更多"Corporate Direct’s biggest clients "的相关试题:
[单项选择]Corporate Direct’s biggest clients are
A. financial service companies.
B. hotel and catering firms.
C. fashion retailers.
[单项选择]Why did Peter start Corporate Direct
A. His local travel agencies had no vacancies,
B. His wife wanted him to work from home.
C. His ambition was to be self-employe
[单项选择]Which Corporate Direct service is expending most rapidly
A. the car rental scheme
B. the company magazine
C. the currency exchange service
[单项选择]Why is Corporate Direct unique in the South-East
A. It is an independent travel agency.
B. It holds detailed client information.
C. It offers the most competitive rates.
[填空题]Just as the Corporate cowboys of the 1970s destroyed the reputation of the corporations they headed, and engaged in grand scale self indulgence at corporate expense, now Australia is in the era of the campus cowboy (and female counterpart). They too overstate the performance of their product and corporation, and indulge in grand scale self indulgence, despite their claims of academic excellence and projecting a holier than holy image.
Academics are put under various pressures to drop the standard of university education so that more students are retained through to graduation, thereby maximizing the revenue collected by governments of both persuasions and the more revenue handed back to the universities to fund the outrageous perquisites of senior management at those institutions.
Australian universities artificially boost student numbers by accepting many Australians who should not be allowed within 100 kilometers of a university on the grounds of their intellectual rigo
[简答题]Google’s Plan for World’s Biggest Online Library: Philanthropy Or Act of Piracy
In recent years, teams of workers dispatched by Google have been working hard to make digital copies of books. So far,Google has scanned more than 10 million titles from libraries in America and Europe—including half a million volumes held by the Bodleian in Oxford. The exact method it uses is unclear: the company does not allow outsiders to observe the process.
Why is Google undertaking such a venture’ Why is it even interested in all those out-of-print library books, most of which have been gathering dust on forgotten shelves for decades The company claims its motives are essentially public-spirited. Its overall mission, after all, is to "organise the world’s information", so it would be odd if that information did not include books.
The company likes to present itself as having lofty aspirations. "This really isn’t about making money. We are doing this for the good of society." As Santiago de la Mo