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科目: 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

① On Friday, January 14, 2005, my cousin, Kara Rose, came into the world. ② She looked perfectly healthy from the outside, but on the inside, the doctors had failed to discover a serious problem. ③ She often had trouble breathing and then turned blue. ④ The doctors found that Kara had been born without part of her heart. ⑤ They didn’t think she would live long enough to leave the hospital. ⑥ When she was four days old, she had her first operation. ⑦ My family stayed together during this hard time, hoping everything would turn out for the best.
Kara’s strength and determination to live were strong. Eventually, she could go home. We all waited patiently for new technology that could give Kara a new heart. When she was eighteen months old, her parents took her to a famous surgeon who performed a series of operations. There was no guarantee she would make it through the operation, but she succeeded.
Kara grew stronger every day, and it was not long before she was well enough to be around people. She had an amazing character and always wore a sweet smile. When she fell asleep against my body, happy and content, I realized how valuable life really is. As I took her in my arms with her warm breath against my neck, I decided to live every day of my life to the fullest.
This child, who is 15 years younger than I, has gone through more suffering and pain than I ever have. I admire her strength and determination. Kara has taught me that no matter how bad things seem, they can work out in the end. Knowing this small, beautiful child has made me a stronger person, I now believe that difficulty can be beaten.
小題1:Kara often had trouble breathing because ________.
A.she didn’t stay long enough in the hospital
B.the doctors failed to discover the problem
C.she was born with an incomplete heart
D.her first operation was not successful
小題2:Which of the following statements is true?
A.Kara’s determination helped her get through.
B.The new technology gave the family the hope to live on.
C.Kara eventually recovered at the age of 15.
D.Doctors were confident in the success of her operation.
小題3:The writer wants to tell us that _______.
A.younger people often suffer more pain
B.strong-will helps defeat difficulties
C.experienced doctors can make miracles
D.medical technology is developing fast
小題4:Where should the sentence in the box be added in Paragraph 1?
I was also anxiously hoping the doctors would be able to make her life longer.
A. After Sentence ①.                   B. After Sentence ③.
C. After Sentence ⑤.                   D. After Sentence ⑦.

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科目: 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Detective Keeling took his client — a good-looking lady into the back yard of the store together. The lady opened a door in the wall and they entered the small room behind the store. They crossed the room to a locked door.
M r. Keeling took some special keys from his pocket. Moments later, one of the keys unlocked the door. The lady went into the store. She said she would hide under the table to keep watch on her husband. Mr. Keeling did not follow her.
The detective went quickly to the policeman’s house. Then the two men hurried to the jewellery store. They looked through the window. The policeman was surprised. He spoke to Mr. Keeling. “I don’t understand. You told me, ‘Robbins took a young woman to a restaurant.’ Where is she?”
“There she is !” said Mr. Keeling. He pointed through the window.
“Do you know the lady with Robbins?” asked the policeman.
“That’s his secret friend,” said Mr. Keeling.
“No! You’re wrong! That’s Robbins’ wife,” said the policeman. “I’ve known her for fifteen years.”
“What ?” the detective shouted. His face became pale. “Who is under the table in the store?”
He started to kick the door of the jewellery store.
Mr. Robbins came to the door and opened it. The policeman and the detective ran into the store.
“Look under that table!” shouted the detective. “Be quick!”
The policeman lifted the cloth and put his arm under the table. He pulled out a black dress, a black veil and a woman’s wig(假發(fā)).
“Is this young lady your wife?” Mr. Keeling asked the jeweler. He pointed at the woman.
“Yes! She is my wife !” said Mr. Robbins angrily. “Why did you kick my door? Why are those clothes under my table?”
“Please check all the jewellery in your store, Mr. Robbins,” the policeman said. “Is anything missing?”
Some diamond rings and some expensive necklaces were missing. The missing jewellery was worth $800.
Later that night, Mr. Keeling was sitting in his office. He was looking through a big book of photographs. They were photographs of criminals. The policeman had brought the book to the detective’s office. Suddenly, Mr. Keeling stopped turning the pages. He looked at a picture of a handsome young man with a familiar face.
The next morning, Mr. Keeling paid the jeweler $800, and then closed his office.
小題1:At the beginning, the lady was able to go into the jewellery store because ___________.
A.she went to the back yard and found the way
B.she was the owner of the store and had the key
C.two men helped her together to enter the store
D.Mr. Keeling unlocked the back door to the store
小題2:The young lady who stayed with Mr. Robbins in the jewellery store was actually _________.
A.Mr. Robbins’ sisterB.Mr. Robbins’ secret friend
C.Mr. Robbins’ wifeD.a(chǎn) clever thief
小題3:It can be inferred from the passage that Mr. Keeling cooperated with his client _____________.
A.so that he could get some jewellery from the store
B.because he thought he was helping the lady
C.because he wanted to play a joke on Mr. Robbins
D.so that he could get a job as a policeman
小題4:The missing jewellery worth$800 was in fact taken away by _____________.
A.a(chǎn) young womanB.a(chǎn) young manC.a(chǎn) detectiveD.a(chǎn) policeman

