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- The homeless make up a growing percentage of American’s population. (62) homelessness has reaches such proportions that government can’t possibly (63) .T0 help homeless people (64) independence, the federal government must support job training programs, (65) the minimum wage, and fund more low-cost housing. (66) everyone agrees on the numbers of American who ae homeless.Estimates range (67) from 600, 000 to 3 million. (68) the figure may vary, analysts do agree on another matter:that the number of the homeless is (69) , one of the federal governments’ studies (70) that the number of the homeless will reach nearly 19 million by the end of this decade. Finding ways to (71) this growing homeless population has become increasingly difficult. (72) when homeless individuals manage to find a (73) that will give them three meals a day and a place to sleep at night, a good number still spend the bulk of each day (74) on the street.Part of the problem is that many homeless adults are addicted to alcohol or drugs.And a significant number of the homeless have serious mental disorders.Many others, (75) not addicted or mentally ill, simply lack the everyday (76) skills need to turn their lives (77) . Boston Globereporter Chris Reidy notes that the situation will improve only when there are (78) programs that address the many needs of the homeless. (79) Edward Blotkowsk, director of community service at Bentley College in Massachusetts, (80) it, "There has to be (81) of programs.What’s need is a package deal.\
- 简述银行业监督管理机构的一般监管措施。
- What would harm the Americans peace initiative for the Middle East
- According to the interviewee, when an employee joins a union he becomes
- The interviewee believes that those who work for a non-union small business
- TEXT A The first pre-election poll, or straw vote, as it was then called, was conducted by the Harris bury Pennsylvanian before the 1824 presidential election. This straw vote and the many that followed it really registered nothing but local opinion; however, as communications improved and elections were won by closer and closer margins, newspapers and journals tried desperately to satisfy their readers’ curiosity in more reliable ways. Before the 1928 elections, no fewer than 85 publications made private inquires, generally by means of questionnaires sent to subscribers and by telephone surveys. The principle common to all these inquiries was that they depended on quantity rather than quality; little effort was made to reach representatives of all segments of the population. Still, the erroneous belief persisted that the greater the number of questionnaires, the more accurate the results would be. The record was held by the American monthly Literary Digest, which sent out millions of postcards with short and pointed questions before each election and received many hundreds of thousands of replies. In fact, in 1932, the Literary Digest’s forecast was off by only 1%. In view of such striking achievements, it seemed rather impertinent for the young American journalist, George Gallup, to claim that large numbers were irrelevant and that equally accurate or better predictions could be made with a small but carefully selected sample of the population and a small team of skilled interviewers. In 1936, it took Gallup a long time to convince 35 newspaper editors that his system was much cheaper than the customary mass inquiries and that it could provide surprisingly accurate predictions. The editors finally agreed, on condition that if Gallup’s predictions were less accurate than those obtained by the tried method of the Literary Digest, he would have to refund the entire cost of the investigation. Although the Literary Digest broke its own record by obtaining 2 million replies to its electoral postcards that year, its prediction was wrong by 19%, whereas Gallup’s was off .by less than 1%. Moreover, the Digest had predicted that Alfred M. Landon, the Republican candidate would obtain 56% of the votes cast, whereas Franklin D. Roosevelt was, in fact, re-elected with an unusually large majority. Gallup was one of the few political prophets who predicted this result. Suddenly Gallup’s name was on everyone’s lips, not only was he the prophet of the moment, but it was generally conceded that he had found a new and most important scientific method of prediction. He was showered with money and commissions, and the Gallup Poll became a generic term for public opinion polls. Unlike earlier prophets, Gallup based his investigations on sociological rather than purely arithmetical calculations. He realised that the electorate is made up of different social strata with differing political trends. Thus, farmers do not vote in the same way that industrial workers do, the North votes quite unlike the South, Black preferences vary from those of White persons, the interests of employers are different from those of employees, and so on. There are also voting differences according to age and sex, for it appeared that older people and women tend to vote for conservative parties. Gallup usually sampled his subjects according to six factors: state, size of community, age, sex, income, and political affiliation. From time to time, other factors may be considered; during times of war, for instance, the national origins of electors may be taken into account. Only when the composition of the electorate has been accurately determined can the purely arithmetical question-how many people in each bracket must be interviewed-be solved. Once this is done, laws of probabilities take over and the more people interviewed, the more exact the estimates will be. However, above a certain maximum number of interviews, the accuracy increases by no more than a fractional percentage and where errors of up to 2% are permissible, a few thousand questionnaires will accurately reflect the opinion of the total US electorate. It is true that not all Gallup’s predictions were as accurate as that, for of the 114 election forecasts made by the American Institute of Public Opinion between 1936 and 1944, only 19 were wrong by less than 1%; 39 were off by between 2% and 3%; nearly half were off by more than 3%, and 6 were off by as much as 10% to 15%. The Gallup method suffered its greatest setback during the 1948 presidential election when Truman-not Gallup’s choice, Dewey--was elected. Before Eisenhower’s election in 1952 and re election in 1956 there was less doubt about the outcome, and Gallup did, in fact make fairly accurate predictions. The American results have been excelled by those obtained by Gallup’s British Institute of Public Opinion, which, using the same methods, has managed to forecast a number of parliamentary elections with a margin of error of only one half of 1% . In France, too, the French Institute of Public Opinion has managed to predict parliamentary results with a margin of error that has rarely exceeded 2%. After his more than 20 years’ experience with surveys, it would be fair to say the Gallup’s method of sampling the electorate has proved most successful. Before Gallup, political predictions were no more than shots in the dark, and it is as a result of his achievement that today we can make truly scientific forecasts in this difficult field. From the passage, we can learn that the Gallup Poll______.
- It’ s time that______(采取措施)about the traffic problem downtown.
