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The battle for the leadership of Britain’s Labour Party ended on September 25. Five candidates competed for the top job, but it turned out to be a tale of two brothers. Victory went to Ed Miliband, 40, with his elder brother David, 45, coming a close second. Ed’s Miliband’s job will now be to try to lead his party back into power and oppose Prime Minister David Cameron.
The two Milibands were both ministers in the Gordon Brown government. David Miliband, as Foreign Secretary, held the third most important post in UK politics. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton described him as “vibrant and attractive”. Ed, who had a lesser role in government as Minister of Climate Change, was valued for his contribution to policy discussions and for his performance at the Copenhagen Conference on Climate Change last December.
The Miliband brothers were born to political parents. Their father, Ralph, was a Marxist scholar. He came to Britain from Belgium in 1940, fleeing the Nazis. Ralph Miliband was buried beside Karl Marx in London’s Highgate Cemetery. His wife Marion, the brothers’ mother, remains an active party member at 76.
The two brothers represent different wings of the Labour Party. David supported former Prime Minister Tony Blair; Ed was a follower of Blair’s great rival Gordon Brown, the last Labour PM.
“We’re determined to make sure that family comes before politics, and I don’t think there’s any chance that politics is going to get in the way,” David Miliband said before the vote.
After the result, the two embraced in front of the cameras.
In his acceptance speech, Ed Miliband said to his brother: “David, I love you so much as a brother. And I have such extraordinary respect for the campaign that you ran.”
But some feel their warm words were for the media and for the sake of party unity. There had been reports of anger on David’s part when his younger brother chose to stand against him. David may feel that the leadership was stolen from him-and by his own brother. Ed himself was reported to be concerned that he might have hurt David. According to the Guardian, after the result, Ed’s first reaction was: “what have I done to David?”
Ed suggested that he was prepared to make his brother shadow chancellor. But David has decided it is time to move on. He will not have a role in the Shadow Cabinet in the future.
In effect, he has fallen on his sword for the Party. David Miliband said the priority was to allow his brother to make a success of leading Labour: “I believe this will be harder if there is constant comparison with my comments and position as a member of the shadow cabinet.”

  1. 1.

    . Ed Miliband became head of Britain’s Labour Party because ______.

    1. A.
      he played an important role in the previous British government.
    2. B.
      his arguments at political discussions and his performance at an international conference
    3. C.
      Hillary Clinton thought highly of him
    4. D.
      his brother supported him both at home and politics.
  2. 2.

    . According to the passage, which is NOT TRUE?

    1. A.
      Ed and David both worked in the government.
    2. B.
      Ralph Miliband came to Britain because of the Nazis.
    3. C.
      Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and David Cameron are all Labour Party Prime Ministers.
    4. D.
      David Miliband and Ed Miliband’s mother is still alive.
  3. 3.

    .What can be inferred from the passage?

    1. A.
      David Miliband and Ed Miliband fought against each other both at home and politics.
    2. B.
      Ed was concerned about David’s feelings after the election.
    3. C.
      David and Ed were born into a political family.
    4. D.
      David and Ed agreed with each other on most of the issues
  4. 4.

    .What does the underlined sentence mean?

    1. A.
      David accepted his brother’s invitation to be a shadow chancellor.
    2. B.
      David was determined to fight against his brother.
    3. C.
      David was so upset that he would end his life with a sword for the Party.
    4. D.
      David refused his brother’s offer for him to be a shadow chancellor.
  5. 5.

    .Which of the following can best describe the relationship between David and Ed?

    1. A.
      Brothers and political rivals
    2. B.
      Partners in the political campaign
    3. C.
      Partners in public and enemy in private
    4. D.
      Representatives of different wings of Labour Party

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阅读理解

  The battle for the leadership of Britain’s Labour Party ended on September 25.Five candidates competed for the top job, but it turned out to be a tale of two brothers.Victory went to Ed Miliband, 40, with his elder brother David, 45, coming a close second.Ed’s Miliband’s job will now be to try to lead his party back into power and oppose Prime Minister David Cameron.

