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由嗜银细胞发生的癌是()。

A. 肺鳞状细胞癌
B. 肺小细胞癌
C. 肺腺癌
D. 肺巨细胞癌
E. 肺肉瘤样癌

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Section C You are going to read an article from a newspaper. Six paragraphs have been removed from the article. Choose from the paragraphs (A-G) the one which fits each gap (65-70). There is one extra paragraph which you do not need to use. Mark your answers on the Answer Sheet. Questions 65-70 are based on the following passage. Cruising may not be everyone’s idea of entertainment yet it would hardly be the same without its traditional British teatime. There is no better way of breaking down social barriers either. Or so I found when I enjoyed a cup of tea with an anonymous-looking passenger aboard the smart ship I had joined. 65. ______ Sharing tea with a celebrity may not be a normal cruising experience, but the Seabourn Spirit is no run-of-the-mill vessel. Nor aboard most cruise ships are you served high-quality leaf tea--it is usually tea-bags, even if it is in a silver pot. 66. ______ And with due reverence to the clientele, it was personal treatment all the way. With a passenger-crew ratio of almost one-to-one, there was never any chance of the delays you might experience on other craft. Nor do you find many lines where the staff are so quick and keen to learn your particular tastes. 67. ______ In what other ship, I wonder, would the cabin stewardess put a marker in your paperback so you would not lose your place A small detail--but little pleasures add up to give maximum satisfaction. Yet such high standards might daunt some, fearing that it will be far from relaxing having to live up to them. But I have not often been on such a happy-go-lucky cruise. Be we president or pleb, we were all treated as equals, and I have been on much less distinguished ships with more marked social mores. Just to illustrate my point: aboard Seabourn Spirit, there were just three formal dinners, and not all the men wore dinner jackets. Most evenings were casual or informal. Full silver service meals were available in your cabin as part of the 24-hour waiter service. Passengers could also choose between the main dining room and the veranda care. The cuisine was worthy of such a ship and, if it was too nouvelle for some, at least it made eating those cream cakes at tea less of a worry. 68. ______ If there was any problem, it was overcoming the temptation to become a seagoing hermit. All the cabins have broad picture windows and living areas with settee, soft chairs, table and desk. And there is plenty of room for the queen-size bed. The marble bathrooms are a good size with a decent tub-shower and double wash-basins. Most convenient is a closet with enough wooden coat hangers for a debutante’s ball and plenty of room for luggage. 69. ______ A highlight of our tour was a visit to the scenic resort of Yalta and the Livadiya Palace, where Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin held their famous conference in 1945 that decided much of the fate of post-war Europe. And we paid a rare cruise ship call to Sevastopol. Mooring near a flotilla of heavily armed warships in what is still a big naval base was one of the more thought-provoking experiences. 70. ______ The main port brought back the smiles--a chance at last to indulge in that cruise essential, shopping, but with a touch of culture. As a mark of the special attention given to the passengers, the line booked the opera house for an exclusive ballet performance. Even if cruising is not your cup of tea, this is almost certainly the ship to change your mind. Paragraphs : A. The passenger clearly seemed to be enjoying the occasion. During a gale, however, he might have wished he was back in port. Seasickness can afflict anyone. A good pair of sea legs is one of the few comforts not provided on a ship where every effort is made to satisfy passengers’ whims. B. Yet nothing moved our emotions more than when we were driven to the site of the Valley of Death. Today, it is a sylvan scene. Had it not been for Olga, our guide, the horror of it would have remained hidden. In perfect English, she recited Tennyson’s Charge of the Light Brigade. I saw the American woman beside me shed a tear. She was not the only one. C. A more potent concern, even before boarding, was not over-eating but overdrinking. One reason for such high fares is that drinks are included without extra charge. But the mainly elderly passengers stayed as sober as judges--as several were, in fact. D. Although under 10,000 tons, a midget of the ocean waves, what it lacks in size it makes up for in quality. "Luxury" is a much abused word, yet this ship deserves the description. "Exclusive" may be a better word if you reckon on the ability to pay an average of more than £ 550 a day for the pleasure of being there. It was not surprising, therefore, that the majority of the 188 passengers on our 12-night jaunt from Istanbul to the Black Sea and Aegean came from the richer golden lodes of the social strata. E. My fridge, too, was stocked to the gunnels. As another compulsion to remain in blissful isolation, the television also relays the ship’ s daily lectures on port news and travel subjects. There were half a dozen grander suites with separate rooms and a balcony. If you could tear yourself away from the room or felt like a more academic pastime, the ship also had its own library, but it would take a world cruise at least to read through the edition of Encyclopaedia Britannica that was included. F. Nothing boosts egos more, or makes one feel more at home, than having the steward know without being reminded that your breakfast croissants should be only slightly warm and that you prefer Orange Pekoe to Darjeeling. G. Sipping from his cup English-style (with milk) with obvious pleasure, he told me: "I enjoy it very much although we do grow excellent tea in my country, Indonesia. It’s called Col Para. Did you know that it is a favourite kind of your Queen" This surprised me but then who am I to dispute a former president of his country

