单项选择题

PART THREE
·Look at the following text and questions over the page.
·Each question has four suggested answers or ways of finishing the sentence, A, B, C and D.
·Mark one letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet, for the answer you choose.


Orange farmers call one of their earliest-ripening varieties Pineapples. But, in the days after Hurricane Charley tore through Florida’s inland orange county, the fruit on the ground looks more like green racquetballs. Small. Hard. Useless.
Charley was a ruthlessly efficient harvester—the hurricane arrived a couple of months before an orange is supposed to be dislodged from its branch. The storm stripped oranges and grapefruits from countless trees at orange groves. In some of the worst-hit fields, two or three oranges dangle from each tree and thousands lie on the ground. In other places, trees are split down the middle, lying on piles of soon-to-be-rotting citrus.
The devastation in the groves strikes at one of the state’s signature industries, the ubiquitous "Florida orange juice" behemoth that is recognizable worldwide.
Florida produces more oranges and grapefruits than any other state; the industry has an economic impact on Florida of $9 billion a year, including $1 billion in tax revenue.
Great chunks of that economic juggernaut could be imperiled, though the damage is still being assessed.
The storm last week shredded swaths of seven of Florida’s biggest citrus-producing counties, responsible for one out of three oranges and grapefruits raised in the state.
Charley arrived at a jumpy time for citrus growers here, who were already rattled by recent battles with inexpensive imports and—more important—a huge dip in sales attributed to the popularity of low-carbohydrate diets, which discourage drinking orange juice. Some growers worry that the devastation will force many out of the citrus business.
Frances Causey, 92, has watched Florida’s best-known crop get its color all her life, a life of frost and drought and economic catastrophes.
"We’ve had ups and downs, but we’ve never had this," she said Monday.
Causey—alone in the rock-solid clapboard house her father built nearly a century ago—watched as Charley ran roughshod through her groves. The house sits up on a bluff, overlooking Wauchula, one of the dozens of small towns in Florida’s interior raked by the storm’s winds.
These little town—places that don’t show up on many maps, with such names as Zolfo Springs, Brownville, Fort Ogden and Moffitt—are dozens of miles from the coastal towns of Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte, which have gotten the most attention in the aftermath of Charley. Far from major media markets, the tiny rural communities have slogged along in a kind of grim, solitary survival march. The vast tracts of soggy land around the towns look like "old Florida"—swamps filled with cabbage palms, meadows shaded by oak trees and miles of citrus groves. Pickup trucks steered by men in sweat-stained fertilizer-company hats skid and bump down narrow, rutted country lanes, where barely solid land seems to be losing the battle against the overwhelming wetness.
These are places that grow things—oranges and grapefruit and cattle—and make things. They aren’t places people go on vacation. This is the other Florida, the one that feels like the Deep South. And some, the people who call this other Florida home, feel forgotten in the storm.
"We were listening to the radio and the television and they never talked about us," said Mary Stombaugh, who lives on a country road outside Arcadia, about 50 miles from Sarasota. "It really upset me. "
Stombaugh and her husband, Jerry, never thought a storm that started in an ocean could find them in the country-road heaven they fell in love with two decades ago.
They hosted 11 relatives and friends in their house, each fleeing cities closer to the coast, or to the north, that were supposed to take direct hits but went largely unscathed. The orange groves across from Stombaugh’s house are ruined. Just up the road from Stombaugh’s home, with a bright-blue tarp now serving as a roof, tractor-trailers hauled fat tanks into a crumpled orange juice processing plant so huge that it resembles an oil refinery. Jason Cloud drove out to gaze at the sagging plant, calculating the impact on a region where agriculture is king.
"You drive around and it almost makes you cry," said Cloud, who works as an orange grove harvesting coordinator.
The citrus business, like any agricultural endeavor, has its own calculus of supply and demand. The misfortune of growers slapped around by Charley will likely produce higher prices for the farmers whose groves went unscathed.
"They’ll benefit from our loss," said John Causey, the nephew of Frances Causey. "Maybe five years from now, we’ll benefit from their loss. "
Which of the following sentence is true()

A.All the orange groves in Florida have been destroyed by Hurricane Charley.
B.The victims may recover from the loss soon.
C.The government will give relief to these victims.
D.Some orange growers may benefit from the disaster.

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填空题

PART ONE
·Read these sentences and the following texts.
·Which text does each sentence (1—7) describe
·For each sentence mark one letter (A, B, C or D).

A. Modeler
1. Two years of work experience with a top management consulting firm and Master’s degree from top university in quantitative disciplines, such as engineering, operations research, statistics, econometrics, applied math, or physics.
2. English fluency, written and oral.
3. Ability and desire to learn quickly.
4. Drive, entrepreneurial spirit.
B. Intern
1. Major in Art, IT, Marketing, Human resources management.
2. Master/bachelor.
3. Mature in major.
4. Fluent-English oral and written, CET-6. and above.
5. Out-going, good team player with excellent interpersonal skill.
6. Leader in campus activities a plus.
C. Assistant Manager
1. Deep knowledge of Chinese equities markets, and client network, plus knowledge of transactions technologies.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3—5 years’ experience at either information vendor/trading systems vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good communication, analytical, interpersonal and project management skills.
6. Good knowledge of marketing strategy and market research, and ability to apply practically to support decision-making and execution.
D. China Content Specialist
1. Deep knowledge of China equities and equities-related content is a must.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3 years’ experience at either information vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good analytical, interpersonal, project management and communication skills.
6. Degree holder in Marketing, Financial Management or related disciplines.

The applicants need to have worked in a consulting company.()

答案: A
填空题

PART FIVE
·Read the following text.
·In most of the lines 34—45 there is one extra word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the sense of the text. Some lines, however, are correct.
·If a line is correct, write CORRECT on your answer sheet.
·If there is an extra word in the line, write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTERS on your answer sheet.

"Today, California took off a giant step toward a brighter future for the (34) ______
frail elderly patients who receive care in skilled nursing of facilities," (35) ______
said Jim Gomez, President and CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. "At a time when legislators, regulators, residents and
families are rightfully demanding for the best care possible, California (36) ______
now has a funding system which will actually pay for the cost of (37) ______
providing care and take into consideration the level of care which each (38) ______
patient needs," continued Gomez.
"Governor Schwarzenegger’s support of AB 1629 (Frommer-D, Glendale)
is consistent with the expectation when he laid out last January. He (39) ______
said that in this current environment of record state budget deficits,
where it would be necessary to develop creative solutions and (40) ______
leverage additional federal policies. Though clearly we have (41) ______
accomplished that," said Paul Tunnell, Chairman of the Association.
In signing AB 1629, Governor Schwarzenegger said, "The quality
assurance fee when authorized in this legislation will provide funds (42) ______
that would be otherwise unavailable in these times of fiscal constraint,
thus enabling the State to provide with a much needed increase in (43) ______
Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to skilled nursing facilities. Higher
rates, combined with the facility-specific rate of methodology specified in (44) ______
the bill, which will result in better wages for nursing home (45) ______
employees, compensation for structural improvements and better
quality of care for the residents. "

34()

答案: off
单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
19()

A.chemical
B.pharmaceutical
C.medical
D.medicine

单项选择题

PART TWO
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best sentence from the list A—H to fill each of the blanks.
·For each blank (8—12) mark one letter (A—H) on your answer sheet.
·Do not mark any letter twice.

An assistant store manager at Costco Wholesale Corp. filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the retail chain Tuesday, alleging that she was passed over for a promotion (8) .
The suit, (9) , claims that females rarely get high-level management jobs.
The lead attorney in the case, Brad Seligman, executive director of the nonprofit Impact Fund, is also suing Wal-Mart Stores Inc. , alleging that the Arkansas-based retailer pays women lower wages and promotes them less than their male counterparts. (10) .
But it is stalled in an appeals court, and the merits have not been litigated.
The Costco case concerns Shirley "Rae" Ellis of Aurora, Colo. , who was hired six years ago amid what she says were promises of a promotion within a year from her assistant manager post to an in-store manager at one of the chain’s 320 U. S.-based outlets.
(11) . "I would put my management ability against any manager," she said.
Issaquah, Wash. -based Costco, which employs about 103,000 people worldwide, did not immediately return calls for comment.
The suit, which focuses on in-store assistant manager and manager positions, claims that 50 percent of the chain’s employees are female, but the management "is virtually all male. "
The suit says only 12 percent of Costco’s store managers and two of 30 upper-level executives are women.
Ellis is seeking unspecified damages, including lost wages, and wants the company to post its managerial positions to its employees.
No hearing has been set for a judge to determine whether the lawsuit will represent all current and former female employees (12) .
Assistant managers receive about $65,000 or more, and managers get more than $100,000 plus bonuses, according to Seligman. He said the suit was about "changing the way Costco does business. "
Costco shares rose 39 cents to $41.21 Tuesday on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

8()

A. who might have been wrongly passed over for a promotion to assistant manager or manager
B. that case, which was granted class-action status, represents as many as 1.6 million current and former female Wal-Mart employees
C. because the company’s policies discriminate against women in upper management
D. she said the retailer does not post job offerings for its managerial posts
E. who seeks higher position over the past few years but failed
F. obviously the managers don’t promote female employees
G. she was supported by most of the female employees in the company
H. which seeks class-action status to represent what the plaintiff’s lawyers say could be 650 women

单项选择题

PART THREE
·Look at the following text and questions over the page.
·Each question has four suggested answers or ways of finishing the sentence, A, B, C and D.
·Mark one letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet, for the answer you choose.


