The day of terror at the Virginia Polytechnic and State University in Blacksburg began at about 7:15 a. m. , with the shooting of a woman and a male resident adviser on the fourth floor of a dorm building on campus, Kristen Bensley, a freshman who lived below the floor where the shooting occurred, told TIME, "There were minors going on about the assailant was fighting with his girlfriend or something of that nature." Bensley notes that only residents can get into the building, using a specific "passport", that is, a card that one has to swipe in order to open doors before 10 a.m. If he was an outsider, someone would have had to let him in. Or more likely, he was a resident of the dorm himself. If so, how did be keep so much ammunition unnoticed
Unlike high schools, most universities can’t beef up security with a metal detector or two. So what can be done to protect students Other questions remain unanswered. Why was there a two-hour gap between t
A. reviewer.
B. journalist.
C. observer.
D. novelist.
The day of terror at the Virginia Polytechnic and State University in Blacksburg began at about 7:15 a. m. , with the shooting of a woman and a male resident adviser on the fourth floor of a dorm building on campus, Kristen Bensley, a freshman who lived below the floor where the shooting occurred, told TIME, "There were minors going on about the assailant was fighting with his girlfriend or something of that nature." Bensley notes that only residents can get into the building, using a specific "passport", that is, a card that one has to swipe in order to open doors before 10 a.m. If he was an outsider, someone would have had to let him in. Or more likely, he was a resident of the dorm himself. If so, how did be keep so much ammunition unnoticed
Unlike high schools, most universities can’t beef up security with a metal detector or two. So what can be done to protect students Other questions remain unanswered. Why was there a two-hour gap between t
A. 7:15 a. m. is the time a woman and a mate resident adviser were killed on the fourth floor of a dorm building on campus
B. The cause of shooting is the assailant was fighting with his girlfriend or something of that nature
C. Open dorm’s doors needs swipe a card before 10 a. m
D. The gunman was a resident of the dorm himself
Forget what Virginia Woolf said about
what a writer needs--a room of one’s own. The writer she has in mind wasn’t at
work on a novel in cyberspaee, one with multiple hypertexts, animated graphics
and downloads of trance, charming music. For that you also need graphic
interfaces, Real Player and maybe even a computer laboratory at Brown
University. That was where Mark Amerika--his legally adopted name; don’t ask him
about his birth name--composed much of his novel Gramatron. But Grammatron isn’t
just a story. It’s an online narrative (gramatron. com) that uses the
capabilities of cyberspace to tie the conventional story line into complicated
knots. In the four years it took to produce-it was completed in 1997-each new
advance in computer software became another potential story device. "I became
sort of dependent on the industry," jokes A. differences between conventional and modern novels B. how Mark Amerika composed his novel Gramatron C. common features of all modern electronic novels D. why Mark Amerika took on a new way of writing [单项选择]
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