Ginny Ruffner is one of the best-known glass artists in the United States. Her one-of-a-kind pieces are colorful, detailed and often humorous. Over the years, she became famous for a method called lamp working, also known as flame working. It involves using a torch to melt and shape the glass instead of blowing on it.
Ginny Ruffner almost died in a three-car accident in 1991. No one thought the Seattle-based artist would ever walk or talk again. An award-winning(优等的) film documentary explores that period of her life. "It's scary when you can't talk, you can't do... all your life." said Ruffner.
Ms. Ruffner was in a coma(昏迷) for five weeks and a wheelchair for five years. But she overcame her injuries. And although she still has difficulty walking and talking, she has willed herself back to work. Now, she has a team that helps bring her dream to life.
Her team recently finished an eight point five meter-high flowerpot made of steel and aluminum. It is now in downtown Seattle. Ms. Ruffner was recently honored in Washington, DC. The Renwick Gallery presented a special showing of the film, "A Not So Still Life, the Ginny Ruffner Story."
Ms. Ruffner says “it has been a long battle, but the hardest part has not been the physical problems. I hate being taken for granted, being ignored. The way I talk, people assume that I'm either really old, or kind of retarded(智力迟钝的), and that is so frustrating."
But she is firm. She says "Fortunately I've done a lot of stuff in my life, so I know that the best thing is to be open to the mystery, who knows what great things will happen. I'm sure they're many more to come."
Ginny Ruffner's art can be seen in more than forty museums around the world. Her work and her life continue to motivate people of all ages.Within five years after a car accident, Ginny Ruffner _____.
A.was unconscious of everything |
B.had trouble walking and talking |
C.got over injuries completely |
D.went back to her work |
From this passage we can learn _____.
A.Ginny Ruffner finished an eight point five meter-high flowerpot made of steel and aluminum himself |
B.The Renwick Gallery made him a the film documentary , "A Not So Still Life, the Ginny Ruffner Story." |
C.Ginny Ruffner's art is shown in more than forty museums in the United States |
D.Ginny Ruffner’s story has encouraged people to do what they want to |
What was the most difficult to accept for Ginny Ruffner?
A.The physical disabilities |
B.Being considered old andstupidity |
C.Being looked down upon |
D.Being mistaken as a useless man |
The best title of this passage is _____.
A. A New Exhibit of Bright Life |
B.The Life of a Glass Artist |
C. A New product of a glass artist |
D.The Introduction of a Great Glass Artist |
From this passage we can know Ginny Ruffner is _____.
A.determined and optimistic |
B.ambitious and stubborn |
C.hopeful and energetic |
D.devoted and active |
Optional evening workshops will be held at small restaurants or other meeting places near the conference hotel. Meals and other costs are not included but are also optional. Locations will be announced at the conference site. Workshops are very loosely organized and most represent discussions that have been held at Society for Economic Botany (SEB) meetings over a series of years.
Workshop 1: Student Network
Date: Wednesday evening, Feb. 5th
Chairs: Hugo de Boer and Arika Virapongse
Sponsor: Society for Economic Botany
Description: Student members of the SEB hold a networking mixer each year in order to meet each other and to become familiar with a variety of educational programs and faculty advisors(大学指导老师). Faculty members who are part of training programs are encouraged to join the mixer to meet and talk with students.
Workshop 2: Botanical Film Making
Date : Wednesday evening, Feb. 5th
Chair : David Strauch
Sponsor : University of Hawaii
Description : Digital film making is a particularly useful tool of linking cultural information to recognizable plants. This workshop is aimed towards increasing the quality of material recorded by giving participants greater control over the medium. We will cover technical aspects (e.g. camera settings, audio), technical aspects (framing, lighting, focus), and some ways of presenting the material. Experienced filmmakers are encouraged to attend, and participants are welcome to bring their own camera equipment.
Workshop 3: Collections for Botany
—Collections Development and Management
Date: Friday evening, Feb. 7th
Chair: Jan Salick
Sponsor: Society for Economic Botany
Description: SEB is a network of researchers who have been developing standards for the development of collections of artifacts, plant samples and related materials. Participants discuss successes, problems, and funding sources for solving management issues.One of the purposes of a networking mixer held each year is to ________.
A.provide students with greater control over the media |
B.help the students to be familiar with educational programs |
C.help the students to deal with most of the environment issues |
D.link cultural information to recognizable plants |
Which of the following is true according to the poster?
A.Evening workshops will be held at small restaurants with meals included. |
B.Faculty advisers can join the mixer without training experience. |
C.Workshops have nothing to do with the discussions held at SEB meetings. |
D.Participants have more than one option on Feb. 5th than another night. |
You are a college student, interested in plants and good at taking TV pictures. Which of the Evening Workshops is most suitable for you?
