邢唷>? wy?v欹_ 鳵規bjbj8bbxNFFFFFZZZ8d\Z>RR"tttOF$?2FOOFFttFtFtt€R+霢捴0>?CF??F$>?, : _l蟼w闚乢-Nf[2021J\貧 N駛韹 Nf[gP桍e脋`N N N0桘t銐 (qQ15\槝蟢\槝2.5R 醤R37.5R)AFire Prevention InformationThe University of Adelaide employs a full-time staff of fire prevention professionals. They inspect all campus buildings and test and maintain all sprinkler(稶4lmpkp艌n)systems fire alarms and fire extinguishers (mpkphV). They also provide educational programs or fire safety in the residence hall. Whenever you move to a new area, you should locate the fire alarm pull stations and the two exits nearest your room.Fire AlarmsThe floors of all campus buildings are equipped with manual(Kb≧剉)fire alarm systems which include fire alarm pull stations and pipes. Most are also equipped with automatic fire alarm systems consisting of heat detectors, smoke detectors and sprinklers. For your safety, never tamper with(醼qNFd_)these systems. False fire alarms are illegal and may lead to imprisonment.Fire DrillsA fire drill will be conducted in your residence hall every semester. During a fire drill, please do the following:Take your room key and ID Failed to download image: http://qbm-images.oss-cn-hangzhou.aliyuncs.com/QBM/2020/8/3/2519867658747904/2522076407029760/STEM/27096eaa2417471aa51c358ccc1823c6.png] close and lock the door to your room.稥xit immediately from the nearest emergency exit do not use a lift.稭eet outside of your residence hall and wait for further instructions.Fire ExtinguishersFire extinguishers are located on each floor and in each apartment. Use a fire extinguisher only if you have been trained to do so. Irresponsible use of a fire extinguisher can create a dangerous situation for other residents and could result in damage to personal property.Misuse of a fire extinguisher will result in fines.Smoke DetectorA smoke detector is on the ceiling in your room. Some buildings also have heat detectors on the ceilings. Do the following to ensure the safe operation of your smoke detector:稩f your smoke detector is working properly, the red light should be on. If the red light is not blinking(陼≧) contact residence hall staff immediately.Do not cover or block your smoke detector in any way.If a smoke detector sets off an alarm and there is no fire or smoke, inform your hall staff.1. What do the automatic fire alarm systems include?A. Pipes and smoke detectors. B. Smoke detectors and sprinklers.C. Fire alarm pull stations and pipes. D. Sprinklers and fire alarm pull stations2. What do we know about the use of fire extinguishers?A. Using them wrongly results in punishment.B. Irresponsible use of them can damage them.C. Improper use of them can destroy the apartment.D. Using them without a trainer present is forbidden.3. To ensure the safe operation of the smoke detector, one should_________.A. contact the hall staff regularly B. cover the things that burn easilyC start the smoke detector in a fire D. make certain the red light is workingBThe government of Norway is planning to build an unusual storage center on an island in the Arctic Ocean. The place would be large enough to hold about two million seeds. The goal is to represent all crops known to scientists. The British magazine New Scientist published details of the plan last month. The structure will be designed to protect the world抯 food supply against nuclear war climate change and other possible threats. It will be built in a mountain on the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen. The mountain is less than one thousand kilometers from the North Pole, the northernmost position on Earth.An international group called the Global Crop Diversity Trust is working on the project. The director of the group, Cary Fowler, spoke to New Scientist. He said the project would let the world rebuild agriculture if in his words 搕he worst came to the worst? Norway is expected to start work next year. The project is expected to cost three million dollars. Workers will drill deep in the side of a sandstone mountain. Temperatures in the area never rise above zero degrees Celsius. The seeds will be protected behind concrete walls a meter thick and high-security doors.The magazine report says the collection will represent the products of ten thousand years of farming. Most of the seeds at first will come from collections at seed banks in Africa, Asia and Latin America. To last a long time, seeds need to be kept in very low temperatures. Workers will not be present all the time. But they plan to replace the air inside the storage space each winter. Winter temperatures on the island are about eighteen degrees below zero Celsius. The cold weather would protect the seeds even if the air could not be replaced.Mr. Fowler says the proposed structure will be the world抯 most secure gene bank. He says the plant seeds would only be used when all other seeds are gone for some reason. Norway first proposed the idea in the 1980s. But security concerns delayed the plan. At that time, the Soviet Union was permitted use of Spitsbergen. New Scientist says the plan won United Nations approval in October at a meeting in Rome of the Food and Agriculture Organization.4. The project is meant to_____.A. increase the world抯 food production in the futureB. carry out some scientific experiments on plant genesC. protect crop seeds from dying out in case of possible disastersD. build an exhibition centre of the world抯 plant seeds5. Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the above passage?A. The government of Norway will perform the project alone.B. Seeds to be collected there were produced ten thousand years ago.C. Spitsbergen is chosen because it is away from the threat of unclear war forever.D. Temperature is a major consideration when choosing the storage place.6. We can infer from the text that_____.A. People will get newly-developed seeds from the center every yearB. The storage center will greatly promote the development of world agricultureC. Norway meant to have built the storage centre more than 20 years agoD. There haven抰 been any seed storage centers in the world before7. What is probably the best title of the passage?A. Noah抯 Ark of Plant Seeds in Plan B. The Best Place to Store SeedsC. Concerns of World Food Supply D. A New Way to Feed the WorldCBad news sells. If it bleeds, it leads. No news is good news, and good news is no news. Those are the classic rules for the evening broadcasts and the morning papers. But now that information is being spread and monitored in different ways, researchers are discovering new rules. By tracking people抯 e-mails and online posts, scientists have found that good news can spread faster and farther than disasters and sob stories.揟he 慽f it bleeds rule works for mass media, says Jonah Berger, a scholar at the University of Pennsylvania. 揟hey want your eyeballs and don抰 care how you抮e feeling. But when you share a story with your friends, you care a lot more how they react. You don抰 want them to think of you as a Debbie Downer.Researchers analyzing word-of-mouth communication梕-mails, Web posts and reviews, face-to-face conversations梖ound that it tended to be more positive than negative, but that didn抰 necessarily mean people preferred positive news. Was positive news shared more often simply because people experienced more good things than bad things? To test for that possibility, Dr. Berger looked at how people spread a particular set of news stories: thousands of articles on The New York Times website. He and a Penn colleague analyzed the 搈ost e-mailed list for six months. One of his first findings was that articles in the science section were much more likely to make the list than non-science articles. He found that science amazed Times readers and made them want to share this positive feeling with others.Readers also tended to share articles that were exciting or funny, or that inspired negative feelings like anger or anxiety, but not articles that left them merely sad. They needed to be aroused one way or the other, and they preferred good news to bad. The more positive an article, the more likely it was to be shared, as Dr. Berger explains in his new book, 揅ontagious: Why Things Catch On.8. What do the classic rules mentioned in the text apply to?A. News reports. B. Research papers. C. Private e-mails. D. Daily conversations9. What can we infer about people like Debbie Downer?A. They re socially inactive. B. They re good at telling stories.C. They re inconsiderate of others. D. They抮e careful with their words.10. Which tended to be the most e-mailed according to Dr. Berger抯 research?A. Sports news. B. Science articles. C. Personal accounts. D. Financial reviews.11. What can be a suitable title for the text?A. Sad Stories Travel Far and WideB. Online News Attracts More PeopleC. Reading Habits Change with the TimesD. Good News Beats Bad on Social NetworksDA substitute teacher crunch has forced Chicago area school districts to raise sub pay, to use parents as subs and even to seek out teachers from moonlighting police and fire department ranks. The crunch also means good subs are getting harder to find, some say. 揑t抯 not only a quantity problem but a quality problem, said Barbara Radner, director of DePaul University抯 Center for Urban Education, which serves as expert partner to 31 academically troubled Chicago public schools. 揥e抮e getting to the bottom of the talent pool and it抯 empty, she said. And a bad sub, Radner explained, can move a class backward by confusing students.Radner said Chicago抯 sub shortage is at 揷risis levels and the worst she抯 seen in 15 years, although city school officials say West Side schools seem to be affected the most. Using the Chicago system抯 substitute teacher center is like engaging in 揜ussian roulette? Radner said. 