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Questions 21~25 are based on the following passage. Supporters of the biotech industry ha

ve accused an American scientist of misconduct after she testified to the New Zealand government that a genetically modified (GM)bacterium could cause serious damage if released.

The New Zealand Life Sciences Network,an association of pro-GM scientists and organisations,says the view expressed by Elaine Ingham,a soil biologist at Oregon State University in Corvallis,was exaggerated and irresponsible. It has asked her university to discipline her.

But Ingham stands by her comments and says the complaints are an attempt to silence her. “They’re trying to cause trouble with my university and get me fired,”Ingham told New Scientist.

The controversy began on 1 February,when Ingham testified before New Zealand’s Royal Commission on Genetic Modification,which will determine how to regulate GM organisms. Ingham claimed that a GM version of a common soil bacterium could spread and destroy plants if released into the wild. Other researchers had previously modified the bacterium to produce alcohol from organic waste. But Ingham says that when she put it in soil with wheat plants,all of the plants died within a week.

“We would lose terrestrial (生的)plants...this is an organism that is potentially deadly to the continued survival of human beings,”she told the commission. She added that the U.S.Environmental Protection Agency (EPA.canceled its approval for field tests using the organism once she had told them about her research in 1999.

But last week the New Zealand Life Sciences Network accused Ingham of “presenting inaccurate,careless and exaggerated information”and “generating speculative doomsday scenarios (世界末日的局面)that are not scientifically supportable”. They say that her study doesn’t even show that the bacteria would survive in the wild,much less kill massive numbers of plants. What’s more,the network says that contrary to Ingham’s claims,the EPA was never asked to consider the organism for field trials.

The EPA has not commented on the dispute. But an e-mail to the network from Janet Anderson,director of the EPA’s bio-pesticides (生物杀虫剂)division,says “there is no record of a review and/or clearance to field test”the organism.

Ingham says EPA officials had told her that the organism was approved for field tests,but says she has few details. It’s also not clear whether the organism,first engineered by a German institute for biotechnology,is still in use.

Whether Ingham is right or wrong,her supporters say opponents are trying unfairly to silence her.

“I think her concerns should be taken seriously. She shouldn’t be harassed in this way,”says Ann Clarke,a plant biologist at the University of Guelph in Canada who also testified before the commission. “It’s an attempt to silence the opposition.”

第21题:The passage centers on the controversy ().

A.between American and New Zealand biologists over genetic modification

B.as to whether the study of genetic modification should be continued

C.over the possible adverse effect of a GM bacterium on plants

D.about whether Elaine Ingham should be fired by her university

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更多“Questions 21~25 are based on t…”相关的问题
第1题
19-21 Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you just heard.第19题:

19-21 Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you just heard.

第19题:

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第2题
Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you have just heard,A.Conducting a train

Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you have just heard,

A.Conducting a training session for security guards.

B.Interviewing a person for a job.

C.Giving a sales talk on alarm systems.

D.Asking a coworker some questions.

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第3题
Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you have just heard.第19题: A) To inte

Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

第19题:

A) To interview a few job applicants.

B) To fill a vacancy in the company.

C) To advertise for a junior sales manager.

D) To apply for a job in a major newspaper.

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第4题
Questions 19 to 21 are based on the passage you have just heard.A.Because they had caught

Questions 19 to 21 are based on the passage you have just heard.

A.Because they had caught serious disease.

B.Because they had been away from home for many years.

C.Because it was said they had died.

D.Because they were put into prison.

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第5题
Section C Directions: in this section, you will hear three recordings of lectures or t
alks followed by three or four questions. the recordings will be played only once. after you hear a question,you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked a, b, c andA.Then mark the corresponding letter on answer sheet 1 with a single line through centre. Questions 16 to 18 are based on the recording you have just heard.

B.they get bored after working for a period of time.

C.they spend an average of one year finding a job.

D.they become stuck in the same job for decades.

E.they choose a job without thinking it through.

17、A.see if there will be chances for promotion.

B.find out what job choices are available.

C.watch a film about ways of job hunting.

D.decide which job is most attractive to you.

