10£®It was the so-called"supermoon"evening the other night£®That is when the moon is at its£¨41£©B and brightest point£®I decided to take a £¨42£©Cfrom the book I was reading and go out to£¨43£©Dit for a while£®A gentle rain was falling as I£¨44£©Bout into my yard and looked up at the sky£®At first I thought the rain clouds would ruin my£¨45£©A£¬but it wasn't long before they£¨46£©Bright where the giant moon was resting in the sky£¬and the golden light from it£¨47£©Aup the sky£®I stood there for a long time moved by the sight and£¨48£©Cnoticed the cold rain drops beating my head£®
When I finally took my£¨49£©Coff the sky£¬I saw something else£¨50£©Din the night£®Dozens of little fireflies were blinking their own£¨51£©Bon and off£®It was so wonderful seeing them again£®They had always£¨52£©Dmy summer nights more lovely with their lights£®Their little blinks were so £¨53£©Acompared to the giant moon£¬yet they too made the dark£¬rainy night look a little brighter£®
You know£¬sometimes I£¨54£©Alike one of those tiny fireflies trying to shine my light in this world£®£¨55£©Cit is so weak and small£¬I know that if I don't shine my light and £¨56£©Bmy love£¬this world will become a darker place£®I know too that the£¨57£©DI shine£¬the more others will share their own loving light as well£®
Don't let this sometimes dark world£¨58£©Ayou then£®So I think you should shine your own light as brightly as you can£®You can£¨59£©Cothers to shine theirs as well£®£¨60£©B£¬you should never forget to share your love with laughter and joy£®

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18£®My father was the biology professor£®When I was young£¬he was used to take me to the biology lab£¬there I saw mice£¬cats and other animals£®My father also influenced me through nature walks£®He often took me on a walk in the backyard£®We would catch frogs£¬snakes and bird£®He seemed know everything about wildlife£®Eighteen years later£¬think about my father and his influence on my life£¬I feel very luckily£®I am grateful that I got the chance to learn from her£®He helps me develop my interest in all that was alive and sometimes dead around me£®

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1£®Recent research shows that listening to music improves our mental well-being and boosts our physical health in surprising and astonishing ways£®£¨16£©F£®Here are some amazing scientifically-proven benefits of being hooked on music£®
Music reduces depression
More than 350million people suffer from depression around the world£®A study by Hans Joachim Trappe in Germany demonstrated that music can benefit patients with depressive symptoms£¬depending on the type of music£®£¨17£©D£¬but techno and heavy metal brought people down even more£®The next time you feel low£¬put on some classical or meditative music to lift your spirits£®
£¨18£©B
Research shows that taking music lessons predicts higher academic performance and IQ in young children£®In one study£¬6-year-olds who took keyboard or singing lessons in small groups for 36weeks had significantly larger increases in IQ and standardized educational test results than children who took either drama lessons or no lessons£® £¨19£©A£®
Music keeps your brain healthy in old age
A study with healthy older adults found that those with ten or more years of musical experience scored higher on cognitive tests than musicians with one to nine years of musical study£®The non-musicians scored the lowest£®Business magnate Warren Buffet stays sharp at age 84by playing ukulele£®£¨20£©C£®

A£®To help them achieve academic excellence£¬encourage them to sing or play an instrument£®
B£®Music raises IQ and academic performance£®
C£®It's never too late to play an instrument to keep you on top of your game£®
D£®Meditative£¨Ú¤ÏëµÄ£© sounds and classical music lifted people up£®
E£®Music strengthens learning and memory£®
F£®Musical training can help raise our IQ and even keep us sharp in old age£®
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18£®Cultural Center Adds Classes for Young Adults
The Allendale Cultural Center has expanded its arts program to include classes for young adults£®Director Leah Martin announced Monday that beginning in September£¬three new classes will be offered to the Allendale community£®The course titles will be Yoga for Teenagers£» Hip Hop Dance£ºLearning the Latest Moves£» and Creative Journaling for Teens£ºDiscovering the Writer Within£®The latter course will not be held at the Allendale Cultural Center but instead will meet at the Allendale Public Library£®
Staff member Tricia Cousins will teach the yoga and hip hop classes£®Ms£®Cousins is an accomplished choreographer £¨Î赸½Ìʦ£© as well as an experienced dance educator£®She has an MA in dance education from Teachers College£¬Columbia University£¬where she wrote a thesis on the pedagogical £¨½Ìѧ·¨µÄ£© effectiveness of dance education£®The journaling class will be taught by Betsy Milford£®Ms£®Milford is the head librarian at the Allendale Public Library as well as a columnist for the professional journal Library Focus£®
The courses are part of the Allendale Cultural Center's Project Teen£¬which was initiated by Leah Martin£¬Director of the Cultural Center£®According to Martin£¬this project is a direct result of her efforts to make the center a more essential part of the Allendale community£®Over the last several years£¬the number of people who have visited the cultural center for classes or events has steadily declined£®Project Teen is primarily funded by a generous grant from The McGee Arts Foundation£¬an organization devoted to bringing arts programs to young adults£®Martin oversees the Project Teen board£¬which consists of five board members£®Two board members are students at Allendale's Brookdale High School£» the other three are adults with backgrounds in education and the arts£®
The creative journaling class will be cosponsored by Brookdale High School£¬and students who complete the class will be given the opportunity to publish one of their journal entries in Pulse£¬Brookdale's student literary magazine£®Students who complete the hip hop class will be eligible to participate in the Allendale Review£¬an annual concert sponsored by the cultural center that features local actors£¬musicians£¬and dancers£®All classes are scheduled to begin immediately following school dismissal£¬and transportation will be available from Brookdale High School to the Allendale Cultural Center and the Allendale Public Library£®For more information about Project Teen£¬contact the cultural center's programming office at 988-0099 or drop by the office after June 1 to pick up a fall course catalog£®The office is located on the third floor of the Allendale Town Hall£®
 
