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  If you are in charge of a project, the key to success is getting everyone to want to help you. As a director, I point, I suggest. I gently push the actors in the direction I want them to go. In the 1986 movie“Nothing in Common”, Jackie Gleason’s character, Max Basner, gets fired from his job as a clothing salesman. The scene, shot on a boat, shows Max’s despair about being out of work. I was looking for some gesture that would allow Max to show his feelings.
Jackie had far more experience at everything than I did, and at first I was frightened. What could I possibly tell “The Great One” about acting? Finally I decided to direct by suggestion, and sat down with Gleason to talk about the scene. “So Max is sad, right?” I said.Gleason nodded.“And he’s probably still carrying his pens with name on them—the ones he used to hand out to his customers, right?”Gleason nodded.“So what would you want to do with the pens after you were fired?”He was silent for a moment. “Why don’t I throw them overboard?”I stood up and turned up and turned toward the crew. “Hey, everybody, Jackie has a wonderful idea. Let’s shoot it.”
After filming the scene, Gleason called me over and said with a smile. “Garry, what kind of wonderful idea am I going to have tomorrow?”
You and your team can discover the answers to problems together. When there are no prizes or gold stars for who gets the solution first, you’ll all benefit when everything turns out right.
According to the writer, to succeed in a project you are in charge of , you     should______.

A.make everyone work for you B.get everyone willing to help
C.let people know you have the idea D.keep talking to them

“The Great One” in Paragraph 2 refers to______.

A.Gleason B.the director himself C.Max D.Max’s boss

After filming the scene, Gleason called the director over and smiled at him. That’s  because Gleason________.

A.thought the director gave him a good idea
B.formed the habit of thinking of ideas while talking
C.was not confident about his acting
D.appreciated the director’s directing skill

The most suitable title for the passage is “_______”.

A.Directing a Film B.The Key to Success
C.A Wonderful Experience D.Working with Film
科目 英语   题型 阅读理解   难度 中等
知识点: 日常生活类阅读
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Jockeys(职业赛马骑师) are the smallest athletes. They are rarely over five feet six, or 120 pounds. The lighter the weight on the horse, the faster it can go.
Riding fast horses on the track is tough on the small jockeys. The jockey doesn’t“sit”on the horse. He leans forward on his legs. The strain is on his thighs(大腿) and calf(小腿) muscles. As jockeys age, their legs“go”first. Jockeys also need arm strength. It’s a strain holding a 1000-pound racehorse.
On muddy days, jockeys get a pounding of mud. The mud comes flying off the hooves(蹄) of the horses in front. “It feels like someone is punching you all over,”says one rider.
And a jockey can be hurt. A jockey can have a leg jammed between two horses. Or it can get caught between horse and the rail. The worst accidents are from falls. A horse may fall on his rider. Or horses behind may trample if he hits the track. In one year about 240 riders are hurt badly. That’s one out of six jockeys.
But the jockeys are well-paid. A jockey keeps about ten percent of the money his horses win. Jacinto Vasquez, a five-foot-three comer, has ridden horses to $7,000,000 in wins in the last eight years, which means he does almost $100,000 a year.
Why do some jockeys do better than others? “It isn’t the way a boy sits on a horse or uses the reins or the whip,”says Conn McCreary. McCreary was a top jockey of the 1950’s. He rode two Kentucky Derby winners. “Most jockeys do this the same. It’s the ‘feel’ he has for the horses.”
“When you come right down to it, it just seems that horses run better for some riders,” McCreary says. “A real good jockey doesn’t lose with the best horse. And sometimes he’ll win with the second or third best.”
Many Latin-American riders, like Jacinto, seem to have the knack. “Maybe it’s because we grew up with horses,”says Jacinto. “Maybe it’s because we like to ride. There was a strike at Aqueduct last year. We, Jorge Velasquez, and Angel Cordero (two other top Latin riders) went to a park. We rented horses, and rode around the bridle path(骑马专用道)!”
The main idea of Paragraph 1 is about ______________.

A.the size of jockeys. B.the age of jockeys
C.the size of the horse D.the speed of the horse

When a jockey is riding a fast horse, he doesn’t __________.

A.really sit on the horse B.lean forward on his legs
C.use much arm strength D.get any mud on wet track

The most dangerous problem for a jockey arises __________________.

A.when his leg is jammed between two horses
B.when his clothes are splashed over with mud.
C.when the jockey’s horse falls on the jockey
D.when the jockey is not well paid

A really good jockey can often win a race ____________.

A.only when he rides on the best horse
B.even when he rides the second best horse
C.when he rides on a rented horse
D.if the horse is just a Kentucky Herby

The underlined word “Knack” in the last paragraph probably means__________________.

A.special skill B.dangerous hobby
C.riding culture D.excellent horses.