- Joining a union gives an employer the security of never having to worry about
- 新生儿革兰阴性菌肺炎首选()
- TEXT C The greatest impact on the family over the last 50 years has been the changing role of the wife. These changes have affected not only her life but also that of her husband and children. The family has changed from an economically defined unit under the authority of the father and having minimal interpersonal emotional ties to a unit with strong emotional ties directed primarily by the mother to her husband and children. This meant a removal of the woman from the community into the much more private setting of the nuclear family. One important result is greater emotional and general psychological seclusion of the woman, which clearly implied that the female role was culturally a secondary one. In recent decades it has become clear that for a distinct minority of American women the traditional mother role in the seclusion of the home is no longer acceptable. For many the family is of diminishing importance. The development of education for women has been a crucial factor in this change. Today, over 80% of all women complete four years of high school as compared to only 35% in 1940. This is related to the fact that marriage now occurs a year later for the average woman. The proportion of women aged 20 to 24 who are single increased from 28% in 1969 to 40% by the mid 1970s. Childbearing is being postponed so that, compared to the 1960s, 10% fewer women bear their first child in the two years immediately following marriage. Furthermore, more women today remain childless. Work, older age at marriage, and fewer children are the basic changes that have taken place in women’s roles in recent years. The trend among women is toward increased education, and this is linked to other role changes. The higher a woman’s educational attainment, the more likely she is to work, to stay in the labour force longer, and to have more job opportunities available to her. This further suggests that when women are married their work has a great impact on their marriage. For example, since working wives contribute 25% to 40% of their total family income, their position as decision-makers in the family is usually strengthened. A sociologist points out that the social trends towards increased education for women not only mean more work experience but also delayed marriage and decreased fertility. These changes, in turn, point the way toward even greater labour force participation throughout the life cycle. The number of women entering the work force is rapidly increasing. Women outnumber men in the total population by about 7 million. When that is added to the fact that labour force participation of males is slowly declining because of the trend toward earlier retirement, "it may not be too long before one out every two American workers is a woman." What is the direct cause of the improvement of women’s position in the family
- 试述我国商业银行的信贷原则。
- The homeless make up a growing percentage of American’s population. (62) homelessness has reaches such proportions that government can’t possibly (63) .T0 help homeless people (64) independence, the federal government must support job training programs, (65) the minimum wage, and fund more low-cost housing. (66) everyone agrees on the numbers of American who ae homeless.Estimates range (67) from 600, 000 to 3 million. (68) the figure may vary, analysts do agree on another matter:that the number of the homeless is (69) , one of the federal governments’ studies (70) that the number of the homeless will reach nearly 19 million by the end of this decade. Finding ways to (71) this growing homeless population has become increasingly difficult. (72) when homeless individuals manage to find a (73) that will give them three meals a day and a place to sleep at night, a good number still spend the bulk of each day (74) on the street.Part of the problem is that many homeless adults are addicted to alcohol or drugs.And a significant number of the homeless have serious mental disorders.Many others, (75) not addicted or mentally ill, simply lack the everyday (76) skills need to turn their lives (77) . Boston Globereporter Chris Reidy notes that the situation will improve only when there are (78) programs that address the many needs of the homeless. (79) Edward Blotkowsk, director of community service at Bentley College in Massachusetts, (80) it, "There has to be (81) of programs.What’s need is a package deal.\
- The homeless make up a growing percentage of American’s population. (62) homelessness has reaches such proportions that government can’t possibly (63) .T0 help homeless people (64) independence, the federal government must support job training programs, (65) the minimum wage, and fund more low-cost housing. (66) everyone agrees on the numbers of American who ae homeless.Estimates range (67) from 600, 000 to 3 million. (68) the figure may vary, analysts do agree on another matter:that the number of the homeless is (69) , one of the federal governments’ studies (70) that the number of the homeless will reach nearly 19 million by the end of this decade. Finding ways to (71) this growing homeless population has become increasingly difficult. (72) when homeless individuals manage to find a (73) that will give them three meals a day and a place to sleep at night, a good number still spend the bulk of each day (74) on the street.Part of the problem is that many homeless adults are addicted to alcohol or drugs.And a significant number of the homeless have serious mental disorders.Many others, (75) not addicted or mentally ill, simply lack the everyday (76) skills need to turn their lives (77) . Boston Globereporter Chris Reidy notes that the situation will improve only when there are (78) programs that address the many needs of the homeless. (79) Edward Blotkowsk, director of community service at Bentley College in Massachusetts, (80) it, "There has to be (81) of programs.What’s need is a package deal.\
- TEXT D "There are too many students overcrowding courses and contributing nothing to society," says Professor Edward Mishan, explaining the subject of an article, published recently in an economics journal. Using pure economic rationality, Professor Mishan argues that subsidizing students because they benefit society is a fallacy--one that he says he would have included in his book 21 Popular Economic Fallacies, had he thought of it when it was first published in 1970. "For if higher education is free," he writes, "a man who chooses to spend three years at university rather than enter the workforce may be willing to do so even though it makes no perceptible difference to his future earnings." As such he advocates full commercial rates on loans for students to pay the entire costs of their higher education.. Professor Mandy Telford is not amused. "There is no doubt that charging commercial interest rates on loans would put people off going to university," she said. "At present we have a system where the poorest students are forced to work long hours just to keep their heads above water, while the rich, supported by their parents, are able to make greater use of their time. Commercial rate loans would hit the poorest students the hardest as they would be forced to borrow the most. After graduation all students would be forced to chase a fast buck to escape the burden of their ever-increasing debts, therefore shunning lower paid jobs in a public sector that is crying out for skilled teachers and nurses, "Ms. Telford added. One effect of subsidizing university studies, claims Professor Mishan, is that "bizarre and outlandish" courses are likely to proliferate. "In some courses (possibly medicine, electrical engineering and accounting), the respective IRRs (internal rate of return) may be well above that on commercial investment, whereas in others (possibly psychology, sociology and gender studies), they would be well below," he writes. On psychology, sociology, and gender studies, he says, "you learn a few terms you throw into a conversation but nothing more, this is not a good allocation of resources." Lynne Segal, professor of psychology and gender studies at Birkbeck College, is nearly amused. "This is amazing. All we hear about is people complaining about boys and masculinity--lower exam results, more crime," she said. "Mental illness amongst men is rising and depression these are economic issues as well. He seems to be negating the study of human behaviour. It’s a bit hard to take seriously," she added. Professor Mishan was a professor of economics at London School of Economics until 1977, after which he moved to America. Since then he has been "a little bit out of economics", says professor Colin Robinson, editor of economic affairs, the journal produced by the Institute of Economic Affairs, which published the paper. But Professor Mishan does sound amused about his paper. This is not my field of competence--it’s just bit of fun," he reassures us. Professor Mishan advocates full commercial rates on students loans because he believes that______.
