26. The author chose to study engineering at a small liberalarts university because he .
[A] wanted to be an example of practicality and rationality
[B] intended to be a combination of engineer and humanist
[C] wanted to coordinate engineering with liberalarts courses in college
[D] intended to be a sensible student with noble ideals
27. According to the author, by interacting with people who study liberal arts, engineering students can .
[A] balance engineering and the liberal arts
[B] receive guidance in their careers
[C] become noble idealists
[D] broaden their horizons
28. In the eyes of the author, a successful engineering student is expected.
[A] to have an excellent academic record
[B] to be wise and mature
[C] to be imaginative with a value system to guide him
[D] to be a technical genius with a wide vision
29. The author's experience shows that he was .
[A] creative
[B] ambitious
[C] unrealistic
[D] irrational
30. The word "they" in "…… together they threaten to confuse." (Line 3, Para. 5) refers to .
[A] engineering and the liberal arts
[B] reality and noble ideals
[C] flexibility and a value system
[D] practicality and rationality
Passage Three
Questions 31 to 35 are based on the following passage:
Priscilla Ouchida's "energy\|efficient" house turned out to be a horrible dream. When she and her engineer husband married a few years ago, they built a $100,000, three\|bedroom home in California. Tightly sealed to prevent air leaks, the house was equipped with small double\|paned(双层玻璃的) windows and several other energy\|saving features. Problems began as soon as the couple moved in, however. Priscilla's eyes burned. Her throat was constantly dry. She suffer ed from headaches and could hardly sleep. It was as though she had suddenly deve loped a strange illness.\;Experts finally traced the cause of her illness. The level of formaldehyde(甲醛) gas in her kitchen was twice the maximum allowed by federal standards for chemical workers. The source of the gas? Her new kitchen cabinets and wall\|to\|wall carpeting.\;The Ouchidas are victims of indoor air pollution, which is not given sufficient attention partly because of the nation's drive to save energy. The problem itself isn't new. "The indoor environment was dirty long before energy conservation came along," says Moschandreas, a pollution scientist at Geomet Technologies in Maryland. "Energy conservation has tended to accentuate the situation in some cases."\;
The problem appears to be more troublesome in newly constructed homes rather than old ones. Back in the days when energy was cheap, home builders didn't worry much about unsealed cracks. Because of such leaks, the air in an average home was replaced by fresh outdoor air about once an hour. As a result, the pollutants generated in most households seldom built up to dangerous levels.
31. It can be learned from the passage that the Ouchidas' house.
[A] is well worth the money spent on its construction
[B] is almost faultless from the point of energy conservation
[C] failed to meet energy conservation standards
[D] was designed and constructed in a scientific way
32. What made the Ouchidas' new house a horrible dream?
[A] Lack of fresh air.
[B] Poor quality of building materials.
[C] Gas leakage in the kitchen.
[D] The newly painted walls
33. The word "accentuate"(Line 4, Para. 3) most probably means "".
[A] relieve
[B] accelerate
[C] worsen
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