18、A.the qualifications you have.

B.the pay you are going to get.

C.the culture of your target company.

D.the work environment you will be in.

19、Questions 19 to 22 are based on the conversation you have just heardA.it is as important as christmas for african-americans.

B.it is a cultural festival founded for african-americans.

C.it is an ancient festival celebrated by african-americans.

D.it is a religious festival celebrated by african-americans

20、A.to urge african-americans to do more for society.

B.to call on african-americans to worship their gods

C.to help african-americans to realize their goals.

D.to remind african-americans of their sufferings.

21、A.faith in self-determination

B.the first fruits of the harvest

C.unity and cooperative economics

D.creative work and achievement.

22、A.they recite a principle

B.they take a solemn oath

C.they drink wine from the unity cup

D.they call out their ancestors' names.

25、A.they care much about their health.

B.they eat foods with little fat.

C.they use little oil in cooking

D.they have lower mortality rates

23、 Questions 23 to 25 are based on the recording you have just heardA.it is one of the world's most healthy diets.

B.it contains large amounts of dairy products.

C.it began to impact the world in recent years.

D.it consists mainly of various kinds of seafood.

24、A.it involved 13, 000 researchers from asia, europe and america.

B.it was conducted in seven mid-eastern countries in the 1950s

C.it is regarded as one of the greatest researches of its kind.

D.it has drawn the attention of medical doctors the world over.

请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

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第6题
Passage One Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage. There are good reason

Passage One Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage.

There are good reasons to be troubled by the violence that spreads throughout the media. Movies, Television and video games are full of gunplay and bloodshed, and one might reasonably ask what’s wrong with a society that presents videos of domestic violence as entertainment.

Most researchers agree that the causes of real-world violence are complex. A 1993 study by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences listed “biological, individual, family, peer, school, and community factors” as all playing their parts.

Viewing abnormally large amounts of violent television and video games may well contribute to violent behavior. in certain individuals. The trouble comes when researchers downplay uncertainties in their studies or overstate the case for causality (因果关系). Skeptics were dismayed several years ago when a group of societies including the American Medical Association tried to end the debate by issuing a joint statement: “At this time, well over 1,000 studies... point overwhelmingly to a causal connection between media violence and aggressive behavior. in some children.”

Freedom-of-speech advocates accused the societies of catering to politicians, and even disputed the number of studies (most were review articles and essays, they said). When Jonathan Freedman, a social psychologist at the University of Toronto, reviewed the literature, he found only 200 or so studies of television-watching and aggression. And when he weeded out “the most doubtful measures of aggression”, only 28% supported a connection.

The critical point here is causality. The alarmists say they have proved that violent media cause aggression. But the assumptions behind their observations need to be examined. When labeling games as violent or non-violent, should a hero eating a ghost really be counted as a violent event? And when experimenters record the time it takes game players to read ‘aggressive’ or ‘non-aggressive’ words from a list, can we be sure what they are actually measuring? The intent of the new Harvard Center on Media and Child Health to collect and standardize studies of media violence in order to compare their methodologies, assumptions and conclusions is an important step in the right direction.

Another appropriate step would be to tone down the criticism until we know more. Several researchers write, speak and testify quite a lot on the threat posed by violence in the media. That is, of course, their privilege. But when doing so, they often come out with statements that the matter has now been settled, drawing criticism from colleagues. In response, the alarmists accuse critics and news reporters of being deceived by the entertainment industry. Such clashes help neither science nor society.

21. Why is there so much violence shown in movies, TV and video games?

A) There is a lot of violence in the real world today.

B) Something has gone wrong with today’s society.

C) Many people are fond of gunplay and bloodshed.

D) Showing violence is thought to be entertaining.

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第7题
Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you have just heard.第19题: A)The touris

Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

第19题:

A)The tourist and the guide. B)The student and the teacher.

C)The reporter and the urban expert. D)The worker and the manager.

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第8题
Passage One Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage. Each summer, no matte

Passage One Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage.

