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AULA ET DIEN/SIDI RINCON DE LOS IDIOMAS

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Bill Richards gets up at 6am every day. He is never late for work. However, on Monday, he forgot to set his alarm clock. He woke up at 7am and arrived at the office an hour late. His boss was angry and warned him never to be late again.

What is said about Bill Richards?

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 French President Nicolas Sarkozy 15-year-old son has been in trouble for pelting a police officer with tomatoes. The female officer was on duty at the Elysee Palace, guarding the president when she was hit on the cheek. Louis Sarkozy is President Sarkozy’s son from his first marriage. He lives in America but often comes to France to stay with his father. The president apologized to the officer.

What is said about President Sarkozy’s son?

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02. According to the article:

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01. President Nicolas Sarkozy admitted France’s “error of judgement” but stopped short of an apology in connection with the Rwandan 1994 genocide during his visit to the country on Thursday, aimed at kicking off a new era of diplomacy. French President Nicolas Sarkozy admitted Thursday at a joint press conference in Kigali with his Rwandan counterpart, Paul Kagame, that France had made “mistakes” at the time of the 1994 Rwandan genocide, in which 800,000 people, mainly from Kagame’s Tutsi minority were killed. “What happened here is unacceptable and compels the international community, including France, to reflect on the mistakes that stopped it from preventing and halting this abominable crime,” the French president told reporters. The French leader also visited the main genocide memorial in Kigali. He observed a minute’s silence in front of one of the mass graves containing the remains of some 250,000 people and laid a wreath. The 1994 genocide arose from a complicated and long-standing conflict between Rwanda’s two main ethnic groups, the Tutsis and the Hutus. The man who held the post of Rwandan president at the time, Juvènal Habyarimana, was a Hutu who supported Hutu interests. He died on April 6, 1994, when his plane was shot down from the sky in an apparent assassination. The Hutus promptly blamed the Tutsis, unleashing the mass slaughter of Tutsis over the course of the following months. Sarkozy’s visit—the first by a French president to Rwanda since the genocide—marks an important step in the reconciliation between the two countries. In the past, Kagame has repeatedly accused Paris of aiding the genocide.

The article states that:

