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【单选题】

The day of terror at the Virginia Polytechnic and State University in Blacksburg began at about 7:15 a. m. , with the shooting of a woman and a male resident adviser on the fourth floor of a dorm building on campus, Kristen Bensley, a freshman who lived below the floor where the shooting occurred, told TIME, "There were minors going on about the assailant was fighting with his girlfriend or something of that nature." Bensley notes that only residents can get into the building, using a specific "passport", that is, a card that one has to swipe in order to open doors before 10 a.m. If he was an outsider, someone would have had to let him in. Or more likely, he was a resident of the dorm himself. If so, how did be keep so much ammunition unnoticed
Unlike high schools, most universities can’t beef up security with a metal detector or two. So what can be done to protect students Other questions remain unanswered. Why was there a two-hour gap between the incident at the dorm and a far more fatal one across campus At one point, that led to theorizing that more than one gunman was involved. The gunman who killed at least 30 people at Norris Hall shortly after 9 a.m. was described by some sources as an Asian man.
It has been a surreal time for the students. Brandon Stiltner, a senior aerospace engineering student, and Jonathan Hess, a senior mechanical engineer, were watching TV all day but by noon they’d had enough. "We decided we needed to do something," Stiltner said. "We were worthless sitting around." So they took their six-foot Virginia Tech sign off the wall and logged into Facebook. Within the next few hours 100 people replied to their e-mail request for a vigil.
By 8 p.m. hundreds bf students began filing down the steps of the War Memorial Chapel toward the drill field. Clusters of two and three students stood together in silence. Slowly they began to line up to sign the board. "I’m still really in disbelief," says Stiltner. The shock of the day’s shootings sank in, Hess said, as he carried the sign across campus for the vigil. "It hit me," Hess said, "to know that it was in these buildings." The media crews that swarmed campus were also surreal to Hess and Stiltner. "We could look out our window and see exactly what’s on TV," Stiltner says. He watched his sign crowded with initials and prayers, awaiting the names of the victims, He shuddered. "I hope I don’t have any nasty surprises.\
Which statement can be inferred from the second paragraph

A.
It’s impossible that a two-hour gap between the incident at the dorm and another one across campus.
B.
More than one gunman was involved.
C.
The gunman was an Asian man.
D.
One of high school’s ways of keeping security is using a metal detector or two.
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【单选题】在一起离婚诉讼中,人民法院误将传票送达给与田晓娅同名的邻村的田晓娅,后者的丈夫一直在外地打工,当她接到法院的传票后,承受不住这种打击,引起精神病复发,不能劳动,生活上不能自理。对于此案,人民法院对精神混乱的田晓娅应否负赔偿义务

A.
不应当负赔偿义务,因为田晓娅以前就有精神病,并不是人民法院误发传票的行为才导致其有精神病
B.
不应当负赔偿义务,因为人民法院误发传票的行为只是给其精神造成损害,而对于精神赔偿在我们国家赔偿中是不存在的
C.
不应当承担赔偿义务,因为黄某所受损害是由人民法院工作人员的个人行为造成的,应当由有关责任人员负赔偿责任
D.
人民法院可以根据《民法通则》第 121条的规定承担赔偿义务

【单选题】Children have more colds because(). A.they are usually infected about eight times each year B.they are not immune to many cold viruses yet C.they never wash their hands so that their thumbnails are di...

A.
You can’t beat it, but you don’t have to join it. Maybe it got the name common cold because it’s more common in winter. The fact is, though, being cold doesn’t have anything to do with getting one. Colds are caused by the spread of rhinoviruses, and, at least so far, medical science is better at telling you how to avoid getting one than how to get rid of one.
B.
Children are the most common way cold viruses are spread to adults, because they have more colds than adults—an average of about eight per year. Why do kids seem so much more easily to get colds than their parents Simple. They haven’t had the opportunity to become immune to many cold viruses.
C.
There are more than 150 different cold viruses, and you never have the same one twice. Being infected by one makes you immune to it—but only it.
D.
Colds are usually spread by direct contact, not sneezing or coughing. From another person’s hand to your hand and then to your nose or eyes is the most common route. The highest concentration of cold viruses anywhere is found under the thumbnails of a boy, although the viruses can survive for hours on skin or other smooth surfaces.
E.
Hygiene is your best defense. Wash your hands frequently preferably with a disinfectant soap, especially when children in your household have colds.
F.
But even careful hygiene won’t ward off every cold. So, what works when a coughing, sneezing, runny nose strikes
G.
The old prescription of two aspirins, lots of water, and bed rest is a good place to start. But you’ll also find some of the folk remedies… worth using. Hot mixtures of sugar (or honey), lemon, and water have real benefits.

【多选题】(二)B注册会计师负责审计乙公司2×10年度财务报表。在运用重要性水平时,B注册会计师遇到下列事项,请代为做出正确的专业判断。 在确定重要性水平时,需要确定重要性水平的基准,下列有关重要性水平基准的说法中正确的有( )。

A.
以营利为目的的企业,通常会以经常性业务的税前利润或税后净利润的5%作为确定重要性水平的基准
B.
对于共同基金公司,注册会计师通常以净资产的0.5%作为判断重要性水平基准的
C.
对于收益不稳定的企业,应该选择以税前利润或税后净利润作为确定重要性水平的基准
D.
注册会计师在将净利润作为确定某企业重要性水平的基准时,因情况变化使该单位本年度净利润出现意外的增加或减少,注册会计师可能认为选择近几年的平均净利润作为重要性水平的基准更加合适

【单选题】13() A.receive B.solve C.fit D.help

A.
These are tough times for Wal-Mart, America’s biggest retailer. Long accused of (1) small-town America mad condemned for the selfishness of its pay, the company has lately come under (2) for its meanness over employees’ health-care benefits. The charge is arguably (3) : the firm’s health coverage, while (4) less extensive than the average for big companies, is on equal terms (5) other retailers’. But bad publicity, coupled with rising costs, has (6) the Bentonville giant to action. WalMart is making changes that should shift the ground in America’s healthcare debate.
B.
One (7) is to reduce the prices of many generic, or out-of-patent, prescription drugs. Wal-Mart’s critics dismiss the move as a publicity (8) . The list of drugs includes only 143 different medicines and excludes many popular group. True, but short-sighted. Wal-Mart has (9) retailing by using its size to squeeze suppliers and (10) the gains on to consumers. It could (11) the same with drugs. A "Wal-Mart effect" in drugs will not solve America’s health-costs problem: group account for only a small share of drug costs, which in turn make (12) only 10% of overall health spending. But it would (13) .
C.
The firm’s other initiative is more (14) . Wal-Mart is joining the small but fast-growing group of employers (15) are controlling costs by shifting to health insurance with high deductibles.
D.
Early evidence (16) these plans do help firms control the cost of health insurance. But critics say that the savings are (17) . They argue that the plans shift costs to sicker workers, discourage preventative care and will anyway do little to (18) overall health spending, (19) most of the $2 trillion that America (20) health care each year goes to people with multiple chronic diseases.