IQUIQUE, Chile (Reuters) — Rescue workers at the San Jose gold and copper mine in northern Chile had reason to sing this week. A small hole drilled into the earth became a passage to freedom for 33 trapped miners, who spent 69 days underground. “Never have people been trapped for so long so deeply,” says a doctor at NASA, the American space agency, which helped in the rescue.
But the chief medical officer for the miners said most are in good enough health to leave the hospital within a day or so. The first three recovered and went home Thursday night.
For much of the day the miners relaxed with Chilean President Sebastian Pinera. The 32 Chileans and 1 Bolivian still wore special sunglasses to protect their eyes.
A partial mine collapse on 5th August trapped them more than half a kilometer underground. They had to stretch a two-day food supply. For two weeks no one knew if they were alive or dead. Later, they received supplies.
The first miner rescued on Wednesday was Florencio Avalos. The second was Mario Sepulveda, who talked about how the experience tested his faith. The last miner up was Luis Urzua, who was the shift leader when his crew became trapped.
Rescuers used a metal cage to pull the miners to safety in less than 24 hours — faster than expected. The rescue capsule was a half-meter wide and known as the Phoenix, an imaginary bird from ancient stories. It bursts into flames but is continually reborn and rises from the ashes.
Chile’s Navy built the capsule with advice from mining experts and NASA engineers. It worked like an elevator, traveling up and down on a cable through a shaft(豎井)drilled 622 meters into the rocks.
Millions of people around the world watched the rescue. More than one thousand journalists traveled to the mine in the Atacama Desert to report on the rescue. They joined family members of the miners and rescue crews housed in an area of tents known as Camp Hope.
小題1:What would be the best title for the passage?
A.Rescued miners speak out
B.Miners’ life deep underground
C.A rebirth for 33 rescued miners in Chile
D.Chilean president honors rescued miners
小題2:How many rescued miners are still in hospital?
A.3.B.30.C.33.D.69.
小題3:We can infer from the passage that ______.
A.a(chǎn)ll the trapped miners are Chileans
B.the Chileans rescued the miners alone
C.the rescue caught the world’s attention
D.the trapped miners lived easily underground
小題4: Which of the following is true of the Phoenix?
A.It was a wooden cage like a capsule.
B.It worked efficiently in the rescue.
C.It was named after a real Chilean bird.
D.It was built by NASA engineers.
小題5:The rescue is great for the reason that ______.
A.33 trapped miners were saved
B.the American space agency took part
C.Chilean President was on the rescuing spot
D.it lasted so long and the miners were trapped so deep

小題1:C
小題1:B
小題1:C
小題1:B
小題1:D
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Visitors were still paying 20 yuan to hug Lele and have their photos taken yesterday despite a ban that forbids any such sontact with a wild animal. The ban was introduced more than a week ago.
“The city zoo broke the law and should be prohibited,” said an official at the State Forestry Administration.
The administration notice last Monday clearly bans contact with wild or captive animals, the abuse of wild or captive animals for performance purposes and any improper business related to wild animal products.
“Close contact with the chimp is the only bit that breaks the ban and we will end that soon,” said Beijing Zoo spokeswoman Ye Minxia yesterday.
“The chimpanzee performance can’t stopped overnight as we have a contract with a company scheduled to terminate at the end of this year,” she said.
“The zoo is negotiating with the company in the hope of terminating it sooner,” Ye said. She refused to answer directly whether the chimp photo sessions were still ongoing yesterday, instead, saying. “It’s very likely we will cancel it tomorrow.”
Zoo staff confirmed photos were taken yesterday, one employee saying 2-year-old Lele “works” form 10am to 3pm daily, according to the Leagl Mirror.
Such activities not only damage the mental and physical health of the animals, but also risk the safety of visitors, according to the official website of the State Forestry Administration where the notice was released.
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小題1:Where can people most probably find the article?
A.In research reports.B.In newspapers.
C.In science fictions.D.In book reviews.
小題2:What do we learn about Lele?
A.It’s used to make money.B.It is hit by the people.
C.It attacked its owners.D.It died unnaturally.
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A.Zoos Disobey National BanB.Profit-making Zoos
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Human Capital - How what you know shapes your life
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This book explores the influence of education and learning on our societies and lives and examines what countries are doing to provide education and training to support people throughout their lives.
Economic Policy Reforms -- Going/or Growth, 2007 Edition
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Based on a broad set of indicators of structural policies and performance, Going for Growth 2007 takes stock of the recent progress made in implementing policy reforms and identifies, for each OECD country, five policy priorities to lift growth.
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A handy pocket reference containing key data covering the entire range of OECD
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A.OECD in Figures 2006-2007.
B.OECD Economic Outlook.
C.Human Capital.
D.Climate Change in the European Alps.
小題2:We can learn from the passage that Alps is _______ .
A.a(chǎn)n Austrian interesting place most attractive in summer seasons
B.a(chǎn)n European mountain belonging to three countries
C.a(chǎn) stadium for skiing lovers from five European countries
D.a(chǎn)n European mountain famous for its winter skiing
小題3:From the book with ISBN ____ you can get a wider range of information about OEC  D.
A.9789264029088                 B.9789264022638
C.9789264030954                D.9789264030473
小題4:You should afford _______ Euro dollars for a book to know about the recent progress in economic policies in the OECD countries.
A.60B.15C.55D.80
小題5:All the five books are ______.
A.written in English
B.concerned about OECD countries
C.involved with education and economy
D.published by the same print

