Passage Two
Do we need laws that prevent us from running risks with our lives If so, then perhaps laws are needed prohibiting the sale of cigarettes and alcoholic drinks. Both products have been known to kill people. The hazards of drinking too much alcohol are as bad as or worse than the hazards of smoking too many cigarettes. All right then, let’s pass a law closing the liquor stores and the bars in this country. Let’s put an end once and for all to the ruinous disease from which as many as 10 million Americans currently suffer alcoholism.
But wait. We’ve already tried that. For 13 years, between 1920 and 1933 there were no liquor stores anywhere in the United States. They were shut down abolished by an amendment (修正案) to the Constitution (to 18th) and by a law of Congress (the Volstead Act). After January 20, 1920, there was supposed to be no more manufacturing, selling, or transporting of "intoxicating liquors." Without any m
A. sold openly
B. no longer a temptation
C. a major factor in the passage of the Volstead Act
D. brought across the Mexican and Canadian borders
When we think of entrepreneurs, most of
us imagine{{U}} (67) {{/U}}, successful, over-achievers like Bill Gates
of Microsoft, Richard Branson of Virgin Airlines, Inc. or Jim Boyle of Columbia
Sportswear, to{{U}} (68) {{/U}}a few contemporary heroes. The{{U}}
(69) {{/U}}is that we often fail to{{U}} (70)
{{/U}}entrepreneurs all around us: the corner grocery store owner, the
family{{U}} (71) {{/U}}who opens a medical{{U}} (72) {{/U}}in
our neighborhood, or the young person who{{U}} (73) {{/U}}the morning
paper.{{U}} (74) {{/U}}is creating business opportunities{{U}} (75)
{{/U}}entrepreneurship, although the{{U}} (76) {{/U}}of
entrepreneurship would be markedly different from each other. According to
Jeffery Timmons, author of "New Venture Creation", there are three{{U}} (77)
{{/U}}components for a successful new{{U}} (78) {{ A. how B. what C. why D. which 我来回答: 提交
|