For a small town, Mantattan, Kansas has some big surprises. And one of them is the Holiday Inn Hotel, with rooms built around a swimming pool and a friendly atmosphere.
The Holiday Inn is where Manhattan people often go for a special party, or a night out. A lot of them choose to eat in the bright‑lit restaurant near the pool, And many of them will be served by Ellen Logan, who has worked as a waitress here for more than two years.
Ellen, like most of the waitresses, is also a student. She comes from Nebraska, but she’s planning one day to be a veterinary surgeon, and to care for small animals. But in order to support herself at college, she works twenty hours a week at the Holiday Inn.
Ellen soon learned what every waitress finds out. Your best friend has a good pair of shoes. She paid forty‑five dollars for hers, much more than she would usually spend. She’s discovered something else too. You don’t have to know much about food to be a good waitress, but you do have to know a lot about people.
“A lot of business people always stay here when they come to Manhattan”, she explains. “They like you to recognize them and remember their favorite dishes. But some couples come for a night out together. They just want to be left alone. Then there are people who can’t make up their minds. They look down the menu and say,‘What do you suggest?’So I ask them how hungry they are. If they say,‘Not very.’I suggest the salad bar, with soup, salad, bread, and a fruit plate. But if they say they’re very hungry, I suggest a Kansas Strip Steak, with potatoes or rice. You get salad and bread as well. It’s very nice. Real good value”.
Ellen may get tired sometimes, but at least she’s learning too much about people. She’s learning too much about people. She’ll probably make a good animal doctor, but if she finds she doesn’t like it after all, she can become a psychiatrist(心理医生)instead.What does the underlined phrase “a veterinary surgeon” mean?
A.An animal doctor | B.A hotel manager | C.A food expert | D.A restaurant waitress |
According to the passage, which of the following statements is true?
A.Businessmen like to be suggested what to eat. |
B.Many couples often want you to recognize them. |
C.Why people like to eat in the hotel is that it is full of a friendly atmosphere. |
D.If you know a lot about people,you’ll be a good veterinary surgeon. |
From the passage we can infer that .
A.waitresses in the Holiday Inn are all students. |
B.waitresses are required to buy a good pair of shoes before they go to work. |
C.waitresses should be familiar with the food there. |
D.it is more important for the waitresses to know much about people than food. |
Choose the best title for the passage.
A.How to Deal with People | B.A Special Holiday Inn Hotel in Manhattan |
C.American Holiday Inn | D.Ellen Logan at the Holiday Inn |
Shake Shack is a new kind of restaurant becoming more popular in the U.S. The restaurants are not“fast food” . They are known as“fast casual” .
Observers say Americans want more choices and fresh food when choosing where and what to eat. This trend is one reason why the fast food restaurant McDonald’ s has struggled financially. In the last quarter of 2014, McDonald’ s net income dropped by about $300 million. The January earnings report brought more bad news. Worldwide sales dropped for the eighth month in a row and even more than expected. While McDonald’ s is struggling to get their customers back, Shake
Shack, is doing well in making money. The New York-based burger chain had a very successful IPO, or initial public offering, of shares at the end of January. On its first day of trading, Shake Shack went from $21 a share to just under $46 a share. Being part of the “fast casual ”trend has helped Shake Shack. Other fast casual restaurants in the U.S. include Chipotle and Panera.
Bonnie Riggs, a restaurant expert with NPD has studied Americans’ restaurant habits for almost 30 years. She says one reason why Americans like fast casual food is that it’ s new. It’ s creative, it’ s something different and people like to try new things. Her study shows Americans made 61 billion visits to restaurants last year. Three out of four visits were to fast food restaurants, like McDonald’ s. Fast casual is still a small percentage of restaurant visits, but it has developed fast. Just as Ms. Riggs says,“It’ s growing by leaps and bounds, because they meet consumers’ needs. They know it’ s being prepared while they wait, it’ s fresh, quality food, good tasting food at what they say are reasonable and affordable prices.”
Many Americans still like their fast food. They just are not going as often. They are finding other ways to have a meal.What’ s the trouble with McDonald’ s?
A.Its share goes down to $21. |
B.Shake Shack has taken its place. |
C.It’ s not popular with Americans. |
D.Its sales and income have dropped. |
We can learn from Bonnie Riggs that Americans ________.
A.don’ t like fast food any more |
B.care only about the quality |
C.like to try something new |
D.pay more restaurant visits to fast casual |
What does the underlined phrase“by leaps and bounds”in Para. 3 mean?
