The state of Hawaii turns 50 this year. People there should be happy. But it’s hard. The economy is really bad. The housing

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问题     The state of Hawaii turns 50 this year. People there should be happy. But it’s hard.
    The economy is really bad. The housing market and construction industry are in deep slumps. Tourism has been hammered by the recession and swine flu. Unemployment is double what it was a year ago. To close a $688 million budget gap, the governor announced the most drastic holiday program in the country. She’s closing state offices three days a month, for two years. Aloha Friday, where people go to work in aloha shirts and muumuus, is going to be Holiday Friday, where they stay home in pajamas and look for jobs on the Internet.
    And now, a communist dictator supposedly wants to blow up Hawaii. A Japanese newspaper, The Yomiuri Shimbun, reported this week that North Korea planned to launch a ballistic missile in Hawaii’s direction around the Fourth of July.
    You can take the threat for what it’s worth. Hawaii isn’t panicking. But then, while no one wants to think of extinction, the word is far less abstract in Hawaii than in other places. The islands have seen the disappearance of the Hawaiian kingdom, the killing of its people and the extinction of its language. Today, Hawaii is the world’s hottest hot spot for threatened and endangered species. As the only island state, it’s the only one that faces an existential threat from global warming and rising oceans.
    For years, financially squeezed Hawaii residents have been leaving in droves, setting up colonies in places they can afford, like the moonscapes of the Las Vegas suburbs. They’re exiles from paradise. Many people assume Hawaiian music is sweet and happy. Actually, much of it is solemn and melancholy. To hear Bla Pahinui sing his version of "Waimanalo Blues’—"the beaches they sell, to build their hotels," is to glimpse the depths of the Hawaiian sense of loss.
    Visitors go to Hawaii to get happy and tan, and they carry home with them vast measures of good will, peacefulness and memories of joy. Maybe it’s time to give some of that back to the suffering 50th state. How? Maybe by telling your representatives in Congress to support the Akaka Bill, to give Native Hawaiians a measure of lost sovereignty, and right some old injustices.
    There’s a great July Fourth parade in Kailua, on Oahu’s windward side. It’s normally followed by fireworks, but they were canceled this year: too expensive. Since 1948, people have sat on the warm sands of Kailua Beach, oohing and aahing as fireworks burst over black water. Now they can’t, in their state’s golden anniversary year. Could anything be sadder than that?
The Akaka Bill is intended to help improve ________.

选项 A、the Hawaiians’ political status
B、the judicial system of the Hawaii State
C、the Hawaiians’ economic status
D、the environmental protection in Hawaii

答案A

解析 根据题干中Akaka Bill定位到第6段末句。从该句中的sovereignty和injustices等词可以推断The Akaka Bill最可能是为了提高夏威夷人在政治上的地位的,因此本题应选A。该句提到的内容不会引起与“经济”或“环保”有关的联想,选项B和选项D显然不正确;选项C中的judicial system看似与原文中的injustices意思相关,但如果将injustices和前面的sovereignty联系起来,可知这里的injustices并不是指法律上的不公平,而是指夏威夷人受到了不公平的对待,主要是“人权”、 “主权”等方面不公平的对待,因此选项C也不正确。
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