TIPPING
How much and who on your cruise(乘船旅游) should be tipped? When and how should tips be given? Generally, you should plan to tip your room steward (服务员) $3.00 to $3.50 per person, per day, and plan an equal amount for your dining room waiter, and half of that for the busboy(餐厅侍者助手).
On most ships, tip the maitre d’(侍者总管) or dining room captain only if you ask for special favors or table-side service; $5 to $10 is normal. Barmen and wine stewards are tipped 10 to 15 percent, but many cruise lines will add this tip to your bar or drink bill. Check the bill to see how it is handled. Also, tips for special services such as salon && spa treatments and room service are left to the guest, depending on services offered. Sometimes tips are placed in envelopes from your cabin’s stationery supply. Generally, passengers on cruises of 10 days or less will tip at the end of the cruise; on longer voyages, tipping weekly.
As part of a new trend that seems likely to grow, Carnival, Holland America, Norwegian, Princess and Cunard now charge tips to your account (账). Norwegian, for example, charges $10 per day, per guest, to cover service in the various dining rooms and your room steward. If you feel this amount needs to be increased or decreased, arrangements can be made onboard the ship, generally at the end of your cruise.
A few lines do not encourage tipping, including Radisson Seven Seas, Seabourn, Silversea and Windstar. Crew members are reportedly higher paid and not tip dependent. Many passengers tip anyway for outstanding service or special favors and give them tips face to face immediately they get serviced.
Tips on Tipping
Cabin steward
$3.00 to $3.50 per person per day
Waiter
$3.00 to $3.50 per person per day
Assistant waiter
$1.50 to $2.00 per person per day
Bartender, wine and deck stewards
10-15% of the bill
Maitre d’
$5.00 to $10.00 tip for each special serviceAccording to the passage, if your bill for bartender and wine is $50, you will probably tip the steward ______.
| A.$3.50 | B.$3.00 | C.$6.50 | D.$10.00 |
How many ways does the passage mention on how to tip the waiters?
| A.3. | B.2. | C.4. | D.5. |
According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true?
| A.Sometimes you must spend more money tipping waiters on cruise. |
| B.In the line Seabourn, you must tip crew members for the special service. |
| C.In some lines, you can bargain on how much to tip. |
| D.Generally speaking, maitre d’ can get the most tips. |
The passage is written mainly for the readers who are ______.
| A.travelers on cruise to America |
| B.students to foreign countries to study |
| C.tourists not knowing how to tip in hotels |
| D.travelers on cruise the first time |
I know what you’re thinking : pizza (比萨饼)? For breakfast? But the truth is that you can have last night’s leftovers in the a. m. if you want to.
I know lots of women who skip breakfast (不吃早餐) , and they have a ton of different excuses for doing it . Some say they don’t have time, others think they’re “saving” calories (卡路里), still others just don’t like breakfast food .
But the bottom line is that eating in the morning is very important when you’re trying to lose weight. “Eating just about anything from 300 to 400 calories would be better than nothing at all,” says Katherine Brooking , R , D , who developed the super-easy eating plan for this year’s “SELF CHALLENGE”. And even pizza can be healthy if it’s loaded with vegetables, and you stick to one small piece.
Breakfast is one meal I never miss, and the same goes for most weight loss success stories. Research shows that eating breakfast keeps you from overeating later in the day. Researchers at the University of Southern California found that breakfast skippers have a bigger chance of gaining weight than those who regularly have a morning meal.
So eat something in the morning, anything. I know plenty of friends who end up having no breakfast altogether, and have just coffee or orange juice. I say, try heating up last night’s leftovers-it may sound crazy, but if it works for you, do it! I find if I tell myself, “You can always eat it tomorrow,” I put away the leftovers instead of eating more that night. Try it…you may save yourself some pre-bedtime calories. And watch your body gain the fat-burning effects. The word “leftovers” in Paragraph 1 probably means__________.
| A.food remaining after a meal | B.things left undone |
| C.meals made of vegetables | D.pizza topped with fruit |
What can we infer from the text?
| A.Working women usually have breakfast in a hurry. |
| B.Many people have wrong ideas about breakfast. |
| C.There are some easy ways of cooking a meal. |
| D.Eating vegetables helps save energy. |
According to the last paragraph, it is important to____________.
| A.eat something for breakfast | B.be careful about what you eat |
| C.heat up food before eating it | D.eat calorie-controlled food |
The text is written mainly for those_____________.
| A.who go to work early | B.who want to lose weight |
| C.who stay up late | D.who eat before sleep |
What’s the writer’s attitude towards eating breakfast?
| A.He thinks it’s up to different people. | B.He is not sure about it. |
| C.He thinks it depends. | D.He supports it. |
As any homemaker who has tried to keep order at the dinner table knows, there is far more to a family meal than food. Sociologist Michael Lewis has been studying 50 families to find out just how much more.
