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1£®Marjorie Gestring
    Marjorie Gestring was a springboard£¨Ìø°å£© diver from the United States who won the gold medal in 3-meter springboard diving at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin£¬Germany at the age of 13 years£®With the cancellation£¨È¡Ïû£© of the Olympics in 1940 and 1944 because of World War II£¬Gestring did not get a chance to defend her title£¬and her comeback attempt for the 1948 Summer Olympics failed£®
Bob Mathias
    17-year-old American Bob Mathias won the decathlon£¨Ê®ÏîÈ«ÄÜÔ˶¯£© only four months after taking up the sport£®He is the youngest athlete in Olympic history to win a men's track and field event£®By the time Mathias retired from decathlon competition in 1952£¬he had nine victories in nine competitions£®He had won two gold medals separately in 1948 and 1952£®In 1954 a film about his early life called The Bob Mathias Story was made£¬in which he and his wife played themselves£®
Fu Mingxia
    Fu Mingxia was born on August 16£¬1978 in Wuhan£¬Hubei Province£®At an early age£¬her father taught her to swim at a nearby river£®She started exercising gymnastics at age 5£¬soon turning to diving£®Fu Mingxia left home at age 9 to train in Beijing£®In the 1992 Summer Olympics held in Barcelona£¬Fu Mingxia became China's youngest Olympic champion ever when she won the 10-meter platform gold at the age of 13£®
Ian Thorpe
    Ian Thorpe was born on 13 October£¬1982£®He is a former Australian freestyle swimmer£®At the age of 14£¬he became the youngest male ever to represent Australia£®Ian Thorpe£¬17 years old£¬won the gold medal in the 400m freestyle by breaking his own world record in Sydney 2000£®He has won five Olympic gold medals£®
41£®How many times has Marjorie Gestring taken part in the Olympic Games£¿A
    A£®Two£®       B£®Three£®          C£®Four£®           D£®Five£®
42£®Which two athletes took part in the Olympics in the same year£¿C
    A£®Marjorie Gestring and Fu Mingxia
    B£®Bob Mathias and Fu Mingxia
    C£®Marjorie Gestring and Bob Mathias£®
    D£®Bob Mathias and Ian Thorpe£®
43£®How long had Fu Mingxia practised diving in Beijing before she won the 10-meter platform gold in the 1992 Summer Olympics£¿C
    A£®About ten years£®
    B£®About nine years£®
    C£®About five years£®
    D£®About three years£®
44£®What is the passage mainly about£¿A
    A£®Some young Olympic champions£®
    B£®The history of the Olympic Games£®
    C£®How to train young Olympic athletes£®
    D£®How to prepare for the Olympic Games£®
9£®I was going to die in Antarctica£¬I was certain£®An image of my frost-covered body£¬pale and lifeless£¬filled my mind as I glanced around£®In all directions the empty wilderness of Antarctica stretched away from me£¬the only feature on the landscape was the division between snow and sky£®I gazed sadly at my team£®They were rapidly disappearing over the horizon£®
I was leading an expedition £¨Ì½ÏÕ£© attempting to reach the south pole£®The team was made up of ordinary women from all around the world-from Jamaica£¬India£¬Singapore and Cyprus-many of whom had never seen snow£¬or spent a night in a tent£¬before we set off£®Our aim was to be the most international all-female team to reach die South Pole£®
As I watched£¬the rest of die team hat marched on£¬unaware that I was not with them£®By the time I realized that my sledge was firmly trapped£¬the team were already a long way ahead of me£®I called out to Era£¬my teammate£¬"Era!Stop I"
Getting no response I called again£¬but my shouts were carried away in the opposite direction by the wind£®Seconds passed£®Nothing£®I was gradually being left alone£¬completely defenseless against the low temperatures of Antarctica£®
My strength increased when I thought of a cold£¬lonely death£®I pulled again my sledge£¬which moved a little£®I removed the ice with my ski-pole and boot£¬desperately trying to break the sledge free£®The sledge shot forward£¬knocking me off balance£®I struggled to my feet and set off after the team£®
I caught up just as Reena£¬my teammate from India£¬looked behind her and noticed there was one person missing£®She swung around on her skis£®in shock and spotted me in the near distance£®
As we continued£¬my panic slowly faded£®For the rest of the day£®each of the team was glancing over their shoulder every few minutes£®They were not going to risk losing me again£®

