D

Protests (¿¹Òé) at the use of animals in research have taken on a new and fearful character in Britain with the attempted murder of two British scientists by the terrorist (¿Ö²À·Ö×ÓµÄ) technique of the pre-planted car¨Cbomb .

The research community (ÉçÍÅ) will rightly be alarmed at these developments which have two aims :to draw public attention and to frighten people working in research with animals . The scientists insist that everything should be done to identify those responsible for the crimes and to put them on trial . The Defense Research Society has taken the practical step of offering a reward of ??10£¬000 for information leading to those responsible , but past experience is not encouraging . People are unlikely to be attracted by such offers . The professional police will similarly be challenged by the problem of finding a needle in a haystack .

That is why the intellectual (֪ʶ·Ö×Ó) community in Britain and elsewhere must act more strongly in its own defense . There are several steps that can be taken , of which the chief one is to demand of all the organizations that exist with the declared aims of defending the interests of animals that they should declare clearly where they stand on violence towards people . And it will not be enough for the chairman and chairwoman of these organizations to make placatory (°²¸§µÄ) statements on behalf of all their members . These people should also promise that it will be a test of continuing membership in their organizations that members and would-be members should declare that they will take no part in acts of violence against human beings .

67£®The words ¡°these developments¡± (Linel , Para .2 ) most probably refer to         .

       A£®the use of animals in research

       B£®the acts of violence against scientists

       C£®the techniques of planting bombs in cars

       D£®setting up of new animal protection organizations

68£®Which of the following is true according to the passage ?

       A£®The police gave up their efforts to find the criminals .

       B£®The terrorists escaped with the help of their organization .

       C£®The attempted murder caused great anxiety among British scientists .

       D£®People supported the animal protectors in spite of their extremist acts .

69£®The author¡¯s purpose in writing this article is to demand that animal-protecting organizations         .

       A£®give up the use of violence

       B£®declare their aims clearly

       C£®continue the dialogue with the scientific community

       D£®help to fid those responsible for the attempted murder

70£®In the author¡¯s opinion ,        .

       A£®animal-protecting organizations should be declared illegal

       B£®the scientists should take effective measures to protect themselves

       C£®since people can lie , the problem about eh rights of scientists can¡¯t be solved

       D£®animal-protecting organizations should help the police to fight against the acts of violence

against scientists

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Passage ten(Antinuclear Demonstration)

Police fired tear gas and arrested more than 5,000 passively resisting protestors Friday in an attempt to break up the largest antinuclear demonstration ever staged in the United States. More than 135,000 demonstrators confronted police on the construction site of a 1,000-megawatt nuclear power plant scheduled to provide power to most of southern New Hampshire. Organizers of the huge demonstration said, the protest was continuing despite the police actions. More demonstrators were arriving to keep up the pressure on state authorities to cancel the project. The demonstrator had charged that the project was unsafe in the densely populated area, would create thermal pollution in the bay, and had no acceptable means for disposing of its radioactive wasters. The demonstrations would go on until the jails and the courts were so overloaded that the state judicial system would collapse.

Governor Stanforth Thumper insisted that there would be no reconsideration of the power project and no delay in its construction set for completion in three years. ¡°This project will begin on time and the people of this state will begin to receive its benefits on schedule. Those who break the law in misguided attempts to sabotage the project will be dealt with according to the law,¡± he said. And police called in reinforcements from all over the state to handle the disturbances.

The protests began before dawn Friday when several thousand demonstrators broke through police lines around the cordoned-off construction site. They carried placards that read ¡°No Nukes is Good Nukes,¡± ¡°Sunpower, Not Nuclear Power,¡± and ¡°Stop Private Profits from Public Peril.¡± They defied police order to move from the area. Tear gas canisters fired by police failed to dislodge the protestors who had come prepared with their own gas masks or facecloths. Finally gas-masked and helmeted police charged into the crowd to drag off the demonstrators one by one. The protestors did not resist police, but refused to walk away under their own power. Those arrested would be charged with unlawful assembly, trespassing, and disturbing the peace.

1.What were the demonstrators protesting about?

A.Private profits.

B.Nuclear Power Station.

C.The project of nuclear power construction.