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

CONCORD, N.H.—Torrential rain forced hundreds of people from their homes in parts of New England on Sunday, as water flowed over dams and washed out roads.
The governors of New Hampshire and Massachusetts declared states of emergency. Maine’s governor also declared a state of emergency for one county. “It’s a very serious situation,” said New Hampshire Governor John Lynch, adding that forecasters were predicting 12 to 15 inches of rain by the end of the storm in parts of southern New Hampshire. “It continues to change and the situation continues to worsen.”
In some towns, police and fire crews used boats to get people out of their homes and stranded cars after hundreds of roads were damaged. Others got around in kayaks(皮船). Some towns shut down, not letting anyone pass except emergency vehicles. “The town is cut right in half,” said Glenn Laramie, police chief in Andover, N.H.
A dam in Milton, N.H., was in danger of failing, which could send a 10-foot wall of water downstream, the National Weather Service said in a bulletin. People downstream were being evacuated from the town.
In Massachusetts, cars were pulled from flooded streets in downtown Peabody, about 20 miles north of Boston, and about 300 people were evacuated from an apartment complex for seniors. Businesses stacked sandbags at their doors, trying to prevent damage from water that at one point rose to waist-deep.
Some parts of New Hampshire had seen 7 inches of rain by midday Sunday and forecasters said up to 5 more inches might come during the day. About 100 residents were evacuated from their homes in Wakefield, N.H., because of concerns about two dams in the area.
Flooding in New Hampshire in October killed seven people, carried off homes and washed away miles of roads down to bedrock.
In Maine, flooding was reported on 60 roads in the southern part of the state, said governor’s spokeswoman Crystal Canney. More than 50 homes in Sanford and several in Kennebunk also were evacuated, state officials said.
小題1:Which is NOT true according to the article?
A.The situation in N. H. is very serious.
B.New England is a region of the U.S.
C.A state of emergency was declared in three whole states.
D.Seven people lost their lives in New Hampshire in October.
小題2:What is the main idea of the passage?
A.Two dams failed in New Hampshire.
B.Flood in New Hampshire.
C.State of emergency in New England.
D.Severe floods in three U.S. states.
小題3:In paragraph 4, the underlined word “evacuate” most probably means“    ”.
A.rescueB.trappedC.send awayD.wash away
小題4:Which is NOT a part of New Hampshire?
A.PeabodyB.ConcordC.MiltonD.Andover
小題5:What was mentioned to cope with the situation?
A.Some towns shut down.B.Some dams were open.
C.People all left their homes.D.Some temporary houses were built.

