Every day 25 million U.S. children ride school buses. The safety record for these buses is much better than for passenger cars; but nevertheless, about 10 children are killed each year riding on large school buses, and nearly four times that number are killed outside buses in the loading zones. By and large, however, the nation’s school children are transported to and from school safely.
Even though the number of school bus accidents is not large, the safety of children is always of intense public concern. While everyone wants to see children transported safely, people are divided about what needs to be done-particularly whether seat belts should be compulsory.
People in favor of seat belts on school buses-many of them parents and medical organizations-argue that seat belts are necessary not only to reduce fatality and injury, but also to teach children lessons about the importance of using them routinely in any moving vehicle. A side benefit, they point out, is that seat belts help keep children in their seats, away from the bus driver.
People who object to seat belt installation suggest that children are already well protected by the school buses that follow the Nation Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA) safety requirements set in 1977. They also believe that many children won’t wear seat belts anyway, and that may damage the belts or use them as weapons to hurt other children.
A new research council report on school bus safety suggest that there are alternate safety devices and procedures that may be more effective and less expensive. For example, the study committee suggested that raising seat backs four inches may have the same safety effectiveness as seat belts.
The report sponsored by the Department of transportation at the request of Congress, reviews seat belts extensively while taking a broader look at safety in and around school buses.According to the passage, the “school bus” is _________.
| A.the bus offered by the school and different from the public bus |
| B.the bus that has no difference from the public bus |
| C.the bus that is driven by the students |
| D.the bus that is not safe |
According to the passage, who has the greatest degree of control of the school buses “safety”?
| A.A new Research Council. |
| B.The Department of Transportation. |
| C.The Medical Organization. |
| D.National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. |
It may be inferred from this passage that __________.
| A.many of the opponents(反对者) of seat belt installation are parents and officials of the Department of Transportation |
| B.proposals of seat belts on school buses would be seriously considered |
| C.an alternate safety device (raising seat backs four inches) may be taken into consideration |
| D.The Department of Transportation may either take the idea of seat belts or other measures when it reviews the whole situation |
The title below which best expresses the idea of the passage is“_______”.
| A.Making School Buses Even Safer for Children |
| B.Seat Belts Needed on School Buses |
| C.Alternate Safety Devices and Procedures |
| D.Safety in and around School Buses |
What is the writer’ s attitude towards the safety of the school bus is _______.
| A.Critical | B.Negative | C.Objective | D.Indifferent |
The Kinema, Lincolnshire
It’s a wooden building on the outside and a two-screen cinema on the inside, all nesting among pine trees in a tiny village. The Kinema showed its first film in 1922 and the first six rows were deckchair (折叠帆布躺椅). Today, it’s more richly decorated.
“People come here because it’s a fantastic experience,” says manager Philip Jones. “Many rooms in the Kinema are simple and not attractive, but we try to remain everything that makes it special.”
The Cube, Bristol
It’s not really a cinema. It is a not-for-profit cooperative run by volunteers, which has been operating for the last 15 years.
They are “unique for what we do, which is to operate seven nights a week and with no funding.” They make many things themselves, such as cola and yogurt.
The Broadway, Nottingham
A cinema has been here since the 1960s, when local fashion designer Paul Smith would come to see arty foreign films, which heavily influenced his career choice. Later, he designed the stripy(条纹的) sofas.
The Broadway was previously used as a church, but locals love it for its independent, art house, and DIY spirit. The Broadway also has a right-on restaurant, with locally sourced vegetables and salads, and even serves its own beer.
The Rex, Hertfordshire
It opened to the public in 1938 and has been named the most beautiful cinema in the UK. There’s a varied program with different films every night. Hot dogs and popcorn are banned. And a real person answers the phone when you call.
People speak very highly of the Rex. So do go, if only once, to see just how a cinema should be run.In Philip Jones’ opinion, the Kinema may attract people who_____.
| A.live in the nearby villages |
| B.are fond of rich decorations |
| C.are interested in wooden structures |
| D.want to experience something special |
We know from the text that the Broadway_____.
| A.was built in 1960 |
| B.owns a restaurant |
| C.is next to a church |
| D.was designed by Paul Smith |
The Cube and the Broadway are similar in the way that both_____.
| A.are non-profit cooperatives |
| B.show arty foreign films |
| C.offer homemade drinks |
| D.use stripy sofas |
Which of the following has the longest history?
| A.The Kinema. | B.The Cube. |
| C.The Broadway. | D.The Rex. |
It was raining as I ran out of the church, eager to get home and play with the gifts Father Christmas sent me. Across the street was a gas station, which was closed for Christmas, but I noticed a family standing under the narrow overhang to keep dry. I wondered briefly why they were there but then forgot about them as I couldn’t wait to see my gifts.
