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A heart attack can happen to anyone. Let’s say it’s 5:20 pm and you’re driving home alone after an unusually hard day on the job. You’re really tired, upset and frustrated. Suddenly, you start experiencing terrible pains in your chest, and they spread to your arm and up into your jaw. You are only about five miles from the hospital which is nearest your home. Unfortunately, you don’t know if you’ll be able to make it that far. You’ve been trained in a CPR course, but the guy who teaches the course hasn’t told you how to perform it on yourself. What can you do?
Since many people are alone when they suffer a heart attack, this article seems to be quite useful. Without help, people whose hearts stop beating properly and who begin to feel faint (头晕的) have only about 10 seconds left before they faint. However, they can help themselves by coughing over and over very loudly. A deep breath should be taken before each cough, and the cough must be deep and prolonged, coming from inside the chest. Deep breaths and coughing must be repeated about every two seconds without stopping until help arrives, or until the heart is felt to be beating normally again. Deep breaths get oxygen into the lungs and coughing movements squeeze (挤压) the heart and keep the blood circulating. The squeezing pressure on the heart also helps it beat normally. In this way, people who are suffering a heart attack can get to a phone and between breaths call for help.
Tell as many other people as possible about this, as it may save their lives!
64. What is the main idea of this passage?
A. The good thing about coughing.
B. How to help people survive a heart attack.
C. How to avoid having a heart attack.
D. How to survive a heart attack when alone.
65. According to the passage, CPR is most probably something done to ________.
A. regain a person’s breath and heart beat
B. oneself to help survive a heart attack
C. teach people how to stay in good condition
D. train people how to stay calm when facing danger
66. According to the second paragraph, what’s the use of taking deep breaths during a heart attack?
A. It helps to squeeze the heart.                        
B. It helps to keep the blood circulating.
C. It helps to get oxygen into the lungs.             
D. It helps to reduce the pains in the chest.
67. In which section of a newspaper could you read this passage?
A. Health care.     B. Advertisement.        C. Family.       D. Education.

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Last week, while visiting my dad with my daughter, we went to a restaurant for dinner. When we were seated, my dad asked the waitress if there were any soldiers eating at the restaurant. Then waitress said there was a soldier having dinner with his friend. My dad told the waitress to tell the soldier and his friend that their dinner was paid for! He also said that he did not want to be known as the benefactor(施主).
Then waitress later commented on my dad’s thoughtful behavior saying that she had never seen anything like this before. At a local college, she had studied opera and so she used this to thank my dad by performing a piece from The Pearl Fisherman. Her voice brought me to tears because it sounded perfect!
After a while, the soldier appeared at our table (I don’t know how he knew my dad paid the bill for him.) and said that he would be sent to the front the next morning and that he could not leave this country without saying “thanks” to my dad. My dad replied that it was he who wanted to say “thanks”. They shook hands as the soldier left.
Before we left, the waitress came by again. She did a magic show as another way to show her
“thanks” to my dad. Her show was really great. My dad left her a note with email address asking for her next performance time in addition to a $ 50 tip.
Everyone witnessed something exemplary(可作榜样的) in the human spirit that night. I can only hope to see more of this in the future.
68.What did the soldier do in response to the author’s father’s kindness?
A.He gave something to author’s dad.
B.He gave a big tip to the waitress.
C.He said thanks to the author’s dad in person.
D.He did a magic show for the author and her father.
69.The author considered her father’s action to be ____.
A.funny B.understandable C.worthless D.honorable
70.Their passage mainly tells us that we should ____.
A.learn to be grateful to others B.find ways to thank others
C.try to learn from each other D.respect soldiers and waitresses

A small piece of fish each day may keep the heart doctor away.That's the finding of a scientific study of Dutch men in which deaths from heart disease were more than 50 percent lower among those who consumed at least an ounce(盎司)of salt water fish per day than those who never ate fish.
The Dutch research is one of three human studies that hold the belief that eating fish can provide health benefits, particularly to the heart. Heart disease is the number-one killer in the United States, with more than 550,000 deaths occurring from heart attacks each year.But researchers previously have noticed that the incidence (发生率) of heart disease is lower in cultures that consume more fish than Americans do.There are fewer heart disease deaths, for example, among the Eskimos of Greenland, who consume about 14 ounces of fish a day, and among the Japanese, whose daily fish consumption averages more than 3 ounces.



