大学英语六级秋季全程班
主讲老师:王江涛、李旭、田静、董仲蠡、刘畅、刘琦、潘赟、李卓然
课程特色:120小时干货精讲 包邮3斤礼盒 课后巩固练习 智能语音听力练习 知识堂答疑 在线阶段测评 学习群服务 作文批改 离线看
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课程与PC端同步更新,充分利用零碎时间。做题
海量精选试题,想练就练,瞬间提分。答疑
网校名师24小时在线答疑解惑直播
名师大咖面对面,有问有大收获多。Privatization is particularly frightening from the point of view of public well-being. A researcher employed by a university-affiliated hospital in Canada, working under contract with a medicine-making company, made public her findings that a particular drug was harmful. This violated the terms of her contract, and so she was fired. Her dismissal caused a scandal, and she was subsequently restored to her previous position. The university and hospital in question are now working out something similar to tenure (终身任职) for hospital-based researchers and guidelines for contracts, so that more public exposure of privately funded research will become possible. This is a rare victory and a small step in the right direction, but the general trend is the other way. Thanks to profit-driven private funding, researchers are not only forced to keep valuable information secret, they are often contractually obliged to keep discovered dangers to public health under wraps, too. Of course, we must