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Happy hours should be banned, health warnings put on cans and bottles and drunk people refused service, according to the UK’s accident and emergency doctors ahead of student freshers’ weeks.The College of Emergency Medicine (CEM) is also (36) an end to the sale of alcohol at petrol stations, a (37) in the drink-drive limit from 80mg per 100ml of blood to 50mg per 100ml, advertisements not targeted at young people and the introduction of a (38) price per unit of alcohol.The doctors made their call for vigorous action to (39) alcohol-related problems just before the start of freshers’ weeks, which bring a significant (40) in admissions to casualty departments. Dr John Heyworth, CEM’s president, said: "Our message is simple—let’s all enjoy alcohol (41) . We don’t want to (42) anyone from having fun, especially not during freshers’ week, which is a time for making friends and social integration. But we want to reinforce the message that drinking in moderation will prevent a whole host of (43) consequences."(44) , said Heyworth. Recent NHS figures showed that hospitals in England dealt with 945,469 admissions due to alcohol in 2008/09.(45) so that they cannot continue consuming alcohol. (46) if they are breathalysed (呼吸测试), they add. (36) should be filled in ()

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Passage Two

A. Our brain.
B. Our muscles and joints.
C. Our eyes.
D. Our skin.

根据如下资料建立账套,进行账务处理。并编制资产负债表和利润表。 会计主体资料: 公司名称:新泰工厂,账套号001,税号10102345231。 法人代表:王三,本币名称:人民币。企业类型:工业企业,行业性质:新会计制度。 新设甲和乙两个操作员。记账凭证采用通用记账凭证。

Passage One

A. There is few evidence proving their existence.
B. They are difficult to verify due to their mobility.
C. People cannot live long enough to get them.
D. Current devices have limitation in locating them.

Undoubtedly the most damaging aspect of our football at the moment is hooliganism (流氓行为). Other facets of the matter may be debated; this violence is solely harmful. Mr. Dennis Follows, when he was a secretary of the Football Association, diagnosed it accurately, though his suggested remedy was obviously unacceptable when he advocated the banning of spectators under the age of eighteen from football grounds.His idea was rejected for valid human reasons. Saturday has replaced the old Sunday morning as the working man’s time of glory. The football match, core of Saturday, is, for many orderly youthful citizens as well as the unruly, the compensation for a week of monotonous, depressing work and, often, disappointing family life. Mr. Follows identified the specifically disruptive adolescent element.On the other hand, many of his critics appeared to think that the youngsters in question were simply football followers enthusiastically supporting their own teams. If that were the whole matter it would be relatively easy to adjust: but it is not. Apparently it is not generally realized that many of these young men drink heavily on their football match "day out". The youngest of them — quite early teenagers — can be seen buying drink in the public-houses near many of the large grounds; it is simpler, safer, and more profitable for publicans (酒馆老板) to serve them than to ask their age or refuse. It may be accepted from one who has now twice been forced to defend himself against their mindless violence, that a mob of drunken fifteen or sixteen-year-olds is frighteningly illogical, unpredictable, and potentially violent.A significant statistic of public reaction shows that in a recent year Boxing attendances at League matches were 300,000 lower than in the previous year. This, on a fine day for the season, could not be explained away by the postponement of one Second and one Fourth Division match, the general quality of play, or competition from television.The effect of hooliganism is almost certainly wider than has generally been accepted. It is not limited to driving away spectators who used to watch from the terraces, who are not prepared to take the risk of violence there, but cannot afford grandstand (正面看台) seats. It is increasingly clear that a considerable number of people, who used to travel by train to "their" team’s away matches, or from areas without first-class football, no longer do so because of the atmosphere created by young "supporters" in trains and at railway stations. We learn from the passage that some orderly and unruly young workers ().

A. form disruptive groups in football crowds
B. often have monotonous tasks in an industrial society
C. discourage responsible teenagers from watching matches
D. watch football on Saturdays as compensation for a dull life

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