Since I took office I’ve done everything in my power to protect our children from harm.We’ve worked to make their streets and their schools safer, to give them something positive to do after school and before their parents get home.We’ve worked to teach our children that drugs are dangerous, illegal and wrong.
Today, I want to talk to you about the historic opportunity we now have to protect our nation’s children from an even more deadly threat:smoking.Smoking kills more people every day than AIDS, alcohol, car accidents, murders, suicides, drugs and fires combined.Nearly 90 percent of those smokers lit their first cigarette before they turned 18.Consider this:3, 000 children start to smoke every day illegally, and 1, 000 of them will die sooner because of it.
This is a national tragedy that every American should be honor-bound to help prevent.For more than five years we’ve worked to stop our children from smoking before they start, launching a nationwide campaign to educate them about the dangers of smoking, to reduce their access to tobacco products, and to severely restrict tobacco companies from advertising to young people.If we do these, we’ll cut teen smoking by almost half over the next five years.That means if we act now, we have it in our power to stop 3 million children from smoking and to save a million lives as a result.
(1)
What has the author done in his power?
[ ]
A.
To look after our children.
B.
To clean the street.
C.
To teach our children.
D.
To protect our children from harm.
(2)
Compared with other disasters, what kills more people everyday?
[ ]
A.
Smoking.
B.
Car accidents.
C.
Drugs.
D.
Murders.
(3)
How many children start to smoke everyday illegally?
[ ]
A.
1 000.
B.
3 000.
C.
90.
D.
18.
(4)
For more than five years what have they done to stop their children from smoking?
[ ]
A.
To educate them about the dangers of smoking.
B.
To reduce their access to tobacco products.
C.
To restrict tobacco companies from advertising to young people.