Lewis and his co-workers carried out their study by videotaping(录像) the families while they ate ordinary meals in their own homes. They found that parents with small families talk actively with each other and their children. But as the number of children gets larger, conversation gives way to the parents’ efforts to control the loud noise they make. That can have an important effect on the children. “In general, the more question-asking the parents do, the higher the children’s IQ scores,” Lewis says. “And the more children there are, the less question-asking there is. ”
The study also provides an explanation for why middle children often seem to have a harder time in life than their siblings(兄弟姐妹). Lewis found that in families with three or four children, dinner conversation is likely to center on the oldest child, who has the most to talk about, and the youngest, who needs the most attention. “Middle children are invisible,” says Lewis. “When you see someone get up from the table and walk around during dinner, chances are it’s the middle child.” There is, however, one thing that stops all conversation and prevents anyone from having attention: “When the TV is on,” Lewis says, “dinner is a non-event.”The writer’s purpose in writing the text is to ______.
| A.report on the findings of a study |
| B.teach parents ways to keep order at the dinner table |
| C.show the relationship between parents and children |
| D.give information about family problems |
Parents with large families ask fewer questions at dinner because ______.
| A.they are busy serving food to their children |
| B.they have to pay more attention to younger children |
| C.they are busy keeping order at the dinner table |
| D.they are tired out having prepared food for the whole family |
By saying “Middle children are invisible” in paragraph 3, Lewis means that middle children ______.
| A.have to help their parents to serve dinner |
| B.find it hard to keep up with other children |
| C.are often kept away from the dinner table |
| D.get the least attention from the family |
Which of the following statements would the writer agree to?
| A.Parents should talk to each of their children frequently. |
| B.It is a good idea to have the TV on during dinner. |
| C.It is important to have the right food for children. |
| D.Elder children should help the younger ones at dinner. |
“Soon, you’re going to have to move out!” cried my neighbor upon seeing the largest tomato plant known to mankind, or at least known in my neighborhood.
One tiny 9-inch plant, bought for $1.25 in the spring, has already taken over much of my rose bed, covering much of other plants, and is well on its way to the front door.
Roses require a good deal of care, and if it weren’t for the pleasure they give, it wouldn’t be worth the work. As it is, I have a garden full of sweet-smelling roses for most of the year. Bushes must be pruned(剪枝) in early spring, leaving ugly woody branches until the new growth appears a few weeks later. It was the space available in the garden that led me into planting just one little tomato plant. A big mistake.
Soil conditions made just perfect for roses turn out to be even more perfect for tomatoes. The daily watering coupled with full sun and regular fertilizing (施肥) have turned the little plant into a tall bush. The cage I placed around it as the plant grew has long disappeared under the thick leaves.
Now the task I face in harvesting the fruit is twofold; First, I have to find the red ones among the leaves, which means I almost have to stand on my head, and once found I have to reach down and under, pick the tomatoes and withdraw(缩回) my full fist without dropping the prize so dearly won. I found two full-blown white roses completely hidden as I picked tomatoes in June. But they were weak and the leaves already yellow for lack of light.