D.Public peril.

2.Who had gas-masks?

A.Everybody.

B.A part of the protestors.

C.Policemen.

D.Both B and C.

3.Which of the following was NOT mentioned as a reason for the demonstration?

A.Public transportation.

B.Public peril.

C.Pollution.

D.Disposal of wastes.

4.With whom were the jails and courts overloaded?

A.With prisoners.

B.With arrested demonstrators.

C.With criminals.

D.With protestors.

5.What is the attitude of Governor Stanforth Thumper toward the power project and the demonstration?

A.stubborn.

B.insistent.

C.insolvable.

D.remissible.

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A U.S man found 300 letters to God floating in the Atlantic Ocean last week. He said on Friday he would   1   them to a church instead of selling them on eBay following protests from religious people.
The letters , sent to a late Baptist clergyman (ÄÁʦ), were   2  put in a sealed plastic shopping bag near a    3   in Atlantic, New Jersey.
Bill Lacovara, an insurance adjuster from Ventnor, New Jersey, said he got the bag while on a fishing trip last week.
The letters were     4     to the clergyman, who died in 2004. Someone cleaning his house may have   5   the bag, which Lacovara found about 100 miles (160km) from Cooper¡¯s house.
They include one from a teenage girl asking God to    6  her for her wrongdoing, one from a prisoner who said he was    7    and someone had set a trap for him, and    8   from a man who wanted God¡¯s help winning the lottery, according to media reports.
Lavovara said he could have    9   them on eBay for up to $15,000(7,889 pounds) according to his prediction of the compete price and would have given the money to charity. But he has changed his mind because he said the move caused     10    to some religious people.
¡°They said they were    11    in me, and I didn¡¯t want to do something that¡¯s going to create    12     results.¡± he told Reuters.
Some    13    him to burn the letters, throw them back in the ocean or give them to a church, Lacovara said.
Lacovara said about a dozen clergymen have offered to take the letters, and he is evaluating the    14   to make sure the letters don¡¯t fall into the     15    hands.
1.    A. donate                     B. show          C. sell                 D. owe
2.    A. hurriedly                  B. privately       C. mysteriously   D. occasionally
3.    A. river                      B. lake                   C. hill                 D. beach
4.    A. taken              B. offered       C. addressed      D. given
5.    A. collected           B. thrown        C. opened        D. destroyed
6.    A. forgive            B. punish        C. adjust         D. charge
7.    A. friendly            B. correct              C. innocent      D. energetic
8.    A. others                     B. another       C. the other      D. one
9.    A. auctioned         B. bought             C. donated               D. discounted
10.   A. damage            B. offence       C. injury               D. worry
11.   A. absorbed           B. involved            C. interested      D. disappointed
12.   A. final              B. direct               C. same         D. bad
13.   A. forced             B. urged               C. questioned           D. pleased
14.   A. requests                   B. orders              C. commands           D. invitations
15.   A. wrong                     B. poor                C. tight                D. firm

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D

Protests (¿¹Òé) at the use of animals in research have taken on a new and fearful character in Britain with the attempted murder of two British scientists by the terrorist (¿Ö²À·Ö×ÓµÄ) technique of the pre-planted car¨Cbomb .

The research community (ÉçÍÅ) will rightly be alarmed at these developments which have two aims :to draw public attention and to frighten people working in research with animals . The scientists insist that everything should be done to identify those responsible for the crimes and to put them on trial . The Defense Research Society has taken the practical step of offering a reward of £10£¬000 for information leading to those responsible , but past experience is not encouraging . People are unlikely to be attracted by such offers . The professional police will similarly be challenged by the problem of finding a needle in a haystack .

That is why the intellectual (֪ʶ·Ö×Ó) community in Britain and elsewhere must act more strongly in its own defense . There are several steps that can be taken , of which the chief one is to demand of all the organizations that exist with the declared aims of defending the interests of animals that they should declare clearly where they stand on violence towards people . And it will not be enough for the chairman and chairwoman of these organizations to make placatory (°²¸§µÄ) statements on behalf of all their members . These people should also promise that it will be a test of continuing membership in their organizations that members and would-be members should declare that they will take no part in acts of violence against human beings .

