gloves built into the sides to allow a technician to manipulate objects inside, but managers had decided it was ordinary uranium. In fact, it was highly enriched uranium that had been declared surplus from the weapons inventory of the Energy Department and sent to the plant to be diluted to a strength appropriate for a civilian reactor. If the material had gone critical, "it is likely that at least one worker would have received an exposure high enough to cause acute health effects or death," the commission said. Generally, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission does describe nuclear incidents and changes in licenses. But in 2004, according to the committee's letter, the Office of Naval Reactors, part of the Energy Department, reached an agreement with the commission that any correspondence with Nuclear Fuel Services would be marked "official use only./
单选题The first sentence of the sixth paragraph implies that______.
单选题The Revenue's last resort in solving the problem seems to be ______.
单选题What does the writer mean by saying "But these were not just the isolated actions of a scientist" ?
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单选题It can be inferred that the author’s attitude toward the early stage of British industrialization should be one of
单选题{{B}}Text 3{{/B}}
Is the literary critic like the poet,
responding creatively, intuitively, subjectively to the written word as the poet
responds to human experience? Or is the critic more like a scientist, following
a series of demonstrable, verifiable steps, using an objective method of
analysis? For the woman who is a practitioner of feminist
literary criticism, the subjectivity versus objectivity, or
critic-as-artist-or-scientist, debate has special significance; for her, the
question is not only academic, but political as well, and her definition will
provoke special risks whichever side of the issue it favors. If she defines
feminist criticism as objective and scientific--a valid, verifiable,
intellectual method that anyone, whether man or woman, can perform--the
definition not only makes the critic-as-artist approach impossible, but may also
hinder accomplishment of the utilitarian political objectives of those who seek
to change the academic establishment and its thinking, especially about sex
roles. If she defines feminist criticism as creative and intuitive, privileged
as art, then her work becomes vulnerable to the prejudices of stereotypic ideas
about the ways in which women think, and will be dismissed by much of the
academic establishment. Because of these prejudices, women who use an intuitive
approach in their criticism may find themselves charged with inability to be
analytical, to be objective, or to think critically. Whereas men may be free to
claim the role of critic-as-artist, women run different professional risks when
they choose intuition and private experience as critical method and
defense. These questions are political in the sense that the
debate over them will inevitably be less an exploration of abstract matters in a
spirit of disinterested inquiry than an academic power struggle, in which the
careers and professional fortunes of many women scholars only now entering the
academic profession in substantial numbers will be at stake, and with them the
chances for a distinctive contribution to humanistic understanding, a
contribution that might be an important influence against sexism in our
society. As long as the academic establishment continues to
regard objective analysis as "masculine" and an intuitive approach as
"feminine," the theoretician must steer a delicate philosophical course between
the two. If she wishes to construct a theory of feminist criticism, she would be
well advised to place it within the framework of a general theory of the
critical process that is neither purely objective nor purely intuitive. Her
theory is then more likely to be compared and contrasted with other theories of
criticism with some degree of dispassionate distance. (418
words)
单选题In paragraph 3, the underlined word "exacerbated" is most similar in use to______.
单选题When Ted Kennedy gazes from the windows of his office in Boston, he can see the harbor's "Golden Stairs", where all eight of his great-grandparents first set foot in America. It reminds him, he told his Senate colleagues this week, that reforming America's immigration laws is an " awesome responsibility" Mr. Kennedy is the Democrat most prominently pushing a bipartisan bill to secure the border, ease the national skills shortage and offer a path to citizenship for the estimated 12m illegal aliens already in the country. He has a steep climb ahead of him. As drafted, the bill seeks to mend America's broken immigration system in several ways. First, and before its other main provisions come into effect, it would tighten border security. It provides for 200 miles (320km) of vehicle barriers, 370 miles of fencing and 18 000 new border patrol agents. It calls for an electronic identification system to ensure employers verify that all their employees are legally allowed to work. And it stiffens punishments for those who knowingly hire illegals. As soon as the bill was unveiled, it was stoned from all sides. Christans, mostly Republicans, denounced it as an "amnesty" that would encourage further waves of illegal immigration. Tom Tancredo, a Republican congressman running for president (without hope of success) on an anti-illegal-immigration platform, demanded that all but the border-security clauses be scrapped. Even these he derided as "so limited it's almost a joke". Conservative talk-radio echoed his call. No one is seriously proposing mass deportation, but Mr. Tancredo says the illegals will all go home if the laws against hiring them are vigorously enforced. Most labor unions are skeptical, too. The AFL-CIO denounced the guest-worker program, which it said would give employers "a ready pool of labor that they can exploit to drive down wages, benefits, health and safety protections " for everyone else. Two Democratic senators tried to gut the program. One failed to abolish it entirely; another succeeded in slashing it from 400000 to 200000 people a year. Employers like the idea of more legal migrants but worry that the new system will be cumbersome. Many object to the idea that they will have to check the immigration status of all their employees. The proposed federal computer system to sort legal from illegal workers is bound to make mistakes. Even if only one employee in a hundred is falsely labelled illegal, that will cause a lot of headaches. And the points system has drawbacks, too. Employers are better placed than bureaucrats to judge which skills are in short supply. That is why the current mess has advantages--illegal immigrants nearly always go where their labor is in demand. Other groups have complaints, too. Immigrant-rights groups say that the path to citizenship would be too long and arduous and too few Hispanics would qualify. Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic speaker of the House, fretted that the new stress on skills would hurt families, adding that her party is "about families and family values". Some people worry that House Democrats will kill it to prevent Mr. Bush from enjoying a domestic success. Despite the indignation, public opinion favors the underlying principles. At least 60% of Americans want to give illegals a chance to become citizens if they work hard and behave.