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科目: 來源:不詳 題型:完形填空

“Look, it’s Baldy!” A boy shouted in my direction across the playground. Even though I was
used to regular insults(侮辱)because of the   41  on my head, it was   42  horrible to hear. I sighed as I headed back to the class.
When I was just 20 months old, I suffered serious   43  after a bowl full of hot oil fell on my head. I was   44  to hospital and had to stay there for weeks while the doctors   45  to save my life. “Holly’s very   46  to be alive,” they told Mum and Dad. “But she’ll be   47  with scars on her head, and of course her hair won’t grow there.”
As a child, I cared much about my scars, so I   48  wore a scarf to cover them up when I left home.   49  I didn’t, people would call me horrible names like Baldy. Although my friends were always comforting me, they never   50  understood how it felt.
Then through the hospital I was   51  to a children’s burns camp, where children like me can get any help. There I   52  14-year-old Stephanie, whose burns are a lot more serious than mine. But she is so  53  that she never lets anyone put her down. “You shouldn’t   54  what people say about what you look like because we’re not different from anyone else, Holly, ”  She   55  me. “And you don’t need to wear a scarf because you look great   56  it!” For the first time in my life I could speak to someone who’d been through something   57  . So weeks later, at my 13th birthday party,   58  by her bravery, I gave up my scarf and showed off my scars. It felt amazing not having to   59  away behind my scarf.
Now, I am   60  of what I look like and much happier, because I have realized it is your personality that decides who you are.
小題1:
A.hatB.scarfC.scarsD.cuts
小題2:
A.stillB.justC.neverD.seldom
小題3:
A.hungerB.coldC.defeatsD.burns
小題4:
A.rushedB.ledC.invitedD.forced
小題5:
A.learnedB.foughtC.returnedD.decided
小題6:
A.happyB.luckyC.lonelyD.poor
小題7:
A.pressedB.occupiedC.leftD.painted
小題8:
A.possiblyB.usuallyC.finallyD.nearly
小題9:
A.AlthoughB.SinceC.IfD.Before
小題10:
A.correctlyB.roughlyC.easilyD.really
小題11:
A.promotedB.introducedC.reportedD.carried
小題12:
A.metB.recognizedC.rememberedD.caught
小題13:
A.honestB.strongC.a(chǎn)ctiveD.young
小題14:
A.write downB.a(chǎn)gree withC.pass onD.listen to
小題15:
A.promisedB.encouragedC.orderedD.calmed
小題16:
A.inB.forC.withoutD.beyond
小題17:
A.similarB.strangeC.hardD.important
小題18:
A.a(chǎn)llowedB.requiredC.guidedD.inspired
小題19:
A.hideB.giveC.keepD.put
小題20:
A.sickB.a(chǎn)wakeC.tiredD.proud

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科目: 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

