第1题
The business of buying and selling shares is done in an area known the floor. Scattered over the floor are positions called posts. Each post bears the names of the stocks traded at that post. A broker desiring to buy shares of a certain stock will go to the section of the post allotted to that stock. If the prevailing price of the stock is several points (31) from the figure the broker is authorized to pay, an order may be left with the specialist, who often acts as liaison (32) buyer and seller. The specialist enters the order in a book; (33) the price is reached, the specialist buys or sells the stock (34) to the orders of the broker and reports the transaction to the buyer and the seller. If the prevailing quotations are close (35) the price the broker is authorized to by, however, he or she usually attempts (36) complete the transaction without recourse to the specialist. As soon as a price is agreed on, both brokers, the buyer and the seller, make a memorandum of the transaction. which is reported (37) the brokerage office at once by telephone. An exchange employee (38) the post where the transaction occurs writes, on a special card. the stock symbol, the number of shares, and the price, and places the card in an optical reader. The photoelectric eye of the card reader scans tire pencil marks (39) transmits the information to a compute. The computer records the information in its memory banks and transmits the details of the transaction (40) more than 25,400 electrical tickers and display devices in the U. S., Canada. and Europe.
(31)
第2题
A.CreateaGPOandenabletheConfigureAutomaticUpdatesandEnablerecommendedupdatesvia automaticUpdatesoptions.LinktheGPOtotheWorkstationsOU.
B.CreateaGPOandenabletheConfigureAutomaticUpdatesandAutomaticUpdatesdetectionfrequencyoptions.LinktheGPOtotheWorkstationsOU.
C.CreateaGPOandenabletheConfigureAutomaticUpdatesandSpecifyintranetMicrosoftupdateservicelocationoptions.LinktheGPOtothedomain.
D.CreateaGPOenabletheConfigureAutomaticUpdatesandSpecifyintranetMicrosoftupdateservicelocationoptions.LinktheGPOtotheServersOU.
第3题
A. Modify the Ports settings of Printer1.
B. Modify the Sharing settings of Printer1.
C. Run the Printer Migration tool.
D. Run the Remove-Job and Copy-Item cmdlets.
第4题
The business of buying and selling shares is done in an area known the floor. Scattered over the floor are positions called posts. Each post bears the names of the stocks traded at that post. A broker desiring to buy shares of a certain stock will go to the section of the post allotted to that stock. If the prevailing price of the stock is several points (31) from the figure the broker is authorized to pay, an order may be left with the specialist, who often acts as liaison (32) buyer and seller. The specialist enters the order in a book; (33) the price is reached, the specialist buys or sells the stock (34) to the orders of the broker and reports the transaction to the buyer and the seller. If the prevailing quotations are close (35) the price the broker is authorized to by, however, he or she usually attempts (36) complete the transaction without recourse to the specialist. As soon as a price is agreed on, both brokers, the buyer and the seller, make a memorandum of the transaction. which is reported (37) the brokerage office at once by telephone. An exchange employee (38) the post where the transaction occurs writes, on a special card. the stock symbol, the number of shares, and the price, and places the card in an optical reader. The photoelectric eye of the card reader scans tire pencil marks (39) transmits the information to a compute. The computer records the information in its memory banks and transmits the details of the transaction (40) more than 25,400 electrical tickers and display devices in the U. S., Canada. and Europe.
(31)
第5题
Directions: In this section you will hear several conversations. Listen to the conversations carefully and then answer the questions that follow.
听力原文:D: Oh, hello, you must be Tracey's parent?
T: Er, yes. Are you her class teacher, Mrs. Daniels?
D: Yes, that's fight. Now, just let me find my notes. As you know I don't actually teach Tracey, but I do see her every day before classes begin, is there anything you want to ask me?
T: Well, yes. To be honest, we're a bit worried about her last report--she doesn't seem to be doing as well as she was.
D: Well now, let's see. Oh, yes, her math teacher says she's finding the work more difficult now that they're getting near to the exams.
T: I was never good at math.
D: And Dr. Baker feels that Tracey isn't concentrating very hard in biology lessons.
T: Oh, but she really likes biology and she's so good at drawing.
D: Yes, but even in art her teacher thinks she tends to spend too much time talking to her friends. In fact, several of her teachers have told me that she isn't giving in her homework. Mr. Brock has complained to me that he hasn't had a single piece of geography homework from her all term.
T: Yes, we don't know what to do about it. She doesn't seem to be interested in school any more.
D: I don't think we should give up on her. Tracey's a very intelligent girl. In English her marks are well above the average and her teacher says she always has a lot to say in lessons.
T: Yes, that's part of Tracey's trouble. She talks too much.
D: Well, nevertheless oral skills are very important and if we can all guide her back to a more positive attitude to school work, she'll do very well.
T: Well, I hope so. I'm very disappointed in her. She was doing so well, especially in English and French, and now everything seems to be going to pieces. She came bottom of the class in French this term.
D: Well, it's not because she can't do French--she just prefers to that in English! At least she's doing well in sport. She's in the hockey team and you know we haven't lost a single match this year!
T: Well, it's nice to know she does something well.
D: Oh, come on, Mr. Thompson, let's look on the bright side.
What does Mrs. Daniels teach?
A.She teaches Tracey English.
B.She teaches Tracey math.
C.She teaches Tracey art.
D.She doesn't teach Tracey.
第6题
A. From ntdsutil.exe, run Set DSRM Password.
B. From ntdsutil.exe, run Security account management.
C. From Active Directory Users and Computers, select the Account is trusted for delegation option for the Administrator account.
D. From Active Directory Users and Computers, select the Store password using reversible encryption option for the Administrator account.