- The homeless make up a growing percentage of American’s population. (62) homelessness has reaches such proportions that government can’t possibly (63) .T0 help homeless people (64) independence, the federal government must support job training programs, (65) the minimum wage, and fund more low-cost housing. (66) everyone agrees on the numbers of American who ae homeless.Estimates range (67) from 600, 000 to 3 million. (68) the figure may vary, analysts do agree on another matter:that the number of the homeless is (69) , one of the federal governments’ studies (70) that the number of the homeless will reach nearly 19 million by the end of this decade. Finding ways to (71) this growing homeless population has become increasingly difficult. (72) when homeless individuals manage to find a (73) that will give them three meals a day and a place to sleep at night, a good number still spend the bulk of each day (74) on the street.Part of the problem is that many homeless adults are addicted to alcohol or drugs.And a significant number of the homeless have serious mental disorders.Many others, (75) not addicted or mentally ill, simply lack the everyday (76) skills need to turn their lives (77) . Boston Globereporter Chris Reidy notes that the situation will improve only when there are (78) programs that address the many needs of the homeless. (79) Edward Blotkowsk, director of community service at Bentley College in Massachusetts, (80) it, "There has to be (81) of programs.What’s need is a package deal.\
- TEXT B As more people live closer together, and as they use machines to produce leisure, they find that their leisure, and even their working hours, become spoilt by a by-product of their machines--namely, noise. Noise is nowadays in the news; it has acquired political status, and public opinion is demanding, more and more insistently, that something be done about it. So it was very appropriate’ that many people professionally interested in noise control should meet to discuss their common problems at a large-scale conference. In the three days of the Conference at Teddington, 25 papers were presented; and faced with the pile of texts, whose contents ranged from sophisticated aerodynamics to general comments on the irritation expressed by neighbours, it was difficult to sort out the new ideas which remain active in one’s mind six months from now, from the big mass of valuable knowledge and facts which will remain on the shelves for reference. This difficulty was faced by Mr. D. W. Robinson, head of the acoustics work at the National Physical Laboratory. His introduction elaborated the general idea that noise must be considered in relation to the social organism which produces it. Sound becomes annoying noise only when someone’s opinion has made it so. In terms of energy, it is an undesired byproduct, often an exceedingly small fraction of the main output of the machine or process which produces it, and correspondingly difficult to reduce significantly. To control noise is going to demand much self-discipline (annoyance arises often from lack of common courtesy and imagination), a sense of proportion (there is usually a conflict of interest if a noise is to be stopped), the expenditure of money (and it is far more economical to do this early rather than late), and, finally, technical knowledge. Technical difficulties often arise from the subjective-objective nature of the problem. You can define the excessive speed of a motor Car in terms of a pointer reading on a speedometer. But can you define excessive noise in the same way The results of several large-scale experiments, involving numbers of vehicles and of listeners, show how difficult it is to fix any instrumental reading as a legal limit in a way which satisfies most of the public and yet is fair to the vehicle owner. You, find, for example, that with any existing simple "noise meter", vehicles which are judged to be equally noisy by a jury may show considerable difference on the meter. A group of papers dealt with noise, at the source--the basic origins of noise in gears, internal combustion engines, fans and jets. The prospect of a significant reduction in noise output from jet engines of the future was one of the most important questions discussed at the conference. Though the ideal cure for noise is to stop it at its source, this may in many cases be impossible. The next weapon in the anti-noise armory is to absorb it in transit to the ear. It is a common fallacy that a sound absorbent such as glass wool is opaque to sound and is therefore the best way of diminishing annoying noise from the flat next door. In a normally furnished room, lining a wall with absorbent will have little effect on the noise level built up by reverberation; and will contribute hardly anything to the acoustic opacity of the wall. In a typical factory building, even if all available surfaces are covered with absorbent, the noise level is unlikely to drop by more than five decibels. A consultant will often recommend light partitioning, and partial screening round noisy machines, as a more of the Conference at Teddington, 25 papers were presented; and faced with the pile of texts, whose contents ranged from sophisticated aerodynamics to general comments on the irritation expressed by neighbours, it was difficult to sort out the new ideas which remain active in one’s mind six months from now, from the big mass of valuable knowledge and facts which will remain on the shelves for reference. This difficulty was faced by Mr. D. W. Robinson, head of the acoustics work at the National Physical Laboratory. His introduction elaborated the general idea that noise must be considered in relation to the social organism which produces it. Sound becomes annoying noise only when someone’s opinion has made it so. In terms of energy, it is an undesired byproduct, often an exceedingly small fraction of the main output of the machine or process which produces it, and correspondingly difficult to reduce significantly. To control noise is going to demand much self-discipline (annoyance arises often from lack of common courtesy and imagination), a sense of proportion (there is usually a conflict of interest if a noise is to be stopped), the expenditure of money (and it is far more economical to do this early rather than late), and, finally, technical knowledge. Technical difficulties often arise from the subjective-objective nature of the problem. You can define the excessive speed of a motor Car in terms of a pointer reading on a speedometer. But can you define excessive noise in the same way The results of several large-scale experiments, involving numbers of vehicles and of listeners, show how difficult it is to fix any instrumental reading as a legal limit in a way which satisfies most of the public and yet is fair to the vehicle owner. You, find, for example, that with any existing simple "noise meter", vehicles which are judged to be equally noisy by a jury may show considerable difference on the meter. A group of papers dealt with noise, at the source--the basic origins of noise in gears, internal combustion engines, fans and jets. The prospect of a significant reduction in noise output from jet engines of the future was one of the most important questions discussed at the conference. Though the ideal cure for noise is to stop it at its source, this may in many cases be impossible. The next weapon in the anti-noise armory is to absorb it in transit to the ear. It is a common fallacy that a sound absorbent such as glass wool is opaque to sound and is therefore the best way of diminishing annoying noise from the flat next door. In a normally furnished room, lining a wall with absorbent will have little effect on the noise level built up by reverberation; and will contribute hardly anything to the acoustic opacity of the wall. In a typical factory building, even if all available surfaces are covered with absorbent, the noise level is unlikely to drop by more than five decibels. A consultant will often recommend light partitioning, and partial screening round noisy machines, as a more effective and a more economical course. Domestic noises may perhaps be controlled by forethought and courtesy and industrial noises by good planning and technical improvement. But, if we are going to allow fast motor-cycles and heavy diesel lorries to pass continuously through residential and business property, the community as a whole must decide on the control it needs to exercise, for in the long run, it has got to pay for it. And if a nation is to take a leading part in modern air transport, it must enter into international agreements on the noise control measures it will impose at its airports and here the cost of any real control is immediately to be measured in millions of pounds. Which of the following is NOT one of the requirements if noise is to be controlled
