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复式记账法的产生和“簿记论”的问世,标志着现代会计的开始。()

A. 正确
B. 错误

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Why are now male reporters prepared to acknowledge that fatherhood affects their reporting, too?

A. They are influenced by their female counterparts in their work.
B. They can no longer remain detached.
C. They are more open-minded now.
D. They have been feminized.

See the city first from the water. In the harbour sits Denmark's best-known landmark: the Little Mermaid. Remember her? She left the world of the Sea People in search of a human soul in one of Hans Christian Andersen's beloved fantasies. From the harbour you can get a feel for the attractive "city of green spires". At twilight Or in cloudy weather, the copper-covered spires of old castles and churches lend the city a dream-like atmosphere; you'll think you've stepped into a watercolour painting.
Copenhagen is a city on a human scale. You don't have to hurry to walk the city's centre in less than an hour. Exploring it will take much longer. But that's easy. Copenhagen was the first city to declare a street for pedestrians only. The city has less traffic noise and pollution than any other European capital.
Stroll away from the harbour along the riverbanks, you'll see the modest Amalienborg Palace first. Completed in the mid 18th century, it still houses the royal family. The Danish Royal Guard is on duty. At noon, watch the changing of the guard.
Churches and castles are almost all that remain of the original city. See one of the spires up close--really close--at the 17th century Church of Our Savior. Brave souls may climb the 150 stairs winding outside the spire to its top. If you're afraid of heights, or if it's a windy day, you can forget the climb. But then you'll miss the magnificent view.
Keep going, to the Christiansborg Palace. The town of Copenhagen began here. Stop and visit the medieval castle. Parliament and the Royal Reception Chambers are open, too. Then continue to Nyhavn, a narrow waterway dug by soldiers in 1673, you'll understand why Hans Christian Andersen' made this charming waterway his home. A specially-built mirror outside his apartment window allowed him to peek unseen at the world outside.
Nyhavn is peaceful, an ideal place for lingering and people-watching. You'll usually see them dressed casually, though they are among Europe's affluent people. Danes are taught not to stand out in a crowd. But they do know how to party, especially during holidays.
To see them having fun, and to have some fun yourself, cross Andersens Boulevard and enter Tivoli Gardens. You won't be alone. More than five million people a year come here. They come to dance, dine, take in outdoor and indoor concerts, see ballets and laugh at the mimes. One tip: bring a lot of money. Some of the more than 20 restaurants are among the city's most expensive. Even without money, you can still enjoy the proud old trees, the coloured night lights and the beautiful gardens. You might feel as if you are in a fairy tale.
The passage is probably taken from______.

A. a geological book
B. a fairy-tale book
C. a travel book
D. an architecture book

听力原文: American researchers have made a discovery that might help them better understand the mysterious sense of smell. VOA' s Jessica Bermon reports. There are about a thousand protein receptors in the nose that tell the brain what it's smelling. Each receptor can detect one or more odors but scientists have never before linked a specific odor molecule to a particular receptor. Writing in the journal Science, researchers at New York's Columbia University report doing just that with a meat odor and a receptor in the noses of rats. Steward Fairstine led the team of investigators. He says humans are capable of decerning something like ten thousand different odors. Mr. Fairstine says the research might also tell scientists more a- bout brain chemicals and hormones which are part of the same family as odor receptors. Jessica Bermon, VOA news Washington.
The discovery by American researchers might help them understand ______.

A. human beings
B. the mystery
C. the sense of smell
D. the space

Art needs a super-rich elite in order to flourish, according to professor of English at London University, Lisa Jardine. Jardine, who completed a major study into Renaissance art in mid-1997, points to the era as one to emulate an age when millionaire patrons were responsible for many of the world's great artistic masterpieces.
"Committees do not create good art," she says, referring to the current system of state-sponsored arts funding in Britain. "We need enlightened patrons; this is my passionate plea. If you believe that art is just something that a society ought to have--something that a committee can decide to promote, or not, depending on the acceptability of the artist--then art will be dead in 100 years."
Professor Jardine is a committed socialist. But her new Study of the great Italian Renaissance families of the 15th and l6th centuries--the Medicis and other free-spending dynasties--has fired in her an almost missionary zeal for the rich as great art's only true promoters.
It was the Renaissance, she points out, that kindled the desire to purchase the rare and beautiful. Merchants and bankers, such as Medicis, used their money to ensure the creation of the finest artifacts.
"These people were powerful. They had status, but they also had taste," says Jardine. "They were supremely cultivated or, if they were not, they knew they needed advice. Today's art lovers are benefiting from their patronage. '
For people who visit the great collections in the National Gallery in London, the Vatican museums in Rome and the Louvre in Paris, the Renaissance is one of the most evocative terms in the history of art. It conjures up images of Botticelli angels, a far-off era when some of the greatest artists the world has known were at the height of their powers. To Professor Jardine, however, this is not a long-lost golden age but a time with more similarities than differences to contemporary Europe. "We are the Renaissance's direct inheritors,' she explains. "The Renaissance made and shaped the Europe of today."
Jardine sees the Renaissance as the first consumer boom. Its great, memorable works, she argues, came about because of acquisitiveness, bordering on avarice. New-found wealth, often the profits of the silk and spice trades, was spent on exquisite possessions, from jewels and globes to paintings and sculpture.
"Conspicuous consumption was a manifestation of power. It was the key way to demonstrate your prosperity, but at the same time it was a manifestation of taste. Many of those who were collectors during the Renaissance were nouveau riche, but they did have a responsibility; just as the newly rich today have a responsibility to ensure that art flourishes."
Inevitably, under such a system, there will be craftspeople working for very little money, she says. "But that is the price we have to pay to have somebody painting works like the Mona Lisa that challenge society. I only wish' you could have Utopia and create good art as well."
State sponsorship of the arts in Britain may soon be a thing of the. past. Jardine points to the US where, she says, they understand the importance of the entrepreneurial patron. "We need such patrons in Britain, too."
Britain does have some wealthy families who are interested in the arts. These include the Sainsbury family, owners of one of the country's largest supermarket chains; and the Saatchi brothers, founders of the world famous international advertising agency of Saatchi&Saatchi. "Firms like Sainsbury's,"says Jardine, "do their best to patronize young architects, even if it is only to build local supermarkets. '
At present, however, such patrons are not common. "Art mattered to the patrons of the Renaissance," she says. "The Popes understood that they were spending money for the future when they spent money on books. And for other patrons, like the Medicis, ther

A. People with refined taste.
B. Conspicuous consumers.
C. The newly rich.
D. People with responsibilities.

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