問題詳情

VI.篇章結構 10%    While China continued to bask in the glory of last month's Olympics, 66 So far, fourbabies have died and more than 1,300 babies have been hospitalized due to illness caused bytoxic melamine found in baby milk powder formula, according to China's Ministry of Health.The scandal hit China like a tsunami as anxious parents of victimized babies demanded actionfrom the government and many of the country's angry netizens called for the execution of topofficials in charge of public health and food safety supervision.    It was quite an embarrassment for Beijing, which was on top of the world a month ago when itsOlympics were praised as one of the greatest in Olympic history. But the glow was ephemeral. 67. The issue is especially politically-charged because Beijing has pledged to reform food safetyregulations after a spate of pet food poisoning problems broke out last year in the United States68 The new scandal bodes ill for China, now the workshop of the world. The label "made inChina" has become a warning sign since the outbreak of unsafe products were found in theUnited States and Europe in recent years. In Japan, the incident of "poison dumplings" importedfrom China remains a rancorous issue. The baby formula scandal adds insult to injury.       69 The Ministry of Health named 22 dairy companies whose products have been foundcontaining melamine, including the state-owned Sanlu Group . While China's officials blameddairy companies for failing to come forward about the problem, Fonterra, a New Zealanddairy firm with a 43 percent stake in Sanlu, said it learned of the problem in August andtried to prod Sanlu into making a public recall, but to no avail.       As the scandal snowballed heads started to roll. The Communist Party fired Sanlu's CEO TianWenhua, an award-winning model worker, and Shijiazhuang's mayor and other officials in charge of product safety. The buck is unlikely to stop there. Bigger dominos in the province andthe capital are likely to fall.       70 . Beijing had spent seven years and US$42 billion for the Olympics to improve itsinternational image. Beijing can't afford to let the hard-fought prize be wiped out by a chemicalthat costs 200 yuan (US$30) per kilo, and watch the glow of the Games disappear in an instant. 
(A) where dogs and cats died after eating melamine-laced food imported from China. 
(B)This is because the stakes are too high 
(C)a shocking scandal grabbed international headlines. 
(D)All of a sudden, the scandal of contaminated milk powder grabbed internationalheadlines. 
(E)What is worse is the alleged cover-up by both the producers and government officials. 
66

參考答案

答案:[無官方正解]
難度:適中0.5
統計:A(0),B(0),C(0),D(0),E(0)

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