第7题
A. From ntdsutil.exe, run Set DSRM Password.
B. From ntdsutil.exe, run Security account management.
C. From Active Directory Users and Computers, select the Account is trusted for delegation option for the Administrator account.
D. From Active Directory Users and Computers, select the Store password using reversible encryption option for the Administrator account.
第8题
On the face of it, this should not be happening.
Healthier nations are usually wealthier nations. The United States is the third richest of the 30 developed nations belonging to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), after Luxembourg and Norway. But it now ranks 22nd in life expectancy—down from 12th for women and 18th for men in 1980.
Could the problem be inadequate healthcare spending?
No. The US spends $1 of every $7 of its gross domestic product on healthcare—far more than any other OECD nation, which typically devotes less than $1 in $10 of GDP to the sector. Per person, that works out to an extra $1,800 compared with the Swiss or $2,300 compared with the Canadians, even though both those groups live longer than Americans.
So what's at work?
One factor could be diet, according to a new study on longevity by Alicia Munnell, director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, and two students, Robert Hatch and James Lee①. Americans have been getting fatter, and physicians maintain that putting on weight often shrinks a person's life span.
On the positive side, US alcohol and tobacco consumption is more moderate than the OECD average.
Another factor holding back longevity: poverty. The quarter to a third of Americans with low incomes often have less money than the same low-income groups in several other rich countries, points out Mr. Burt less.
A third factor—inequality—worsens the problem. The most prosperous 10 percent of Americans receive 17 times as much income as those in the bottom 10 percent. In countries with high life expectancies among those at 65—such as Japan, Sweden, and Norway—the top 10 percent makes only five times as much in come as those in the bottom, Professor Munnell says.
The US also struggles with inequality in healthcare. While most rich nations have universal coverage, 45 million in the US did not have health insurance last year, according to census statistics—a rise of 5.2 million since the year of 2000②. Millions more have insurance only part of the year.
Many of those without health insurance tend to postpone medical care for chronic problems, though they may go to hospital emergency facilities in a crisis.
Thus, a better predicator of life expectancy than GDP may be the average GDP for the bottom 40 per cent of the population, notes the Boston College study. Here the US falls in the middle of the pack of rich countries, rather than at the top.
According to the author, people in which country are expected to live longer?
A.The United States.
B.Spain.
C.Greece.
D.New Zealand.
第9题
A.ACCOUNTED FOR
B.FOR
C.GROUNDS A.RAILROADS JUSTIFY RATE DISCRIMINATION AGAINST CAPTIVE SHIPPERS ON THE 【T1】______THAT
B.ANOTHER RAILROAD IS COMPETING【T2】______THE BUSINESS
C.THE TOP FOUR RAILROADS【T3】_______UNDER 70 PERCENT IN RECENT YEARS, RAILROADS HAVE BEEN COMBINING WITH EACH OTHER, MERGING INTO SUPER SYSTEMS, CAUSING HEIGHTENED CONCERNS ABOUT MONOPOLY.AS RECENTLY AS 1995,【T4】______OF THE TOTAL TON-MILES MOVED BY RAILS.NEXT YEAR, AFTER A SERIES OF MERGERS IS COMPLETED, JUST FOUR RAILROADS WILL CONTROL WELL OVER 90 PERCENT OF ALL THE FREIGHT MOVED BY MAJOR RAIL CARRIERS. SUPPORTERS OF THE NEW SUPER SYSTEMS ARGUE THAT THESE MERGERS WILL ALLOW FOR SUBSTANTIAL COST REDUCTIONS AND BETTER COORDINATED SERVIC
E.ANY THREAT OF MONOPOLY, THEY ARGUE, IS REMOVED BY FIERCE COMPETITION FROM TRUCKS.BUT MANY SHIPPERS COMPLAIN THAT FOR HEAVY BULK COMMODITIES TRAVELING LONG DISTANCES, SUCH AS COAL, CHEMICALS, AND GRAIN, TRUCKING IS TOO COSTLY AND THE RAILROADS THEREFORE HAVE THEM BY THE THROAT. THE VAST CONSOLIDATION WITHIN THE RAIL INDUSTRY MEANS THAT MOST SHIPPERS ARE SERVED BY ONLY ONE RAIL COMPANY.RAILROADS TYPICALLY CHARGE SUCH "CAPTIVE" SHIPPERS 20 TO 30 PERCENTMORE THAN THEY DO WHEN【T5】______.SHIPPERS WHO FEEL THEY ARE BEING OVERCHARGED HAVETHE RIGHT TO APPEAL TO THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT"S SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD FOR RATE RELIEF, BUT THE PROCESS IS EXPENSIVE, TIME CONSUMING, AND WILL WORK ONLY IN TRULY EXTREME CASES. 【T6】______IN THE LONG RUN IT REDUCES EVERYONE"S COST.IF RAILROADS CHARGED ALL CUSTOMERS THE SAME AVERAGE RATE, THEY ARGUE, SHIPPERS WHO HAVE THE OPTION OF SWITCHING TO TRUCKS OR OTHER FORMS OF TRANSPORTATION WOULD DO SO, LEAVING REMAINING CUSTOMERS TO SHOULDER THE COST OF KEEPING UP THE LIN
E.IT"S THEORY TO WHICH MANY ECONOMISTS SUBSCRIBE, BUT IN PRACTICE IT OFTEN LEAVES RAILROADS IN THE POSITION OF DETERMINING WHICH COMPANIES WILL FLOURISH AND WHICH WILL FAIL."DO WE REALLY WANT RAILROADS TO BE THE ARBITERS OF WHO WINS AND WHO LOSES IN THE MARKETPLACE?" ASKS MARTIN BERCOVICI, A WASHINGTON LAWYER WHO FREQUENTLY REPRESENTS SHIPPER.
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