揈very sixth sub you get could be a total blowup. Increasingly, she said, principals in schools she works with say they can抰 get subs, or the subs they get leave midday because they can抰 handle the job. Chicago school officials are recruiting police officers and firefighters to sub in high-crime areas that some subs refuse to enter. A sub recruitment push is also planned on college campuses among graduate and doctoral students who may find the part-time work attractive, Schools Chief Executive Officer Paul Vallas said.Teachers often leave detailed lesson plans for subs if they know in advance they will be off, and keep 揺mergency plans on file for unexpected absences, such as an illness. But Radner said emergency plans can amount to 揳 recipe for baby-sitter. Carolyn Martin said her daughter抯 last sub at Bolingbrook抯 Tibbott Elementary in Valley View District 365 was so unpleasant that she may demand to sit in the classroom next time there抯 a problem sub. 揟he last time they had a sub, the substitute teacher had to call the principal into the room, Martin said, 揟his is a third-grade classroom, and the lady couldn抰 even handle it?Demand for subs is high because of several factors, school officials say. For starters, those who hold sub certificate may not be using them because they have found better-paying jobs in today抯 booming economy. 揝ix or seven years ago, Schaumburg District 54 Associate Supt. Kenneth Cull said, 揑 used to have 30 real estate agents sign up for sub work because they had college degrees and business was slow. I don抰 have that anymore. Sub pools have been further consumed by several waves of early teacher retirements and increased student enrollments both of which have meant more subs are being hired as full-time teachers.12. What is troubling the Chicago school districts?A. People in unrelated areas find jobs in school teaching.B. Quality of regular and sub teachers needs improving.C. Students suffer greatly from unprofessional teachers.D. Chicago area is in bad need of qualified sub teachers. 13. From the second paragraph, we learn ________.A. the sub crunches before were not as bad as the present ones B. many principals quit their jobs as they can t handle the situation C. police officers are sent to the high-crime areas to keep orderD. six out of ten substitute teachers come from college campuses14. According to Radner, the emergency plans________. A. are most effective in mending the situation B. are detested by most parentsC. are resisted by most students D. do not efficiently meet the situation15. Which of the following is NOT a factor that leads to the shortage of qualified subs?A. Many certified teachers quit their teaching positions for other professions.B. Sound economic situation attracts many candidates from teaching positions.C. There are more students admitted to schools than ever before.D. Many teachers retire earlier from their positions than they should.孨0N 悢N (qQ5\槝蟢\槝2.5R 醤R12.5R)Different CulturesThe cultures of the East and the West really distinguish each other a lot. 16 The origin of the eastern cultures is mainly from two countries: China and India. Both of the two cultures are fostered by rivers梩he Yellow River in China and the Hindu River in India. 17 Then in Tang Dynasty of China, the Chinese culture gradually went overseas to Japan, mixed into the Japanese society and shaped the Japanese culture nowadays. Though a bit different from the Chinese one, it belongs to the same system. When the two mother rivers gave birth to the Eastern culture, another famous culture was brought up on the Mesopotamian Plain梩he Mesopotamian Civilization. This civilization later on developed into the cultures of Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome. 18 Like the Chinese culture, the European one also crossed waters. When the British settled down in America, their culture went with them over the Atlantic Ocean. So the American culture doesn抰 distinguish from the European one a lot. 19 Take the language system for example. In the East, most languages belong to the pictographic language while the Western languages are mostly based on the Latin system. Other causes like human race difference counts as well. But what抯 more, due to the far distance and the steep areas between the East and West, the two cultures seldom communicate until recent centuries. So they grew up totally in their own ways with almost no interference from the other.The differences are everywhere. 