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¡¡¡¡Most worthwhile careers require some kind of specialized training£®Therefore, the ¡¡¡¡1¡¡¡¡ of a job should be made even before the choice of a curriculum(¿Î³Ì)in high school£®¡¡¡¡2¡¡¡¡£®most people make several job choices during their working lives, ¡¡¡¡3¡¡¡¡ because of economic and industrial changes and partly to improve ¡¡¡¡4¡¡¡¡ position£®The "one perfect job" does not exist£®Young people should ¡¡¡¡5¡¡¡¡ enter into a broad Hexible(Áé»îµÄ)training program that will ¡¡¡¡6¡¡¡¡ them for a field of work rather than for a single ¡¡¡¡7¡¡¡¡£®

¡¡¡¡Unfortunately many young people have to make career plans ¡¡¡¡8¡¡¡¡ benefit of help from a ¡¡¡¡9¡¡¡¡ vocational counselor(¹ËÎÊ)or psychologist£®Knowing ¡¡¡¡10¡¡¡¡ about the professional world, or themselves for that matter, they ¡¡¡¡11¡¡¡¡ their life work aimlessly£®Some move from job to job£®

¡¡¡¡Others ¡¡¡¡12¡¡¡¡ to work in which they are unhappy and for which they are not ¡¡¡¡13¡¡¡¡ One common mistake is choosing an occupation for its real or imagined prestige(ÉùÍû)£®Too many high-school students-or their parents for them-choose the professional field, not ¡¡¡¡14¡¡¡¡ the relatively small proportion of workers in the professions or the extremely high educational and personal ¡¡¡¡15¡¡¡¡£®he imagined or real prestige of a profession or a "White-collar" job is ¡¡¡¡16¡¡¡¡ good reason for choosing it as life's work£®¡¡¡¡17¡¡¡¡ these occupations are not always well paid£®¡¡¡¡18¡¡¡¡ a large proportion of jobs are in mechanical and manual work, the ¡¡¡¡19¡¡¡¡ of young people should give serious ¡¡¡¡20¡¡¡¡ to these fields£®

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In the doorway of my home, I looked closely at my 23-year-old son, Daniel£®In a few hours he would be flying to France to  36  a different life£®It was a transitional(¹ý¶ÉµÄ) time in Daniel¡¯s life£®I wanted to   37   him some words of significance£®But nothing came from my lips, and this was not the   38   time I had let such moments pass£®

When Daniel was five, I took him to the bus stop on his first day of kindergarten£®He asked, ¡°What is it going to be like, Dad? Can I do it?¡± Then he walked   39   the steps of the bus and disappeared inside£®The bus drove away and I said nothing£®A decade later, a similar   40   played itself out£®I drove him to college£®As I started to leave, I tried to think of something to say to give him  41    and confidence as he started this new stage of life£®Again, words   42   me£®

Now, as I stood before him, I thought of those    43   opportunities£®How many times have I let such moments   44   ? I don¡¯t find a quiet moment to tell him what they have   45   to me£®Or what he might   46   to face in the years ahead£®Maybe I thought it was not necessary to say anything£®

What does it matter in the course of a lifetime if a father never tells a son what he really thinks of him?   47   as I stood before Daniel, I knew that it did matter£®My father and I loved each other£®Yet, I always   48   never hearing him put his    49   into words£®Now I could feel my palms sweat and my throat tighten£®Why is it so   50  to tell a son something from the heart?

My mouth turned dry, and I knew I would be able to get out only a few words clearly£®¡°Daniel,¡± I said, ¡°If I could have picked, I would have picked you£®¡± That¡¯s all I could say£®He hugged me£®For a moment, the world   51   , and there were just Daniel and me£®He was saying something, but tears misted my eyes, and I couldn¡¯t understand what he was saying£®All I was   52   of was the stubble(¶ÌÐë) on his chin as his face pressed    53    mine£®What I had said to Daniel was   54   £®It was nothing£®And yet, it was    55     £®

