听力原文: Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. My name is Alice Brown. As you know, we hold a series of events during the school year on various culture topics. I am happy there's such a large crowd of both students and professors, that's it, the second of our time, our city art presentation this year. I see that almost every seat is taken. Tonight, we are lucky to have our guest, the man of considerable fame in the world of music. He began to play the piano at age of 5, by the time he was 10, he was already composing in playing his own pieces. He's a graduate of the famous Juliet School in New York City. Our guest has spent at least 45 years of his very successful career touring the world playing in concert. We are fortunate that he's consented to come share some of his experiences with us. He has had many adventures along the way, lost instruments, miss connections, no hotel room, locked concert halls, and so on. He's played for all of the well-known conductors, not only in North America but all over the world. The title of his talk is the country tour 40 years on 4 continents. Please join me in welcoming Mr. Daniel Robinson, one of the foremost pianists of our day.
(39)
A. To present an award to a musician.
B. To thank the organizers of "Time Out for the Arts."
C. To invite musicians to join the concert tour.
D. To introduce the guest speaker for the evenmg.
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A.He wants to get a job in a smaller company.B.He's looking forward to working on the
A. He wants to get a job in a smaller company.
B. He's looking forward to working on the West Coast.
C. He hopes to keep working where he now lives.
D. He expects his company to promote him soon.
听力原文: We know then that in the US, it's the job of Congress to review propose new laws, which we call bills, and perhaps to modify these bills and then wrote on them. But even if the bill passed in Congress, it still doesn't become a law until the president had a chance to review it too. And if it's not to the president's liking, the bill can be vetoed or killed in either of two ways. One is by a veto message. The president has ten days to veto the bill by returning it to Congress, along with the message explaining why it's being rejected. This keeps the bill from becoming a law unless overwhelming majorities of both houses of Congress vote to over-right the president's veto. Something they really do. Often, lawmakers simply revised the vetoed bill and passed it again. This time, in the form. the president less likely to object to, and us less likely to want to veto. The other way the president can kill a bill is by pocket veto. Here's what happen. If the president doesn't sign the bill within ten days, and Congress are jurors during that time, then the bill will not become law. Notice that is only the end of entire session of Congress that the pocket veto can be used, not just whenever Congress take the shorter break, say, for a summer vacation, after a pocket veto, that particular bill is dead. If a lawmaker in Congress want to push the matter in their next session, they'll have to start all over with a brand new version of the bill.
(46)
A. How the President proposes new laws.
B. How a bill is passed by lawmakers in Congress.
C. How the President can reject a proposed law.
D. How lawmakers can force the President to sign a bill.
According to the passage, rock breaks down into clay under all of the following conditions
A. it is exposed to freezing and thawing
B. roots of trees force their way into cracks
C. it is combined with alkalies
D. natural forces wear away the Earth's crust
A.She couldn't find her watch.B.She feels bad about being late.C.She forgot what time
A. She couldn't find her watch.
B. She feels bad about being late.
C. She forgot what time the library closed.
D. She had never agreed to meet the man.