题目
题型:不详难度:来源:
March 22, 20II---Most restaurants in the United States offer their customers a glass of tap water at no charge with their meal, but this week many restaurants are asking dinners to pay a dollar, or more, for a glass of water. Cards on their tables explain that this small amount helps bring clean water to children around the world. It’s called the UNICEF Tap Project.
“UNICEF’s Tap Project is really all about bringing attention to the fact that over 900 million people around the globe do not have access to good, clean, healthy drinking water,” says Cary Stem, who heads the US Fund for UNICEF. She adds that water-borne illness is the second-highest cause of preventable childhood death in the world.
“Each and every day approximately 4,100 children die just because they don’t have that access - 4,100 every single day.”
The public service campaign encourages people to help change that statistic with a simple, affordable action: paying a dollar to get a glass of tap water at a restaurant.
“One dollar buys enough good, clean water for a child for 40 days,” Stem says.
“The tap project has expanded since it began five years ago with 300 restaurants in New York City. This year, Stem says, about 3,000 restaurants across the country are participating in the campaign. We raised about $2.5 million over the last five years of this campaign,” says Stem. “Last year, we raised over $1 million for the first time. This year we’re hoping to top that.”
Stem credits the continued success of the campaign to an army of volunteers who support the tap project and raise money in their communities.
The UNICEF Tap Project is promoting its efforts with a simple motto: when you take water, give water. Currently, UNICEF works in more than 100 countries around the world to improve access to safe water and sanitation facilities in schools and communities.
Stem hopes that, by participating in the project, more Americans will realize that what they often take for granted is a precious and scarce resource in many other parts of the world.
小题1:Restaurants began to charge for tap water to _______.
A.increase their profit |
B.urge customers to save water |
C.raise people’s awareness of the world water problem |
D.collect money for those without access to safe water |
A.began in New York City |
B.was started by volunteers |
C.is hoping to collect $2.5 million this year |
D.provides help for 1,000 countries in the world |
A.the Tap Project began in 2006 |
B.America suffers a serious problem |
C.4,100 children die of water pollution every year |
D.water-borne illnesses are the biggest killer of children |
A.Concerned | B.Hopeful | C.Disappointed | D.Angry |
答案
小题1:D
小题2:A
小题3:A
小题4:B
解析
试题分析:本文是一篇新闻报道,介绍了The UNICEF Tap Project。这个活动旨在于为缺水的孩子筹集资金。同时在文章里也介绍了与这个活动有关的其他的相关信息。
小题1:D 推理题。根据文章1,2段内容bring clean water to children around the world可知这个活动是为了筹集足够的资金来帮助那些缺水的孩子。故D正确。
小题2:A 细节题。根据文章第6段第1行“The tap project has expanded since it began five years ago with 300 restaurants in New York City. 可知这项运动最初是从纽约开始的。故A正确。
小题3:A 计算题。本文第一行March 2011;可知这则新闻是在2011年三月的,根据第6段第一行The tap project has expanded since it began five years ago可知这项运动开始于5年前。可知这项运动是2006年开始的。故A正确。
小题4:B 推理题。根据文章倒数第三段Stem credits the continued success of the campaign to an army of volunteers who support the tap project and raise money in their communities.可知他认为这项活动会持续得到成功,能够筹集到更多的钱。故B正确。
核心考点
试题【March 22, 20II---Most restaurants in the United States offer their customers a g】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
But the 27-year-old claims she was refused an ambulance and told to walk the 100m from her house in Leicester to the city’s nearby Royal Infirmary(医院).
Her daughter Mariah was delivered on a pavement outside the hospital by a passer-by, just before ambulance crews arrived.
Ms Blake said she started going into labor at about 7:15 am on Sunday, August 2. She said, “I phoned up the Royal Infirmary, it’s just across the road.
“I went into the bath and realized she was gong to come quickly. I didn’t think I’d be able to make it out of the bath, so I phoned the maternity(妇产科的) ward back and told them to get an ambulance out.”
They said they were not sending an ambulance and told me I had had nine months to sort out a lift.
Experienced mother MS Blake today said she knew she had to get herself out of the bath and try to get to the hospital.
