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What does Jose Martinez plan to do in the future?A.Develop a chain of restaurants.B.Set up

What does Jose Martinez plan to do in the future?

A.Develop a chain of restaurants.

B.Set up a franchise operation.

C.Expand into the frozen food market.

D.Open more branches abroad.

提问人:网友yorksun0326 发布时间:2022-01-06
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更多“What does Jose Martinez plan t…”相关的问题
第1题
What has happened to Jose Bono?A.He was honored at a march.B.He was killed at a march.C.He

What has happened to Jose Bono?

A.He was honored at a march.

B.He was killed at a march.

C.He was injured at a march.

D.He has been shoved and mocked at a march.

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第2题
听力原文:Welcome to the Good Health Show. We're pleased to have well-known dietician Pauli
na Cruz on the show today. She will tell us how drinking a few extra glasses of water can help us lose weight and keep fit. In our regular exercise segment with Nina Jose, we will learn simple exercises to fight fatigue at work. Also, stay tuned for information on the latest health foods in the market.

What is the show mainly about?

A.How to stay healthy.

B.Where to buy health foods.

C.What to eat when fatigued.

D.How to conserve water.

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第3题
In the past, people who graduated from college felt proud of their academic achievments an
d confident that their degree would help them to find a good job.

However, in the past four years the job market has changed dramatically. This year's College graduates are facing one of the worst job markets. For example, Ryan Stewart, a graduate of San Jose State University, got a degree in religious studies, but he has not gotten any job offers. He points out that many people already working are getting laid off and don't have jobs, so it's even harder for new college graduates to find jobs.

Four years ago, the future looked bright for his class of 2006. There were many high-tech ("dot com") job opportunities, graduates received many job offers, and they were able to get jobs with high salaries and benefits such as health insurance and paid vacations. However, "Times have changed. It's a new market," according to an officer of the university.

The officer says students who do find jobs started preparing two years ago. They worked during summer vacations, they have had several short-time jobs, and they majored in fields that are still paying well, such as accounting or nursing.

Even teaching is not a secure profession now. Ryan Stewart wanted to be a teacher, but in stead he will probably go back to school in order to become a college teacher. He thinks college teaching could be a good career even in a bad economy.

In conclusion, these days a college degree does not automatically lead to a good job with a high salary. Some students can only hope that the value of their degree will increase in the future.

What did a college degree mean to people in the past?

A.It was a proof of their profssional skills.

B.It would guarantee their quick promotion.

C.It built up their confidence in the job market.

D.It would help them to start an academic career.

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第4题
The image was riveting, as justice John Paul Stevens, a Chicago native, presented it. A ga
ng member and his father are hanging out near Wrigley Field. Are they there "to rob an unsuspecting fan or just to get a glimpse of Sammy Sosa leaving the ball park?" A police officer has no idea, but under Chicagos anti-gang law, the cop must order them to disperse. With Stevens writing for a 6-to-3 majority, the Supreme Court last week struck down Chicagos sweeping statute, which had sparked 42,000 arrests in its three years of enforcement. The decision was a blow to advocates of get-tough crime policies. But in a widely noted concurring opinion, Justice Sandra Day OConnor suggested that a less draconian approach-—distinguishing gang members from innocent bystanders—might pass constitutional muster. New language could target loiterers "with no apparent purpose other than to establish control over identifiable areas, to intimidate others from entering those areas or to conceal illegal activities," she wrote. Chicago officials vowed to draft a new measure. "We will go back and correct it and then move forward," said Mayor Richard Daley. Chicago officials, along with the League of Cities and 31 states that sided with them in court, might do well to look at one state where anti-gang loitering prosecutions have withstood constitutional challenges; California. The state has two anti-loitering statutes on the books, aimed at people intending to commit specific crimes—prostitution and drug dealing. In addition, a number of local prosecutors are waging war against gangs by an innovative use of the public-nuisance laws. In cities such as Los Angeles and San Jose, prosecutors have sought injunctions against groups of people suspected of gang activity. "The officers in the streets know the gang members and gather physical evidence for lengthy court hearings," says Los Angeles prosecutor Martin Vranicar. If the evidence is enough to convince a judge, an injunction is issued to prohibit specific behavior—such as carrying cell phones or pagers or blocking sidewalk passage—in defined geographical areas. "It works instantly," says San Jose city attorney Joan Gallo, who successfully defended the tactic before the California Supreme Court. "A few days after the injunctions, children are playing on streets where they never were before. " So far, only a few hundred gang members have been targeted, out of an estimated 150,000 in Los Angeles alone. But experts say last weeks decision set the parameters for sharper measures. Says Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe: "It just means they have to use a scalpel rather than an invisible mallet. "

What does the author intend to illustrate with the example of the gang member and his father?

A.How the anti-loitering law works.

B.How to maintain charming image.

C.How tough the crime policies were.

D.Why Chicago"s sweeping statute stroke down.

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第5题
听力原文: The first book we'll be reading in this class will be One Hundred Years of Solit
ude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Marquez was the winner of 1982 Nobel Peace Prize and this is his most famous novel. The story is set in the 1700s in South America. It's a story of the successes and failures of the Buendia family, and it covers it all--love and death, war and peace, youth and age. The story begins with one man and one woman, Jose Arcadio and Ursula, setting off in the jungles to start a new life in a new town. What follows is a chronicle of their lives. You can find copies of the book at most bookstores downtown, and I think the school bookstore has some used copies, too. We'11 be reading the English translation, but I encourage you to read the Spanish edition, too. The novel has been translated into 15 different languages, though the most common editions are in either Spanish or English.

