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A.With an increase in the amount of blood.B.With more muscles.C.With vigorous trial.D.

A. With an increase in the amount of blood.
B. With more muscles.
C. With vigorous trial.
D. With routine exercise.

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What is sports violence? The distinction between unacceptable viciousness and a game's normal rough-and-tumble(混战) is impossible to make, or so the argument runs. This position may appeal to our inclination for legalism, but the truth is most of us know quite well when an act of needless savagery has been committed, and sports are little different from countless other activities of life. The distinction is as apparent as that between a deliberately aimed blow and the arm hailing of an athlete losing his balance. When a player balls his hand into a fist, when he drives his helmet into an unsuspecting opponent in shorts, when he crosses the boundary between playing hard and playing to hurt—he can only intend an act of violence.
Admittedly, rough acts in sports are difficult to police. But here, too, we find reflected the conditions of everyday life. Ambiguities in the law, confusion at the scene, and the reluctance of witnesses cloud almost any routine assault case. Such uncertainties, however, have not prevented society from arresting people who strike their fellow citizens on the street.
Perhaps our troubles stem not from the games we play but rather from how we play them. The 1979 meeting between hockey(曲棍球) stars from the Soviet Union and the National Hockey League provided a direct test of two approaches to sport—the emphasis on skill, grace, and finesse(技巧) by the Russians and the stress on brutality and violence by the NHL. In a startling upset, the Russians embarrassed their rough—playing opponents and exploded a long-standing myth: that success in certain sports requires excessive violence.
Violence apologists cite two additional arguments. First, they say, sports always have been rough; today things are no different. But arguments in America's Old West were settled on Main Street with six guns, and early cave-dwellers chose their women with a club. Civilizing influences ended those practices; yet we are told sports violence should be tolerated. The second contention is that athletes accept risk as part of the game, and, in the case of professionals, are paid handsomely to do so. But can anyone seriously argue that being an athlete should require the acceptance of unnecessary physical abuse? And, exaggerated as it may seem, the pay of professional athletes presumably reflects their abilities, not a payment against combat injuries.
"Clearly we are in deep trouble," says perplexed former football player AL DeRogatis. "But how and why has it gotten so bad?"
According to the author, the distinction between violent acts and non-violent ones in sports is ______.

A. impossible to make
B. not very clear in any circumstances
C. too obvious to escape observation
D. not very difficult to make if enough attention is paid to

Section B
Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice.
The scientific establishment is playing a key role in research and development of genetic engineering biotechnology and in actively defending the industry under the banner of "sound science' and "scientific progress". Scientific advice to the government is heavily biased in favor of the industry. Lord Sainsbury, current Minister for Science, was former chairman of the Sainsbury family's supermarket chain, closely involved with the development of GE foods. Another prominent scientist, Derek Burke, advisor to the Parliamentary Committee on Science and Technology and former chair of the Advisory Committee on Novel Food Products, was a key participant, in the UK Government's Technology Foresight exercises, and in a follow-up group that determined the pro-biotech funding policy of the BBSRC. Derek Burke is an outspoken and staunch defender of the industry. The public are being informed uncritically by scientists like Burke and others, consciously or unconsciously serving commercial interests, and legitimate concerns about safety are caricatured as irrational fear arising out of ignorance.
The credibility of science and scientists has been steadily diminishing over the years as science has become more and more absorbed into the commercial sector. Science education at every level is being subverted to corporate aims: its chief purpose is to provide skilled but uncritical workers for industry. The UK Government has even run a competition for science students on how to commercially exploit scientific research. There has been no major open debate on genetic engineering within academic institutions that has been organized by the academic staff. With very few exceptions, students are not encouraged to ask questions about the ethics or the hazards of genetic engineering on either side of the Atlantic.
Scientific evidence of actual and potential hazards, which has been steadily building up over the past ten years, is being ignored and dismissed. More seriously, independent scientists reporting findings damaging to the industry are gagged and victimized. Within the UK, Dr. Arpad Pusztai, senior scientist of the publicly-funded Rowlett Institute, and his collaborators were awarded a 1.6 million pound grant to carry out systematic safety testing of GE food. They found that the GE potato lines tested were toxic to young rats, and Pusztai informed the public in a brief interview which was part of a TV documentary. A few days later, he was removed from his job, denied access to his data, and forbidden to speak on the subject.
The suppression of scientific findings is nothing new; it has been happening more and more within the past decade. Since the 1970s, scientific fraud has been increasing, as has the proportion of peer-reviewed scientific papers retracted. We have moved far away from the traditional ideals of science as science loses innocence and independence.
Towards the role the scientific establishment is playing the author's attitude is that of ______.

A. criticism
B. approval
C. tolerance
D. apprehension

下列各选项中的张某具备刑法规定的“可以从轻或者减轻处罚”的情节的有:A.尚未完全丧失辨认或者控下列各选项中的张某具备刑法规定的“可以从轻或者减轻处罚”的情节的有:

A. 尚未完全丧失辨认或者控制自己行为能力的精神病人张某故意杀死蒋某
B. 秦某持刀抢劫张某的财物,张某进行防卫,不慎将秦某打死
C. 胡某和赵某有仇。一日下午,胡某持刀赶往赵某家,意图杀害赵某。半路遇到张某,张某对胡某说:“大白天杀人,容易被人看到。你应该晚上去,而—且下手一定要狠!”张某遂于当天晚上去赵某家将其杀害
D. 张某涉嫌诬告陷害罪。公安机关在掌握有关线索后,对张某依法留置盘问。张某如实交代了自己的罪行

区域购物中心是指规模巨大,集购物、休闲、娱乐、饮食等于一体包括百货店、大卖场以及众多专业连锁零售店在内的超级商业中心。其建筑面积在()。

A. 5万m2以上
B. 8万m2以上
C. 10万m2以上
D. 15万m2以上

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