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     After Mom died, I began visiting Dad every morning before I went to work. He was frail and moved
slowly, but he always had a glass of freshly squeezed orange juice on the kitchen table for me, along with
an unsigned note reading, "Drink your juice." Such a gesture, I knew, was as far as Dad had ever been
able to go in expressing his love. In fact, I remember, as a kid I had questioned Mom "Why doesn't Dad
love me!" Mom frowned. "Who said he doesn't love you!" "Well, he never tells me," I complained. "He
never tells me either," she said, smiling. "But look how hard he works to take care of us, to buy us food
and clothes, and to pay for this house. That's how your father tells us he loves us."
     I nodded slowly. I understood in my head, but not in my heart. I still wanted my father to put his arms
around me and tell me he loved me. Dad owned and operated a small scrap(片)metal business and after
school I often hung around while he worked. I always hoped he'd ask me to help and then praise me for
what I did. He never asked. His tasks were too dangerous for a young boy to attempt, and Mom was
already worried enough that he'd hurt himself. Dad hand fed scrap steel into a device that chopped it as
cleanly as a butcher chops a rack of ribs. The machine looked like a giant pair of scissors, with blades
thicker than my father's body. If he didn't feed those terrifying blades just right, he risked serious injury.
"Why don't you hire someone to do that for you?" Mom asked Dad one night as she bent over him and
rubbed his aching shoulders with a strong smelling liniment. "Why don't you hire a cook?" Dad asked,
giving her one of his rare smiles.
     Many years later, during my first daily visit, after drinking the juice my father had squeezed for me, I
walked over, hugged him and said, "I love you, Dad." From then on I did this every morning. My father
never told me how he felt about my hugs, and there was never any expression on his face when I gave
them.
1. What would be the best title for the passage?
A. I just couldn't understand my father  
B. My father never loved me
C. Silent fatherly love                
D. My hard-working father
2. The author's father always prepared a glass of freshly squeezed orange juice for him because _______.
A. that was the author's favorite    
B. he was sure the author would be thirsty
C. the author was always complaining
D. that was a gesture of love
3. When the author complained in the first paragraph, his mother __________.
A. tried to comfort him            
B. told him that his father loved him with action
C. tried to defend his father        
D. got a bit angry with him
4. The author's father didn't hire a helper because __________.
A. his job was too dangerous    
B. his job required high skills
C. he wanted to save money        
D. he was not good at communicating with others
5. We may infer from the passage that __________.
A. the author's father lacked a sense of humor
B. the author quite understood his father as time went on
C. the author's father didn't love him very much
D. the author's father was too strict with him
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     After decades of skimpy(小而暴露的)skirts and sleeveless tops on game days, some schools in the
US are saying cheerleader uniforms will have to meet stricter dress codes when they are worn in class.
     In Lake County, Florida, cheerleaders with uniforms too skimpy for the code are being asked to wear
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memo. Principals at two of Lake's eight high schools-Leesburg and Lake Minneola-are not allowing the
outfits in school at all.
     Michelle Thomas, a cheerleader at Leesburg High School, was disappointed when she learned she
couldn't wear her outfit to school on game days.
     "It shows that we're a team just like all the other sports." She said.
     But the school administrators didn't agree. "During the educational portion of the day, they have to
meet the dress code just like every other student," said school board chairwoman Debbie Stivender,
who ordered the staff to bring the outfits into line with the dress code.
     Bare midriffs(露腰装) are banned across the state by the Florida High School Athletic Association,
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     "Cheerleading is athletic," Noone said. "There's a lot of jumping so you won't want a knee-length skirt
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     Most cheerleaders were sad to hear the news, but say they'll follow the rules. Even male cheerleaders, whose pants and tops meet dress codes, chose not to wear their outfits to show unity.
     "I understand, because they are kind of short," said Holly Bishop,14, a Lake Minneola High School
cheerleader, about her miniskirt. "It would've been really, really cool to wear them to school."

1. According to the new dress codes for cheerleaders in some American schools,_________.

A. bare midriffs are banned
B. cheerleading miniskirts are banned
C. cheerleader uniforms have switched from skirts to trousers
D. cheerleaders have to make their uniforms less revealing.

2. Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the article?

A. School administrators believe cheerleader uniforms do not match school dress codes.
B. Most cheerleaders show understanding of the new dress codes.
C. Sheila Noone believes that cheerleading miniskirts are not revealing.
D. School administrators don't take cheerleading seriously.

3.Some cheerleaders are not happy about the news because_______.

A. they hate the dress codes that other sports have  
B. they consider their uniforms special and cool
C. they want to wear revealing clothes
D. they will have to buy new uniforms

4. What is the main point of the article?

A. Stricter dress codes for cheerleaders meet opposition.
B. Positive reactions to stricter dress codes for cheerleaders
C. American schools encourage unity in dress codes.
D. Changes in dress codes for cheerleaders in American high schools.

5. What does the underlined word "hamper" in paragraph 7 mean?

A. protect      
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科目:高中英语 来源:同步题 题型:阅读理解

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     After suffering through many months of unemployment  (失业). my wife and I moved this week from
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     After moving to the United States, immigrant groups trying to fit in tend to choose high calorie fatty
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A. more and more Asians enjoy high-calorie snacks                            
B. immigrants tend to eat American junk food to fit in                        
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D. all the American people have a bad eating habit                            
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D. immigrants are forced to eat junk food                                      
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A. Having worked on the computer for too long, she became a bit strange.
B. Sometimes TV programs give her comfort and even makes her forget her work.
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