The war hero received many m for bravery. 查看更多

 

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  Fred was born in a rich family.His father had a big company and he had four brothers.He was the strongest of them five but he did not like to use his head.Of course he could not pass the examinations.

  Suddenly the war broke out.Young men were called on to join the army.His father thought for a long time and at last decided to send him to the military camp(军营).Soon after that he was sent to France where they fought with Germans.The young man hated the life in the camp.They could not be supplied with enough food and had to live in the cold and wet houses, sometimes they had to sleep on the hard ground and he was often afraid to be shot.He usually remembered the life in his country and tried to leave the camp.

  Once he made an excuse in order not to the front.Another soldier whose name was Bob reported the captain about it.Fred was punished for it.He hated Bob and the captain very much.In a fight he hurt the captain and he was sent to the court(法庭)at once.

  “Have you hurt the captain, Fred?” asked a judge.

  “Yes, I have, sir, ”answered the young man, “but it was a fortuitous(偶然的)accident.”

  “Oh?” the judge said in surprise, “Why?”

  “The captain was standing just in front of Bob while I was shooting at the young soldier.So I hurt him by mistake.”

(1)

Fred could not pass the examinations because ________.

[  ]

A.

his brother did not help him

B.

he liked to have some sports

C.

he would not use his head

D.

he wanted to be a soldier

(2)

Fred was sent to the military camp because ________.

[  ]

A.

his father did not love him

B.

he was weak at his subjects

C.

he was stronger than his brothers

D.

both B and C

(3)

________, so he hated the life in the military camp.

[  ]

A.

Fred wanted to see his parents

B.

Fred was too hungry to fight with the enemy

C.

Fred had to sleep on the wet ground

D.

Fred was afraid the Germans would shoot him

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  In 1837, at the age of seventeen, Florence Nightingale decided to become a nurse, which horrified her whimsical(多奇想的)mother. In those days nurses were little more than door-keepers, and hospitals were pits of squalor(污秽)and neglect. Nightingale pressed on, and in 1853 she became superintendent(院长)of a small London hospital. She went on to the Crimea when war broke out there between Britain and Russia. She established the first of what we know as war hospitals: sanitary(卫生), safe and stocked with supplies. Her tireless ministrations(照顾,照料)to the wounded soldiers made her famous all over the world.

  Following the war Nightingale avoided fame and continued to train nurses, ever battling against what she herself declared“a commonly received idea... that it requires nothing but a disappointment in love or incapacity in other things, to turn a woman into a good nurse.”ince 1921 her birthday--May 12--has been the centerpiece of National Hospital Week, observed in British and American hospitals with special exhibitions, workshops and publicity drives.

(1)Florence Nightingale was born on ______.

[  ]

A.May 12, in 1821
B.May 12, in 1921
C.May 12, in 1830
D.May 12, in 1831

(2)The underlined word“it”efers to ______.

[  ]

A.turning a woman into a doctor

B.turning a woman into a good nurse

C.avoiding fame

D.continuing to train nurses

(3)The word“observed”n the second paragraph means ______.

[  ]

A.watched carefully
B.saw and noticed
C.paid attention to
D.celebrated

(4)Why did Florence Nightingale become well-known all over the world?

[  ]

A.She was one of the best nurses then.

B.Her skills of operations were the most wonderful and successful.

C.She always looked after the wounded soul and heart.

D.She was superintendent of London Hospital.

(5)Why did Florence Nightingale want to become a nurse?

[  ]

A.The author did not give the reason.

B.Florence Nightingale would like to become famous by attending the wounded of battles.

C.She wanted to take good care of the sick.

D.She was not able to do anything but become a nurse.

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More and mor people want to work these days. w.w.w.k.s.5.u.c.o.m 

     , it has become harder and harder in today’s world to 1.   

find work for everybody. The     (经济)of the world need 2.   

to grow     4% each year to keep the old number of jobs for people.  3.   

Often this is impossible, so more and more people are out of w 4.   

On the other h    , new machines can do the work of many people 5.   

in a short time. What’s      , machines do not ask for more money 6.   

and longer holiday. All over the world, machines are t      the place 7.   

of people little by little, not only in cities but also in the     (乡村). 8.   