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Following the nuclear at the Fukushima (福島) nuclear power station in Japan, Germany has decided to abandon the use of nuclear energy sooner than it had planned.
Germany was planning to cut its use of nuclear power slowly over 25 years. But now, the government has speeded up its program. Germany’s government has said that seven of its 17 nuclear reactors (反應(yīng)堆) will stop working for three months for safety checks.
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Some experts think Germany is setting a good example for countries such as the US to follow. Germany now gets 23 percent of its energy from nuclear power –about as much as the US.
However, France, which relies on nuclear energy for more than 70 percent of its power, shows no sign of changing its policy.
小題1:
We can most probably read the article _______. 
A.in a newspaper B.in a pamphlet(小冊(cè)子)
C.in an advertisementD.in a textbook
小題2:
The most appropriate heading for this article is _______.
A.Germany to develop its new resources of energy
B.Nuclear power no longer popular in Germany
C.Germany to have safety checks for some nuclear reactors
D.Germany to end its nuclear energy program
小題3:
According to the article, all of the following statements are true EXCEPT______.
A.In both the US and Germany, approximately a quarter of their energy are from nuclear power now.
B.The explosion of some Fukushima nuclear reactors has quickened Germany’s pace to abandon nuclear energy.
C.France, which relies on nuclear energy for more than 70 percent of its power, will follow Germany and cut its use of it at any cost.
D.The Chernobyl nuclear disaster seemingly cast a huge shadow over the Germans, making them increasingly suspicious of the safety of nuclear energy.

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

This is the VOA Special English Education Report. A few weeks ago, we talked about the Test of English as a Foreign Language, or TOEFL. A listener in Cambodia named Thida asks if American colleges and universities also accept the IELTS exam. IELTS is the International English Language Testing System. It was developed by the University of Cambridge ESOL examiners.
Cambridge ESOL says the test measures true-to-life ability to communicate in English for education, immigration or employment. The IELTS tests listening, reading, writing and speaking skills. It uses a mixture of accents and spellings, including British English and American English.
The test is used by government agencies, schools and professional organizations in one hundred and twenty countries. And, yes, that includes the United States. The many American schools that accepted the IELTS can be found on the Web at felts.org.
Some schools accept both the TOEFL and the IELTS, but the graduate school at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, for example, says it prefers the IEITS.
The listening and speaking parts are the same for everyone who takes the IELTS, but people have a choice of reading and writing tests -- either academic or general training.
The listening test takes thirty minutes. There are forty questions based on a recording. The reading test takes sixty minutes. Students answer forty questions based on three written passages.
The writing test also takes sixty minutes. Students have to write two essays. One essay has to be at least one hundred and fifty words long and the other at least two hundred and fifty words. The shorter one is description of something; the longer one has to support and argument.
The speaking test takes less than fifteen minutes. The score is based on a recorded talk between the student and a test examiner.
And that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach. If you have a general question for our series, write to special@voanews.com. I'm Barbara Klein.
小題1:What does TOEFL stand for?
A.The Voice of AmericaB.The International English Language Testing System
C.The Test of English as a Foreign Language
D.The Test of English as a Native Language
小題2:The International English Language Testing System commonly takes _______ in all.
A.less than 160 minutesB.more than 165 minutes
C.no more than 160 minutesD.less than 166 minutes
小題3: According to the passage, we can infer _______.
A.IELTS is efficient and necessary if you want to go to English-speaking countries
B.IELTS is completely different from TOEFL
C.every American needs to accept TOEFLD.IEITS isn't used more widely than TOEFL
小題4:What is the main idea of the passage?
A.How can the readers write papers to the VOA programme?
B.It talks about some ways to pass TOEFL.
C.It introduces IELTS.
D.How can the readers pass two kinds of tests?

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

XI’AN---Seven people died in a fire early on Wednesday morning in Xi’an, capital of Shanxi Province. A restaurant with a karaoke hall in the southern suburbs caught fire around 2 a. m. and seven waitresses who were sleeping on the second floor of the restaurant were killed. The restaurant was completely destroyed and the waitresses, the local police said, were killed by toxic smoke from burning decorations.
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TEL AVIV---An Israeli couple kissed for 30 hours and 45 minutes which, a spokeswoman said yesterday, was a world record. The couple, both in their twenties, started kissing on Monday at 8:30 p.m. along with 250 other couples in a contest. “For nearly 31 hours they didn’t eat, drink, talk or even go to the bathroom. And the whole time, they were standing up”, said Arielle Goldman, who handled public relations for the event. She said a representative of the Guinness Book of World Records was on hang to witness the event, recorded on video. The previous record was 29 hour and 37 minutes, Goldman said. The winning couple received two round-the-world plane tickets and $2,500. (277 words)
小題1:Which of the following statements is right?
A.The news report didn’t mention the loss caused by the fire.
B.After reading the report we know how the fire broke out.
C.The reporter tended to think the bomb had something to do with World War II
D.The police refused to admit the bomb had anything to do with World War II.
小題2: The underlined word “toxic” means _____.
A.poisonousB.dangerousC.hotD.thick
小題3: The Israeli couple kissed for nearly 31 hours_____.
A.to test their enduranceB.to set a new world record
C.to show their special loveD.to prove they are very healthy
小題4:Why did so many couples take part in the contest?
A.Because it was a good chance to enjoy themselves.
B.Because they were poor and wanted to gain the 2,500 dollars.
C.Because they wanted to attract people’s attention.
D.Because they aimed at the honor and prize.

