题目内容
________ famous woman singer will remarry has been reported in today’s newspaper.
A.What
B.That that
C.This
D.That
Paparazzi, or "paps", are photographers who take pictures of famous people when they are not at the center of public attention. Paps are different from professional photographers or journalists because they never take ordinary photos.
The goal for paparazzi is to get pictures that no one else will get and then sell the pictures to the buyer who offers the most money —normally a small newspaper, magazine or website.
There is no law against paparazzi taking pictures in public places. However, there are laws that protect certain individuals. For example, child protection laws stop improper (不合适的) pictures of anyone under 16 from being published.
There is also no law that stops paparazzi from following celebrities (名人) and taking their pictures either. However, if paps are secretly following them and taking pictures of their faces, they could get into trouble.
Most paparazzi hang out on streets and hot spots for celebrities, waiting for the opportunity to take a picture of a star. Many stay on the streets until the early hours of the morning when celebrities are leaving nightclubs and looking a little worse for wear. However, some have other ways to make sure they get pictures. Many paps are in contact with "informers" who know the locations of celebrities at any given time. They then pass the information on to paparazzi. An informer could be anyone —from a restaurant waiter to a salesman.
Most of the time, paparazzi get a bad reputation for following celebrities. But sometimes stars or their managers will contact paps themselves and tell them exactly where and when they will go.
What a love-hate relationship between paparazzi and celebrities!
【小题1】Which of the following things paparazzi might do would be against the law?
| A.Taking pictures of famous people in public places. |
| B.Getting unsuitable pictures of a 10-year-old actress published. |
| C.Following a famous woman singer secretly and taking her pictures. |
| D.Hanging out at the places where celebrities often appear. |
| A.get the only first-hand pictures |
| B.sell the pictures to a big newspaper |
| C.make friends with famous people |
| D.know the locations of celebrities |
| A.how paparazzi get the pictures |
| B.how dangerous paparazzi’s job is |
| C.how much paparazzi pay for the pictures |
| D.how paparazzi contact informers |
| A.Paparazzi always take pictures when famous people are tired. |
| B.Stars hate paparazzi and don’t want to be followed. |
| C.Paparazzi and famous people rely on each other sometimes. |
| D.Informers might get paparazzi into trouble. |
Dr. Marie Curie is known to the world as the scientist who discovered radioactive metals i.e. Radium and Polonium.
Marie Curie was a Polish physicist and chemist. Together with her husband, Pierre, she discovered two new elements and studied the x-rays they emitted. She found that the harmful properties of x-rays were able to kill tumors. By the end of World War I, Marie Curie was probably the most famous woman in the world. She had made a conscious decision, however, not to patent methods of processing radium or its medical applications.
Marie Curie was born on November 7, 1867 in Poland and died on July 4, 1934. Her co-discovery with her husband Pierre Curie of the radioactive elements radium and polonium represents one of the best known stories in modern science for which they were recognized in 1901 with the Nobel Prize for Physics. In 1911, Marie Curie was honored with a second Nobel prize, this time for chemistry, to honor her for successfully isolating pure radium and determining radium's atomic weight.
As a child, Marie Curie amazed people with her great memory. She learned to read when she was only four years old. Her father was a professor of science and the instruments that he kept in a glass case fascinated Marie. She dreamed of becoming a scientist, but that would not be easy. Her family became very poor, and at the age of 18, Marie became a governess. She helped pay for her sister to study in Paris. Later, her sister helped Marie with her education. In 1891, Marie attended the Sorbonne University in Paris where she met and married Pierre Curie, a well-known physicist.
Marie Curie contributed greatly to our understanding of radioactivity and the effects of x-rays. She received two Nobel prizes for her brilliant work, but died of leukemia, caused by her repeated exposure to radioactive material.
【小题1】The underlined word “emitted” in the 2nd paragraph means_______.
| A.gave off | B.gave away | C.set out | D.set off |
① Marie Curie worked as a governess. ② Marie Curie met and marry Pierre Curie.
③ Marie Curie learned to read. ④ Marie Curie was honored with a second Nobel Prize.
⑤ Marie Curie discovered radium.
| A.①②③④⑤ | B.③①②⑤④ | C.①②③⑤④ | D.③①②④⑤ |
| A.In her twenties | B.In her thirties | C.In her forties | D.In her fifties |
| A.Marie Curie discovered radium | B.Marie Curie, a famous chemist |
| C.Marie Curie won two Noble Prizes | D.The brief biography of Marie Curie |
Catherine Destivelle is a rock star. She loves rock, but she can’t sing or play the guitar! She is a rock climber and a big star in France and Italy. She is the most famous woman climber in the world because she often climbs without ropes. She climbs in many countries but most often in the French Alps near Chamonix, where she lives. She started climbing near her home in Paris when she was five. Then, at fourteen, she joined the French Alpine Club to learn more, but immediately she climbed better and more quickly than the older members of the club. She won her first competition in Italy in 1995.
Three years ago she found a new route up the Dru Mountain near Chamonix. The climb took eleven days and for four days the snow was so heavy that she could not move. Last year other climbers tried to follow the new Destivelle Route, but they failed. They are going to try again this year.
