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资料三2007年上半年某镇完成工业总产值66625万元,比去年同期增长32.7%,增速提高12.7个百分点。其中规模以上工业企业完成产值,56869万元,比上年同期增长43.9%,占全年工业总产值计划的45.3%。完成工业增加值22177万元,同比增长26.2%,其中规模以上工业企业实现19270万元,同比增长47.9%。骨干企业群体壮大,对经济增长的带动作用明显。上半年,全镇规模以上工业企业中有3家企业完成工业总产值超过5000万元,累计完成工业总产值28501.8万元,同比增长48.9%。有10家企业产值同比增加额超过1000万元,比去年增加3家,共完成工业总产值18852.7万元,同比增长88.1%。这13家骨干企业拉动规模以上工业企业经济增长20个百分点。10个行业大类中,服装行业实现价值3.01亿元,同比增长84.9%;机械行业实现产值2236.8万元,同比增长49.5%;酒业完成价值1284万元,同比增长118.7%;童车行业实现产值1107.2万元,同比增长19.3%;五金机械行业完成价值377.3万元,同比增长34.4%;箱包行业实现产值1363.2万元,同比增长31.7%;羊毛衫行业实现产值1.75亿元,同比增长11.6%;有机化学行业实现产值792.7万元,同比增长16.4%;纸制品行业实现产值1713万元,同比增长7.0%;砖瓦行业由于今年砖窑厂数量的减少,实现产值329.5万元,同比下降64%。 2006年上半年,该镇工业增加值中由规模以上企业实现的比例约为()。

A. 74.1%
B. 78.8%
C. 85.4%
D. 86.9%

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打开考生文件夹下的Word文档WORD2.doc,其内容如下: [WORD2.doc文档开始] 本周手机价格一览表______。 厂家 手机型号 价格(元) 摩托罗拉 P7689 558 摩托罗拉 T2988 758 摩托罗拉 V998+ 1418 诺基亚 N5110 338 诺基亚 N3310 658 诺基亚 N8250 1928 西门子 S1118 499 西门子 S3618 1799 [WORD2.doc文档结束] 按要求完成下列操作并以原名保存。 (1) 将文中后9行文字转换为一个9行3列的表格;设置表格居中、表格列宽为3cm、行高为0.5cm。 (2) 合并表格第1列第2~4行单元格、第5~7行单元格、第8~9行单元格;将合并后单元格中重复的厂家名称删除、只保留一个;将表格中第1行和第1列的所有单元格中的内容中部居中,其余各行各列单元格内容中部右对齐;表格所有框线设置为红色1磅单实线;以原文件名保存文档。

In this section you will heat" everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Mark the correct answer to each question on your coloured answer sheet. Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the following five questions. Now listen to the interview. How old are the triplet boys now

A. They are six months old.
B. They are two weeks old.
C. They are six weeks old.
D. They are eight weeks old.

案例分析题某市税务局税务人员甲到该市某企业征税。该企业总经理王某殴打税务人员甲,拒不缴税。王某的朋友李某当时恰巧路过,看到王某殴打甲,不知甲是谁,不知事情原委,但也参与了殴打该税务人员甲。税务人虽甲在归途中,遭遇陈某抢劫。经鉴定,王、李的行为造成税务人员甲轻微伤。 该企业总经理王某()。

A. 构成抗税罪
B. 不构成抗税罪
C. 应当判处3年以下有期徒刑或者拘役,并处拒缴税款1倍以上5倍以下的罚金
D. 不应当判处罚金

TEXT B The decline of civility and good manners may be worrying people more than crime, according to Gentility Recalled, edited by Digby Anderson, which laments the breakdown of traditional codes that once regulated social conduct. It criticizes the fact that "manners" are scorned as repressive and outdated. The result, according to Mr. Anderson director of the Social Affairs Unit, an independent thing-tank -is a society characterized by rudeness: loutish behaviour on the streets, jostling in crowds, impolite shop assistants and bad-tempered drivers. Mr. Anderson says the cumulative effect of these-apparently trivial, but often offensive-is to make everyday life uneasy, unpredictable and unpleasant. As they are encountered far more often than crime, they can cause more anxiety than crime. When people lament the disintegration of law and order, he argues, what they generally mean is order, as manifested by courteous forms of social contact. Meanwhile, attempts to re-establish restraint and self-control through "politically correct" rules are artificial. The book has contributions from 12 academics in disciplines ranging from medicine to sociology and charts what it calls the "coarsening" of Britain. Old-fashioned terms such as "gentleman" and "lady" have lost all meaningful resonance and need to be re-evaluated, it says. Rachel Trickett, honorary fellow and former principal of St. Hugh’s College, Oxford, says that the notion of a "lady" protects women rather than demeaning them. Feminism and demands for equality have blurred the distinctions between the sexes, creating situations where men are able to dominate women because of their more aggressive and forceful natures, she says. "Women, without some code of deference or respect, become increasingly victims." Caroline Moore, the first woman fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge, points out that "gentleman" is now used only with irony or derision. "The popular view of a gentleman is poised somewhere between the imbecile parasite and the villainous one: between Woosteresque chinless wonders, and those heartless capitalist toffs who are ~.. the stock-in-trade of television." She argues that the concept is neither class-bound nor rigid; conventions of gentlemanly behaviour enable a man to act naturally as an individual within shared assumptions while taking his place in society. "Politeness is no constraint, precisely because the manners...are no ’code’ but a language, rich, flexible, restrained and infinitely subtle." For Anthony O’hear, professor of philosophy at the University of Bradford, manners are closely associated with the different forms of behaviour appropriate to age and status. They curb both the impetuosity of youth and the bitterness of old age. Egalitarianism, he says, has led to people failing to act their age. "We have vice-chancellors with earrings, aristocrats as hippies...the trendy vicar on his motorbike." Dr Athena Leoussi, sociology lecturer at Reading University, bemoans the deliberate neglect by people of their sartorial appearance. Dress, she says, is the outward expression of attitudes and aspirations. The ubiquitousness of jeans "displays a utilitarian attitude" that has "led to the cultural impoverishment of everyday life". Dr Leoussi says that while cloths used to be seen as a means of concealing taboo forces of sexuality and violence, certain fashions-such as leather jackets have the opposite effect. Dr Bruce Charlton, a lecturer in public health medicine in Newcastle upon Tyne, takes issue with the excessive informality of relations between professionals such as doctors and bank managers, and their clients. He says this has eroded the distance and respect necessary in such relationships. For Tristam Engelhardt, professor of medicine in Houston, Texas, says manners are bound to morals. "Manners express a particular set of values," he says. "Good manners interpret and transform social reality. They provide social orientation." According to Caroline Moore, the media has projected a ______ image of the gentleman.

A. humorous
B. favourable
C. negative
D. traditional

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