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Part 2 4. Islamic terrorism may be a distant threat for Shearer Lumber Products, a timber

company based in Idaho. But eco-terrorism is a very real one. In November, the Earth Liberation Front (ELF), an underground organization, gave warning that it had“spiked”trees in the Nez Perce national forest to protest against logging. Spiking involves hiding metal bars in tree trunks, thereby potentially crippling chain saws and hurting people. More such attacks are expected. How do they fit into America’s war on terrorism?

The nation’s forests have seen a sharp increase in violent incidents—equipment vandalized, people intimidated—over the past ten years. Shearer now carefully inspects every tree before cutting and has been using metal detectors to check every trunk being processed. Yet Ihor Mereszczak, of the Nez Perce Forest Service, says it has been hard to get the FBI’s attention, and investigations have got nowhere.

The ELF is only one thread in a web of underground radical environmentalists. Its aim is to inflict as much financial pain as possible on organizations or people who, by its lights, are exploiting the environment. The ELF, though made up of anonymous cells, nonetheless operates a website offering tips on how to cause fires with electric timers. Until recently, it also had a public spokesman.

Together with the Animal Liberation Front (ALF), which operates along the same lines, the ELF is estimated to be responsible for over $45m-worth of damage in North America over the past few years. In 1998, it caused fires that did $12m-worth of damage in Vail, Colorado, to make the point that the ski resort’s expansion was threatening places where lynxes live. Earlier this year, the ELF burned down the offices of a lumber company in Oregon. Since September 11th, the ALF and ELF have claimed responsibility for starting a fire at a primate research center in New Mexico, releasing mink from an Iowa fur farm, and firebombing a federal corral for wild horses in California.

Are they terrorists? The two groups reject the label, claiming to take all precautions against harming “animals, whether humans or not”. But earlier this year Louis Freeh, the FBI’s boss, listed both organizations among the most active domestic terrorist groups. Scott McInnis, the Republican congressman whose district includes Vail, argues it is only a matter of time before somebody gets hurt, and he now expects the FBI to put in more resources.

The House subcommittee on forests, which Mr McInnis heads, will hold a hearing on eco-terrorism in February. But he has annoyed some mainstream green groups by asking them to denounce the ELF’s and ALF’s methods. Greenpeace, for instance, says that its disapproval is self-evident, and resents being asked to express it. Mr. McInnis still wants their answer by December 1st, but the war on eco-terrorism is off to a rocky start.

第36题:What did the ELF do to Shearer Lumber Products?

[A] Hurt its employees. [B] Crippled its equipments. [C] Hid metals in its trees. [D] Protested against its spiking.

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第1题
Part BDirections: In the following text, some sentences have been removed. For Questions

Part BDirections:

In the following text, some sentences have been removed. For Questions 41-45, choose the most suitable one from the list A-G to fit into the numbered blank when there are tow extra choices, which do not fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points)

After its misadventures in 1993, when American marines were driven out of Somalia by skinny gunmen, America has used a long spoon in supping with Somalia's warlords. This, like so much else, changed on September 11th. (41) .

Clandestine, up to a point: within hours of the arrival in Baidoa of nine closely cropped Americans sporting matching satellite phones and shades, their activities were broadcast. After meeting various warlords, the group inspected a compound that had apparently been offered to them as their future base. They also saw an old military depot. Neither can have been encouraging: the compound has been taken over by war-displaced families, and the depot by thorn-scrub.

America was already convinced of al-Qaeda's presence in Somalia. Its had listed a Somali Islamic group, al-Itihaad al-Islamiya (Islamic Unity), as a terrorist organisation. (42) . It fears that lawless Somalia could become a haven for escapes from Afghanistan. The American navy is currently patrolling the country's long coastline, while spy planes are said to be criss-crossing the heavens.

(43) . With a little bit of help, he told his American visitors, he would be ready "to liberate the country from these evil forces". America had already heard as much through its embassies in Nairobi and Addis Ababa, which maintain contact with warlords, and from Ethiopia.

The warlords are supported by Ethiopia, which has a historical fear of strong Somalia, in a bid to oppose the government. But their differing views on where to strike at the "terrorists" reveal that their individual ambitions are even sharper than their dislike of the government.

Mr. Ismail says that Merca, which is claimed by his Rahanwein clan, is the capital of terror. (44) . The UN says there is only an orphanage there now. But the island is close to Mr. Morgan's home town of Kismaayo, which he failed to capture from a pro-government militia in July, and he is determined not to fail again.

None of this looks good for Somalia's official president, Abdiquassim Salad Hassan, Whose government is in control of about half the capital, Mogadishu. He has formed his own anti-terrorism unit, and invited America to send investigators, or even troops. America, armed with stories about the presence of al-Itihaad members held back, but on December 18th sent an envoy to Mogadishu.

Both Mr. Hassan and the UN say that al-Itihaad is not a terrorist organisation. It emerged as an armed force in 1991, battling for power in the aftermath of Siad Barre's fall. It had some early successes, briefly taking Kismaayo. But it was always dependent on the blessing of its members' clan elders. When the elders eventually called their fighters back, a hard core of Islamists fled to the Gedo border region where, in 1997, they were crushed by Ethiopian troops (45) .

The Baidoa alliance plainly hopes to be supported as proxies in a fight against "terrorism" and the Mogadishu regime. But the latest intelligence leaks suggest that the first reports may have overestimated al-Qaeda's presence in Somalia. Nor would Mr. bin Laden and his henchmen find it easy to lie low in an oral culture that considers rumour-mongering to be a form. of manners. Even so, the warlords seem to believe that they have won some promise of help. Soon after the arrival of the American group, they pulled out of the peace talks they had been holding with their government in Nairobi.