Orange farmers call one of their earliest-ripening varieties Pineapples. But, in the days after Hurricane Charley tore through Florida’s inland orange county, the fruit on the ground looks more like green racquetballs. Small. Hard. Useless.
Charley was a ruthlessly efficient harvester—the hurricane arrived a couple of months before an orange is supposed to be dislodged from its branch. The storm stripped oranges and grapefruits from countless trees at orange groves. In some of the worst-hit fields, two or three oranges dangle from each tree and thousands lie on the ground. In other places, trees are split down the middle, lying on piles of soon-to-be-rotting citrus.
The devastation in the groves strikes at one of the state’s signature industries, the ubiquitous "Florida orange juice" behemoth that is recognizable worldwide.
Florida produces more oranges and grapefruits than any other state; the industry has an economic impact on Florida of $9 billion a year, including $1 billion in tax revenue.
Great chunks of that economic juggernaut could be imperiled, though the damage is still being assessed.
The storm last week shredded swaths of seven of Florida’s biggest citrus-producing counties, responsible for one out of three oranges and grapefruits raised in the state.
Charley arrived at a jumpy time for citrus growers here, who were already rattled by recent battles with inexpensive imports and—more important—a huge dip in sales attributed to the popularity of low-carbohydrate diets, which discourage drinking orange juice. Some growers worry that the devastation will force many out of the citrus business.
Frances Causey, 92, has watched Florida’s best-known crop get its color all her life, a life of frost and drought and economic catastrophes.
"We’ve had ups and downs, but we’ve never had this," she said Monday.
Causey—alone in the rock-solid clapboard house her father built nearly a century ago—watched as Charley ran roughshod through her groves. The house sits up on a bluff, overlooking Wauchula, one of the dozens of small towns in Florida’s interior raked by the storm’s winds.
These little town—places that don’t show up on many maps, with such names as Zolfo Springs, Brownville, Fort Ogden and Moffitt—are dozens of miles from the coastal towns of Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte, which have gotten the most attention in the aftermath of Charley. Far from major media markets, the tiny rural communities have slogged along in a kind of grim, solitary survival march. The vast tracts of soggy land around the towns look like "old Florida"—swamps filled with cabbage palms, meadows shaded by oak trees and miles of citrus groves. Pickup trucks steered by men in sweat-stained fertilizer-company hats skid and bump down narrow, rutted country lanes, where barely solid land seems to be losing the battle against the overwhelming wetness.
These are places that grow things—oranges and grapefruit and cattle—and make things. They aren’t places people go on vacation. This is the other Florida, the one that feels like the Deep South. And some, the people who call this other Florida home, feel forgotten in the storm.
"We were listening to the radio and the television and they never talked about us," said Mary Stombaugh, who lives on a country road outside Arcadia, about 50 miles from Sarasota. "It really upset me. "
Stombaugh and her husband, Jerry, never thought a storm that started in an ocean could find them in the country-road heaven they fell in love with two decades ago.
They hosted 11 relatives and friends in their house, each fleeing cities closer to the coast, or to the north, that were supposed to take direct hits but went largely unscathed. The orange groves across from Stombaugh’s house are ruined. Just up the road from Stombaugh’s home, with a bright-blue tarp now serving as a roof, tractor-trailers hauled fat tanks into a crumpled orange juice processing plant so huge that it resembles an oil refinery. Jason Cloud drove out to gaze at the sagging plant, calculating the impact on a region where agriculture is king.
"You drive around and it almost makes you cry," said Cloud, who works as an orange grove harvesting coordinator.
The citrus business, like any agricultural endeavor, has its own calculus of supply and demand. The misfortune of growers slapped around by Charley will likely produce higher prices for the farmers whose groves went unscathed.
"They’ll benefit from our loss," said John Causey, the nephew of Frances Causey. "Maybe five years from now, we’ll benefit from their loss. "
() have been paid most attention to after Hurricane Charley.

A.inland towns
B.coastal towns
C.rural areas
D.little towns

填空题

PART ONE
·Read these sentences and the following texts.
·Which text does each sentence (1—7) describe
·For each sentence mark one letter (A, B, C or D).

A. Modeler
1. Two years of work experience with a top management consulting firm and Master’s degree from top university in quantitative disciplines, such as engineering, operations research, statistics, econometrics, applied math, or physics.
2. English fluency, written and oral.
3. Ability and desire to learn quickly.
4. Drive, entrepreneurial spirit.
B. Intern
1. Major in Art, IT, Marketing, Human resources management.
2. Master/bachelor.
3. Mature in major.
4. Fluent-English oral and written, CET-6. and above.
5. Out-going, good team player with excellent interpersonal skill.
6. Leader in campus activities a plus.
C. Assistant Manager
1. Deep knowledge of Chinese equities markets, and client network, plus knowledge of transactions technologies.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3—5 years’ experience at either information vendor/trading systems vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good communication, analytical, interpersonal and project management skills.
6. Good knowledge of marketing strategy and market research, and ability to apply practically to support decision-making and execution.
D. China Content Specialist
1. Deep knowledge of China equities and equities-related content is a must.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3 years’ experience at either information vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good analytical, interpersonal, project management and communication skills.
6. Degree holder in Marketing, Financial Management or related disciplines.

The applicants must be able to back up and carry out decisions.()

答案: C
单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
20()

A.increase
B.decrease
C.inflate
D.deflate

填空题

PART FIVE
·Read the following text.
·In most of the lines 34—45 there is one extra word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the sense of the text. Some lines, however, are correct.
·If a line is correct, write CORRECT on your answer sheet.
·If there is an extra word in the line, write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTERS on your answer sheet.

"Today, California took off a giant step toward a brighter future for the (34) ______
frail elderly patients who receive care in skilled nursing of facilities," (35) ______
said Jim Gomez, President and CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. "At a time when legislators, regulators, residents and
families are rightfully demanding for the best care possible, California (36) ______
now has a funding system which will actually pay for the cost of (37) ______
providing care and take into consideration the level of care which each (38) ______
patient needs," continued Gomez.
"Governor Schwarzenegger’s support of AB 1629 (Frommer-D, Glendale)
is consistent with the expectation when he laid out last January. He (39) ______
said that in this current environment of record state budget deficits,
where it would be necessary to develop creative solutions and (40) ______
leverage additional federal policies. Though clearly we have (41) ______
accomplished that," said Paul Tunnell, Chairman of the Association.
In signing AB 1629, Governor Schwarzenegger said, "The quality
assurance fee when authorized in this legislation will provide funds (42) ______
that would be otherwise unavailable in these times of fiscal constraint,
thus enabling the State to provide with a much needed increase in (43) ______
Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to skilled nursing facilities. Higher
rates, combined with the facility-specific rate of methodology specified in (44) ______
the bill, which will result in better wages for nursing home (45) ______
employees, compensation for structural improvements and better
quality of care for the residents. "

35()

答案: of
单项选择题

PART TWO
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best sentence from the list A—H to fill each of the blanks.
·For each blank (8—12) mark one letter (A—H) on your answer sheet.
·Do not mark any letter twice.