A.Steadily. | B.Rapidly. |
C.Slowly. | D.Normally. |
Which of the following best describes fast casual?
A.Fresh-made and tasty. |
B.High-quality and expensive. |
C.Farm-to-table and traditional. |
D.Time-consuming and special. |
We don’ t always get a second chance to achieve our dreams. But some people are lucky, like Matthew McConaughey. Once almost unknown, the actor has recently found himself back on the list of the best actors in Hollywood. His new movie Interstellar is just another sign that his career reinvention has been an incredible success. “The film relies on McConaughey’ s performance to hold together the emotional story of a father and his daughter against the background of space travel and the end of the world,”Forbes commented.
But only years ago, the Texas native was often the butt of jokes(笑柄)about being too handsome. In 1993, after meeting with director Richard Linklater, McConaughey starred in Dazed and Confused. And a Hollywood career was born, mostly in romantic comedies. For a long time, the whole world believed McConaughey was just a handsome guy with comic talent.
But McConaughey stopped starring in that type of movie, and began to use his looks differently. Slowly he built up his reputation as a serious actor. In 2013, McConaughey was offered to play an AIDS activist in Dallas Buyers Club. The role saw the normally muscular actor losing 50 pounds in order to appear sick. His performance won him an Oscar for Best Actor.
The actor gave thanks to someone he has always looked up to as a hero during his Oscar acceptance speech. When he was 15, the actor said, he decided that his hero would be himself in 10 years. But 10 years later, he pushed the deadline ahead another decade. Then 10 years later, another decade.“My hero’ s always 10 years away,” he said. “I’ m never going to attain that. That keeps me with somebody to keep on chasing.”Or perhaps constantly chasing the chance to be his own hero has given him a second chance to follow his dreams.Why was McConaughey often the butt of jokes in his early career?
A.He was limited to handsome roles. |
B.He was unknown to the audience. |
C.He played in romantic comedies. |
D.He was handsome and emotional. |
What role won Mc Conaughey an Oscar for Best Actor?
A.A caring father. | B.An AIDS activist. |
C.A serious buyer. | D.A strong hero. |
What can we learn about McConaughey?
A.He was born in Hollywood. |
B.He has become a hero of his own. |
C.He wasn’ t famous until recently. |
D.He isn’ t content with his achievements. |
Which of the following can be the best title?
A.McConaughey, a Romantic Comedian |
B.McConaughey, a Man Making a Hit |
C.McConaughey, a Man Daring to change |
D.McConaughey, Handsome and Talented |
Parents might tell older children to “Act your age”. But some researchers say that is what persons from thirteen to nineteen years old are doing. While teenagers can look all grown up, studies have shown that their brains are still developing. How much this explains their behavior, though, is a subject of debate.
Jay Giedd of America’s National Institutes of Health is a leader in this area of research. Doctor Giedd has been studying a group of young people since 1991. They visit him every two years for imaging tests of their brains. He says considerable development continues in young people from the teenage years into the twenties.
A part of the brain called the dorsal-lateral prefrontal cortex appears especially undeveloped in teenagers. Researchers believe that this area controls judgment and consideration of risk. So, its underdevelopment may explain why young people seem more willing to take risks like driving too fast.
Laurence Steinberg is a psychology professor at Temple University in Philadelphia. He says stronger laws and stronger parental control are needed to protect teens from themselves. That includes raising the age for driving. He says research shows that teenage brains are not fully equipped to control behavior.
Other researchers, however, say there is not enough evidence to make a strong case for such findings. Psychologist Robert Epstein is a visiting scholar at the University of California in San Diego. Mr. Epstein notes that teen behavior differs from culture to culture. He says behavior depends for the most part on socialization. He believes that teenagers will demonstrate(表明) better, safer behavior if they spend more time with adults, and are treated more like them.
But is that always true? Mike Males works at the Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice in San Francisco. He suggests that all of this talk lately about brainless teens could be an attempt to take away attention from the reality. Writing in the New York Times, he says it is middle-aged adults whose behavior has worsened. In his words, if grown-ups really have superior brains, why don’t we act as if we do?If your parents ask you to act your age, they really mean to advise that you __________.
A.behave yourself |
B.take care of yourself |
C.make yourself at home |
D.do everything on your own |
Why do young people seem more willing to take adventures?
A.Because they can all look grown up in that way. |
B.Because their dorsal-lateral prefrontal cortex appears undeveloped. |
C.Because some researchers have been studying and encouraging them. |
D.Because stronger laws and stronger parental control protect them |
Which of the following is TRUE about teenagers?