People always ask her about her climbing. She says, “I climb because I’m in love with mountains. I like touching the rock and reading the face of the rock. I like it a lot. I felt at home on the side of a mountain. I prepare well before I go, so I’m never worried.”
Catherine chooses new mountains from books—like buying from a shopping catalogue(目录)! “I see a nice mountain and I go to climb it!” Her next mountain is in Pakistan. She is going there next month. “It’s much bigger than the Dru, so it’s going to take longer to climb. An American climber, Jeff Lowe, is coming with me to help.”
【小题1】Catherine Destivelle is called ‘a star’ because ________.
| A.she won a competition in 1995 | B.she loves rocks |
| C.she’s a famous woman climber | D.she found a new route up to the Dru Mountain |
| A.she lost her way | B.the climb took 11 days |
| C.she needed help from an American climber | D.there was heavy snow |
【小题3】On the side of a mountain she feels _______.| A.independent | B.easy and happy | C.energetic and challenged | D.nervous |
| A.Why do you like climbing? | B.Are you in love with an American climber? |
| C.Do you enjoy reading books on mountains? | D.What do you do before you go climbing? |
Harvard University named historian Drew Gilpin Faust as its first female president on Sunday, ending a lengthy and secretive search to find a successor to Lawrence Summers.
The seven-member Harvard Corporation elected Faust, a noted scholar on History of the American South and dean of Harvard’s Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, as the university’s 28th president.
“This is a great day, and a historic day, for Harvard,” James R. Houghton, chairman of the presidential search committee, said in a statement. “Drew Faust is an inspiring and accomplished leader, a superb scholar, a dedicated teacher, and a wonderful human being.”
Her selection is noteworthy given the heated debates over Summers’ comments that genetic differences between the sexes might help explain the lack of women in top science jobs.
Faust has been dean of Radcliffe since 2001, two years after the former women’s college was combined into the university as a research center with a mission to study gender issues.
Some professors have quietly groused that the 371-year-old university is appointing a fifth president who is not a scientist. No scientist has had the top job since James Bryant Conant retired in 1953; its last four have come from the fields of classics, law, literature and economics.
Faust is the first Harvard president who did not receive a degree from the university since Charles Chauncy, a graduate of Cambridge University, who died in office in 1762. She attended the University of Pennsylvania.
“Teaching staff turned to her constantly,” said Sheldon Hackney, a former president of the University of Pennsylvania and historian who worked closely with Faust. “She’s very clear. She has a sense of humor, but she’s very strong-minded. You come to trust in her because she’s so solid.”
【小题1】Which might be the best title for the passage?
| A.Harvard named its first female president. |
| B.History of Harvard University changed. |
| C.Debates on female equality ended. |
| D.Drew Gilpin Faust, a famous woman historian. |
| A.She is the 28th president of Harvard University. |
| B.She is a famous scholar from the American South. |
| C.She isn’t a graduate from Harvard University. |
| D.She was head of Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. |
| A.approved | B.commented | C.complained | D.indicated |
| A.biography | B.personal letter | C.research paper | D.newspaper report |
Florence Nightingale was born in a rich family. When she was young she took lessons in music and drawing, and read great books. She also traveled a great deal with her mother and father.
As a child she felt that visiting sick people was both a duty and a pleasure. She enjoyed helping them.
At last mind was made up. “I’m going to be a nurse,” she decided.
“Nursing isn’t the right work for a lady,” her father told her.
“Then I will make it so,” she smiled. And she went to learn nursing in Germany and France. When she returned to England, Florence started a nursing home for home. During the Crimean War in 1854 she went with a group of thirty eight nurses to the front hospitals. What they saw there was terrible. Dirt and death were everywhere to be seen — and smelled. The officer there did not want any woman to tell him how to run a hospital, either. But the brave nurse went to work.
Florence used her own money and some from friends to buy clothes, beds, medicine and food for the men. Her only pay was in smiles from the lips of dying soldiers. But they were more than enough for this kind woman.
After she returned to England, she was honored for her services by Queen Victoria. But Florence said that her work had just begun. She raised money to build the Nightingale Home for Nurses in London. She also wrote a book on public health, which was printed in several countries.
Florence Nightingale died at the age of ninety, still trying to serve others through her work as a nurse. Indeed, it is because of her that we honor nurses today.
1.When she was a child, Florence ____ .
|
A.loved to travel very much |
|
B.knew what her duty in life was |
|
C.loved to help the sick people |
|
D.was most interested in music and drawing |
2.What made Florence make up her mind to become a nurse?
|
A.Her father’s support. |
|
B.Her desire to help the sick. |
|
C.Her education in Germany and France. |
|
D.Her knowledge from reading great books. |
3.During the Crimean War in 1854, Florence served in the front hospital where ____ .
|
A.she earned a little money |
|
B.work was very difficult |
|
C.few soldiers died because of her work |
|
D.she didn’t have enough food or clothes |
4.The passage can best be described as ____ .
|
A.the life story of a famous woman |
|
B.a description of the nursing work |
|
C.an example of successful education |
|
D.the history of nursing in England |