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提问人:网友wwwlee100 发布时间:2022-01-07
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After 50 years of paying for roads,power and schools, and helping poor countries to libera

After 50 years of paying for roads, power and schools, and helping poor countries to liberalize their economies, the World Bank—the financial aim of the United Nations system—has started shifting some of the focus of its activities to supporting "knowledge development", including science.

Two separate internal World Bank task groups are investigating a potential role for the bank in supporting science in developing countries. Each group will report back this year with proposals on how the bank can best support basic research, something it has never before considered, how to make its expertise more available to developing countries, and whether it needs a science department to oversee its new initiatives.

The bank, which is owned by 180 governments, provides long-term loans at commercial interest rates, mainly to developing countries. One quarter of its lending is interest-free and goes to the poorest. In the 1980s, with its focus on infrastructure development and trade liberalization, it closed its science department and abolished the science adviser's post.

Direct support for research in developing countries is now seen as more of a priority. This is because the bank believes research will help to find solutions to its priority issues, such as providing the poor with access to food, clean water and a disease-free environment.

But it also comes from a belief that developing countries need to build up knowledge-based industries to remain economically competitive. In an attempt to help the poorest countries, particularly those in Africa, to catch up with those better off, the bank is helping to fund information technology infrastructure under a programme called "info. Dev."

As a sign of this new thinking, the bank devoted the latest edition of its annual World Development Report to bridging the "knowledge gap" between rich and poor countries. Last month it agreed to partly fund in Chile the first in a chain of centres of excellence in scientific research.—known as Millennium Institutes—in developing countries.

Both events represent the culmination of a three-year study by the bank into how it can fund science in developing countries in partnership with governments and philanthropic foundations. Ian Johnson, the bank's vice-president for environment, acknowledges that the bank previously considered research to be a luxury for developing countries. But he says that attitudes have changed.

From the passage we learn that the World Bank______.

A.focuses on basic science rather than theoretical one

B.seems reluctant to aid some of theoretical sciences

C.is still willing to help the third world

D.agrees to grant scientific researches

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更多“After 50 years of paying for roads,power and schools, and helping poor countries to libera”相关的问题
第1题
From the passage we know that the GATT stopped working______.A.soon after World War endedB

From the passage we know that the GATT stopped working______.

A.soon after World War ended

B.just at the end of the year 1994

C.a little more than 50 year after World War II

D.seven years before the Uruguay Round talk

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第2题
Copyrights and related rights protect ______.A.the rights of a novelist only when he is al

Copyrights and related rights protect ______.

A.the rights of a novelist only when he is alive

B.the rights of a novelist for no longer than 50 years after his death

C.the rights of a music performer for his creative work

D.the rights of radio program producers rather than those of radio stations

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第3题
听力原文:Interviewer(I): Good morning, MissMiss Jones(J): Miss Jones.I: Miss Jones, yes, r

听力原文:Interviewer(I): Good morning, Miss

Miss Jones(J): Miss Jones.

I: Miss Jones, yes, right. Hi, Um now, you'd like to join our team, I gather ...

J: Yes, I would.

I: That's very good. Er I'd like to know a little bit about you. Perhaps you could start if you could tell me a little bit about your education.

J: Oh yes, right. Well, I left school at 18 and for the first two years I went to Gibsons, you might know it, it's an engineering firm. Um and after that, I wanted to do a course, so I did a one-year full-time PA course and went back to Gibsona. I was PA to the Export Director. I stayed there for two years and then moved on to my present company. Um that's Europa Marketing um Mr Adair, the marketing director, offered me a job because Gibson had worked quite a lot with Europa Marketing. And I've been with them for three years now Um first working with the Marketing Director and and now I'm with the Sales Director.

I: That's all very interesting, Miss Jones. Um,.- l'd like to know, what did you enjoy most at school'? What was the course that you enjoyed most?

J: Ah foreign languages I liked best. We did French and German. Yes.

I: Mhm. And are you quite fluent in those now?

J: Yes, a bit rusty now, but um obviously the more travel I can do, the more [ can use my languages and I'd like to learn another language. I'd like to add Italian as well.

I: Italian?

J:Yes.

J: Very good, very good, that might be very useful Now er tell me a little bit about er the work you're doing at present.

J: Um well er Europa Marketing is a marketing and public relations company and they do consultancy work for companies operating in the UK and European markets. Er our clients come from all over the world um we deal with some of them by post, but most of them come to our offices and at least once during a project. I assist the sales director by arranging these visits, setting up meetings and presentations and I deal with her correspondence. I've not been able to go with her on any of her trips abroad, but I've been to firms in this country, several times on my own to make these arrangements.

I: It sounds as if you're very happy there, Miss Jones. I'm curious why you'd tike to leave them and join our company.

J: Well um I know the reputation of Anglo-European and it has a very good reputation. And I feel I would have more scope and opportunity in your company and that the work will be more challenging for me. I might be able to possibly travel and use my languages because at the moment most of my work is rather routine secretarial-type work and I like the idea of more um challenges in my life really.