“Just take a deep breath.” “Don’t think about it.” “You’re more likely to die in a car wreck on the way to the airport than you are in a plane crash.” These are just some words given to people with a fear of flying. But as Tom Cruise, playing Lt. Daniel Kaffee in the movie A Few Good Men, said, “I get sick when I fly because I’m afraid of crashing into a large mountain. I don’t think Daniel will help.”
But there’s a new application that just may. Today, the VALK Foundation, a Dutch group that’s a partnership between KLM Royal Dutch Airlines and the University of Leiden, launches the app (application) in the US. The VALK Foundation was one of the first centers for research and fear-of-flying treatment in the world and is the organizer of three world conferences on fear of flying.
The foundation said the app, called Flight App VALK, is the first scientifically-developed, web-based treatment for people who suffer from mild to moderate fear of flying.
“The fear-of-flying application we have created aims to transfer all of the knowledge we have developed through our program into a mobile application that will help ease travelers’ fears,” said Dr. Lucas van Gerwen, director of the VALK Foundation. Dr. van Gerwen is also a psychologist and professional pilot with more than 30 years experience.
The foundation said up to 30% of adults are fearful fliers. The Flight App is designed to help relax passengers before and during flights by educating users about flight safety and turbulence. It explains the sounds and sensations(感觉)they can expect during departure, flight and landing. And, if a passenger’s flight stress reaches a panic level, they press a special panic button which provides audio and written information to help decrease stress levels. Most importantly, the Flight App can be used during the flight in the airplane mode. Once downloaded, the program does not require Internet connection in the air.
By saying the words at the beginning of the passage, people are expected to ______.

A.decrease their fear of flying
B.get rid of their doubt about plane
C.have a good time on their flight journey
D.use some medicine to cure their fear of flying

According to the passage, the VALK Foundation ______.

A.is a group focusing on psychology on the flight
B.was the first center to do research into fear of flying
C.organizes the world conferences on fear of flying annually
D.focuses on researching and offering treatment on fear of flying

Flight App VALK is aimed to ______.

A.help passengers experience the fear of flying
B.help relax passengers before and during flights
C.treat people who suffer from mild fear of flying
D.teach people the basic knowledge of taking flight

What does the last paragraph mainly tell us?

A.Many adults are suffering from fear of flying
B.It’s convenient for people to use the Flight App
C.Many planes will be installed with the Flight App.
D.The Flight App can decrease stress levels effectively

In which column of a newspaper can we read this passage?

A.Culture B.Entertainment C.Technology D.Education

Looking back on my childhood. I am convinced that naturalists are born and not made. Although we were brought up in the same way, my brothers and sisters soon abandoned their pressed flowers and insects. Unlike them , I had no ear for music and languages, I was not an early reader and I could not do mental arithmetic.
  Before World War I we spent our summer holidays in Hungary. I have only the dim memory of the house we lived in, of my room and my toys. Nor do I recall clearly the large family of grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins who gathered next door .but I do have a crystal-clear memory of dogs, the farm animals, the local birds and above all, the insects.
  I am a naturalist, not a scientist. I have a strong love of the natural world, and my enthusiasm has led me into varied investigations. I love discussing my favorite topics and enjoy burning the midnight oil, reading about other people’s observations and discoveries. Then something happens that brings these observations together in my conscious mind. Suddenly you fancy you see the answer to the riddle,because it all seems to fit together. This has resulted in my publishing 300 papers and books, which some might honor with the title of scientific research.
  But curiosity, a keen eye, a good memory and enjoyment of the animal and plant world do not make a scientist; one of the outstanding and essential qualities required is self-discipline, a quality I lack. A scientist can be made .A naturalist is born. If you can combine the two, you get the best of both worlds.
According to the author, a born naturalist should first of all be_____

A.full of ambition B.self-disciplined
C.full of enthusiasm D.knowledgeable

The first paragraph tells us that the author _____

A.lost his hearing when he was a child
B.didn’t like his brothers and sisters
C.was interested in flowers and insects in his childhood
D.was born to a naturalist’s family

The author says that he is a naturalist rather than a scientist probably because he thinks he _____

A.just reads about other people’s observations and discoveries
B.lacks some of the qualities required of scientist
C.has a great deal of trouble doing mental arithmetic
D.comes up with solutions in most natural ways

The author can’t remember his relatives clearly because_____.

A.he was too young when he lived with them
B.he didn’t live very long with them
C.the family was extremely large
D.he was fully occupied with observing nature

Which of the following statement is true?

A.The author believes that a born naturalist cannot be a scientist.
B.The author read a lot of books about the natural world and the oil industry.
C.The author’s brothers and sisters were good at music and languages.
D.The author spent a lot of time working on riddles.

