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ting the media debate on climate change during seven or eight critical years inwhich urgent international talks should have been taking place, by constantly seedingdoubt about the science just as it should have been most persuasive, they have justifiedthe money their sponsors have spent on them many times over.63. Which of the following has NOT been done by the organizations to establish theirposition on climate change39。s involvement in scientific scandals B. Exxon39。s tone in presenting the passage?A. Factual. B. Praiseful. C. Biased. D. Encouraging.Passage Four Where anyone reaching the age of 60 was considered to be near death39。s behaviourswitches back.Richardson says that thinking about stopping ageing is a little bit silly at themoment but doesn39。 lifespan increases with the amount of food eaten amounts of food cause a change in the animals39。t separate them,send a student to the office to get help. If a crowd of children is gathering, insist that theymove away or sit down, perhaps clapping your hands to get their attention: After theincident is over, meet with the batants together so they can give you their versions ofwhat happened and you can help them resolve any lingering problems. Also notify theparents. Speak in a firm, nononsense manner to stop a student39。 attention.D. To distract the students39。punitively (in Paragraph 5) probably mean? A. Surprisingly. B. Depressingly. C. Involving persuasion. D. Involving punishment. 79. What might be the last step to help all aggressive student?A. Encourage the student to be nice to the student he hit. B. Ask the student to promise he39。父母可更多地參與孩子的教育。另一些文化卻由于這種親密接觸而感到灰心喪氣,甚至感到自尊受到傷害,原因是這種親密接觸的后果之一是使人們輕易地發(fā)現(xiàn)彼此在世界中的位置。s elementary and secondary schools and give all children the access to highquality education. The ultimate goal is to ensure that no one is left behind. As a result of the implementation of this act, schools enjoy more flexibility to use resources where they are needed most. Parents can get more involved in the child39。這些組織不顧人們的死活,消滅它們最符合我們的利益。人們之間連接的速度之快使人和社會措手不及。最終目標(biāo)是確保無一人落后。s aggressive behavior? A. Respond calmly but finny. B. Tell the student39。s aggressive behavior warrants separating himfrom the rest of the class, either to send him a strong message that what he did merits aserious consequence or to protect the other students. You can do that by giving him a timeout in class or by sending him to the office. Although he might expect you to react punitively, surprise him by reactingsupportively. Express your confidence that he can resolve problems without being hurtfulto his peers. Tell him that you think he must be upset about something to lose control ashe did and you want to understand what might be bothering him. If he does open up toyou, listen attentively without interrupting. Speaking m a calm voice, tell him that youunderstand why he was upset, but stress that he has to find a way to express his angerwith words rather than with his hands. You don39。t work, you might say something odd (Look up! The ceiling isfalling!) to divert their attention. If they still don39。ll be like the difference between aRollsRoyce and a cheap car.69. It can be seen from the first paragraph that people have doubts on whether _____________. A. is possible to live a longer healthyandlifeB. humans can live as long as scientists predictC. living longer is still considered a good ideaD. new antiageing treatments are safe for humans70. In the 1980s, the data on people39。t prevent. But that world view changed suddenly in the early 1990s with the publication of astudy by researchers at DukeUniversity, who had been following the health of 20,000people for almost a decade. They showed that disability among the elderly was not onlydropping, but it was doing so at an everincreasing rate. Arian Richardson, director of the Barshop Institute for Ageing and Longevityresearch, predicts that understanding the mechanisms behind calorie restriction and othergenetic reasons behind ageing could be used within the next two decades to give peopleseveral extra healthy years of life. Restrict how much an animal eats, for example, and itwill live longer. In lab experiments, rats on calorierestricted diets were found to bephysiologically younger, got diseases later in life and, at any rate, had less severe cases.From the models that have been looked at, the increase in lifespan is usually in the rangeof 1530% maximum, says Richardson. Cutting calories is thought to trigger a switch inan animal39。s role in delaying solutions to global warming D. Exxon39。 (in Paragraph 4)? A. Reasonable. B. Fake. C. Limitless. D. Inconsistent.65. John Christy is mentioned to show_______________. A. how closely these organizations work with scientists B. how these organizations select scientific findings for theirownpurpose C. how important correct data are for scientists to make sound discoveries D. how one man39。s most profitablecorporation. It makes most of its money from oil, and has more to lose than any otherpany from efforts to tackle climate change. To safeguard its profits, ExxonMobilneeds to sow doubt about whether serious action needs to be taken on climate there are difficulties: it must confront a scientific consensus as strong as that whichmaintains that smoking causes lung cancer or that HIV causes Aids. So what39。s body shape B. genes are the decisive factors for people3