Eventually MS Blake and her friends enlisted the help of a physiotherapist(理疗师) who happened to be passing on her way to work. She dialed 999 and helped deliver baby Mariah while waiting for emergency services.
Ms Blake said despite the happy ending she was upset she was told to make her own way to the hospital as, being an experienced mum, she knew she did not have the time.
Today a government spokeswoman said, “We are disappointed that Ms Blake was not happy with the advice and care she received and will of course investigate any complaint. We are pleased that both Ms Blake and her daughter are well and healthy.”
小题1: Carmen Blake, the 27-year-old mother, gave girth to her new child Mariah .
A.in the city’s Royal Infirmary |
B.in the ambulance on her way to hospital |
C.out of the bath at home |
D.in the street on her way to hospital |
A.felt worried | B.felt tired | C.gave birth to | D.went to sleep |
A.there were not enough ambulance in the Royal Infirmary |
B.the story ended with a sad ending |
C.the maternity ward said Ms Blake only needed a lift |
D.the maternity ward said Ms Blake ought to call earlier |
A.failing to send an ambulance to help her |
B.having killed her newly-born baby |
C.not taking good care of her and her baby |
D.refusing to admit her into the hospital |
Jack Andraka from Maryland won the grand prize at the 2012 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. It is the largest high school science competition in the world. The Maryland teenager is the youngest winner of the $75,000 prize. He was chosen from among 1,500 students in 70 countries.Jack Andraka invented a test for pancreatic cancer (胰腺癌). He started to learn it after losing a close family friend to the disease. “I went on the Internet and I found that 85%of all pancreatic cancers are found late, when someone has less than 2% chance of survival(生存), ” he says, “and I was thinking,’ That’s not right. We should be able to do something.’” He found that early discovery is important to increasing the chances of surviving the disease.
The Maryland teenager asked to work in a laboratory at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and was allowed. There he developed a simple paper test, which can recognize the disease in a single drop of blood. His test has proved correct 90% of the time. It also is 100 times more sensitive(敏感的)than other tests. “It costs 3 cents per test, and then it takes only 5 minutes to run,” he said.
Jack’s success wouldn’t have been possible without Anirban Maitra, a professor at Johns Hopkins. He was the only person among the 200 researchers Jack wrote to who showed interest in his project. “I was very surprised that this was a 15-year-old who was writing this. I wanted to meet this clever young man and see what he wanted to talk about and so I called him over for an interview(会面). ”
Jack worked in Professor Maitra’s laboratory, completing his project in 7 months. The government has given the Maryland teenager patent rights(专利权)to the pancreatic cancer test. He is now talking with companies about developing the test into a simple product.
Whatever happens, the professor believes Jack Andraka’s name is one we will be hearing again over the next 10 to 20 years.
小题1: What made Jack Andraka research pancreatic cancer?
A.A high school task. | B.A professor’s encouragement. |
C.Losing a friend. | D.Doubts about the present test. |
A.proved to be very successful |
B.was 100 times cheaper than other tests |
C.gave patients a 90% chance of survival |
D.was finished at the high school of Maryland |
A.left a deep impression on Professor Maitra |
B.was thought highly of by companies |
C.got support from others easily |
D.wasn’t afraid of failure |
A.become rich |
B.make contributions(贡献)continually |
C.get a good job |
D.make products to treat cancer |
A.Intel International Science and Engineering Fair |
B.Jack Andraka’s Fights Against Cancer |
C.Research on Pancreatic Cancer |
D.Teenager Cancer Researcher |
"I want to look normal," said Aidan, whose father, Tim, is a firefighter in the Bronx. The third-grader has hemi facial micro soma, in which one half of the face doesn"t develop correctly.
Last weekend, family friend Peter Drake, a Ridgefield, Conn., firefighter, hosted a fund-raiser, collecting between $8,000 and $9,000. But when the party at a Danbury, Conn., Irish cultural center was over, the money had disappeared.
"At the end of the night, all the money that was donated was put in a zippered bag," said Tim Sullivan. "A bartender gave the bag to Pete... He had it in his hands. He put it down to go do something, and when he came back, he saw that it was missing."
Sullivan said his longtime friend -- who has had fund-raisers to pay for Aidan"s 10 previous surgeries -- is "devastated."
"Pete was so upset. He kept saying, "I let Aidan down, I let Aidan down,” Colleen Sullivan, 40, recalled.