Thousands of people are     (搬家)to cities every day and 9.   

l     for jobs, but how many of them can find one?  10.   

k.s.5.u.c.o.m

 

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  Margaret Bourke-White was one of the leading news reporters of the 20th century.But she did not write news.She told her stories with a camera.Margaret Bourke-White began her career as an industrial photographer in the early 1930s.In 1936, she accepted the American publisher Henry Luce’s invitation and went to his magazine, called Life, and later another magazine called Fortune.

  In the 1930s, Margaret Bourke-White met the American writer Erskine Caldwell.They decided to produce a book about poor country people of the South.They traveled through eight states.Their book, You Have Seen Their Faces, was published in 1937.It was a great success.

  In 1938, some countries in Europe were close to war.Margaret Bourke-White and Caldwell went there to report on these events.The next year they got married.

  During the World War Two, she became an official photographer with the United States Army.Her photographs were to be used jointly by the military(军队)and by Life magazine.She was the first woman to be permitted to work at the front during World War Two.

  After the war, she went to India and took a famous photograph of Mohandas Gandhi called “Gandhi at His Spinning Wheel”.She was the last person to photograph Gandhi before he was murdered in 1948.

  Often, Margaret Bourke-White was not satisfied with what she had done.She would look at her pictures and see something she had failed to do, or something she had not done right.Reaching perfection was not easy.Many things got in the way of her work.She said, “There is only one moment when a picture is there.And a moment later, it is gone forever.My memory is full of those pictures that were lost.”

(1)

Margaret Bourke-White ________.

[  ]

A.

did very well in writing news

B.

reported news by taking pictures

C.

focused on industrial news as a reporter

D.

began her career by working for Fortune

(2)

Margaret Bourke-White married Erskine Caldwell ________.

[  ]

A.

in 1936

B.

in 1937

C.

in 1938

D.

in 1939

(3)

It can be inferred from the passage that in World War Two, ________.

[  ]

A.

No woman was allowed at the war front before Margaret Bourke-White

B.

Margaret Bourke-White gave up her job in Life magazine

C.

Margaret Bourke-White became the only official U.S.Army photographer

D.

Margaret Bourke-White was murdered after she photographed Gandhi

(4)

We can know from the last paragraph that Margaret Bourke-White ________

[  ]

A.

didn’t think here career was successful

B.

regretted having been a photographer

C.

always tried to make her pictures perfect

D.

felt proud of her contribution to photography

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  As a boy, Sanders was much influenced(影响)by books about the sea, but by the age of fifteen he had decided to become a doctor rather than a sailor.His father was a doctor.So he was often with the doctors and got along very well with them.When he was fourteen, he was already hanging around the hospital where he was supposed to be helping to clean the medicine bottles, but was trying to listen to the doctors’ conversations with patients in the next room.

  During the war Sanders served in the army as a surgeon(外科医生).“That was the happiest time of my life.I was dealing with real sufferers and on the whole making a success of my job.” In Rhodes he taught the country people simple facts about medicine.He saw himself as a life-saver.He had proved his skill to himself and had a firm belief that he could serve those who lived simply, and were dependent upon him.Thus, while in a position to tell them what to do he could feel he was serving them.

  After the war, he married and set up a practice deep in the English countryside, working under an old doctor who hated the sight of blood.This gave the younger man plenty of opportunity(机会)to go on working as a life-saver.

(1)

When he was a small boy, books about the sea had made Sanders want to be _________.

[  ]

A.

a surgeon

B.

an army man

C.

a sailor

D.

a life-saver

(2)

At the age of 14, Sanders _________.

[  ]

A.

worked as a doctor by cleaning the medicine bottles

B.

met some doctors who were very friendly to him

C.

was interested in talking with patients

D.

remained together with the doctors

(3)

When the war was over, he _________.

[  ]

A.

learned from an old doctor because he was popular

B.

started to hate the sight of blood while working

C.

served the countrymen under an old doctor who needed someone to help him

D.

had no chances to be a life-saver because he was younger

(4)

When did Sanders served as a surgeon?

[  ]

A.

when he was a boy

B.

During the war

C.

After the war

D.

Before the war

(5)

What give the young man plenty of opportunity to go on working as a life-saver?

[  ]

A.

listening to the doctors’ conversations with patients

B.

Serving in the army

C.

The old doctor who he work with hating the sight of blood.

D.

setting up a practice deep in the English count

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