  The two Milibands were both ministers in the Gordon Brown government.David Miliband, as Foreign Secretary, held the third most important post in UK politics.US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton described him as “vibrant and attractive”.Ed, who had a lesser role in government as Minister of Climate Change, was valued for his contribution to policy discussions and for his performance at the Copenhagen Conference on Climate Change last December.

  The Miliband brothers were born to political parents.Their father, Ralph, was a Marxist scholar.He came to Britain from Belgium in 1940, fleeing the Nazis.Ralph Miliband was buried beside Karl Marx in London’s Highgate Cemetery(公墓).His wife Marion, the brothers’ mother, remains an active party member at 76.

  The two brothers represent different wings of the Labour Party.David supported former Prime Minister Tony Blair; Ed was a follower of Blair’s great rival Gordon Brown, the last Labour PM.

  “We’re determined to make sure that family comes before politics, and I don’t think there’s any chance that politics is going to get in the way,” David Miliband said before the vote.

  After the result, the two embraced(拥抱)in front of the cameras.

  In his acceptance speech, Ed Miliband said to his brother:“David, I love you so much as a brother.And I have such extraordinary respect for the campaign that you ran.”

  But some feel their warm words were for the media and for the sake of party unity.There had been reports of anger on David’s part when his younger brother chose to stand against him.David may feel that the leadership was stolen from him-and by his own brother.Ed himself was reported to be concerned that he might have hurt David.According to the Guardian, after the result, Ed’s first reaction was:“what have I done to David?”

  Ed suggested that he was prepared to make his brother shadow chancellor(影子大臣).But David has decided it is time to move on.He will not have a role in the Shadow Cabinet in the future.

  In effect, he has fallen on his sword for the Party.David Miliband said the priority(优先考虑的事)was to allow his brother to make a success of leading Labour:“I believe this will be harder if there is constant comparison with my comments and position as a member of the shadow cabinet(影子内阁).”

(1)

Ed Miliband became head of Britain’s Labour Party because ________.

[  ]

A.

he played an important role in the previous British government.

B.

his arguments at political discussions and his performance at an international conference

C.

Hillary Clinton thought highly of him

D.

his brother supported him both at home and politics.

(2)

According to the passage, which is not true?

[  ]

A.

Ed and David both worked in the government.

B.

Ralph Miliband came to Britain because of the Nazis.

C.

Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and David Cameron are all Labour Party Prime Ministers.

D.

David Miliband and Ed Miliband’s mother is still alive.

(3)

What can be inferred from the passage?

[  ]

A.

David Miliband and Ed Miliband fought against each other both at home and politics.

B.

Ed was concerned about David’s feelings after the election.

C.

David and Ed were born into a political family.

D.

David and Ed agreed with each other on most of the issues

(4)

What does the underlined sentence mean?

[  ]

A.

David accepted his brother’s invitation to be a shadow chancellor.

B.

David was determined to fight against his brother.

C.

David was so upset that he would end his life with a sword for the Party.

D.

David refused his brother’s offer for him to be a shadow chancellor.

(5)

Which of the following can best describe the relationship between David and Ed?

[  ]

A.

Brothers and political rivals

B.

Partners in the political campaign

C.

Partners in public and enemy in private

D.

Representatives of different wings of Labour Party

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阅读理解

  LONDON-British Prime Minister Tony Blair faced a growing rebellion over his leadership on Wednesday after reports he planned to stay in office until mid-2007 prompted seven former loyalists to quit their posts.

  A junior minister and six government aides, part of a group of once-loyal Labour lawmakers now calling for Blair to step aside, resigned saying an urgent change of leader was needed to revitalise the Labour Party’s flagging fortunes.

  The departures came the day British newspapers reported that Blair planned to quit on July 26, 2007, after more than a decade in power-effectively kick-starting a battle for leadership of his ruling Labour Party and the country.