LONDON---A British judge on Thursday sentenced a businessman who sold fake(假冒的)bomb detectors(探測器)to 10 years in prison, saying the man hadn’t cared about potentially deadly consequences.
It is believed that James McCormick got about $ 77.8 million from the sales of his detectors---which were based on a kind of golf ball finder---to countries including Iraq, Belgium and Saudi Arabia.
McCormick, 57, was convicted(判罪)of cheats last month and sentenced Thursday at the Old Bailey court in London.
“Your cheating conduct in selling a great amount of useless equipment simply for huge profit promoted a false sense of security and in all probability materially contributed to causing death and injury to innocent people,” Judge Richard Hone told McCormick. “You have neither regret, nor shame, nor any sense of guilt.”
The detectors, sold for up to $ 42, 000 each, were said to be able to find such dangerous objects as bombs under water and from the air. But in fact they “l(fā)acked any grounding in science” and were of no use.
McCormick had told the court that he sold his detectors to the police in Kenya, the prison service in Hong Kong, the army in Egypt and the border control in Thailand.
“I never had any bad results from customers,” he said.
小題1:Why was McCormick sentenced to prison?
A.He sold bombs. B.He caused death of people.
C.He made detectors.D.He cheated in business.
小題2:According to the judge, what McCormick had done         .
A.increased the cost of safeguarding
B.lowered people’s guard against danger
C.changed people’s idea of social security
D.caused innocent people to commit crimes
小題3:Which of the following is true of the detectors?
A.They have not been sold to Africa
B.They have caused many serious problems.
C.They can find dangerous objects in water.
D.They don’t function on the basis of science.
小題4:It can be inferred from the passage that McCormick         .
A.solo the equipment at a low price
B.was well-known in most countries
C.did not think he had committed the crime
D.had not got such huge profit as mentioned in the text

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科目: 來源:不詳 題型:完形填空

Travis laughed as he tore at the wrapping paper on his birthday present. He was so 36  ! Finally, he would have the coolest pair of name-brand basketball shoes.
All the guys on his team were wearing the name-brand shoes of a popular basketball 37 , Chuck Hart. 38_ Hart was criticized for his poor sportsmanship and infamous 39_ , he was a great player. In fact, Travis wasn’t thinking about Hart’s behavior; he had only expected to see Hart’s 40 on the side of the box. He realized that something was 41 as he tore away the last piece of paper. Not Hart’s. The new shoes were the name-brand of another player, Robert Ryann, who was  42  for his amazing work in the community.
Travis’s hands 43 ; his heart stopped. It wasn’t that the Ryann shoes weren’t nice, but what would his friends think?
They were the wrong shoes and Travis would be 44   by the other players. When he looked up into his dad’s eyes, however, Travis knew he 45 tell him. “Thanks, Dad. I was really hoping for shoes,” Travis said as he pulled the shoes out of the box.
Next morning his dad drove him to school. When they 46  in front of his destination, Travis slowly opened the car door. Just then, his dad stopped him.
“Hey, Travis, wait a minute…” his dad said 47 “Travis, I know those aren’t the shoes you had hoped for, but I saw the names of the two guys and made a(n)  48  . The guy whose name is on those shoes,” he said, pointing down at Travis’s feet, “is someone I 49 . Do you know how often Ryann has found himself in 50 ? ”
“ No,” Travis said.
“ Never. He’s never talked back to his coach or started a fight, and he’s a team player. You could have acted like a(n) 51   when you didn’t get the shoes you wanted, Travis,  52 you were polite and made the best of it. You have honor, like the guy whose name is on these shoes. I’ m hoping that someday, your  53 will be on the coolest pair of shoes I’ll ever see.”
When Travis looked down at his feet, he saw the shoes 54  . His dad had used his mind and heart to give the son a thoughtful 55   .
小題1:
A.surprisedB.a(chǎn)shamedC.excitedD.worried
小題2:
A.teamB.playerC.coachD.game
小題3:
A.UnlessB.IfC.BecauseD.Although
小題4:
A.skillB.performanceC.behaviorD.a(chǎn)ction
小題5:
A.nameB.photoC.signD.model
小題6:
A.strangeB.wrongC.trueD.funny
小題7:
A.knownB.encouragedC.a(chǎn)doptedD.influenced
小題8:
A.fellB.frozeC.shookD.folded
小題9:
A.questionedB.noticedC.teasedD.a(chǎn)ttacked
小題10:
A.mustn’tB.needn’tC.wouldn’tD.couldn’t
小題11:
A.pulled upB.put upC.took upD.turned up
小題12:
A.peacefullyB.hesitantlyC.delightedlyD.naturally
小題13:
A.choiceB.effortC.commentD.mistake
小題14:
A.believeB.missC.a(chǎn)dmireD.remember
小題15:
A.dangerB.a(chǎn)ngerC.sorrowD.trouble
小題16:
A.teammateB.a(chǎn)dultC.kidD.student
小題17:
A.soB.a(chǎn)ndC.butD.or
小題18:
A.honorB.courageC.nameD.belief
小題19:
A.clearlyB.carefullyC.patientlyD.differently
小題20:
A.giftB.smileC.wishD.lesson

