[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷140及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 140 及答案与解析Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)0 “Please dont take your organs to heaven,“ reads the American bumper sticker. “Heaven knows that we need them here on earth. “ Last year more than 7,000
2、Americans died while awaiting an organ transplantalmost double the number of American soldiers killed in Iraq since 2003. In Europe, too, thousands of people whose lives could be extended or transformed(by having sight restored, for example)through transplants forfeit the opportunity for want of ava
3、ilable organs.Research by the World Health Organisation(WHO)has found that only one in ten people in need of a new kidney, the body part most in demand, manages to get one. In the poorest places, of course, a complex transplantwhich in the American health system costs $500, 000is unthinkable for mos
4、t people anyway. But the gap between supply and demand for organs affects the poor too, by creating a market in body parts where abuses are prevalent.In prosperous and middle-income countries, the waiting lists for organ transplants grow ever longer as ageing populations, hypertension and obesity(a
5、big cause of diabetes-driven kidney failure)take their toll. The problem has been worsened by a fall in road deaths in rich countries, whichalong with strokes and heart attacksare the main source of organs for transplant. Small wonder that people scour the globe to procure the organs they or their l
6、oved ones need; or that unscrupulous intermediaries offer help.The latest of many organ-harvesting scandals is now raging in India, one of several poor countries where the sale of organs used to be legal but has now been banned, with the apparent effect of driving the trade underground. A doctor, Am
7、it Kumar, is awaiting trial after reportedly confessing to having performed hundreds of illegal transplants for rich clients from America, Britain, Canada, Saudi Arabia and Greece. He has been accused of luring labourers into his clinics with job offers; victims were then offered up to $2,000, a pri
8、ncely sum, to part with a kidney. Some who refused are said to have had kidneys removed anyway after being drugged.Another kidney racket flourished in South Africa between 2001 and 2003. Donors were recruited in Brazil, Israel and Romania with offers of $5,000-20,000 to visit Durban and forfeit a ki
9、dney. The 109 recipients, mainly Israelis, each paid up to $120,000 for a “transplant holiday“; they pretended they were relatives of the donors and that no cash changed hands.Knowingly or unknowingly, Europeans may have benefited from another racket, operating on their doorstep, in a region where t
10、he West claims to be upholding human rights. Carla del Ponte, until recently the chief prosecutor at the war-crimes court for ex-Yugoslavia, claims in a new book that in 1999, guerrillas from Kosovo harvested the organs of 300 captive Serbs at a secret site in Albania. The authorities in Kosovo and
11、Albania have hotly denied the story.1 Which of the following affects the poor most according to the first two paragraphs?(A)More than 7,000 Americans died during waiting for organ transplant last year.(B) Only 10% people in need could succeed in getting organ transplant operation.(C) Organ transplan
12、t operation is very complex and costly even in America.(D)The larger gap between demand and supply creates markets of body parts.2 The best reason that leads to a larger gap between organ demand and supply is(A)in prosperous and middle-income countries, more and more people die of various diseases.(
13、B) in prosperous countries, the supply of organs reduces for the fewer traffic accident deaths.(C) there is a larger and larger demand while the supply seems to become less and less.(D)more and more nations begin to take measures to ban the once legal sale of organs.3 Which of the following is true
14、according to Paragraph 4?(A)The last of many organ-harvesting scandals is now taking place in India.(B) After being banned the sale of organs in India has now disappeared.(C) Amit Kumar was on trial for performing hundreds of illegal organ transplants.(D)For a large amount of income, some job hunter
15、s went to part with a kidney.4 What does the author feel about the present situation in organ transplant profession?(A)Pleased.(B) Concerned.(C) Indifferent.(D)Sympathetic.5 What message does this passage mainly aim to convey?(A)More people are awaiting to have lives extended or transformed through
16、transplants.(B) Organ transplant operations are too expensive and complex for poor people to have.(C) Organ exchange markets have been in existence in many parts of the world.(D)The gap between demand and supply creates organ markets especially immoral exchanges.5 Improving the balance between the w
17、orking part of the day and the rest of it is a goal of a growing number of workers in rich Western countries. Some are turning away from the ideals of their parents, for whom work always came first; others with scarce skills are demanding more because they know they can get it. Employers, caught bet
18、ween a falling population of workers and tight controls on immigration, are eager to identify extra perks that will lure more “talent“ their way. Just now they are focusing on benefits(especially flexible working)that offer employees more than just pay.Some companies saw the change of mood some time
19、 ago. IBM has more than 50 different programmes promoting work-life balance and Bank of America over 30. But plenty of other firms remain unconvinced and many lack the capacity to cater to such ideas even if they wanted to. Helen Murlis, with Hay Group, a human-resources consultancy, sees a widening
20、 gap between firms “at the creative end of employment“ and those that are not.The chief component of almost all schemes to promote work-life balance is flexible working. This allows people to escape rigid nine-to-five schedules and work away from a formal office. IBM says that 40% of its employees t
21、oday work off the company premises. For many businesses, flexible working is a necessity. Globalization has spread the hours in which workers need to communicate with each other and increased the call for flexible shifts.Nella Barkley, an American who advises companies on work-life balance, says tha
22、t large firms are beginning to understand the value of such schemes, “but only slowly“. For most of them, they still mean little more than child care, health care and flexible working.To some extent, the proliferation of work-life-balance schemes is a function of todays labour market. Companies in k
23、nowledge-based industries worry about the shortage of skills and how they are going to persuade talented people to work for them. Although white-collar workers are more likely to be laid off nowadays, they are also likely to get rehired. Unemployment among college graduates in America is just over 2
24、%. The same competition for scarce talent is evident in Britain.For some time to come, talented people in the West will demand more from employers, and clever employers will create new gewgaws to attract them to join. Those employers should note that for a growing number of these workers the most ap
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