20 But different cultures make the world of 21st century more colorful. The cultural gap should not be the obstacle to the civilization of human being. It ought to be the motivation of our going farther. A. Let us work together to keep a variety of culture.B. One important thing is to learn about other cultures.C. And these two are well-known as the base of the European culture.D. At the same time, some other differences add to the cultural differences.E. This is because the culture systems are two separate systems on the whole.F. They helped the two cultures develop for centuries and form their own styles.G. They are obvious and affect people s ways of thinking and their views of the world. N0 孾b_kXzz (qQ15\槝蟢\槝1R 醤R15R)At the mid-May in 2018,the 69 year-old amputee(4x*b€ Xia Boyu finally stood proud on two artificial legs on the peak of Mount Qomolangma, a symbol showcasing to the world the power of __21__More than 40 years ago, Xia __22__ both of his feet to frost bite after lending his sleeping bag to a team member during the trip to climb Mount Qomolangma.Even though artificial legs were not __23__ in China at the time, Xia strongly__24__that he would one day fulfill his __25__dream and so, before that day came, the best thing to do was to ___26__himself by training constantly. Three years later he finally got his new legs, which enabled him to __27__ his sports career.However, fate once again took a __28__ turn when he was in his 40s.In 1993,illness developed on the stumps(媖 on his legs, which required __29__ third of his lower legs be amputated. Three years after that, he was diagnosed with lymph cancer.Over the years, Xia never gave up his dream of climbing Mount Qomolangma.__30__ to his final successful climb in 2018,he had tried four other times to climb to the summit, but each time Lady Luck gave him the __31__The last time he __32__ his dream was in 2016.The then 67-year-old was only 94 meters from the summit, but a snow storm __33__ his way. Taking his team members' __34__ into consideration, Xia made the __35__decision to go back.On May 14, Xia felt __36__ and a strong sense of fulfillment__37__ in him, standing on the peak of the highest mountain in the world.揟he key is to focus on your dreams, instead of the __38__you encounter along the way. I didn't regret anything that I had done and accepted everything that life had __39__me,but I never stopped fighting against __40__,擷ia said, stressing that fulfilling one's dream has nothing to do with age, disability or the thoughts or expectations of others, but a firm belief in yourself.21. A. strength B. confidence C. dreams D. mind22. A. lost B. gave C. cost D. paid23. A. affordable B. available C. acceptable D. reachable24. A. confirmed B. assured C. believed D. suspected25. A. unchallenged B. unfinished C. unsolved D. unreached26. A. pressure B. present C. prepare D. preserve27. A. continue B. begin C. complete D. take28. A. sudden B. sharp C. good D. dark29. A. one B. other C. the other D. another30. A. Back B. Contrary C. Previous D. Similar31. A. cold shoulder B. red carpet C. tough nut D. last straw32. 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A. blanketed B. bathed C. blocked D. smoothed34. A. safety B. honor C. credit D. struggle35. A. final B. heartbreaking C. wise D. disappointing36. A. tiredness B. relief C. pain D. loneliness37. A. showed up B. welled up C. came up D. sprang up38. A. distrust B. doubt C. criticism D. hardships39. A. thrown at B. provided for C. arranged for D. distributed to40. A. challenges B. fate C. fear D. mischiefs踁09hnc噀匭筟kXzzM10 U1 Teach a man to fishA concert held by an Irish musician, who had been shocked by the (1) g_________ of worldwide hunger, in 1985 made the (2) h________. In (3) w________ with the (4) ________蹚?N緰剉僗0W of worldwide hunger, the UN set up an (5) ________:g刧 called the World Food Program in 1963. The WFP has organized a number of programs including the Food-for-Growth programme, which target people most at risk, such as babies, (6) p_________ women and old people. Today some developing countries in Africa, Asia and South America stand at a (7) c_________. Despite great development, they still need to (8) a_________ the problem of hunger and the economical (9) _________頱nc . What they need is a (10) _________8lEN剉 solution to this long-term problem. Their (11) _________觺刧 Fh秅 needs to be improved for new jobs to be created, thus giving the poor some extra income to pay their living (12) e_________.Another worldwide serious problem is, widely acknowledged, the environment issue. As for this issue, 鑭陓騶魘 }!},}-}J}K}T}U}b}c}亇倉拀搣衹襺趠軁閩~鄜鎫HLnr€€垇巵pv靷騻V\瑑皟"(&,"(鋱陥06矇笁z}攰棅|蜚蜚蜚蜚蜚蜚蜚蜚蜚蜚蜚蜚崖蚵蚵蚵蚵蚵蚵蚵蚵蚵蚵蚵蚵缆蚵蚵蚵蚵蚵蚵蚵蚵Uhh錶CJOJQJaJ#h錶h錶5丆JOJPJQJaJh;h錶CJOJQJaJh錶CJOJQJaJo(Dserious (13) a_________ need to be made in worldwide development. For example, coal, gas and oil, these (14) c_________ unrenewable energy, are (15) _________塴飝ir of animals and plants bodies. So we need (16) a_________ energy. Luckily, in many parts of the world, (17) t_________ steps are being taken to introduce these forms of alternative energy. Such deeds will (18) h_________ help end (19) s_________ destruction of the environment and see alternative energy promoted around the world, thus (20) _________JR1_ the harm caused by the usage of the unrenewable energy. T{Hh桘t銐: A: BAD B: CDCA C: ACBD D: DADA N 悢N EFCDG孾b_ 21. C 22. A 23. B 24. C 25. B 26. C 27. A 28. D 29. D 30. C 31. A 32. B 33. C 34. A 35. B 36. B 37. B 38. D 39. A 40. 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