精英家教网 > 高中英语 > 题目详情
阅读理解。
     Pulling heavy suitcases all day in the summer is hard work, especially when you're a thin 14-year-old.
That was me in 1940-the youngest and smallest baggage boy at New York City's Pennsyl-vania Railway
Station.
     After just a few days on the job, I began noticing that the other fellows were overcharging pas-sengers.
I'd like to join them, thinking,"Everyone else is doing it."
     When I got home that night, I told my dad what I wanted to do."You give an honest day's work," he
said, looking at me straight in the eye."They're paying you. If they want to do that, you let them do that."
     I followed my dad's advice for the rest of that summer and have lived by his words ever since.
     Of all the jobs I've had, it was my experience at Pennsylvania Railway Station that has stuck with me.
Now I teach my players to have respect for other people and their possessions. Being a member of a team
is a totally shared experience. If one person steals, it destroys trust and hurts everyone. I can put up with
many things, but not with people who steal. If one of my players were caught stealing, he'd be gone.
     Whether you're on a sports team, in an office or a member of a family, if you can't trust one another,
there's going to be trouble.
1. What can be inferred about the baggage boys?
A. They could earn much, but they had to work hard.
B. Many of them earned money in a dishonest way.
C. They were all from poor families.
D. They were all thin, young boys.
2. What does the father's advice imply?
A. It is wrong to give more pay to the passengers.
B. Don't believe them if they are paying you more.
C. Don't follow others to overcharge the passengers.
D. It is difficult to work hard and live as an honest boy.
3. The writer can't put up with stealing because he thinks that ______.
A. it is a totally shared experience
B. it is considered as the most dangerous
C. it does great harm to human relationship
D. it may lead to the loss of his sports team
4. It can be concluded from the text that ______.
A. his father's advice helped him to decide which job to take up
B. working in the sports team was his most important experience
C. he learnt much from his shared experience with his team members
D. his experience as a baggage boy had a great influence on his later life
练习册系列答案
相关习题

科目:高中英语 来源:单元双测同步达标活页试卷 高二英语下 题型:050

阅读理解

  In Glacier National Park, which is in the Rocky Mountains of Montana, there once roamed a little deaf Indian boy. He loved to wander in the forest, and made friends with the animals who lived there. Since he loved animals, he would observe them intently and learn their habits. This little Indian boy's name was John Lewis Clarke.

  John Lewis Clarke's grandfather was a graduate from West Point and a captain in the U. S. Army. He was married to the daughter of a Blackfoot Indian Chief and adopted by the tribe. His son, John Lewis Clarke's father, also married an Indian princess, the daughter of Chief Stands Alone. Sadly, John's grandfather was later killed by Indians of another tribe near Helena, Montana.

  John Lewis Clarke was not born deaf. He became ill at a young age with scarlet fever. Though he survived, he could no longer hear the sounds that the forest animals made. He could not hear his Indian friends when they called to him. Scarlet fever had caused him to lose his hearing. His Indian friends gave him the name Cutapuis (Cu-ta-pu-ee) which means, “man who talks not.”

  Because John could not talk, he could not tell his parents about his many animal friends in the forest and the exciting things that he saw, but he found another way to express himself. He made figures of them out of clay(粘土) from the river banks. Later, when he was older, he learned to carve things out of wood. He loved to carve animals. With an axe and a pocket knife, he carved a life-sized image of a bear from a cedar trunk. The bear looked so real, the only thing missing was its growl.

  When John was old enough to go to school, his parents sent him to the Fort Shaw Indian School. However, since he needed special education, he was transferred to a school for the deaf at Boulder, Montana. He also attended the School for the Deaf at Devil's Lake, North Dakota. When he was older, he enrolled at St. Francis Academy in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he studied wood carving. While he was still in his teens, John returned to Montana and opened a studio. He began to carve all the animals he had known very well in his childhood, and offer them for sale. He made models of animals out of wood, clay, and stone. He painted pictures using water colors and oils, and did excellent pen and ink drawings. He began to make a name for himself as an artist.

  John spent most of his 89 years at his home studio in Glacier Park. Every year when the park season was over, he continued his work in Great Falls, Montana, his second home. Many important people bought John's work. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., the famous multimillionaire, was one of them. John's work was on exhibit in many places in this country. John died on November 20,1970. In his life-time, he literally carved his way to fame.

1.John probably started to use American Sign Language as soon as ________.

[  ]

A.he became deaf

B.he entered a school for the deaf

C.he could make figures out of clay

D.his Indian friends taught him

2.The subject of his artwork was mostly animals. This is most likely because ________.

[  ]

A.the environment he grew up has influenced him

B.he was an Indian

C.it was his way of expressing ideas

D.he did not like people

3.“The bear looked so real. The only thing missing was its growl.” This phrase means ________.

[  ]

A.John forgot to add one more thing

B.the bear was missing

C.the bear missed growling

D.the bear looked perfect except that it could not make any sound

4.During the course of his education, John attended ________.

[  ]

A.two schools

B.only a residential school for the deaf

C.four different schools

D.a school in Maine

查看答案和解析>>

同步练习册答案