An assistant store manager at Costco Wholesale Corp. filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the retail chain Tuesday, alleging that she was passed over for a promotion (8) .
The suit, (9) , claims that females rarely get high-level management jobs.
The lead attorney in the case, Brad Seligman, executive director of the nonprofit Impact Fund, is also suing Wal-Mart Stores Inc. , alleging that the Arkansas-based retailer pays women lower wages and promotes them less than their male counterparts. (10) .
But it is stalled in an appeals court, and the merits have not been litigated.
The Costco case concerns Shirley "Rae" Ellis of Aurora, Colo. , who was hired six years ago amid what she says were promises of a promotion within a year from her assistant manager post to an in-store manager at one of the chain’s 320 U. S.-based outlets.
(11) . "I would put my management ability against any manager," she said.
Issaquah, Wash. -based Costco, which employs about 103,000 people worldwide, did not immediately return calls for comment.
The suit, which focuses on in-store assistant manager and manager positions, claims that 50 percent of the chain’s employees are female, but the management "is virtually all male. "
The suit says only 12 percent of Costco’s store managers and two of 30 upper-level executives are women.
Ellis is seeking unspecified damages, including lost wages, and wants the company to post its managerial positions to its employees.
No hearing has been set for a judge to determine whether the lawsuit will represent all current and former female employees (12) .
Assistant managers receive about $65,000 or more, and managers get more than $100,000 plus bonuses, according to Seligman. He said the suit was about "changing the way Costco does business. "
Costco shares rose 39 cents to $41.21 Tuesday on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

9()

A. who might have been wrongly passed over for a promotion to assistant manager or manager
B. that case, which was granted class-action status, represents as many as 1.6 million current and former female Wal-Mart employees
C. because the company’s policies discriminate against women in upper management
D. she said the retailer does not post job offerings for its managerial posts
E. who seeks higher position over the past few years but failed
F. obviously the managers don’t promote female employees
G. she was supported by most of the female employees in the company
H. which seeks class-action status to represent what the plaintiff’s lawyers say could be 650 women

填空题

PART ONE
·Read these sentences and the following texts.
·Which text does each sentence (1—7) describe
·For each sentence mark one letter (A, B, C or D).

A. Modeler
1. Two years of work experience with a top management consulting firm and Master’s degree from top university in quantitative disciplines, such as engineering, operations research, statistics, econometrics, applied math, or physics.
2. English fluency, written and oral.
3. Ability and desire to learn quickly.
4. Drive, entrepreneurial spirit.
B. Intern
1. Major in Art, IT, Marketing, Human resources management.
2. Master/bachelor.
3. Mature in major.
4. Fluent-English oral and written, CET-6. and above.
5. Out-going, good team player with excellent interpersonal skill.
6. Leader in campus activities a plus.
C. Assistant Manager
1. Deep knowledge of Chinese equities markets, and client network, plus knowledge of transactions technologies.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3—5 years’ experience at either information vendor/trading systems vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good communication, analytical, interpersonal and project management skills.
6. Good knowledge of marketing strategy and market research, and ability to apply practically to support decision-making and execution.
D. China Content Specialist
1. Deep knowledge of China equities and equities-related content is a must.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3 years’ experience at either information vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good analytical, interpersonal, project management and communication skills.
6. Degree holder in Marketing, Financial Management or related disciplines.

The applicants need to have got the degree in marketing and related field.()

答案: D
单项选择题

PART THREE
·Look at the following text and questions over the page.
·Each question has four suggested answers or ways of finishing the sentence, A, B, C and D.
·Mark one letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet, for the answer you choose.


Orange farmers call one of their earliest-ripening varieties Pineapples. But, in the days after Hurricane Charley tore through Florida’s inland orange county, the fruit on the ground looks more like green racquetballs. Small. Hard. Useless.
Charley was a ruthlessly efficient harvester—the hurricane arrived a couple of months before an orange is supposed to be dislodged from its branch. The storm stripped oranges and grapefruits from countless trees at orange groves. In some of the worst-hit fields, two or three oranges dangle from each tree and thousands lie on the ground. In other places, trees are split down the middle, lying on piles of soon-to-be-rotting citrus.
The devastation in the groves strikes at one of the state’s signature industries, the ubiquitous "Florida orange juice" behemoth that is recognizable worldwide.
Florida produces more oranges and grapefruits than any other state; the industry has an economic impact on Florida of $9 billion a year, including $1 billion in tax revenue.
Great chunks of that economic juggernaut could be imperiled, though the damage is still being assessed.
The storm last week shredded swaths of seven of Florida’s biggest citrus-producing counties, responsible for one out of three oranges and grapefruits raised in the state.
Charley arrived at a jumpy time for citrus growers here, who were already rattled by recent battles with inexpensive imports and—more important—a huge dip in sales attributed to the popularity of low-carbohydrate diets, which discourage drinking orange juice. Some growers worry that the devastation will force many out of the citrus business.
Frances Causey, 92, has watched Florida’s best-known crop get its color all her life, a life of frost and drought and economic catastrophes.
"We’ve had ups and downs, but we’ve never had this," she said Monday.
Causey—alone in the rock-solid clapboard house her father built nearly a century ago—watched as Charley ran roughshod through her groves. The house sits up on a bluff, overlooking Wauchula, one of the dozens of small towns in Florida’s interior raked by the storm’s winds.
These little town—places that don’t show up on many maps, with such names as Zolfo Springs, Brownville, Fort Ogden and Moffitt—are dozens of miles from the coastal towns of Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte, which have gotten the most attention in the aftermath of Charley. Far from major media markets, the tiny rural communities have slogged along in a kind of grim, solitary survival march. The vast tracts of soggy land around the towns look like "old Florida"—swamps filled with cabbage palms, meadows shaded by oak trees and miles of citrus groves. Pickup trucks steered by men in sweat-stained fertilizer-company hats skid and bump down narrow, rutted country lanes, where barely solid land seems to be losing the battle against the overwhelming wetness.
These are places that grow things—oranges and grapefruit and cattle—and make things. They aren’t places people go on vacation. This is the other Florida, the one that feels like the Deep South. And some, the people who call this other Florida home, feel forgotten in the storm.
"We were listening to the radio and the television and they never talked about us," said Mary Stombaugh, who lives on a country road outside Arcadia, about 50 miles from Sarasota. "It really upset me. "
Stombaugh and her husband, Jerry, never thought a storm that started in an ocean could find them in the country-road heaven they fell in love with two decades ago.
They hosted 11 relatives and friends in their house, each fleeing cities closer to the coast, or to the north, that were supposed to take direct hits but went largely unscathed. The orange groves across from Stombaugh’s house are ruined. Just up the road from Stombaugh’s home, with a bright-blue tarp now serving as a roof, tractor-trailers hauled fat tanks into a crumpled orange juice processing plant so huge that it resembles an oil refinery. Jason Cloud drove out to gaze at the sagging plant, calculating the impact on a region where agriculture is king.
"You drive around and it almost makes you cry," said Cloud, who works as an orange grove harvesting coordinator.
The citrus business, like any agricultural endeavor, has its own calculus of supply and demand. The misfortune of growers slapped around by Charley will likely produce higher prices for the farmers whose groves went unscathed.
"They’ll benefit from our loss," said John Causey, the nephew of Frances Causey. "Maybe five years from now, we’ll benefit from their loss. "
The tax revenue of the citrus business in Florida represents()out of the overall incomes of the citrus business.

A.23 percent
B.17 percent
C.11 percent
D.9 percent

单项选择题

PART TWO
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best sentence from the list A—H to fill each of the blanks.
·For each blank (8—12) mark one letter (A—H) on your answer sheet.
·Do not mark any letter twice.

An assistant store manager at Costco Wholesale Corp. filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the retail chain Tuesday, alleging that she was passed over for a promotion (8) .
The suit, (9) , claims that females rarely get high-level management jobs.
The lead attorney in the case, Brad Seligman, executive director of the nonprofit Impact Fund, is also suing Wal-Mart Stores Inc. , alleging that the Arkansas-based retailer pays women lower wages and promotes them less than their male counterparts. (10) .
But it is stalled in an appeals court, and the merits have not been litigated.
The Costco case concerns Shirley "Rae" Ellis of Aurora, Colo. , who was hired six years ago amid what she says were promises of a promotion within a year from her assistant manager post to an in-store manager at one of the chain’s 320 U. S.-based outlets.
(11) . "I would put my management ability against any manager," she said.
Issaquah, Wash. -based Costco, which employs about 103,000 people worldwide, did not immediately return calls for comment.
The suit, which focuses on in-store assistant manager and manager positions, claims that 50 percent of the chain’s employees are female, but the management "is virtually all male. "
The suit says only 12 percent of Costco’s store managers and two of 30 upper-level executives are women.
Ellis is seeking unspecified damages, including lost wages, and wants the company to post its managerial positions to its employees.
No hearing has been set for a judge to determine whether the lawsuit will represent all current and former female employees (12) .
Assistant managers receive about $65,000 or more, and managers get more than $100,000 plus bonuses, according to Seligman. He said the suit was about "changing the way Costco does business. "
Costco shares rose 39 cents to $41.21 Tuesday on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

10()

A. who might have been wrongly passed over for a promotion to assistant manager or manager
B. that case, which was granted class-action status, represents as many as 1.6 million current and former female Wal-Mart employees
C. because the company’s policies discriminate against women in upper management
D. she said the retailer does not post job offerings for its managerial posts
E. who seeks higher position over the past few years but failed
F. obviously the managers don’t promote female employees
G. she was supported by most of the female employees in the company
H. which seeks class-action status to represent what the plaintiff’s lawyers say could be 650 women

单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
21()

A.makers
B.dealers
C.stores
D.factories

填空题

PART FIVE
·Read the following text.
·In most of the lines 34—45 there is one extra word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the sense of the text. Some lines, however, are correct.
·If a line is correct, write CORRECT on your answer sheet.
·If there is an extra word in the line, write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTERS on your answer sheet.