Once I got home, there was hardly any time to enjoy my gifts. My grandparents were still waiting for us to have Christmas dinner together at their house. As we drove down the highway, I noticed that the family was still there.
The closer we got to my grandparents’ house, the slower the car went. Suddenly, my father U-turned and said, “I can’t stand it!” “What?” asked my mother. “It’s those people back there at the gas station, standing in the rain.”
When my father pulled into the station, I saw there were five of them: the parents and three children—two girls and a small boy. Then we learned that the family was waiting for the bus to Birmingham, where the man planned to find a job.
“Well, that bus won’t come along for several hours. Winborn’s just a few miles away, and there is a shed(棚) with a cover there,” my father advised. “I will run you up there.”
Then they climbed into our car,. My father looked back and asked the children if Father Christmas had found them. Three sad faces gave him his answer.
“Well, Father Christmas said he was having trouble finding you, so he just left your toys at my house this morning. Let’s go to get them first,” my father said. All at once, the three children’s faces lit up.
When we arrived at our house, one girl spied a lovely doll, that little boy took a ball, and the other girl picked up something else. That was the Christmas when I learned the joy of making others happy.At the gas station the family might feel______.
| A.anxious | B.disappointed |
| C.frightened | D.ashamed |
The three children received Christmas gifts thanks to_______.
| A.the author | B.the author’s father |
| C.their parents | D.their grandparents |
We can learn from the text that the author’s father_____.
| A.knew that family very well |
| B.got lost on the way to Winborn |
| C.sent that family to Birmingham |
| D.was happy to help those in trouble |
What would be the best title for the text?
| A.Father Christmas saved us |
| B.My father never gives up. |
| C.Special Christmas gifts |
| D.A hard-working family |
Before we start a voyage, we usually try to find out more or less definitely where we are bound and how we are supposed to get there.
I happen to have the “Concise Oxford dictionary” on my desk and that will do as well as any other. The word I am looking for appears at the bottom of Page 344. edition 1912.
“Geography: the science of the earth's surface, form, physical features, natural and political divisions, climate, productions and population.”
I could not possibly hope to do better, but I still stress some of the aspects of the case at the expenses of others, because I intend to place man in the centre of the stage. This book of mine will not merely discuss the surface of the earth and its physical features, together with its political and natural boundaries. I would rather call it a study of man in search of food and shelter and leisure for himself and for his family and an attempt to his background or has reshaped his physical surroundings in order to be comfortable and well nourished and happy with his limited strength.
Among the two million human beings in the world, there is of course the widest possible range for all sorts of experiments of an economic and social and cultural nature. It seems that those experiments deserve our attention before anything else. For a mountain is after all merely a mountain until it has been seen by human eyes and has been walked on by human feet and until its slopes and valleys have been occupied and fought over and planted by a dozen generation of hungry settlers.
The Atlantic Ocean was just as wide and deep and as wet and salty before the beginning of the 13th century as after, but it took the human touch to make it what it is today—a bridge between the New World and the Old, the highway for the commerce between East and West.
For thousands of years the endless Russian plains lay ready to offer their abundant harvest to whoever should take the trouble to sow the first grain. But the aspect of that country today would he a very different one if the hand of a German or a Frank, rather than that of a Slav, had guided the iron-pointed stick that plowed the first furrows (犁沟).
The island of Nippon would shake and quake just as continually, whether they happened to be settled by Japanese or by the Tasmanian race, but in the latter case they would hardly be able to feed 60,000,000 people.
Generally speaking, I have paid more attention to the purely “human” side of geography than to the commercial problems which are so important in a day and age devoted to mass production. In the first four paragraphs, the author wants to share with the readers ______.
| A.his approach to planning a voyage |
| B.his emphasis on using a dictionary |
| C.his definition of the word “geography” |
| D.his altitude to the earth's physical features |
Which of the following will the author NOT consider to be on experiment according to Paragraph 5?
| A.Exploring a mountain. |
| B.Climbing a mountain. |
| C.Planting on slopes and valleys. |
| D.Becoming hungry. |
The author mentioned the Russian plains and the island of Nippon to show that _____.
| A.they both feed a lot of people |
| B.they enjoy very good natural conditions |
| C.different people may make the same place different |
| D.their natural conditions haven't changed for many years |
【原创】How is the passage organized?
| A.Topic ---Argument --- Explanation |
| B.Introduction --- Supporting examples --- Conclusion |
| C.Opinion --- Discussion --- Description |
| D.Main idea --- Comparison --- Supporting examples |
My Left Foot (1989)
Imagine being a prisoner of your own body, unable to make any movements except to move your left foot. The main character in My Left Foot, based on the real story of cerebral palsy (大脑性麻痹) sufferer Christy Brown, can barely move his mouth to speak, but by controlling his left foot, he’s able to express himself as an artist and poet. For his moving performance of Brown, Daniel Lewis won his first Academy Award for best actor.
