货物从境内进入物流中心视同出口,企业向海关申报时:A.需缴纳出口关税的,应按照规定纳

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问题:

货物从境内进入物流中心视同出口,企业向海关申报时:

A.需缴纳出口关税的,应按照规定纳税

B.属许可证件管理的商品,应向海关出具有效的出口许可证件

C.从境内运人物流中心的原进口货物,已经缴纳的关税不予退还

D.从境内运人物流中心的原进口货物,已经缴纳进口环节税的不予退还

考点:海关报关员考试报关员
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公有制的主体地位主要体现在

A.国有资产比重上有量的优势

B.公有资产在社会总资产中占优势

C.国有经济控制国民经济命脉

D.对经济发展起主导作用

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从主观心意状态探讨美有何积极意义和不良后果?

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依据旅游需求弹性不同,旅游收入包括()。

A.基本旅游收入

B.非基本旅游收入

C.商品性收入

D.劳务性收入

E.旅游外汇收入

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中国古代把天上的星星分成许多群落称为什么?

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Teach for America (TFA) was founded by Wendy Kopp in 1990. It is a non-profit organisation that recruits top-notch graduates from elite institutions and gets them to teach for two years in struggling state schools in poor areas.

I had thought the programme was about getting more high-quality teachers — but that, it appears, is a secondary benefit. “This is about enlisting the energy of our country’s future leaders in its long-term educational needs, and eliminating inequity,” Wendy explains. It’s great if “corps members”, as TFA calls its active teachers, stay in the classroom — and many do, and rise quickly through the ranks.

But the “alums”, as she calls those who have finished their two-year teaching, who don’t stay in schools often go on to lead in other fields, meaning that increasing numbers of influential people in all walks of life learn that it is possible to teach successfully in low-income communities, and just what it takes. “It means you realise that we can solve this problem.”

As she continues to talk I realise that TFA is — in the best possible sense — a cult. It has its own language (“corps members”, “alums”), recruits are instilled (“We tell them that it can be done, that we know of hundreds, thousands, of teachers attaining tremendous success”), go through an ordeal (“Everyone hits the wall in week three in the classroom”), emerge transformed by privileged knowledge (“Once you know what we know — that kids in poor urban areas can excel — you can accomplish different things”) and can never leave (alumni form a growing, and influential, network). I have not seen the same zeal when talking to those on the equivalent programme in England, Teach First., in which the missionary-style language imported from America had to be toned down, because it just didn’t suit the restrained English style. But could that favour be necessary for its success

Chester, an alum, takes me to visit three TFA corps members at a middle school in the Bronx. They are impressive young people, and their zeal is evident. Two intend to stay in teaching; both want to open charter schools. One, a Hispanic woman, is working out with a friend how to educate migrant Hispanic labourers in Texas; the other would like to open a “green” charter, but in the meantime he has accepted a job with the KIPP charter group in Newark, New Jersey.

All three are tired. Their classrooms are not much like the rest of the school where they work, and their heroic efforts are only supported by Chester and each other, not by their co-workers. “The first year was unbelievably bad,” one tells me. “So many years with low expectations meant a lot of resistance from the kids. Eventually they saw the power and the growth they were capable of.”

The author is most likely()

A. a graduate from elite institutions

B. an education correspondent

C. a TFA teacher

D. a Teach Firster

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