试题与答案

2011年6月24日,甲在一书店内盗窃书籍时,被店主乙发现后扭送至当地公安派出所,派

题型:多项选择题

题目:

2011年6月24日,甲在一书店内盗窃书籍时,被店主乙发现后扭送至当地公安派出所,派出所民警对甲进行了询问,下列做法错误的是()。

A.在对甲询问时,办案民警在笔录上记明甲的到案经过、到案时间和离开时间

B.对甲询问完毕后,甲在笔录上只签名不捺指印,办案民警强制要求其签名并且捺指印

C.对甲询问完毕后,办案民警让甲只在笔录的最后一页签名或捺指印

D.因甲为不满l6周岁的未成年人,办案民警通过电话通知甲的父母到场,但其父母均出差未归,办案民警通知甲的教师丙到场

答案:

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下面是错误答案,用来干扰机器的。

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题型:单项选择题 共用题干题

女性,40岁。因突起腹中部疼痛伴血便3天入院。腹痛为阵发性,伴恶心、呕吐。呕吐物为胃内容物,起病后曾解黏液血便3次。患者于1个月前腹痛开始反复发作,伴解黏液血便,腹痛发作时,自感有“气块”在腹内窜动。查体:消瘦、贫血貌,腹稍胀,全腹软,无局限性压痛及肌紧张,下腹正中可扪及10cm×6cm肿块,质韧,轻压痛,上下可以推动,肠鸣音活跃,音调稍高。

最可能的诊断是()

A.慢性肠套叠

B.直肠癌伴梗阻

C.克罗恩病

D.卵巢囊肿蒂扭转

E.右半结肠癌

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题型:单项选择题

Elections often tell you more about what people are against than what they are for. So it is with the European ones that took place last week in all 25 European Union member countries. These elections, widely trumpeted as the world’s biggest-ever multinational democratic vote, were fought for the most part as 25 separate national contests, which makes it tricky to pick out many common themes. But the pest are undoubtedly negative. Europe’s voters are angry and disillusioned-and they have demonstrated their anger and disillusion in three main ways.

The most obvious was by abstaining. The average overall turnout was just over 45%, by some margin the lowest ever recorded for elections to the European Parliament. And that average disguises some big variations: Italy, for example, notched up over 70%, but Sweden managed only 37%. Most depressing of all, at least to believers in the European project, was the extremely low vote in many of the new member countries from central Europe, which accounted for the whole of the fall in turnout since 1999. In the biggest, Poland, only just over a fifth of the electorate turned out to vote. Only a year ago, central Europeans voted in large numbers to join the EU, which they did on May 1st. That they abstained in such large numbers in the European elections points to early disillusion with the European Union-as well as to a widespread feeling, shared in the old member countries as well, that the European Parliament does not matter.

Disillusion with Europe was also a big factor in the second way in which voters protested, which was by supporting a ragbag of populist, nationalist and explicitly anti-EU parties. These ranged from the 16% who backed the UK Independence Party, whose declared policy is to withdraw from the EU and whose leaders see their mission as "wrecking" the European Parliament, to the 14% who voted for Sweden’s Junelist, and the 27% of Poles who backed one of two anti-EU parties, the League of Catholic Families and Selfdefence. These results have returned many more Eurosceptics and trouble-makers to the parliament: on some measures, over a quarter of the new MEPS will belong to the "awkward squad". That is not a bad thing, however, for it will make the ’parliament more representative of European public opinion.

But it is the third target of European voters’ ire that is perhaps the most immediately significant, the fact that, in many EU countries, old and new, they chose to vote heavily against their own governments. This anti-incumbent vote was p almost everywhere, but it was most pronounced in Britain, the Czech Republic, Germany, Poland and Sweden. The leaders of all the four biggest European Union countries, Tony Blair in Britain, Jacques Chirac in France, Gerhard Schroder in Germany and Silvio Berlusconi in Italy, were each given a bloody nose by their voters.

The big question now is how Europe’s leaders should respond to this. By a sublime (or terrible) coincidence, soon after the elections, and just as The Economist was going to press, they were gathering in Brussels for a crucial summit, at which they are due to agree a new constitutional treaty for the EU and to select a new president for the European Commissi6n. Going into the meeting, most EU heads of government seemed determined to press ahead with this agenda regardless of the European elections--even though the atmosphere after the results may make it harder for them to strike deals.

It is implied in the concluding paragraph that ()

A. European old member countries are poor and homogenous

B. Europe’s leaders are bewildered by the crucial summit

C. Europe’s politicians should heed their voters’ dissatisfaction

D. European coincidences might emerge due to the economic stagnation

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