[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷256及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 256 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 The Energy Department has recommended expanding the amount of nuclear waste that could he stored in an underground repository at Yucca Mountain in Nevad
2、a to avoid the need for a second dump. It is a sensible proposal that also is an urgent reminder of how little progress has been made in solving one of the most vexing problems of the nuclear age.Tens of thousands of tons of spent fuel and military waste have been piling up at temporary storage site
3、s around the country while the federal government has struggled, unsuccessfully, to find a long-term solution. Expert groups have long recommended that the nuclear waste should be buried deep underground in a stable, leak-resistant geological formation that would keep it bottled up for many millenni
4、ums. Yucca Mountain, the only site now under consideration, has run into so many technical problems and so much political opposition that its future is uncertain. The site is still awaiting licensing from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.In the 1980s when Congress ordered the Energy Department to l
5、ook for places to bury long-lived radioactive wastes, it visualized two underground repositories one in the West and one in the Eastto spread the burden fairly. Congress eventually chose one site in Nevada, which lacked the political clout at the time to push it elsewhere.The only concession to Neva
6、da was that no more than 70,000 metric tons could be stored at Yucca Mountain until a second repository was in operation. The amount of spent reactor fuel and military waste now stored at production sites and waiting for permanent disposal is expected to reach that limit by 2010.The Energy Departmen
7、t now has recommended that the statutory limit be eliminated so that consideration of a second repository can be deferred. Without specifying any particular capacity, the report notes that Yucca Mountain could physically accommodate at least three times the statutory limit.It would make sense to exp
8、and Yucca Mountain rather than undertake the arduous and controversial process of evaluating sites in other states. The political tides are running against the Yucca Mountain site. During a primary debate in Las Vegas, Barack Obama pledged to Nevada voters that he would “end the notion of Yucca Moun
9、tain“.A currently powerful Nevada Congressional delegation also is pushing to kill off the project.Our hope is that opponents of the repository will wait for a verdict from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission before prejudging the site as unacceptable. Nuclear waste is piling up and the country needs
10、to find a safe place to store it.1 The Energy Department is inclined to_.(A)restrict the amount of nuclear waste produced(B) store more nuclear waste in Nevadas repository(C) seek another repository for increased nuclear waste(D)remind us of the difficulty to build a new repository2 According to the
11、 text, Yucca Mountain is_.(A)only a temporary site for storing nuclear waste(B) a desirable site in the U. S. to store nuclear waste(C) a geologically suitable site to store nuclear waste(D)no longer a proper place for storing nuclear waste3 Nevada was chosen as one site for storing nuclear waste on
12、 account of(A)the urgent need for a repository(B) few technical problems it ran into(C) the absence of suitable substitutes(D)little political opposition it met with4 It seems that Barack Obama objected to_.(A)waiving the statutory limit for Nevadas repository(B) evaluating other sites for storing r
13、adioactive waste(C) considering a second repository for nuclear waste(D)specifying a limit for Yucca Mountain repository5 The author is anxious about_.(A)the pledge of Obama to Nevada voters(B) the uncertain future of Yucca Mountain(C) the permanent disposal of nuclear waste(D)the limited storage ca
14、pacity of a repository5 Several weeks ago. three of the countrys most respected institutions of higher learning, Harvard, Princeton, and the University of Virginia, announced that they were embarking on a nationwide campaign to recruit more poor students.Consider the efforts to recruit poor students
15、. Harvard, Princeton, and U. Va. are reacting to a troubling pattern; The percentage of low-income students at elite colleges and universities is quite low. Precise figures are hard to come by, but a 2004 report indicated that at the most selective colleges, only 3 percent of the students were from
16、the poorest sector of society, and only 10 percent from the bottom half. Perhaps even more troubling, the percentage of low-income students on some campuses has declined over the last decade. Ten years ago at the University of Virginia, for example, more than 10 percent of the students came from low
17、-income households; today, less than 7 percent do. Many college campuses are becoming the province of the economic elite, where the very essence of the American Dreamthat a child from a modest home can, by dint of hard work, climb as far as talent will take him or herseems to be fading from view. Th
18、e effort by these three institutions to recruit more poor students is laudable, but its also like treating the symptom rather than the disease. The real problem is not that there are bus loads of qualified poor students every year who just decide to give Harvard a pass. Its that there are far too fe
19、w poor students who are even remotely prepared to attend Harvard. Stepping up the recruitment of poor students might create a more diverse campus and therefore benefit colleges and universities, as well as the lucky few poor students who attend them. But why dont college presidents also talk publicl
20、y about the fact that so few poor students seem prepared to attend college, let alone an elite university? Better still, why not talk about what to do about that fact?The failure of college and university presidents to speak out on this issue is symptomatic of a broader problem: These leaders are pr
21、etty much invisible in the public sphere and, most jarringly, in the debates and discussions about K12 education. To be sure, college presidents are busy people, with complicated institutions to guide and plenty of problems of their own. But they are also leaders in the larger enterprise of educatio
22、n, and they are in an unparalleled position to make a valuable contribution to the discussion of what should happen to students before they graduate from high school. Perhaps instead of just focusing on the bottom line, they should be thinking more about the broader picture.6 It is_ for prestigious
23、universities to recruit more poor students.(A)normal(B) sensible(C) incredible(D)admirable7 It seems that the American Dream_.(A)is nothing but an illusion(B) means little to poor children(C) is cherished by all Americans(D)keeps on inspiring poor children8 The “disease“ in “treating the symptom rat
24、her than the disease“ refers to the fact that_.(A)there are few qualified poor students for universities to recruit(B) poor students value most the opportunity of attending universities(C) some prestigious universities decide to recruit more poor students(D)some elite universities are not well-prepa
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