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Like many lovers of books, Mary and her husband, Richard Goldman, seldom walked past a bookstore without stopping to look inside. They often talked of opening their own store one day.
When Mary was hospitalized with heart trouble in 1989, they decided it was time to get serious. Richard, who worked for a business company, was eager to work for himself, and Mary needed to slow down from her demanding job.
They started by talking to bookstore owners and researching the industry. “We knew it had to be a specialty(专业) store because we couldn’t match the big chains dollar for dollar,” says Mary. One figure caught her attention: She’d read somewhere that roughly 20 percent of books sold were mysteries (推理小说), and many buyers spent more $300 a year on books. She and Richard were themselves mystery readers.
On Halloween 1992, they opened the Mystery Lovers Bookshop and Café near their home. With three children in college, the couple could not spend all the family’s money to start a shop. To cover the $100,000 cost, they drew some of their savings, borrowed from relatives and from a bank.
The store merely broke even in its first year, with only $120,000 in sales. But Mary was always coming up with new ways to attract customers. The shop had a coffee bar and it offered gifts to mystery lovers and served dinners for book clubs that met in the store. She also invited dozens of writers to discuss their stories.
Today Mystery Lovers makes sales of about $420,000 a year. After paying taxes, business costs and the six part-time sales clerks, Richard and Mary together earn about $34,000.
“The job you love may not go hand in hand with a million-dollar income,” says Richard. “This has always been about an enjoyable life for ourselves, not about making a lot of money.”
1.When Mary was in hospital, the couple realized that ____.
A. they had to put their plan into practice   B. health was more important than wealth
C. heart trouble was a serious illness        D. they both needed to stop working
2.After Mary got well from her illness they began _____.
A. to study industrial management          
B. to buy and read more mystery books
C. to do market research on book business 
D. to work harder to save money for the bookstore
3.According to Richard, the main purpose of running the bookstore is _____.
A. to pay for their children’s education     B. to get to know more writers
C. to set up more bookstores              D. to do what they like to do

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It was about midday. I’d left work early in the morning to cash a cheque. I walked along to the bank, and found that there weren’t too many people about ten or eleven customers in there, which was pretty unusual for those central city banks.
I waited until it was my turn and just went up to the desk and started to talk to the bank clerk. He had a really strange expression on his face -- just sort of blank stare at least I thought he was looking at me and then I realized he was staring over my shoulder.
I began to turn round to see what he was looking at. At the same moment the outside bank guard came flying through the door and lay face down on the floor and following him through the door were three frightening masked men. They were carrying guns; at least I think the one in front was carrying a gun. Whether or not they said anything at that point I can’t remember to this day, or whether people just automatically put their hands up I’ve just no idea.
For a few moments there was just total silence, suddenly broken by the telephone ringing and I remember thinking and wondering who was on the other end of the telephone. Nobody went to answer the telephone, so this thing just kept on ringing and ringing. Then two of the masked men went to the counter, jumped over it and got the cashiers and the bank clerks to start filling the bags with cash. While the two were getting the money, the one at the door who was covering us with the gun was a bit frightened. He started swearing at them, and telling them to hurry up, to get a move on. They jumped back over the counter. One of them slipped as he landed on the floor and fell over and the other two swore at him again. They left through the door. Warning us, “Don’t move, stay like that with your hands up for ten minutes.” And then they just disappeared. Again back to total silence. People put their hands down, I put my hands down but I just stayed exactly where I was.
What does the writer mean by saying “…a pretty unusual number for those central banks” in the first paragraph?

A.More customers than usual were staying in the bank.
B.Less bank clerks than expected were in the bank.
C.There were often more than a dozen customers in the bank.
D.More banks should be open to serve customers in the city center.

The bank clerk wore a blank expression on his face probably because ________.

A.he was feeling upset at that moment
B.he felt puzzled and sensed something terrible
C.he was required to keep silence
D.he was threatened with a gun by robbers

Which of the following is true according to the passage?

A.The customers didn’t wait in line but jumped the queue because of the confusion.
B.All the people in the bank except the writer put their hands up automatically.
C.Nobody answered the phone because all the clerks were busy with work.
D.the bank workers were forced to fill the robbers’ bags with cash.

What’s the best title of this passage?

A.A Street Gang B.A Strange Bank
C.A Bank Robbery D.A Horrible Adventure

No one is glad to hear that his body has to be cut open by a surgeon(外科医生) and part of it taken out. Today, however, we needn't worry about feeling pain during the operation. The sick person falls into a kind of sleep,and when he awakes,the operation is finished. But these happy conditions are fairly new.It is not many years since a man who had to have operation felt all its pain.
Long ago, operation had usually to be done while the sick man could feel everything. The sick man had to be held down(压制,控制) on a table by force while the doctors did their best for him. He could feel all the pain if his leg or arm was being cut off, and his fearful cries filled the room and the hearts of those who watched.
Soon after 1770, Josept Priestley discovered a gas which is now called “laughing gas”.Laughing gas became known in America.Young men and women went to parties to try it.Most of them spent their time laughing,but one man at a party,Horace Wells,noticed that people didn't seem to feel pain when they were using this gas.He decided to make an experiment on himself.He asked a friend to help him.
Wells took some of the gas,and his friend pulled out one of Well’s teeth.Wells felt no pain at all.
As he didn't know enough about laughing gas,he gave a man less gas than he should have. The man cried out with pain when his tooth was being pulled out.
Wells tried again,but this time he gave too much of the gas,and the man died.Wells never forgot this terrible event.
It is ____ since a man being operated felt all the pain.

A.a few more years B.not long C.few years D.two thousand years

Long ago,when the sick man was operated on, he ____.

