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8£®"People are ruder today because they are rushed and more¡®time poor'than ever before£¬"says Patsy Rowe£¬"Manners have fallen off the radar£¨À״£®"Due to our strong attraction to electronic equipment it is a wonder more people don't wake up each morning and greet the singing birds with a complaint£¨±§Ô¹£©about the noise£®Here are some examples of rudeness£®
Some people prefer to do almost everything over the internet£®To them£¬dealing with an actual human is like an evolutionary step backward£®It feels very slow because humans don't work at 4G speeds£®When you have dinner with friends£¬you will often notice someone paying more attention to his mobile phone£®We have programmed ourselves to think that every new message brings life-changing news£¬so taking calls and checking our texts are more important than talking to the people we are with£®What is worse£¬some people even tend to send anonymous£¨ÄäÃûµÄ£© rude messages by email£®
However£¬rudeness is never acceptable£¬Don't assume it is OK to be rude if the person you're in touch with won't recognize you£®If you have something awful to say£¬have the courage to face the person and say it£¬write a letter or email and sign it£¬or forget it£®Upsetting people with unsigned messages is cruel and disgusting£®
We shouldn't blame technology for our shortcomings£®Technology is here to help us£¬but we should not allow it to take over our lives£®An important step is acknowledging our shortcomings£®People spend a lot of time pointing out bad manners but it would be even more help if we'd publicly acknowledge good manners when we see them£®

68£®What can be inferred from the underlined sentence in Paragraph I£¿C
A£®People can tell good from bad behavior£®
B£®Radar is able to observe human behavior£®
C£®People care little about their behavior£®
D£®Radar can be used to predict human behavior£®
69£®Some people are less willing to deal with humans becauseA£®
A£®they are becoming less patient
B£®they are growing too independent
C£®they have to handle many important messages
D£®they have to follow an evolutionary step backward£®
70£®The author thinks sending unsigned awful messages isB£®
A£®Ridiculous   B£®disgusting   C£®acceptable   D£®reasonable
71£®What can we learn from the last paragraph£¿A
A£®We should applaud good behavior£®
B£®Technology can never be blamed
C£®We should keep pointing out mistakes£®
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9£®Walt Disney is credited for creating such wonderful things as Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse£®However£¬he cannot take the credit for creating other well-loved characters£¬such as Cinderella and Snow White£®They are almost automatically associated with Disney because Disney turned old fables£¨Ô¢ÑÔ£© into cartoon movies£®
The original Cinderella varies very much from the Disney version we know today£®It started off with the girl mourning her mother's death and going to her tomb three times a day£®In addition£¬there were only birds that helped Cinderella£» there was no such thing as a fairy godmother or helpful mice£¬nor was there mention of a horse and carriage£®
The stepsisters were cruel£ºthey always threw Cinderella's food into the ashes of the fire and made her sleep on the ashes on the floor£¬hence£¨Òò´Ë£©her name£®
In the original story£¬the king's ball actually lasted for three days£®With the help of the birds£¬the girl£¬beautifully dressed£¬danced with the prince on all three nights and the prince fell in love with her£®However£¬she broke away from him to rush back home each night£®On the last night£¬the prince placed soothing sticky on the stairs£» as Cinderella made her escape£¬a shoe got stuck on it£®
Here now is where the story becomes unpleasant£ºwhen the prince went to the house looking for the girl whose foot fit the shoe£¬the wicked£¨Ð°¶ñµÄ£© stepmother told one of her two daughters to cut off her big toe to fit into the shoe£®The daughter did as told£®So the prince took her away to be his bride£®But when they passed the tomb of Cinderella's mother£¬the birds called out to the prince£¬
"Turn and peep£¬there's blood in the shoe£»
the shoe is too small£¬the true bride waits for you£®"
Realizing he had been tricked£¬the prince returned the daughter to her mother£®The other then had to cut off part of her heel in order to fit into the shoe£¬with the same result£®Only Cinderella's foot fit perfectly and so the prince chose to marry her£®The story ends with the wedding day£ºas Cinderella's two stepsisters followed her£¬pretending to be devoted to her so that they could enjoy the king's riches£¬two birds flew by and plucked£¨×Ä£© out their eyes£®Because of their wickedness and falsehood£¬they had to spend the rest of their days blind£®
The original Cinderella is so different from the Disney version£®Thank goodness Disney made such changes£» it indeed was a wise move£®

