【考研类试卷】考研英语(阅读)-试卷27及答案解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)-试卷 27及答案解析(总分:70.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Reading Comprehensio(总题数:7,分数:70.00)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)_As college seniors hurtle into the job hunt, little l
2、ies on the resumefor example, claiming a degree when they“re three credits shy of graduationseem harmless enough. So new grads ought to read this memo now: those 20-year-old falsehoods on cream-colored, 32-lb. premium paper have ruined so many high-profile executives that you wonder who in the busin
3、ess world hasn“t got themessage.A.resume listing two fabricated degrees led to the resignation of David Edmondson, CEO of RadioShack, in February. Untruthful resume have also hindered the careers of executives at the U.S. Olympic Committee. The headlines haven“t dented job seekers“ desire to dissemb
4、le even as employers have grown increasingly able to detect deception. InfoLink Screening Services, a background-checking company, estimates that 14% of job applicants in the U.S. lie about their education on their resumes. Employees who lie to get in the door can cause untold damage on a business,
5、experts say, from staining the reputation and credibility of a firm to upending co-workers and projects to igniting shareholder wrathand that“s if the he is found out. Even when it isn“t, the falsified resume can indicate a deeply rooted inclination toward unethical behavior. “There“s a lot of evide
6、nce that those who cheat on job applications also cheat in school and in life,“ says Richard Griffith, director of the industrial and organizational psychology program at the Florida Institute of Technology. “If someone says they have a degree and they don“t, I“d have little faith that person would
7、tell the truth when it came to financial statements and so on.“ Employers“ fears have sparked a boom in the background-screening industry. But guarding the henhouse does little good if the fox is already nestled inside. To unmask the deceivers among them, some employers are conducting checks upon pr
8、omotion. Verified Person markets its ability to provide ongoing employee screening through automated criminal checks. With this increased alertness comes a thorny new dilemma; figuring out whether every lie is really a fireable offense. Many bosses feel that a worker“s track record on the job speaks
9、 more strongly than a stretched resume, says John Challenger of the outplacement firm Challenger, Gray its only negative effect was a small one, on the wages of workers without a high-school diploma. And if by increasing the number of legal guest workers we reduced the number of undocumented workers
10、, the economy would benefit even more. Guest workers are also, paradoxically, less likely than illegal immigrants to become permanent residents. The U.S. already has a number of smallerand less well-designedtemporary-worker programs, and there“s no evidence that workers in those plans routinely over
11、stay their visas. One remarkable study found that after border enforcement was stepped up in 1993 the chances of an illegal immigrant returning to his homeland to stay fell by a third. In fact, whatever benefits the guest-worker program brought to the U.S. economy or to particular businesses, the bi
12、ggest winners would be the workers themselves. Congress, of course, is under no obligation to care about foreign workers. But the program“s costs to American workers are negligible, the gains for the guest workers are enormous, and the U.S. economy will benefit. This is that rare option which is bot
13、h sensible and politically possible.(分数:10.00)(1).In Paragraph 2, the author holds that the guest-worker program will _.(分数:2.00)A.arouse great concerns about illegal immigrationB.be a sensible way to solve the immigration problemsC.be hazardous to the improvement of working structureD.bring fierce
14、competitions to local laborers(2).Gianmarco Ottaviano and Giovanni Peri point out that immigration _.(分数:2.00)A.is immune from negative effectsB.has lead to economic prosperity and social stabilityC.has enhanced wages of most American workersD.will root out illegal documentation of workers(3).Which
15、of the following is true according to Paragraph 4?(分数:2.00)A.Illegal immigrants have more chances to stay permanently in the U.S. than guest workers.B.With stepped-up border control, illegal immigrants are more likely to stay in their homeland.C.Workers in temporary-worker programs usually pay no at
16、tention to their visa duration.D.Guest workers will not stay too long because of the enhanced border enforcement.(4).The plan of creating a new class of “guest workers“ _.(分数:2.00)A.has aroused criticism from conservatives, liberals and the business worldB.has allowed immigrants to work in the U.S.
17、for six consecutive yearsC.will benefit both businesses and immigrant labor employersD.will give people a good reason to treat such workers as slaves(5).What is the author“s attitude towards guest workers plan?(分数:2.00)A.Negligible.B.Obscure.C.Indifferent.D.Favorable.It was just a footnote compared
18、with the more infectious disaster that killed millions more people in 1918, but the 1957 influenza pandemic that sickened some 25 to 30 percent of the American population was a medical watershed for the clues that it offered about how a new strain of influenza could spread. Americans first got a whi
19、ff of the so-called Asian flu when Maurice Hilleman, aphysician at Walter Reed Hospital in Washington, D.C., read about an unusually large number of people-some 250,000who had come down with flu-like symptoms in Hong Kong. Concerned, he immediately requested samples from American servicemen in Asia
20、and within days had his answer. The genetic structure of this strain was like nothing immunologists had ever seen before. When the virus finally hit America: “It went like a house on fire,“ recallsD.A Henderson, then the chief of the United States Epidemic Intelligence Service. Worsened by school op
21、enings that fall, the flu spread so rapidly from a few counties in Louisiana that just eight weeks later it had heavily infected more than half the counties in nearly all 50 states. Although it wasn“t particularly potent, the 1957 strain killed about 80,000 Americans. The victims were predominantly
22、the very old and the very young, although the infection occasionally killed otherwise healthy adults as well. Pharmaceutical companies worked furiously to produce a vaccine, ultimately distributing some 40 million doses. But “they were just a little bit too late,“ says Arnold Monto, an influenza spe
23、cialist at the University of Michigan. “They only had significant doses available when the pandemic was peaking.“ Earlier, scarcities raised questions about who deserved the vaccine first.A set of official rules gave priority to military personnel and necessary civic workers, but that didn“t stop me
24、mbers of the San Francisco 49ers football team from getting vaccinated before police and firemen. Despite some manufacturing improvements, experts say the same shortages could occur with a pandemic today. And that concern has caused preparedness officials to plan for community interventions such as
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