- The homeless make up a growing percentage of American’s population. (62) homelessness has reaches such proportions that government can’t possibly (63) .T0 help homeless people (64) independence, the federal government must support job training programs, (65) the minimum wage, and fund more low-cost housing. (66) everyone agrees on the numbers of American who ae homeless.Estimates range (67) from 600, 000 to 3 million. (68) the figure may vary, analysts do agree on another matter:that the number of the homeless is (69) , one of the federal governments’ studies (70) that the number of the homeless will reach nearly 19 million by the end of this decade. Finding ways to (71) this growing homeless population has become increasingly difficult. (72) when homeless individuals manage to find a (73) that will give them three meals a day and a place to sleep at night, a good number still spend the bulk of each day (74) on the street.Part of the problem is that many homeless adults are addicted to alcohol or drugs.And a significant number of the homeless have serious mental disorders.Many others, (75) not addicted or mentally ill, simply lack the everyday (76) skills need to turn their lives (77) . Boston Globereporter Chris Reidy notes that the situation will improve only when there are (78) programs that address the many needs of the homeless. (79) Edward Blotkowsk, director of community service at Bentley College in Massachusetts, (80) it, "There has to be (81) of programs.What’s need is a package deal.\
- 简述我国房地产权属登记的特点。
- 我国实行破产管理人制度,在债权人会议上由全体债权人加以选任管理人。()
- TEXT E The job interview is the moment of truth in job hunting. In addition to how the interviewer sees your qualifications and personal qualities, much will depend on how they evaluate your interview performance in general. Therefore, it is helpful to consider it a performance or a game whose goal is to sell the interviewer on the idea that you are the best person for the job. Most people take a passive approach to an interview, answering whatever questions they are asked to the best of their ability. A better approach is to take control and give the interviewer what you want to give, not necessarily what they are trying to find out; inspire confidence--to give the interviewer every reason to believe that you can handle the job for which you are being considered and little reason to believe you can’t. You do this with more than the answers you provide. Confidence is also inspired by the way you look, the enthusiasm, energy, confidence, personal ability and ambition you show or don’t show. The main reason most candidates do not get the job is that they don’t inspire confidence. They don’t lose out because they don’t have the qualifications to do the job but because their confidence in their ability to do the job didn’t come through in the interview. They didn’t sell themselves well enough. The reason most don’t is because they are nervous and feel too great pressure to perform. Many people feel like failures and become even more anxious if they don’t get an offer after each interview. This is unrealistic. Most people who get interviewed get turned down, Forget about whether you are going to get the job. Just concentrate on the interview and do as many as you can. Interviewing is a skill that is learned with practice just like any sport or performance. Mentally going over what worked and what didn’t will improve your performance. Preparation is the key. Practice answering questions and sounding confident. Just like an actor rehearses, you are rehearsing your role as a job candidate. It will give you the confidence to take control when it is your turn "on stage". When you handle the interview with confidence, the job will take care of itself. As in sports, confidence comes from knowing you are prepared. Never go to any interview without doing as much research as possible about the company, institution, etc. Surveys in the US show that lack of familiarity with the company will hurt your chances in as many as 75% of the interviews. Virtually all interviews are about the following: Can you do the job Will you do the job Will you fit into the company Regardless of the questions you are asked, the answers you give should fit into one of those three areas--I can do the job. I will do the job. I will fit into your company. Which factor that may influence your job interview is repeatedly emphasised in the passage
- 中国人民银行是一个特殊的国家机关,其作为政府的综合经济部门,与一般政府机关存在很大的不同,其执行国家的经济政策,维护正常金融体系的稳健运行,以宏观调节经济为己任,以赢利为最终目的。()
- 男性.60岁,嗜烟,平时经常轻微咳嗽,因股骨颈骨折行固定术,术后痰多而稀,但无力咳出,术后1天逐渐出现烦躁不安、呼吸急促。检查:体温37.8℃, 脉率95次/分,呼吸31次/分,血压正常,无发绀,心脏无特殊,右肺下部呈实音,呼吸音消失,血白细胞10.5×l09/L,中性粒细胞0.78。 诊断首先考虑
- 关于产程分期下列哪项正确
- Nike’s ties to the "Adventure" market made it willing to pay a reported $400 million simply for the right to sponsor Brazil’s outstanding national soccer team, thereby boosting the brand’s image as the footwear of champions. Such an investment makes sense in a market where consumers find many products with comparable features and quality and must find some reason to choose one over the others. The Market for Love, Friendship, and Togetherness has such offerings as perfume, gifts, home photography, restaurants, and entertainment. Tapping the "Togetherness" market, Guinness Brewery has teamed with an Irish firm to establish a chain for "authentic" Irish pubs in cities around the world--where Irish charm and British beer sell briskly in each other’s company. The Market for Care recently offered a product that captured children’s desire to nurture and care for pets. The Tamagotchi is a demanding little electronic puppy that beeps for attention from its owner. Real pets are becoming hotel amenities in some places. The Who-Am-I Market offers products that proclaim their owner’s identity, like fashion, automobiles, and accessories. Louis Vuitton suitcases, for instance, tell a story that their owners want to tell the world: "I am an exciting person, gliding with perfect ease through pos}t hotels all over the world, and I do it in style. ’ Other consumers may want their purchases to proclaim their environmental awareness, so they may buy "bird friendly" coffee, grown only in shaded areas so endangered birds may be preserved. Eco-Sustainable Shady coffee and Caribou Coffee’s Rainforest Blend are among several such offerings. The Peace of Mind Market features nostalgia, history, and antiques. In rapidly changing times, many people seek the serenity of the familiar, be it the bistros of Paris or small-town life in the US. For instance, First National Bank in Brookings, South Dakota, proclaims, "We strive to maintain the small-town banking atmosphere while growing and changing with the technological age. " The Conviction Market, last of the six markets, includes "green" products, humane testing, and worker welfare. While many companies may be reluctant to become overly political, they can highlight their involvement in the community and market to their customers’ need to make purchase that are in line with their convictions. Among companies taking this approach are British Petroleum, which uses its Web site to report on the company’s Community Development Programme, and Mobil, which accentuates its concern for local populations of countries in which it does business. Jenson believes that companies will increasingly let consumers in on the story-telling process. Companies will come to value storytellers not only in their creative advertising departments, but in executive positions, where refashioning a company’s history and traditions into an appealing myth will be crucial for winning the enthusiasm of employees, the affection of customers, and the respect of the general public. As the stories get better, sales should soar. What may be Roll Jensen’s main purpose of classifying these six distinct markets
