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When did major changes begin in the U.S. comic industry?A.Before the start of World War Ⅱ.

When did major changes begin in the U.S. comic industry?

A.Before the start of World War Ⅱ.

B.After the end of World War Ⅱ.

C.During World War Ⅱ.

D.Several years after World War Ⅱ.

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更多“When did major changes begin i…”相关的问题
第1题
What does the woman discover when she looks at the records on the computer?A.The man chang

What does the woman discover when she looks at the records on the computer?

A.The man changed his major from art to business.

B.The man isn't living on campus.

C.The man is a new student.

D.There are two students named Robert Smith at the school.

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第2题
听力原文:W: Did you watch the 7 o'clock program on channel 2 yesterday evening?1 was about
to watch it when someone came to see me.

M: Yeah!It reported some major breakthroughs in cancer research. People over 40 would find a program worth watching.

Q: What do we learn from the conversation about the TV program?

(16)

A.It could help people of all ages to avoid cancer.

B.It was mainly meant for cancer patients.

C.It might appeal more to viewers over 40.

D.It was frequently interrupted by commercials.

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第3题
Which player did Michael Chang defeat in the 3rd set ______.A.Jim CourierB.Andre MedvedevC

Which player did Michael Chang defeat in the 3rd set ______.

A.Jim Courier

B.Andre Medvedev

C.Magnus Larsen

D.Jan Seimerink

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第4题
There is severe classic tragedy within major-league baseball, tragedy which catches and ma
nipulates the fife of every athlete as surely as forces beyond the heaths manipulated Hardy's simple Wes-sex folks into creatures of imposing stature.

Major-league baseball is an insecure society; it pays a lavish salary to an athlete and then, when he reaches thirty-five or so, it abruptly stops paying him anything. But the tragedy goes considerably deeper than that. Briefly, it is the tragedy of fulfillment.

Each major leaguer, like his childhood friends, always wanted desperately to become a major leaguer. Whenever there was trouble at home, in school, or with a girl, there was the sure escape of baseball; not the stumbling, ungainly escape of an ordinary ballplayer, but a sudden, wondrous metamorphosis into the role of a hero. For each major leaguer was first a star in his neighborhood or in his town, and each rived with the unending solace that there was one thing he could always do with grace and skill and poise. Somehow, he once believed with the most profound faith he possessed, that if he ever did make the major leagues, everything would then become ideal.

A major-league baseball team is comprised of twenty-five youngish men who have made the major leagues and discovered that, in spite of it, life remains distressingly short of ideal. In retrospect, they were better off during the years when their adolescent dream was happily simple and vague. Among the twenty-five youngish men of a ball club, who individually held the common dream which came to be fulfilled, cynicism and disillusion are common as grass. So Willie Mays angrily announces that he will henceforth charge six hundred dollars to be interviewed, and Duke Snider shifts his dream-site from a ball park to an avocado farm overlooking the Pacific, and Peewee Reese tries to fight off a momentary depression by saying, "Sure I dreamt about baseball when I was a kid, but not the night games. No, sir. I did not dream about the fights. "

For most men, the business of shifting and reworking dreams comes late in life, when there are older children upon whose unwilling shoulders the tired dreams may be deposited. It is a harsh, jarring thing to have to shift dreams at thirty, and if there is ever to be a major novel written about baseball, it will have to come to grips with this theme.

The first paragraph indicates that______.

A.winning and losing ball games are both heartbreaking experiences

B.no baseball player can escape the tragedy inherent in major-league baseball

C.tragedy catapults baseball players into creatures of imposing stature

D.Hardy, the novelist, wrote ennobling stories about athletes

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第5题
听力原文:W: Did you watch the 7 o’clock program on channel 2 yesterday evening? I was abou
t to watch it when someone came to see me.

M: Yeah! It reported some major breakthrough in cancer research. People over 40 would find the program worth watching.

Q: What do we learn from the conversation about the TV program?

(14)

A.It could help people of all ages to avoid cancer.

B.It was mainly meant for cancer patients.

C.It might appeal more to viewers over 40.

D.It was frequently interrupted by commercials.

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第6题
听力原文:(Man) When can you submit the report to Mr. Chang? (Woman) (A) Today's weather re

听力原文:(Man) When can you submit the report to Mr. Chang?

(Woman) (A) Today's weather report.

(B) By Tuesday afternoon at the earliest.

(C) Mr. Chang hasn't called all day.

(16)

A.

B.

C.