Here I am faced with a painful small decision: To tear up a wonderful and productive tomato plant that offers up between ten and twenty ripe sweet tomatoes each day or say goodbye to several expensive and treasured roses. Like Scarlett in Gone With the Wind, I’ll think about that tomorrow.What are the requirements for the healthy growth of rose?
| A.Frequent pruning and fertilizing. | B.A lot of care and the right soil. |
| C.Tomato plants grown alongside. | D.Cages placed around the roots. |
The writer planted the tomato because _________.
| A.there was room for it in the garden |
| B.the soil was just right for it |
| C.it cost only $1.25 |
| D.the roses’ branches needed to be covered |
This year the writer’s roses were __________.
| A.removed from the rose bed |
| B.largely hidden under the tomato plant |
| C.mostly damaged by too much sunlight |
| D.picked along with the tomatoes |
By saying “the prize so dearly won” in paragraph 5, the writer wants to ________.
| A.express her liking for the roses |
| B.show the hardship of growing the roses |
| C.show the difficulty in picking the tomatoes |
| D.express her care for the tomatoes |
In the situation described in the text, one good thing is that ________.
| A.the writer has a daily harvest of tomatoes |
| B.the roses cost the writer little money |
| C.someone will help the writer make the decision |
| D.the writer can now enjoy both the roses and tomatoes |
New York City schoolchildren can’t use cellphones at school because of Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s ban on cellphones in schools. Many parents are opposed to Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s ban on cellphones in schools by e-mail messages.
There was a 13-year-old student who was shot with a gun after school, unable to call his mother for help. There was a high school student robbed three times last year, twice in her school building. There was a girl who got a piece of glass placed in her eye during school and was saved from a possible cornea transplant (角膜移植) only because, having disobeyed the cellphone ban, she was able to call her mother and get an operation on time.
The ban has been on for years, but it set off a widespread parental outcry only in April, after some headmasters sent home letters reminding parents that cellphones are not allowed to be brought into school.
Mr Bloomberg has defended the ban, saying that cellphones are bad and often used to cheat or call in friends for fights. If something is important, he says, parents can call schools directly.
On the other hand, many of the e-mail messages from parents described the ban as “cruel and heartless”, “absurdly(荒谬地) wrong-headed”, “anti-parent”, “ridiculous”.
“We respect the fears that parents have,” David Cantor, a spokesman for Schools Minister Joel I. Klein said, “but after all the fact is that having phones in schools always leads to more problems.”A 13-year-old student was shot with a gun after school, unable to call his mother for help, because ____.
| A.his mother had no cellphone |
| B.his mother wasn’t at home |
| C.he didn’t take a cellphone with him |
| D.he was too frightened to call |
From the fifth paragraph we can see many parents _________ the ban.
| A.agreed to | B.thought highly of |
| C.supported | D.were opposed to |
According to what the spokesman said, the school might _______.
| A.call off the ban |
| B.continue the ban |
| C.thank the parents |
| D.allow some students to use cellphones at school |

Some of Man's closest relatives in the animal kingdom are under serious threat because of human activity, according to a recently published report.
Almost one in three of all apes and monkeys are now considered to be in danger of dying out and disappearing from our planet, if action is not taken soon.
The report, which was produced for the World Conservation Union (WCU), shows that 114 of the world's 394 kinds could be lost forever, and the main reason they are threatened is the continuing loss of forests where most of these animals live. In addition, illegal wildlife trade, climate change and commercial(商业的)hunting for meat are also endangering them.
What's more, the problem is getting worse. The number of species on the organization’s Red List has increased by 3 to 25 since 2005.
Russell Mittermeier, the main researcher of the WCU report, said, "You could fit(安置) all the surviving members of these 25 species in a single football stadium. So the problem is obviously urgent."
The scientists, who drew up the Red List, believe that the situation is now so bad that if action is not taken immediately, it will result in primate(灵长目动物) species dying out - something which has not happened in over a century.
The loss of habitat caused by the clearing of forests for wood, farmland and fuel continues to be the main reason for the decreasing number of primates, according to the report, and the problem was most severe in Asia.
The loss of forest trees is also responsible for 20 percent of all greenhouse gases - more than all the cars, trucks, trains and airplanes in the world combined.What is the main subject of the report discussed in the text?
| A.Climate change. | B.Loss of animal habitat. |
| C.Animal protection. | D.Endangered animals |
How many animals were on the Red List in 2005?
| A.22 | B.19 | C.25. | D.28. |
The spokesman refers to 'a football stadium' in paragraph 5 to stress that ______.
| A.the animals enjoy playing sports |
| B.these animals should be placed there for protection |
| C.there are not many of these animals left |
| D.the report was announced there |
What is the main cause of the greenhouse gas problem according to the text?
| A.Airplanes. | B.Loss of trees. |
| C.Factory pollution. | D.Road vehicles. |