首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Banking on Sperm A)It came to him in a dream. Ole Schou was a young Danish business student when he awoke one morning two decade
Banking on Sperm A)It came to him in a dream. Ole Schou was a young Danish business student when he awoke one morning two decade
admin
2014-12-31
146
问题
Banking on Sperm
A)It came to him in a dream. Ole Schou was a young Danish business student when he awoke one morning two decades ago with images of spermatozoa swimming in his head. Schou’s strange nocturnal vision gave rise to an obsession. "Some people collect stamps; others play golf," he explains, "I studied sperm." With no scientific or medical training, Schou set out to make himself an expert,poring over the scientific literature and consulting specialists about different methods for freezing sperm. His goal: to establish "the best sperm bank in the world."
B)Schou’ s single-minded devotion has paid off. Cryos, the company he founded in 1987 in the Danish city, Aarhus, claims to be the world’s largest sperm bank, with more than 200 active donors and revenues nearing $1 million. In the high-tech world of modern reproduction, sperm is becoming a controversial business, and with his aggressive entrepreneurial flair, Schou is something of a trailblazer. Last year Cryos signed a special agreement with British authorities that will allow the firm to make bulk exports to a Scottish clinic that cannot find donors to meet its tough standards. Schou, 45, estimates that British sales could eventually bring the company more than $2 million annually.
C)Cryos has benefited from a bewildering patchwork of European rules governing sperm donation. In Britain, for example, the law dictates that a single donor can father only 10 children. In Denmark, whose population of 5 million is less than one-tenth of Britain’s, the limit is 25. In Austria and Sweden, laws allow children conceived through sperm donation to seek the identity of their parents when the children reach age 18. Denmark, however, has more sweeping protection of donor anonymity: Cryos does not maintain a record of its donor’ s names, using a coded identification number instead. According to Schou, the Swedish law has resulted in such a severe donor shortage that hundreds of Swedish couples seek help each year in Denmark. Attracting donors is not much of a problem in Aarhus, which has a large university population. But only about 10% of those who apply make it through the screening process, which includes a psychological assessment as well as a battery of medical tests to rule out HIV, hepatitis and other diseases.
D)Cryos does not maintain the exhaustive profiles of donor characteristics used by U.S. Sperm banks. The company limits its data to such fundamentals as hair and eye color, height and ethnic classification, which, says Schou, is the main difference from what he calls the "couture style" U.S. system of merchandising sperm. He is critical of the U.S. Reliance on "positive eugenics" his term for the penchant for selecting donors based on detailed genetic, physical and psychological profiles.
E)Schou believes sperm banks should practice "negative eugenics" testing for disease and severe genetic defects only to the extent that an average couple would. On the other hand, to supply a global marketplace, he is having to bend his principles. Cryos now supplies a few U.S. Clinics with sperm, and in those cases has begun to provide more extensive donor profiles. To serve increasing demand for non-Scandinavian ethnic types, Schou cooperates with a handful of overseas sperm banks.
F)Cryos appears likely to continue to dominate Europe’ s commercial sperm-donor industry, and its growing success is provoking some criticism. Charles Sims, a clinical pathologist who co-founded California Cryobank, the best-known U.S. Sperm bank, thinks Cryos’ claims of market dominance are misplaced. "Sperm is not a commodity," he says. "It’ s not something you’ re selling like aspirin. "But Ole Schou shrugs off those views. He is passionate about his company’s mission to help thousands of would-be parents. In fact, he and his wife are about to become first-time parents—the old-fashioned way. "We’ ve been working at it for many years, and believe me, it’ s not that easy".
It is estimated that the sperm exports to a Scottish clinic will bring an income of more than $2 million every year.
选项
答案
B
解析
题干:据估.计,出口到苏格兰一家诊所的精子每年会带来两百多万美元的收益。题干关键词是exports,Scottish clinic和$2 million。文中B段最后两句提到,去年.克瑞奥斯公司与英国当局签署了一项特殊的协议,这项协议允许该公司向一家苏格兰诊所批量出售精子,45岁的休乌预计英国的销售最终可以给公司每年带来200多万美元的收益。与题干意思吻合,故选B。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/rxq7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
Crimeisincreasingworldwide.Thereiseveryreasontobelievethe(1)_____willcontinuethroughthenextfewdecades.Crimera
Crimeisincreasingworldwide.Thereiseveryreasontobelievethe(1)_____willcontinuethroughthenextfewdecades.Crimera
Crimeisincreasingworldwide.Thereiseveryreasontobelievethe(1)_____willcontinuethroughthenextfewdecades.Crimera
Crimeisincreasingworldwide.Thereiseveryreasontobelievethe(1)_____willcontinuethroughthenextfewdecades.Crimera
Selectingamajorisoneofthetoughesttasksforacollegestudent.Studentsusuallycometocollegewithamajorin【B1】______
ThePeakTimeforEverythingCouldyoupackmoreintoeachdayifyoudideverythingattheoptimaltime?Agrowingbodyof
A、Loveforbeautyandadesiretoimpressotherpeople.B、Displayofone’swealthandadesiretoexpressoneself.C、Individual
ThePeakTimeforEverythingA)Couldyoupackmoreintoeachdayifyoudideverythingattheoptimaltime?Agrowingbodyofre
ThePeakTimeforEverythingA)Couldyoupackmoreintoeachdayifyoudideverythingattheoptimaltime?Agrowingbodyofre
随机试题
心电图()。
正常情况下胸部MRI不能显示的结构是
自动冲洗机药液温度监测的叙述,错误的是
某二级耐火等级的多层综合楼,一层为商店,二层为餐厅,三层为影院,四层为宾馆。二层最大使用人数为240人。三、四层每层最大使用人数均为200人。该建筑设有三部疏散楼梯,其中一部为电影院独立使用的室外疏散楼梯,下列防火检查结果中不符合现行国家标准要求的是(
上海证券交易所B股佣金的最低标准是( )。
我国的证券公司按照所能从事的业务,可以分为()
中国戏曲最早可以追溯到《史记》所记载的先秦优孟扮演楚国已故宰相孙淑敌的故事。()
有关城市学校论述错误的是()。
Appeal-focusedtexts
Childrenwhogriptheirpenstooclosetothewritingpointarelikelytobeatadisadvantageinexaminations,【C1】______tothe
最新回复
(
0
)