In what department would this class most likely be offered?

A.Economics of South America.

B.Latin American History.

C.United States history.

D.Political Science.

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第6题
关系数据库系统采用关系模型作为数据的组织方式。关系模型是谁首先提出的?A.P.P.S.ChenB.J. Marti

关系数据库系统采用关系模型作为数据的组织方式。关系模型是谁首先提出的?

A.P.P.S.Chen

B.J. Martin

C.E.P. Codd

D.W.H. 1nmon

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第7题
听力原文:Which hotel should I book for our guests from Paris?(A)I liked the book Dr. Marti

听力原文:Which hotel should I book for our guests from Paris?

(A) I liked the book Dr. Martino recommended.

(B) How about the newly built one on Chestnut Street?

(C) I' ve made every effort to accommodate your opinion.

(26)

A.

B.

C.

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第8题
SECTION CNEWS BROADCASTDirections: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Lis

SECTION C NEWS BROADCAST

Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. At the end of each news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the questions.

听力原文: The death toll has risen to at least 190 after a series of bombs placed on rush hour trains in Madrid Thursday. More than 1,200 are injured. The Spanish government blamed Basque separatists for what is being called the worst terrorist attack in its history. But there are other signs that suggest al-Qaida and its supporters may be responsible.

Ambulances carry the dead and wounded from some of Madrid's busiest train stations. As many as 10 bombs exploded in the city in what appear to be closely coordinated terrorist attacks.

Addressing the nation, Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar called it mass murder, blaming the Basque separatist group ETA and vowing to track down those responsible for what British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw calls a shocking, unbelievable outrage.

"This is, without any question, at least the worst terrorist outrage, which has taken place within Europe since the Lockerbie bombings at the end of the 1980s,' he said.

How many people were killed in the series of bomb explosions in Madrid?

A.90.

B.190.

C.120.

D.1,200.

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第9题
How does E-mail travel on the Internet to reach someone far away? When Jennifer, Who lives

How does E-mail travel on the Internet to reach someone far away?

When Jennifer, Who lives in Pasadena, Calif. wants to send an E-mail message from her home computer to her mother in Washington, D. C., she uses a local Internet service provider (ISP) such as EarthLink Network Inc. (ELNK). EarthLink gives Jennifer access to the Internet, much in the way that a ramp puts a driver on the national highway system.

After Jennifer's computer makes a local telephone call to EarthLink's local bank of modems, Jennifer types in her E-mail message and hits "send." Based on Mom's E-mail address, EarthLink will recognize that Mom is a customer of an ISP in Washington called Erols Internet Inc. (RCNC). EarthLink will then send the E-mail to an Internet backbone provider, such as GTE Corp. (GTE), to route it along its way

What is a backbone provider and why is it important on the Internet?

Backbone providers are the Internet players that typically own and lease long-haul fiber-optic cables spanning a large region. They also own the communications gear that directs traffic over the Internet. There are only a handful of major backbone providers, including MCI, WorldCom, Sprint Corp. , GTE, and PSINet Inc. (PSIX).

Backbone providers connect to each other to exchange data between their customers. They also pick up and deliver traffic for a fee from the 7,000 or so smaller ISPs, who give residential and small-business users access to the Internet. Backbone carriers are like the highway system over which most of the freight of the Internet travels to reach its destination. How did the current backbone providers come to be?

When the Internet was still a government-run system, there was only a single Internet backbone: the NSFNET, operated by the National Science Foundation, which connected the regional government-funded Internet networks that were run by various research universities. When the government privatized the NSFNET in 1995, companies such as MCI, UUNET Technologies (now owned by Worldcom), BBN (now owned by GTE), and PSINet stepped into the breach by setting up commercial Internet backbone services. Now, instead of one NSFNET backbone, there are many of them that link together to provide the global connectivity, that is the Internet.

How do Internet companies connect to each other?

When the NSFNET was privatized, the government set up three locations in the U. S. where various Internet backbone companies could place their communications gear side by side and connect to each other. These so-called "public peering points" are in Chicago, Palo Alto, Calif., and Pennsauken, N.J.. Later, the government sanctioned two industry-run public peering points called Metropolitan Access Exchange East and West — MAE-East, in Vienna, Va., and MAE- West in San Jose, Calif..

The problem was, as the Internet grew, the public points became overburdened and traffic slowed at these bottlenecks. So backbone providers started making arrangements with each other, called "private peering." These are direct, bilateral connections between two carriers in which no fees are charged.

Do the largest backbone providers charge each other?

Backbone providers aren't charging peers now, but there is a lot of discussion about whether they should. Most industry experts say the Internet needs to develop some payment scheme. After all, it is now a commercial, profit-making business, not a government freebie.

But the industry has not figured out how to calculate who owes what to whom. Without an industry standard or government regulation, smaller companies fear that larger ones will set these charges in an arbitrary and discriminatory fashion.

America's first backbone Internet Service provider was ______.

A.EarthLink

B.MCI

C.GTE Corp

D.NSFNET

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第10题
What does the price clause include?What does the price clause include?
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