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Admittedly, minor accidents and slip--ups continue to shake public confidence in nuclear power. Given the unquantifiable risks that nuclear power carries, it is only right that the industry be subjected to the test of public opinion and due political process. However, this argues for exceptional alerts, regulatory scrutiny and accountability and not for bans or shut-downs. Those nuclear operators with a good safety record deserve to have their licenses renewed, so that existing plants may run to the end of their useful lives. The Bush administration’s enthusiastic support goes a lot further than this, however. It also wants to see new plants. Proponents of new nuclear power stations make three arguments in their favor. They will enhance energy security by lessening dependence on fossil fuels; far from being environmentally harmful, they will be beneficial because they will reduce the output of greenhouse gases; and, most crucially, the economics of nuclear power has improved from the days when it was wholly dependent on bail-out (紧急财政支持) and subsidy. Yet these arguments do not stand up to investigation. The claim that governments should support nuclear power to reduce their vulnerability (致命弱点) to the OPEC oil cartel (联合企业) is doubly absurd. Little oil is used in power generation: what nuclear power displaces is mostly natural gas and coal, which are not only more plentiful than oil but also geographically better distributed. Security is enhanced not by seeking energy self-sufficiency but through diversification of supplies. Creating lots of fissile material that might be pinched by terrorists is an odd way to look for security anyway. What about the argument that climate change might be the great savior of nuclear power Global warming is indeed a risk that should be taken more seriously than the Bush administration has so far done. Nuclear plants do not produce any carbon dioxide, which is the principal greenhouse gas. However, rushing in response to build dozens of new nuclear plants would be both needlessly expensive and environmentally unsound. It would make far more sense to adopt a carbon tax, which would put clean energy sources such as solar and wind on an equal footing with nuclear, whose waste poses an undeniable (if remote) environmental threat of its own for aeons to come. Governments should also dismantle (拆除) all subsidies oh fossil fuels--especially for coal, the dirtiest of all. They should adopt reforms that send proper price signals to those who use power, and so reduce emissions. Global warming certainly provides one argument in favor of nuclear power: but it is not sufficient on its own to justify a nuclear renaissance. According to the author, energy security can only be achieved by ______.

A. using less oil in power generation
B. replacing fossil fuels with more nuclear power
C. seeking energy self sufficiency
D. expanding the sources of power supply

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Passage One

A. Expand operating areas.
B. Restrict operating hours.
C. Limit the use of waterscooters.
D. Enforce necessary regulations.

Passage One

A. They were small.
B. They were fuel-efficient.
C. They were oil consuming.
D. They were not attractive.

Passage One

A. Young people couldn’t afford their own tuition in the 1970’s.
B. Fewer parents could afford to send their children to college in the 1970’s.
C. It’s difficult for graduates from colleges to find a job in the 1970’s.
D. Institutions of higher education depend mainly on government in the 1970’s.

There are many features that 1 a movie as American, but perhaps the most 2 is the theme of the loner-hero. In the western movie, which comes out of many 3 of the American West, a typical figure is the lonesome cowboy. He wanders into a town and 4 out its troubles. Then the strong and independent hero rides off in to the sunset 5 . Americans like this 6 in their films because they are 7 independent, and individualism 8 a great deal with them. An individual, who is able to 9 . the evils of the world, or of a small town, is someone to admire. Even the gangster movie, a very popular 10 of the typical American film, usually has a hero. 11 he is a lawman out to catch the criminals or a gangster who suddenly sees the light and tries to go 12 . During the violence-ridden period of Prohibition in the 1920s, the gangster movie 13 in popularity. These films kept the same 14 as the western-- the bad cannot triumph. One good person can save the innocent. Recent science fiction films deal 15 the same theme. Against the forces of the alien powers, people will fight to protect their ideals. Here, too, the action 16 around a single individual, 17 ...now he or she must save the world. The hero battles the unknown, trusting in inner capabilities and in the power of good 18 evil. Fearless, the hero of a typical American movie does not 19 to jump into the action. This dominant theme of the American movie is familiar 20 people around the world.

A. with
B. for
C. to
D. in

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