36£®A£®experience      B£®spend               C£®enjoy        D£®shape

37£®A£®show        B£®give           C£®leave           D£®instruct

38£®A£®last           B£®first           C£®very           D£®next

39£®A£®upward         B£®into            C£®down          D£®up

40£®A£®sign            B£®scene        C£®scenery      D£®sight

41£®A£®interest         B£®instruction           C£®courage        D£®direction

42£®A£®failed          B£®discouraged     C£®struck         D£®troubled

43£®A£®future           B£®embarrassing  C£®obvious      D£®lost

44£®A£®last            B£®pass           C£®fly            D£®remain

45£®A£®counted        B£®meant           C£®valued          D£®eared

46£®A£®think           B£®want          C£®expect          D£®wish

47£®A£®But            B£®And           C£®Instead        D£®So

48£®A£®wondered    B£®regretted     C£®minded      D£®tried

49£®A£®views          B£®actions              C£®feelings      D£®attitudes

50£®A£®important      B£®essential       C£®hard          D£®complex

51£®A£®disappeared    B£®changed         C£®progressed    D£®advanced

52£®A£®sensitive        B£®convinced       C£®aware          D£®tired

53£®A£®by          B£®against          C£®on          D£®with

54£®A£®clumsy        B£®gentle         C£®absurd         D£®moving

55£®A£®none        B£®all          C£®anything      D£®everything

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       In 1929, the awful Depression(ÃÀ¹ú¾­¼Ã´óÏôÌõ)began. It was a year of change for me, too. I¡¯d taken my first  36  that spring, at age 10. From 6:00 to 11:00 on Saturday nights, I  37  the Sunday edition of the Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph at a street corner.

       I went to the news store,   38  my papers and took them up to the street corner. I had to make three   39   because the Sunday edition was big and I was small.

       After waiting for  40   from the last streetcar, I gathered up my extras and   41   them to the news store. It was 10:20. Next I hurried across the street to the flower shop and bought the most beautiful flower for my mother   42   tomorrow was Mother¡¯s Day.

       It was almost  43   when I arrived . Mom was sick with tuberculosis(·Î½áºË).I peeked in to see if she was 44  , then quickly tiptoed in and set the flower on the table beside her bed. I wanted her to be   45   when she woke on Mother¡¯s Day.

       The next morning, I dressed and hurried downstairs. The sun was shining  46   the kitchen windows as I looked into Mom¡¯s room, She motioned (ʾÒâ) for me to come in, then 47  over at the table where the flower was.

       When I looked at Mom, she was  48  , with tears streaming down her cheeks. She  49  her hand for me to come near, then pulled me close and hugged  50   it hurt. Then,  51  her contagious(½Ó´¥´«È¾µÄ) condition and that she wasn¡¯t  52  to touch me, she quickly let go. 

       My dear mom died the next night. That moment she hugged me  53   to be the most wonderful of my life. Not only had that beautiful flower helped  54  just how much I loved her, but I¡¯d  55 remember how much she loved me.

36. A. chance                       B. exam                       C. job                          D. course

37. A. bought                       B. sold                         C. printed                     D. carried

38. A. took up                      B. held up                    C. put up                      D. picked up

39. A. attempts                     B. trips                         C. ways                        D. efforts

40. A. customers                  B. workers                    C. drivers                         D. reporters

41. A. gave                          B. brought                    C. returned                   D. took

42. A. for                           B. when                       C. though                     D. because

43. A. midnight                    B. noon                        C. evening                    D. daybreak

44. A. anxious                   B. alive                        C. asleep                      D. afraid

45. A. well                          B. surprised                  C. excited                     D. interested

46. A. on                             B. across                      C. at                                   D. through

47. A. watched                     B. glared                      C. fixed                        D. glanced

48. A. smiling                      B. crying                      C. screaming                 D. thinking

49. A. took out                     B. held out                   C. picked out                D. put out

50. A. before                       B. after                        C. till                           D. when

51. A. thinking                     B. forgetting                 C. remembering            D. wondering

52. A. meant                        B. supposed                  C. planned                    D. demanded

53. A. turned to                   B. turned up                 C. turned in                  D. turned out

54. A. explain                      B. show                        C. mean                       D. tell

55. A. never                         B. seldom                     C. always                         D. often

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In the doorway of my home, I looked closely at my 23-year-old son, Daniel£®In a few hours he would be flying to France to  36  a different life£®It was a transitional(¹ý¶ÉµÄ) time in Daniel¡¯s life£®I wanted to   37   him some words of significance£®But nothing came from my lips, and this was not the   38   time I had let such moments pass£®

When Daniel was five, I took him to the bus stop on his first day of kindergarten£®He asked, ¡°What is it going to be like, Dad? Can I do it?¡± Then he walked   39   the steps of the bus and disappeared inside£®The bus drove away and I said nothing£®A decade later, a similar   40   played itself out£®I drove him to college£®As I started to leave, I tried to think of something to say to give him  41    and confidence as he started this new stage of life£®Again, words   42   me£®

Now, as I stood before him, I thought of those    43   opportunities£®How many times have I let such moments   44   ? I don¡¯t find a quiet moment to tell him what they have   45   to me£®Or what he might   46   to face in the years ahead£®Maybe I thought it was not necessary to say anything£®

What does it matter in the course of a lifetime if a father never tells a son what he really thinks of him?   47   as I stood before Daniel, I knew that it did matter£®My father and I loved each other£®Yet, I always   48   never hearing him put his    49   into words£®Now I could feel my palms sweat and my throat tighten£®Why is it so   50  to tell a son something from the heart?

