题目列表(包括答案和解析)
63.
What is the main idea of the text?
A.
Delivering bad news properly is important in communication.
B.
Helping others sincerely is the key to business success.
C.
Receiving bad news requires great courage.
D.
Learning ancient traditions can be useful.
C
Four
people in England,
back in 1953, stared at photo 51. it wasn’t much –a picture showing a black X.
But three of these people won the Nobel Prize for figuring out what the photo
really shows-the shape of DNA. The discovery brought fame and fortune to
scientists James Watson, Francis Crick, and Maurice Wilkins. The fourth, the
one who actually made the picture, was left out.
Her
name was Rosalind Franklin. “She should have been up there,” says historian
Mary Bowden. “if her photo hadn’t been there, the others couldn’t have come up
with the structure.” one reason Franklin
was missing was that she had died of cancer four years before the Nobel
decision. But now scholars doubt that Franklin
was not only robbed of her life by disease but robbed of credit by her
competitors.
At Cambridge University in the 1950s, Watson and
Crick fried to make models by cutting up shapes of DNA’s parts and then putting
them together. In the meantime, at king’s college in London, Franklin and Wilkins shone X-rays at the
molecule(分子).The rays produced patterns reflecting
the shape.
But
Wilkins and Franklin’s relationship was a lot rockier than the celebrated
teamwork of Watson and Crick. Wilkins thought Franklin was hired to be his assistant. But
the college actually employed her to take over the DNA project.
What
she did was produce X-ray pictures that told Watson and Crick that one of their
early models was inside out. And she was not shy about saying so. That angered
Watson, who attacked her in return. "Mere inspection suggested that she
would not easily bend. Clearly she had to go or be put in her place."
As Franklin’s competitors, Wilkins,
Watson and Crick had much to gain by cutting her out of the little group of
researchers, says historian Pnina Abir-Am. In 1962 at the Nobel Prize awarding
ceremony, Wilkins thanked 13 colleagues by name before he mentioned Franklin. Watson wrote his
book laughing at her. Crick wrote in 1974 that “Franklins was only two steps away from the
solution.”
No, Franklin was the solution.
"She contributed more than any other players to solving the structure of
DNA. She must be considered a co-discoverer,” Abir-Am says. This was backed up
by Aaron Klug, who worked with Franklin
and later won a Nobel Prize himself. Once described as the “Dark Lady of DNA”, Franklin is finally coming
into the light.
62.
From “Dreams of head-cutting!”(Paragraph 3), we learn that the writer
.
A. was
mad at the sales agent.
B. was
reminded of the cruel pharaoh
C.
wished that the sales agent would have had dreams.
D.
dreamed of cutting the sales agent’s head that night.
61.
In
the writer's opinion, his neighbor was ____.
A. friendly
B. warm-hearted C. not
considerate D. not helpful
60.
In
Paragraph 1,the writer tells the story of the pharaoh to
.
A.
make a comparison B. introduce a topic
C.
describe a scene
D. offer an argument
59.
What
is the message conveyed in the story?
A.
Flowers are important for a date. B. Small talk is
helpful.
C.
Love and kindness are rewarding. D. Elderly people
deserve respecting.
B
In
ancient Egypt, the pharaoh(法老)treated the
poor message runner like a prince when he arrived at the palace ,if he brought
good news. However, if the exhausted runner had the misfortune to bring the
pharaoh unhappy news, his head was cut off.
Shades
of that spirit spread over today’s conversations. Once a friend and I pack up
some peanut butter and sandwiches for an outing. As we walked
light-heartedly out the door, picnic basket in hand ,a smiling neighbor looked
up at the sky and said ,"Oh boy, bad day for a picnic. The weatherman says
it’s going to rain". I wanted to strike him on the face with
the peanut butter and sandwiches not for his stupid weather report but for his
smile!
Several
months ago, I was racing to catch a bus. As I breathlessly put my
handful of cash across the Greyhound counter, the sales agent said
with a broad smile: "Oh that bus left five minutes ago'" Dreams
of head cutting
It’s
not the news that makes someone angry. It’s the unsympathetic attitude with
which it’s delivered. Everyone must give bad news from time to time, and
winning professionals do it with the proper attitude. A doctor
advising a patient she needs an operation does it in a caring way. A
boss informing an employee he didn’t get the job takes on a sympathetic tone.
Big winners know when delivering any bad news they should share the feeling of
the receiver.
Unfortunately,
many people are not aware of this. You’re tired from a long flight, has a hotel
clerk cheerfully said that your room isn’t ready yet? When you had your heart
set on the toast beef, has your waiter merrily told you that he just served the
last piece? It makes you as traveler or diner want to land your fist fight on
their unsympathetic faces.
Had my
neighbor told me of the upcoming rainstorm with sympathy, I would have
appreciated his warning. Had the Greyhound salesclerk sympathetically informed
me that my bus had already left, I probably would have said, “Oh, that‘s all
right. I’ll catch the next one.” Big winners , when they bear bad new ,deliver
bombs with the emotion the bombarded (被轰炸的)
person is sure to have .
58.
Why
did the writer give his flowers to the elderly lady?
A. She
told him a nice story.
B. She allowed him to pay first.
C. She
gave him encouragement. D. She liked flowers very much.
57.
What
does the underlined phrase “her gift” (Paragraph 2 ) refer to?
A. Her
words. B. Her smile.
C. Her
flowers. D. Her politeness.
56.
Why
was the writer in a hurry that day?
A. He
was to meet his girlfriend.
B. He had to go back to school soon.
C. He
was delayed by an elderly lady. D. He had to pick up some
groceries.
54.
A.rainy B.sunny C.cool D.windy
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