The most fascinating possibility is that search data might help (46) people's behavior. When we search online for a certain brand of stereo system, we are surely indicating we're more (47) to buy that brand.
Perhaps we search for a political candidate's name when we are thinking about (48) him or her. Maybe we even search for "stock market crash" or "recession" just before we start (49) our investments. This information could clearly be useful to a smart marketer--it's already how Google decides which (50) to show on its search results pages--or to a political campaign manager.
41. A. investigation 42. A. extraordinary 43. A. culture
B. insight B. obvious B. nation
C. consideration C. mysterious C. person
D. prospect D. sensitive D. mass D. driven by D. dash D. preserve D. likely D. running for D. adding to
44. A. reduced to 45. A. rush
B. resulting in C. backed up by B. push
C. charge
46. A. presume 47. A. liking
B. preoccupy C. predict B. alike
C. like
48. A. fighting against B. voting for C. believing in 49. A. withdrawing from B. depositing in C. turning down 50. A. Notices 11/1
B. papers
C. advertisements D. statements
Early in January 2009, the temperature in Tanana, Alaska, fell to 55 below zero F. It was cold that when the airport runaway lights stopped working, crews were from going outside to fix them.
So it was a real concern when Vicky Aldridge, a nurse practitioner at the village health center, realized that 61-year-old Winkler Bifelt was bleeding and needed medical treatment at Fairbanks Memorial Hospital, 150 miles away. The sun was already down when Aldridge made the telephone call to Frontier Flying Service Fairbanks.
“we told them the only way we could fly was if they could find enough vehicles to the runway with headlights so we could land,” said Bob Hajdukovich,
the company’s president. Aldridge’s next calls went to airport and town officials, who, , called villagers. Forty five minutes later, enough cars, trucks, minivans and snowmobiles had lined up so that the runway was .
Pilots Nate Thompson and David Fowler landed without , and then took off again, with Befelt.