67£®The words ¡°these developments¡± (Linel , Para .2 ) most probably refer to         .

A£®the use of animals in research

B£®the acts of violence against scientists

C£®the techniques of planting bombs in cars

D£®setting up of new animal protection organizations

68£®Which of the following is true according to the passage ?

A£®The police gave up their efforts to find the criminals .

B£®The terrorists escaped with the help of their organization .

C£®The attempted murder caused great anxiety among British scientists .

D£®People supported the animal protectors in spite of their extremist acts .

69£®The author¡¯s purpose in writing this article is to demand that animal-protecting organizations         .

A£®give up the use of violence

B£®declare their aims clearly

C£®continue the dialogue with the scientific community

D£®help to fid those responsible for the attempted murder

70£®In the author¡¯s opinion ,       .

A£®animal-protecting organizations should be declared illegal

B£®the scientists should take effective measures to protect themselves

C£®since people can lie , the problem about eh rights of scientists can¡¯t be solved

D£®animal-protecting organizations should help the police to fight against the acts of violence

against scientists

 

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     On Sundays my father always wore that dull gray apron after breakfast when Dad always announced, "Go ahead everyone. I'll take care of the dishes!" 
     I suppose it was strange for a boy's father to   1   an apron, but I never thought   2   of it until the day
that Dad    3   with tradition. It was the last Sunday in August. My father seemed in an expansive mood as we walked    4   from church together.
     "Tommy," he said letting my name roll off his tongue. "There comes a time in every boy's life when he
must take on    5  ."   
     "Responsibilities?" I asked.
     "Yes. It's   6   that you took a greater role in the household. Starting today, I want you to do the dishes on Sunday morning   7   your mother and I can work the crossword puzzle together."
     "The dishes?"
     "Anything   8   with taking over the dishes, my son?"
     I started to say   9   about a man's job or woman's work, but I knew immediately that my   10  would
fall on deaf ears.
     I didn't taste a bit of breakfast that morning. Dad seemed in a merry mood as he   11   an exceptional
Yankee game on the radio last night.
     Suddenly, everything grew   12  . My father announced, "Let's go on to read the paper."
     "Aren't you doing the   13  ?" my mother asked anxiously.
     "Your oldest son has generously offered to fill the   14  ."
     "I want you to have this, Tommy. It'll   15   your clothes from getting wet." And   16   I could say a
protest, he had put the thing on me. "Thanks, my son. Your mother and I   17   this."
     With that he   18   into the Sunday paper. I looked down at the plastic. It had seen better days. I could see my dad reaching for the dishes. The dark angel flew   19  . Soon I was singing about Mrs. Murphy¡¯s chowder. The words came out of nowhere. And out of nowhere I knew the kind of man I   20   to be.
(     )1. A. share       
(     )2. A. many       
(     )3. A. broke       
(     )4. A. school      
(     )5. A. worries      
(     )6. A. time        
(     )7. A. because     
(     )8. A. wrong        
(     )9. A. everything  
(     )10. A. discussions
(     )11. A. declared    
(     )12. A. quiet     
(     )13. A. manners    
(     )14. A. environment
(     )15. A. keep        
(     )16. A. after      
(     )17. A. regret      
(     )18. A. disappeared
(     )19. A. back       
(     )20. A. refused  
B. wear          
B. any          
B. promised      
B. business      
B. responsibilities
B. room          
B. so              
B. good      
B. something      
B. judgement      
B. pretended      
B. empty        
B. dishes      
B. role      
B. put            
B. until          
B. appreciate    
B. returned    
B. on            
B. ordered     
C. dress      
C. little      
C. showed    
C. home      
C. abilities  
C. effort      
C. but        
C. beneficial  
C. anything  
C. excitement  
C. described  
C. cheerful    
C. atmospheres
C. status      
C. leave      
C. before      
C. dislike    
C. existed  
C. off        
C. believed
D. hold    
D. much    
D. read    
D. class    
D. faults  
D. money    
D. for      
D. right    
D. nothing  
D. protests
D. admitted
D. noisy    
D. friends  
D. position
D. make    
D. while    
D. focus    
D. pretended
D. in      
D. wanted  

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