单选题The building collapsed because its foundation was not strong enough to______ the weight of the building.(2007年清华大学考博试题)
单选题In this {{U}}monumental{{/U}} work the entire storehouse of the world's art is surveyed.
单选题As there was not enough money to bury all dead AIDS orphans, 23 babies were interred in a modest cemetery in South Africa before World AIDS Day.
单选题His parents were once Uwell-off/U but they lost all their money.
单选题The rain ________ our spirits because we were planning to go for a picnic.
单选题The collaboration among scientists, universities and industry is not new. Both the university administration and the industry play a role in developing the scientific knowledge in the academic environment. The university is usually responsible for obtaining patents and for licensing the rights for its professors' inventions. The company, having licensed the product, must provide the considerable financial backing required for its development and marketing. In the best of all possible worlds, the inventors, the university administrators and the company executives work as a well-oiled machine that creates a beneficial product and generates capital to support the academic lab, the scientist, the university and the company's shareholders. In the real world, however, each of these component parts has its own agenda. The goal may not entirely overlap. When a university stands to gain financially from the commercialization of one of its professors' inventions, for example, the professor may hesitate, out of conflict-of-interest issues, to participate in the trials of the new product. Such a policy causes friction and frustration in the relationship between the university administration and the faculty members. Universities themselves have faced the frustration of licensing their inventions to companies that have then sublicensed them to other firms for enormous fees. Because these "fees" can be disguised by a variety of accounting procedures, there is no way for the university or the inventor to participate in the profits of the sublicensing agreement. Thus, unless the invention becomes a product, the profits made by the company are not shared by the university or the inventor. Meanwhile it is the company who writes the checks. Of the three parties involved, it compromises the least. As a rule, the company shows more concern over new ideas and new products which can be used to benefit itself and the public good as well. So the scientist, the university and the industry find themselves on a three-way street where ideas from the academic laboratory move into the realm of application. Because the use of this highway has increased dramatically in recent years, traffic jams and collisions have been unavoidable. And, increasingly, basic research is diverted from its path. Inevitably, such sidetracking will slow the movement of basic science discoveries into technical products. Preventing this slowdown requires some new rules of the road. Increased government funding for research is necessary to restore order by redirecting lab efforts back toward basic research—the well spring of all applied technologies. The scientist and the university must cease regarding companies as money-providers with deep pockets and learn from the business world how economic realities are integrated into idealistic goals. And the company's attitude that "the scientist has done the easy work" has to give way to adapting to a more inclusive approach that permits participation by the scientist and the university in deciding on the best road to development. Without these accommodations on all sides, the flow of idea into products will be slowed, and all parties, including society at large, will suffer from the gridlock.
单选题To obtain a satisfactory result, you must apply two ______ of paint on a clean surface.
单选题"credentials" in the last paragraph refers to______.
单选题The ______ beauty of the mountain has made it a world-famous resort.
Every year numerous tourists from home and abroad come to visit it.
A.perpetual
B.perplexed
C.preserved
D.perished
单选题Before the construction of the road, it was {{U}}prohibitively{{/U}} expensive to transport any furs or fruits across the mountains.
单选题The word "bankruptcy" comes from banes rotta, Italian for broken bench. The custom was that when a medieval trader failed to pay his creditors, his trading bench was broken. Since bankruptcy was taken off the street and put into the statute book, it has become rather more complicated. Bankruptcy is as necessary for capitalism as profit; together they make up the stick and carrot which persuade businessmen to work. In Europe the accountants and lawyers who make a living from overseeing bankrupt companies expect the coming year to provide a bumper crop; in America bankruptcy courses are among the most popular at business schools. Only in Japan are experts talking about a possible decline in bankruptcies. Analyzing companies involves much the same task worldwide: look at the accounts and you will get some idea of how much or how little money a firm makes. Bankruptcy laws, however, vary enormously from country to country, mainly because each starts from different historical perspectives. Yet they all tackle the same issues—and the most fundamental is how friendly the law should be to the debtor. Countries whose bankruptcy laws are based on the British model view bankruptcy primarily as a way to recover creditors' money. Typically, the courts replace the bankrupt firm's management with a liquidator or a receiver whose mission is to pay back creditors as quickly as possible. England's first bankruptcy law was an "act against such persons as do make bankrupt". For centuries British bankrupts went to debtors' prison. Continental countries also took the creditors' side. In contrast, one of America's attractions to immigrants was its very lack of a debtors' prison. Bankruptcy is still viewed in America as a side-effect of entrepreneurship. Managers of a bankrupt firm are often allowed to stay on. Cynics reckon that some well-know businessmen have made a career ont of taking companies into and out of bankruptcy. The aim of American bankruptcy law is rehabilitation: to reorganize the company so that it can continue to trade, rather than .to see that the creditors are paid off. Thus, while an ailing American company can opt for liquidation by filing under the chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, it can also file under chapter 11 to seek protection from its creditors. Once a firm has gone into chapter 11 its management has to produce a reorganization plan: the creditors are arranged into committees to vote on it. These can become scrums where the various creditors' relative seniority varies according to their lawyers' eloquence. Fans of the American system argue that it gives companies a chance to recover. Critics say that American law favors the same managers who bankrupted the firm, that it encourages lawyers to prolong bankruptcy protection, that it favors big bankers over smaller trade creditors, and that shareholders, the last to be paid in liquidation, gain at the expense of debt-holders.
