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The facilities are situated in places where ______.A.residents can buy into a facility by

The facilities are situated in places where ______.

A.residents can buy into a facility by paying a lot of money

B.residents are rich and there are a lot of aged people

C.there are retirement and independent living communities

D.home values are higher and people have higher incomes

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更多“The facilities are situated in…”相关的问题
第1题
The word “facilities” in the sentence “It’s your duty to help them find the departmen

A.areas

B.hospitals

C.departments

D.corridors

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第2题
After 1949 the Ministry of Public Health was responsible for all health-care activitie

s and established and supervised all facets of health policy.Along with a system of national,provincial, and local facilities,the ministry regulated a network of industrial and state enterprise hospitals and other facilities covering the health needs of workers of those enterprises.In 1981 this additional network provided approximately 25 percent of the country's total health services.

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第3题
It can be inferred from the passage that______.A.fire safety lessons should be aimed at Am

It can be inferred from the passage that______.

A.fire safety lessons should be aimed at American adults

B.American children have not received enough education of fire safety lesson

C.Japan is better equipped with fire facilities than the United States

D.America's large population accounts for hight fire frequency

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第4题
The quotation of Skinner's words(Paragraph 3) is used to show thatA.Wesleyan needs to impr

The quotation of Skinner's words(Paragraph 3) is used to show that

A.Wesleyan needs to improve its aging school facilities.

B.the technology program is not so attractive to the students.

C.foresighted students concern more about obvious growth.

D.Skinner prefers to excellent facilities in Wesleyan.

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第5题
Without proper planning, tourism can cause problems. For example, too many tourists can cr
owd public places' that are also enjoyed by the inhabitants of a country. If tourists create too much traffic, the inhabitants become annoyed and unhappy. They begin to dislike tourists and to treat them impolitely. They forget how much tourism can help the country's economy. It is important to think about the people of a destination and how tourism affects them. Tourism should help a country to keep the customs and beauty that attract tourists. Tourism should also advance the well-being of local inhabitants.

Too much tourism can be a problem. If tourism grows too quickly, people must leave other jobs to work in the tourism industry. This means that other parts of the country's economy can suffer.

On the other hand, if there is not enough tourism, people can lose jobs. Businesses can also lose money. It costs a great deal of money to build large hotels, airports, air terminals, first-class roads, and other support facilities needed by tourist attractions. For example, a major international-class tourism hotel can cost as much as 50000 dollars per room to build. If this room is not used most of the time, the owners of the hotel lose money.

Building a hotel is just a beginning. There must be many support facilities as well, including roads to get to the hotel, electricity, sewers to handle waste and water. All of these support facilities cost money. If they are not used because there are not enough tourists, jobs and money are lost.

Which of the following has most probably been discussed in the para. that goes before the para. ? ______.

A.It is extremely important to develop tourism

B.Building roads and hotels are essential

C.Support facilities are highly necessary

D.Planning is of great importance to tourism

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第6题
Fiercely independent, 90 year-old Vincenzia Rinaldi wouldn't consider a home health aide o
r nursing home. So Louis Critelli, her nephew had to coax the widowed homemaker into assisted living, the nation's growing long-term care option for the elderly. For $1,100 a month, Rinaldi became the reluctant resident of an efficiency unit where she could still simmer her much-loved tomato sauce and where caregivers would make sure she took her pills.

Instead, 30 months later, she died. Not because she was old. But because aides at her new home, Loretto Utica Center, one of the modern, hotel-style. facilities that have sprouted across the country over the past decade, mistakenly gave her another resident's prescription medication. That error led to her death, state inspectors concluded.

Neither the state nor Loretto told her nephew about the cause of death. Critelli, thinking his aunt had been properly cared for, only learned of the finding years later from USA TODAY. "When they find something blatant like that, you'd think they'd tell the family", the shaken nephew told a reporter after a long pause.

A USA TODAY investigation shows that Rinaldi's death represents the tragic extreme in a pattern of mistakes and violations that lead to scores of injuries and occasional deaths among the estimated 1 million elderly residents of assisted living facilities. The centers are the state regulated, largely private-pay residences that help seniors with medication and other activities of daily life.

In a wide ranging analysis, USA TODAY reviewed two years of inspection records within 2000-02 for more than 5,300 assisted living facilities in seven states: Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Indiana, New York and Texas. The precise time period varied slightly from state to state. The analysis covered a broad range—from mom-and-pop facilities with just a few residents to corporate run centers with scores of beds and many levels of care. It is the first time such data have been gathered and analyzed across so many states. The review included less-detailed data from five other states and focused on broad quality-of-care categories to compensate for variations in regulations from state to state.

As affluent and middle-class Americans cope with the infirmities of age, many turn to assisted living as an alternative to a nursing home industry that has been periodically plagued by abuse or neglect scandals. Even though assisted living facilities generally don't provide 24-hour skilled medical care, they increasingly serve seniors who only a decade ago might have been in nursing homes.

The first paragraph implies that

A.life in the nursing homes is largely regulated by caregivers.

B.old people are very much unsatisfied with life cared by a home health aide.

C.Rinaldi knew better than to live in an efficiency unit with caregivers.

D.the nation's long-term care options for the elderly are limited.

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第7题
A young pair of pandas is expected to settle in their new home in the Atlanta's Zoo to- mo
rrow, tile Beijing Youth Daily reported yesterday.

