单选题However bad the situation is, the majority is
unwilling
to risk change.
单选题The Need to Remember
Some people say they have no memory at all: "I just can"t remember a thing!" But of course we all have a memory. Our memory tells us who we are. Our memory helps us to make use in the present of what we have learnt in the past.
In fact we have different types of memory. For example, our visual memory helps us recall facts and places. Some people have such a strong visual memory, they can remember exactly what they have seen, for example, pages of a book, as a complete picture.
Our verbal (言语的) memory helps us remember words and figures we may have heard but not seen or written: items of a shopping list, a chemical formula, dates, or a recipe.
With our emotional (情感的) memory, we recall situations or places where we had strong feelings, perhaps of happiness or unhappiness. We also have special memories for smell, taste, touch and sound, and for performing physical movements.
We have two ways of storing any of these memories: Our short-term memory stores items for up to thirty seconds—enough to remember a telephone number while we dial. Our long-term memory, on the other hand, may store items for a lifetime. Older people in fact have a much better long-term memory than short-term. They may forget what they have done only a few hours ago, but have the clearest remembrance (记忆) of when they were very young.
Psychologists tell us that we only remember few facts about our past, and that we invent the rest. It is as though we remember only the outline of a story. We then make up the details. We often do this in the way we want to remember them, usually so that we appear as the heroes of our own past or maybe victims needing sympathy (同情).
单选题Becoming aware of our mother's age, not just in numbers of years but ______ her psychological and physical" state, often helps us to understand her better.A. in spite ofB. in charge ofC. in terms ofD. with respect to
单选题The police crept up from behind and took the
gangsters
by surprise.
单选题Psychologists have done extensive studies of how well patients comply with doctors’ orders. A. obey B. understand C. improve with D. agree with
单选题Which of the following is true of whales?
单选题Only a small minority of the mentally ill are
liable
to harm themselves or others.
单选题They hold a party to observe their 30th maRRiage anniversary.A. watchB. understandC. explainD. celebrate
单选题He seems
bizarre
these days.
单选题Not all member states abided by the principle they had agreed on previously. A. adhered to B. abandoned C. applied D. adopted
单选题{{B}}第三篇{{/B}}
{{B}}The Effects of Global Warming on Weather{{/B}}
There are hidden factors which scientists call “feedback mechanisms”. No
one knows quite how they will interact with the changing climate. Here’s one
example: plants and animals adapt to climate change over centuries. At the
current estimate of half a degree centigrade of warming per decade, vegetation
(植物) may not keep up. Climatologist James Hansen predicts climate zones will
shift toward the poles by 50 to 75 kilometres a year—faster than trees can
naturally migrate. Species that find themselves in an unfamiliar environment
will die. The 1000-kilometer-wide strip of forest running through Canada, the
USSR and Scandinavia could be cut by half. Millions of dying trees would soon
lead to massive forest fires, releasing tons of CO2 and further
boosting global warming. There are dozens of other possible
“feedback mechanism”. Higher temperatures will fuel condensation and increase
cloudiness, which may actually damp down global warming. Others, like the
“albedo” effect, will do the opposite. The “albedo” effect is the amount of
solar energy reflected by the earth’s surface. As northern ice and snow melts
and the darker sea and land pokes (戳) through, more heat will be absorbed,
adding to the global temperature increase. Even if we were to
magically stop all greenhouse-gas emissions tomorrow the impact on global
climate would continue for decades. Delay will simply make the problem worse.
The fact is that some of us are doing quite well the way things are. In
developed world prosperity has been built on 150 years of cheap fossil
fuels. Material progress has been linked to energy consumption.
Today 75 percent of all the world’s energy is consumed by a quarter of the
world’s population. The average rich-world resident adds about 3.2 tons of
CO2 yearly to the atmosphere, more than four times the level added by
each Third World citizen. The US, with just seven per cent of the global
population, is responsible for 22 per cent of global
warming.
单选题The People's Republic of China was Ufounded/U in 1949.
单选题
Still High in A Slowdown, Executive Pay Draws
Looks Business has slowed, layoffs mount, but
executive pay continues to roar-at least so far. Business Week's annual survey
finds that chief executive officers (CEOS) at 365 of the largest companies got
compensation last year averaging $3.1 million-up 1.3 percent from
1994. Why are the top bosses getting an estimated 485 times the
pay of a typical factory worker? That is up from 475 times in 1999 and a mere 42
times in 1980. One reason may be what experts call the "Lake Wobegon effect".
Corporate boards tend to reckon that "all CEOs are above average" -a play on
Garrison Keillor's famous line in his public radio show, A Prairie Home
Companion, that all the town's children are "above average". Consultants provide
boards with surveys of corporate CEO compensation. Since directors are reluctant
to regard their CEOs as below average, the compensation committees of boards
tend to set pay at an above-average level. The result: Pay levels get ratcheted
up (一步步地增加). Defenders of lavish CEO pay argue there is such a
strong demand for experienced CEOs that the free market forces their pay up.
