【考研类试卷】考研英语(阅读)-试卷109及答案解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)-试卷 109 及答案解析(总分:60.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:6,分数:60.00)1.Section II Reading Comprehension(分数:10.00)_2.Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D.(分数:10.00)_When Congress passed the Age Discrimination in Empl
2、oyment Act, it gave older Americans a broad right to sue for discrimination. But the Supreme Court has narrowed that right with a 5-to-4 ruling that union members cannot file lawsuits when their contracts call for arbitration of age-discrimination claims. The decision, which reversed the court“s pre
3、cedents, sets back antidiscrimination law significantly. A group of New York City building-services workers sued after they were moved from positions like night lobby watchman to less desirable assignments, including cleaning jobs. The workers charged, among oilier claims, that they had been reassig
4、ned based on age. The contract negotiated by the workers“ union required employees to submit claims of discrimination to binding arbitration. The workers sued in federal court, asserting that their job reassignments violated the federal age-discrimination statute and other laws. The employer moved t
5、o dismiss the suit, arguing that the union contract required that the claims be arbitrated. The Federal Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit denied the motion, citing a 1974 Supreme Court case, Alexander v. Gardner-Denver Company. It held that collective bargaining agreements cannot waive workers
6、“ rights to sue under federal antidiscrimination laws. The Supreme Court reversed, in an opinion by Justice Clarence Thomas. In the majority“s view, the union agreed to the arbitration clause, and it was binding on all of its members. The four dissenters, in an opinion by Justice David Souter, had b
7、y far the better argument. Rights that Congress grants, they argued, cannot be waived in a collective-bargaining contract. Union contracts represent group rightsand unions often sacrifice the interests of a minority of their members for the good of the whole. Laws like the Age Discrimination in Empl
8、oyment Act give individuals a right to sue for discrimination -no matter what deal their union decides to strike for the workers as a group. The dissenters protested that the majority was too quick to abandon the well-established, 35-year-old precedent of Gardner-Denver. The fight over who will hear
9、 these claims matters because workers who have been discriminated against are more likely to get a fair hearing in federal court than in arbitration. That is why employers are eager to arbitrateand it may be why the court “ s most conservative justices voted in favor of compulsory arbitration. When
10、Congress passed the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, it protected Americans from discrimination on the basis of ageand gave them the chance to vindicate that right in federal court. There is no reason to believe that Congress intended this right to sue to be so weak that unions could freely bar
11、gain it away.(分数:10.00)(1).It is implied that the Age Discrimination in Employment Act(分数:2.00)A.fails to effectively protect Americans from discriminationB.calls for arbitration of age-discrimination claimsC.flies in the face of the earlier judicial decisionsD.impedes antidiscrimination law tremend
12、ously(2).The example of a group of building-service workers is cited to show that(分数:2.00)A.cleaning jobs are less desirable for average workersB.workers“ claims of discrimination are subject to arbitrationC.the enforcement of age discrimination law has been hinderedD.job reassignments disregard the
13、 federal age discrimination law(3).Justice Clarence Thomas believes that the Supreme Court(分数:2.00)A.defends the age-discrimination law unswervinglyB.has changed its attitude toward age discrimination lawC.safeguards the interests of both the union and its membersD.adheres to its position of protect
14、ing the majority“s interests(4).In the opinion of Justice David Souter.(分数:2.00)A.the interests of the minority can be sacrificed sometimesB.the deals struck by the union are for the good of the wholeC.group rights are under the full protection of union contractD.it is reasonable to defend the right
15、s granted by the Congress(5).According to the text. Congress(分数:2.00)A.gives workers a chance for a fair hearing in federal courtB.grants Americans the right to sue for age-discriminationC.vindicates the legal rights of Americans in federal courtD.waives the right of Americans to sue for discriminat
16、ionThe 1st Amendment, which guarantees freedom of speech and freedom of the press, takes the view that the people should dictate to the government, not the other way around. But no one told a group of 32 state attorneys general, who have taken it upon themselves to instruct the film industry on the
17、appropriate content of movies. This time, the cause is not raunchy sex, foul language or blood-spattering violence. It“s cigarettes. Many experts think that when actors puff away, they cause teenagers to do likewise. One study went so far as to say that 38 percent of all the kids who acquire the hab
18、it do so because of the influence of films. So all these state government officials want filmmakers to stop depicting tobacco use. It“s hard to fully credit the notion that kids start smoking just because they see Scarlett Johansson doing it. If movies exert such a mammoth influence on impressionabl
19、e youngsters, shouldn“t teen tobacco use be on the rise? The studies themselves are not as damning as they purport to be. They indicate that kids who watch more movies with smoking are more likely to smoke. But a correlation does not necessarily show a cause: Just because there is lots of beer drink
20、ing at baseball games doesn“t mean beer drinking causes baseball. It may be that kids see a star light up and rush out to imitate him. Or it may be that teens who are inclined to smoke anyway are also inclined to see the sort of movies that feature smoking. Michael Siegel, a physician and professor,
21、 believes the studies greatly exaggerate the impact of tobacco in films. “It is simply one of a large number of ways in which youths are exposed to positive images of smoking(which includes advertisements, television movies, television shows, DVDs, Internet, music videos, and a variety of other sour
22、ces),“ he told me in an e-mail interview. “To single out smoking in movies as THE cause of youth smoking initiation for a large percentage of kids is ridiculous. Putting an R rating on smoky movies probably wouldn“t do much to reduce teenagers“ exposure. Some 75 percent of new releases that feature
23、smoking are already rated R and a lot of them are accessible even to preteens. Siegel points out that applying R ratings to films just because they feature full-frontal shots of cigarettes may backfire. Parents anxious about sex and violence may stop paying attention to the rating system once it fac
24、tors in smoking. “ So you could actually end up with more kids seeing films with smoking.(分数:10.00)(1).It is implied in the text that the government _.(分数:2.00)A.has to abide by the 1st Amendment strictlyB.has no right to restrict the content of moviesC.has responsibility to protect freedom of speec
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