问题 单项选择题

Questions 1~5


Writing articles about films for The Front Page was my first proper job. Before then I had done bits of reviewing—novels for other newspapers, films for a magazine and anything I was asked to do for the radio. That was how I met Tom Seaton, the first arts editor of The Front Page, who had also written for radio and television. He hired me, but Tom was not primarily a journalist, or he would certainly have been more careful in choosing his staff.
At first, his idea was that a team of critics should take care of the art forms that didn’t require specialized knowledge: books, TV, theatre, film and radio. There would be a weekly lunch at which we would make our choices from the artistic material that Tom had decided we should cover, though there would also be guests to make the atmosphere sociable.
It all felt a bit of a dream at that time: a new newspaper, and I was one of the team. It seemed so unlikely that a paper could he introduced into a crowded market. It seemed just as likely that a millionaire wanted to help me personally, and was pretending to employ me. Such was my lack of self-confidence. In fact, the first time I saw someone reading the newspaper on the London Underground, then turning to a page on which one of my reviews appeared, I didn’t know where to look.
Tom’s original scheme for a team of critics for the arts never took off. It was a good idea, but we didn’t get together as planned and so everything was done by phone. It turned out, too, that the general public out there preferred to associate a reviewer with a single subject area, and so I chose film. Without Tom’s initial push, though, we would hardly have come up with the present arrangement, by which I write an extended weekly piece, usually on one film.
The space I am given allows me to broaden my argument—or forces me, in an uninteresting week, to make something out of nothing. But what is my role in the public arena I assume that people choose what films to go to on the basis of the stars, the publicity or the director. There is also such a thing as loyalty to "type" or its opposite. It can only rarely happen that someone who hates westerns buys a ticket for one after reading a review, or a love story addict avoids a romantic film because of what the papers say.
So if a film review isn’t really a consumer guide, what is it I certainly don’t feel I have a responsibility to be "right" about a movie. Nor do I think there should be a certain number of "great" and "bad" films each year. All I have to do is put forward an argument. I’m not a judge, and nor would I want to be.

Which of the following best describes what the author says about his work

A. He can freely express his opinion.
B. He prefers to write about films he likes.
C. His success varies from year to year.
D. He writes according to accepted rules.

答案

参考答案:A

单项选择题

光华化肥厂财务科三名会计都姓刘。老刘是财务科长;大刘负责报表和稽核工作;小刘是出纳。该厂2008年12月发生如下事件: (一)月初,小刘因病请假两周,老刘认为小刘痊愈后,仍从事出纳工作,故责成大刘临时接替小刘工作,双方未办理会计工作交接手续。 (二)在大刘接替小刘做出纳工作期间,销售部负责人拿来一张发票报销,发票内容是在某超市购买价值5万元的办公用品,未附验收证明,大刘明知发票注明的经济内容与实际不符,看到厂领导签字,就予以报销。 (三)为了维护产品销售渠道,厂领导决定在外省市分别设立三个办事处,每个办事处开办费3万元,具体事宜责成小刘办理。 (四)该厂外聘某专家进行技术服务,服务费一年3万元。12月30日,技术科申请专家服务费3万元,财务科小刘根据领导领导指示全额支付,并未按照规定扣缴个人所得税。 (五)为了应对金融危机,该厂决定压缩行政支出,精减行政人员,将原由档案部门保管的历年财务会计档案统一移交财务科进行保管,财务科科长老刘将此项工作交给出纳小刘负责。 (六)为了保证在金融危机的形势下实现明年开门红,厂领导找到财务科长老刘,大刘将已实现的200万元销售收入放在明年一月份反映,老刘欣然同意并责成大刘处理。大刘按领导的要求将已实现的200万元销售收入挂在往来款项中,领导感到非常满意。 (七)年底厂里评选先进时,大刘榜上有名,对此大刘十分感慨地说,这么多年我还是第一次体会到了,不能与领导扭着干,领导让干啥就干啥,让怎么干就怎么干革命,只要两袖清风,就没有问题。

财务科长老刘责成大刘临时负责出纳工作,不符合会计法律制度中()的有关规定

A.会计工作出岗位设置

B.会计人员回避制度

C.不相容职务相互分离

D.授权审批控制

单项选择题 A1/A2型题