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For 20 years, the Dutch study followed 852 middle-aged men, 20 percent of whom ate no fish.

At the start of the study, the average fish consumption was about two-thirds of an ounce each day with more men eating thin fish than fatty fish.
During the next two decades, 78 of the men died from heart disease.The fewest deaths were among the group who regularly ate fish, even at levels far lower than those of the Japanese or Eskimos.This relationship was true regardless of other factors such as age, high blood pressure, or blood cholesterol (胆固醇) levels.
64.Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?
A.The Dutch research has proved that eating fish can help to prevent heart disease.
B.Heart doctors won't call at your house so long as you keep eating fish each day.
C.Among all the diseases heart disease is the most dangerous in America.
D.There is a low incidence of heart disease in Japan and Greenland.
65.The underlined phrase "this relationship" refers to the connection between ______and the incidence of heart disease.
A.regular fish-eating B.the amount of fish eaten
C.the kind of fish eaten D.people of different regions
66.The passage is mainly about ______.
A.the high incidence of heart disease
B.the great changes in people's diet
C.the fish consumption in some countries
D.the effect of fish eating on people 's health
67.How many lives could probably be saved each year in the United States by eating fish according to the Dutch study?
A.152,000. B.110,000. C.275,000. D.550,000.

Contrary to the impression that grandmothers are delighted to help their grown daughters and care for their grandchildren, a study of multigenerational families shows that many older women hate the frequent demands that the younger generations make on their time and energy.
“Young women with children are under a lot of pressure these days, and they expect their mothers to help them pick up the pieces,” noted Dr.Bertram J.Cohler, a behavioral scientist at the University of Chicago.“This is often the strongest source of complaint on the part of Grandmother, who has finished with child caring and now has her own life to live.Grandmothers like to see their children and grandchildren, but on their own time.”
Dr.Cohler is director of a study, sponsored by the National Institute of Aging, of 150 workingclass families that live in a Midwestern suburb.He and Dr.Henry U.Gruebaum of Harvard Medical School, have already completed their study of four such families in New England.
Dr.Cohler tells of a middle-aged Boston woman who works as a cook all week and for her parish(教区) on Sundays.Every Saturday, her one day off, her daughter and family visit, expecting mother to make lunch, shop, and visit.“That's not how she wants to grow old,” said Dr.Cohler, who was told by the older woman, “My daughter would never speak to me if she knew how angry and unhappy I get.”
In all the four New England families studied, the older women disliked the numerous phone calls and visits from their grown daughters, who often turned to the mothers for advice, physical resources, love, and companionship as well as baby-sitting services.“American society keeps increasing the burdens for older people, particularly those in their 50s and 60s,” Dr.Cohler said in an interview here.“They're still working and they're taking care of their grown children and maybe also their aged parents.Sometimes life gets to be too much.”
67.Which of the following is closest in meaning to the expression “pick up the pieces” in the second paragraph?
A.Save a bad situation. B.Put children's toys in their proper places.
C.Gather up pieces of clothing. D.Keep the room in good order.
68.The middle-aged Boston woman ______.
A.expects her mother to cook lunch for her
B.enjoys the room in good order
C.visits an older woman every Saturday
D.works six days a week
69.The passage is mainly about ______.
A.young women's inability to look after their children
B.Grandmothers' attitudes toward helping their grown daughters
C.average American women's family life
D.grandmother should give more help to their daughters
70.From Dr.Cohler's study we may reach the conclusion that ______.
A.daughters should be independent of their old grandmothers
B.grandmother should give more help to their daughters
C.mothers and daughters should support each other
D.daughters should be more considerate toward their mothers