A.could feel nothing B.could not want anything
C.could feel all the pain D.could do anything

Using the laughing gas,the people did not seem to ____.

A.be afraid of anything B.feel pain C.want to go to the parties D.be ill

If a man took less laughing gas than he should have when an operation went on,he _.

A.felt nothing B.felt very comfortable C.still felt pain D.would die

One who took too much of the laughing gas ___.

A.would laugh all the time B.would die
C.would never feel pain D.would be very calm

Started in 1636, Harvard University is the oldest of all the many colleges and universities in the United States. Yale, Princeton, Columbia and Dartmouth were opened soon after Harvard.
  In the early years, these schools were much alike(*similar).Only young men went to college. All the students studied the same subjects, and everyone learned Latin, Greek and Hebrew. Little was known about science then, and one kind of school could teach everything that was known about the world. When the students graduated(*毕业),most of them became ministers or teachers.
 In 1782, Harvard started a medical school for young men who wanted to become doctors. Later, lawyers could receive their training in Harvard’s law school. In 1825, besides Latin and Greek, Harvard began teaching modern languages, such as French and German. Soon it began teaching American history.
 As knowledge increased, Harvard and other colleges began to teach many new subjects. Students were allowed to choose the subjects that interested them.
 Today, there are many different kinds of colleges and universities. Most of them are made up of smaller schools that deal with special fields of learning. There’s so much to learn that one kind of school can’t offer it all.
The oldest university in the US is _________.

A.Yale    B.Harvard    C.Princeton   D.Columbia

From the second paragraph, we can see that in the early years,______.

A.those colleges and universities were the same
B.people, young or old, might study in the colleges
C.students studied only some languages and science
D.when the students finished their school, they became lawyers or teachers

Modern languages the Harvard taught in 1825 were ________.

A.Latin and Greek B.Latin, Green, French and German
C.American history and German D.French and German

As knowledge increased, colleges began to teach_______.

A.everything that was known B.law and something about medicine
C.many new subjects D.the subjects that interested students

On the whole, the passage is about___________.

A.how to start a university B.the world-famous colleges in America
C.how colleges have changed D.what kind of lesson each college teaches

Miss Gogers taught physics in a New York school. Last month she explained to one of her classes about sound, and she decided to test them to see how successful she had been in her explanation. She said to them,“Now I have a brother in Los Angeles. If I was calling him on the phone and at the same time you were 75 feet away, listening to me from across the street, which of you would hear what I said earlier, my brother or you and for what reason?”
 Tom at once answered,“Your brother. Because electricity travaels faster than sound waves.”“That’s every good,”Miss Gogers answered; but then one of the girls raised her hand, and Miss Gogers said.“Yes, Kate.”
 “I disagree,”Kate said.“Your brother would hear you earlier because when it’s 11 o’clock here it’s only 8 o’clock in Los Angeles.”
Miss Gogers was teaching her class_________.

A.how to telephone   B.about electricity C.about time zone   D.about sound

Miss Gogers raised this question because she wanted to know whether______.

A.it was easy to phone to Los Angeles
B.her student could hear her from 75 feet away
C.her students had a good command of her lesson about sound
D.sound waves were slower than electricity

Tom thought that electricity was _________.

A.slower than sound waves B.faster than sound waves
C.not so fast as sound waves D.as fast as sound waves

Kate thought Tom was wrong because _______.

A.clocks in Los Angeles showed a different time from those in New York
B.electricity was slower than sound waves
C.Tom was not good at physics at all
D.Tom’s answer had nothing to do with sound waves

Whose answer do you think is correct according to the law of physics?

A.Tom’s   B.Kate’s C.Bath A and B D.Neither A nor B

BEIJING, Oct. 8(Xinhua)——There are ten times as many Chinese newspapers and magazines than there were 30 years ago. That’s when the country adopted the reform and opening-up policy.
Figures from the General Administration of Press and Publication (GAPP)show there were 186 newspapers and 930 magazines in China in 1978. Today, the country has 2,081 newspapers and 9,363 different magazines.
In the meantime, official figures show China has some 600 publishing houses producing nearly 300,000 kinds of books. That’s a dramatic increase from the 105 publishers of the past that produced only 10,000 different books.
Rapid economic development and universal education since China adopted the reform has helped fuel the need for more information sources.
Under the market economy, hundreds of publishing houses and newspapers have taken steps to restructure management systems into corporations listed on the stock market.
The legal system overseeing the news and publishing industries in China has also changed over the last three decades. Since 1990 a law and five relevant(相关) regulations were adopted in 1990 to govern the sectors.
Since it started in 1993, digital publishing has flourished. Its industrial volume amounted to 20 billion yuan (2.93 billion U.S. dollars) in 2006. More than 500,000 kinds of digital books were produced last year alone in China, which is more than any other country in the world.
Which of the following would be the best title for the text?

A.Digital books take the place of common ones in China.
B.China has more newspapers and magazines.
C.More information sources are developing with the economy.
D.A law should be adopted to govern the publishing industries.

There are ten times as many newspapers and magazines because ________.

A.the publishing houses want to make more money.
B.there are more readers along with the bigger population.
C.economic and education have developed under the policy.
D.the legal system overseeing the publishing industries has changed.

Which is true according to this text?

A.The development of publishing industry in the past was out of control.
B.Hundreds of publishing houses have closed down and turned to stock market.
C.China adopted the reform and opening-up policy about 20 years ago.
D.China produces more digital books than any other country.

The underlined word “flourished” in Paragraph 7 probably means ________.

A.first appeared B.fell down
C.well developed D.successfully ended

You will probably read this text in the ________ column of XINHUA NET?

A.culture and education B.entertainment
C.science and technology D.business

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