If the eyes are the romantic’s window into the soul, then the teeth are an anthropologist’s ( 人类学家 ) door to the stomach.
In a study published last month in the journal Science, Peter Ungar of the University of Arkansas and his partner, Matt Sponheimer of the University of Colorado, US, examined the teeth of our early human ancestors to find out what they were really eating.
They already knew that different foods cause different marks on teeth. Some cause scratches, while others cause pits (坑).The carbon left on teeth by different foods is also different. Tropical grasses, for example, leave one kind of carbon, but trees leave another kind because they photosynthesized ( 光合作用 ) differently.
Traditionally, scientists had looked at the size and shape of teeth and skulls ( 头骨 ) to figure out what early humans ate. Big flat teeth were taken to be signs that they ate nuts and seeds, while hard and sharp teeth seemed good for cutting meat and leaves. But this was proven wrong.
The best example was the Paranthropus (傍人), one of our close cousins, some of which lived in eastern Africa. Scientists used to believe Paranthropus ate nuts and seeds because they had big crests(突起)on their skulls, suggesting they had large chewing muscles and big teeth. If this had been true, their teeth should have been covered with pits like the surface of the moon. They would also have had a particular type of carbon on their teeth that typically comes from tree products, such as nuts and seeds.
However, when the two scientists studied the Paranthroupus, it turned out to have none of these characteristics. The teeth had a different kind of carbon, and were covered with scratches, not pits. This suggests they probably ate grass, not nuts and fruit stones. It was the exact opposite of what people had expected to find.
Carbon “foodprints” give us a completely new and different insight into what different species ate and the different environments they lived in. If a certain species had the kind of carbon on its teeth that came from grasses, it probably lived in a tropical grassland, for example.
The underlined sentence in Paragraph 1 probably means that _____.

A.anthropologists can study the structure of human stomachs by studying their teeth.
B.anthropologists can study the diet of early humans by studying their teeth
C.anthropologists can learn whether humans were healthy by looking at their teeth
D.anthropologists can get the most useful information about humans from their teeth

According to Paragraph 3 to 5, which of the following statements is TRUE?

A.Scratches on teeth are caused by eating nuts or seeds.
B.Pits on teeth are caused by eating grass or leaves.
C.Early humans with hard and sharp teeth ate meat and leaves.
D.Different foods leave different marks and carbon on teeth.

The example of the Paranthropus was mentioned in the article in order to _____.

A.tell readers that they are one of our close cousins living in eastern Africa
B.tell readers they had different eating habits from modern humans
C.prove that size and shape of skulls does not show accurately what early humans ate
D.tell readers that living environment makes a difference to skull structure

What’s On Stage
An acrobatic show: To celebrate its 50th anniversary, the China Acrobatic Troupe (剧团) will present “The Soul of China”, where the seemingly impossible is made real. Chills will run down your spine(脊柱) as you watch breathlessly as performers take their art and their bodies to the edge.
Time: 7:30 p.m., September 13-19
Place: Capital Theatre, 22 Wangfujing Dajie, Dongcheng District
Exhibitions
Joint Show: A group ink painting exhibition is running at the Huangshicheng Art Gallery in Beijing. About 50 works by 25 young artists including Ge Yun and Yu Yang are on display.
Time: 9:00 a. m.-5:00 p.m. until September 10
Place: Huangshicheng Art Gallery, 136 Nanchizi Dajie, Dongcheng DistrictOil paintings: The Wanfung Art Gallery will host a joint show of oil painting by 10 young and middle-aged artists. On display are more than 30 of their latest works, which capture the wondrous variety of life in unique styles.
Time: 9:00 a.m. -4:00 p.m. until September 15
Place: 136 Nanchizi Street, Dongcheng District
Literature museum: The National Museum of Modern Chinese Literature offers an in-depth study of the evolution of Chinese contemporary literature from 1919 to 1949.
Time: 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m., daily
Place: 45 Anyuan Donglu, Chaoyang District (Shaoyaoju area)
ConcertsBeijing rocks: “The Fashion Night of Chinese Rock” is set to bring rock fans out by the thousands next month. Nine Chinese rock bands will perform at the concert, including older generation bands, middle generation and some recent arrivals. The audience will be given a chance to decide what songs they want to hear, which is sure to bring a storm.
Time: September 16
Place: The Olympic Center
Belgium orchestra:La Petite Bande, the Baroque Orehestra of Belgium, will perform in Beijing at the Grand Theatre of the Cultural Palace of Nationalities as part of activities across the world in memory of the 250th anniversary of Bach’s death.
Time: 7:30 p.m. September 11-14
Place: Grand Theatre of the Cultural Palace of Nationalities
What do you think of the acrobatic show mentioned above?

A.When you watch it, you will certainly feel cold.
B.Unexpected things will make you excited and surprised.
C.Something strange will puzzle everyone, including scientists.
D.Even the bravest ones will be too frightened to go on watching.

The most characteristic about the Fashion Night of Chinese Rock is that ______.

A.it will certainly cause a rock storm throughout China
B.it is to bring thousands of rock fans out of their homes
C.it is to be held in memory of one of the greatest musicians
D.it will let the audience choose the performers and the music

Suppose it is September 14 today, how many activities can people choose to attend?

A.2. B.3. C.4. D.5.

On the whole, we can conclude ______.

A.we can enjoy a large variety of cultural activities in Beijing
B.people in Beijing prefer modern culture to something traditional
C.most of the cultural activities in Beijing are for foreign visitors only
D.there are usually more cultural activities in September than in any other month

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