Each summer, no matter how pressing my work schedule, I take off one day exclusively for my son. We call it dad-son day. This year our third stop was the amusement park, where be discovered that he was tall enough to ride one of the fastest roller coasters (过山车) in the world. We blasted through face-stretching turns and loops for ninety seconds. Then, as we stepped off the ride, be shrugged and, in a distressingly calm voice, remarked that it was not as exciting as other rides he’d been on. As I listened, I began to sense something seriously out of balance.

Throughout the season, I noticed similar events all around me. Parents seemed hard pressed to find new thrills for indifferent kids. Surrounded by ever-greater stimulation, their young faces were looking disappointed and bored.

Facing their children’s complaints of “nothing to do“, parents were shelling out large numbers of dollars for various forms of entertainment. In many cases the money seemed to do little more than buy transient relief from the terrible moans of their bored children. This set me pondering the obvious question:“ How can it be so hard for kids to find something to do when there’s never been such a range of stimulating entertainment available to them?”

What really worries me is the intensity of the stimulation. I watch my little daughter’s face as she absorbs the powerful onslaught (冲击) of arousing visuals and bloody special effects in movies.

Why do children immersed in this much excitement seem starved for more? That was, I realized, the point. I discovered during my own reckless adolescence that what creates excitement is not going fast, but going faster. Thrills have less to do with speed than changes in speed.

I’m concerned about the cumulative effect of years at these levels of feverish activity. It is no mystery to me why many teenagers appear apathetic (麻木的) and burned out, with a “been there, done that” air of indifference toward much of life. As increasing numbers of friends’ children are prescribed medications-stimulants to deal with inattentiveness at school or anti-depressants to help with the loss of interest and joy in their lives-I question the role of kids’ boredom in some of the diagnoses.

My own work is focused on the chemical imbalances and biological factors related to behavioral and emotional disorders. These are complex problems. Yet I’ve been reflecting more and more on how the pace of life and the intensity of stimulation may be contributing to the rising rates of psychiatric problems among children and adolescents in our society.

21. The author tell surprised in the amusement park at fact that ________.

A) his son was not as thrilled by the roller coasters ride as expected

B) his son blasted through the turns and loops with his face stretched

C) his son appeared distressed but calm while riding the roller coasters

D) his son could keep his balance so well on the fast moving roller coasters(A)

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第9题
Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you have just heard.19.A.It is bound to r

Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you have just heard.19.

A.It is bound to regain its full glory of a hundred years ago.

B.It will be a major economic power by the mid-21st century.

C.It is a resolute advocate of the anti-global movement.

D.It will face challenges unprecedented in its history.

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第10题
听力原文:On Feb 15th, 1989, an instant survey was carried out among 18 overseas postgradua

听力原文: On Feb 15th, 1989, an instant survey was carried out among 18 overseas postgraduate students. Eleven students were male and seven were female. The purpose of the survey was to discover the views of the students on a number of matters of personal concern. The survey was conducted by means of a questionnaire given to the students to complete. There were five questions. The first question concerned favorite color and the .second favorite number. The next 3 questions were all concerned with aspects of marriage. No. 3 looked at the ideal age to get married, No. 4 examined the qualities looked for in a partner and No. 5 asked about the ideal number of children. The main findings were as follows: Blue was the most popular color. This was followed by Green and Purple. There was no real significance in the choice of lucky numbers. About one third of the students said that they had none. Sixty-one percent of the students selected the age group 26 to 30 years as ideal for marriage, followed by 21 to 25 years. In looking for the most important qualities in an ideal partner, someone hoped the person to be Intelligent, others chose Natural, and still others indicated Attractive and Honest. The ideal number of children was 2, followed by 3. It is not easy to reach any definite conclusions based upon such a small sample of students from such widely different backgrounds. However, it is clear that majority favorite of 26 to 30 is the ideal age to get married with an intelligent partner, thereby producing 2 children.

(23)

A.Personal matters.

B.Social problems.

C.Family planning.

D.Family relations.

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第11题
Questions 22 to 25 are based on the passage you have just heard.第22题:

Questions 22 to 25 are based on the passage you have just heard.

第22题:

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