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科目: 來源:不詳 題型:完形填空

Embroidering(刺繡)
When I was a little boy living in New York, my mother used to embroider a great deal. I would sit at her knee and look up from the    36    and ask what she was doing. She   3 me that she was embroidering. I told her that it looked like a mess from where I was. As from the underside I watched her work within the    38  of the little round hoop(鐵環(huán))that she held in her hand, I complained to her that it sure looked   39   from where I sat.
She would smile at me, look down and  40   say, "My son, you go about your    41   for a while, and when I am finished with my embroidering, I will put you on my    42   and let you see it from my side."
I would wonder why she was using some dark threads along with the    43   ones and why they seemed so jumbled(混亂的)from my   44  . A few minutes would pass and then I would hear Mother's voice say, " Son, come and sit on my knee." This I did only to be  surprised and    45  to see a beautiful flower or a sunset. I could not    4 it, because from underneath it looked so messy.
Then mother would    47   to me, "My son, from underneath it did look messy and jumbled, but you did not realize that there was a   4 plan on the top. It was a    49   . I was only following it. Now look at it from my side    50   you will see what I was doing."
Many    51    through the years, I have    52   up to my Heavenly Father and said, “ Father, what are You doing? ” He    53   , “ I am embroidering your    54  . ”I say, " But it looks like a mess to me. It seems so jumbled. The threads seem so dark. Why can't they all be bright ? " The Father seems to tell me, " My child, you go about your business of doing My business, and one day I will bring you to    55   and put you on my knee and you will see the plan from My side. "
小題1:
A.floorB.cornerC.ceilingD.step
小題2:
A.demandedB.blamedC.persuadedD.informed
小題3:
A.decorateB.boundariesC.pictureD.surface
小題4:
A.messyB.dirtyC.shabbyD.tight
小題5:
A.smartlyB.cautiouslyC.gentlyD.precisely
小題6:
A.complainingB.playingC.embroideringD.imagining
小題7:
A.backB.chairC.kneeD.table
小題8:
A.whiteB.blackC.brightD.shining
小題9:
A.eyesB.opinionC.heartD.view
小題10:
A.hopefulB.thrilledC.expectingD.enthusiastic
小題11:
A.believeB.considerC.seeD.touch
小題12:
A.talkB.mentionC.sayD.whisper
小題13:
A.pre-drawnB.previewedC.preservedD.produced
小題14:
A.directionB.lineC.diagramD.design
小題15:
A.orB.a(chǎn)ndC.untilD.unless
小題16:
A.timesB.daysC.seasonsD.chances
小題17:
A.climbedB.jumpedC.shoutedD.looked
小題18:
A.requiredB.a(chǎn)nsweredC.instructedD.concluded
小題19:
A.decisionB.fortuneC.lifeD.business
小題20:
A.homeB.motherC.AmericaD.Heaven

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科目: 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

