下列关于建筑工程一切险的承保内容的说法正确的是()。
A. 工程本身是指由总承包萄和分包商为履行合同而实施的全部工程
B. 施工机具仅指属承包商所有的运输设备和不能行驶的地用车辆
C. 场地清理费是指施工单位进入现场后为达到“三通一平”而支付的费用
D. 第三者责任不包括因工程意外事故而支付的诉讼费用
第二节
听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几道小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听每段对话或独白前,你将有5秒钟的时间阅读各个小题;听完后,各小题将给出5秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。
听力原文:M: Hey, Mary, let's go to a movie. You've been working on these bills for hours now.
W: It's impossible.
M: Why?
W: We can't afford to go out. Look at the bills yourself. Everything I say goes in one ear and out of the other.
M: All right, rye been trying to cut down our expenses lately. I've been turning off the lights when I leave the room. I've been keeping track of all of our phone bills...
What does the man want to do?
A. Have his hair cut.
B. Go to the cinema.
C. Go to work.
A century ago in the United States, when an individual brought suit against a company, public opinion tended to protect that company. But perhaps this phenomenon was most striking in the case of the railroads. Nearly half of all negligence cases decided through 1896 involved railroads. And the railroads usually won.
Most of the cases were decided in state courts, when the railroads had the climate of the times on their sides. Government supported the railroad industry; the progress railroads represented was not to be slowed down by requiring them often to pay damages to those unlucky enough to be hurt working for them.
Court decisions always went against railroad workers. A Mr. Farwell, an engineer, lost his right hand when a switchman's negligence ran his engine off the track. The court reasoned that since Farwell had taken the job of an engineer voluntarily at good pay, he had accepted the risk. Therefore the accident, though avoidable had the switchman acted carefully, was a "pure accident". In effect a railroad could never be held responsible for injury to one employee caused by the mistake of another.
In one case where a Pennsylvania Railroad worker had started a fire at a warehouse and the fire had spread several blocks, causing widespread damage, a jury found the company responsible for all the damage. But the court overturned the jury's decision because it argued that the railroad's negligence was the immediate cause of damage only to the nearest buildings. Beyond them the connection was too remote to consider.
As the century wore on, public sentiment began to turn against the railroads— against their economic and political power and high fares as well as against their callousness toward individuals.
Which of the following is NOT true in Farwell's case?
A. Farwell was injured because he negligently ran his engine off the track.
B. Farwell would not have been injured if the switchman had been more careful.
C. The court argued that the victim had accepted the risk since he had willingly taken his job.
D. The court decided that the railroad should not be held responsible.