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My father took me out camping for the first time when I was seven£®He wanted teach me about animals£¬insects and trees£®My uncles all come along with bows and arrows for hunting£®
One evening at sunset£¬we sat by the fire£¬have our barbecue£¨ÉÕ¿¾£©£®Just then a bird was flying over us£®My uncles immediate jumped up and shot their arrows on the bird£®Neither of the arrows hit the target£®Suddenly the arrows was flying down at us from the sky-they were looked like rain!We ran to escape but
fortunately no one was injured£®
That day I didn't learn much about animals£¬insects or trees£¬but I learnt a impressive lesson about gravity £¨ÖØÁ¦£©£®

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½â´ð My father took me out camping for the first time when I was seven£®He wanted¡Äteach me about animals£¬insects and trees£®My uncles all come along with bows and arrows for hunting£®One evening at sunset£¬we sat by the fire£¬have our barbecue£¨ÉÕ¿¾£©£®Just then a bird was flying over us£®My uncles immediate jumped up and shot their arrows on the bird£®Neither of the arrows hit the target£®Suddenly the arrows was flying down at us from the sky-they were looked like rain!We ran to escape but
fortunately no one was injured£®That day I didn't learn much about animals£¬insects or trees£¬but I learnt a impressive lesson about gravity £¨ÖØÁ¦£©£®
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4£®Discover
    Newsmagazine of science devoted to the wonders and stories of modern science£¬written for the educated general reader£®Published by Disney Magazine Publishing Co£®£¬Discover tells many of the same stories professionals read in Scientific American£®A truly delightflul family science magazine£¬each issue brings to light new and newsworthy topics to make dinnertime and water-cooler conversations interesting£®
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Self
    Published by Conde Nast Publications Inc£®£¬Self is a handbook devoted to women's overall physical and mental health£®Every issue contains usable articles such as"Style Lab''£¬in which wearable clothes are mixed and matched on non-models and the "Eat-Right Road Map"£¬with tips on how to eat properly£®
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InStyle
    InStyle is a guide to the lives and lifestyles of the world's famous people£®The magazine covers the choices people make about their homes£¬their clothes and their free time activities£®With photos and articles£¬it opens the door to these peopled homes£¬families£¬parties and weddings£¬offering ideas about beauty£¬fitness and in general£¬lifestyles£®Publisher£ºThe Time Inc£®Magazine Company£®
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Wired
    This magazine is designed for leaders in the field of information engineering including top managers and professionals in the computer£¬business£¬and design and education industries£®Published by Conde Nast Publications Inc£®£¬Wired often carries articles on how technology changes people's lives£®
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36£®Which of the following magazines is published monthly£¿B
A£®Self
B£®Discover
C£®InStyle 
D£®Wired
37£®Which two magazines are published by the same publisher£¿D
A£®Wired and InStyle
B£®Discover and InStyle
C£®Self and Discover
D£®Self and Wired
38£®Which magazine offers the biggest price cut£¿B
A£®InStyle
B£®Wired
C£®Discover
D£®Self
39£®The"Style Lab"in Self provides with articles whichA
A£®offer advice to ordinary women on clothes
B£®show how a woman can become famous
C£®introduce places with the best food
D£®discuss ways of training models
40£®Those who are interested in management and the use of high technology would  probably choose£®C
A£®InStyle
B£®Self
C£®Wired
D£®Discover£®

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5£®Born in 1949£¬Diana Nyad took an early interest in swimming as a sport and was a Florida State High School swimming champion£®Like many young athletes£¬she had Olympic dreams£¬but a serious illness kept her from competing in the Games£®The disappointment didn't stop her from going forward£®Instead£¬she became interested in marathon swimming£®A brilliant athlete£¬she was well-conditioned for spending long periods of time in the water£®As a long-distance swimmer£¬she would compete against herself and the obstacles presented by distance£¬danger£¬cold£¬and exhaustion£®
    For ten years Nyad devoted herself to becoming one of the world's best long-distance swimmers£®In 1970£¬she swam a ten-mile marathon in Lake Ontario£¬setting the women's record for the course£®In 1972 she set another record by swimming 102.5 miles from an island in the Bahamas to the coast of Florida£®Then she broke a third record when swimming around Manhattan Island in 1975£®
    Nyad attempted to swim the distance between Florida and Cuba in l978£®Though the span of water is less than 100 miles wide£¬it is rough and dangerous£®After battling the water for two days£¬she had to give up for the sake of her own health and safety£®Even so£¬she impressed the world with her courage and strong desire to succeed£®For Nyad her strength of purpose was just as important as reading Cuba£®That is how she defined success£®It did not matter that her swim came up short£»she believed she had touched the other shore£®
    When Nyad ended her career as a swimmer£¬she continued to try new things-travelling the world as a reporter£¬writing books and giving public speeches about her life£®Diana Nyad works to inspire others£¬just as she did when she swam the waters of the world£®

56£®What prevented Nyad from taking part in the Olympic Games£¿£¨No more than 5 words£©A serious illness£¨did£©
57£®What does the underlined word"obstacles"mean£¿£¨1 word£©Difficulties/Problems/Troubles/Challenges
58£®What achievement did Nyad make in 1970£¿£¨No more than 10 words£®£©She swam a ten-mile marathon and set women's record£®
Or£ºShe swam a ten-mile marathon£¬setting the women's record£®
Or£ºShe set the women's record for a ten-mile marathon swimming£®
59£®Why did Nyad believe that she had touched the other shore£¿£¨No more than 10 words£©Because she had tried her best£¨to fulfill the task£©£®
Or£ºHer strength of purpose was as important as reaching Cuba£®
60£®Please explain how you are inspired by Nyad£®£¨No more than 20 words£©I learned that once we set a goal£¬we should try hard to achieve it£®
Or£ºWe should never stop trying new things and we may achieve success in different fields£®£®