They further maintain most boards structure pay packages to reflect an
executive's performance. They get paid more if their companies and their stock
do well. So companies with high-paid CEOs generate great wealth for their
shareholders. But the supposed cream-of-the-crop executives did
surprisingly poorly for their shareholders in1999, says Scott Klinger, author of
this report by a Boston-based Organization United for a Fair Economy. If an
investor had put $10,000 apiece at the end of 1999 into the stock of those
companies with the 10 highest-paid CEOs, by year-end 2000 the investment would
have shrunk to $8,132. If $10,000 had been put into the Standard & Poor's
500 stocks, it would have been worth $9,090. To Mr. Klinger, these findings
suggest that the theory that one person, the CEO, is responsible for creating
most of a corporation's value is dead wrong. "It takes many employees to make a
corporation profitable." With profits down, corporate boards
may make more effort to tame executive compensation. And executives are making
greater efforts to avoid pay cuts. Some CEOs, seeing their options "under water"
or worthless because of falling stock prices, are seeking more pay in cash or in
restricted stock.
单选题The word "thrift" in paragraph 1 could be best replaced by
单选题The ability to {{U}}react to{{/U}} environmental stimuli is a basic and general characteristic of living organisms.
单选题A special education Videodisc holds great promise of helping to meet the needs of American schoolchildren who have problems seeing, hearing, speaking, or socializing. Almost eleven percent of the students aged 3-21 in this country have an impairment that affects their ability to benefit from a regular education program. Handicapped students require special education because they are often markedly different from most children in one or more of the following ways: mentally retarded (发展迟缓的) learning-disabled, emotionally disturbed, deaf, visually handicapped, physically handicapped, or other health impairments. The education of these handicapped children is rewarding but challenging. A special education student usually needs a longer period of time to acquire information. Repetitive teaching techniques are often beneficial, and indefatigable (孜孜不倦的) consistency on the part of the teacher is frequently necessary. Interactive videodisc courseware has characteristics that can be capitalized upon to meet the challenges that special education poses. A videodisc program is infinitely patient. Repetition of any videodisc lesson can continue endlessly, and designers can assure absolute consistency within a program. Most important, according to special educator William Healey of the University of Arizona, is that videodisc "adds an extra dimension of realism for children who need graphic representations." Healey explained that deaf and mentally retarded children especially have difficulty grasping figurative language and higher-order language concepts. He believes that for special education, the power of videodisc lies in the ability of the technology to visually represent language concepts normally taken for granted by non-handicapped persons. Complex figurative language forms such as idioms and metaphors come most readily to mind as being difficult for handicapped learners.
单选题The index is the government"s chief
gauge
of future economic activity.
单选题She undertakes to verify the true source of the rumor.A. triesB. decidesC. promisesD. refuses
单选题Mobile Phone and Diseases A study by scientists in Finland has found that mobile phone radiation can cause changes in human cells that might affect the brain, the leader of the research team said. But Darius Leszczynski, who headed the 2-year study and will present findings next week at a conference in Quebec(魁北克), said more research was needed to determine the seriousness of the changes and their impact on the brain or the body. The study at Finland's Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority found that exposure to radiation from mobile phones can cause increased activity in hundreds of proteins in human cells grown in a laboratory, he said. "We know that there is some biological response. We can detect it with our very sensitive approaches, but we do not know whether it can have any physiological effects on the human brain or human body, " Leszczynski said. Nonetheless the study, the initial findings of which were published last month in the scientific journal Differentiation, raises new questions about whether mobile phone radiation can weaken the brain's protective shield against harmful substances. The study focused on changes in ceils that line blood vessels and on whether such changes could weaken the functioning of the blood-brain barrier, which prevents potentially harmful substances from entering the brain from the bloodstream, Leszczynski said. The study found that a protein called hsp27 linked to the functioning of the blood-brain barrier showed increased activity due to irradiation and pointed to a possibility that such activity could make the shield more permeable(能透过的), he said. "Increased protein activity might cause cells to shrink—not the blood vessels but the cells themselves—and then tiny gaps could appear between those cells through which some molecules could pass. " he said. Leszczynski declined to speculate on what kind of health risks that could pose, but said a French study indicated that headache, fatigue and sleep disorders could result. "These are not life-threatening problems but can cause a lot of discomfort, " he said, adding that a Swedish group had also suggested a possible link with Alzheimer's disease. "Where the truth is do not know, " he said. Leszczynski said that he, his wife and children use mobile phones, and he said that he did not think his study suggested any need for new restrictions on mobile phone use.
单选题John is {{U}}collaborating{{/U}} with mary in writing an article.
