问题 单项选择题

二、根据以下资料,回答106-110题

某市2007、2008年度高校各专业学生数 单位:人

专业2007年2008年
毕业人数在校人数毕业人数在校人数
哲学9541066
经济学57335996594664
法学61538798004748
教育学52637457984703
文学157810593198513683
历史学10253498556
理学1158716313158522
工学349124912459830850
农学28518603632160
医学62652947956566
管理学139910275193213817

2007年该市高校学生在校人数最多的是哪个专业

A.经济学

B.教育学

C.文学

D.工学

答案

参考答案:D

解析: 由表查找知,经济学在校人数为3599人,教育学为3745人,文学为10593人,工学为24912人,所以选D。

选择题
单项选择题

European farm ministers have ended three weeks of negotiations with a deal which they claim represents genuine reform of the common agricultural policy (CAP). Will it be enough to kick off the Doha world trade negotiations

On the face of it, the deal agreed in the early hours of Thursday June 26th looks promising. Most subsidies linked to specific farm products are, at last, to be broken--the idea is to replace these with a direct payment to farmers, .unconnected to particular products. Support prices for several key products, including milk and butter, are to be cut-that should mean European prices eventually falling towards the world market level. Cut-ting the link between subsidy and production was the main objective of proposals put forward by Mr. Fischler, which had formed the starting point for the negotiations.

The CAP is hugely unpopular around the world. It subsidizes European farmers to such an extent that they can undercut farmers from poor countries, who also face trade barriers that largely exclude them from the potentially lucrative European market. Farm trade is also a key feature of the Doha round of trade talks, launched under the auspices of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in November 2001. Developing countries have lined up alongside a number of industrial countries to demand an end to the massive subsidies Europe pays its farmers. Several Doha deadlines have already been missed because of the EU’s intransigence, and the survival of the talks will be at risk if no progress is made by September, when the world’s trade ministers meet in Cancun, Mexico.

But now even the French seem to have gone along with the deal hammered out in Luxembourg. Up to a point, anyway. The package of measures gives the green light for the most eager reformers to move fast to implement the changes within their own countries. But there is an escape clause of sorts for the French and other reform-averse nations. They can delay implementation for up to two years. There is also a suggestion that the reforms might not apply where there is a chance that they would lead to a reduction in land under cultivation.

These 1et-outs are potentially damaging for Europe’s negotiators in the Doha round. They could significantly reduce the cost savings that the reforms might otherwise generate and, in turn, keep European expenditure on farm support unacceptably high by world standards. Mote generally, the escape clauses could undermine the reforms by encouraging the suspicion that the new package will not deliver the changes that its supporters claim Close analysis of what is inevitably a very complicated package might confirm the sceptics’ fears.

In what case might the escape clauses apply in reform-averse nations()

A. Farmers lose their interest in farming

B. Reforms have to be delayed for up to two years

C. Implementation of the measures goes too eagerly

D. The measures damage the reformers’ confidence