Tim Richter and his wife, Linda, had taught for over 30 years near Buffalo, New York—he in computers, she in special education.“Teaching means everything to us,” Tim would say. In April 1998, he learned he would need a heart operation. It was the kind of news that leads to some serious thinking about life's purpose.
Not long after the surgery, Tim saw a brochure describing Imagination Library, a program started by Dolly Parton's foundation (基金會(huì)) that mailed a book every month to children from birth to age five in the singer's home town of Sevier, Tennessee. “I thought, maybe Linda and I could do something like this when we retire,”Tim recalls.  He placed the brochure on his desk,“as a reminder.”
Five years later, now retired and with that brochure still on the desk, Tim clicked on imagination library .com. The program had been opened up to partners who could take advantage of book and postage discounts.
The quality of the books was of great concern to the Richters. Rather than sign up online, they went to Dollywood for a look­see. “We didn't want to give the children rubbish,” says Linda. The books reviewed each year by teachers, literacy specialists and Dollywood board members included classics such as Ezra Jack Keats's The Snowy Day and newer books like Anna Dewdney's Llama Llama series.
Satisfied, the couple set up the Richter Family Foundation and got to work. Since 2004, they have shipped more than 12,200 books to preschoolers in their area. Megan Williams, a mother of four, is more than appreciative: “This program introduces us to books I've never heard of .”
The Richters spend about $400 a month sending books to 200 children. “Some people sit there and wait to die,” says Tim. “Others get as busy as they can in the time they have left.”
小題1:What let Tim think seriously about the meaning of life?
A.His health problem.B.His love for teaching.
C.The influence of his wife.D.The news from the Web.
小題2:What did Tim want to do after learning about Imagination Library?
A.Give out brochures.B.Do something similar.
C.Write books for children.D.Retire from being a teacher.
小題3:According to the text,Dolly Parton is________.
A.a(chǎn) well­known surgeonB.a(chǎn) mother of a four­year­old
C.a(chǎn) singer born in TennesseeD.a(chǎn) computer programmer
小題4:Why did the Richters go to Dollywood?
A.To avoid signing up online.
B.To meet Dollywood board members.
C.To make sure the books were the newest.
D.To see if the books were of good quality.

小題1:A
小題2:B
小題3:C
小題4:D

小題1:答案 A [細(xì)節(jié)理解題。由第一段最后兩句話(huà)In April 1998, he learned he would need a heart operation. It was the kind of news that leads to some serious thinking about life's purpose.可知是Tim 得病導(dǎo)致他思考生命的意義。]
小題2:答案 B [細(xì)節(jié)理解題。從第二段Tim說(shuō)的話(huà)中“I could do something like this when we retire”,知道他打算在退休后做類(lèi)似的事。選B。]
小題3:答案 C [細(xì)節(jié)理解題。從第二段的第一句話(huà)...a program started by Dolly Parton's foundation (基金會(huì)) that mailed a book every month to children from birth to age five in the singer's hometown of Sevier, Tennessee.得出Dollly Parton 是singer。]
小題4:答案 D [細(xì)節(jié)理解題。從第四段The quality of the books was of great concern to the Richters.以及“We didn't want to give the children rubbish”可知D正確。]
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

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My dad was never the kind to offer many words of love or encouragement. But we knew he loved us. He just had his own way of showing it.

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Yes, that’s the Evil Eye: best way ever to keep wandering teen boys’ hands away from your daughter.
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A.As teenagers, we went camping every weekend.
B.We made lots of friends during the seasonal camping.
C.We had regular boyfriends or girlfriends and enjoyed ourselves.
D.The boy dropped my hand and turned away because he loved the Evil Eye.
小題4: It can be inferred from the passage that the author   .
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B.is a teenage boy who hates his father
C.is now an adult who has come to understand her father’s love
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:單選題

Robert Capa is a name that has for many years been associated with war photography.
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When World War II broke out,Capa was in New York,but he was soon back in Europe covering the War for Life magazine.Some of his most famous work was created on 6th June 1944.Capa,armed only with two cameras,took more than one hundred photographs in the first hour of the Normandy landing(諾曼底登陸),but a mistake in the darkroom during the drying of the film destroyed all but eight frames.It was the images from these frames,however,that inspired the visual style of Steven Spielberg’s Oscar winning movie Saving Private Ryan.
小題1:Capa originally wanted to be ____________.
A.a(chǎn) journalistB.a(chǎn) writerC.a(chǎn)n American D.a(chǎn) photographer
小題2:Why did Capa change his name?
A.To hide his identity.
B.Because he had been involved in protests.
C.To sound more American.
D.Because he had to leave Hungary.
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A.fight in the civil warB.build his reputation
C.have a holiday D.take photographs
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A.was taken by someone elseB.was definitely real
C.wasn’t even taken in Spain D.cannot be proven real or staged
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A.most of Capa’s images of the Normandy landing were destroyed
B.Capa lost both of his two cameras
C.Capa’s images inspired an Oscar winning movie
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Shirley Temple, who died on February 10, 2014, was that rare example of a Hollywood child star who, when the cameras stopped rolling, carved out a new career.
For four years, she was Hollywood’s biggest box-office star representing the kind of sweet, innocent girl that everyone wanted as their daughter. However, years later, she reappeared as a successful politician.
Shirley Temple was born in Santa Monica, California on 23 April 1928. Encouraged by her mother, she learned to dance while she was just three.
In 1934, Stand Up and Cheer became her first film and the film was a great success. At the age of six she was earning $1,250 a week — more than $21,000 at today’s values.
Across the world, audiences flocked to see her in films such as Little Miss Marker, The Little Colonel and The Littlest Rebel.
In 1935 she was awarded a special Oscar (Academy Award) and her foot and hand prints were added to those of stars such as Jean Harlow and Mary Pickford outside Grauman’s Chinese theatre in Hollywood. The peak of her film career came in 1939 when The Little Princess became a box-office success.
Temple starred in a total of 43 feature films. But she found it difficult to maintain her film career in adulthood and retired from Hollywood in 1950.
She disappeared from the spotlight for nearly 20 years. She returned to the public eye in 1967, as a Republican candidate for Congress. When Nixon became president, he rewarded her with an appointment to the American delegation to the United Nations. Then, in 1974, President Ford appointed her the United States Ambassador(大使) to Ghana. George Bush Snr, appointed her Ambassador to Czechoslovakia.
Shirley Temple drew a line between her childhood stardom and her later political career. “Some people are stuck on this image of the little girl,” she once said. “She is not me. We shouldn’t live in the past; my life is now.” Nevertheless, for many across the world, the name Shirley Temple always called to mind a superstar child.
小題1:Shirley Temple died at the age of _____.
A.75B.80C.86D.90
小題2:What happened to Shirley Temple when she was 7 years old?
A.She won a special Oscar.
B.She began to learn to dance.
C.She appeared in her first film.
D.She retired from Hollywood.
小題3:Which of the following represents the peak of Shirley Temple’s film career?
A.Stand Up and Cheer.B.Little Miss Marker.
C.The Little Colonel.D.The Little Princess.
小題4:We can infer that _____.
A.the films in which Shirley Temple starred in adulthood were not popular
B.Jean Harlow and Mary Pickford appeared in the same film with Temple
C.Shirley Temple succeeded in being elected as Congresswoman in 1967
D.Shirley Temple was the youngest person to receive an Academy Award

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