"Today, California took off a giant step toward a brighter future for the (34) ______
frail elderly patients who receive care in skilled nursing of facilities," (35) ______
said Jim Gomez, President and CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. "At a time when legislators, regulators, residents and
families are rightfully demanding for the best care possible, California (36) ______
now has a funding system which will actually pay for the cost of (37) ______
providing care and take into consideration the level of care which each (38) ______
patient needs," continued Gomez.
"Governor Schwarzenegger’s support of AB 1629 (Frommer-D, Glendale)
is consistent with the expectation when he laid out last January. He (39) ______
said that in this current environment of record state budget deficits,
where it would be necessary to develop creative solutions and (40) ______
leverage additional federal policies. Though clearly we have (41) ______
accomplished that," said Paul Tunnell, Chairman of the Association.
In signing AB 1629, Governor Schwarzenegger said, "The quality
assurance fee when authorized in this legislation will provide funds (42) ______
that would be otherwise unavailable in these times of fiscal constraint,
thus enabling the State to provide with a much needed increase in (43) ______
Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to skilled nursing facilities. Higher
rates, combined with the facility-specific rate of methodology specified in (44) ______
the bill, which will result in better wages for nursing home (45) ______
employees, compensation for structural improvements and better
quality of care for the residents. "

36()

答案: for
填空题

PART ONE
·Read these sentences and the following texts.
·Which text does each sentence (1—7) describe
·For each sentence mark one letter (A, B, C or D).

A. Modeler
1. Two years of work experience with a top management consulting firm and Master’s degree from top university in quantitative disciplines, such as engineering, operations research, statistics, econometrics, applied math, or physics.
2. English fluency, written and oral.
3. Ability and desire to learn quickly.
4. Drive, entrepreneurial spirit.
B. Intern
1. Major in Art, IT, Marketing, Human resources management.
2. Master/bachelor.
3. Mature in major.
4. Fluent-English oral and written, CET-6. and above.
5. Out-going, good team player with excellent interpersonal skill.
6. Leader in campus activities a plus.
C. Assistant Manager
1. Deep knowledge of Chinese equities markets, and client network, plus knowledge of transactions technologies.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3—5 years’ experience at either information vendor/trading systems vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good communication, analytical, interpersonal and project management skills.
6. Good knowledge of marketing strategy and market research, and ability to apply practically to support decision-making and execution.
D. China Content Specialist
1. Deep knowledge of China equities and equities-related content is a must.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3 years’ experience at either information vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good analytical, interpersonal, project management and communication skills.
6. Degree holder in Marketing, Financial Management or related disciplines.

The applicants majoring in ART can apply for the job.()

答案: B
填空题

PART FIVE
·Read the following text.
·In most of the lines 34—45 there is one extra word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the sense of the text. Some lines, however, are correct.
·If a line is correct, write CORRECT on your answer sheet.
·If there is an extra word in the line, write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTERS on your answer sheet.

"Today, California took off a giant step toward a brighter future for the (34) ______
frail elderly patients who receive care in skilled nursing of facilities," (35) ______
said Jim Gomez, President and CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. "At a time when legislators, regulators, residents and
families are rightfully demanding for the best care possible, California (36) ______
now has a funding system which will actually pay for the cost of (37) ______
providing care and take into consideration the level of care which each (38) ______
patient needs," continued Gomez.
"Governor Schwarzenegger’s support of AB 1629 (Frommer-D, Glendale)
is consistent with the expectation when he laid out last January. He (39) ______
said that in this current environment of record state budget deficits,
where it would be necessary to develop creative solutions and (40) ______
leverage additional federal policies. Though clearly we have (41) ______
accomplished that," said Paul Tunnell, Chairman of the Association.
In signing AB 1629, Governor Schwarzenegger said, "The quality
assurance fee when authorized in this legislation will provide funds (42) ______
that would be otherwise unavailable in these times of fiscal constraint,
thus enabling the State to provide with a much needed increase in (43) ______
Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to skilled nursing facilities. Higher
rates, combined with the facility-specific rate of methodology specified in (44) ______
the bill, which will result in better wages for nursing home (45) ______
employees, compensation for structural improvements and better
quality of care for the residents. "

37()

答案: correct
单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
22()

A.same
B.lower
C.higher
D.cheaper

单项选择题

PART TWO
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best sentence from the list A—H to fill each of the blanks.
·For each blank (8—12) mark one letter (A—H) on your answer sheet.
·Do not mark any letter twice.

An assistant store manager at Costco Wholesale Corp. filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the retail chain Tuesday, alleging that she was passed over for a promotion (8) .
The suit, (9) , claims that females rarely get high-level management jobs.
The lead attorney in the case, Brad Seligman, executive director of the nonprofit Impact Fund, is also suing Wal-Mart Stores Inc. , alleging that the Arkansas-based retailer pays women lower wages and promotes them less than their male counterparts. (10) .
But it is stalled in an appeals court, and the merits have not been litigated.
The Costco case concerns Shirley "Rae" Ellis of Aurora, Colo. , who was hired six years ago amid what she says were promises of a promotion within a year from her assistant manager post to an in-store manager at one of the chain’s 320 U. S.-based outlets.
(11) . "I would put my management ability against any manager," she said.
Issaquah, Wash. -based Costco, which employs about 103,000 people worldwide, did not immediately return calls for comment.
The suit, which focuses on in-store assistant manager and manager positions, claims that 50 percent of the chain’s employees are female, but the management "is virtually all male. "
The suit says only 12 percent of Costco’s store managers and two of 30 upper-level executives are women.
Ellis is seeking unspecified damages, including lost wages, and wants the company to post its managerial positions to its employees.
No hearing has been set for a judge to determine whether the lawsuit will represent all current and former female employees (12) .
Assistant managers receive about $65,000 or more, and managers get more than $100,000 plus bonuses, according to Seligman. He said the suit was about "changing the way Costco does business. "
Costco shares rose 39 cents to $41.21 Tuesday on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

11()

A. who might have been wrongly passed over for a promotion to assistant manager or manager
B. that case, which was granted class-action status, represents as many as 1.6 million current and former female Wal-Mart employees
C. because the company’s policies discriminate against women in upper management
D. she said the retailer does not post job offerings for its managerial posts
E. who seeks higher position over the past few years but failed
F. obviously the managers don’t promote female employees
G. she was supported by most of the female employees in the company
H. which seeks class-action status to represent what the plaintiff’s lawyers say could be 650 women

单项选择题

PART THREE
·Look at the following text and questions over the page.
·Each question has four suggested answers or ways of finishing the sentence, A, B, C and D.
·Mark one letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet, for the answer you choose.


Orange farmers call one of their earliest-ripening varieties Pineapples. But, in the days after Hurricane Charley tore through Florida’s inland orange county, the fruit on the ground looks more like green racquetballs. Small. Hard. Useless.
Charley was a ruthlessly efficient harvester—the hurricane arrived a couple of months before an orange is supposed to be dislodged from its branch. The storm stripped oranges and grapefruits from countless trees at orange groves. In some of the worst-hit fields, two or three oranges dangle from each tree and thousands lie on the ground. In other places, trees are split down the middle, lying on piles of soon-to-be-rotting citrus.
The devastation in the groves strikes at one of the state’s signature industries, the ubiquitous "Florida orange juice" behemoth that is recognizable worldwide.
Florida produces more oranges and grapefruits than any other state; the industry has an economic impact on Florida of $9 billion a year, including $1 billion in tax revenue.
Great chunks of that economic juggernaut could be imperiled, though the damage is still being assessed.
The storm last week shredded swaths of seven of Florida’s biggest citrus-producing counties, responsible for one out of three oranges and grapefruits raised in the state.
Charley arrived at a jumpy time for citrus growers here, who were already rattled by recent battles with inexpensive imports and—more important—a huge dip in sales attributed to the popularity of low-carbohydrate diets, which discourage drinking orange juice. Some growers worry that the devastation will force many out of the citrus business.
Frances Causey, 92, has watched Florida’s best-known crop get its color all her life, a life of frost and drought and economic catastrophes.
"We’ve had ups and downs, but we’ve never had this," she said Monday.
Causey—alone in the rock-solid clapboard house her father built nearly a century ago—watched as Charley ran roughshod through her groves. The house sits up on a bluff, overlooking Wauchula, one of the dozens of small towns in Florida’s interior raked by the storm’s winds.
These little town—places that don’t show up on many maps, with such names as Zolfo Springs, Brownville, Fort Ogden and Moffitt—are dozens of miles from the coastal towns of Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte, which have gotten the most attention in the aftermath of Charley. Far from major media markets, the tiny rural communities have slogged along in a kind of grim, solitary survival march. The vast tracts of soggy land around the towns look like "old Florida"—swamps filled with cabbage palms, meadows shaded by oak trees and miles of citrus groves. Pickup trucks steered by men in sweat-stained fertilizer-company hats skid and bump down narrow, rutted country lanes, where barely solid land seems to be losing the battle against the overwhelming wetness.
These are places that grow things—oranges and grapefruit and cattle—and make things. They aren’t places people go on vacation. This is the other Florida, the one that feels like the Deep South. And some, the people who call this other Florida home, feel forgotten in the storm.
"We were listening to the radio and the television and they never talked about us," said Mary Stombaugh, who lives on a country road outside Arcadia, about 50 miles from Sarasota. "It really upset me. "
Stombaugh and her husband, Jerry, never thought a storm that started in an ocean could find them in the country-road heaven they fell in love with two decades ago.
They hosted 11 relatives and friends in their house, each fleeing cities closer to the coast, or to the north, that were supposed to take direct hits but went largely unscathed. The orange groves across from Stombaugh’s house are ruined. Just up the road from Stombaugh’s home, with a bright-blue tarp now serving as a roof, tractor-trailers hauled fat tanks into a crumpled orange juice processing plant so huge that it resembles an oil refinery. Jason Cloud drove out to gaze at the sagging plant, calculating the impact on a region where agriculture is king.
"You drive around and it almost makes you cry," said Cloud, who works as an orange grove harvesting coordinator.
The citrus business, like any agricultural endeavor, has its own calculus of supply and demand. The misfortune of growers slapped around by Charley will likely produce higher prices for the farmers whose groves went unscathed.
"They’ll benefit from our loss," said John Causey, the nephew of Frances Causey. "Maybe five years from now, we’ll benefit from their loss. "
Hurricane Charley caused () to the citrus business in Florida.