My husband and I were once in Nepal(尼泊爾)to see sunrise over the Himalayas.
One morning we awoke to total darkness at 5 o’clock.As we rushed through a town with cameras in hand,I noticed the calm,gentle way the Nepalese people greeted the morning.One man boiled a huge pot of milk tea,and other villagers gathered around his fire,cupping their hands around small glasses of the steaming sweet mixture.It was fascinating,but not to be left behind,we joined the stream of tourists moving quickly up to the lookout point.
The top was crowded when we arrived,but after 10 minutes of cold waiting,the assembled group gave up.“The cloud cover is too heavy,”one said.Then one by one they rushed down the hill to the next item on their sightseeing list.I was disappointed as well,but suddenly I noticed a small Nepalese boy absently playing with a stick and shooting quick glances at the clouds.He must know something we don’t,I thought.I decided to wait with him.
The boy and I didn’t have to wait long.Moments later,a tiny stream of golden light burned through one thick cloud,then another.Rose-colored fog warmed the backs of the clouds,and suddenly the morning sun stole a glance around the side of the mountain,mile above where I’d expected it to be.
Nothing I’d seen before prepared me for the moment the clouds withdrew with bowed heads,and the magnificent Himalayas were revealed before,around,and above me.I sat in astonishment,not breathing,not daring to look away,certain that God had placed me here at the backdoor of Earth to show me what Heaven really looks like.I certainly got the message.Never again will I rush a sunrise.I now know Nature will supply her fruits to me only when I am truly ready to receive them.
小題1:What does “It” in Paragraph 2 most probably imply?
A.The darkness of the town in the morning.
B.The huge pot of milk tea boiling on the fire.
C.The way the local people welcomed the day.
D.The stream of tourists rushing to the lookout point.
小題2:The author decided to wait with the Nepalese boy because _____.
A.she felt kind of having faith in him
B.the restless tourists disappointed her
C.that boy was praying to the sun with a magic stick
D.she had nothing more to see on her sightseeing list
小題3:What can be concluded from the passage?
A.Do in Rome as the Romans do.
B.God helps those who help themselves.
C.Time and tide wait for no man.
D.Fortune rewards those having patience.

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科目: 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

It was an autumn morning shortly after my husband and I moved into our first house. Children were upstairs unpacking , and I was looking out of the window at my father moving around mysteriously on the front lawn. My parents lived nearby ,and Dad had visited us several times already. “What are you doing out there?” I called to him .He looked up, smiling. “I’m making you a surprise.” Knowing my father, I thought it could be just about anything. A self-employed jobber, he was always building things out of odds and ends. When we were kids, he always created something surprising for us.
Today, however, Dad would say no more, and caught ups in the busyness of our new life, I eventually forgot about his surprise. Until one gloomy day the following March when I glanced out of the window. Any yet… I saw a dot of blue across the yard. I headed outside for a closer look. They were crocuses (番紅花), throughout the front lawn. Lavender, blue, yellow and my favorite pink ---- little faces moved up and down in the cold wind.
Dad! I smiled, remembering the things he had secretly planted last autumn. He knew how the darkness and dullness of winter always got me down. What could have been more perfectly timely to my needs?
My father’s crocuses bloomed each spring for the next four or five seasons, bringing the same assurance every time they arrived: hard times was almost over. Hold on, keep going, light is coming soon.
Then a spring came with only half the usual blooms. The next spring there were none. I missed the crocuses. I would ask Dad to come over and plant new bulbs. But I never did.
He died suddenly one October day. My family was in deep sorrow, leaning on our faith. I missed him terribly.
Four years passed, and on a dismal spring afternoon I was driving back when I found myself feeling depressed. “You’ve got the winter depression again and you get them every year.” I told myself.
It was Dad’s birthday, and I found myself thinking about him. This was not unusual --- my family often talked about him, remembering how he lived his faith. Once I saw him give his coat to a homeless man.
Suddenly I slowed as I turned into our driveway. I stopped and stared at the lawn. And there on the muddy grass and small gray piles of melting snow, bravely waving in the wind, was one pink crocus.
How could a flower bloom from a bulb more than 18 years old, one that had not blossomed in over a decade? But there was the crocus. Tears filled my eyes as I realized its significance.
Hold on, keep going, light is coming soon. The pink crocus bloomed for only a day. But it built my faith for a lifetime.
小題1:According to the first three paragraphs, we learn that _________.
A.the writer was unpacking when her father was making the surprise
B.the writer knew what the surprise was because she knew her father
C.it was not the first time that the writer’s father had made a surprise
D.it kept bothering the writer not knowing what the surprise was
小題2:Which of the following would most probably be the worst time of the year as seen by the writer?
A.Spring.B.Summer.C.Autumn.D.Winter.
小題3:Which of the following is NOT true, according to the passage?
A.The writer’s father planted the crocus to lift her low spirit.
B.The crocuses bloomed each spring before the writer’s father died.
C.The writer often thought about her father since her father died.
D.The writer’s father died some years after he planted the crocus.
小題4:The writer’s father should be best described as_________.
A.a(chǎn) full-time gardener with skillful hands
B.a(chǎn) part-time jobber who loved flowers
C.a(chǎn) kind-hearted man who lived with faith
D.a(chǎn)n ordinary man with doubts in his life
小題5:Crocus was viewed as the symbol of _________ by the writer.
A.faithB.familyC.loveD.friendship

