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Nearly two decades has passed, I still remember my favourite professor, James Sehwartz. Whenever he smiles, it’s as if you’d just been told the funniest joke on earth. Almost all his students are his friends, and almost all his students know his life story.
When James was a teenager, his father1him to a fur factory where he worked . This was during the Great Depression. The2was to get James a job.
James entered the factory, and immediately felt as if the 3had closed in around him. The room was dark and hot, the windows covered with dust, and the4were packed tightly together, running like trains. The fur hairs were flying,5a thickened air, and the workers,6the pieces of fur together, were bent over their needles7the boss marched up and down the rows, searching for them to go faster .James could hardly8. He stood next to his father, frozen with fear, hoping the boss wouldn’t9at him, too.
During lunch break, his father took James to the boss and pushed him in front of him, 10if there was any work for his son. But11there was hardly enough12for the adult labours, for no one would give it up once he took a job.
Thus, for James, it was a 13. He hated the place. He made a14that he kept to the end of his life: he would never do any work that brought15to someone else, and he would never allow himself to16money off the seat of others.
“What will you do?” his mother, Eva, would ask him.
“I don’t know,” he17say. He ruled out law, because he didn’t like18, and he ruled out medicine, because he couldn’t take the19of blood.
“What will you do?”
20, my best professor I ever had became—he thought it was the job not to hurt anybody.

  1. 1.
    1. A.
      sent
    2. B.
      carried
    3. C.
      took
    4. D.
      admitted
  2. 2.
    1. A.
      idea
    2. B.
      condition
    3. C.
      situation
    4. D.
      way
  3. 3.
    1. A.
      lights
    2. B.
      walls
    3. C.
      chances
    4. D.
      doors
  4. 4.
    1. A.
      goods
    2. B.
      workers
    3. C.
      vehicles
    4. D.
      machines
  5. 5.
    1. A.
      sending
    2. B.
      creating
    3. C.
      taking
    4. D.
      disturbing
  6. 6.
    1. A.
      collecting
    2. B.
      pulling
    3. C.
      sewing
    4. D.
      drawing
  7. 7.
    1. A.
      as
    2. B.
      after
    3. C.
      if
    4. D.
      though
  8. 8.
    1. A.
      see
    2. B.
      breathe
    3. C.
      walk
    4. D.
      hear
  9. 9.
    1. A.
      scream
    2. B.
      scold
    3. C.
      rush
    4. D.
      attack
  10. 10.
    1. A.
      doubting
    2. B.
      asking
    3. C.
      questioning
    4. D.
      demanding
  11. 11.
    1. A.
      even
    2. B.
      still
    3. C.
      yet
    4. D.
      also
  12. 12.
    1. A.
      time
    2. B.
      office
    3. C.
      work
    4. D.
      occupation
  13. 13.
    1. A.
      comforting
    2. B.
      blessing
    3. C.
      regretting
    4. D.
      forgiving
  14. 14.
    1. A.
      request
    2. B.
      arrangement
    3. C.
      plan
    4. D.
      promise
  15. 15.
    1. A.
      injury
    2. B.
      harm
    3. C.
      damage
    4. D.
      inconvenience
  16. 16.
    1. A.
      make
    2. B.
      save
    3. C.
      pay
    4. D.
      let
  17. 17.
    1. A.
      should
    2. B.
      might
    3. C.
      could
    4. D.
      would
  18. 18.
    1. A.
      police
    2. B.
      lawyers
    3. C.
      judges
    4. D.
      government
  19. 19.
    1. A.
      sense
    2. B.
      feel
    3. C.
      sight
    4. D.
      scenery
  20. 20.
    1. A.
      Eventually
    2. B.
      Luckily
    3. C.
      Generally
    4. D.
      Basically
CABDB CABAB ACBDB ADBCA
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B.Western countries are engaged in biofuel study but still have a long way to go

C.watermelon juice has been used as a source of sugars to produce alcohol biofuel

D.the European Union is likely to meet its target of transport fuels from biological sources

 

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