题目内容

白雪在霞光的映照下,呈现出一片红色,单人们对学弟的知觉依旧是白色,这是由于知觉具有( )。

A. 选择性
B. 整体性
C. 连贯性
D. 恒常性

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有限责任公司应当置备股东名册,记载的事项不包括______。

A. 公司注册资本
B. 出资证明书编号
C. 股东的出资额
D. 股东的姓名或者名称及住所

维生素C注射液(抗坏血酸)处方 注射用溶剂

A. 维生素C104g
B. 碳酸氢钠49g
C. 亚硫酸氢钠2g
D. 依地酸二钠0.05g
E. 注射用水加到1000ml

【情境】(每个公文筐10分,共100分) 咸阳本享农业产业集团有限公司是国家级农业产业化重点龙头企业,全国百强养殖企业,陕西省高新技术企业。公司以“标准化生产、服务三农、健康为民”为宗旨,通过“安全饲料生产、优良种猪繁育、商品猪养殖、安全猪肉加工、冷链配送连锁专卖”五大环节,建成了“从源头到终端”完整的安全猪肉产业链,形成了有本享特色的运营管理模式。公司生产的安全冷鲜肉系列产品被评为陕西省名牌产品,“bexun本享”商标是陕西省著名商标。本享获得的荣誉有:国家级农业产业化重点龙头企业;国家现代生猪体系试验站等。 本享集团是我国西北地区养殖规模领先的企业;也是国内单体猪场母猪存栏育肥猪出栏数量最大的企业;国内首家西北地区唯一一家全产业链运营企业;国内养殖场设备设施最先进的企业。本享在西北地区主要的竞争对手是渭南雨润集团公司,两家公司共占有西北地区75%以上的市场份额。在过去,两家公司的竞争实力差距比较大,占有的市场份额也相对稳定。但是在去年来,雨润集团开发了新产品,延长了产业链,在产品销售上更加注重不同用户的营养观念,而且抓紧乌克兰危机,欧洲国家对俄罗斯制裁,大量向俄罗斯出口肉制品。两家公司差距瞬时缩小。当前咸阳本享占西部地区40%左右的市场,而渭南雨润占有35%左右的市场。咸阳本享高层逐渐意识到,市场开发不足、供应链不能应对国际市场的变化,农产品套期保值未开展,受市场波动较大。二个月前,为了改变公司的现状,董事会特地聘请了一位新的总经理丁磊,他在IT业有着丰富的国际管理经验,将作为公司战略变革的主要推行者。董事会对新来的总经理的工作非常支持,多次要求公司的各级管理者尽可能配合丁总的工作。(王全一HR工作室编) 您(陈天桥)是该公司的人力资源总监,直接主管是公司总经理丁磊,您在公司总部有5位直接下属,分别是劳动关系经理、招聘经理、绩效经理、薪酬经理和培训经理,另外在13家分公司分别设有人力资源经理和助理各一名。 现在是2015年5月14日上午9:10,您刚刚参加完3天的封闭会议归来,到办公室处理累积下来的电子邮件和电话留言等信息文件,11:20还有一个重要的会议需要您主持,因此您必须在2小时10分钟内处理好这些文件。在这段时间你可自由支配,无人打扰您。好,现在可以开始工作了! 【任务】 请您查阅文件筐中的各种文件,并用如下文件处理列表作为样例,给出您对每个公文的处理思路,并作出书面表述。具体答题要求是:1.请您给出处理问题的思路,并准确、详细地写出您将要采取的措施及意图。2.在处理文件的过程中,请认真阅读情境和十个文件的内容,注意文件之间的相互联系。3.在处理每个具体文件时,请重点考虑以下内容:(1)需要收集哪些资料;(2)需要和哪些部门或人员进行沟通;(3)需要您的下属做哪些工作;(4)应采取何种具体处理办法;(5)您在处理这些问题时的权限和责任。4.问题处理可能出现不同的结果,这种情况下要针对各种情况给出相应的处理办法。 【处理列表示例】公文处理表 1.许诺对方三日内给出答复 2.联系相关部门进行磋商,制定应对方案 3.将讨论方案上报主管领导,等待上级批示 …… 【文件十】类 别:电话留言来件人:詹 宏 战略发展部总经理收件人:陈天桥 人力资源部总监日 期:5月13日陈总: 企业作为以盈利为主要目的的组织,人是企业发展的关键要素,战略性人力资源管理需要平衡多个利益相关者的关系,实现组织的战略。当前各方面关系出现失衡,若某一方面利益受到损害时,则会对企业的长期发展带来负面影响。人力资源部要改善员工的工作生活质量,作为平衡利益相关者的一个重要课题之一,你们应该给予更多的关注。 人力资源部作为人力资源管理专业工作者,如果发现员工在工作过程中表现出的“不健康”的行为,则首先要对人力资源管理体系进行评估,检讨在工作设计、职业生涯管理、薪酬、福利等工作生活质量重要影响因素的决策与实施的合理性,同时识别员工的潜在需求,制定有针对性的策略,与直线经理共同执行。并为直线经理提供专业指导。你什么时间有空,我想与你就该问题进行讨论,以便咱们公司制定出具有竞争性的人力资源战略。谢谢!