A.not mentioned
B.$9 billion
C.under estimation
D.$1 billion

填空题

PART ONE
·Read these sentences and the following texts.
·Which text does each sentence (1—7) describe
·For each sentence mark one letter (A, B, C or D).

A. Modeler
1. Two years of work experience with a top management consulting firm and Master’s degree from top university in quantitative disciplines, such as engineering, operations research, statistics, econometrics, applied math, or physics.
2. English fluency, written and oral.
3. Ability and desire to learn quickly.
4. Drive, entrepreneurial spirit.
B. Intern
1. Major in Art, IT, Marketing, Human resources management.
2. Master/bachelor.
3. Mature in major.
4. Fluent-English oral and written, CET-6. and above.
5. Out-going, good team player with excellent interpersonal skill.
6. Leader in campus activities a plus.
C. Assistant Manager
1. Deep knowledge of Chinese equities markets, and client network, plus knowledge of transactions technologies.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3—5 years’ experience at either information vendor/trading systems vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good communication, analytical, interpersonal and project management skills.
6. Good knowledge of marketing strategy and market research, and ability to apply practically to support decision-making and execution.
D. China Content Specialist
1. Deep knowledge of China equities and equities-related content is a must.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3 years’ experience at either information vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good analytical, interpersonal, project management and communication skills.
6. Degree holder in Marketing, Financial Management or related disciplines.

The applicants are required to have CET-6 certificate.()

答案: B
单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
23()

A.someone
B.anyone
C.everyone
D.others

单项选择题

PART TWO
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best sentence from the list A—H to fill each of the blanks.
·For each blank (8—12) mark one letter (A—H) on your answer sheet.
·Do not mark any letter twice.

An assistant store manager at Costco Wholesale Corp. filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the retail chain Tuesday, alleging that she was passed over for a promotion (8) .
The suit, (9) , claims that females rarely get high-level management jobs.
The lead attorney in the case, Brad Seligman, executive director of the nonprofit Impact Fund, is also suing Wal-Mart Stores Inc. , alleging that the Arkansas-based retailer pays women lower wages and promotes them less than their male counterparts. (10) .
But it is stalled in an appeals court, and the merits have not been litigated.
The Costco case concerns Shirley "Rae" Ellis of Aurora, Colo. , who was hired six years ago amid what she says were promises of a promotion within a year from her assistant manager post to an in-store manager at one of the chain’s 320 U. S.-based outlets.
(11) . "I would put my management ability against any manager," she said.
Issaquah, Wash. -based Costco, which employs about 103,000 people worldwide, did not immediately return calls for comment.
The suit, which focuses on in-store assistant manager and manager positions, claims that 50 percent of the chain’s employees are female, but the management "is virtually all male. "
The suit says only 12 percent of Costco’s store managers and two of 30 upper-level executives are women.
Ellis is seeking unspecified damages, including lost wages, and wants the company to post its managerial positions to its employees.
No hearing has been set for a judge to determine whether the lawsuit will represent all current and former female employees (12) .
Assistant managers receive about $65,000 or more, and managers get more than $100,000 plus bonuses, according to Seligman. He said the suit was about "changing the way Costco does business. "
Costco shares rose 39 cents to $41.21 Tuesday on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

12()

A. who might have been wrongly passed over for a promotion to assistant manager or manager
B. that case, which was granted class-action status, represents as many as 1.6 million current and former female Wal-Mart employees
C. because the company’s policies discriminate against women in upper management
D. she said the retailer does not post job offerings for its managerial posts
E. who seeks higher position over the past few years but failed
F. obviously the managers don’t promote female employees
G. she was supported by most of the female employees in the company
H. which seeks class-action status to represent what the plaintiff’s lawyers say could be 650 women

填空题

PART FIVE
·Read the following text.
·In most of the lines 34—45 there is one extra word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the sense of the text. Some lines, however, are correct.
·If a line is correct, write CORRECT on your answer sheet.
·If there is an extra word in the line, write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTERS on your answer sheet.

"Today, California took off a giant step toward a brighter future for the (34) ______
frail elderly patients who receive care in skilled nursing of facilities," (35) ______
said Jim Gomez, President and CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. "At a time when legislators, regulators, residents and
families are rightfully demanding for the best care possible, California (36) ______
now has a funding system which will actually pay for the cost of (37) ______
providing care and take into consideration the level of care which each (38) ______
patient needs," continued Gomez.
"Governor Schwarzenegger’s support of AB 1629 (Frommer-D, Glendale)
is consistent with the expectation when he laid out last January. He (39) ______
said that in this current environment of record state budget deficits,
where it would be necessary to develop creative solutions and (40) ______
leverage additional federal policies. Though clearly we have (41) ______
accomplished that," said Paul Tunnell, Chairman of the Association.
In signing AB 1629, Governor Schwarzenegger said, "The quality
assurance fee when authorized in this legislation will provide funds (42) ______
that would be otherwise unavailable in these times of fiscal constraint,
thus enabling the State to provide with a much needed increase in (43) ______
Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to skilled nursing facilities. Higher
rates, combined with the facility-specific rate of methodology specified in (44) ______
the bill, which will result in better wages for nursing home (45) ______
employees, compensation for structural improvements and better
quality of care for the residents. "

38()

答案: which
单项选择题

PART THREE
·Look at the following text and questions over the page.
·Each question has four suggested answers or ways of finishing the sentence, A, B, C and D.
·Mark one letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet, for the answer you choose.


