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案情:被告人林大伟,男,32岁,中国农业银行某县支行某镇营业所储蓄员。某县农业银行举办"888"有奖储蓄,公开发行奖券,每张奖券面额为5元,定期1年,发行一组20万户,总金额 100万元,共设四类奖2221个,其中特等奖1个,奖金1万元。1月12日,被告人林大伟在该县银行存款并代表营业所领取2万元奖券,回来后将奖券分摊给本所职工销售,自己负责发行 2000元的奖券。3月12日,该县银行存款股副股长李某某,带着该县西南山区未售完的1.5万元奖券到营业所,要求林大伟再承担1.5万元奖券的发行任务,并告诉林大伟,奖券必须在3月15日抽奖前发放完。3月14日,林大伟已售出11200元奖券,尚有5800元奖券未售出。3月11上午8时,林大伟到镇供销社推销了5000元奖券,他在办理财经手续时,让出纳员将转账支票日期写为3月14日。当时林大伟没有把奖券交给供销社。上午9时许,林大伟骑车去县城看到摇奖结果,遂赶回镇里。林大伟将含有特等奖的800元奖券留下,将另外5000元奖券送给供销社。4月3日,林大伟找到其好友刘某某到县银行兑现奖金1万元,占为已有。 问题: 林大伟的行为应该处什么刑罚

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案情:被告人林大伟,男,32岁,中国农业银行某县支行某镇营业所储蓄员。某县农业银行举办"888"有奖储蓄,公开发行奖券,每张奖券面额为5元,定期1年,发行一组20万户,总金额 100万元,共设四类奖2221个,其中特等奖1个,奖金1万元。1月12日,被告人林大伟在该县银行存款并代表营业所领取2万元奖券,回来后将奖券分摊给本所职工销售,自己负责发行 2000元的奖券。3月12日,该县银行存款股副股长李某某,带着该县西南山区未售完的1.5万元奖券到营业所,要求林大伟再承担1.5万元奖券的发行任务,并告诉林大伟,奖券必须在3月15日抽奖前发放完。3月14日,林大伟已售出11200元奖券,尚有5800元奖券未售出。3月11上午8时,林大伟到镇供销社推销了5000元奖券,他在办理财经手续时,让出纳员将转账支票日期写为3月14日。当时林大伟没有把奖券交给供销社。上午9时许,林大伟骑车去县城看到摇奖结果,遂赶回镇里。林大伟将含有特等奖的800元奖券留下,将另外5000元奖券送给供销社。4月3日,林大伟找到其好友刘某某到县银行兑现奖金1万元,占为已有。 问题: 林大伟的行为应该如何定性为什么

Text 3 My family and I recently returned from a trip to Alaska, a place that combines supernatural beauty with a breathtaking amount of bear risks. I’ll start with some facts at a glance: WHERE ALASKA IS: Way the hell far from you. Beyond Mars. HOW YOU GET THERE: You sit in a variety of airplanes for most of your adult life. WHAT THEY HAVE THERE THAT WILL TRY TO KILL YOU: Bears. I am quite serious about this. Although Alaska is now an official state in the United States with modem conveniences such as rental cars and frozen yogurt, it also allows a large number of admitted bears to stride freely, and nobody seems to be the least bit alarmed about this. In fact, the Alaskans seem to be proud of it. You walk into a hotel or department store, and the first thing you see is a glass case containing a stuffed bear the size of a real one. Our hotel had two of these. It was what we travel writers call "a two-bear hotel". Both bears were standing on their hind legs and striking a pose that said: "Welcome to Alaska! I’m going to tear your arms off!" This struck me as an odd concept, greeting visitors with a showcase containing a major local hazard. It’s as if an anti-drug organization went around setting up glass display cases containing stuffed drug smugglers (走私者), with little plaques (胸章) stating how much they weighed and where they were taken. Anyway, we decided the best way to deal with our fear of bears was to become well informed about them, so we bought a book, Alaska Bear Tales. Here are some of the chapter titles, which I am not making up: "They’ll Attack Without Warning" "They’ll Really Attack You" "They Will Kill" "Come Quick! I’m Being Eaten by a Bear!" "They Can Be Funny" Ha-ha! I bet they can. I bet Mr. and Mrs. Bear will fight playfully over the remaining portion of a former tourist plumped up by airline food. But just the same, I’m glad that the only actual bears that we saw were in the zoo. Why does the author mention stuffed drug smugglers

A. Because they can attack without warning just like bears.
Because they are used to give warnings to visitors about bears.
C. Because they are as funny as stuffed bears.
D. Because they are used to show the oddness of the stuffed bears.

Text 1 When a 13-year-old Virginia girl started sneezing, her parents thought it was merely a cold. But when the sneezes continued for hours, they called in a doctor. Nearly two months later the girl was still sneezing, thousands of times a day, and her case had attracted worldwide attention. Hundreds of suggestions, ranging from "put a clothes pin on her nose" to "have her stand on her head" poured in. But nothing did any good. Finally, she was taken to Johns Hopkins Hospital where Dr. Leo Kanner, one of the world’s top authorities on sneezing, solved the baffling (难以理解的) problem with great speed. He used neither drugs nor surgery, curiously enough, the clue for the treatment was found in an ancient superstition about the amazing bodily reaction we call the sneeze. It was all in her mind, he said, a view which Aristotle, some 3,000 years earlier, would have agreed with heartily. Dr. Kanner simply gave a modem psychological interpretation to the ancient belief that too much sneezing was an indication that the spirit was troubled; and he began to treat the girl accordingly. "Less than two days in a hospital room, a plan for better scholastic and vocational adjustment, and reassurance about her unreasonable fear of tuberculosis quickly changed her from a sneezer to an ex-sneezer," he reported. Sneezing has always been a subject of wonder, awe and puzzlement. Dr. Kanner has collected thousands of superstitions concerning it. The most universal one is the custom of begging for the blessing of God when a person sneezes—a practice Dr. Kanner traces back to the ancient belief that a sneeze was an indication that the sneezer was possessed of an evil spirit. Strangely, people over the world still continue the custom with the traditional, "God bless you" or its equivalent. When scientists look at the sneeze, they see a remarkable mechanism which, without any conscious help from you, takes on a job that has to be done. When you need to sneeze you sneeze, this being nature’s clever way of getting rid of an annoying object from the nose. The object may be just some dust in the nose which nature is striving to remove. The girl sneezed continuously because she______.

A. was ill
B. was mentally ill
C. had heavy mental burden
D. had attracted world-wide attention

Part A You will hear 10 short dialogues. For each dialogue, there is one question and four possible answers. Choose the correct answer—A, B, C or D, and mark it in your test booklet. You will have 15 seconds to answer the question and you will hear each dialogue ONLY ONCE. Now look at question 1. On what day of the week will the magazine arrive

A. Monday.
B. Tuesday.
C. Wednesday.
D. Thursday.

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