问题 填空题
己知有理数a的相反数是
5
3
,有理数b的倒数是-
5
2
,则
3a+5b
3a-5b
的值是______.
答案

∵有理数a的相反数是

5
3
,有理数b的倒数是-
5
2

∴a=-

5
3
,b=-
2
5

3a+5b
3a-5b
=
3×(-
5
3
)+5×(-
2
5
)
3×(-
5
3
)-5×(-
2
5
)
=
-5-2
-5+2
=
7
3

故答案为:

7
3

问答题


案情:甲、乙国有企业与另外7家国有企业拟联合组建设立永发有限责任公司(以下简称永发公司),公司章程的部分内容是:公司股东会除召开定期会议外,还可以召开临时会议,临时会议须经代表1/2以上表决权的股东、1/2以上的董事或1/2以上的监事提议召开。在申请公司设立登记时,工商行政管理机关指出了公司章程中规定的关于召开临时股东会议方面的不合法之处。经全体股东协商后,予以纠正。
2005年3月,永发公司依法登记设立,注册资本为1亿元,其中甲以工业产权出资,协议作价金额1200万元;乙出资2400万元,是出资最多的股东。公司成立后,由甲召集和主持首次股东会会议,设立了董事会。2005年5月,永发公司董事会发现,甲作为出资的工业产权的实际价额显著低于公司章程所定的价额,为了使公司股东出资总额仍达到1亿元,董事会提出了解决方案:由甲补足差额;如果甲不能补足差额,则由其他股东按出资比例分担该差额。
2006年5月,公司经过一段时间的运作后,经济效益较好,董事会拟定了一个增加注册资本的方案,方案提出将公司现有的注册资本由1亿元增加到1.5亿元。增资方案提交到股东会讨论表决时,有7家股东赞成增资。7家股东出资总和为5830万元,占表决权总数的 58.3%;有2家股东不赞成增资,2家股东出资总和为4170万元,占表决权总数的41.7%。股东会通过增资决议,并授权董事会执行。
2006年3月,永发公司因业务发展需要,依法成立了上海分公司。上海分公司在生产经营过程中,因违约被诉至法院,对方以永发公司是上海分公司的总公司为由,要求永发公司承担违约责任。
根据上述事实,请按照《公司法》的规定,分析回答下列问题:

永发公司设立过程中订立的公司章程中关于召开临时股东会议的规定是否合法说明理由。

问答题

(46)A long-held view of the history of the English colonies that became the United States has been that England’s policy toward these colonies before 1763 was dictated by commercial interests and that a change to a more imperial policy generated the tensions that ultimately led to the American Revolution. In a recent study, Stephen Saunders Webb has resented a formidable challenge to this view. According to Webb, England already had a military imperial policy for more than a century before the American Revolution. He sees Charles Ⅱ, the English monarch between 1660 and 1685, as the proper successor of the Tudor monarchs of the sixteenth century and of Oliver Cromwell, all of whom were bent on extending centralized executive power over England’s possessions through the use of what Webb calls "garrison government. " Garrison government allowed the colonists a legislative assembly, but real authority, in Webb’s view, belonged to the colonial governor, who was appointed by the king and supported by the "garrison," that is, by the local contingent of English troops under the colonial governor’s command.

According to Webb, the purpose of garrison government was to provide military support for a royal policy designed to limit the power of the upper classes in the American colonies. (47) Webb argues that the colonial legislative assemblies represented the interests not of the common people but of the colonial upper classes, a coalition of merchants and nobility who favored self-rule and sought to elevate legislative authority at the expense of the executive. It was, according to Webb, the colonial governors who favored the small farmer, opposed the plantation system, and tried through taxation to break up large holdings of land. Backed by the military presence of the garrison, these governors tried to prevent the gentry and merchants, allied in the colonial assemblies, from transforming colonial America into a capitalistic oligarchy.

(48) Webb’s study illuminates the political alignments that existed in the colonies in the century prior to the American Revolution, but his view of the crown’s use of the military as an instrument of colonial policy is not entirely convincing. England during the seventeenth century was not noted for its military achievements. Cromwell did mount England’s most ambitious overseas military expedition in more than a century, but it proved to be an utter failure. Under Charles II, the English army was too small to be a major instrument of government. (49) Not until the war in France in 1697 did William III persuade Parliament to create a professional standing army, and Parliament’s price for doing so was to keep the army under tight legislative control. (50) While it may be true that the crown attempted to diminish the power of the colonial upper classes, it is hard to imagine how the English army during the seventeenth century could have provided significant military support for such a policy.

(48) Webb’s study illuminates the political alignments that existed in the colonies in the century prior to the American Revolution, but his view of the crown’s use of the military as an instrument of colonial policy is not entirely convincing.