题目内容
to give? On this page we suggest a few organizations you might like to help.
Children's Home
We DON T want your money, but children's toys, books, and clothes IN COOD CONDIT10N
would be very welcome.
Also, we are looking for friendly families who would take our children into their homes for a few
hours or days as guests. You have so much-will you share it?
Phone Sister Thomas on 55671.
Children's Hospice
We look after a small number of very sick children. This important work needs skill and love. We
cannot continue without gifts or money to pay for more nursing staff. We also need storybooks and
toys suitable for quiet games.
Please contact the Secretary. Little Children's
Hospice, Newby Road.
Street Food
In the winter weather, it's no fun being homeless. It's even worse if you're hungry. We give hot food
to at least fifty people every night. It's hard work, but necessary. Can you come and help? If not, can
you find a little money? We use a very old kitchen, and we need some new sauce pans. Money for new
ones would be most welcome indeed,
Contact Street Food,c/o Mary's House. Elming Way, Littleton. Phone 27713.
Youth Club
Have you got an unwanted chair? A record player? A pot of paint? Because we can use them!
We want to get to work on our meeting room!
Please phone 66231 and we'll be happy to collect anything you can give us.
Thank you !
The Night Shelter
We offer a warm bed for the night to anyone who has nowhere to go. We rent the former
Commercial Hotel on Green Street. Although it is not expensive, we never seem to have quite enough
money. Can you let us have a few pounds? Any amount, however small, will be such a help.
Send it to us at 15, Green St, Littleton. Please make check payable to The Night Shelter.
B. less fortunate members of our society
C. hungry people who have no beds to sleep in
D. friendly members of our society to help others
B. The Night Shelter
C. Children's Home
D. Children's Hospice
B. people are very poor during the time for giving
C. warm-hearted people like to give away money
D. this passage is taken from a local newspaper
B. The Night Shelter and Children's Home
C. Children's Hospice and The Night Shelter
D. Street Food and The Night Shelter
“Racism (种族歧视) is a grown-up disease,” declares the saying on Ruby Bridge’s website along with a photo of Mrs. Bridge today, a 6-year-old girl four decades ago. In the photo, she is walking up the steps of the William Frantz Public School in New Orleans, a little black girl accompanied by two officers who protect her on her way to school.
Her name then was Ruby Nell. It was Nov. 14, 1960. She was the first black child to enroll at this all-white elementary school according to the court order to desegregate in New Orleans schools. Her story is moving -- she was a very courageous child -- and remains a significant proof against intolerance (不宽容) of all kinds. Ruby’s photo brings out another powerful image on her website: Norman Rockwells symbolic painting for Look magazine on Jan. 14, 1964, “The Problem We All Live With.”
Rockwell was an illustrator of exceptional skill and charm. He produced a vast number of unforgettable images over a long career, many of them involving children. His American kids are innocent and appealing, but often, at the same time, decidedly naughty. His method was to photograph his models, and the resulting paintings were photographic. But it is revealing to see how the artist slightly changed facial expressions from photo to oil painting in order to make his paintings communicate with the viewer. Communication, even persuasion, lay at the back of his work; this was art for effect.
“The Problem We All Live With” belongs to Rockwell’s later work, when he began openly showing his strong belief in liberty. This is a highly persuasive image. Before he arrived at the final copy, one sketch (草图) shows the little girl closer to the two officers following her than to those in front. In the finished picture, the girl seems more determined, independent, and untouched. The unfriendly tomatoes thrown on the wall are behind her now, and she, is completely unaffected.
1.Ruby Nell was protected by officers on her way to school, because .
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A.she was a little fighter against racism |
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B.she was very young, short and timid |
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C.she was the first black to study in an all-white school |
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D.she was chosen by the com t0be’wi’th white children |
2.According to the passage, “The Problem We All Live With” is a(n) .
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A.social program for American children |
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B.famous painting by Norman Rockwell |
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C.photo displayed on Ruby Bridges’ website |
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D.exhibition at the Norman Rockwell Museum |
3.The word “desegregate” in paragraph 2 probably means“ ”.
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A.fight against the white |
B.end racial separation |
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C.struggle for freedom |
D.stop the black-white conflict |
4.The main topic of this passage is .
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A.how Rockwell encouraged Ruby to fight against racism |
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B.how Ruby won her fight to go to an all-white school |
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C.how Rockwell expressed his protest in .Iris work |
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D.how persuasive Rockwell’s earlier work of art is |