74£®Which of the following statements is correct£¿A
A£®Tricia Cousins will teach two of the new classes£®
B£®The new classes will begin on June 1£®
C£®People who want a complete fall catalogue should stop by the Allendale Public Library£®
D£®The cultural center's annual concert is called Pulse£®
75£®According to Leah Martin£¬what was the direct cause of Project Teen£¿D
A£®Tricia Cousins was available to teach courses in the fall£®
B£®Community organizations were ignoring local teenagers£®
C£®The McGee Arts Foundation wanted to be more involved in Allendale's arts programming£®
D£®She wanted to make the cultural center a more important part of the Allendale community£®
76£®Which of the following factors is implied as another reason for Project Teen£¿A
A£®The number of people visiting the cultural center has declined over the last several years£®
B£®The cultural center wanted a grant from The McGee Arts Foundation£®
C£®The young people of Allendale have complained about the cultural center's offerings£®
D£®Leah Martin thinks classes for teenagers are more important than classes for adults£®
77£®This article is organized in which of the following ways£¿B
A£®In time order£¬from the past to the future£®
B£®Most important information first£¬followed by background and details£®
C£®Background first£¬followed by the most important information and details£®
D£®As sensational news£¬with the most controversial topic first£®

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5£®Nowadays£¬the Internet£¬with its ability to connect people throughout the world£¬is changing  the way people learn languages£®There is still no way to avoid the hard work through vocabulary lists and grammar rules£¬but the books£¬tapes and even CDs are being replaced by email£¬video chat and social networks£®
     Livemocha£¬a Seattle company£¬has created a website devoted to helping people learn more than 38 languages by exchanging messages over the Internet and then correcting each other's messages£®The lessons£¬whether they are flashcards£¬quizzes£¬audio recordings or written and spoken essays£¬are delivered through the Intemet£®
    Michael Schutzler£¬Livemocha's chief executive£¨Ö÷¹Ü£©£¬says the website's advantage is the ability to practicel with a real person£®"The great irony£¨·í´Ì£©is that even if you have learned a foreign language in the classroom for years£¬you don't have confidefice to go into a restaurant and have a conversation with a foreigner£¬"he said£®The casual connection with real people throughout the world£¬however brief£¬are not just fun and surprising but show more about how the language is really used£®
    Livemocha is now experimenting with a variety of ways that resemble the games on other social websites to motivate people£®The flashcard exercises£¬for instance£¬are scored£¬and the totals earned by studying and teaching appear on the users'front page£®
    Besides£¬each person can set up a profile£¨¼òÀú£©which includes a short description of his age£¬location and what language he would like to learn£®Therefore£¬if you want to study one language£¬you will easily find many people who are fluent in it£®Andl an email or two is all it takes to find a study partner£®
    There are more and more companies like Livemocha offeritig online language learning to students throughout the world£®And instead of merely helping people practice different languages£¬they also enable people to share interests and make new friends£®

56£®For what purpose did Livemocha create the website£¿A
A£®To offer new ways of language learning£®
B£®To make an advertisement for their company£®
C£®To share interests and make new friends£®
D£®To tell his inspiring story to more people£®
57£®What is the advantage of the Internet language learning£¿B
A£®Books£¬tapes and even CDs are completely out of use£®
B£®Leamers can practice languages with real people£®
C£®People can learn more than 38 languages in all£®
D£®There is no need to learn vocabulary and grammar£®
58£®Why does the writer give us the example of flashcard exercise in Paragraph 4£¿A
A£®To show what Livemocha is doing to inspire website users£®
B£®To introduce how Livemocha scores the website users'work£®
C£®To explain why Livemocha experiments with other social websites£®
D£®To tell what Livemocha prepares for the front page of the website£®
45£®How can one find a study partner on Livemocha£¿D
A£®He needs to set up a profile about his past experience£®
B£®He should deliver his written essays to the website£®
C£®He needs to give lessons over the Internet£®
D£®He can select suitable people and email them£®
60£®What can be inferred from the last paragraph£¿C
A£®Livemocha will open more branch companies£®
B£®Online learners can practice languages free of charge£®
C£®More learners will turn to online language learning£®
D£®Livemocha will be turned into a dating website£®

