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  An explosion on Thursday killed one and injured 21 in a busy street in Tongren, Southwest China’s Guizhou Province.
  The bomb was hidden in a rubbish bin in the city’s commercial hub(商业中心),where lots of shops and restaurants are concentrated.
  The ear-splitting blast was heard around 12∶50 p.m.,said a local newspaper, citing witnesses. The power of the blast shattered(使粉碎)nearby shop windows and ripped the stainless(不生锈的)steel rubbish can to pieces.
  One passer-by,identified(确认)only as Zhang,said she was shocked by the noise and saw a lot of pedestrians lying on the ground when she got to the scene.
  Thirteen of the injured were taken to a local hospital after the explosion. A doctor there said five were in serious condition but already out of danger after emergency treatment. The others were just slightly hurt.
  The cause of the explosion is still under investigation, said an officer with the Tongren police, but refused to speculate as to the cause.
  It can be inferred from the passage that ________.

A.All the injured were taken to a hospital
B.8 of the injured were not taken to a hospital
C.The rubbish bin with a bomb was in a restaurant
D.The rubbish bin with a bomb was in a shop

  Which of the following statements is true according to the passage?

A.One passer- by, indentified only as Zhang, saw the man throwing a bomb into a bin.
B.Some customers in restaurants were injured.
C.The writer didn’t get to the scene.
D.All customers in shops got hurt.

  In the last paragraph the underlined word“ speculate” probably means ________.

A.tell B.guess
C.discuss D.talk

  What of the follwing can be the best title for the passage?

A.Bomb Hidden in a Rubbish Bin
B.The Cause of the Explosion
C.A Terrible Thing
D.Market Blast Kills 1 ,Injures 21
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Tea drinking was common in China for nearly one thousand years before anyone in Europe had ever heard about tea. People in Britain were much slower in finding out what tea was like, mainly because tea was very expensive. It could not be bought in shops. People had it sent from Holland. And even those people who could afford it did so only because of curiosity. Some of them were not sure how to use it. They thought it was a vegetable and tried cooking the leaves. Then they served them mixed with butter and salt. They soon discovered their mistake but many people used to spread the used tea leaves on bread and give them to their children as sandwiches.
Tea remained very expensive in England until the ships of the East India Company began to bring it direct from China early in the seventeenth century. During the next few years so much tea came into the country that the price fell and many people could afford to buy it.
At the same time people on the Continent were becoming more and more fond of tea. Until then tea had been drunk without milk in it, but one day a French lady named Madame de Sevigne decided to see what tea tasted like when milk was added. She found it so pleasant that she would never again drink it without milk. Because she was so famous a lady that people liked to copy everything she did, they also drank their tea with milk in it. Slowly this habit spread until it reached England and today only very few Britons drink tea without milk.
At first, tea was usually drunk after dinner in the evening. No one ever thought of drinking tea in the afternoon until a duchess (公爵夫人) found that a cup of tea and a piece of cake at three or four o'clock stopped her getting “a sinking feeling” as she called it. She invited her friends to have this new meal with her and so, tea-time was born.
The word “curiosity” in the first paragraph probably means ________.

A.好奇 B.臆测 C.迷恋 D.决心

Which of the following is true of tea-drinking in Britain?

A.The British people got expensive tea from India.
B.The habit of tea-drinking reached Britain from France.
C.The British people were much slower in getting the habit.
D.People in Britain began drinking tea one thousand years ago.

Some people cooked tea leaves because ______

A.most children liked to have them
B.they were very good vegetables
C.they didn’t know how to use them
D.sandwiches needed mixing with them

People in Britain like to drink tea with milk because of the influence of _______.

A.a famous French lady
B.people in Holland
C.the upper social class
D.the ancient Chinese

This passage mainly discusses _______.

