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某建设项目在实施过程中发生了以下3个事件: 事件1:该建设项目的业主提供了地质勘察报告,报告显示地下土质很好。承包商以此作了施工方案,拟用挖方余土做通往项目所在地道路基础的填方。由于基础开挖施工时正值雨季,开挖后土方潮湿,且易破碎,不符合道路填筑要求。承包商不得不将余土外运,另外取土做道路填方材料。 事件2:该工程按合同规定的总工期计划应于某年某月开始现场搅拌混凝土,因承包商的混凝土搅拌设备迟迟不能运往工地,承包商决定使用商品混凝土,但被业主否决。而在承包合同中未明确规定使用何种混凝土。承包商不得已,只有继续组织混凝土搅拌设备进场,由此导致施工现场停工,工期拖延和费用增加。 事件3:该工程项目备有地下室,属隐蔽工程,因而在建设工程合同中,双方约定了对隐蔽工程(地下室)的验收检查条款。规定:地下室的检查验收工作由双方共同负责,检查费用由业主负担。地下室竣工后,承包商通知业主检查验收,业主答复:因业主事务繁忙,由承包商自己检查出具检查记录即可。其后15天,业主又聘请专业人员对地下室质量进行检查,发现没有达到合同规定的标准,遂要求承包商负担此次检查费用,并对地下室工程返工。 问题: (1)对于事件1,承包商是否可以提出赔偿要求,为什么? (2)对于事件2,承包商是否可以提出索赔要求,为什么? (3)对于事件3,承包商如何处理,业主的事后检查费用由谁负担?

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Some pessimistic experts feel that the automobile is bound to fall into disuse. They see a day in the not-too-distant future when all autos will be abandoned and allowed to rust. Other authorities, however, think the auto is here to stay. They hold that the car will remain a leading means of urban travel in the foreseeable future. The motorcar will undoubtedly change significantly over the next 30 years. It should become smaller, safer, and more economical, and should not be powered by the gasoline engine. The car of the future should be far more pollution-free than present types. Regardless of its power source, the auto in the future will still be the main problem in urban traffic congestion. One proposed solution to this problem is the automated highway system. When the auto enters the highway system, a retractable arm will drop from the auto and make contact with a rail, which is similar to those powering subway trains electrically. Once attached to the rail, the ear will become electrically powered from the system, and control of the vehicle will pass to a central computer. The computer will then monitor all of the car’s movements. The driver will use a telephone to dial instructions about his destination into the system. The computer will calculate the best route, and reserve space for the car all the way to the correct exit from the highway. The driver will then be free to relax and wait for the buzzer that will warn him of his coming exit. It is estimated that an automated highway will be able to handle 10,000 vehicles per hour, compared with the 1,500 to 2,000 vehicles that can be carried by a present-day highway. What is the author’s main concern

A. How to render automobiles pollution-free.
B. How to make smaller and safer automobiles.
C. How to solve the problem of traffic jams.
D. How to develop an automated subway system.

In the days of Samuel Clemens, better known as Mark Twain, life on a steamboat on the Mississippi River was 1 . One of the most exciting 2 of that period was a race 3 two of the fastest river boats. The Natchez had steamed up the river from New Orleans to St. Louis in three days, twenty-one hours, and fifty-eight minutes. John Cannon, 4 of the Robert E. Lee felt sure that he could 5 this time and challenged the captain of the Natchez. 6 his boat light, Captain Cannon 7 no passengers 8 ; he did not 9 the usual goods. Moreover, he had crews with supplies of coal waiting on floats along the river so that the boat would not have to put it to shore for 10 . The race began on June 30,1870. Being lighter than the Natchez, the Lee jumped into an early lead. For three days the race continued, 11 the boats travelling at full steam. They were 12 each other the whole time, 13 short spaces when bends in the river hid one or the other from view. Then only a few hours from its goal, the Natchez 14 a rock and ran aground. The Lee steamed proudly into St. Louis in exactly three days, eighteen hours, and thirty minutes after she had left New Orleans. Bell rang, and people called 15 the boat named after the general 16 as an army engineer had prevented the river from changing its course and St. Louis 17 becoming an inland town. The Lee 18 a good record—one that brought honor to all rivermen. However, the great day of the river steamers was drawing to 19 . The 20 won the passenger and goods business from the river boats. There are boats on the river today. But they are not the white birds that attracted young Samuel Clemens.

A. between
B. among
C. in
D. within

Since we are social beings, the quality of our lives depends in large measure on our interpersonal relationships. One strength of the human condition is our tendency to give and receive support from one another under stressful circumstances. Social support consists of the exchange of resources among people based on their interpersonal ties. Those of us with strong support systems appear better able to cope with major life changes and daily hassles. People with strong social ties live longer and have better health than those without such ties. Studies over a range of illnesses, from depression to heart disease, reveal that the presence of social support helps people fend off illness, and the absence of such support makes poor health more likely. Social support cushions stress in a number of ways. First, friends, relatives, and co-workers may let us know that they value us. Our self-respect is strengthened when we feel accepted by others despite our faults and difficulties. Second, other people often provide us with informational support. They help us to define and understand our problems and find solutions to them. Third, we typically find social companionship supportive. Engaging in leisure-time activities with others helps us to meet our social needs while at the same time distracting us from our worries and troubles. Finally, other people may give us instrumental support—financial aid, material resources, and needed services—that reduces stress by helping us resolve and cope with our problems. Which of the following is closest in meaning to the word "cushions" (Line 1, Para. 2)

A. adds up to
B. does away with
C. lessens the effect of
D. lays the foundation of

Thomas and Dianne Stewart, out for an afternoon drive, stopped at a stop sign in a quiet suburban neighborhood. Thomas watched a little girl, perhaps two years old, as she played in her yard. Moments later he gasped when he realized she was playing with a cigarette lighter. "How utterly awful it is to let a small child play with a cigarette lighter," Thomas exclaimed to his wife. His wife nodded her head in agreement. As he prepared to pull away, he watched the little girl head into the back yard. As the car began to move, Thomas spotted a large red gasoline can, with no lid on it. If the girl flicked the cigarette lighter, the spark or resulting flame could ignite the fumes escaping from the open gas can, creating a high potential for disaster. Thomas, trained in safety and rescue operations while in the army, trained in the martial arts while in college, a marathon runner, weight lifter, and Olympic swimmer, sprang into action. He kicked his car door open, and instructed his wife to take the fire extinguisher in the car. She nodded her head and followed him with the equipment he needed. He removed the tab, activating the extinguisher and directed her to spray the small child as if were in flames. Dianne aimed the nozzle at the baby and pulled the trigger. Mushrooming foam covered the little girl from her head to her toes, protecting her from the flames, in the event of an explosion. The little girl began crying, not aware that these two people were risking their very lives for her. From the side of the house, Thomas and Dianne heard the child’s mother yell, "Jessica, do you need more candy in your Pez dispenser" The couple looked again at the object in the little girl’s hand, and then rushed to their car and hightailed out of the neighborhood. What was the baby holding in her hand

A cigarette lighter.
B. A toy machine.
C. An open gas can.
D. Some candies.

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