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【单选题】
The single most shattering statistic about life in America in the late 1990s was that tobacco killed more people than the combined total of those who died from AIDS, car accidents, alcohol, murder, suicide, illegal drugs and fire. The deaths of more than 400, 000 Americans each year, 160, 000 of them from lung cancer, make a strong case for the prohibition of tobacco, and particularly of cigarettes. The case, backed by solid evidence, has been made in every public arena since the early 1950s, when the first convincing link between smoking and cancer was established in clinical and epidemiological studies—yet 50 million Americans still go on smoking. tobacco-related illness. It is a remarkable story, clearly told, astonishingly well documented and with a transparent moral motif. Most smokers in America eventually manage to quit, and local laws banning smoking in public have become common, but the industry prospers. The tobacco companies have survived virtually everything their opponents have thrown at them. At the end of his story, Mr. Brandt writes: 'The legal assault on Big Tobacco had been all but repelled. The industry was decidedly intact, ready to do business profitably at home and abroad. 'Although the conclusion is not to his liking, Mr. Brandt's is the first full and convincing explanation of how they pulled it off. Cigarettes overcame any lingering opposition to the pleasure they gave when American soldiers came to crave them during the World War I. War, says Mr. Brandt, was 'a critical watershed in establishing the cigarette as a dominant product in modern consumer culture. ' Cigarettes were sexy, and the companies poured money into advertising. By 1950 Americans smoked 350 billion cigarettes a year and the industry accounted for 3.5% of consumer spending on non-durables. The first 50 years of the'cigarette century'were a golden era for Big Tobacco. That was simply because, until the 1940s, not enough men had been smoking for long enough to develop fatal cancers (women did not reach this threshold until the 1970s). The first clinical and epidemiological studies linking eigarette-smoking and lung cancer were published only in 1950. By 1953 the six leading companies had agreed that a collective response was required. They paid handsomely for a public-relations campaign that insistently denied any proof of a causal connection between smoking and cancer. This worked well until 1964, when a devastating report from the surgeon-general's advisory committee in effect ended medical uncertainty about the harmfulness of smoking. But Big Tobacco rode the punches. When the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) ruled that health warnings must appear on each pack, the industry, consented. But it shrewdly exploited the warning: 'In a culture that emphasised individual responsibility, smokers would bear the blame for willful risk-taking,' notes Mr. Brandt. Many cases for damages against the companies foundered on that rock. Cigarette-makers also marshaled their numerous allies in Congress to help the passage of a law that bypassed federal agencies such as the FTC, and made Congress itself solely responsible for tobacco regulation. Describing the pervasive influence of tobacco lobbyists, he says: 'Legislation from Congress testified to the masterful preparation and strategic command of the tobacco industry. ' However, the industry was powerless to prevent a flood of damaging internal documents, leaked by insiders. The companies were shown, for instance, to have cynically disregarded evidence from their in-house researchers about the addictive properties of nicotine. Internal papers also showed that extra nicotine was added to cigarettes to guarantee smokers sufficient' satisfaction'. Despite such public-relations disasters, the industry continued to win judgments, most significantly when the Supreme Court rejected by five votes to four a potentially calamitous attack that
A.
Allan Brandt is a writer of great talent for writing.
B.
the tobacco industry was just out of a heavy fine.
C.
most of the Americans died from lung cancer.
D.
the book on a history of the cigarette is unintelligible.
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参考答案:
举一反三
【单选题】LTE/EPC网络的去附着流程可由什么实体发起()
A.
UE
B.
MME
C.
HSS
D.
以上都对
【单选题】直接用于产品生产的燃料费用,应直接记入或者分配记入( )科目 。
A.
“制造费用”
B.
“管理费用”
C.
“财务费用”
D.
“基本生产成本”
【单选题】函数调用时,若实参是简单变量,它和对应形参之间的数据传递方式是:( )
A.
实参传给形参,函数调用结束后形参再传回实参
B.
地址传递
C.
单向值传递,实参值复制传给形参
D.
传递方式由用户指定
【单选题】LTE/EPC网络的去附着流程可由什么实体发起()
A.
UE
B.
MME
C.
HSS
D.
都可以
【单选题】LTE/EPC网络的去附着流程可由( )实体发起。
A.
UE
B.
MME
C.
HSS
D.
以上都对
【单选题】在Windows 7操作系统中,正确关闭计算机的操作是( )。
A.
直接按主机面板上的电源按钮
B.
直接拔掉电源关闭计算机。
C.
在文件未保存的情况下,单击“开始”按钮,在打开的“开始”菜单中单击“关机”按钮。
D.
在保存文件并关闭所有运行的程序后,单击“开始”按钮,在打开的“开始”菜单中单击“关机”按钮 。
【单选题】LTE/EPC网络的去附着流程可由( )发起
A.
UE
B.
MME
C.
HSS
D.
以上都是
【单选题】在Windows 7操作系统中,正确关闭计算机的操作是( )。
A.
在文件未保存的情况下,单击“开始”按钮,在打开的“开始”菜单中单击“关机”按钮;
B.
在保存文件并关闭所有运行的程序后,单击“开始”按钮,在打开的“开始”菜单中单击“关机”按钮 ;
C.
直接按主机面板上的电源按钮 ;
D.
直接拔掉电源关闭计算机;
【单选题】函数调用时,若实参是简单变量,它和对应形参之间的数据传递方式是:( )
A.
实参传给形参,函数调用结束后形参再传回实参
B.
地址传递
C.
单向值传递,由复制实参值传给形参
D.
传递方式由用户指定
【单选题】直接用于产品生产的燃料费用,应记入的会计科目是
A.
“制造费用”
B.
“管理费用”
C.
“销售费用”
D.
“基本生产成本”
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