  Blair, 53, winner of a record three consecutive elections for Labour, has seen his popularity slide after a series of government scandals over sleazes and mismanagement, as well as controversy over wars in Iraq and Lebanon.

  Finance Minister Gordon Brown is widely expected to take over and several political figures urged the two to map out a plan to ensure a smooth transition of power and avoid months of government paralysis.

  Two senior ministers and Blair allies have said this week the prime minister would be gone within a year.

  There has long been a vocal wing of hardline Labour left-wingers who are opposed to Blair’s move to the centre ground of British politics since he was first elected in 1997.

  The latest doubters all first entered parliament in 2001 and have loyally backed his reforms and policies.But now they fear that unless Blair goes, Labour will lose the next general election, expected in 2009.

  “DISLOYAL, DISCOURTEOUS AND WRONG”

  Junior Defence Minister Tom Watson was the highest ranking Labour lawmaker to quit on Wednesday.

  “I share the view of the overwhelming majority of the party and the country that the only way the party and the government can renew itself in office is urgently to renew its leadership, ” he said.

  But Blair immediately said he had planned to sack Watson anyway, calling him “disloyal, discourteous and wrong” in signing a letter, along with 14 other previously loyal members of parliament, calling for the prime minister to quit.

  Jaqcui Smith, the chief whip responsible for keeping parliamentarians in line, told Sky News:“Many of my colleagues are concerned that we have an orderly transition.”

  “Bundling the most successful Labour prime minister out the back door in the next few weeks isn’t how we’re going to do that, ” she added.

  Bets poured into bookmakers on Wednesday on whether Blair would quit this year or next, who will replace him and if the opposition Conservatives will win the next general election.

  Opinion polls put Labour well behind the Conservatives, who have been revived by their new youthful leader, David Cameron.

  Newspapers splashed summer 2007 departure dates across their front pages, saying Blair had caved in to increasing pressure from Labour parliamentarians demanding a clear timetable.

  The Sun tabloid said Blair would step down as Labour leader on May 31-less than a month after his 10th anniversary in office-and resign as prime minister eight weeks later after an election to choose a party leader.

  Blair’s Downing Street office described the reports as “speculation” but did not deny them.

  Blair won his first term on May 1, 1997.A decade in power would leave him more than a year short of Margaret Thatcher’s record as the longest-serving leader in more than a century.

(1)

What is the topic of this passage?

[  ]

A.

Blair will quit soon

B.

Blair faces leadership crisis

C.

The story of Blair

D.

Who will be the new Prime Minister

(2)

What does the underlined word “sack” mean?

[  ]

A.

抢劫

B.

解雇

C.

支持

D.

谴责

(3)

Who is expected to be the new prime minister?

[  ]

A.

Gordon Brown.

B.

Tom Watson.

C.

Tony Blair.

D.

Jaqcui Smith.

(4)

Which is not true about Tony Blair?

[  ]

A.

Blair won his first term on May 1, 1997.

B.

Blair is 53 years old.

C.

He faced a growing rebellion over his leadership.

D.

He is the longest-serving leader in more than a century as a prime minister.

(5)

What are the reasons for Blair’s popularity sliding down?

[  ]

A.

He has a series of government scandals over sleazes and mismanagement.

B.

His attitude towards wars in Iraq and Lebanon.

C.

Not mentioned in the passage.

D.

Both A and B.

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 Lack of parent willpower may contribute more to juvenile obesity than under-exercising or overeating.

 Research suggests that having overweight parents is a big, influence ( 影响) upon a child' s weight, with one study finding that child ren with overweight parents were four times more likely to be overweight themselves.

 The findings add heat to an already fierce political debate(争论)over childhood obesity. The Prime Minister, John Howard, last week decided that $116 million be Used for programs to deal with obesity, while the Opposition Leader, Mark Latham, recently announced that his party would move to protect children from unhealthy food advertisements

Clare Collins a senior lecturer at the University of Newcastle, believes such programs will definitely fail unless they influence the way of life of whole families. "If we can' t get parents to take action against their own weight problems, then we can' t expect to influence their kids," she said.