- The homeless make up a growing percentage of American’s population. (62) homelessness has reaches such proportions that government can’t possibly (63) .T0 help homeless people (64) independence, the federal government must support job training programs, (65) the minimum wage, and fund more low-cost housing. (66) everyone agrees on the numbers of American who ae homeless.Estimates range (67) from 600, 000 to 3 million. (68) the figure may vary, analysts do agree on another matter:that the number of the homeless is (69) , one of the federal governments’ studies (70) that the number of the homeless will reach nearly 19 million by the end of this decade. Finding ways to (71) this growing homeless population has become increasingly difficult. (72) when homeless individuals manage to find a (73) that will give them three meals a day and a place to sleep at night, a good number still spend the bulk of each day (74) on the street.Part of the problem is that many homeless adults are addicted to alcohol or drugs.And a significant number of the homeless have serious mental disorders.Many others, (75) not addicted or mentally ill, simply lack the everyday (76) skills need to turn their lives (77) . Boston Globereporter Chris Reidy notes that the situation will improve only when there are (78) programs that address the many needs of the homeless. (79) Edward Blotkowsk, director of community service at Bentley College in Massachusetts, (80) it, "There has to be (81) of programs.What’s need is a package deal.\
- 患儿20天,系第一胎第一产,为过期产,出生体重4300g,生后即有腹胀、便秘,常处于睡眠状态,喂养困难,声音嘶哑,末梢循环差,其黄疸时间达3周,化验检查血象正常,血培养阴性,血TSH29mU/L.总T4 90nmol/L。 其发病的最主要原因是
- The homeless make up a growing percentage of American’s population. (62) homelessness has reaches such proportions that government can’t possibly (63) .T0 help homeless people (64) independence, the federal government must support job training programs, (65) the minimum wage, and fund more low-cost housing. (66) everyone agrees on the numbers of American who ae homeless.Estimates range (67) from 600, 000 to 3 million. (68) the figure may vary, analysts do agree on another matter:that the number of the homeless is (69) , one of the federal governments’ studies (70) that the number of the homeless will reach nearly 19 million by the end of this decade. Finding ways to (71) this growing homeless population has become increasingly difficult. (72) when homeless individuals manage to find a (73) that will give them three meals a day and a place to sleep at night, a good number still spend the bulk of each day (74) on the street.Part of the problem is that many homeless adults are addicted to alcohol or drugs.And a significant number of the homeless have serious mental disorders.Many others, (75) not addicted or mentally ill, simply lack the everyday (76) skills need to turn their lives (77) . Boston Globereporter Chris Reidy notes that the situation will improve only when there are (78) programs that address the many needs of the homeless. (79) Edward Blotkowsk, director of community service at Bentley College in Massachusetts, (80) it, "There has to be (81) of programs.What’s need is a package deal.\
- The homeless make up a growing percentage of American’s population. (62) homelessness has reaches such proportions that government can’t possibly (63) .T0 help homeless people (64) independence, the federal government must support job training programs, (65) the minimum wage, and fund more low-cost housing. (66) everyone agrees on the numbers of American who ae homeless.Estimates range (67) from 600, 000 to 3 million. (68) the figure may vary, analysts do agree on another matter:that the number of the homeless is (69) , one of the federal governments’ studies (70) that the number of the homeless will reach nearly 19 million by the end of this decade. Finding ways to (71) this growing homeless population has become increasingly difficult. (72) when homeless individuals manage to find a (73) that will give them three meals a day and a place to sleep at night, a good number still spend the bulk of each day (74) on the street.Part of the problem is that many homeless adults are addicted to alcohol or drugs.And a significant number of the homeless have serious mental disorders.Many others, (75) not addicted or mentally ill, simply lack the everyday (76) skills need to turn their lives (77) . Boston Globereporter Chris Reidy notes that the situation will improve only when there are (78) programs that address the many needs of the homeless. (79) Edward Blotkowsk, director of community service at Bentley College in Massachusetts, (80) it, "There has to be (81) of programs.What’s need is a package deal.\
- A公司是一家有限责任公司,共有15位股东,其中股东甲持有20%有表决权的股份;股东乙持有15%有表决权的股份;股东丙持有10%有表决权的股份。A公司由于经营不善,连年亏损,净资产已经降至人民币300万元,包括董事长在内的几位董事陆续提出辞职。股东甲提议召开临时股东会,重新选举董事会成员,但董事会和监事会成员对甲的提议均未予理睬,股东甲即自行召集和主持临时股东会。临时股东会首先重新选举董事会成员,股东乙和股东丙联合提议采取累积投票制方式,但未被股东会采纳。最后由股东按照出资比例行使表决权,选举了新的董事会和监事会成员。为解决资金短缺问题,新的董事会提出如下三个方案交股东会审议:方案一,公开发行500万元公司债券;方案二,增加注册资本500万元,由外国B公司认购;方案三,增加注册资本500万元,由全体股东按照原出资比例认购。尽管股东乙和股东丙对第一方案表示反对,但是其他股东仍然一致决议通过了董事会提出的三个方案。在董事会实施上述三个方案时,方案一未能通过国家有关部门核准;方案二未能与B公司达成一致;只有方案三得以实现,并办理了变更手续。董事会决定投资1000万元开发网络游戏,为此,又以公司名下的办公用房作抵押,向C银行贷款500万元,并办理了登记手续。由于种种原因,网络游戏一直未能形成利润,所欠贷款无力偿还,C银行向人民法院申请A公司破产并被受理。案件审理过程中,管理人陆续收到债权人如下请求:①C银行提出,如果A公司被宣告破产,请求就其办公用房拍卖或变卖所得优先清偿所欠的贷款;②D公司提出,在人民法院受理破产申请前3个月时,A公司将一批电脑等设备无偿赠与某网吧,请求撤销该赠与;③E企业提出,对A公司的破产申请受理之前,自己欠A公司20万元劳务费,A公司欠自己20万元货款,请求两者相互抵销;④F律师事务所提出,A公司被申请破产前,由自己代理的诉讼案件发生的5万元律师费尚未支付,请求按破产费用优先支付;⑤C公证处提出,对A公司的破产申请受理之后,因管理人决定是否继续履行合同发生的1万元公证费尚未支付,请求按共益债务优先支付。要求:根据以上事实,并结合相关法律规定,回答下列问题:(1)股东甲是否有权提议召开临时股东会说明理由。(2)股东甲是否有权自行召集和主持临时股东会说明理由。(3)股东乙和股东丙要求采取累积投票制方式是否符合法律规定说明理由。(4)董事会提出的三个方案是否有不合法之处如有,请指出,并说明理由。(5)股东会通过增资方案是否合法说明理由。(6)逐项说明管理人收到的债权人请求是否合法分别说明理由。
- 试述会计法的基本原则。
- 简述审计方法中的顺查法的特征及其优缺点。
- 第一次债权人会议由管理人或者债权人委员会、占债权总额1/4以上的债权人召集,应在债权申报期限届满后15日内召开。()
- TEXT A The first pre-election poll, or straw vote, as it was then called, was conducted by the Harris bury Pennsylvanian before the 1824 presidential election. This straw vote and the many that followed it really registered nothing but local opinion; however, as communications improved and elections were won by closer and closer margins, newspapers and journals tried desperately to satisfy their readers’ curiosity in more reliable ways. Before the 1928 elections, no fewer than 85 publications made private inquires, generally by means of questionnaires sent to subscribers and by telephone surveys. The principle common to all these inquiries was that they depended on quantity rather than quality; little effort was made to reach representatives of all segments of the population. Still, the erroneous belief persisted that the greater the number of questionnaires, the more accurate the results would be. The record was held by the American monthly Literary Digest, which sent out millions of postcards with short and pointed questions before each election and received many hundreds of thousands of replies. In fact, in 1932, the Literary Digest’s forecast was off by only 1%. In view of such striking achievements, it seemed rather impertinent for the young American journalist, George Gallup, to claim that large numbers were irrelevant and that equally accurate or better predictions could be made with a small but carefully selected sample of the population and a small team of skilled interviewers. In 1936, it took Gallup a long time to convince 35 newspaper editors that his system was much cheaper than the customary mass inquiries and that it could provide surprisingly accurate predictions. The editors finally agreed, on condition that if Gallup’s predictions were less accurate than those obtained by the tried method of the Literary Digest, he would have to refund the entire cost of the investigation. Although the Literary Digest broke its own record by obtaining 2 million replies to its electoral postcards that year, its prediction was wrong by 19%, whereas Gallup’s was off .by less than 1%. Moreover, the Digest had predicted that Alfred M. Landon, the Republican candidate would obtain 56% of the votes cast, whereas Franklin D. Roosevelt was, in fact, re-elected with an unusually large majority. Gallup was one of the few political