单选题My shoulder hurt______each time I put another full barrel on it, and my legs occasionally trembled as I was heading to the street.
单选题The ______ now seems to stand as the primary barrier to a new era of strong economic growth.
单选题The house was very quiet, ______ as it was on the side of a mountain.
单选题In the third paragraph , "three weeks of round-clock effort" means ______.
单选题If somebody is ______, he is given a medal or other honor as an official reward for what he has done.
单选题
Whoever said that victory has many
fathers and defeat is an orphan, surely had never heard of the World Trade
organization (WTO). In the case of the hapless multilateral trade body and its
long suffering representatives, the total failure of the opening meeting of the
so-called Millennium trade round has lots of people boasting of their role in
the violent physical struggle. Well. That's just brilliant. They are proud of
being part of a movement that wants to wreck the most important engine of
economic growth, prosperity and overall global rising living standards we
have--the freedom of trade and movement of people and goods between
nations. The 135-members WTO is composed of sovereign
governments wishing to further this goal and ease the settlement of
international trade disputes. From the sounds emanating from Seattle, though, it
would now seem the WTO has now replaced the Trilateral Commission and the
Freemasons as candidate No. 1 to take over the world. Everybody
has his favorite Seattle story. The city's police chief will have plenty of time
to think about his, having now resigned in disgrace over the loss of control of
downtown Seattle. The Seattle business community may be more inclined to brood
over theirs; the poor fools invested $ 9 million to attract the meeting to their
fine city. What stands out more? I would nominate the union of steel workers who
were marching in protest. It's an image that will boggle the mind for years to
come. The debate now is over just how effective this
anti-globalist coalition will turn out to be. In the heat of the moment, it
always looks as though the world as we know it is coming to an end. But the
overwhelming likelihood is that we have not actually seen a replay of the
anti-Vietnam War movement, which had much clearer focus, obviously, though its
consequences were far-reaching. How long, after all, can you protest against
cheap imports when those same imports are all over your house?
No, the real reason for the disaster in Seattle is political, and reports
coming out of the meeting point to President Clinton as a major culprit. Which
may be both good and bad. Taking the long view, other trade rounds have had
difficult beginnings, too. It took years to get the Uruguay Round under way,
which finally happened in 1986. Thankfully, we will soon be electing another
president, and it should be someone whose actions match his rhetoric.
Still, it is a disgrace that the world's greatest trading nation, i. e.
the United States, is currently led by a man whose motivations are so narrowly
political and egocentric that he has now wrecked any chance of entering the
history books as a champion of free trade.
单选题The Supreme Court"s decisions on physician-assisted suicide carry important implications for how medicine seeks to relieve dying patients of pain and suffering.
Although it ruled that there is no constitutional right to physician-assisted suicide, the Court in effect supported the medical principle of "double effect", a centuries-old moral principle holding that an action having two effects—a good one that is intended and a harmful one that is foreseen—is permissible if the actor intends only the good effect.
Doctors have used that principle in recent years to justify using high doses of morphine to control terminally ill patients" pain, even though increasing dosages will eventually kill the patient.
Nancy Dubler, director of Montefiore Medical Center, contends that the principle will shield doctors who "until now have very, very strongly insisted that they could not give patients sufficient mediation to control their pain if that might hasten death."
George Annas, chair of the health law department at Boston University, maintains that, as long as a doctor prescribes a drug for a legitimate medical purpose, the doctor has done nothing illegal even if the patient uses the drug to hasten death. "It"s like surgery," he says, "We don"t call those deaths homicides because the doctors didn"t intend to kill their patients, although they risked their death. If you"re a physician, you can risk your patient"s suicide as long as you don"t intend their suicide."
On another level, many in the medical community acknowledge that the assisted-suicide debate has been fueled in part by the despair of patients for whom modem medicine has prolonged the physical agony of dying.
Just three weeks before the Court"s ruling on physician-assisted suicide, the National Academy of Science (NAS) released a two-volume report,
Approaching Death: Improving Care at the End of Life
. It identifies the under treatment of pain and the aggressive use of "ineffectual and forced medical procedures that may prolong and even dishonor the period of dying" as the twin problems of end-of-life care.
The profession is taking steps to require young doctors to train in hospices, to test knowledge of aggressive pain management therapies, and to develop new standards for assessing and treating pain at the end of life.
Annas says lawyers can play a key role in insisting that these well-meaning medical initiatives translate into better care. "Large numbers of physicians seem unconcerned with the pain their patients are needlessly and predictably suffering," to the extent that it constitutes "systematic patient abuse". He says medical licensing boards "must make it clear that painful deaths are presumptively ones that are incompetently managed and should result in license suspension".
单选题Located in New York City, Greenwich Village Ugained/U a reputation for bohemianism due to its populace of artists and freethinkers.
单选题We always try to______him with financial assistance if necessary.
