更多"Under federal law, it is illegal to"的相关试题:
[单项选择]Under federal law, it is illegal to ______ against minorities and women.
A. distinguish
B. exclude
C. object
D. discriminate
[单项选择]I can't ( ) it because it is against the law.
A. receive
B. accept
C. admit
D. adopt
[单项选择]Don't do anything against law again, otherwise, you and your ______ will be caught by the police.
A. comrades
B. associates
C. connection
D. relations
[单项选择]Under the new law, consumers are entitled to () if products malfunction or fail to perform as promised.
A. compensate
B. compensated
C. compensating
D. compensation
[单项选择]The plan for unity under a federal system ______ into effect in 1782.
A. put
B. got
C. went
D. set
[单项选择]The plan for unity under a federal system ______ into effect in 1782.
A. put
B. got
C. went
D. set
[单项选择]Under a new law, universities must ______ smoke-free policies on their campuses.
A. endow
B. endeavor
C. enact
D. endorse
[单项选择]The government is having problems with illegal immigration. ______ , their economic policies are failing.
A. Therefore
B. However
C. Thus
D. Furthermore
[单项选择]The Federal Communications Commission made an effort to prevent a single giant company from ______. competition in the market.
A. entering
B. evading
C. squelching
D. circumventing
[单项选择]The battle between Californians and federal regulators is about ______.
A. control over the price of power
B. necessity of removing price caps
C. hiking the energy prices in California
D. a regulation concerning power supply
[单项选择]
Text 3
When the Federal Communications Commission proposed giving low-power radio stations licenses on the FM dial, they knew they’d get flak from big broadcasting. The National Association of Broadcasters (NAB), after all, ’spends millions of dollars every year lobbying to keep everybody else off the radio spectrum—even locally managed, noncommercial stations that broadcast only within a four-mile radius. Sure enough, when the FCC proposed its new regulations, the NAB began screaming about all the terrible things those tiny radio transmitters could do to the big ones, whose signals are 500 times as strong and whose reach is nearly 20 times as far.
It was a pretty thin argument. So thin, in fact, that for a while if appeared the proposed regulations might survive the lobbying onslaught. And then the FCC and its allies ran into a most unlikely opponent, one with the moral authority to do real damage to their cause: National Public Radio. On
A. increase competition on the airwaves
B. counter the effects of prior legislation
C. increase local programming in urban areas
D. encourage community involvement in radio broadcasting