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30. Internet-based attacks on critical systems such as gas, power and water have increased around the world, a report suggests. Security firm McAfee surveyed 200 IT executives working for utility companies in 14 countries. Eight out of ten said their networks had been targeted by hackers during the past year. China was seen as the most likely source of attacks, followed by Russia and the United States. The number of reported incidents was higher than in 2009 when just over half of those asked said they had fallen victim. Most of the reported security breaches took the form of distributed denial of service (DDOS) attacks. These typically involve a network of computers, under the control of criminals, overwhelming a company’s internet-connected systems. While such incidents have the potential to impact websites and corporate networks, researchers said it was unlikely they were intended to cut off energy supplies. However, there remained a possibility that DDOS attacks could do more harm in future, according to Stewart Baker, a former U.S. national security advisor to President George W Bush and one of the report’s authors. Arguably the best known example of an internet-borne threat disrupting an industrial system is the Stuxnet worm, which was discovered in 2010. Analysis suggests that the malicious computer code was specifically designed to take control of machinery in either Iran’s Bushehr or Natanz nuclear facilities. While it was known that the worm had spread more widely than its intended target, McAfee’s research suggested the full extent of its reach. Among those utility companies that had carried out a search for Stuxnet on their computer systems, 40% found traces of it. “It probably didn’t result in any obvious interference with the systems, because it wasn’t designed to do that,” said Mr. Baker. The Stuxnet worm...
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29. Internet-based attacks on critical systems such as gas, power and water have increased around the world, a report suggests. Security firm McAfee surveyed 200 IT executives working for utility companies in 14 countries. Eight out of ten said their networks had been targeted by hackers during the past year. China was seen as the most likely source of attacks, followed by Russia and the United States. The number of reported incidents was higher than in 2009 when just over half of those asked said they had fallen victim. Most of the reported security breaches took the form of distributed denial of service (DDOS) attacks. These typically involve a network of computers, under the control of criminals, overwhelming a company’s internet-connected systems. While such incidents have the potential to impact websites and corporate networks, researchers said it was unlikely they were intended to cut off energy supplies. However, there remained a possibility that DDOS attacks could do more harm in future, according to Stewart Baker, a former U.S. national security advisor to President George W Bush and one of the report’s authors. Arguably the best known example of an internet-borne threat disrupting an industrial system is the Stuxnet worm, which was discovered in 2010. Analysis suggests that the malicious computer code was specifically designed to take control of machinery in either Iran’s Bushehr or Natanz nuclear facilities. While it was known that the worm had spread more widely than its intended target, McAfee’s research suggested the full extent of its reach. Among those utility companies that had carried out a search for Stuxnet on their computer systems, 40% found traces of it. “It probably didn’t result in any obvious interference with the systems, because it wasn’t designed to do that,” said Mr. Baker. According to the report, which of the following is true?
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28. Chinese state media have confirmed reports of clashes between monks and police at a Tibetan monastery in Sichuan province, but deny it has been blockaded. The ‘Global Times’ said “Chinese police intervened to control lamas that had stirred up trouble” at Kirti Monastery in Aba county, western China. Tibetan exiles said armed police surrounded the complex last Tuesday and refused to allow monks to enter or leave. The Dalai Lama warned late last week that the situation could turn “explosive”. An article released by the Xinhua state news agency on its news wire this weekend –but not, apparently, on its website –said believers and vehicles were freely entering and monks could be seen outside. The report, headlined “Life Normal in Tibetan Monastery”, quoted a member of Kirti’s management saying it had “long ago formed a joint patrol team, with police, to prevent unspecified people from entering.” He added that “there couldn’t be any beatings” as staff at the entrance were very friendly. The International Campaign for Tibet said hundreds of residents gathered outside Kirti last Tuesday fearing authorities would forcibly remove monks for a “patriotic education” campaign after the self-immolation of a young lama. Citing exile sources, it alleged that security forces beat protesters and unleashed dogs on the crowd as they forced their way through to the monastery, surrounding it and preventing up to 2,500 monks from leaving. The U.S. expressed concern about the situation last week, with state department spokesman Mark Toner tell a regular briefing: “We have seen that Chinese security forces have cordoned off the Kirti Monastery…They’ve also imposed onerous restrictions on the monks and general public, and we believe these are inconsistent with internationally recognized principles of religious freedom.” .It is believed that the Chinese authorities are acting in response to...
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27. Chinese state media have confirmed reports of clashes between monks and police at a Tibetan monastery in Sichuan province, but deny it has been blockaded. The ‘Global Times’ said “Chinese police intervened to control lamas that had stirred up trouble” at Kirti Monastery in Aba county, western China. Tibetan exiles said armed police surrounded the complex last Tuesday and refused to allow monks to enter or leave. The Dalai Lama warned late last week that the situation could turn “explosive”. An article released by the Xinhua state news agency on its news wire this weekend –but not, apparently, on its website –said believers and vehicles were freely entering and monks could be seen outside. The report, headlined “Life Normal in Tibetan Monastery”, quoted a member of Kirti’s management saying it had “long ago formed a joint patrol team, with police, to prevent unspecified people from entering.” He added that “there couldn’t be any beatings” as staff at the entrance were very friendly. The International Campaign for Tibet said hundreds of residents gathered outside Kirti last Tuesday fearing authorities would forcibly remove monks for a “patriotic education” campaign after the self-immolation of a young lama. Citing exile sources, it alleged that security forces beat protesters and unleashed dogs on the crowd as they forced their way through to the monastery, surrounding it and preventing up to 2,500 monks from leaving. The U.S. expressed concern about the situation last week, with state department spokesman Mark Toner tell a regular briefing: “We have seen that Chinese security forces have cordoned off the Kirti Monastery…They’ve also imposed onerous restrictions on the monks and general public, and we believe these are inconsistent with internationally recognized principles of religious freedom.” . The reports by the Chinese state media and The International Campaign for Tibet could best be described as;
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26. Parents believe the benefits of testing their children for the genetic risk of some diseases outweigh the negative consequences, according to US scientists. In the study, published in the journal ‘Pediatrics’, parents who were offered a genetic test supported their children also being tested. The authors say doctors and politicians need to be more aware of the issue. Genewatch U.K. said children should never be tested for adult conditions. Genetic testing used to be confined to specialist clinics, but direct-to-consumer testing is now possible. People send a sample to a company in the post and are told if they have any genes which carry an increased risk of illness. In this study, 219 parents were tested for 15 genetic variants linked to heart disease, osteoporosis, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, type 2 diabetes and colon, skin and lung cancer. They were then asked a series of questions to compare benefits such as reassurance, knowledge and prevention, with risks such as invasion of privacy and psychological discomfort. The report found that ‘parents offered the genetic susceptibility test for common preventable conditions tended to consider that the potential benefits of this test for their own child could outweigh its risks.’ Helen Wallace, from genetic science lobby group Genewatch U.K, said: “Online gene tests frequently give misleading results because most common conditions such as cancer, obesity or diabetes are not predictable from a person’s genes, except in special circumstances. According to the report...
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25. Jailed oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky urged a judge in Moscow today to end his days “slurping gruel” in prison, saying the fate of every Russian was tied up with his own. Khodorkovsky was speaking on the final day of his trial for stealing $25bn of crude oil from subsidiaries of his own Yukos oil company, a charge widely seen as vengeance for his financing of political parties opposing the Kremlin. “A state that destroys its best companies, which are ready to become global champions, a country that holds its own citizens in contempt, trusting only the bureaucracy and the special services, is a sick state,” he told a packed courtroom. The Russian businessman was arrested in 2003 on charges of fraud and sentenced to eight years in a Siberian prison colony in 2005. A new trial of Khodorkovsky and his Yukos partner, Platon Lebedev, began in March last year after prosecutors laid fresh charges of stealing oil and shares, and money laundering. A verdict is expected on 15 December. Political analysts believe the Kremlin wants to ensure Khodorkovsky is not released in the run-up to the 2012 presidential elections. The 46-year-old, who has spent most of his confinement so far at a penal colony close to the border with China, has kept up a stream of diatribes against the Russian government via his website and articles in the press. Khodorkovsky addressed the court from behind a glass screen. He accused President Dmitry Medvedev of leading Russia into stagnation, saying he had dashed hopes the country would become “free from the arbitrary behavior of officials, free from corruption, free from unfairness and lawlessness.”. In his address to the court, Khodorkovsky states that...
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