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科目: 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

I lost my sight when I was four years old by falling off a box car in a freight yard in City and landing on my head. Now I am thirty two. I can slightly remember the brightness of sunshine and what color red is .It would be wonderful to see again , but a calamity (災(zāi)難)can do strange things to people .It occurred to me the other day that I might not have come to love life as I do if I hadn’t been blind . I believe in life now.I am not so sure that I would have believed in it so deeply , otherwise. I don’t mean that would prefer to go without my eyes . I simply mean that Atlantic the loss of them made me appreciate the more what I had left .
Life, I believe, asks a continuous series of adjustments to reality. The more readily a person is able to make these adjustments, the more meaningful his own private world becomes. The adjustment is never easy. I was totally confused and afraid. But I was lucky. My parents and my teachers saw something in me--a potential to live, you might call it--which I didn't see, and they made me want to fight it out with blindness.
The hardest lesson I had to learn was to believe in myself. That was basic. If I hadn't been able to do that, I would have collapsed and become a chair rocker on the front porch for the rest of my life. When I say belief in myself I am not talking about simply the kind of self confidence that helps me down an unfamiliar staircase alone. That is part of it. But I mean something bigger than that: an assurance that I am, despite imperfections, a real, positive person; that somewhere in the sweeping, intricate(錯(cuò)綜復(fù)雜的) pattern of people there is a special place where I can make myself fit.
It took me years to discover and strengthen this assurance. It had to start with the simplest things. Once a man gave me an indoor baseball. I thought he was making fun of me and I was hurt. "I can't use this." I said. "Take it with you," he urged me, "and roll it around." The words stuck in my head. "Roll it around! "By rolling the ball I could hear where it went. This gave me an idea how to achieve a goal I had thought impossible: playing baseball. At Philadelphia's Overbrook School for the Blind I invented a successful variation of baseball. We called it ground ball.
All my life I have set ahead of me a series of goals and then tried to reach them, one at a time. I had to learn my limitations. It was no good trying for something that I knew at the start was wildly out of reach because that only invited the bitterness of failure. I would fail sometimes anyway but on the average I made progress.
小題1:We can learn from the beginning of the passage that _______
A.the author lost his sight because of a car crash.
B.the author wouldn't love life if the disaster didn't happen.
C.the disaster made the author appreciate what he had.
D.the disaster strengthened the author's desire to see.
小題2:What's the most difficult thing for the author?
A.How to adjust himself to reality.
B.Building up assurance that he can find his place in life.
C.Learning to manage his life alone.
D.How to invent a successful variation of baseball.
小題3:According to the context, “a chair rocker on the front porch” in paragraph 3 means that the author __________
A.would sit in a rocking chair and enjoy his life.
B.would be unable to move and stay in a rocking chair.
C.would lose his will to struggle against difficulties.
D.would sit in a chair and stay at home.
小題4:According to the passage, the baseball and encouragement offered by the man _____
A.hurt the author's feeling.
B.gave the author a deep impression.
C.directly led to the invention of ground ball.
D.inspired the author.
小題5:What is the best title for the passage?
A.A Miserable Life
B.Struggle Against Difficulties
C.A Disaster Makes a Strong Person
D.An Unforgettable Experience

