Questions 21to 25are based on the following passage£º
More attention was paid to the quality of production in France at the time of Rene Coty£®Charles Deschanel was then the financial minister£®He stressed that workmanship and quality were more important than quantity for industrial production£®It would be necessary to produce quality goods for the international market to compete with those produced in other countries£®The French economy needed a larger share of the international market to balance its import and export trade£®
The government was reluctant to let workers leave the country£®It was feared this immigration of workers would deplete the labor force£®The lack of qualified workers might hinder the improvement in the quality of industrial products produced£®Qualified workers employed abroad would only increase the quantity of quality goods produced in foreign countries£®Also the quantity of quality goods produced in France would not be able to increase as part of its qualified labor force moved to other countries£®
21£®According to the passage£¬the French workers were ________ £®
Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage£º
Food can be divided into two basic categories£ºreal food and pleasure food£®Real food is fuel for the body's needs£¬while pleasure food£¬ which is high in fat and sugar£¬is primarily for taste satisfaction£®The categories are pretty obvious£®Broccoli is real food£®Cookies are in the pleasure group£®
When you are hungry£¬you are faced with choices£®If you aren't suffering from excessive hunger£¬you can be rational about them£®Go to the refrigerator£®What looks good£¿If you have chosen a real food£¬say£¬a turkey sandwich£¬you can be certain your body can use it for fuel£®Eat it and enjoy£®
Two hours later you are hungry again£®Back to the refrigerator£®What looks good£¿Ice cream£®Stop£¡Employ your will power just a little£®Ice cream is not what your body needs£®Does something else look good£¿Yes£¬a piece of toast with peanut butter and a glass of milk sound good too£®Okay£¬go ahead£¬remembering that high-fat real foods should be eaten in moderation£®
One trick is to eliminate pleasure foods from your kitchen£®Instead£¬keep a variety of high-quality foods available at all times£®In short£¬buy lots of delicious real food£¬food you really like£¬and get rid of the junk£®
But what if you have ice cream on hand and nothing sounds good£¿Although you don't want to eat pleasure foods whenever the urge strikes£¬there is a legitimate place for them in your diet£®If you have analyzed your feelings and there are no other needs imitating hunger£¬ eat the ice cream£®You have not failed£®On the contrary£¬you have accepted your natural appetite£¬but not blindly£®
Surprisingly£¬when you know you can eat anything you want£¬and that you never have to put up with unsatisfied hunger again£¬it takes a lot of pressure off£®You will begin to want to eat what your body needs£¬and your body will begin to need foods that will lead to slimness£®
26£®Which of the following statements is NOT true£¿
The question now is how soon will scientists clone humans£®"Nature"£¬the scientific journal that published the Dolly paper£¬commented£¬"Cloning humans from adults tissues is likely to be achievable any time from one to ten years from now£®"Most scientists agree there is no insurmountable obstacle in human cloning£®But a human clone£¬even though it might resemble the individual from whom it was made£¬would differ dramatically in personality and character£¬intelligence and talents£®"You will never get 100 percent identity£¬"says psychologist Jerome Kagan of Harvard£¬"because of chance factors and because environments are never exactly the same£®"
Questions 36to 40are based on the following passage£º
Failure is probably the most fatiguing experience a person ever has£®There is nothing more exhausting than not succeeding£¬being blocked£¬not moving ahead£®It is an evil circle£®Failure breeds fatigue£¬and fatigue makes it harder to get to work£¬which adds to the fatigue£®
We experience this tiredness in two main ways£¬as start-up fatigue and performance fatigue£®In the former case£¬we keep putting off a task that we are forced to take up£®Either because it is too tedious or because it is too difficult£¬we avoid it£®And the longer we postpone it£¬the more tired we feel£®
Such start-up fatigue is very real£¬even not actually physical£¬not something in our muscles and bones£®The remedy is obvious£¬though perhaps not easy to apply£ºwillpower exercise£®The moment I find myself turning away from a job£¬ or putting it under a pile of things I have to do£¬ I clear my desk of everything else and attach the objectionable item first£®To prevent start-up fatigue£¬always treat the most difficult job first£®
Performance fatigue is more difficult to handle£®Here we are willing to get started£¬but we can't seem to do the job right£®Its difficulties appear to be insurmountable and however hard we work£¬we fail again and again£®The mounting experience of failure carries with it an ever-increasing burden of mental fatigue£®In such a situation£¬I work as hard as I can£¬then let the unconscious take over£®
36£®Which of the following can be called an evil circle£¿
Directions£ºIn this part£¬there is a short passage with five questions or incomplete statements£®
Read the passage carefully£®Then answer the questions or complete the statements in the fewest possible words£®
In an effort to produce the largest£¬fastest£¬ the most luxurious ship afloat£¬the British built the Titanic£®It was so superior to anything else on the seas that it was considered"unsinkable"£® So sure of this were the owners that they provided lifeboats for only 950of its possible 3£¬500 passengers£®Many passengers were aboard the night it rammed an ice-burg£¬only two days at sea and more than half way between England and New York£¬the destination£®Because the luxury liner was traveling so fast£¬it was impossible to avoid the ghostly looking ice-burg£®An inextinguishable fire also contributed to the ship's disaster£®Panic increased the number of deaths as people jumped into the icy water or fought to be among the few to board the lifeboats£®Four hours after the mishap£¬another ship£¬the Carpathia£¬rescued the survivors£¬less than a third of those originally aboard£®The famous Titanic enjoyed only two days of sailing glory on its maiden voyage in 1912before plunging into 12£¬000feet of water near the coast of Newfoundland£¬where it lies today£®
Questions£º
71£®The owners of Titanic provided lifeboats for only 950passengers which were far from enough because ________ £®
72£®How many days was the Titanic at sea before sinking£¿
As teamwork is increasingly important in modern society£¬everyone should train his ability to cooperate with others£®
Today's society is no longer aself-sufficient one£¬but one in which all the people depend on each other for existence£®Only for existence£¬not to mention the pursuit and obtainment of happiness£¬one can't do without the ability to work harmoniously with others£®In the highly developed society today£¬one can almost accomplish nothing without joint efforts£®Every loaf of bread£¬every article ofclothes£¬every house or apartment£¬every means oftransportation is the product ofcooperative efforts£®We play with other children in kindergartens£»we study with our classmates at schools£»and we will work with our fellow workers or colleagues in factories or companies£® What we have got through teamwork is not only self-improvement£¬personalsuccessbutalso the satisfaction at both our devotion to common causes and the sense of collective honor£®
To meet the needs of both personal improvement and the sophisticated society£¬we should learn to cooperate with each other and adjust to each other£®Only in this way can we achieve successes and satisfy ourselves as wellas the society£®