56£®From the first paragraph we can safely infer that the authorC£®
A£®disliked her team                B£®got seriously ill
C£®was in panic                     D£®lost her way
57£®What is special about the expedition team£¿A
A£®They were all female£®                    B£®They were all professional£®
C£®They made the longest expedition£®        D£®They had been strictly trained£®
58£®What made the author get her sledge out of the ice wasB£®
A the shouts from her teammates                       B£®her strong desire to live
C£®the sudden change in wind direction                D£®the natural beauty ahead
59£®At last£¬each of the team members kept looking backB£®
A£®to avoid being attacked from behind
B£®to make sure that none fell behind
C£®to check the distance they had covered
D£®to keep a record of the route they took
60£®Which may be the best title of the passage£¿D
A£®How to survive in Antarctic£®                     
B£®A mysterious trip to the South Pole£®
C£®A female expedition team£®                        
D£®Being left behind in the snow£®
6£®It was the summer of 1936£®The Olympic Games were being held in Berlin£®I had trained£¬sweated and disciplined myself for 6years on the running broad jump£®A year before£¬as a college student at the Ohio State£¬I'd set the world's record of 26feet 8 1/4inches£®Nearly everyone expected me to win£®
I was in for a surprise£®When the time came for the broad-jump trials£¬I was shocked to see a tall boy hitting the pit £¨¿Ó£© at almost 26feet on his practice leaps£®He turned out to be a German named Luz Long£®He had easily qualified for the finals on his first attempt£®
A nervous athlete is an athlete who will make mistakes£®I fouled £¨·¸¹æ£© twice on my qualifying jumps£®Walking a few yards from the pit£¬I kicked at the dirt disgustedly£®Suddenly I felt a hand on my shoulder£®I turned to look into the friendly blue eyes of Luz Long£®"Hi£¬I'm Luz Long£®I don't think we've met£®""Glad to meet you£¬"I said£®Then£¬trying to hide my nervousness£¬I added£¬"How are you£¿""I'm fine£®Something must be eating you£®You should be able to qualify with your eyes closed£®"He said£®
He seemed to understand my nervousness£¬and took pains to reassure me£®Finally£¬seeing that I had calmed down somewhat£¬he said£¬"What does it matter if you're not the first in the trials£¿Tomorrow is what counts£®"All the tension left my body as the truth of what he said hit me£®Confidently I qualified with almost a foot to spare£®
Luz broke his own record and pushed me on to a peak performance£®The instant I landed from my final jump-the one which set the Olympic record of 26feet 5 1/16inches-he was at my side£¬congratulating me£®

56£®The author said"I was in for a surprise"because heC
A£®beat Luz Long
B£®qualified for the final
C£®met a great competitor
D£®joined in the Olympic Games
57£®What can we learn about the author from the passage£¿D
A£®He remained confident in the Olympic Games£®
B£®He had qualified for the finals on his first attempt£®
C£®He had prepared for Berlin Olympics in Ohio State£®
D£®He broke the world record of the running broad jump£®
58£®What is the passage mainly about£¿B
A£®A reliable man in the Olympic Games£®
B£®A memorable experience in the Olympics£®
C£®A surprising result in the Olympic Games£®
D£®A good suggestion on how to win in the Olympics£®
10£®At the age of ten I could not figure out what this Elvis Presley guy had that the rest of us boys did not have£®I mean£¬he had a head£¬two arms and two legs£¬just like the rest of us£®About nine o'clock on Saturday morning I decided to ask Eugene Correthers£¬one of the older boys£¬what it was that made this Elvis guy so special£®He told me that it was Elvis'wavy hair and the way he moved his body£®
About half an hour later all the boys in the orphanage£¨¹Â¶ùÔº£©were called to the main dining-room and told we were all going to downtown Jacksonville£¬Florida to get a new pair of Buster Brown shoes and a haircut£® That is when I got this big idea£¬which hit me like a ton of bricks£®If the Elvis hair cut was the big secret£¬then that's what I was going to get£®
A11the way to town I told everybody£¬including the matron£¨Å®¹Ü¼Ò£©from the orphanage who was taking us to town£¬that I was going to look just like Elvis Presley and that I would learn to move around just like he did and that I would be rich and famous one day£¬just like him£®
When I got my new Buster Brown shoes£¬I could hardly wait for my new hair cut and now that I had my new Busier Brown shoes I would be very happy to go back to the orphanage and practice being like Elvis£®
We finally arrived at the big barber shop£¬where they cut our hair for free because we were orphans£¨¹Â¶ù£©£®I looked at the barber and said£¬"I want an Elvis hair cut£®Can you make my hair like Elvis£¿"I asked him£¬with a big smile on my face£®"Let's just see what we can do for you£¬little man£¬"he said£®I was so happy when he started to cut my hair£®Just as he started to cut my hair£¬the matron signed for him to come over to where she was standing£®She whispered something into his ear and then he shook his head£¬like he was telling her"No"£®Then he told me they were not allowed to give us Elvis hair cuts£®Then I saw my hair falling onto the floor£®