A.Their brains have almost stopped developing. |
B.Their cultures have influenced their behavior more or less. |
C.The behavior of brainless teens has drawn a lot more attention. |
D.Staying more often with adults makes things even worse. |
It can be inferred from the last paragraph that Mike Males _______.
A.agrees with what Robert Epstein says |
B.keeps silent about the subject of debate |
C.is a leader in this area of research |
D.has the opinion of his own |
The passage is written mainly to tell people that __________.
A.development continues in young people from the teens into the twenties |
B.teenagers’ behavior differs from culture to culture |
C.there is still a debate between researchers about people’s behaviors |
D.the talk about brainless teens could take away attention from governments |
Three boys and three girls boarded a bus to Lauderdale, Florida, dreaming of golden beaches. When the bus passed through New Jersey, they began to notice Vingo, who sat in front of them, dressed in a plain, ill-fitting suit.
Deep into the night, the bus pulled into Howard Johnson Restaurant, and everybody got off except Vingo. He sat rooted in his seat, and the young people began to wonder: perhaps he was a sea captain, a runaway from his wife, an old soldier going home.
Shortly after a snack, they went back to the bus and one of the girls sat beside him and introduced herself.
After a while, slowly and painfully, he told his story. He had been in prison in New York for the past four years. Last week he was released from imprisonment and now going home.
“When in prison I wrote to my wife,” he said. “I told her that I was going to be away a long time, and that if she couldn’t stand it, she could just forget me; I’d understand. We used to live in Brunswick, and there’s a big oak tree just as you come into town. Last week, I wrote her again. I told her that if she’d take me back, she should put a yellow handkerchief on the tree, and I’d get off and come home. If she didn’t want me, forget it and I’d go on through.”
She told the others, and soon all of them were in it, waiting for the approach of the great oak tree. Then, suddenly, all of the young people were up out of their seats, screaming and crying, doing small dances of joy. The oak tree was covered with yellow handkerchiefs, 20 of them, 30 of them, maybe hundreds, a tree that stood like small flags of welcome flying in the wind. As the young people shouted, Vingo rose and made his way to the front of the bus to go home.What attracted the six young people when their bus passed through New Jersey?
A.The Howard Johnson Restaurant. |
B.A silent man. |
C.Golden beaches. |
D.A well-dressed man |
The young people on the bus try to imagine Vingo may be a person EXCEPT_________.
A.a sea captain |
B.an old soldier going home |
C.an old soldier going home |
D.a prisoner escaping from prison |
Vingo wrote a letter to his wife again last week to ________.
A.ask for her forgiveness |
B.beg her to allow him back home |
C.tie a yellow handkerchief to the oak tree |
D.make sure if she was still in love with him |
Why did all the young people shout with joy when they arrived in Brunswick?
A.They were approaching their destination. |
B.They were surprised to see so many welcoming people. |
C.They were sure that Vingo’s wife was expecting him home. |
D.The oak tree was still standing there welcoming Vingo back home. |
What can be the best title for the passage?
A.Going home |
B.Vingo and his wife |
C.Yellow handkerchiefs |
D.The relationship between Vingo and the young people |
The disease Ebola is spreading in West Africa. The situation frightens both local citizens and travelers.
There is no vaccine or special treatment. It is difficult to stop Ebola from spreading. It moves easily from person to person. The disease strikes its victims through direct contact with the blood or other fluids from the body of an infected person.
The bodies of victims still contain the virus days after they die. Local traditions and burial and funeral customs also make the sickness hard to control. Doctors say it is important to identify an Ebola case early to prevent others from becoming infected. Patients suffer from high body temperature, bleeding and diarrhea(腹泻).
Only a few prevention measures exist. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the U.S. suggest staying away from countries with confirmed Ebola cases. People at increased threat include those working in animal research, health care workers and others caring for patients in the community.
In the past, cases of Ebola have been confirmed in the Republic of the Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Gabon, Sudan, and Uganda.
Doctors advise careful protective measures if you must go to an area where Ebola exists.
If Ebola has been identified directly around you, the C.D.C. and W.H.O. strongly suggest wearing protective clothing. Cover your face and hands. Goggles can protect the eyes. Try to remove Ebola germs with cleaners that fight infection.How does the disease Ebola spread? (No more than 16 words)
What makes the sickness hard to control? (No more than 10 words)
What symptoms do the Ebola patients have? (No more than 7 words)
Who are at increased threat according to the passage? (No more than 17 words)