Shine (1996)
Do you have a talent you’re afraid to share with the world? David Helfgott seemed meant from childhood to be “one of the truly great pianists,” but the pressures of performing (and pleasing his father) resulted in a complete breakdown. Ten years in a mental institution didn’t weaken Helfgott’s musical gift: When he was rediscovered, he was playing concertos in a bar. Shine received seven Oscar nominations (提名), and Geoffrey Rush won best actor for his performance of Helfgott.
Life Is Beautiful (1997)
Nothing’s more powerful than the love between a parent and a child. In this heartbreaking Italian film, a father (Roberto Benigni) makes an unbelievable sacrifice for his 4-year-old son: trapped in a Nazi concentration camp in 1945, the Jewish man convinces his boy that they are playing a complicated game. He manages to spare him the horror of the terrible war, and even in his final moments of life, keeps his son smiling and hopeful. Benigni won the best actor Oscar.
Stand and Deliver (1988)
Few people can inspire us more than a good teacher. Jaime Escalante (Edward James Olmos got Oscar nomination for best actor) is a great one. Employed at a high school where kids are expected to fail, Escalante challenges his math students to struggle for better things, like getting good grades in the AP exam. Despite the obstacles in their lives, the classmates accomplish their goals, thanks to Mr. Escalante’s support. The real Jaime Escalante, the Best Teacher in America, says that Stand and Deliver is “ 90% truth, 10% drama.” The underlined part in the passage means _________.
| A.The main character in My Left Foot is a prisoner |
| B.The main character in My Left Foot is a disabled person |
| C.The main character in My Left Foot is trapped by others |
| D.The main character in My Left Foot can’t control his whole body |
【改编】Which film received seven Oscar nominations?
| A.Life Is Beautiful. | B. My Left Foot. |
| C.Stand and Deliver. | D.Shine. |
Jaime Escalante has a talent for _________.
| A.teaching | B.drawing and writing |
| C.making stories | D.playing the piano |
What do the four movies have in common?
| A.They are all based on real stories. |
| B.The main characters all won Academy Award for Best Actor. |
| C.They are all inspiring stories that make a difference. |
| D.The main characters are all sick to some degree but succeed. |
Robots that can chat,find misplaced glasses,draw aeroplanes and play with your children are attracting thousands of visitors during an expo in Tokyo as Japan adapts to changes in society.
Robots,such as the sound.sensitive Chapit,answer simple questions and even joke with people to help them fight loneliness and stay alert in old age.
Japan has one of the world’s fastest-aging societies and the government predicts that by 2050,the proportion of people over 65 will reach 40 percent.”Many older people in Japan live alone and have no one to talk to,”said Kazuya Kitamura representative of the expo organizer.“Communication robots accompany people and don’t mind listening to the same stories over and over again.”
Matsumoto’s“Personal Mobility Robot,”equipped with four cameras and a sensor to recognize the user's centre of gravity, is designed to help elderly move around without pressing buttons.using joysticks(操纵杆)or rotating wheels as in traditional wheelchairs.
The robot can also help find misplaced glasses by identifying them with a sensor.
Other robots,such as the award-winning “DiGRO” can support busy parents who have little time to play with their children.The robot can use the Internet to find a simple image and then draw pictures,keeping children company while parents work.
While Chapit,a relatively simple robot,managed to attract a corporate partner many researchers,such as Kiyoshi Matsumoto,a professor at the University of Tokyo,struggle to attract sponsors for more expensive projects.
“We have developed a robot that can assist many people,but we still haven’t found a sponsor,” said Matsumoto,who added that the cost of the machine,if mass-produced,would be comparable to that of a car.”In the current economic environment there are few companies willing to invest in such a costly project,”he said.It can be inferred from the text that_______.
| A.many children lack love from parents |
| B.robots helpful to the old will be in great demand |
| C.robots are the most useful to children |
| D.robots do better than people in healthcare |
It is difficult to find sponsors for robots because______.
| A.Japan is suffering economy depression |
| B.the robots are of poor design |
| C.the production of robots costs a lot |
| D.the future market is worrying |
【改编】What’s the purpose of the passage?
| A.To attract people to visit the new kind of robot |
| B.To find the investment of the robot. |
| C.To persuade people to buy the robot. |
| D.To introduce a new kind of robot. |