?You will hear part of an interview between a Human Resources Manager of a company and Miss Jones.

?For each question 23—30, mark one letter A, B or C for the correct answer.

?You will hear the recording twice.

What did Miss Jones do after she left school?

A.She became a PA (personal assistant).

B.She did a one-year full-time PA Course company.

C.She went to an engineering company.

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第4题
A Chinese company intends to set up a sino-foreign...

A Chinese company intends to set up a sino-foreign co-operative joint venture enterprisewith a Singapore company in China, the two parties signed agrass contract. The following matters in the contract, which one is allowed by Chineselaw? A、 Registered capital of the joint venture is $MathJax 1,000,000, of which foreign capital accountsfor 22%, and China accountsfor 78%. B、 Foreign party’s investment includes anequipment which is worth of $MathJax 100,000,and would arriveat the enterprise after three months of obtaining the business license. C、 Chinese party invests $MathJax 300,000 in cash which lending from bank, and the joint ventureenterprise providesguaranteewith the equipment. D、 The first five years profit would be distributed as the proportion of 50% eachside.ompany doesnot have social responsibility.

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第5题
A Chinese company intends to set up a sino-foreign co-operative joint venture enterprisewi
th a Singapore company in China, the two parties signed agrass contract. The following matters in the contract, which one is allowed by Chineselaw?

A、A、 Registered capital of the joint venture is $MathJax 1,000,000, of which foreign capital accountsfor 22%, and China accountsfor 78%.

B、B、 Foreign party’s investment includes anequipment which is worth of $MathJax 100,000,and would arriveat the enterprise after three months of obtaining the business license.

C、C、 Chinese party invests $MathJax 300,000 in cash which lending from bank, and the joint ventureenterprise providesguaranteewith the equipment.

D、D、 The first five years profit would be distributed as the proportion of 50% eachside.ompany doesnot have social responsibility.

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第6题
Lanzaro is hopeful that in a few years man can ______A.start to eliminate malariaB.cure pa

Lanzaro is hopeful that in a few years man can ______

A.start to eliminate malaria

B.cure parasitic blood diseases

C.prevent mice from transmitting parasites

D.acquire immunity against malaria

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第7题
A student who enters a university in the second half of 20th century is in a new situation
. He is not like the young man of the early 19th century who came to sit at the feet of his masters and left as a master. That situation no longer exists, because now it is not only the student who changes. He may grow fast, but science grows still faster.

Today a student cannot master knowledge, he can only be its servant. He knows that he can become familiar (熟悉) with only a small comer of knowledge and that his learning will always be imperfect and imcomplete. But he can still hope to add something to the sum(总量) of knowledge, and so make the situation slightly more difficult for those who come after him.

The phrase "in the second half of the 20th century" means _________.

A.in 1950

B.in the late 2000

C.in 50 years of the 20th century

D.in 1950--2000

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第8题
Rise in Number of Cancer Survivors Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the Unit

Rise in Number of Cancer Survivors

Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the United States, after heart disease. In the (51), it was often considered a death sentence. But many patients now live longer(52)of improvements in discovery and treatment.

Researchers say death(53)in the United States from all cancers combined have fallen for thirty years. Survival rates have increased for most of the top fifteen cancers in both men and women, and for cancers in(54).

The National Cancer Institute and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention studied the number of cancer survivors. A cancer survivor is defined(55)anyone who has been found to have cancer. This would include current patients.

The study covered the period(56)1971 to 2001. The researchers found there are three(57)as many cancer survivors today as there were thirty years ago. In 1971, the United States had about three-million cancer(58). Today there are about ten-million.

The study also found that 64% of adults with cancer can expect to still be(59)in five years. Thirty years ago, the five-year survival rate was 50%. The government wants to (60)the five-year survival rate to 70% by 2010.

The risk of cancer increases with age. The report says the majority of survivors are 65 years and (61).

But it says medical improvements have also helped children with cancer live(62)longer. Researchers say 80% of children with cancer will survive at least five years after the discovery. About 75% will survive at (63)ten years.

In the 1970s, the five-year survival rate for children was about 50%. In the 1960s, most children did not survive cancer. Researchers say they(64)more improvements in cancer treatment in the future. In fact, they say traditional cancer-prevention programs are not enough anymore. They say public health programs should also aim to support the (65)numbers of cancer survivors and their families.

A.past

B.present

C.future

D.old

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第9题
Are There Truths in Dreams? Imagine waking up after dreaming (dream) about a terrible plan

Are There Truths in Dreams? Imagine waking up after dreaming (dream) about a terrible plane crash. The next day you will make a plane journey that you have______(41)(plan) long before. Will you get on the plane? A survey shows that you may not cancel your trip. But your dream will probably influence your______(42)(thought) during the journey. You may feel______(43)(worry) and find the trip much______(44)(long) than before. So dreams may influence what we are______(45)(real) doing while we are awake. The explanation of dreams is still a(n)______(46)(clear) area. A team of researchers are entering a new field of studies: Do dreams actually influence our______(47)(behave)? Over the past few years, they have______(48)(do) studies in different cultures and found out that dreams contain some______(49)(hide) truths: dreams affect the way people live and work. But researchers also tell people not to be______(50)(easy) influenced by their dreams. ______.

