What is the animal research community trying to do?
A: Find new ways to reduce and replace animal testing.
B: Further commit themselves to animal research.
C: Criticize animal rights activists’ deceptive claims.
D: Help companies to save a lot of money and costs.
A: Find new ways to reduce and replace animal testing.
B: Further commit themselves to animal research.
C: Criticize animal rights activists’ deceptive claims.
D: Help companies to save a lot of money and costs.
举一反三
- Question 8 is based on the same passage of question 6.What is the animal research community trying to do? A: Find new ways to reduce and replace animal testing. B: Further commit themselves to animal research. C: Criticize animal rights activists' deceptive claims. D: Help companies to save a lot of money and costs.
- What do animal rights activists say wrong about animal research? A: Government regulations around the world. B: The advances of new drugs, vaccines and surgical implants. C: The causes of disease and its resistance to the current treatment. D: The ability of computers and emerging scientific techniques.
- The author, a physician engaged in doing animal research, expresses his growing frustration with the animal rights movement and justifies animal research with many reasons including how medical advances benefited from the experiments on animals.
- Question 7 is based on the same passage of question 6.What do animal rights activists say wrong about animal research? A: Government regulations around the world. B: The advances of new drugs, vaccines and surgical implants. C: The causes of disease and its resistance to the current treatment. D: The ability of computers and emerging scientific techniques.
- 3. The example of the grandmotherly woman is used to show the publics ______ A: discontent with animal research B: ignorance about medical science C: indifference to epidemics D: anxiety about animal rights