Passage 10
In Switzerland, six miles west of Geneva, lies a collection of laboratories and buildings, and most curious of all, a circular mound1 of earth more than 650 feet in diameter. This cluster has unique importance. It is Europe’s one and only atomic city dedicated2 to investigating the atom for peaceful purposes. The strange buildings belong to the European Council for Nuclear Research, more popularly known, from its French initials, as CERN. The council was born when a handful of statesman and scientific experts met in Paris in 1950. Their aim was to "establish an organization providing for collaboration3 among European states in nuclear research of a pure scientific and fundamental character". The CERN agreement was signed in 1953, and work on the atomic city began in 1954. Today CERN’s facilities are among the most modern and the most diversified4 ones in the world. Impressive as the scientific aspect may be, the real significance of CERN may lie with the thousand people --- the scientists, lab workers, and administrative5 crew drawn6 from the fourteen member nations --- who populate it. British engineers work side by side with Swiss electricians, Yugoslav nuclear physicists7, and Dutch mathematicians8. The official languages are French and English, with German an unofficial third. But CERN is no tower of Babel --- the language of science is universal and all embracing.
The laboratories and buildings discussed in the passage belong to _____.[ANSWER]
A)a private research organization
B)Switzerland
C)the European Council for Nuclear Research
D)the United Nationa
The cluster has unique significance because it is _____.[ANSWER]
A)Europe’s only atomic city
B)a city devoted9 to nuclear research
C)a city dedicated to investigating the atom for peaceful purposes
D)a clearing house for the world’s nuclear research
CERN’s facilities for research are _____.[ANSWER]
A)limited but effective
B)among the best in the world
C)rapidly expanding
D)both a and c
The passage says that CERN is not a tower of Babel because _____.[ANSWER]
A)work is the common denominator of all the staff
B)the language of science is universal
C)CERN had adopted only two official languages
D)all the workers are drawn from one country
The real significance of CERN may lie in its staff because they _____.[ANSWER]
A)work in international harmony
B)come from all over the world
C)are investigating all phases of human conduct
D)are eliminating the problems of individual rationalism