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---To have a good commandof the English laguage before going abroad£®

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13£®I'm seventeen£®I had worked as a box boy at a supermarket in Los Angeles£®People came to the counter and you put things in their bags for them and carried things to their cars£®It was hard work£®
While working£¬you wear a plate with your name on it£®I once met someone I knew years ago£®I remembered his name and said£¬"Mr£®Castle£¬how are you£¿"We talked about this and that£®As he left£¬he said£¬"It was nice talking to you£¬Brett£®"I felt great£¬he remembered me£®Then I looked down at my name plate£®Oh£¬no£®He didn't remember me at all£®He just read the name plate£®I wish I had put"Irving"down on my name plate£®If he'd have said£¬"Oh yes£¬Irving£¬how could I forget you£¿"I'd have been ready for him£®There's nothing personal here£®
The manager and everyone else who were a step above the box boys often shouted orders£®One of these was£ºyou couldn't accept tips£®Okay£¬I'm outside and I put the bags in the car£®For a lot of people£¬the natural reaction is to take a quarter and give it to me£®I'd say£¬"I'm sorry£¬I can't£®"They'd get angry£®When you give someone a tip£¬you're sort of being polite£®You take a quarter and you put it in their hand and you expect them to say£¬"Oh£¬thanks a lot£®"When you say£¬"I'm sorry£¬I can't£®"they feel a little put down£®They say£¬"No one will know£®"And they put it in your pocket£®You say£¬"I really can't£®"
It gets to a point where you almost have to hurt a person physically to prevent him from tipping you£®It was not in agreement with the store's belief in being friendly£®Accepting tips was a friendly thing and made the customer feel good£®I just couldn't understand the strangeness of some people's ideas£®One lady actually put it in my pocket£¬got in the car£¬and drove away£®I would have had to throw the quarter at her or eaten it or something£®
I had decided that one year was enough£®Some people needed the job to stay alive and fed£®I guess I had the means and could afford to hate it and give it up£®

24£®What can be the best title for this text£¿B
A£®The Art of Taking Tips
B£®Why I Gave up My Job                  
C£®How Hard Life Is for Box Boys
D£®Getting along with Customers
25£®From the second paragraph£¬we can infer thatA
A£®the writer didn't like the impersonal part of his job
B£®Mr£®Castle mistook Irving for Brett
C£®with a name plate£¬people can easily start talking
D£®Irving was the writer's real name
26£®The box boy refused to accept tips becauseC£®
A£®customers only gave small tips
B£®he didn't want to fight with the customers
C£®the store didn't allow the box boys to take tips
D£®some customers had strange ideas about tipping
27£®The underlined phrase"put down"in the third paragraph probably meansD£®
A£®misunderstood        
B£®defeated        
C£®hateful              
D£®hurt£®

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17£®Henrietta Lacks was born in 1920 in Virginia and raised on a tobacco farm£®She married her first cousin£¬David Day and later settled near Baltimore in Turner Station where Day worked at a steel mill£®After giving birth to her fifth child£¬she was diagnosed with cervical cancer£®She was treated at Johns Hopkins£¬the only hospital within twenty miles that treated black patients and had been established as a charity hospital£®
    In an attempt to grow everlasting cells£¬Dr£®George Gey took samples of all women who came to Hopkins with cervical cancer£®After taking a biopsy £¨»î¼ì£© of Henrietta's cervical cancer£¬researcher Dr£®George Gey discovered that unlike any cells they had seen before£¬Henrietta's cells could not only reproduce£¬but thrive outside the body--a breakthrough that would change modern medicine£®Actually£¬her cells doubled in size every 24 hours and Dr£®Gey shared these cells for free with any researcher interested£®Later£¬Dr£®Stanley Gartler found that Henrietta's cells were even capable of jumping out of the petri dish£¨ÅàÑøÃ󣩠and taking other cell types£®As a result£¬these cells£¬named HeLa£¨for Henrietta Lacks£© were essential in the research into cancer£¬AIDS£¬the effects of radiation and poisonous substances£¬gene mapping£¬and countless other scientific pursuits£®And they've been used in tens of thousands of research studies£®
    Ms£®Lacks died not too long after her diagnosis in 1951£®She unknowingly held the key to unlocking medical advancements in her tumor cells£®Now£¬decades after Henrietta's death£¬her cells are still alive£®For many years£¬her family knew nothing about the impact her cells had on medical science-she provided a crucial sample of cells that has furthered the knowledge of medical science and disease prevention£®
    Now nearly 60years after her death£¬in May 2011£¬Morgan State University in Baltimore awarded her an honorary degree£®

25£®What is the passage mainly about£¿A
A£®A woman's contribution to medical progress£®
B£®The contribution of Johns Hopkins£®
C£®The original research of cancer£®
D£®The death of a black patient£®
26£®Which word can describe the cells of Henrietta Lacks£¿C
A£®Radioactive£®B£®Poisonous£®C£®Active£®D£®Interesting£®
27£®What does the underlined word"thrive"mean probably£¿B
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