单选题Remember to ask for a ______ of quality for these goods; otherwise
they will not offer any maintenance.
A. warranty
B. promise
C. certificate
D. receipt
单选题Throughout his political career he has always been in the ____.
单选题She actually preferred a more {{U}}gregarious{{/U}} urban life style and the cultural attractions in a warmer clime.
单选题The remedies proposed for dealing with the situation ore only ______ promises for action for the future.
单选题The fact that the golden eagle usually builds its nest on some high cliffs ______ it almost impossible to obtain the eggs or the young birds.
单选题Our theory and practice in the area of sentencing have undergone a gradual but dramatic metamorphosis through the years. Primitive man believed that a crime created an imbalance, which could be rectified only by punishing the wrongdoer. Thus, sentencing was initially vengeance-oriented. Gradually, emphasis began to be placed on the deterrent value of a sentence upon future wrongdoing. Though deterrence is still an important consideration, increased emphasis on the possibility of reforming the offender--of returning him to the community a useful citizen bars the harsh penalties once imposed and brings into play a new set of sentencing criteria. Today, each offender is viewed as a unique individual, and the sentencing judge seeks to know why he has committed the crime and what are the chances of a repetition of the offense. The judge's prime objective is not to punish but to treat. This emphasis on treatment of the individual has created a host of new problems. In seeking to arrive at the best treatment for individual prisoners, judges must weigh an imposing array of factors. I believe that the primary aim of every sentence is the prevention of future crime. Little can be done to correct past damage, and a sentence will achieve its objective to the extent that it upholds general respect for the law, discourages those tempted to commit similar crimes, and leads to the rehabilitation of the offender, so that he will not run afoul of the law again. Where the offender is so hardened that rehabilitation is plainly impossible, the sentence may be designed to segregate the offender from society so that he will be unable to do any future harm. The balancing of these interacting, and often mutually antagonistic, factors requires more than a good heart and a sense of fair play on the judge's part, although these are certainly prerequisites. It requires the judge to know as much as he can about the prisoner before him. He should know the probable effects of sentences upon those who might commit similar crimes and how the prisoner is likely to react to imprisonment or probation. Because evaluation of these various factors may differ from judge to judge, the same offense will be treated differently by different judges. The task of improving our sentencing techniques is so important to the nation's moral health that it deserves far more careful attention than it now receives from the bar and many civic-minded individuals who usually lead even the judges in the fight for legal reform approach this subject with apathy or with erroneous preconceptions. For example, I have observed the sentiment shared by many that, after a judge has sentenced several hundred defendants, the whole process becomes one of callous routine. I have heard this feeling expressed even by attorneys who should know better.
单选题
BQuestions 27—30 are based on a dialogue about
intermarriage. You now have 20 seconds to read Questions
27—30./B
单选题
单选题The attack of the World Trade Center will leave a______ impression on those who have witnessed the explosion.(2002年春季上海交通大学考博试题)
单选题Organised volunteering and work experience has long been a vital companion to university degree courses. Usually it is left to
1
to deduce the potential from a list of extracurricular adventures on a graduate"s resume,
2
now the University of Bristol has launched an award to formalize the achievements of students who
3
time to activities outside their courses. Bristol PLuS aims to boost students in an increasingly
4
job market by helping them acquire work and life skills alongside
5
qualifications.
"Our students are a pretty active bunch, but we found that they didn"t
6
appreciate the value of what they did
7
the lecture hall, "says Jeff Goodman, director of careers and employability at the university. "Employers are much more
8
than they used to be. They used to look for
9
and saw it as part of their job to extract the value of an applicant"s skills. Now they want students to be able to explain why those skills are
10
to the job."
Students who sign
11
for the award will be expected to complete 50 hours of work experience or
12
work, attend four workshops on employ-ability skills, take part in an intensive skills" related activity
13
, crucially, write a summary of the skills they have gained.
14
efforts will gain an Outstanding Achievement Award. Those who
15
best on the sports field can take the Sporting PLuS Award which fosters employer-friendly sports accomplishments.
The experience does not have to be
16
organised. "We"re not just interested in easily identifiable skills," says Goodman. "
17
, one student took the lead in dealing with a difficult landlord and so
18
negotiation skills. We try to make the experience relevant to individual lives."
Goodman hopes the
19
will enable active students to fill in any gaps in their experience and encourage their less-active
20
to take up activities outside their academic area of work.
单选题 The biosphere is the name biologists give to the sort of
skin on the surface of this planet that is inhabitable by living organisms. Most
land creatures occupy only the interface between the atmosphere and the land;
birds extend their range for a few hundred feet into the atmosphere; burrowing
invertebrates (无脊椎动物) such as earthworms may reach a few yards into the soil but
rarely penetrate farther unless, it has been recently disturbed by men. Fish
cover a wider range, from just beneath the surface of the sea to those depths of
greater than a mile inhabited by specialized creatures. Fungi (真菌) and bacteria
are plentiful in the atmosphere to a height of about half a mile, blown there by
winds from the lower air. Balloon exploration of the stratosphere (同温层) as long
ago as 1936 indicated that moulds and bacteria could be found at heights of
several miles, recently the USA's National Aeronautics and Space Administration
has detected them, in decreasing numbers, at heights up to eighteen miles. They
arc pretty sparse at such levels, about one for every two thousand cubic feet,
compared with 50 to 100 per cubic foot at two to six miles (the usual altitude
of jet aircraft),and they are almost certainly in an inactive state. Marine
bacteria have been detected at the bottom of the deep Pacific trench, sometimes
as deep as seven miles; they are certainly not inactive. Living microbes have
also been obtained on land from cores of rock drilled (while prospecting for
oil) at depths of as much as 1,200 feet. Thus we can say, disregarding the
exploits of astronauts, that the biosphere has a maximum thickness of about
twenty-five miles, Active living processes occur only within a compass of about
seven miles, in the sea, on land and in the lower atmosphere, but the majority
of living creatures live within a zone of a hundred feet or so. If this planet
were sealed down to the size of an orange, the biosphere, at its extreme width,
would occupy the thickness of the orange-colored skin, excluding the
pith. In this tiny zone of our planet takes place the multitude
of chemical and biological activities that we call life. The way in which living
creatures interact with each other, depend on each other or compete with each
other, has fascinated thinkers since the beginning of recorded history. Living
things exist in a fine balance which is often taken for granted, from a
practical point of view, things could not be otherwise. Yet it is a source of
continual amazement to scientists because of its intricacy and delicacy. The
balance of nature is obvious most often when it is disturbed. Yet even here it
can seem remarkable how quickly it readjusts itself to a new balance after a
disturbance. The science of ecology—the study of the interaction of organisms
with their environment—has grown up to deal with the minutiae of the balance of
nature.
单选题
单选题A
A large collection
of contemporary photographs, B
including
some taken by Mary C
are
on display D
at
the museum.
单选题
单选题The basic causes are unknown, although certain conditions that may lead to cancer have been ______.
单选题The former Soviet state of Georgia today exhibits a diversified economy.
单选题Because of the currency appreciation of RMB, many people ______dollar against RMB. A. ran over B. ran on C. ran through D. ran off
单选题The computer can______stored information in a matter of minutes.(2004年湖北省考博试题)
单选题Final grades should be______on plenty of good evidence.
单选题I arrive at nine o' clock, teach until twelve thirty and then have a meal; that is my morning ______.(2003年上海交通大学考博试题)