prophets who predicted this result. Suddenly Gallup’s name was on everyone’s lips, not only was he the prophet of the moment, but it was generally conceded that he had found a new and most important scientific method of prediction. He was showered with money and commissions, and the Gallup Poll became a generic term for public opinion polls. Unlike earlier prophets, Gallup based his investigations on sociological rather than purely arithmetical calculations. He realised that the electorate is made up of different social strata with differing political trends. Thus, farmers do not vote in the same way that industrial workers do, the North votes quite unlike the South, Black preferences vary from those of White persons, the interests of employers are different from those of employees, and so on. There are also voting differences according to age and sex, for it appeared that older people and women tend to vote for conservative parties. Gallup usually sampled his subjects according to six factors: state, size of community, age, sex, income, and political affiliation. From time to time, other factors may be considered; during times of war, for instance, the national origins of electors may be taken into account. Only when the composition of the electorate has been accurately determined can the purely arithmetical question-how many people in each bracket must be interviewed-be solved. Once this is done, laws of probabilities take over and the more people interviewed, the more exact the estimates will be. However, above a certain maximum number of interviews, the accuracy increases by no more than a fractional percentage and where errors of up to 2% are permissible, a few thousand questionnaires will accurately reflect the opinion of the total US electorate. It is true that not all Gallup’s predictions were as accurate as that, for of the 114 election forecasts made by the American Institute of Public Opinion between 1936 and 1944, only 19 were wrong by less than 1%; 39 were off by between 2% and 3%; nearly half were off by more than 3%, and 6 were off by as much as 10% to 15%. The Gallup method suffered its greatest setback during the 1948 presidential election when Truman-not Gallup’s choice, Dewey--was elected. Before Eisenhower’s election in 1952 and re election in 1956 there was less doubt about the outcome, and Gallup did, in fact make fairly accurate predictions. The American results have been excelled by those obtained by Gallup’s British Institute of Public Opinion, which, using the same methods, has managed to forecast a number of parliamentary elections with a margin of error of only one half of 1% . In France, too, the French Institute of Public Opinion has managed to predict parliamentary results with a margin of error that has rarely exceeded 2%. After his more than 20 years’ experience with surveys, it would be fair to say the Gallup’s method of sampling the electorate has proved most successful. Before Gallup, political predictions were no more than shots in the dark, and it is as a result of his achievement that today we can make truly scientific forecasts in this difficult field. Which of the following may be unnecessary in conducting Gallup Poll
- The homeless make up a growing percentage of American’s population. (62) homelessness has reaches such proportions that government can’t possibly (63) .T0 help homeless people (64) independence, the federal government must support job training programs, (65) the minimum wage, and fund more low-cost housing. (66) everyone agrees on the numbers of American who ae homeless.Estimates range (67) from 600, 000 to 3 million. (68) the figure may vary, analysts do agree on another matter:that the number of the homeless is (69) , one of the federal governments’ studies (70) that the number of the homeless will reach nearly 19 million by the end of this decade. Finding ways to (71) this growing homeless population has become increasingly difficult. (72) when homeless individuals manage to find a (73) that will give them three meals a day and a place to sleep at night, a good number still spend the bulk of each day (74) on the street.Part of the problem is that many homeless adults are addicted to alcohol or drugs.And a significant number of the homeless have serious mental disorders.Many others, (75) not addicted or mentally ill, simply lack the everyday (76) skills need to turn their lives (77) . Boston Globereporter Chris Reidy notes that the situation will improve only when there are (78) programs that address the many needs of the homeless. (79) Edward Blotkowsk, director of community service at Bentley College in Massachusetts, (80) it, "There has to be (81) of programs.What’s need is a package deal.\
- 患儿20天,系第一胎第一产,为过期产,出生体重4300g,生后即有腹胀、便秘,常处于睡眠状态,喂养困难,声音嘶哑,末梢循环差,其黄疸时间达3周,化验检查血象正常,血培养阴性,血TSH29mU/L.总T4 90nmol/L。 最可能的诊断是
- 胎儿娩出后多长时间胎盘仍未排出称胎盘滞留
- 肝细胞脂肪变的是()
- 男性,18岁,因转移性右下腹痛12小时入院,诊断为“急性阑尾炎”,当晚行阑尾切除术,病理为坏疽性阑尾炎。自术后次晨起,患者表现为腹痛,烦躁不安, 未解小便。体查:面色较苍白,皮肤湿冷,心率110次/分,较弱,血压10. 67/8kPa( 80/60mmHg),腹稍胀,全腹压痛,轻度肌紧张,肠鸣音减弱。 诊断明确后,应采取何种治疗方法
- 新生儿娩出后首先应
- 枕左前位分娩时,进行胎头内旋转动作是在
- 破膜一般发生在
- 临产后宫颈的变化,不正确的是
- TEXT D "There are too many students overcrowding courses and contributing nothing to society," says Professor Edward Mishan, explaining the subject of an article, published recently in an economics journal. Using pure economic rationality, Professor Mishan argues that subsidizing students because they benefit society is a fallacy--one that he says he would have included in his book 21 Popular Economic Fallacies, had he thought of it when it was first published in 1970. "For if higher education is free," he writes, "a man who chooses to spend three years at university rather than enter the workforce may be willing to do so even though it makes no perceptible difference to his future earnings." As such he advocates full commercial rates on loans for students to pay the entire costs of their higher education.. Professor Mandy Telford is not amused. "There is no doubt that charging commercial interest rates on loans would put people off going to university," she said. "At present we have a system where the poorest students are forced to work long hours just to keep their heads above water, while the rich, supported by their parents, are able to make greater use of their time. Commercial rate loans would hit the poorest students the hardest as they would be forced to borrow the most. After graduation all students would be forced to chase a fast buck to escape the burden of their ever-increasing debts, therefore shunning lower paid jobs in a public sector that is crying out for skilled teachers and nurses, "Ms. Telford added. One effect of subsidizing university studies, claims Professor Mishan, is that "bizarre and outlandish" courses are likely to proliferate. "In some courses (possibly medicine, electrical engineering and accounting), the respective IRRs (internal rate of return) may be well above that on commercial investment, whereas in others (possibly psychology, sociology and gender studies), they would be well below," he writes. On psychology, sociology, and gender studies, he says, "you learn a few terms you throw into a conversation but nothing more, this is not a good allocation of resources." Lynne Segal, professor of psychology and gender studies at Birkbeck College, is nearly amused. "This is amazing. All we hear about is people complaining about boys and masculinity--lower exam results, more crime," she said. "Mental illness amongst men is rising and depression these are economic issues as well. He seems to be negating the study of human behaviour. It’s a bit hard to take seriously," she added. Professor Mishan was a professor of economics at London School of Economics until 1977, after which he moved to America. Since then he has been "a little bit out of economics", says professor Colin Robinson, editor of economic affairs, the journal produced by the Institute of Economic Affairs, which published the paper. But Professor Mishan does sound amused about his paper. This is not my field of competence--it’s just bit of fun," he reassures us. What may be Lynne Segal’s attitude towards Professor Mishan’s comment on psychology, sociology and gender studies
- 患者,男,45岁,2个月来反酸、反食和烧心,多于餐后明显,平卧或身体前倾时易出现,近l周来加重,有时伴胸骨后疼痛,ECG未见明显异常,内镜检查见食管黏膜破损有融合。 选用的最佳治疗药物是