However, Professor, Louise Baur from the Children’ s Hospital at Westmead, doubts whether adult education programs offer any solution to weight problems. "Many parents know they need to lose weight and they know it influences their kids, but they lack the willpower to do anything about it.

The 10-year study of 150 American children found two-thirds of children with overweight parents became overweight. Only one in six children whose parents were of average weight became overweight.  

 The president of the Australasian Society for the .Study of Obesity, Associate Professor Gary Wittert, said parents needed help in doing their job and the Opposition Party’s policy(政策) might be on the right track.

 "We know that driving without a seat belt is unsafe, so we make law against it,” he said."Obesity is a major public health concern, so why shouldn’t we change the law regarding unhealthy food ads?"

1. What does the underlined phrase “juvenile obesity” mean?

A. Adult education.     B. Childhood overweight

C. Parents’ influence    D. Growing pains

2. What is TRUE about the programs supported by the Prime Minister?

A. Debates on them will become less fierce.

B. They will be effective in dealing with obesity.

C. A large sum of money will be spent on them.

D. They will influence people' s way of life.

3.Both Collins and Baur believe that overweight parents_______,

A. will come up with .better solutions

B. will help with their children' s education

C. should be more active in reducing weight

D. should carry out at least 10 years' study

4. According to some experts, the Opposition Party's policy________.

A. can help fight against unemployment

B. may protect kids from unhealthy food ads

C. should be brought back to the right track

D. will work well to prevent traffic accidents

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Lack of parent willpower may contribute more to juvenile obesity than under-exercising or overeating .

Research suggests that having overweight parents is a big influence(影响)upon a child’s weight , with one study finding that children with overweight parents were four times more likely to be overweight themselves .

The findings add heat to an already fierce political debate(争论)over childhood obesity . The Prime Minister , John Howard , last week decided that $116 million be used for programs to deal with obesity , while the Opposition Leader , Mark Latham , recently announced that his party would move to protect children from unhealthy food advertisements .

Clare Collins , a senior lecturer at the University of Newcastle , believes such programs will definitely fail unless they influence the way of life of whole families . “ If we can’t get parents to take action against their own weight problems , then we can’t expect to influence their kids , ” she said .

However , Professor Louise Baur from the Children’s Hospital at Westmead , doubts whether adult education programs offer any solution to weight problems . “ Many parents know they need to lose weight and they know it influences their kids , but they lack the willpower to do anything about it . ”

The 10-year study of 150 American children found two-thirds of children with overweight parents became overweight . Only one in six children whose parents were of average weight became overweight .

The president of the Australasian Society for the Study of Obesity , Associate Professor Gary Wittert , said parents needed help in doing their job and the Opposition Party’s policy(政策)might be on the right track .

“ We know that driving without a seat belt is unsafe , so we make law against it , ” he said . “ Obesity is a major public health concern , so why shouldn’t we change the law regarding unhealthy food ads ? ”

1.What does the underlined phrase “ juvenile obesity ” mean ?

A. Adult education .                        B. Childhood overweight .

C. Parents’ influence .                        D. Growing pains .

2.What is TRUE about the programs supported by the Prime Minister ?

A. Debates on them will become less fierce .

B. They will be effective in dealing with obesity .

C. A large sum of money will be spent on them .    

D. They will influence people’s way of life .

3.Both Collins and Baur believe that overweight parents       .

A. will come up with better solutions           B. will help with their children’s education

C. should be more active in reducing weight     D. should carry out at least 10 years’ study

4.According to some experts , the Opposition Party’s policy       .

A. can help fight against unemployment      B. may protect kids from unhealthy food ads

C. should be brought back to the right track        D. will work well to prevent traffic accidents

 

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