A.Collections for Botany. | B.Botanical Film Making. |
C.Student Network. | D.Society for Economic Botany. |
Many people in high school cannot wait to go to college and leave their hometown behind. Questions arise, though, when it comes to all of the decisions involved in choosing a college.
One of the first considerations may be finance. State and public colleges are often the least expensive. Often, though, the better colleges are private and more expensive. It is sad when gifted students cannot attend a college of their choice just for financial reasons.
Another major factor is location. Whether the college is in a small town or large city can have a major impact on its activities. A water lover probably will be more comfortable spending four years near an ocean or a lake. Those who cannot tolerate heat will probably be more comfortable at a northern college. Distance from home may also come into consideration. If family is a top priority, that person should stay close to home; on the other hand, if independence is desired, a campus farther from home would be more appropriate.
School size also plays a major role in the decision process. If you want to get to know your teachers, a small college is suitable. For those of you who consider yourself a “ people person” and want a wide range of activities, a large college is more fitting. Your area of interest is another factor to consider in the decision-making process if you want to get the most from your education. The whole point of college is to learn what is of interest to you.
Crucially(至关重要地), one must take into consideration the colleges by which you can realistically be accepted. An Ivy League school for an average student would probably not be a good match. Similarly, an average school for an above-average student would not work well. The college should provide enough of a challenge for the student to work hard. Although there may not be the perfect college out there, there probably will be one that is close. Those who cannot find a suitable college are probably not looking hard enough.When it comes to going to college the author thinks ________.
A.financial situation is the first to consider |
B.students are unwilling to leave their home |
C.students will become homesick |
D.students are eager to attend their ideal university |
What is the main idea of the third paragraph?
A.Students can be independent at college. |
B.A long distance will make students upset. |
C.The location of the college is a main factor. |
D.The climate must be taken into consideration. |
What does the underlined part people person in the passage mean?
A.A person of great capacity. | B.A very particular person. |
C.A very sociable person. | D.A person of great importance. |
Which is the most important factor when choosing a college?
A.The location of a college. |
B.The examination result. |
C.School size. |
D.The coming challenges. |
Amy Pankratz spent a few nights in the hospital with her daughter, Isabella, who caught a bad flu. “Lying in bed beside Isabella, I could hear the cries of children in pain, ”says Amy. “It completely broke my heart. ”
When Isabella was getting well and could leave her room, she wore her prized possession—a “superhero cape(短斗篷)”Amy had sewn to encourage her—and walked into the hallway. The pink cape was an instant hit with the other young patients, who were doing exercise around the nursing station. Then, all the kids were taking turns wearing the cape, giggling, ”Amy says. “These were some of the same children I had heard crying the night before, and here they were playing and having fun—kids just being kids! ”
From that moment on, Amy began making Comfort Capes for little ones battling with serious illnesses. “I felt God presenting an opportunity, ”she says. “I hoped Comfort Capes can help these kids feel brave, to lift some of the fear away. ”
Since then, Amy has made and donated more than 5, 000 capes in the United States. Amy usually pays for materials herself, although she accepts donations.
The capes she makes for kids in treatment are different from those her own children have. Before Amy starts to sew she learns what image or character the little boy or girl connects with. “ I choose the pattern, color and theme specially for each child,” explains Amy.
When she is not sewing, Amy is raising awareness of childhood cancers and looking into ways to get Comfort Capes to more kids who need them, “ If a cape can help a child, even only for a moment, forget his illness, its worth the time spent sewing, she says.What made Amy feel sad when she was staying with her daughter in the hospital?
A.Her daughters serious illness. |
B.The cries of children in pain. |
C.The tiredness from sewing the cape. |
D.The illness of children in her daughters room. |
What purpose did Amy have when she began making Comfort Capes for sick children?
A.To make them feel warm. |
B.To find friends for her daughter. |
C.To make them happy and fearless. |
D.To raise the awareness of childrens illness. |
According to the passage, we can get that the authors attitude toward Amys behaviour is ________.
A.indifferent | B.neutral |
C.negative | D.supportive |
Which of the following can be the best title of the passage?
A.Turning Sick Kids into Superheroes |
B.How to Treat the Sick Children |
C.A Strong Mom Who Helps Others |
D.Amy: a Considerate Woman |
Parts of Africa are covered by a dark cloud. But this is no rain cloud. It is a living cloud made of billions of locusts(蝗虫) that are traveling across the continent eating everything in their path.