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

China launched its fifth Beidou orbiter into space on Sunday morning, moving it one step closer to its goal of building a navigation(導(dǎo)航) and positioning satellite network.
The Beidou, or Compass, system is being built to rival the US-developed GPS, the European Union's Galileo and Russia's Global Navigation Satellite System. It can allow travelers, drivers and military officials to know their locations.
The fifth orbiter was launched on top of a Long March 3A carrier rocket at 5:30 am on Sunday from Xichang of Southwest China's Sichuan province.
It is the third Compass satellite launched this year, following launches on Jan 17 and June 2.
The short interval of less than two months since the last launch demonstrated that "the country is stepping into a busy period of launching the Compass satellites", an unnamed official in charge of the project said last month.
The first two orbiters were launched in 2007 and 2009 respectively.
Sun Jiadong, the Beidou program's chief designer, said on June 21 in a TV interview that China would launch 13 to 15 Beidou navigation satellites into orbit by 2012 to form a network that provides regional service covering the neighboring areas.
And in about 10 years, the network would be expanded to include more than 30 satellites covering the globe, he said.
The system is a crucial part of the country's space infrastructure for providing navigation and positioning services in transportation, meteorology, petroleum prospecting, forest fire monitoring, disaster forecasting, telecommunications and public security.
In addition, a global positioning system is crucial to any country's national security and defense, said Ran Chengqi, an official in charge of the program, referring to the fact that the US initially built its GPS system for military purposes.
It is unimaginable for China to go without such a system, he said.
Earlier reports cited(引用) Song Xiaojun, a Beijing-based military expert, as saying that 90 percent of the world's current weapons systems need a global positioning system.
小題1:This news report was probably released           .
A.in January, 2010B.in June, 2010C.in July, 2010D.in August, 2010
小題2:The Compass System is expected to finally cover     in the future.
A.ChinaB.China and its neigh boring areas
C.Asia, Europe and OceaniaD.the earth
小題3:At the very beginning, the GPS system was built to help      .
A.military officers to judge their locationsB.travelers to know their locations
C.drivers to reach their destinations easilyD.hunters to find wild animals smoothly

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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解


China recorded fewer traffic accidents in 2001 than in 2000 and a lower going continued in January this year .
The traffic accidents in 2001 totaled 270, 000 , fewer by 20, 000 than in 2000 .
But the number of the dead for 2001 was 54, 000 , an increase of 1, 000 from the year before . The increase was not as slow as that in recent years .
A government official said in Beijing yesterday that 3, 821 persons were killed in highway traffic accidents last month , a drop of 12.8 percent from January 2001 . He also said there were 21, 201 traffic accidents in the first month of the year , 10.1 percent fewer than January last year , and 11, 700 people injured .
The traffic accidents last year caused a loss worth 27.32 million yuan , about 2.9 million US dollars .
Economic Daily also said 170, 000 persons were injured in the traffic accidents in 2001 , fewer by 10, 000 than in 2000 .
( From China Daily , February 16 , 2002)
1. In 2000 the total number of the traffic accidents was ________ .
A. 290, 000     B. 250, 000      C. 270, 000      D. 20, 000
2. In 2000 ________ persons were killed in the traffic accidents .
A. 1, 000     B. 53, 000      C. 54, 000      D. 55, 000
3. Which is true according to the news report ?
A. The traffic accidents in 2002 will go up continuously .
B. Economic Daily said the traffic accidents caused a loss worth 2.9 million US dollars in 2000 .
C. In January 2002 , there were 3, 821 highway traffic accidents .
D. There were more traffic accidents in January 2001 than in January 2002 .
4. The best title for this news report should be ________ .
A. Road Accidents 2001        B. Road Accidents 2000
C. Death Up or Down This Year  D. $ 2.9 Million Loss in Traffic Accidents

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