21£®In the author's eyes£¬Elvis Presley wasB£®
A£®disgusting    B£®admirable    C£®ambitious   D£®dynamic
22£®From the passage£¬we can know thatC£®
A£®Buster Brown was more appealing than Elvis Presley
B£®An Elvis hair cut cost the orphans a lot of money
C£®The matron did not want the boy to have an Elvis hair cut
D£®The barber was unwilling to give the boy an Elvis hair cut
23£®We can learn from the underlined sentence that the boy wasA£®
A£®excited to have an Elvis hair cut
B£®worried to think about the secret
C£®anxious to remove the ton of bricks
D£®careful to seize the chance
24£®How would the boy probably feel when he walked out of the barber shop£¿D
A£®Delighted£®    B£®Guilty£®    C£®Self-satisfied£®      D£®Depressed£®
2£®One of the latest trend£¨Ç÷ÊÆ£© in American Childcare is Chinese au pairs£®Au Pair in Stamford£¬for example£¬has got increasing numbers of request for Chinese au pairs from aero to around 4£¬000since 2004£®And that's true all across the country£®
"I thought it would be useful for him to learn Chinese at an early age"Joseph Stocke£¬the managing director of a company£¬says of his 2-year old son£®"I would at least like to  give him the chance to use the language in the future£¬"After only six months of being cared by 25-year-old woman from China£¬the boy can already understand basic Chinese daily expressions£¬his dad says£®
Li Drake£¬a Chinese native raising two children in Minnesota with an American husband£¬had another reason for looking for an au pair from China£®She didn't want her children to miss out on their roots£®"Because I am Chinese£¬my husband and I wanted the children to keep exposed to£¨½Ó´¥£© the language and culture£¨ÎÄ»¯£©£®"she says£®
"Staying with a native speaker is better for children than simply sitting in a classroom£¬"says Suzanne Flynn£¬a professor in language education of Children£®"But parents must understand that just one year with au pair is unlikely to produce wonders£®Complete mastery demands continued learning until the age of 10or 12£®"
The popularity of au pairs from China has been strengthened by the increasing numbers of American parents who want their children who want their children to learn Chinese£®It is expected that American demand for au pairs will continue to rise in the next few years£®

64£®What does that term"au pair"in the text mean£¿B
A£®A mother raising her children on her own
B£®A young foreign woman taking care of children£®
C£®A professor in language education of children
D£®A child learning a foreign language at home
65£®Li Drake has her children study Chinese because she wants themD£®
A£®to live in China some day             B£®to speak the language at home
C£®to catch up wit other children        D£®to learn about the Chinese culture
66£®How can children leam a foreign language best according to Flynn£¿C
A£®From their parents          B£®By attcnding classes£®
C£®From a native speaker       D£®By starting at an early age£®
67£®What can we infer from the text£¿A
A£®Learning Chinese is becoming popular In America£¬
B£®Educated woman do better in looking after children
C£®Chinese au pairs need to improve their English Skills£®
D£®Children can learn a foreign language well in six months£®

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