"We even went Dumpster diving, in case it was thrown out."
The Sullivans plan to go ahead with the March 1 surgery led by specialists at NYU"s Langone Medical Center in Manhattan. The money would have offset the $10,000 to $15,000 that insurance doesn"t cover. Yesterday, Aidan said he"s not a fan of hospitals and doesn"t like to be away from his sister, Kaylee, 4. But he"s willing to do it. "I"m excited," he said. "Finally, an ear."
小题1: Where do you probably read this text from?
A.A magazine. | B.A newspaper. | C.A book. | D.An advertisement. |
A.He felt excited. | B.He felt surprised. |
C.He felt upset. | D.He felt annoyed. |
A.To help Aidan Sullivan to have another operation. |
B.To help pay for Aidan Sullivan’s life insurance. |
C.To return the money the Sullivans owed to the hospital. |
D.To help a firefighter who got hurt in the ear. |
A.He hates going to hospital. |
B.He will go to New York for the surgery. |
C.He didn’t care too much about the lost money. |
D.He has received 10 surgeries before. |
A.He was heartless. | B.He was kind. |
C.He was caress. | D.He was a firefighter. |
The paper’s main content deals with metropolitan life, explaining the differences and similarities between Eastern and Western culture. Its culture and lifestyle part is regarded as a guide to metropolitan life in Beijing.
The paper has 24 pages in four main sections:
NEWS: Select stories that discuss cultural differences.
COMMUNITY: Reports on developments related to foreigners in the city and a platform(平台)by which they can communicate with a bigger audience.
CULTURE and LIFESTYLE: Highlights from international lifestyle and fashion trends in Beijing
STUDY: Cheerful and humorous pieces to help English-language students improve their skills
Beijing Today circulates 50,000 copies published every Friday. It is one of Beijing’s most authoritative(权威的) English media sources, and is sold at post newsstands and distributed in hotels, apartment complexes, etc.
Price: 2 yuan per issue
小题1:Which of the following sections would be the best choice to exchange thoughts with others?
A.NEWS | B.COMMUNITY | C.CULTURE and LIFESYLE | D.STUDY |
A.52 yuan | B.24 yuan | C.104 yuan | D.48 yuan |
A.News abou foreign cultural festivals |
B.fashion trends in Paris. |
C.Discussions with foreigners |
D.Skills in improving English |
The First Lady looked extremely attractive in a red dress by designer Jason Wu. She teamed the dramatic dress with heels by Jimmy Choo and a diamond ring by Kimberly McDonald.
She surprised the fashion world by returning to a Wu design which had been made for her.
Four years ago at her first Inauguration Ball, Michelle shone in a white, one-shouldered floor-length dress by the designer.
Wu, who was 26 at the time and had only been working in fashion for three years, saw his career take off after the First Lady’s surprise decision to wear one of his dresses.
He said at the time that he was unaware she had chosen the dress and had been watching at home on his couch and eating pizza when she appeared.
After her 2013 decision, Wu told Women’s Wear Daily: “Mrs. Obama likes to keep her secrets. She fooled me again.”
Wu released a women’s clothing and accessories(配饰)collection at Target last year and continues to be popular with the First Lady for official appointments.
The sleeveless dress with low-cut back flattered (突出)49-year-old Michelle’s arms and neat waist.
It had been created especially for her by Wu and was a departure from the dark and plain color tone she stuck to at earlier inauguration events.
Vice-President Joe Biden’s wife Jill also looked attractive in a blue silk dress by Vera Wang at the Inauguration Ball.
小题1:What does the passage mainly talk about?
A.Mrs. Obama’s 2013 decision. |
B.Wu, a great designer. |
C.The First Lady’s secrets. |
D.Michelle Obama’s inaugural ball dress. |
A.risk | B.success | C.surprise | D.danger |
A.Daring and gifted. | B.Unusual and cautious. |
C.Talented and lucky. | D.Careful and brave. |
A.Wu was aware that Mrs. Obama had chosen his work again |
B.Being First Lady, Mrs. Obama hasn’t stuck to her dark and plain color tone. |
C.Mrs. Obama told Wu to give away her secrets |
D.Mrs. Obama should have told Wu the truth |
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