- 患者,男,45岁,2个月来反酸、反食和烧心,多于餐后明显,平卧或身体前倾时易出现,近l周来加重,有时伴胸骨后疼痛,ECG未见明显异常,内镜检查见食管黏膜破损有融合。 对该患者的诊断是
- 支原体肺炎首选()
- 票据签章的变更属于典型的票据变造行为。()
- 临产后,起主要作用的产力是
- TEXT A The first pre-election poll, or straw vote, as it was then called, was conducted by the Harris bury Pennsylvanian before the 1824 presidential election. This straw vote and the many that followed it really registered nothing but local opinion; however, as communications improved and elections were won by closer and closer margins, newspapers and journals tried desperately to satisfy their readers’ curiosity in more reliable ways. Before the 1928 elections, no fewer than 85 publications made private inquires, generally by means of questionnaires sent to subscribers and by telephone surveys. The principle common to all these inquiries was that they depended on quantity rather than quality; little effort was made to reach representatives of all segments of the population. Still, the erroneous belief persisted that the greater the number of questionnaires, the more accurate the results would be. The record was held by the American monthly Literary Digest, which sent out millions of postcards with short and pointed questions before each election and received many hundreds of thousands of replies. In fact, in 1932, the Literary Digest’s forecast was off by only 1%. In view of such striking achievements, it seemed rather impertinent for the young American journalist, George Gallup, to claim that large numbers were irrelevant and that equally accurate or better predictions could be made with a small but carefully selected sample of the population and a small team of skilled interviewers. In 1936, it took Gallup a long time to convince 35 newspaper editors that his system was much cheaper than the customary mass inquiries and that it could provide surprisingly accurate predictions. The editors finally agreed, on condition that if Gallup’s predictions were less accurate than those obtained by the tried method of the Literary Digest, he would have to refund the entire cost of the investigation. Although the Literary Digest broke its own record by obtaining 2 million replies to its electoral postcards that year, its prediction was wrong by 19%, whereas Gallup’s was off .by less than 1%. Moreover, the Digest had predicted that Alfred M. Landon, the Republican candidate would obtain 56% of the votes cast, whereas Franklin D. Roosevelt was, in fact, re-elected with an unusually large majority. Gallup was one of the few political prophets who predicted this result. Suddenly Gallup’s name was on everyone’s lips, not only was he the prophet of the moment, but it was generally conceded that he had found a new and most important scientific method of prediction. He was showered with money and commissions, and the Gallup Poll became a generic term for public opinion polls. Unlike earlier prophets, Gallup based his investigations on sociological rather than purely arithmetical calculations. He realised that the electorate is made up of different social strata with differing political trends. Thus, farmers do not vote in the same way that industrial workers do, the North votes quite unlike the South, Black preferences vary from those of White persons, the interests of employers are different from those of employees, and so on. There are also voting differences according to age and sex, for it appeared that older people and women tend to vote for conservative parties. Gallup usually sampled his subjects according to six factors: state, size of community, age, sex, income, and political affiliation. From time to time, other factors may be considered; during times of war, for instance, the national origins of electors may be taken into account. Only when the composition of the electorate has been accurately determined can the purely arithmetical question-how many people in each bracket must be interviewed-be solved. Once this is done, laws of probabilities take over and the more people interviewed, the more exact the estimates will be. However, above a certain maximum number of interviews, the accuracy increases by no more than a fractional percentage and where errors of up to 2% are permissible, a few thousand questionnaires will accurately reflect the opinion of the total US electorate. It is true that not all Gallup’s predictions were as accurate as that, for of the 114 election forecasts made by the American Institute of Public Opinion between 1936 and 1944, only 19 were wrong by less than 1%; 39 were off by between 2% and 3%; nearly half were off by more than 3%, and 6 were off by as much as 10% to 15%. The Gallup method suffered its greatest setback during the 1948 presidential election when Truman-not Gallup’s choice, Dewey--was elected. Before Eisenhower’s election in 1952 and re election in 1956 there was less doubt about the outcome, and Gallup did, in fact make fairly accurate predictions. The American results have been excelled by those obtained by Gallup’s British Institute of Public Opinion, which, using the same methods, has managed to forecast a number of parliamentary elections with a margin of error of only one half of 1% . In France, too, the French Institute of Public Opinion has managed to predict parliamentary results with a margin of error that has rarely exceeded 2%. After his more than 20 years’ experience with surveys, it would be fair to say the Gallup’s method of sampling the electorate has proved most successful. Before Gallup, political predictions were no more than shots in the dark, and it is as a result of his achievement that today we can make truly scientific forecasts in this difficult field. Which of the following factors concerning the electorate may NOT be considered in Gallup Poll
- 患者,男,53岁,l周来无诱因终末血尿3次,无发热,无尿频、尿痛等不适。吸烟史20年。胸片示陈旧肺结核,尿镜检有大量红细胞。 下列进一步检查项目中,对该患者明确诊断帮助最大的是
- 为临产妇实施护理措施,下述错误的做法是
- The homeless make up a growing percentage of American’s population. (62) homelessness has reaches such proportions that government can’t possibly (63) .T0 help homeless people (64) independence, the federal government must support job training programs, (65) the minimum wage, and fund more low-cost housing. (66) everyone agrees on the numbers of American who ae homeless.Estimates range (67) from 600, 000 to 3 million. (68) the figure may vary, analysts do agree on another matter:that the number of the homeless is (69) , one of the federal governments’ studies (70) that the number of the homeless will reach nearly 19 million by the end of this decade. Finding ways to (71) this growing homeless population has become increasingly difficult. (72) when homeless individuals manage to find a (73) that will give them three meals a day and a place to sleep at night, a good number still spend the bulk of each day (74) on the street.Part of the problem is that many homeless adults are addicted to alcohol or drugs.And a significant number of the homeless have serious mental disorders.Many others, (75) not addicted or mentally ill, simply lack the everyday (76) skills need to turn their lives (77) . Boston Globereporter Chris Reidy notes that the situation will improve only when there are (78) programs that address the many needs of the homeless. (79) Edward Blotkowsk, director of community service at Bentley College in Massachusetts, (80) it, "There has to be (81) of programs.What’s need is a package deal.\
- Did these prejudices prevail only among the meatiest and lowest of the people, perhaps they might be excused, as they have few, if any, opportunities of correcting them by reading, travelling, or conversing with foreigners; but the misfortune is that they infect the minds and influence the conduct, even of our gentlemen; of those, I mean, Who have every title to this appellation but an exemption from prejudice, which however, in my opinion, ought to be regarded as the characteristical mark of a gentleman; for let a man’s birth be ever so high, his station ever so exalted, or his fortune ever so large, yet if he is not free from national and other prejudices, I should make bold to tell him that he had a low and vulgar mind, and had no just claim to the character of a gentleman. And in fact, you will always find that those are most apt to boast of national merit, who have little or no merit of their own to depend on.
