三、分析下列句子中加粗词的意义与用法。 1. 谁说你的眼睛是雪白的,谁说你是蓝色的。 2. 谁说你的眼睛是雪白的,谁说你是蓝色的。 friday, february 27, 2004 您在网站上输入的任何信息都将被加密,以防止未经授权的人员访问您的个人资料。请确保您的密码是正确的。密码必须包含至少八个字符,并且不能包含使你无法记住的字符。 网站使用 SSL(SSL证书)来加密所有用户的数据。这将确保您的登录体验更加安全,并保护您的个人信息免受攻击。SSL证书可以由身份验证机构(如美国联邦航空局)颁发。 如果您有疑问,请访问我们的帮助中心或联系我们的客服。 the university daily kansan news 本报告仅供红杉资本股份有限公司(以下简称“红杉资本”)客户使用。 如需分发给他人,请务必注明出处为“红杉资本”。 7A REQUIREMENTS: Credits change CONTINUED FROM 1A Laura Phillips, Naperville, Ill., junior, said she enrolled in Western Civilization II at the beginning of the semester, but when she saw how much reading it required, she enrolled in Barton Online. Phillips said Barton County was easy because she had to read one chapter a week and could participate in discussion any time she wanted to during the week. Six of eight students in Phillips' class are from the University she said. Although it was easier at Barton County, Phillips took the first Western Civilization class at the University and admitted that she learned a lot from it. Bremner said he thought the University should challenge students in class, even if they are difficult. He said the University should never have accepted credit from an online course. "Anyone who skips KU's HWC out of fear is simply missing a wonderful learning opportunity," he said of the course. Students who go to community colleges are missing out on a real education and understanding of the world, Bremer said. He said major universities should challenge students to take classes that may be difficult, because they learn the importance of great works by people like Virginia Woolf, Karl Marx and John Locke. He said students take courses at other community colleges because they reduce the amount of work. Johnson County Community College has made an effort to keep its program as rigorous as the University's. Johnson County patterns its course after the way the University conducts its courses, making students read original texts and participate in discussion, said Doreen Maronde, assistant dean of art and humanities at Johnson County. She said students take Western Civilization and other courses at Johnson County because the classes at the University were full. The college helped accommodate University students by offering the classes at nearby high school such as Desoto High School. Stephanie Wetschensky, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, is taking Western Civilization I through Johnson County at Desoto High School because she knew it would be hard to enroll in the course at the University. She said there was probably no difference between the quality of education she was receiving there and at the University. Bremer said to approach the courses at the University with an open mind. Many of his students have told him that his Western Civilization classes taught them more about the world than they could have imagined. RECYCLING: Program picks up recyclables on residence hall floors CONTINUED FROM 1A But Fish wasn't so certain. KU Recycling keeps track of its monthly recycling load by tonnage and Fish said the numbers hadn't shown a sizable increase. - Edited by Kevin Flaherty "It varies a lot from month to month," Fish said, "and the yearly averages don't really tell us anything." Nevertheless, Fish said she thought the floor-to-floor pickup was worthwhile because her organization was equipped to do it and it was convenient for students. Even if the tons of recycling are not increasing, Allison Fine likes the change. The Leawood senior works the front desk at Lewis Hall and was a resident there during her freshman and sophomore years. She served on her floor's recycling committee before KU Recycling did floor-to-floor pickup. "It didn't seem like a big problem, but having it now is nice for students," she said. "It's one less thing they have to worry about." The fight to expand on-campus recycling has continued under the presidency of Andy Knopp and his KUnited administration. Nick Sterner, Community Affairs Director and KUnited member, is spearheading an effort to get a staffed recycling center on campus. — Edited by Danielle Hillx Brian Thomas, Wichita junior, carried sacks of plastic recyclables to add to the pile on Wednesday in the lobby of McCollum Hall. The Delta Force coalition created a floor-by-floor recycling pick-up program for residence halls such as McCollum. Courtney Kuhlen/Kansan NATION Department supoenas Planned Parenthood WASHINGTON - The Justice Department has subpoenaed hundreds of medical records from six Planned Parenthood sites as part of the government's defense in lawsuits challenging the Partial-Birth Abortion Act. According to court documents, Justice Department lawyers say the records — which would be edited to remove names and other personal information — are essential to defend the law against the lawsuits The suits challenge the law that prohibits a procedure referred to by critics as partial-birth abortion but by medical organizations as "intact dilation and extraction." During the procedure, a fetus's legs and torso are pulled from the uterus before its skull is punctured. brought by Planned Parenthood and doctor groups around the country. Planned Parenthood has resisted producing the medical records, which critics of the subpoenas say threatens the privacy of patients and could intimidate doctors and clinics that provide abortions. ---The Associated Press SEX VALUES: Doctors may avoid talking about sex with patients CONTINUED FROM 1A patients were older than 65. He said older women were most concerned about decreased libidos and men were most concerned about erectile dysfunction. Vandgeest-Wallace said a variety of health issues — from spinal cord injuries to manic-depression — involved sex somehow. "Sometimes we're ready to walk out of the room and they ask 'Oh yeah, is Viagra any good?'," said Hatton. "Then we have to come back in and deal with that problem." She said a doctor's avoidance of sex topics can be attributed to sexual values learned from parents, community standards or religious principles. "For some things the person is going to have to find other ways to express sexuality," she said. "Some people may have been taught that sex is naughty or inappropriate," she said. Dennis Dailey, certified sex therapist and professor of social welfare, agreed. He said that doctors weren't the only ones who avoided sexual conversations because of personal discomfort or lack of knowledge. "We live in a fairly uptight, repressive culture, and that hasn't changed in a long, long time," Dailey said. Buck said the majority of students who come in are not shy about discussing sex. However, Dailey said medical practitioners might feel uncomfortable talking about sex to patients on various levels, ranging from people looking for contraceptives to dealing with sadomasochistic behavior. There might also be another reason medical practitioners want to avoid talking about sex. Regardless of the amount of training medical practitioners have gone through, both Buck and Dailey agreed that practitioners need to be put aside their bias when they're on the job. "Very few physicians have training in human sexuality," Dailey said. "They should not as a matter of professional ethics let their personal beliefs interfere with their ability to practice medicine," Dailey said. Edited by Cindy Yeo