An associate professor in life engineering travels to a medieval European fantasy world. Using modern biochemistry, he discovers that viruses, bacteria, and parasites extinct in human history are a...
The questions and answers are the following two questions.
1. Suppose that Muxi Port needs to be expanded. If you were to design the expansion plan, how would you choose the direction of expansion and the layout of the buildings?
2. Please list the three traded commodities that you believe have experienced the greatest price fluctuations in the past month, and analyze the reasons for the fluctuations of one of them.
Seeing these problems would break most people's spirits.
This completely overturned the impressions these medieval residents had of exams.
In academia, the exams set by professors are mostly confined to books and theories. Exams that focus so much on practicality and feasibility are almost never seen by people.
Some people gave up on the exam after only glancing at the paper once, without even writing a pen.
Some people scratched their heads, racking their brains for an answer, their hair falling to the ground, but they still had no clue.
In the grand hall, a knight proctoring the exam silently observed the candidates before him. A scholar, usually so eloquent, stared blankly at the exam paper, his hand trembling as he held the pencil. The knight suppressed a smile and used his 'Dragon Bone' to send a message to his knight colleague in the next room: "Look at these people's expressions! Damn! This feels so good!"
Two hours passed, and the exam was over.
Urged on by the soldiers' swords, the examinees reluctantly put down their pens and paper and left the examination hall.
Unlike their confident and ambitious entrance, the vast majority of people were sighing and looking as if they had lost their parents.
The knights' examiners instructed their men to quickly seal and pack the exam papers and send them to the King's Chamber behind headquarters.
Todd had long ago converted the living room into a review room, with himself as the review chairman, and Emerson and several loyal knights acting as review assistants.
The exam papers of more than 700 candidates were carried into the room by the soldiers. They were stacked together and looked like a huge book 30 centimeters high.
Todd divided the tasks with the others according to the pre-discussed plan.
He was responsible for grading the subjective questions (short answer questions), while the rest of the staff were divided into three groups. The first group was responsible for grading the multiple-choice questions, the second group was responsible for grading the correct and incorrect questions, and the last group was responsible for compiling the scores and verifying the results.
It took Todd two whole days to finally complete the review process for the first official examination in Twilight City. The 30 top-performing candidates were selected, and their names were placed on his desk.
He was quite familiar with a few names, such as the old acquaintances from the San Sidlow Monastery—the "Ragren Couple" who made it to the finals with high scores, and Lev, the North Island guide during the conquest of the Claw Tribe, who happened to be ranked 30th.
But the unfamiliar name at the top of the list gave him a headache.
A blatantly obvious Southern heretic—Aisha Barbarossa Hayreddin.