- 软产道的组成除外
- 平静吸气时脉搏明显减弱或消失()
- 患儿20天,系第一胎第一产,为过期产,出生体重4300g,生后即有腹胀、便秘,常处于睡眠状态,喂养困难,声音嘶哑,末梢循环差,其黄疸时间达3周,化验检查血象正常,血培养阴性,血TSH29mU/L.总T4 90nmol/L。 其最主要的治疗措施为
- 初产妇宫口扩张5cm以上时应
- 支票上的金额不得更改,更改的支票无效。( )
- 孕38周,初产妇。骨盆外测量正常,胎头双顶径&5cm,规律宫缩4小时,宫口开大1cm,未破膜,头先露,此时较合适的处理是
- 胎儿是否能经阴道分娩的重要观察指标是
- 肺炎球菌肺炎首选()
- 依照《行政复议法》的规定,申请人申请行政复议,必须提出书面申请。 ( )
- 2008年10月10日,甲公司收到一张应由甲公司与乙公司共同负担费用支出的原始凭证,甲公司会计人员王某以该原始凭证及应承担的费用进行账务处理,并保存该原始凭证;同时应乙公司要求将该原始凭证复制件提供给乙公司用于账务处理。年终,甲公司拟销毁一批保管期满的会计档案,其中有一张未结清债权债务的原始凭证,会计人员李某认为只要保管期满的会计档案就可以销毁。要求:根据我国《会计法》的规定,回答下列问题: 会计人员李某的观点是否正确简要说明理由。
- 符合I型呼吸衰竭的动脉血气标准是()
- The tendency of a boy to become attached to his mother and to resent his father ______ (被称作) the "Oedipus Complex".
- 新生儿Apgar评分法,不包括下列哪项
- 关于第二产程,下列哪项不正确
- 关于枕右前位分娩机制正确的是
- 符合Ⅱ型呼吸衰竭的动脉血气标准是()
- 临产后,正常宫缩的特点除外
- 已承兑的商业汇票丧失,失票人不能采用挂失止付方式补救。( )
- 甲公司与乙厂签订合同,委托乙厂生产一批机器设备。在交货日前,乙厂厂长听说甲公司财务状况恶化,银行已停止向其贷款为避免甲公司无力支付货款,乙厂决定停止为甲公司生产机器设备。甲公司遂向乙厂进行交涉。 要求:根据上述情况和《合同法》的有关规定,回答下列问题。 (1) 乙厂在什么情况下可以中止履行合同乙厂中止履行合同应承担什么义务 (2) 如乙厂中止履行合同是合法的,乙厂在什么情况下可解除合同 (3) 如乙厂中止履行合同是不合法的,乙厂应承担什么责任
- 某孕妇,孕36周,产前检查如下:出口横径7.5cm,外径18cm,耻骨弓角度90°,为判断足月胎儿是否可以娩出还必须测量
- 男性,18岁,因转移性右下腹痛12小时入院,诊断为“急性阑尾炎”,当晚行阑尾切除术,病理为坏疽性阑尾炎。自术后次晨起,患者表现为腹痛,烦躁不安, 未解小便。体查:面色较苍白,皮肤湿冷,心率110次/分,较弱,血压10. 67/8kPa( 80/60mmHg),腹稍胀,全腹压痛,轻度肌紧张,肠鸣音减弱。 为明确诊断,最好选择采取何种措施
- The homeless make up a growing percentage of American’s population. (62) homelessness has reaches such proportions that government can’t possibly (63) .T0 help homeless people (64) independence, the federal government must support job training programs, (65) the minimum wage, and fund more low-cost housing. (66) everyone agrees on the numbers of American who ae homeless.Estimates range (67) from 600, 000 to 3 million. (68) the figure may vary, analysts do agree on another matter:that the number of the homeless is (69) , one of the federal governments’ studies (70) that the number of the homeless will reach nearly 19 million by the end of this decade. Finding ways to (71) this growing homeless population has become increasingly difficult. (72) when homeless individuals manage to find a (73) that will give them three meals a day and a place to sleep at night, a good number still spend the bulk of each day (74) on the street.Part of the problem is that many homeless adults are addicted to alcohol or drugs.And a significant number of the homeless have serious mental disorders.Many others, (75) not addicted or mentally ill, simply lack the everyday (76) skills need to turn their lives (77) . Boston Globereporter Chris Reidy notes that the situation will improve only when there are (78) programs that address the many needs of the homeless. (79) Edward Blotkowsk, director of community service at Bentley College in Massachusetts, (80) it, "There has to be (81) of programs.What’s need is a package deal.\
- 第三产程对胎盘、胎膜的检查,下列错误的是
- 肝细胞水肿的病变是()
- 缩复作用的作用表现在
- 下列方法可以促进子宫收缩,但除外
- 新生儿应在产后多长时间内进行早吸吮
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