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第7题
Professor Chang is always very ______ to the reaction of the andience when he gives lectur
e.

A.sensible

B.positive

C.sensitive

D.responsible

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第8题
A chain of shops in East Yorkshire, England has been told that it would be a criminal offe
nce to sell thousands of tubes of toothpaste made by a leading French manufacturer simply because the small print giving the firm importing it does not include the letters "UK". Under cosmetics regulations implementing 25 separate European Union instructions, unless the address is London, which is "a major city", the letters UK must be added. The suppliers response, when Gordon Rodgerss A2Z chain asked them to take back the toothpaste, was that this would pose no problem, because trading standards officials elsewhere in Britain do not bother about such fault-finding to a very minute detail. A2Z, which sells a range of more than 10 000 household items from its 14 discount stores in Hull and East Yorkshire, first stumbled into these mysterious requirements of cosmetic labelling when summoned by East Yorkshire trading standards officials on a criminal charge of selling tubes of the same brand of toothpaste, Mentadent, designed for the South African market. These carried the name of a German distributor but no UK supplier. The council had no complaint about the toothpaste itself. It is common and legal practice for supermarkets and discount stores to buy up a wide range of branded products packaged by leading European and American manufacturers for non-EU markets. These can then be sold at prices lower than those recommended for identical products in Europe, which are only more expensive because EU consumers can supposedly afford to pay more. Council officials were quick to point out that they support the contribution this gray economy makes to "healthy competition". The only problem was that importers details must be given by the regulation formula. For a major city such as London only a postcode is necessary, but for other cities and towns the letters UK must be added. When A2Z asked how it was expected to examine the small print on the labelling of each of 10 000 products it carries, East Yorkshire replied that it was up to the firm to improve the quality of their inspection procedures. A2Z then supplied the council three weeks running with examples of similar products carrying "illegal labelling", bought from major supermarkets in the same area, asking why these large firms were not also prosecuted. The council said it "did not have the resources" to chase up every case of illegality, to which Mr. Rodgers responded that he "did not have the resources" to improve the quality of their inspection procedures, which the council was asking of him. Last week his firms case was adjourned.

Why did Gordon Rodgerss A2Z chain have trouble with East Yorkshire Council?

A.They sold fake product.

B.They sold stolen goods.

C.The product they sold was incorrectly labelled.

D.They were not licensed to sell this product.

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第9题
What is happiness? We Americans believe that the right to 【C1】______ happiness is issued t
o us with the birth 【C2】______ , but no one seems quite sure 【C3】______ way it ran.

【C4】______ , we Americans seem to be 【C5】______ to the idea of buying our way to happiness. We shall all have 【C6】______ it to Heaven when we 【C7】______ enough.

And at the same time the 【C8】______ of American commercialism are hugely dedicated to making us deliberately 【C9】______ .

Advertising is one of our major 【C10】______ , and advertising exists not to 【C11】______ desires but to create them--and to create them faster than any man's 【C12】______ can satisfy them. We are taught that to 【C13】______ is to be happy, and then we are 【C14】______ to want. We are even told it is our 【C15】______ to want. It was only a few years ago, to 【C16】______ a single example, that car dealers across the country were flying banners that 【C17】______ "You Auto Buy Now". They were calling 【C18】______ Americans, as an act approaching patriotism, to buy at once, 【C19】______ money they did not have, automobiles they did not really need, and which they would be required to grow tired of by the time the next year's 【C20】______ were released.

【C1】

A.pursue

B.persist

C.preserve

D.prevail

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第10题
听力原文:I wasn't too fond of the lecture classes of 400 students that were in my general

听力原文: I wasn't too fond of the lecture classes of 400 students that were in my general courses. Halfway through my second term, when I was considering whether or not to come back in the fall, I went on the Internet and came across AmeriCorps. Then I joined the organization. And that was what I did last school year. I worked on making roads, building a house and serving as a teacher's assistant. It's been a great experience.

And I've almost learned more than what I could have in college. Since I didn't really want to ha at that school and I wasn't interested in my major anyway, I think this was better for me. After 1,700 hours of service, I received 4,750 dollars. I can use that to pay off the money I harrowed from the banks or for what I need when I go hack to school this fall at Columbus State in Ohio. Classes are smaller there, and I'll be majoring in German education. After working with the kids, now I know I want to be a teacher.

Why did the man decide to leave the college in his second term?

A.He didn't like the big lecture classes.

B.He couldn't afford further education.

C.He was not interested in education.

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