It is natural that children are curious about the world around them.For example, they want to know how their hearts beat.They want to know why the ocean water tastes salty.
As children grow up, they become curious about different kinds of things.When they are babies, they are interested in the parts of their bodies and in the smiles of their mothers.They become interested in the physical world around them: the plants, the animals, the sky.Later, they become interested in the things that people have made: wheels, bicycles, cars.And when they are adults, their curiosity continues.Sometimes this curiosity leads to a career in science.
Scientists spend their lives trying to find out about the world.Those who work with the earth sciences study the earth, the oceans, and the sky.Other scientists who study living things work with the biological sciences.A third group of scientists study the physical sciences, e.g.physics, chemistry .
These scientists have already discovered a lot about our world.For example, they tell us why your heart beats fast when you run.They say that when you are quiet, your heart normally beats 65 or 75 times a minute.Your heart is a pump that pumps blood to all parts of the body.The blood carries oxygen and nutrition.When you run, your muscles work very hard and use the nutrition that the blood carries to them.The muscles need oxygen, too.So your brain sends a signal to the heart.The signal means that the muscles need more nutrition and oxygen.Then the heart beats fast and sends blood quickly to the muscles.It may beat 90 to 140 times a minute.
Of course, scientists cannot answer all of our questions.If we ask, “Why does the ocean water taste salty” scientists will say that the salt comes from rocks.When a rock gets very hot or very cold, it cracks.Rain falls into cracks.The rain then carries the salt into the earth and into the rivers.The rivers carry the salt into the ocean.But then we ask , “What happens to the salt in the ocean? The ocean does not get saltier every year.” Scientists are not sure about the answer to this question.
We know a lot about our world, but there are still many answers that we do not have, and we are curious.
63.According to the passage, which of the following statements is true?
  A.People are curious in the same way.
  B.People in different countries are interested in different things.
  C.People of different ages are interested in different things. 
D.Men and women are curious about different things.
64.Scientists who work with the biological sciences study____.
A.the earth , the oceans and the sky B.plants and animals
C.man-made things D.ocean water
65.A rock cracks _____.
A.in wet regions B.in dry regions
C.when salty water falls in D.at very high or very low temperatures
66.People are always curious because _____ .
A.they know little about the world B.they know nothing about the world
C.they can not explain many things D.they want to be scientists

Just at that time, a telegram arrived from his brother.Mr.Jameson opened it quickly.It said, “Come home at once.Your wife is ill and in a critical condition.West End Hospital.”Mr.Jameson began to think.Since the work at the mine was going well, he decided to go home at once.He just told himself again and again that he couldn’t lose his wife, or his life would be meaningless.
At about 6 the next morning, he and one of his assistants reached Lamesa, where they were going to Chicago at 6:30.There was still half an hour left before the train started, so Mr.Jameson decided to telephone to Chicago to ask about his wife.And after that, if still enough time was left he could see a doctor and have the piece of coal or the piece of metal removed out of his eye.His eye and his whole head ached now.
After he sent his assistant to the railway station to buy tickets for the train, he went to make the phone call.When the operator put through his call, he sat down and waited.His eye felt like a piece of hot iron.And he was worried about his sick wife.The phone rang.Soon Mr.Jameson talked with the hospital in Chicago.A voice said, “Yes, sir! Your wife is here.She is much better.There is no danger now.You don’t have to return.”
Everything was all right.His wife was going to live.He would not lose his wife.Quite excited, Mr.Jameson began to cry like a little child and could not stop.Big tears rolled out of his eyes and down his cheeks.Soon his eye felt better.He touched his eye and felt something in the corner of his eye.That was a small piece of coal.His tears had washed it out of his eye!
59.What happened to Mr.Jameson before setting off?
A.He was hurt and couldn’t walk.
B.His eye was suffering from a certain disease.
C.A small piece of coal stuck him in the eye.
D.A piece of metal got into his eye.
60.The writer doesn’t mention but we can infer that Mr.Jameson probably _____.
A.worked in a factory in Chicago
B.worked as a mining engineer in a company
C.was worried about his work on the way to Chicago
D.sold coal in a faraway village
61.How was the coal removed out of Mr.Jameson’s eye?
A.It was taken out by a doctor.
B.A good rest helped it out.
C.He rubbed his eyes slightly.
D.It was washed out by his tears.
62.How can we describe the feeling of Mr.Jameson?
A.Worried ---relaxed B.Excited ---dull
C.Anger---calm.D.Depressed ---nervous.

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