问题 单项选择题

下列关于单折账户挂失后续处理时核实客户身份信息的表述,不正确的是()。

A、要通过人工和证件鉴别仪识别证件真伪,核对有效期是否过期。

B、当提供居民身份证件时,要通过联网核查系统核对证件的号码、姓名、有效期的一致性,核对回显照片、证件照片与本人三者的一致性。

C、挂失后续处理业务询问并核对特殊业务信息,进一步核对客户真实性。

D、对于客户持居民身份证和临时身份证以外的其他不能联网核查的有效身份证件办理挂失后续处理业务,营业机构在核实确认客户身份时,可以通过要求客户提供辅助证件。

答案

参考答案:C

单项选择题

Pretty in pink: adult women do not remember being so obsessed with the colour, yet it is pervasive in our young girls’ lives. It is not that pink is intrinsically bad, but it is such a tiny slice of the rainbow and, though it may celebrate girlhood in one way, it also repeatedly and firmly fuses girls’ identity to appearance. Then it presents that connection, even among two-year-olds, between girls as not only innocent but as evidence of innocence. Looking around, l despaired at the singular lack of imagination about girls’ lives and interests.

Girls’ attraction to pink may seem unavoidable, somehow encoded in their DNA, but according to Jo Paoletti, an associate professor of American Studies, it is not. Children were not colour-coded at all until the early 20th century: in the era before domestic washing machines all babies wore white as a practical matter, since the only way of getting clothes clean was to boil them. What’s more, both boys and girls wore what were thought of as gender-neutral dresses. When nursery colours were introduced, pink was actually considered the more masculine colour, a pastel version of red, which was associated with strength. Blue, with its intimations of the Virgin Mary, constancy and faithfulness, symbolised femininity. It was not until the mid-1980s, when amplifying age and sex differences became a dominant children’s marketing strategy, that pink fully Came into its own, when it began to seem inherently attractive to girls, part of what defined them as female, at least for the first few critical years.

I had not realised how profoundly marketing trends dictated our perception of what is natural to kins, including our core beliefs about their psychological development. Take the toddler. I assumed that phase was something experts developed after years of research into children’s behaviour: wrong. Turns out, according to Daniel Cook, a historian of childhood consumerism, it was popularised as a marketing trick by clothing manufacturers in the 1930s.

Trade publications counselled department stores that, in order to increase sales, they should create a "third stepping stone" between infant wear and older kids’ clothes. It was only after "toddler" became a common shoppers’ term that it evolved into a broadly accepted developmental stage. Splitting kids, or adults, into ever- tinier categories has proved a sure-fire way to boost profits. And one of the easiest ways to segment a market is to magnify gender differences—or invent them where they did not previously exist.

We may learn from Paragraph 4 that department stores were advised to()

A. focus on infant wear and older kids’ clothes

B. attach equal importance to different genders

C. classify consumers into smaller groups

D. create some common shoppers’ terms

选择题