There are 10 blanks in the passage. Use the words given in the box to fill in the blanks, changing the form when necessary. Use only one word in each blank. There are two extra words which you do not need to use. Remember to write the answers on the Answer Sheet. appear, competitive, corporate, corrupt, differ, ethics, interest, nation, present, sponsor, volunteer, co-worker A surprising number of employees in large companies report feeling pressure to "do the wrong thing. " One out of eight workers reported their (81) or managers somehow pressured them to do something against the company’s ethical standards. Such internal (82) has led several large companies into difficulty and even to complete failure. When a large corporation fails due to corruption, a clear message is sent to the public, and business students in particular. That message is "in life and in business, (83) behavior will get you in trouble. " It (84) more students are getting this message as enrollment in Business Ethics courses rises. (85) , however, very few MBA programs in North America require students to take any Business Ethics courses. For this reason, the (86) organization called Students in Free Enterprise (SIFE) is actively working to train young business people to make ethical business decisions. SIFE works through teams of university students who (87) their time to work on training courses and to develop projects. These teams can be found on more than 1,500 campuses in 37 countries around the world. The organization is supported by faculty advisors on these campuses, and many international (88) take part in events organized by SIFE. The courses and programs (89) by SIFE are aimed at helping young businesspeople better themselves, their communities, and their countries. Each year, the teams from each university write an annual report of their activities and give a (90) in a competition where the best team is awarded the SIFE World Cup.

Text 2 Force of habit is a powerful thing. How else can I explain why I spend $ 200 per month for a package of the Internet, TV, and telephone - most of which I don’t really need My wife and I make most calls on our cell phones. We don’t watch much TV and nearly everything we want we could get online. So why not just pay for the Internet and forget the rest. My answers are totally unreasonable: I’m 49 years old; this is how I’ve always done things; change is hard. Most of the U. S. population is in this same situation. Nielsen recently reported that although online video (视频) viewing has risen 35 percent in the past year, 99 percent of TV viewing is still done on a traditional TV. But that is not the case for younger people, like my friend Dan Frommer, a 27-year-old writer for a Website. Frommer pulled the plug (插座) on cable (有线的) TV in May 2008 and instead gets shows from the Internet by a Macintosh computer connected to his LCD television. He cannot get everthing he’d like to see, but he has saved $ 1,500 on cable-TV bills. The next generation—today’s young people—will likely never sign up for cable TV at all. This is terrible news for cable companies. For decades they have had a wonderful business model, running the tollbooth (收费站) that stood between you and the shows. Now the Internet provides a way to get around the tollbooth, and cable companies are faced with a problem: do they welcome the Internet and try to make money online, or do they fight the Internet and try to delay the damage The answer is to do both: delaying the trend with one hand while racing to develop workable Internet business models with the other. Problem is, even if the tollbooth stays up, it probably won’t make as much money. The rule is that when the Internet hits an industry, wherever you used to make dollars, you now make cents. For cable companies, the good old days may soon be over. What is the problem faced by cable companies()

A. How to improve tollbooths.
B. How to make more money online.
C. How to survive in an Internet age.
D. How to design attractive programs.

問1 [21]おとうとは 学校の [22]ちか くに [23]すんで います。 おとうと

A. 弟
B. 兑
C. 第
D. 兄

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