Orange farmers call one of their earliest-ripening varieties Pineapples. But, in the days after Hurricane Charley tore through Florida’s inland orange county, the fruit on the ground looks more like green racquetballs. Small. Hard. Useless.
Charley was a ruthlessly efficient harvester—the hurricane arrived a couple of months before an orange is supposed to be dislodged from its branch. The storm stripped oranges and grapefruits from countless trees at orange groves. In some of the worst-hit fields, two or three oranges dangle from each tree and thousands lie on the ground. In other places, trees are split down the middle, lying on piles of soon-to-be-rotting citrus.
The devastation in the groves strikes at one of the state’s signature industries, the ubiquitous "Florida orange juice" behemoth that is recognizable worldwide.
Florida produces more oranges and grapefruits than any other state; the industry has an economic impact on Florida of $9 billion a year, including $1 billion in tax revenue.
Great chunks of that economic juggernaut could be imperiled, though the damage is still being assessed.
The storm last week shredded swaths of seven of Florida’s biggest citrus-producing counties, responsible for one out of three oranges and grapefruits raised in the state.
Charley arrived at a jumpy time for citrus growers here, who were already rattled by recent battles with inexpensive imports and—more important—a huge dip in sales attributed to the popularity of low-carbohydrate diets, which discourage drinking orange juice. Some growers worry that the devastation will force many out of the citrus business.
Frances Causey, 92, has watched Florida’s best-known crop get its color all her life, a life of frost and drought and economic catastrophes.
"We’ve had ups and downs, but we’ve never had this," she said Monday.
Causey—alone in the rock-solid clapboard house her father built nearly a century ago—watched as Charley ran roughshod through her groves. The house sits up on a bluff, overlooking Wauchula, one of the dozens of small towns in Florida’s interior raked by the storm’s winds.
These little town—places that don’t show up on many maps, with such names as Zolfo Springs, Brownville, Fort Ogden and Moffitt—are dozens of miles from the coastal towns of Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte, which have gotten the most attention in the aftermath of Charley. Far from major media markets, the tiny rural communities have slogged along in a kind of grim, solitary survival march. The vast tracts of soggy land around the towns look like "old Florida"—swamps filled with cabbage palms, meadows shaded by oak trees and miles of citrus groves. Pickup trucks steered by men in sweat-stained fertilizer-company hats skid and bump down narrow, rutted country lanes, where barely solid land seems to be losing the battle against the overwhelming wetness.
These are places that grow things—oranges and grapefruit and cattle—and make things. They aren’t places people go on vacation. This is the other Florida, the one that feels like the Deep South. And some, the people who call this other Florida home, feel forgotten in the storm.
"We were listening to the radio and the television and they never talked about us," said Mary Stombaugh, who lives on a country road outside Arcadia, about 50 miles from Sarasota. "It really upset me. "
Stombaugh and her husband, Jerry, never thought a storm that started in an ocean could find them in the country-road heaven they fell in love with two decades ago.
They hosted 11 relatives and friends in their house, each fleeing cities closer to the coast, or to the north, that were supposed to take direct hits but went largely unscathed. The orange groves across from Stombaugh’s house are ruined. Just up the road from Stombaugh’s home, with a bright-blue tarp now serving as a roof, tractor-trailers hauled fat tanks into a crumpled orange juice processing plant so huge that it resembles an oil refinery. Jason Cloud drove out to gaze at the sagging plant, calculating the impact on a region where agriculture is king.
"You drive around and it almost makes you cry," said Cloud, who works as an orange grove harvesting coordinator.
The citrus business, like any agricultural endeavor, has its own calculus of supply and demand. The misfortune of growers slapped around by Charley will likely produce higher prices for the farmers whose groves went unscathed.
"They’ll benefit from our loss," said John Causey, the nephew of Frances Causey. "Maybe five years from now, we’ll benefit from their loss. "
Which of the following sentence is true()

A.All the orange groves in Florida have been destroyed by Hurricane Charley.
B.The victims may recover from the loss soon.
C.The government will give relief to these victims.
D.Some orange growers may benefit from the disaster.

填空题

PART ONE
·Read these sentences and the following texts.
·Which text does each sentence (1—7) describe
·For each sentence mark one letter (A, B, C or D).

A. Modeler
1. Two years of work experience with a top management consulting firm and Master’s degree from top university in quantitative disciplines, such as engineering, operations research, statistics, econometrics, applied math, or physics.
2. English fluency, written and oral.
3. Ability and desire to learn quickly.
4. Drive, entrepreneurial spirit.
B. Intern
1. Major in Art, IT, Marketing, Human resources management.
2. Master/bachelor.
3. Mature in major.
4. Fluent-English oral and written, CET-6. and above.
5. Out-going, good team player with excellent interpersonal skill.
6. Leader in campus activities a plus.
C. Assistant Manager
1. Deep knowledge of Chinese equities markets, and client network, plus knowledge of transactions technologies.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3—5 years’ experience at either information vendor/trading systems vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good communication, analytical, interpersonal and project management skills.
6. Good knowledge of marketing strategy and market research, and ability to apply practically to support decision-making and execution.
D. China Content Specialist
1. Deep knowledge of China equities and equities-related content is a must.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3 years’ experience at either information vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good analytical, interpersonal, project management and communication skills.
6. Degree holder in Marketing, Financial Management or related disciplines.

The applicants must be a master degree holder.()

答案: A
单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
24()

A.argues
B.alleges
C.confirms
D.asserts

填空题

PART FIVE
·Read the following text.
·In most of the lines 34—45 there is one extra word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the sense of the text. Some lines, however, are correct.
·If a line is correct, write CORRECT on your answer sheet.
·If there is an extra word in the line, write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTERS on your answer sheet.

"Today, California took off a giant step toward a brighter future for the (34) ______
frail elderly patients who receive care in skilled nursing of facilities," (35) ______
said Jim Gomez, President and CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. "At a time when legislators, regulators, residents and
families are rightfully demanding for the best care possible, California (36) ______
now has a funding system which will actually pay for the cost of (37) ______
providing care and take into consideration the level of care which each (38) ______
patient needs," continued Gomez.
"Governor Schwarzenegger’s support of AB 1629 (Frommer-D, Glendale)
is consistent with the expectation when he laid out last January. He (39) ______
said that in this current environment of record state budget deficits,
where it would be necessary to develop creative solutions and (40) ______
leverage additional federal policies. Though clearly we have (41) ______
accomplished that," said Paul Tunnell, Chairman of the Association.
In signing AB 1629, Governor Schwarzenegger said, "The quality
assurance fee when authorized in this legislation will provide funds (42) ______
that would be otherwise unavailable in these times of fiscal constraint,
thus enabling the State to provide with a much needed increase in (43) ______
Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to skilled nursing facilities. Higher
rates, combined with the facility-specific rate of methodology specified in (44) ______
the bill, which will result in better wages for nursing home (45) ______
employees, compensation for structural improvements and better
quality of care for the residents. "

39()

答案: when
填空题

PART ONE
·Read these sentences and the following texts.
·Which text does each sentence (1—7) describe
·For each sentence mark one letter (A, B, C or D).

A. Modeler
1. Two years of work experience with a top management consulting firm and Master’s degree from top university in quantitative disciplines, such as engineering, operations research, statistics, econometrics, applied math, or physics.
2. English fluency, written and oral.
3. Ability and desire to learn quickly.
4. Drive, entrepreneurial spirit.
B. Intern
1. Major in Art, IT, Marketing, Human resources management.
2. Master/bachelor.
3. Mature in major.
4. Fluent-English oral and written, CET-6. and above.
5. Out-going, good team player with excellent interpersonal skill.
6. Leader in campus activities a plus.
C. Assistant Manager
1. Deep knowledge of Chinese equities markets, and client network, plus knowledge of transactions technologies.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3—5 years’ experience at either information vendor/trading systems vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good communication, analytical, interpersonal and project management skills.
6. Good knowledge of marketing strategy and market research, and ability to apply practically to support decision-making and execution.
D. China Content Specialist
1. Deep knowledge of China equities and equities-related content is a must.
2. Proficient in both Chinese (Mandarin, reading and speaking) and English.
3. Fast behaviors.
4. 3 years’ experience at either information vendor, or at financial markets firm/organization.
5. Good analytical, interpersonal, project management and communication skills.
6. Degree holder in Marketing, Financial Management or related disciplines.

The applicants who are leaders in the Students’ Union are preferred.()

答案: B
单项选择题

PART THREE
·Look at the following text and questions over the page.
·Each question has four suggested answers or ways of finishing the sentence, A, B, C and D.
·Mark one letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet, for the answer you choose.