______.

______.

______.

______.

______.

______.

______.

______.

______.

请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

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第10题
At 18, Ashanthi DeSilva of suburban Cleveland is a living symbol of one of the great intel
lectual achievements of the 20th century. Born with an extremely rare and usually fatal disorder that left her without a functioning immune system (the "bubble-boy disease", named after an earlier victim who was kept alive for years in a sterile plastic tent), she was treated beginning in 1990 with a revolutionary new therapy that sought to correct the defect at its very source, in the genes of her white blood cells. It worked. Although her last gene-therapy treatment was in 1992, she is completely healthy with normal immune function, according to one of the doctors who treated her, W. French Anderson of the University of Southern California. Researchers have long dreamed of treating diseases from hemophilia to cancer by replacing mutant genes with normal ones. And the dreaming may continue for decades more. "There will be a gene-based treatment for essentially every disease," Anderson says, "within 50 years. "

It's not entirely clear why medicine has been so slow to build on Anderson' s early success. The National Institutes of Health budget office estimates it will spend $ 432 million on gene-therapy research in 2005, and there is no shortage of promising leads. The therapeutic genes are usually delivered through viruses that don' t cause human disease. "The virus is sort of like a Trojan horse," says Ronald Crystal of New York Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical College. "The cargo is the gene. "

At the University of Pennsylvania's Abramson Cancer Center, immunologist Carl June recently treated HIV pa tients with a gene intended to help their cells resist the infection. At Cornell University, researchers are pursuing gene-based therapies for Parkinson's disease and a rare hereditary disorder that destroys children' s brain cells. At Stanford University and the Children' s Hospital of Philadelphia, researchers are trying to figure out how to help patients with hemophilia who today must inject themselves with expensive clotting drugs for life. Animal experiments have shown great promise.

But somehow, things get lost in the translation from laboratory to patient. In human trials of the hemophilia treatment, patients show a response at first, but it fades over time. And the field has still not recovered from the setback it suffered in 1999, when Jesse Gelsinger, an 18-year-old with a rare metabolic disorder, died after receiving an experimental gene therapy at the University of Pennsylvania. Some experts worry that the field will be tarnished further if the next people to benefit are not patients but athletes seeking an edge. This summer, researchers at the Salk Institute in San Diego said they had created a "marathon mouse" by implanting a gene that enhances running ability; already, officials at the World Anti-Doping Agency are preparing to test athletes for signs of "gene doping". But the principle is the same, whether you're trying to help a healthy runner run faster or allow a muscular-dystro-phy patient to walk. "Everybody recognizes that gene therapy is a very good idea," says Crystal. "And eventually it's going to work. "

The case of Ashanthi Desilva is mentioned in the text to

A.show the promise of gene-therapy

B.give an example of modem treatment for fatal diseases

C.introduce the achievement of Anderson and his team

D.explain how gene-based treatment works

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第11题
George Washington was the first man not a king whose birthday was publicly celebrated duri
ng his lifetime. Before the colonies declared their independence, celebrations honoring the birthdays of British rulers were customary. After the Declaration of Independence, the American people ignored royal birthdays and began instead to celebrate General Washington's birthday. This custom started in 1778 during the army's cold snowy winter at Valle Forge, when one of the military bands marched to Washington's headquarters and played for him.

When the war ended in 1783, Washington eagerly returned to Mount Vernon. But his peaceful retirement was interrupted when he was unanimously chosen first president of the United States. He took office in 1789 and was reelected in 1792. In 1796, he refused a third term and retired from political life. He died two years later and was buried at Mount Vernon, which one million tourists visit every year. Shortly after his death, Washington was praised in these famous words: "First in war, first in peace, and first in the heart of his countrymen."

To the American people, Washington symbolizes dignity, statesmanship, and, above all, honesty. The famous cherry tree story, which was invented by Washington's first biographer, has become a lesson in morals for all American schoolchildren. The story goes like this: When George Washington was about six years old, his father gave him a hatchet (small axe), which the little boy loved to play with. One day, he tried the edge of his hatchet on his father's favorite young cherry tree and did enough damage to kill the tree. Next morning, his father noticed the damage and ran into the house shouting, "George, do you know who killed that beautiful little cherry tree.., in the garden? George's famous reply was, "I can't tell a lie, Pa, you know I can't tell a lie. I cut it with my hatchet." His father, pleased with the boy's courage and honesty, quickly forgave him.

Because of this story, traditional dessert on Washington's birthday are cherry pie or a log-shaped cake decorated with cherries. Washington's Birthday is a legal holiday throughout the U.S.A. It is celebrated on the third Monday in February. In some states, this date is called Presidents' Day and honors both Washington and Lincoln.

George Washington's birthday was first celebrated ______.

A.before the War of Independence

B.after he died

C.after he became the President of the United States

D.during the War of Independence

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