We were overjoyed at the news of China__________ another man-made satel1ite.A.sta
We were overjoyed at the news of China__________ another man-made satel1ite.
A.starting
B.1aunching
C.fighting
D.shouting
We were overjoyed at the news of China__________ another man-made satel1ite.
A.starting
B.1aunching
C.fighting
D.shouting
A Chinese trading company (the Buyer) entered a contract with a Japanese manufacturer (the Seller) of precision machinery and testing equipment for purchasing 15 sets of production lines. The total value of the contract is 400,000 US dollars. Price terms: CFR Shanghai; Time of shipment: the end of September 2017; Payment terms: Buyer opens an irrevocable negotiable letter of credit in full amount two months prior to the date of shipment. In the sales contract, the place of arbitration is China. On July 29, 2017, the buyer opened a letter of credit through a bank in favour of the seller and no deposit was made. The seller, on September 8, shipped the production lines, and negotiated the payment to the negotiating bank. On September 19, the 15 sets of production lines arrived at the port of destination – Shanghai. The regional commodity inspection authority inspected the production lines. The inspection report issued by the authority showed that: 4 out of 15 sets of the production lines are not in conformity with the quality terms stipulated in the sales contract. These 4 sets of production lines cannot be used to manufacture standard-conforming products at all. The buyer insisted that the 15 sets of production lines should be used together. Since 4 sets of the production lines were of no use, the remaining 11 sets of qualified production lines should be rejected as well. Therefore, on September 29, 2017, the buyer sent a memo to the Japanese manufacturer, which requested that all 15 sets of production lines should be sent back to Japan. However, the Japanese seller neither signed the memo nor replied to the Chinese buyer’s request. The buyer finally brought the case to the CIETAC, the arbitration institution specified in the sales contract. The demands of the buyer were: 1). Return the 15 sets of the production lines. The seller should fully refund the payment and bear the costs and expenses associated with the return. 2). The buyer signed a contract with another Chinese company for renting out all 15 sets of the production lines. Because the 4 sets of faulty production lines, the buyer had already paid compensation of 15,000 US dollars to the leasing Chinese company. The buyer demanded that the seller should bear the loss and pay the buyer 15,000 US dollars. Questions: 1. Other than the discrepancy and claim clauses, what kind of clause regarding dispute resolution should be included in the sales contract of this case? (1’) Why? (1’) 2. What could be the arbitration awards the arbitration court gives in terms of the demands of the buyer? (1’+1’) Give your answers for the following subjects a. Return of 15 sets of production lines b. economic loss to the Chinese buyer which rented out the equipment 3. Since the Japanese manufacturer did not sign the memo and respond to the Chinese buyer, could the buyer bring the case to a court in China and sue the Japanese seller for damage and loss first before arbitration? Why? (2’+2’) After the arbitration award was made, if the Japanese manufacturer refused to honour the award, what could the Chinese buyer do? (2’) Total 10 points
A、Import substitution
B、Export promotion
C、Commercial dumping
D、Multilaterial contract
Historians of womens labor in the United States at first largely disregarded the story of female. service workers—women earning wages in occupations such as salesclerk. domestie servant ,and office secretary. These historians focused instead on factory work ,primarily becouse it seemed so different from traditional. unpaid "women&39;s work". in the home.and because the underlying economie forces of industrialism were presumed to be gender blind and hence emancipatory(解放的) in efect. Unfortunately. emancipation has been less profound than expected,for not even industrial wage labor has escaped continued sex segregation(隔离) in the workplace. To explain this unfinished tevolution in the status of women. Historiens have recently begun to emphasize the way a prevailing definition of femininity often determines the kinds of work allocated to women.even when such allocation is inappropriate to new conditions.For instance.early textile-mill entrepreneurs,in justilying women&39;s employment in wage labor. made much of the assumption that women were by nature skillful at detailed tasks and patient in carrying out repetitive chores; the mill owners thus imported into the new industrial order hoary stereotypes associated with the homemaking activities they presumed to have been the purview of women. Because women accepted the more unattractive new industrial tasks more readily than did men. such jobs came to be regarded as female jobs.And employers. who assumed that women&39;s "real" aspirations were for marriage and family life.declined to pay women. wages commensurate with those of imen. Thus many lower-skilled , lower-paid.less secute jobs came to be perceived as "female".
Job segregation by sex in the United States was____.
A.justified by early textile mill owners
B.one means’for women to achieve greater job security
C.reluctantly challenged by employers
D.a constant source of labor unrest in the young textile industry
Historians of womens labor focused on factory work as a more promising area of research than service-sector work because factory work_____.A.involved the payment of higher wages
B.required skill in detailed tasks
C.was assumed to be less characterized by sex segregation
D.was more readily accepted by women than by men
It can be inferred trom the passage that early historians of women’s labor in the United States paid little attention to womens employment in the service sector of the economy because______ .A.fewer women found employment in the service sector than in factory work
B.the wages paid to workers in the service sector were much lower than those paid in the industrial sector.
C.womens employment in the service sector tended to be much more short-term than in factory work
D.employment in the service sector seemed to have much in common with the unpaid work associated with homemaking
The early mill owners____.A.hoped that by creating relatively unattractive female jobs they would discourage women from losing interest in marriage and family life
B.sought to keep womens wages low by intereasing the size of the available labor force
C.argued that women were inherently suited to do well in particular kinds of factory work
D.thought that factory work bettered the condition of women by emancipating them from dependence on income earned by men.
标出所给文章中的全部SVO,下划线即可。 One day a young man was writing a letter to his girl friend who lived just a few miles away in a nearby town. He was telling her how much he loved her and how wonderful he thought she was. Finally, he said that in order to be with her he would suffer the greatest difficulties, he would face the greatest dangers that anyone could imagine. In fact, to spend only one minute with her, he would swim across the widest river, he would enter the deepest forest, and he would fight against the fiercest animals with his bare hands. He finished the letter, signed his name, and then suddenly remembered that he had forgotten to mention something quite important. So, in a postscript below his name, he added:“By the way, I’ll be over to see you on Wednesday night, if it doesn’t rain.”
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