"The impulse to excess among young
Britons remains as powerful as ever, but the force that used to keep the impulse
in check has all but disappeared," claimed a newspaper. Legislation that made it
easier to get hold of a drink was "an Act for the increase of drunkenness and
immorality", asserted a politician. The first statement comes from 2005, the second from 1830. On both occasions, the object of scorn was a parliamentary bill that promised to sweep away "antiquated" licensing laws. As liberal regulations came into force this week, Britons on both sides of the debate unwittingly followed a 19th-century script. Reformers then, as now, took a benign view of human nature. Make booze cheaper and more readily available, said the liberalisers, and drinkers would develop sensible, continental European style ways. Nonsense, retorted t A. the statement by a critic B. the increase of drunkenness C. the decline of immorality D. the assertion by a politician [单项选择]The book, which is a useful guide for today’s young people, deals with many questions and problems that face them at school and at home as well as in society().
A. are faced B. confront C. in opposition D. meet. [填空题]Left-handers are more common to be found among______.
[填空题]The study found that cigarette smoking among American {{U}} (36) {{/U}} dropped during the past year. The drop continues a general decrease in teenage smoking rates that started in Nineteen-Ninety-Six.
American health officials praised the decrease as good news in the nation’s battle against smoking. They note that smoking remains the leading cause of {{U}} (37) {{/U}} death and disease. Smoking rates among American teenagers increased in the first half of the Nineteen-Nineties. However, teenage smoking rates have been decreasing in recent years.
The University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research {{U}} (38) {{/U}} the latest study. The Department of Health and Human Services reported the findings.
The study involved more than forty-four-thousand students in more than four-hundred schools across the United States. They were asked about past and daily use of {{U}} (39) {{/U}}, {{U}} (40) {{/U}} and illegal drugs.
The youngest students questioned were thirteen
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