题目内容

2000年1月甲公司的高级工程师乙研制出一种节油装置,完成了该公司的技术攻坚课题,并达到国际领先水平。2000年2月甲公司将该装置样品提供给我国政府承认的某国际技术展览会展出。同年3月,乙未经单位同意,在向某国外杂志的投稿论文中透露了该装置的核心技术,该杂志将论文全文刊载,引起甲公司不满。同年6月,丙公司依照该杂志的报道很快研制了样品,并作好了批量生产的必要准备。甲公司于2000年7月向我国专利局递交专利申请书。2000年12月丁公司也根据该杂志开始生产该节油装置。2003年5月7日国务院专利行政部门授予甲公司发明专利,2003年7月甲公司向法院提起诉讼,分别要求丙公司和丁公司停止侵害并赔偿损失。 甲公司可以在起诉前向法院申请采取什么措施保护自己的合法权益?

A. 申请诉前禁令
B. 申请诉前先予执行
C. 申请诉前财产保全
D. 申请诉前证据保全

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Conversation 1M: Fast Taxi Service here. Can I help youW: Oh, yes, please. I’ d like a taxi in about fifteen minutes’ time.M: OK. Where are you calling fromW: I’m at the Singapore Rubber House. My name is Lee, Barbara Lee.M: Right. Could you just wait in the entrance hall, pleaseW: All right. I’ ll be there. Let’ s see.., that’ ll be at nine.M: Yes. OK, at nine. Our taxi will be there. Err... where are you goingW: I want to go to Changi Airport. I’ m catching a plane to Bangkok at 9:30.M: That’ s OK. Our taxi will be right now.W: Thanks. Good-bye. Where will the woman wait for the taxi()

At Fast Taxi Service.
B. At the gate of the house.
C. In her room.
D. In the entrance hall.

It is the world’s fourth-most-important food crop, after maize, wheat and rice. It provides more calories, more quickly, using less land and in a wider range of climates than any Other plant. It is, of Course, the potato. The United Nations has declared 2008 the International Year of the Potato. It hopes that greater awareness of the merits of potatoes will contribute to the achievement of its Millennium Development Goals, by helping to alleviate poverty, improve food security and promote economic development. It is always the international year of this or month of that. But the potato’s unusual history means it is well worth celebrating by readers of The Economist because the potato is intertwined with economic development, trade liberalisation and globalisation. Unlikely though it seems, the potato promoted economic development by underpinning the industrial revolution in England in the 19th century. It provided a cheap source of calories and was easy to cultivate, so it liberated workers from the land. Potatoes became popular in the north of England, as people there specialised in livestock farming and domestic industry, while farmers in the south (where the soil was more suitable ) concentrated on wheat production. By a happy accident, this concentrated industrial activity in the regions where coal was readily available, and a potato-driven population boom provided ample workers for the new factories. Friedrich Engels even declared that the potato was the equal of iron for its "historically revolutionary role". The potato promoted free trade by contributing to the abolition of Britain’s Corn Laws-the cause which prompted the founding of The Economist in 1843. The Corn Laws restricted imports of grain into the United Kingdom in order to protect domestic wheat producers. Landowners supported the laws, since cheap imported grain would reduce their income, but industrialists opposed them because imports would drive down the cost of food, allowing people to spend more on manufactured goods. Ultimately it was not the eloquence of the arguments against the Corn Laws that led to their abolition-and more’s the pity. It was the tragedy of the Irish potato famine of 1845, in which 1million Irish perished when the potato crop on which they subsisted succumbed to blight. The need to import grain to relieve the situation in Ireland forced the government, which was dominated by landowners who backed the Corn Laws, to reverse its position. This paved the way for liberalisation in other areas, and free trade became British policy. As the Duke of Wellington complained at the time, "rotten potatoes have done it all. " In the form of French fries, served alongside burgers and Coca-Cola, potatoes are now an icon of globalisation. This is quite a turnaround given the scepticism which first greeted them on their arrival in the Old World in the 16th century. Spuds were variously thought to cause leprosy, to be fit only for animals, to be associated with the devil or to be poisonous. They took hold in 18th century Europe only when war and famine meant there was nothing else to eat; people then realised just how versatile and reliable they were. As Adam Smith, one of the potato’s many admirers, observed at the time, "The very general use which is made of potatoes in these kingdoms as food for man is a convincing proof that the prejudices of a nation, with regard to diet, however deeply rooted, are by no means unconquerable. " Mashed, fried, boiled and roast, a humble tuber changed the world, and free-trading globalisers everywhere should celebrate it. According to the text, what are the features of potatoes

A. Lower price, quicker growing speed, less land required, and wider range of climate.
B. More calories, quicker growing speed, less labor required in growing and processing, and wider range of climate.
C. More calories, quicker growing speed, less land required, and wider range of climate.
D. More calories, quicker growing speed, less land required, and wider range of products to be made of.

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