Orange farmers call one of their earliest-ripening varieties Pineapples. But, in the days after Hurricane Charley tore through Florida’s inland orange county, the fruit on the ground looks more like green racquetballs. Small. Hard. Useless.
Charley was a ruthlessly efficient harvester—the hurricane arrived a couple of months before an orange is supposed to be dislodged from its branch. The storm stripped oranges and grapefruits from countless trees at orange groves. In some of the worst-hit fields, two or three oranges dangle from each tree and thousands lie on the ground. In other places, trees are split down the middle, lying on piles of soon-to-be-rotting citrus.
The devastation in the groves strikes at one of the state’s signature industries, the ubiquitous "Florida orange juice" behemoth that is recognizable worldwide.
Florida produces more oranges and grapefruits than any other state; the industry has an economic impact on Florida of $9 billion a year, including $1 billion in tax revenue.
Great chunks of that economic juggernaut could be imperiled, though the damage is still being assessed.
The storm last week shredded swaths of seven of Florida’s biggest citrus-producing counties, responsible for one out of three oranges and grapefruits raised in the state.
Charley arrived at a jumpy time for citrus growers here, who were already rattled by recent battles with inexpensive imports and—more important—a huge dip in sales attributed to the popularity of low-carbohydrate diets, which discourage drinking orange juice. Some growers worry that the devastation will force many out of the citrus business.
Frances Causey, 92, has watched Florida’s best-known crop get its color all her life, a life of frost and drought and economic catastrophes.
"We’ve had ups and downs, but we’ve never had this," she said Monday.
Causey—alone in the rock-solid clapboard house her father built nearly a century ago—watched as Charley ran roughshod through her groves. The house sits up on a bluff, overlooking Wauchula, one of the dozens of small towns in Florida’s interior raked by the storm’s winds.
These little town—places that don’t show up on many maps, with such names as Zolfo Springs, Brownville, Fort Ogden and Moffitt—are dozens of miles from the coastal towns of Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte, which have gotten the most attention in the aftermath of Charley. Far from major media markets, the tiny rural communities have slogged along in a kind of grim, solitary survival march. The vast tracts of soggy land around the towns look like "old Florida"—swamps filled with cabbage palms, meadows shaded by oak trees and miles of citrus groves. Pickup trucks steered by men in sweat-stained fertilizer-company hats skid and bump down narrow, rutted country lanes, where barely solid land seems to be losing the battle against the overwhelming wetness.
These are places that grow things—oranges and grapefruit and cattle—and make things. They aren’t places people go on vacation. This is the other Florida, the one that feels like the Deep South. And some, the people who call this other Florida home, feel forgotten in the storm.
"We were listening to the radio and the television and they never talked about us," said Mary Stombaugh, who lives on a country road outside Arcadia, about 50 miles from Sarasota. "It really upset me. "
Stombaugh and her husband, Jerry, never thought a storm that started in an ocean could find them in the country-road heaven they fell in love with two decades ago.
They hosted 11 relatives and friends in their house, each fleeing cities closer to the coast, or to the north, that were supposed to take direct hits but went largely unscathed. The orange groves across from Stombaugh’s house are ruined. Just up the road from Stombaugh’s home, with a bright-blue tarp now serving as a roof, tractor-trailers hauled fat tanks into a crumpled orange juice processing plant so huge that it resembles an oil refinery. Jason Cloud drove out to gaze at the sagging plant, calculating the impact on a region where agriculture is king.
"You drive around and it almost makes you cry," said Cloud, who works as an orange grove harvesting coordinator.
The citrus business, like any agricultural endeavor, has its own calculus of supply and demand. The misfortune of growers slapped around by Charley will likely produce higher prices for the farmers whose groves went unscathed.
"They’ll benefit from our loss," said John Causey, the nephew of Frances Causey. "Maybe five years from now, we’ll benefit from their loss. "
We can infer from the passage, ()

A.The inland areas in Florida are often visited by storms.
B.The rural communities in Florida have changed a lot in the past 20 years.
C.People in rural communities in Florida have difficulty making contact with outside world.
D.Coastal areas meet with storms more often than inland areas in Florida.

填空题

PART FIVE
·Read the following text.
·In most of the lines 34—45 there is one extra word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the sense of the text. Some lines, however, are correct.
·If a line is correct, write CORRECT on your answer sheet.
·If there is an extra word in the line, write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTERS on your answer sheet.

"Today, California took off a giant step toward a brighter future for the (34) ______
frail elderly patients who receive care in skilled nursing of facilities," (35) ______
said Jim Gomez, President and CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. "At a time when legislators, regulators, residents and
families are rightfully demanding for the best care possible, California (36) ______
now has a funding system which will actually pay for the cost of (37) ______
providing care and take into consideration the level of care which each (38) ______
patient needs," continued Gomez.
"Governor Schwarzenegger’s support of AB 1629 (Frommer-D, Glendale)
is consistent with the expectation when he laid out last January. He (39) ______
said that in this current environment of record state budget deficits,
where it would be necessary to develop creative solutions and (40) ______
leverage additional federal policies. Though clearly we have (41) ______
accomplished that," said Paul Tunnell, Chairman of the Association.
In signing AB 1629, Governor Schwarzenegger said, "The quality
assurance fee when authorized in this legislation will provide funds (42) ______
that would be otherwise unavailable in these times of fiscal constraint,
thus enabling the State to provide with a much needed increase in (43) ______
Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to skilled nursing facilities. Higher
rates, combined with the facility-specific rate of methodology specified in (44) ______
the bill, which will result in better wages for nursing home (45) ______
employees, compensation for structural improvements and better
quality of care for the residents. "

40()

答案: where
单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
25()

A.hit
B.hurt
C.touched
D.reached

填空题

PART FIVE
·Read the following text.
·In most of the lines 34—45 there is one extra word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the sense of the text. Some lines, however, are correct.
·If a line is correct, write CORRECT on your answer sheet.
·If there is an extra word in the line, write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTERS on your answer sheet.

"Today, California took off a giant step toward a brighter future for the (34) ______
frail elderly patients who receive care in skilled nursing of facilities," (35) ______
said Jim Gomez, President and CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. "At a time when legislators, regulators, residents and
families are rightfully demanding for the best care possible, California (36) ______
now has a funding system which will actually pay for the cost of (37) ______
providing care and take into consideration the level of care which each (38) ______
patient needs," continued Gomez.
"Governor Schwarzenegger’s support of AB 1629 (Frommer-D, Glendale)
is consistent with the expectation when he laid out last January. He (39) ______
said that in this current environment of record state budget deficits,
where it would be necessary to develop creative solutions and (40) ______
leverage additional federal policies. Though clearly we have (41) ______
accomplished that," said Paul Tunnell, Chairman of the Association.
In signing AB 1629, Governor Schwarzenegger said, "The quality
assurance fee when authorized in this legislation will provide funds (42) ______
that would be otherwise unavailable in these times of fiscal constraint,
thus enabling the State to provide with a much needed increase in (43) ______
Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to skilled nursing facilities. Higher
rates, combined with the facility-specific rate of methodology specified in (44) ______
the bill, which will result in better wages for nursing home (45) ______
employees, compensation for structural improvements and better
quality of care for the residents. "

41()

答案: Though
单项选择题

PART THREE
·Look at the following text and questions over the page.
·Each question has four suggested answers or ways of finishing the sentence, A, B, C and D.
·Mark one letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet, for the answer you choose.


Orange farmers call one of their earliest-ripening varieties Pineapples. But, in the days after Hurricane Charley tore through Florida’s inland orange county, the fruit on the ground looks more like green racquetballs. Small. Hard. Useless.
Charley was a ruthlessly efficient harvester—the hurricane arrived a couple of months before an orange is supposed to be dislodged from its branch. The storm stripped oranges and grapefruits from countless trees at orange groves. In some of the worst-hit fields, two or three oranges dangle from each tree and thousands lie on the ground. In other places, trees are split down the middle, lying on piles of soon-to-be-rotting citrus.
The devastation in the groves strikes at one of the state’s signature industries, the ubiquitous "Florida orange juice" behemoth that is recognizable worldwide.
Florida produces more oranges and grapefruits than any other state; the industry has an economic impact on Florida of $9 billion a year, including $1 billion in tax revenue.
Great chunks of that economic juggernaut could be imperiled, though the damage is still being assessed.
The storm last week shredded swaths of seven of Florida’s biggest citrus-producing counties, responsible for one out of three oranges and grapefruits raised in the state.
Charley arrived at a jumpy time for citrus growers here, who were already rattled by recent battles with inexpensive imports and—more important—a huge dip in sales attributed to the popularity of low-carbohydrate diets, which discourage drinking orange juice. Some growers worry that the devastation will force many out of the citrus business.
Frances Causey, 92, has watched Florida’s best-known crop get its color all her life, a life of frost and drought and economic catastrophes.
"We’ve had ups and downs, but we’ve never had this," she said Monday.
Causey—alone in the rock-solid clapboard house her father built nearly a century ago—watched as Charley ran roughshod through her groves. The house sits up on a bluff, overlooking Wauchula, one of the dozens of small towns in Florida’s interior raked by the storm’s winds.
These little town—places that don’t show up on many maps, with such names as Zolfo Springs, Brownville, Fort Ogden and Moffitt—are dozens of miles from the coastal towns of Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte, which have gotten the most attention in the aftermath of Charley. Far from major media markets, the tiny rural communities have slogged along in a kind of grim, solitary survival march. The vast tracts of soggy land around the towns look like "old Florida"—swamps filled with cabbage palms, meadows shaded by oak trees and miles of citrus groves. Pickup trucks steered by men in sweat-stained fertilizer-company hats skid and bump down narrow, rutted country lanes, where barely solid land seems to be losing the battle against the overwhelming wetness.
These are places that grow things—oranges and grapefruit and cattle—and make things. They aren’t places people go on vacation. This is the other Florida, the one that feels like the Deep South. And some, the people who call this other Florida home, feel forgotten in the storm.
"We were listening to the radio and the television and they never talked about us," said Mary Stombaugh, who lives on a country road outside Arcadia, about 50 miles from Sarasota. "It really upset me. "
Stombaugh and her husband, Jerry, never thought a storm that started in an ocean could find them in the country-road heaven they fell in love with two decades ago.
They hosted 11 relatives and friends in their house, each fleeing cities closer to the coast, or to the north, that were supposed to take direct hits but went largely unscathed. The orange groves across from Stombaugh’s house are ruined. Just up the road from Stombaugh’s home, with a bright-blue tarp now serving as a roof, tractor-trailers hauled fat tanks into a crumpled orange juice processing plant so huge that it resembles an oil refinery. Jason Cloud drove out to gaze at the sagging plant, calculating the impact on a region where agriculture is king.
"You drive around and it almost makes you cry," said Cloud, who works as an orange grove harvesting coordinator.
The citrus business, like any agricultural endeavor, has its own calculus of supply and demand. The misfortune of growers slapped around by Charley will likely produce higher prices for the farmers whose groves went unscathed.
"They’ll benefit from our loss," said John Causey, the nephew of Frances Causey. "Maybe five years from now, we’ll benefit from their loss. "
Which is the topic of the passage()

A.Citrus business damaged by hurricane.
B.Citrus business in Florida.
C.Worldwide hometown of oranges.
D.Hurricane Charley.