A.how tea-time was born in history
B.the history of tea-drinking in Britain
C.the habit of drinking tea with milk in it
D.differences about tea-drinking Europe

Course A: Understanding computers
1. A twelve-hour course for people who do not know very much about computers but need to learn about them. You can learn what computers are, what computers can do and cannot do, and how to use them.
2. Course fee: $75, from June 1 to June 28, 9~12am every Sunday.
3. Equipment fee: $10.
4. Teacher: Joseph Saunders, professor of computer science at New Urban University, with twelve years of experience in computer field.
Call 67801642 or 67801643 for more information.
Course B: Learning to speak French
1. A course with a small class of less than 20 people, twice a week. Your French level is tested in the first class. Then you can begin practicing at one of eight different skill levels. This allows you to learn at your own speed, and prepares you to learn through situations of real life with a funny and easy method.
2. Course fee: $200, from June 1 to June 25, 4~7pm every Monday and Thursday.
3. Personal tutoring fee: $100.
4. Teacher: From the first day on you can have your own personal French teacher that corrects your exercises and assists you along the course, who has successfully taught French course before.
Phone 67353019 for more information.
Course C: Learning to swim
1. A course for people who have interest in swimming. We offer morning and afternoon classes, where swimming knowledge will be taught. Then you can gain swimming skills through practicing in water.
2. Course fee: $150, from June 9 to June 29, 10am~4pm every Tuesday and Friday..
3. Personal tutoring Fee: $100
4. Teacher: Teachers from sports college and experienced swimming-loves.
Very close to the Central Park. For further information call 67432308.
The computer professor has got _____ years of experience in computer field.

A.seven B.nine C.ten D.twelve

If you want to take Course A, you need to go ______ learn something about computers.

A.twice every week
B.three times a week
C.four times altogether
D.every Sunday afternoon

Having a test in the first French class is to ____.

A.correct your exercises
B.learn your speaking speed
C.practice your eight different levels
D.know your French level for the course

With a personal swimming trainer helping you along the course, you should pay ______ for the course altogether.

A.$100 B.$150 C.$200 D.$250

If you want to know more about the French-learning course, you can phone ____.

A.67801642 B.67353019
C.67432308 D.67801643

How important can a fifteen-year-old boy’s work be? Well, Louis Braille’s work changed the world. Born in a small town near Paris in 1809, shortly after his third birthday Louis blinded himself in one eye while playing with a sharp pointed tool in his father’s workshop. He soon lost the sight in his other eye when the infection(感染) spread.
He wanted to go to school, but in his small town there was no school for him. At that time, blind people did not get any school education. Braille went to Paris to study, but there were few books for the blind.
Louis knew that books were the key to learning. He struggled with ideas for three years. Finally, at fifteen, he invented an alphabet made with raised dots(点). Blind people could “read” by feeling the patterns of the dots.
Being able to read Braille allows blind children to learn together with the sighted at school, and go on to get jobs. It allows people who lose their eyesight to continue to read, learn and get information.
Braille got blind as a result of _________.

A.an illness B.an accident
C.a party D.a fired

From the passage we know in Braille’s day, _________

A.there were no schools in the town
B.none of blind could go to school
C.there were few books for the blind
D.blind children could read by talking

It took Braille _______ to invent the alphabet.

A.three years B.six years
C.fifteen D.many years.

The Braille alphabet _________.

A.was of no use for the blind people.
B.helped Louis make much money.
C.allowed people to get information directly.
D.made the blind read and learn more easily.

Which could be the best title for the passage?

A.Louis Braille changed the world
B.Louis Braille struggled in his life
C.Louis Braille saved sighted children
D.Louis Braille set up a blind school

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who wrote the story of the detective(侦探) Sherlock Holmes, was having a trip in Europe. One day he got out of the railway station and climbed into a taxi. Before he could say a word, the driver turned to him and asked, “Where can I take you, Mr. Doyle?”
Doyle was rather surprised. He asked the driver if he had ever seen him before. “No, sir,” the driver replied, “I have never seen you before.” Then he explained, “This morning’s newspaper had a story about your being on vacation in Marseilles. This is the taxi stop where people who return from Marseilles always come. Your skin color tells me you have been on vacation. The ink spot on your right fingers suggests to me that you are a writer. Your clothes are very English, not French. Adding up all those pieces of information, I conclude that you are Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.”
“This is truly surprising!” the writer cried out. “You are a real-life copy to my fictional(虚构的) story, Sherlock Holmes!”
“And there is one other thing,” the driver added, with a smile on his face.
“What’s that?”
“Your name is on the front of your suitcase.”
The conversation between the two people took place________.

A.at a bus stop B.in a taxi
C.in Marseilles D.in a railway station

Doyle was rather surprised because ________.

A.the driver had seen him before
B.the driver could call him by his name
C.the driver was waiting for him
D.the driver answered no questions from him

After he heard the driver’s analysis, Doyle concluded that ______.