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单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} Read the following text. Choose the best
word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on ANSWER SHEET 1.
Valentine's Day may come from the
ancient Roman feast of Luperealia.{{U}} (1) {{/U}}the fierce wolves
roamed nearby, the old Romans called{{U}} (2) {{/U}}the god Lupereus to
help them. A festival in his{{U}} (3) {{/U}}was held February 15th. On
the eve of the festival the{{U}} (4) {{/U}}of the girls were written
on{{U}} (5) {{/U}}paper and placed in jars. Each young man{{U}} (6)
{{/U}}a slip. The girl whose name was{{U}} (7) {{/U}}was to be his
sweetheart for the year. Legend{{U}} (8) {{/U}}it that
the holiday became Valentine's Day{{U}} (9) {{/U}}a roman priest named
Valentine. Emperor Claudius II{{U}} (10) {{/U}}the Roman soldiers not to
marry or become engaged. Claudius felt married soldiers would{{U}} (11)
{{/U}}stay home than fight. When Valentine{{U}} (12) {{/U}}the
Emperor and secretly married the young couples, he was put to death on February
14th, the{{U}} (13) {{/U}}of Lupercalia. After his death, Valentine
became a{{U}} (14) {{/U}}. Christian priests moved the holiday from the
15th to the 14th---Valentine's Day. Now the holiday honors Valentine{{U}}
(15) {{/U}}of Lupercus. Valentine's Day has become a
major{{U}} (16) {{/U}}of love and romance in the modem world. The
ancient god Cupid and his{{U}} (17) {{/U}}into a lover's heart may still
be used to{{U}} (18) {{/U}}falling in love or being in love. But we also
use cards and gifts, such as flowers Or jewelry, to do this.{{U}} (19)
{{/U}}to give flower to a wife or sweetheart on Valentine's Day can
sometimes be as{{U}} (20) {{/U}}as forgetting a birthday or a wedding
anniversary.
单选题The birthplace of Leonardo is mentioned in the text
单选题A shortcoming of protective labor laws that singling out a particular group of workers for protection is
单选题{{B}}Text 2{{/B}}
Where is the second centre of Hollywood
film making in Europe. after London*. Paris. or perhaps Berlin? Try Prague. Last
year, Hollywood spent over $200m on shooting movies, commercials and pop videos
in the Czech capital. This year. all the big studios will be in town. MGM has
"Hart's War" starring Bruce Willis; Disney is shooting "Black Sheep" with
Anthony Hopkins; and Fox has just finished filming "From Hell", a Jack the
Ripper saga starring Johnny Depp. Praguers take Tinseltown in
their stride. Old ladies looked only slightly confused last month when the
cobbled streets of Mala Strana, Prague's old quarter, were cleared of real snow
and sprayed with a more cinematically pleasing chemical alternative for
Universal's "Bourne Identity", a $50m thriller starring Matt Damon. The film's
producer, Pat Crowley, reckons a day filming in Prague costs him $100.000,
against $250,000 in Paris. Czech crews, he says, are professional,
English-speaking and numerous. They are also a bargain—40% cheaper than similar
crews in London or Los Angeles, points out Matthew Stillman. the British boss of
Stillking, a Prague-based production firm. Mr. Stillman founded
Stillking in 1993 after arriving in Prague with $500 and a typewriter. Today,
Hollywood producers come to the company for crews, catering, lights and much
more. It claims to have about half of the local film-production business and
this year hopes for revenues of over $50m. The biggest draw to
Prague, however, is Barrandov—one of the largest film studios in Europe, with 11
sound-stages, onsite photo labs and top-notch technicians. It was founded during
Czechoslovakia's pre-war first republic by Milos Havel, an uncle of the present
Czech president, Vaclav Havel. The Nazis expanded it as a production centre for
propaganda flicks—the sound-stages are courtesy of Joseph Goebbels. Then came
the Communists with their own propaganda and, admittedly, a few impressive
homegrown directors such as Milos Forman, who began Hollywood's march to Prague
by filming "Amadeus" there. But it is partly thanks to Barrandov
that Prague remains some way behind London as a film centre. The studio has
suffered from doubtful management and is already stretched to capacity ("You
can't even get an office there," moans one producer). Its present owner, a local
steel company, is keen to sell but talks with a Canadian institution have been
thorny, not least because the Czech government holds a golden share. Should the
Canadian deal fall through, Stillking says it would consider a bid of its own.
