武汉工业学院普通专升本国际贸易专业原题
集团标准化办公室:[VV986T-J682P28-JP266L8-68PNN]
快速阅读原文
In 1989 an 8.2 earthquake almost flattened America, killing over 30,000 people in less than four minutes. In the midst of utter devastation and chaos, a father left his wife safely at home and rushed to the school where his son was supposed to be, only to discover that the building was as flat as a pancake.
After the unforgettably initial shock, he remembered the
promise he had made to his son: \for you!\of ruins that once was the school, it looked hopeless, but he kept remembering his commitment to his son.
He began to direct his attention towards where he walked his son to class at school each morning. Remembering his son s classroom would be in the back right corner of the building, he rushed there and started digging through the ruins.
As he was digging, other helpless parents arrived, clutching their hearts, saying: \parents tried to pull him off what was left of the school, saying: \
Go home! Come on, face reality, there s nothing you can do!\ To each parent he responded with one line: \help me now\The fire chief showed up and tried to pull him off the school s ruins saying, \You re in danger. We ll take care of it. Go home.\
loving, caring American father asked, \ The police came and said, \over. You re endangering others. Go home. We ll handle it!\he replied, \
No one helped.
Courageously he went on alone because he needed to know for himself: \hours...24 hours...36 hours...then, in the 38th hour, he pulled back
a large stone and heard his son s voice. He screamed his son s name, \not to worry. I told em that if you were alive, you d save me and when you saved me, they d be saved. You promised, No matter what happens, I ll always be there for you! You did it, Dad!\going on in there How is it\
\thirsty and thankful you re here. When the building collapsed, it made a triangle, and it saved us.\
\
\get me! No matter what happens, I know you ll always be there for me!\
1-7为T/F/NG判断题 8-10为填空题 阅读理解
A railroad was being built all the way down the east coast off
Florida, from Jacksonville to Miami and Negro workers were employed because they were cheap. A great many of them were in Daytona. Most of them had children. They were living in shacks worse than those in The Terry in Augusta. The children were running wild in the streets. Mary Bethune seemed to hear a voice say, \your school there.\
Her husband, Albertus, wasn't so sure about her school. He thought Palatka was a pretty good place for them to live. Mary listened but she never gave up her idea. She knew that if she went to Daytona, Albertuswould come too.
One day she begged a ride for herself and her little boy with a
family that was going to Daytona. It was only seventy miles away. But in 1904 the sand was deep on Florida roads. Practically no one had an automobile -- certainly not the poor family that gave Mary and little Albert a ride. So it was three dusty days after they left Palatka before they reached Daytona. There Mary hunted up the only person she knew, and she and little Albert stayed with this friend for a few days.
As she had done in The Terry in Augusta, Mary walked up and down the poor streets of Daytona. She was looking for two things -- a building for the school she was determined to start and some pupils for that school.