And now in the battle to stop this disaster, a radio station in Senegal, West Africa, is offering listeners 50 kilograms of locusts. “We think this idea will get more people to take part in the war on the locusts.” said Abdoulaye Ba, from Sud-Fm, a radio station in one of Senegal’s worst affected area.
This is West Africa’s biggest locust disaster in 15 years, and it is moving east, causing huge damage to crops. As they move they produce young and increase their number and will soon threaten Sudan in the northeast of Africa. Some say it could reach Asia.
Experts say the harmful effect on crops in areas already suffering from food shortage and war could cast many people to go hungry. Governments in the areas are not well equipped to fight the pest.
Although leaders of 12 countries have agreed on a plan, it is not expected to be enough. “We are now treating 6,000 hectares per day with pesticide(杀虫剂), but we need to treat 20,000 hectares per day in order to have any hope of controlling this disaster,” said Mohamed Adballahi Ould Babah, director of locust control in Mauritania.
Requests are being made for international aid, which is the only way to limit the disaster, the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization warned.By using “dark cloud” to describe locusts in the first paragraph, the author mainly meant to______.
A.show the size, speed and damage of the mass of locusts |
B.suggest the high speed that locusts travel at |
C.warn that locusts would sweep the continent severely |
D.hint that they look like dark monster |
The story is mainly about______.
A.West Africa’s united effort in fighting a disaster |
B.the difficulty in controlling locusts |
C.the great damage locusts caused to West Africa |
D.a struggle to fight against a disaster brought by locusts in West Africa |
According to the text we learn that the locust disaster______.
A.can be even more serious in Asia |
B.is then out of control |
C.has affected greatly most areas |
D.cannot be stopped unless twice as much pesticide is provided for the affected areas |
Which of the following is WRONG?
A.Sud-Fm offered a reward for fighting locusts so that more people would join in the effort. |
B.Senegal is to southwest of Sudan. |
C.The locusts can cause such damage mainly because it has no natural enemy in West Africa. |
D.12 countries affected by locusts have untied but still lack pesticide. |
Some plants get so hungry they eat flies, and small frogs. What’s more amazing is that these plants occur naturally (in special environments) in every state. In fact, they’re found on every continent except Antarctica.
You’ve probably seen a Venus’ flytrap. It’s often sold in museum gift stores, department stores, and even supermarkets. A small plant, it grows 6 to 8 inches tall in a container. At the end of its stalks(茎)are leaves that act like traps. Inside each trap is a lining of tiny hairs. When an insect lands on them, the traps suddenly shut. Over the course of a week or so, the plant feeds on its catch.
The Venus’ flytrap is just one of more than 500 species of meat-eating plants, says Barry Meyers-Rice, the editor of the International Carnivorous Plant Society’s Newsletter. He states despite any science-fiction stories you might have read, no meat-eating plant does any danger to humans.
Dr. Meyers-Rice says a plant is meat-eating, only if it does all four of the following: “attract, kill, digest, and absorb” some form of insects. Meat-eating plants look and act like other green plants—well, most of the time.
All green plants make sugar to produce food. What makes meat-eating plants different is their special leaves, which need insects for one reason: nitrogen(氮). Nitrogen is a nutrient(营养物质) that they can’t obtain any other way. Why?
Almost all green plants on our planet get nitrogen from the soil. Meat-eating plants can’t. They live in places where nutrients are hard or almost impossible to get from the soil because of its acidity .So they’ve come to rely on getting nitrogen from insects and small animals. In fact, nutrient-rich soil is poisonous to meat-eating plants. Never fertilize(施肥) them! But don’t worry, either, if they never seem to catch any insects. They can survive, but they’ll grow very slowly.According to the passage, Venus flytrap.
A.is a small plant which grows in a container |
B.is a kind of plant which gets hungry easily |
C.can trap and feed on some form of insects |
D.grows 6-8 inches tall |
From the passage, we can infer that .
A.meat-eating plants are found nowhere else except Antarctica |
B.All green plants get nitrogen from the soil |
C.meat-eating plants endanger humans in science-fiction stories |
D.The nutrient-poor soil is beneficial to meat-eating plants |
Meat-eating plants grow very slowly, .
A.so you’d better fertilize them |
B.probably because the supply of nitrogen is cut off |
C.simply because they can’t absorb nitrogen from the soil |
D.and then they will die slowly |
Which of the following is true?
A.Meat-eating plants look and act like other green plants. |
B.It’ hard to get nutrients in the soil when acidity is high. |
C.Venus flytrap eats flies to get nutrient from them. |
D.Green plants make sugar at night. |