单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
26()

A.violating
B.abiding
C.betraying
D.abandoning

填空题

PART FIVE
·Read the following text.
·In most of the lines 34—45 there is one extra word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the sense of the text. Some lines, however, are correct.
·If a line is correct, write CORRECT on your answer sheet.
·If there is an extra word in the line, write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTERS on your answer sheet.

"Today, California took off a giant step toward a brighter future for the (34) ______
frail elderly patients who receive care in skilled nursing of facilities," (35) ______
said Jim Gomez, President and CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. "At a time when legislators, regulators, residents and
families are rightfully demanding for the best care possible, California (36) ______
now has a funding system which will actually pay for the cost of (37) ______
providing care and take into consideration the level of care which each (38) ______
patient needs," continued Gomez.
"Governor Schwarzenegger’s support of AB 1629 (Frommer-D, Glendale)
is consistent with the expectation when he laid out last January. He (39) ______
said that in this current environment of record state budget deficits,
where it would be necessary to develop creative solutions and (40) ______
leverage additional federal policies. Though clearly we have (41) ______
accomplished that," said Paul Tunnell, Chairman of the Association.
In signing AB 1629, Governor Schwarzenegger said, "The quality
assurance fee when authorized in this legislation will provide funds (42) ______
that would be otherwise unavailable in these times of fiscal constraint,
thus enabling the State to provide with a much needed increase in (43) ______
Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to skilled nursing facilities. Higher
rates, combined with the facility-specific rate of methodology specified in (44) ______
the bill, which will result in better wages for nursing home (45) ______
employees, compensation for structural improvements and better
quality of care for the residents. "

42()

答案: when
单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
27()

A.check
B.examination
C.scuff
D.scrutiny

填空题

PART FIVE
·Read the following text.
·In most of the lines 34—45 there is one extra word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the sense of the text. Some lines, however, are correct.
·If a line is correct, write CORRECT on your answer sheet.
·If there is an extra word in the line, write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTERS on your answer sheet.

"Today, California took off a giant step toward a brighter future for the (34) ______
frail elderly patients who receive care in skilled nursing of facilities," (35) ______
said Jim Gomez, President and CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. "At a time when legislators, regulators, residents and
families are rightfully demanding for the best care possible, California (36) ______
now has a funding system which will actually pay for the cost of (37) ______
providing care and take into consideration the level of care which each (38) ______
patient needs," continued Gomez.
"Governor Schwarzenegger’s support of AB 1629 (Frommer-D, Glendale)
is consistent with the expectation when he laid out last January. He (39) ______
said that in this current environment of record state budget deficits,
where it would be necessary to develop creative solutions and (40) ______
leverage additional federal policies. Though clearly we have (41) ______
accomplished that," said Paul Tunnell, Chairman of the Association.
In signing AB 1629, Governor Schwarzenegger said, "The quality
assurance fee when authorized in this legislation will provide funds (42) ______
that would be otherwise unavailable in these times of fiscal constraint,
thus enabling the State to provide with a much needed increase in (43) ______
Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to skilled nursing facilities. Higher
rates, combined with the facility-specific rate of methodology specified in (44) ______
the bill, which will result in better wages for nursing home (45) ______
employees, compensation for structural improvements and better
quality of care for the residents. "

43()

答案: with
填空题

PART FIVE
·Read the following text.
·In most of the lines 34—45 there is one extra word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the sense of the text. Some lines, however, are correct.
·If a line is correct, write CORRECT on your answer sheet.
·If there is an extra word in the line, write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTERS on your answer sheet.

"Today, California took off a giant step toward a brighter future for the (34) ______
frail elderly patients who receive care in skilled nursing of facilities," (35) ______
said Jim Gomez, President and CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. "At a time when legislators, regulators, residents and
families are rightfully demanding for the best care possible, California (36) ______
now has a funding system which will actually pay for the cost of (37) ______
providing care and take into consideration the level of care which each (38) ______
patient needs," continued Gomez.
"Governor Schwarzenegger’s support of AB 1629 (Frommer-D, Glendale)
is consistent with the expectation when he laid out last January. He (39) ______
said that in this current environment of record state budget deficits,
where it would be necessary to develop creative solutions and (40) ______
leverage additional federal policies. Though clearly we have (41) ______
accomplished that," said Paul Tunnell, Chairman of the Association.
In signing AB 1629, Governor Schwarzenegger said, "The quality
assurance fee when authorized in this legislation will provide funds (42) ______
that would be otherwise unavailable in these times of fiscal constraint,
thus enabling the State to provide with a much needed increase in (43) ______
Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to skilled nursing facilities. Higher
rates, combined with the facility-specific rate of methodology specified in (44) ______
the bill, which will result in better wages for nursing home (45) ______
employees, compensation for structural improvements and better
quality of care for the residents. "

44()

答案: of
填空题

PART FIVE
·Read the following text.
·In most of the lines 34—45 there is one extra word. It is either grammatically incorrect or does not fit in with the sense of the text. Some lines, however, are correct.
·If a line is correct, write CORRECT on your answer sheet.
·If there is an extra word in the line, write the extra word in CAPITAL LETTERS on your answer sheet.

"Today, California took off a giant step toward a brighter future for the (34) ______
frail elderly patients who receive care in skilled nursing of facilities," (35) ______
said Jim Gomez, President and CEO of the California Association of
Health Facilities. "At a time when legislators, regulators, residents and
families are rightfully demanding for the best care possible, California (36) ______
now has a funding system which will actually pay for the cost of (37) ______
providing care and take into consideration the level of care which each (38) ______
patient needs," continued Gomez.
"Governor Schwarzenegger’s support of AB 1629 (Frommer-D, Glendale)
is consistent with the expectation when he laid out last January. He (39) ______
said that in this current environment of record state budget deficits,
where it would be necessary to develop creative solutions and (40) ______
leverage additional federal policies. Though clearly we have (41) ______
accomplished that," said Paul Tunnell, Chairman of the Association.
In signing AB 1629, Governor Schwarzenegger said, "The quality
assurance fee when authorized in this legislation will provide funds (42) ______
that would be otherwise unavailable in these times of fiscal constraint,
thus enabling the State to provide with a much needed increase in (43) ______
Medi-Cal reimbursement rates to skilled nursing facilities. Higher
rates, combined with the facility-specific rate of methodology specified in (44) ______
the bill, which will result in better wages for nursing home (45) ______
employees, compensation for structural improvements and better
quality of care for the residents. "

45()

答案: which
单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
28()

A.practices
B.movements
C.actions
D.activities

单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
29()

A.parts
B.portions
C.fractions
D.factions

单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
30()

A.refused
B.accepted
C.received
D.denied

单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
31()

A.item
B.problem
C.issue
D.law

单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
32()

A.comment
B.interview
C.report
D.talk

单项选择题

PART FOUR
·Read the following text.
·Choose the best word to fill each gap.
·For each question (19—33) mark one letter (A, B, C, D) on your answer sheet.


Nineteen California pharmacies filed a state lawsuit Thursday accusing the world’s largest (19) companies of conspiring to (20) U. S. drug prices.
The pharmacies accuse the 15 drug (21) of illegally conspiring to charge inflated prices in the United States while barring pharmacies from buying the makers’ drugs at (22) prices outside the country.
"We are being charged higher prices than foreigners are being charged," said Joseph Alioto, representing the pharmacies. "If we are selling the same drug we want to pay the same prices as (23) else. "
The lawsuit, filed in Alameda County court in Oakland, (24) the pharmaceutical companies have (25) the pharmacies’ bottom lines by (26) California’s antitrust and unfair business practices laws.
The lawsuit comes at a time when pharmaceutical companies are under increased (27) over drug costs and their marketing (28) . Many of the same drugs sold in the United States are available in Canada and elsewhere for (29) of the U.S. retail prices.
The Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly (30) requests to import drugs from Canada, where the government controls prices. The state of Vermont has filed a lawsuit against the federal agency over the (31) .
Many of the drug companies either declined (32) or didn’t return telephone calls Thursday. The drug industry has in the past defended its U. S. prices as a way to (33) research and development costs.
33()

A.pay
B.compensate
C.restart
D.recoup

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