A.the driver was Sherlock Holmes
B.the once wrote a story about the driver
C.he had met the driver long before
D.the driver was a real life-copy to his story

From what the driver said, we could know ________.

A.Doyle was from England
B.Doyle could not speak French
C.Doyle liked English very much
D.Doyle was writing a French story

The driver knew the writer’s name because _______.

A.Doyle told the driver himself
B.it was on the front of his suitcase
C.the morning’s newspaper had said that
D.the detective let out the information

You could feel sorry for Alberto Torres, who is blind. The last thing he remembers seeing was his daughter being born 13 years ago. Then the world went blank; he can only imagine what his only child looks like now, as a teenaged honor student. Bad luck is no stranger to this warm and thoughtful 37-year-old man. His mother died of cancer when he was 4, and his father, who was often ill, had to give him up to the care of the state when he was 11. He later worked for 19 years in a workshop making household goods, deathly boring work. Earlier this month, Alberto Torres’s wife, who had just been laid off from her job, had to have a breast removed due to cancer and now faces a year of radiation treatments. Things seemed always to go from almost incredibly bad to worse. Even Mr. Torres’s good luck has a dark side: Five years ago, his lovely guide dog pulled him out of the path of a truck. Mr. Torres was not hurt. The dog was killed.
But Mr. Torres does not feel sorry for himself. “These are just little bumps you have to go over in your life,” he said. At 5 a.m. on a recent morning, we caught up with Mr. Torres at a subway stop in Brooklyn, New York, near where he lives in a third-floor apartment (with no elevator). He had been up since 3 a.m., feeding his new dog, making coffee, getting ready. “When you’re blind, it takes a little longer to do things,” he said.
Mr. Torres was beginning his two-hour trip to his job developing film in the X-ray department of the emergency room of the Bronx hospital. He would take the G train to Queens Plaza station to the R train, heading towards Manhattan. He would then ride the R train to 59th Street where he would walk upstairs to switch to the Number 6 train. At one point along the journey, he might chat with a stranger. At another, someone would pat his dog, calling him by name. People offered assistance, even seats. At 125th Street, Mr. Torres would transfer to the Number 4 train by crossing the platform. At 149th Street, he would go down to the Number 2. He would take that to East 180th Street where he nearly always has a long wait for his final train, to Pelham Parkway. Then he and his dog would walk 20 minutes to the hospital.
It was a hard job to come by. Before he got the job, Mr. Torres was determined to escape the workshop run by an organization dedicated to help people who can’t see. He wanted a job developing X-ray film, something that everyone must do in the dark. He had to handle the long trip, as well as the work. “Our philosophy here is that blind people can do just about anything except drive buses,” it was the thinking about disabled people at the Bronx hospital. “We find what a person can do rather than what he can’t do,” said the hospital’s director.
One day a while ago marked the first anniversary of Mr. Torres’s hiring. He developed 150 or so X-rays, his usual output, to celebrate. Mr. Torres works by himself in a small, dark room that smells of chemicals. He cannot wear gloves, because he needs to feel. It is hard work, related to emergency of lives. His immediate supervisor says he trusts him 100%. Mr. Torres makes $20,000 a year. But his motivation goes beyond money. “If I start feeling like a victim, that makes me bitter. And why be bitter? That makes you go into a hole and stay there.” he said. “I’m not doing anything out of the ordinary,” insisted Mr. Torres as he quickly completed the task.
Mr. Torres became blind when________.

A.his daughter was just born
B.he was thirteen years old
C.his mother died of cancer
D.his wife was out of work

Mr. Torres does not feel sorry for himselfbecause he ________.

A.was once saved by his lovely guide dog
B.is taken good care of by the government
C.thinks it’s natural to have setbacks in life
D.believes it takes a little longer to do things

The description of Mr. Torres’s long trip to work shows ________.

A.the effective traffic system
B.the kindness of New Yorkers
C.the loyalty of his guide dog
D.his will to overcome difficulty

What is the principle of the hospital in employing a worker?

A.Sympathy counts most.
B.Ability comes first.
C.Preference for the blind.
D.Easy job for the weak.

Mr. Torres works very hard in order to ________.

A.make plenty of money
B.win his supervisor’s trust
C.live like a normal person
D.complete his daily task

In the eyes of the writer, Alberto Torres is a man of _______.

A.deep thinking B.weak motivation
C.special talents D.great independence

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