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-26 which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.THE LOST CITYThanks to modern remote-sensing techniques, a ruined city in Turkey is slowly revealing itself as one of the greatest and most mysterious cities of the ancient world. Sally Palmer uncovers more.A The low granite mountain, known as Kerkenes Dag, juts from the northern edge of the Cappadocian plain in Turkey. Sprawled over the mountainside are the ruins of an enormous city, contained by crumbling defensive walls seven kilometers long. Many respected archaeologists believe these are the remains of the fabled city of Pteria, the sixth-century BC stronghold of the Medes that the Greek historian Herodotus described in his famous work The Histories. The short-lived city came under Median control and only fifty years later was sacked, burned and its strong stone walls destroyed.B British archaeologist Dr Geoffrey Summers has spent ten years studying the site. Excavating the ruins is a challenge because of the vast area they cover. The 7 km perimeter walls run around a site covering 271 hectares. Dr Summers quickly realised it would take far too long to excavate the site using traditional techniques alone. So he decided to use modern technology as well to map the entire site, both above and beneath the surface, to locate the most interesting areas and priorities to start digging.C In 1993, Dr Summers hired a special hand-held balloon with a remote-controlled camera attached. He walked over the entire site holding the balloon and taking photos. Then one afternoon, he rented a hot-air balloon and floated over the site, taking yet more pictures. By the end of the 1994 season, Dr Summers and his team had a jigsaw of aerial photographs of the whole site. The next stage was to use remote sensing, which would let them work out what lay below the intriguing outlines and ruined walls. "Archaeology is a discipline that lends itself very well to remote sensing because it revolves around space," says Scott Branting, an associated director of the project. He started working with Dr Summers in 1995.D The project used two main remote-sensing techniques. The first is magnetometry, which works on the principle that magnetic fields at the surface of the Earth are influenced by what is buried beneath. It measures localised variations in the direction and intensity of this magnetic field. "The Earth’s magnetic field can vary from place to place, depending on what happened there in the past," says Branting. "If something containing iron oxide was heavily burnt, by natural or human actions, the iron particles in it can be permanently reoriented, like a compass needle, to align with the Earth’s magnetic field present at that point in time and space." The magnetometer detects differences in the orientations and intensities of these iron particles from the present-day magnetic field and uses them to produce an image of what lies below ground.E Kerkenes Dag lends itself particularly well to magnetometry because it was all burnt once in a savage fire. In places the heat was sufficient to turn sandstone to glass and to melt granite. The fire was so hot that there were strong magnetic signatures set to the Earth’s magnetic field from the time — around 547 BC — resulting in extremely clear pictures. Furthermore, the city was never rebuilt. "If you have multiple layers, it can confuse pictures, because you have different walls from different periods giving signatures that all go in different directions," says Branting. "We only have one going down about 1.5 meters, so we can get a good picture of this fairly short-lived city."F The other main sub-surface mapping technique, which is still being used at the site, is resistivity. This technique measures the way electrical pulses are conducted through sub-surface soil. It’s done by shooting pulses into the ground through a thin metal probe. Different materials have different electrical conductivity. For example, stone and mudbrick are poor conductors, but looser, damp soil conducts very well. By walking around the site and taking about four readings per metre, it is possible to get a detailed idea of what is where beneath the surface. The teams then build up pictures of walls, hearths and other remains. "It helps a lot if it has rained, because the electrical pulse can get through more easily," says Branting. "Then if something is more resistant, it really shows up." This is one of the reasons that the project has a spring season, when most of the resistivity work is done. Unfortunately, testing resistivity is a lot slower than magnetometry. "If we did resistivity over the whole site it would take about 100 years," says Branting. Consequently, the team is concentrating on areas where they want to clarify pictures from the magnetometry.G Remote sensing does not reveal everything about Kerkenes Dag, but it shows the most interesting sub-surface areas of the site. The archaeologists can then excavate these using traditional techniques. One surprise came when they dug out one of the fates in the defensive walls. "Our observations in early seasons led us to assume that we were looking at a stone base from a mudbrick city wall, such as would be found at most other cities in the Ancient Near East," says Dr Summers. "When we started to excavate we were staggered to discover that the walls were made entirely from stone and that the gate would have stood at least ten metres high. After ten years of study, Pteria is gradually giving up its secrets." Questions 14-17Reading Passage 2 has seven paragraphs, A-G.Which paragraph contains the following informationWrite the correct letter, A-G, in boxes 14-17 on your answer sheet. The reason why experts are interested in the site

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