My mouth turned dry, and I knew I would be able to get out only a few words clearly£®¡°Daniel,¡± I said, ¡°If I could have picked, I would have picked you£®¡± That¡¯s all I could say£®He hugged me£®For a moment, the world   51   , and there were just Daniel and me£®He was saying something, but tears misted my eyes, and I couldn¡¯t understand what he was saying£®All I was   52   of was the stubble(¶ÌÐë) on his chin as his face pressed    53    mine£®What I had said to Daniel was   54   £®It was nothing£®And yet, it was    55     £®

36£®A£®experience      B£®spend               C£®enjoy        D£®shape

37£®A£®show        B£®give           C£®leave           D£®instruct

38£®A£®last           B£®first           C£®very           D£®next

39£®A£®upward         B£®into            C£®down          D£®up

40£®A£®sign            B£®scene        C£®scenery      D£®sight

41£®A£®interest         B£®instruction           C£®courage        D£®direction

42£®A£®failed          B£®discouraged     C£®struck         D£®troubled

43£®A£®future           B£®embarrassing  C£®obvious      D£®lost

44£®A£®last            B£®pass           C£®fly            D£®remain

45£®A£®counted        B£®meant           C£®valued          D£®eared

46£®A£®think           B£®want          C£®expect          D£®wish

47£®A£®But            B£®And           C£®Instead        D£®So

48£®A£®wondered    B£®regretted     C£®minded       D£®tried

49£®A£®views          B£®actions              C£®feelings      D£®attitudes

50£®A£®important      B£®essential       C£®hard          D£®complex

51£®A£®disappeared    B£®changed         C£®progressed    D£®advanced

52£®A£®sensitive        B£®convinced       C£®aware          D£®tired

53£®A£®by           B£®against          C£®on          D£®with

54£®A£®clumsy        B£®gentle         C£®absurd         D£®moving

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It was the afternoon of December 24, the day before Christmas, but I had to stay to tidy the office. The only thing that   36   my day was the beautifully decorated   37   in our waiting room and a   38   sent to me by a fellow I was dating¡ªa dozen long-stemmed red roses.

    Suddenly, our receptionist came and said there was a lady outside that urgently needed to speak with me. As I stepped out, I noticed a young   39    woman with a baby in her arms standing there.  40  , she explained that her husband¡ªa prisoner in a nearby prison¡ªwas my next patient. She told me she wasn¡¯t   41   to visit her husband in prison and   42   he had never seen his son. So she   43   me to let her wait here ahead of time. I agreed.   44  , it was Christmas Eve.

       A short time later, her husband arrived¡ªwith chains on his feet, cuffs on his hands, and two armed guards   45   him. The woman¡¯s tired face   46   when her husband took a seat beside her. I watched them laugh, cry, and share their  47  . He seemed like a gentle and honest man.

       At the end of the   48  , the man had to go back and I    49     him a Merry Christmas. He smiled and thanked me and said he felt saddened by the   50   that he hadn¡¯t been able to get his wife 51   for Christmas. On hearing this, I was  52   with a wonderful idea.

       I¡¯ll never forget the  53  on both their faces as the prisoner gave his wife the beautiful, long-stemmed red roses. I¡¯m not sure who   54   the most joy¡ªthe husband in giving, the wife in receiving, or myself in having the opportunity to share in this   55  moment.

36. A. enjoyed                                          B. brightened                    

C. relaxed                                          D. presented

37. A. office              B. Christmas Father           C. Christmas tree      D. furniture

38. A. gift                     B. regards                     C. message        D. package

39. A. ordinary-looking                       B. good-looking       

C. tired-looking                          D. frightened-looking

40. A. Happily             B. Quietly          C. Excitedly             D. Nervously

41. A. going           B. determined        C. expected        D. allowed

42. A. why                  B. how                C. that          D. when

43. A. persuaded        B. demanded           C. begged         D. pleased

44. A. After all                              B. In all           

C. All in all                                D. Above all

45. A. near                    B. around             C. behind         D. before

46. A. turned pale       B. went red           C. lit up            D. turned away

47. A. child                   B. tears               C. joy            D. sorrows

48. A. meeting         B. appointment               C. discussion     D. conversation

49. A. said                 B. showed             C. wished         D. hoped

50. A. words                   B. fact              C. idea           D. scene

51. A. something                             B. nothing         

C. anything                           D. everything

52. A. encouraged       B. struck              C. provided      D. inspired

53. A. sadness           B. happiness           C. look                 D. smiles

54. A. experienced      B. received             C. gave                 D. accepted

55. A. unforgettable     B. sad                 C. happy                D. special

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