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科目: 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

As Rosalie Warren stood at the mailbox in the lobby of her apartment building in May 1980, she shared the anxiety of many other college seniors. In her hand was an envelope containing her final grades. As she nervously opened it, Warren wondered whether her hundreds of hours of studying had paid off.
They had.
“I got five ‘A’s,” she still recalls with elation. “I almost fell on the floor!”
Warren would graduate from Suffolk University with a bachelor of science degree in philosophy and history at age 80.Three years later, at age 83, she would receive her second degree from Suffolk, a master’s in education.
Now, with both diplomas proudly displayed in her apartment, Warren is not finished with learning. Now 93,she continues for her 18th year at Suffolk under a program that allows persons 65 and over to attend classes tuition free. “It’s my life to go to school, to enjoy being in an academic atmosphere,” she says. “That’s what I love.”
Warren was born Rosalie Levey on Aug.29, 1900. Two years after she entered high school, her father died. Warren had to leave school for factory work to help support her family’s 10 children. Warren describes herself as a “person who always liked school,” and she says the move “broke my heart completely because I couldn’t finish high school.”
In the end, however, “I went to school nights,” she recalls. “Any place I could find an outlet of learning and teaching, I was there.”
A short time later, her mother became ill, and Warren had to care for her, once again putting her education on hold.
Finally, in 1921, her mother, now recovered, drew from her saving to send Warren to Boston University for two years to study typing, stenography, and office procedures.
Those courses helped Warren gain several long-term office positions over the next 60 years, but her great desire “to be in the academic field” continued.
In 1924, she married Eugene Warren, and seven years later, her daughter, Corinne, was born. In 1955, by then a widow and a grandmother, Warren took a bus tour across the United States that was to last nine months. She said she wanted to see “things you never see in the West End.”
When she returned home, she took a bookkeeping position and also enrolled in courses in philosophy, sociology
And Chinese history. free program for senior citizens.” I was at the registrar’s  office the very next day.”she recalls. At first ,she took one or two courses at a time , but encouraged by her professors , she enrolled as a
In 1975, when she was 75, Warren learned from a neighbor about Suffolk University’s tuition- degree candidate.
“I had not studied for so many years,” she says, “but I was determined.” For the next four years, Warren, who calls herself a “student of philosophy,” worked toward her degree.
Nancy Stoll, dean of students at Suffolk, says Warren is “an interesting role model for our younger students---that learning is a lifetime activity….She is genuinely enthusiastic about being here, and that permeates (散發(fā)) her activities and is contagious (傳染的) to students and faculty.”
小題1:What does the word elation mean in the sentence “I got fives ‘A’s”, she still recalls with elation”?
A.Great happinessB.Great surpriseC.Great prideD.Great honor
小題2:How old was Warren when she got her first college degree?
A.She was 79B.She was 23C.She was 80D.She was 75
小題3:What kind of work did she do for 60 years?
A.StudyingB.Factory workC.TypingD.Office work
小題4:Which statement can be inferred from the underlined sentences?
A.Because Warren needn’t pay her tuition, she went to study at Suffolk University
B.At first Warren had to pay for her courses at Suffolk University
C.Most of the students at Suffolk University are older than 65
D.Suffolk University encourages older people to take courses
小題5:It can be inferred from this passage that Rosalie Warren _______.
A.came from a wealthy familyB.didn’t like working in an office
C.put her family before her educationD.didn’t like her family very much
小題6:What is the main topic of this passage?
A.Rosalie Warren’s family
B.Rosalie Warren’s life
C.Rosalie Warren’s education
D.Rosalie Warren’s studying at Suffolk University

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