Born in the Chengdu Panda Breeding Base, the two, named Jiu Jiu and Hua Hua, will .spend the next 10 years in the United States. At a cost of $ 4 million, their new home is an exact copy of the natural environment where they lived in Chengdu, Sichuan Province in Southwest China. The panda house is also equipped with advanced facilities to study pandas in an all-around way, said the report. Visitors can view pandas in a separate room inside the

panda house, which is open to public every day.

As part of an international co operative plan to protect and study panda, the co-operation between Chengdu and Atlanta has finally come to an agreement after three years of discussion. And the research fund of $ 5 million raised by Atlanta's zoo has also contributed to the co-operation.

After a flight in a huge and comfortable case, Jiu Jiu and Hua Hua will be put under quarantine(隔离) for two weeks upon their arrival. And a welcome ceremony will be held for them in Atlanta on November 20, with ambassador(大使) Li, former U. S. President Carter and his wife, the Georgia governor and mayor of Atlanta.

Where is the two panda's original home?

A.Some mountains in Siehuan Province.

B.A certain base in the city of Chengdu.

C.The Atlantic Zoo in the United States.

D.A separate room inside the panda house.

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第8题
Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by c

Part A

Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)

Earlier this summer Arnold Schwarzenegger, California's governor, said that the state's penal system was "falling apart in front of our very eyes". Indeed so. Some 172,000 inmates are crowded into institutions—from the state's 33 prisons to its 12 "community correctional facilities"—that are meant to house fewer than 90,000. Drug abuse is rampant; so too are diseases such as HIV and hepatitis C. Race-based gangs pose the constant threat of violence, riot and even murder. And with more than 16,000 prisoners sleeping in prison gymnasiums and classrooms, rehabilitation programs are virtually non-existent—which helps to explain why two-thirds of California's convicts, the highest rate in the country, are back in prison within three years of being released.

Will the governor's summons of a special session of the state legislature, beginning this week, bring a remedy? The reason for the session is to discuss Mr. Schwarzenegger's request for almost $5.8 billion of public money to be pumped into the prison system. Bonds for $2 billion would finance ten 500-bed "re-entry facilities" for prisoners nearing the end of their sentences; another $2 billion would expand existing prisons; $1.2 billion would be earmarked for two new prisons; and $500m would go for new prison hospitals.

Money alone will provide neither an immediate solution nor a lasting one. The first problem is that California simply puts too many offenders in prison. The imprisonment rate, which has risen almost eight-fold since 1970 and is way ahead of any European country, has consistently meant overcrowding despite the construction of 22 new prisons in the past 20 years.

The 1994 "three-strikes" law, approved by voters in a referendum, means handing out 25-years-to-life sentences for often trivial third offences--and results in the growing presence in prison of elderly inmates who cost the taxpayer far more than the average of $34,000 a prisoner. Meanwhile, the practice of returning parole violators to prison, even for relatively trivial missteps such as missing a drugs test, also strains the system; some 11% of inmates are parole violators. Added to all these are more than 5,000 illegal immigrants being held on behalf of the federal government.

The second problem is that any attempt to reform. California's penal policy becomes hostage to politics. Two years ago, the governor was expressing optimism. He added the word "rehabilitation" to California's department of corrections, appointed Rod Hickman, a reform-minded former prison guard, to oversee the system and promised to lessen the power of the 31,000-strong prison guards' union, not least by breaking the "code of silence" that protects corrupt or violent guards. But that was then. The reality now is that Mr. Hickman resigned in March. Evidence indicates that the governor's office may have given the code of silence in California's prisons a new lease on life.

Many experts say that with no moderation in sentencing policies on the horizon, the prison population is expected to grow by another 21,000 over the next five years—enough to outpace any prison-building program. Thus, the dream of prison reforms will never touch the ground.

By quoting governor Schwarzenegger's remark, the author intends to

A.emphasize the fact that Schwarzenegger is still in his office.

B.show the fact that drug abuse is rampant in prisons.

C.point out that California has the highest convict rate in the US.

D.introduce the topic of overcrowding problem in California prisons.

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第9题
Directions: For each blank in the following passage, there are four choices marked A, B, C
and D. Choose the one that is most suitable and mark your answer by blackening the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.

Without proper planning, tourism can cause problems. For example, (21) many tourists can (22) public places that are also enjoyed (23) the inhabitants(居住者) of a coun- try: If tourists (24) too much traffic, the inhabitants become annoyed and (25) . They begin to dislike tourists and to (26) them impolitely. They (27) how much tourism can help the country's economy. It is important to (28) about the people of a tourist attraction and how tourism affects it. Tourism should help a country (29) the customs and beauty that attract tourists.

Too much tourism can be a problem. If tourism (30) too quickly, people must leave other jobs to work in the tourism industry. This (31) that other parts of the country's economy can suffer.

On the other hand, if there is not enough tourism, people can (32) jobs. Business can also lose money. It (33) a great deal of money to build large hotels, airports, air terminal, first class roads, and other support facilities(设施) (34) by tourist attractions. For example, a major international-class tourism (35) can cost as much as 50 thousand dollars per room to build. If this room is not used most of the time, the owners of the hotel lose money.

21.

A. so

B. how

C. too

D. rather

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第10题
A.servicesB.helpingsC.facilitiesD.money

A.services

B.helpings

C.facilities

D.money

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