[A] Al-Itihaad subsequently infiltrated Somalia's business class, and now runs Islamic schools, courts and clinics with the money it has accumulated.

[B] According to Abdullahi Sheikh Ismail, the acting chairman of the loose alliance of warlords who control most of Somalia and are based in Baidoa, there are "approximately 20,480 armed extremists" in Somalia and "85% of the government is al-Itihaad".

[C] Muhammad Hersi Morgan, known as the "butcher of Hargeisa" because he once razed that town to the ground, says an al-Itihaad camp on Ras Kamboni island, is still active.

[D] But since September 11th 2001, western governments anxious to prevent al-Qaeda from using Somalia as a base, have pressed the warlords to make peace.

[E] American intelligence officers are working with two warlords to gather information about suspected al-Qaeda people in Somalia.

[F] On December 9th America sent a clandestine mission to talk to a collection of Somali warlords, who like to claim that their country, in particular their UN-sponsored government, is overrun with terrorists.

[G] It had also forced the closure of Barakaat, Somalia's biggest banking and telecoms company, which handles most of the remittances that somalis working abroad send back to their families.

第41题:

(41) .

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第2题
以下哪些事件可以触发NR随机接入()。

A.teleadmin:te!edmin

B.huawei:huawei123

C.zhangsan:zhangsan100

D.zhangsan:Pu4#$h*2!1

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第3题
以下哪些账号对应的口令为弱口令()

A.zhangsan:Pu4#$h*2!1

B.huawei:huawei@123

C.zhangsan:zhangsan100

D.teleadmin:te!e@dmin

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第4题
同一物理单板或者两两相邻的网元之间最多支持()条VC12虚拟TE链路

A.1

B.2

C.4

D.8

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第5题
用2×10-2mol/L EDTA滴定同浓度的Fe3+溶液,若要求△pM'=±0.2、TE=±0.1%,计算滴定的适宜酸度范围。[已知:lgK

用2×10-2mol/L EDTA滴定同浓度的Fe3+溶液,若要求△pM'=±0.2、TE=±0.1%,计算滴定的适宜酸度范围。[已知:lgKFeY为25.1,Fe(OH)3的Ksp=10-37.4]

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第6题
Averroёs held that _____.[A] Islamic theology was often subordinate to philosophy

Averroёs held that _____.

[A] Islamic theology was often subordinate to philosophy

[B] religious truth was nothing but imaginative fantasy

[C] real truth was inaccessible to many common people

[D] imperfect expressions were result of flawed religion

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第7题
一个喇叭天线由矩形波导馈电,传输TE,。波,喇叭的归一化阻抗=0.8+j0.6,若用一个对称电容膜片进行匹配,如图所

一个喇叭天线由矩形波导馈电,传输TE,。波,喇叭的归一化阻抗一个喇叭天线由矩形波导馈电,传输TE,。波,喇叭的归一化阻抗=0.8+j0.6,若用一个对称电容膜片=0.8+j0.6,若用一个对称电容膜片进行匹配,如图所示。求电容膜片接入处到喇叭的距离l及膜片的b'/a值。著采用一个对称电感膜片进行匹配,则l及δ/a又各为多少(设b=a/2,λp=2a)?

一个喇叭天线由矩形波导馈电,传输TE,。波,喇叭的归一化阻抗=0.8+j0.6,若用一个对称电容膜片

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第8题
设氩等离子体密度n=2.0×1010cm-3,电子温度Te=1.0eV,离子温度Ti=0.026eV,存在恒定均匀磁场B=800Gauss,求(1)德拜半径λD;(2)电子等离子体频率ωpe和离子等离子体频率ωpi;(3)电子回旋频率Ωe和离子回旋频率ΩI;(4)电子回旋半径rce和离子回旋半径rci。
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第9题
对下面的文法G E➝TE' E'➝+E|ε T➝FT' T'➝T|ε F➝PF' F'➝*F|ε P➝(E)|a|b|Λ (1)计算这个文法的每个非终端符的FIRST和EOLLOW (2)证明这个文法是LL(1)的 (3)构造它的预测分析表 (4)构造它的递归下降分析程序
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第10题
Emotions play an important part in the negotiation process, although it is only in rec
ent years that their effect is being studied. Emotions have the potential to play either a positive or negative role in negotiation. During negotiations, the decision as to whether or not to settle rests in part on emotional factors. Negative emotions can cause intense and even irrational behavior, and can cause conflicts and negotiations to break down, but may be instrumental in attaining concessions. On the other hand, positive emotions often facilitate reaching an agreement and help to maximize joint gains, but can also be instrumental in attaining concessions. Positive and negative discrete emotions can be strategically displayed to influence task and relational outcomes and may play out differently across cultural boundaries.

1. Emotions play an important role during the negotiation, although their effect is being studied just().

A、at the beginning of negotiation practice

B、during the negotiation process

C、not long before

2. Negative emotions may()make concessions.

A、be helpful to

B、be harmful to

C、be nothing to

3. During negotiations, the decision as to whether or not to settle depends in part on emotional factors.()

A、totally

B、to some extend

C、completely not

4. Attaining concessions can be done()

A、only by negative emotions

B、only by positive emotions

C、by both negative and positive emotions

5. In different cultures, negotiators should use()strategies to show positive and negative emotions.

A、the same

B、different

C、no

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