60£®What dose the underlined word"They"in the first paragraph refer to£¿B
A£®Such wonderful things£®
B£®Other well-loved characters£®
C£®Old fables£®
D£®Cartoon movies£®
61£®How did Cinderella get her name£¿C
A£®The Birds came up with it£®
B£®It was given by Disney£®
C£®It came from the word"ash"£®
D£®She got it from her mother£®
62£®Which of the following is TRUE according to the original story£¿D
A£®Helpful mice got Cinderella a beautiful dress£®
B£®The ball was held to celebrate the prince's wedding£®
C£®Cinderella left her shoe on the stairs on purpose£®
D£®The birds told the prince that he had been cheated£®
63£®The moral of the original story is thatA£®
A£®a wicked person cannot escape punishment£®
B£®a devoted person certainly deserves respect£®
C£®a well-behaved child earns a great reward£®
D£®a dishonest child cannot get mother love£®
64£®What does the author think of the Disney version£¿A
A£®Excellent£® B£®Ordinary  C£®Dull£® D£®Ridiculous£®

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5£®Yes£¬I admit it£®I'm a true£¬incurable book abuser£¨Ê©Å°ÈË£©£®I like to fold dog ears£®I like to break my books open so that their backs crack£®
I had a friend£¬who loved rubbing all the pages£®I have another friend who is the exact opposite£®She needs to keep her books completely new£®I understand her£®But once I get to know the book£¬I can't help but show it some tough love£®Because£¬believe me£¬although it sounds like I'm an abuser without a heart£¬that's what it's all about£®Not hidden aggressions£¬or a lack of respect£» not at all£®Let me explain£®
I have one book by my favorite author Diana Gabaldon that looks like rubbish£®It's completely wrinkled up from rain£¬and on its way to falling apart£®I brought it like that to have her sign it£®I hope she's realized what an honor it is to her as a writer£®It means£¬basically£¬that I've read the book to bits£®I wouldn't bother to mistreat books that don't mean anything to me£®Only the best books get read well£¬carried everywhere£¬worth intense reading where I'm so caught up with words that I will spill coffee over it£®
For my further defense£¬I would like to call in a witness£®I have a cook book£®Like almost all my other cook books£¬it's worn£¬and there are dirty marks of food in it£®The book is called Tex-Mex-Food£¬Music and the Joy of Life from Texas£®Just as the title suggests£¬this is more than a cook book£®
These are the words on the very first page£º
Tex-Max hasn't been trendy for over 30 years£®Considering it's anything but cheap in calories£¬it probably never will be£¬either£®Tacos£¨Ä«Î÷¸ç¾í£© are instead all about such an untrendy things as a love for life£®It's something you enjoy while spending time with your loved ones£®¡­
We hope£¬therefore£¬that this cook book will soon be as dirty as a really old and used cook book should be£®
Oh£¬how true!How wonderfully put!And it's the same thing for books£ºwhether you're a book preserver or a book abuser£¬the approach is based on love and a joy for life£®Because I believe all who are passionate about books£¬are passionate people£®
 
66£®According to the passage£¬the writer often does the following to his book exceptC£®
A£®have it dog-eared                       
B£®carry it everywhere
C£®keep it tidy                                        
D£®have dirty marks in it
67£®Why does the writer treat his favorite books badly£¿D
A£®To cover up his disrespect for its author£®
B£®To conceal his aggressions to things around£®
C£®To express his objection to the book preserver£®
D£®To show his strong affection for the book£®
68£®The book Tex-Mex-Food£¬Music and the Joy of Life from Texas is mentioned by the writer to show thatC£®
A£®it is really common to have dirty marks in the cook book
B£®Tex-Max is not popular mainly because it's low in calories
C£®the writer is not alone with the view that books should be abused
D£®one must try some food like Tex-Max to experience the love for life
69£®What's the main idea of the passage£¿A
A£®The defense of one who treats books badly£®
B£®The reasons why a certain book is preferred£®
C£®The book lovers'different habits of reading£®
D£®The different ways to treat different books£®

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