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15£®Students from Florida International University in£®Miami walked on water Thursday for a class assignment£®To do it£¬they wore aquatic £¨Ë®Éϵģ©shoes they designed and created£®
Alex Quinones was the first to make it to the other side of a 175-foot lake on campus in record time-just over a minute£®Quinones£¬who wore oversized boat-like shoes£¬also won last year and will receive  500£®Students had to wear the aquatic shoes and make it across the lake in order to earn an'6A"on the assignment for Architecture Professor Jaime Canaves£¬Materials and Methods Construction Class£®"It's traditional in a school of architecture to do boats out of cardboard for a boat race£®I thought our students were a little bit more special than that£¬"Canaves said£®"We decided to do the walk on water event to take it to the next level£®"
A total of 79 students competed in the race this year in 41  teams£®Only 10 teams failed to cross the lake£®Others who fell got back up and made it to the end£®The race is open to all students and anyone in the community£®The youngest person to ever participate was a 9-year-old girl who competed in place of her mother£¬while the oldest was a 67-year-old female£®
A large crowd on campus joined Canaves as he cheered on the racers£®He shouted encouraging words£¬but also laughed as some unsteadily made their way to the end£®
"A part of this is for them to have more understanding of designing and make it work better£¬"he said£®It is also a lesson in life for the students£®
"Anything£¬including walking on water£¬is possible£¬if you do the research£¬test it and go through the design process seriously£®
56£®Which statement about Alex'Quinones is ture£¿D
A£®He finished the race in less than a minute£®
B£®He won the  race with  the help of 2  boats£®
C£®He failed the race last year£®
D£®He set a new record this year£®
57£®For what purpose did the students take part in the race£¿C
A£®To go across the lake to school£®
B£®To test their balance on the water£®
C£®To pass Professor Canaves'class£®
D£®To win the prize money of  500£®
58£®Which of the following is true about the race£¿D
A£®The students who fell into the water had to quit£®
B£®More than 20 teams failed to cross the lake£®
C£®The students kept silent when the other racers competed£®
D£®The youngest competitor competed instead of her mother£®
59£®According to Canaves£¬this race can help the studentsA
A£®understand designing better               
B£®achieve almost everything
C£®work together and unite as one           
D£®walk on the surface of water
60£®What is the purpose of this passage£¿B
A£®To advertise a student's program£®
B£®To report an interesting assignment£®
C£®To introduce a creative professor£®
D£®To encourage special events on campus£®

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2£®What would it be like to take a walk on the surface of Mars£¿If you could design the tallest building in the world£¬what would it look like£¿Do you dream of being the next J£®K£®Rowling£¿This summer£¬you can experience all of these things£¬and more£®All you need is an Internet connection and your imagination£®
   A recent study by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that kids spend an average of 1 hour and 29 minutes online each day£®Many kids like to use that time to chat with friends£¬play games or check e-mail£®But next time you get on the Web£¬try exploring the world instead£®"With the Internet£¬you can go back 11£¬000 years in time£¬or go 11£¬000 kilometers across the planet£¬"said Russell£¬Web search expert of Google£®"The whole scope of history and the world is open to you£®"
   There is a wealth of information to be found online£®For example£¬if your family is going on vacation somewhere£¬do a quick online search on the area before you even get in the car£®"What's the background of the place£» what's the history£¿"says Russell£®"I like to tell my kids£¬¡®Whenever you have a question£¬whenever you have a doubt£¬search it out£®'"
   Ready to launch a virtual£¨ÐéÄâµÄ£© journey of your own£¿Here are a few starting points to get you thinking and to help you on your way£®You can invite your parents along for the ride£¬too£®Always ask for permission before downloading programs and software into your computer£®And£¬check with a parent or adult before visiting any new Web site£®
   Navigate the world in 3-D with Google Earth£®Begin in outer space and zoom into the streets of any city£¬from Hong Kong to San Francisco£®Or£¬visit ancient monuments and watch the changing rainforests over time£®With the moon in Google Earth tool£¬you can walk in Neil Armstrong's famous footsteps£®Take a guided tour of the moon's surface with Armstrong's fellow shuttle mate astronaut Buzz Aldrin£®
56£®According to Russell£¬the kidsC
A£®spend too much time on the Internet           
B£®should never chat and play games online
C£®can solve their problems through the Internet    
D£®should study hard instead of chatting online
57£®From the passage we know thatA
A£®we can find much information we need online   
B£®Neil Armstrong traveled to the moon alone
C£®the kids can download programs onto the computer freely
D£®the kids can visit the new website freely without parents'guidance
58£®According to the passage£¬if you want to go to Tropical Rainforests£¬you canD
A£®take the time shuttle                                                 
B£®go to the cinema to watch 3-D films
C£®find a travel agency in Google                                 
D£®use Google Earth
59£®The passage is mainly intended forD
A£®parents                 
B£®kids                            
C£®teachers                   
D£®adults
60£®In which section of a website can we probably read this passage£¿C
A£®Culture
B£®Health
C£®Internet World
D£®Tourism£®

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