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Enjoy a unique evening of fun on the boat, with live music by Mike O Brien and a delicious barbecue dinner.Adult: $ 59 Kids (3-12) : $29 Two and under are FreeLOCATION: Dana Point HarborBOOK ONLINE OR CALL: 949-496-5794Rancho Days FiestaCelebration the history of Saddleback Valley, there will be children s activities including free crafts projects. Help make and taste homemade ice cream and butter, warm bread from the oven. Dip water and grind (鑨巟) corn while learning about the early days of Orange County.Admission is $ 3 for children 3 to 12 years old and $4 for adults.LOCATION: Heritage Hill Historical ParkINFORMATION: 949-923-2230Annual Silverado Counter Fair and Art FestivalThe 46th Annual Silverado Country Fair explores the wonders of the area s Old West rustic (aNQg剉)culture, great live music tasty food, handmade arts, crafts and family games under the oak-trees below Orange Country s famous Saddleback Mountain.Daytime adult admission: $4 Kids under 12: only $2Saturday Night Music Fest : $ 5 for everyoneLOCATION: Silverado Community CenterINFORMATION: 714-997-3968Starr Ranch SanctuaryAudubon California s Starr Ranch Sanctuary invites you to our fall classes for adults. Join our wildlife biologist for two peaceful days at beautiful 4,000 acre Starr Ranch in southeast Orange County and experience nature hands-on as a wildlife researcher.Cost: $ 95 for those not camping (including dinner) $100 for those camping (dinner and breakfast provided)LOCATION: Starr Ranch SanctuaryRESERVATIONS OR INFORMATION: 949-858-030936. In which event can you enjoy riding a boat?A. Rancho Days Fiesta. B. Starr Ranch Sanctuary.C. Father s day Sunset Live Music Dinner Cruise.D. Annual Silverado Counter Fair and Art Festival.37. How much will a couple have to pay if they go to Saturday Night Music Fest ?A. $ 15. B. $10. C. $8. D. $5.38. Who will share special interest in Starr Ranch Sanctuary?A. Tom who likes enjoying live music.B. Lisa who wants to learn how to make butter.C. Peter who always goes out for a barbecue dinner.D. Jack who devotes himself to protecting wild animals.BAlexis, 17, sat quietly in the passenger seat of her dad s car. She let her eyes lazily scan, the landscape for wildlife. Then a deer came into view about 200 yards in front of them.  Dad, there s a deer there! Alexis said. It was a male deer with sharp antlers (覊) on each side of its head.As the car moved closer, Alexis saw that the deer s head was bent toward the ground. Then she heard a scream and saw an arm fly up near the deer s head. Alexis realized the deer was attacking a woman. Sue, a 44-year-old mother, had been out for her morning run. The deer followed her and edged closer.  I knew I was in trouble, Sue says. She went to pick up a stick for self-defense, and the deer charged. It lifted her with its antlers and threw her into the air. Sue could feel blood flew down her leg. Within seconds, the deer had pushed her off the road.When Alexis and her father pulled up, the deer was throwing Sue like a doll. Alexis looked into the woman s terrified eyes, and before her father had even stopped the car, the teenager jumped quickly out of the car and ran toward the deer.  I was kicking it to get its attention, she says. Then her father, who had followed his daughter, pushed the deer away from the women.Alexis helped Sue into the car, and then applied a piece of cloth to Sue s injured leg.  We re going to get you to a hospital, Alexis said. Then she heard her father shout loudly. He had been knocked to the ground. Alexis took hold of a hammer from the car and ran to where her father lay on his back. She beat the deer s head and neck, but the blows didn t scare it away.  I was losing faith, she says.  A couple more strikes, Alexis, said her father.  You can do it. Turning the hammer around, Alexis closed her eyes and beat the deer s neck with all her strength. When she opened her eyes, the deer was running away. Alexis got in the driver s seat and sped toward the nearest hospital.After Sue was treated, she tearfully thanked her rescuers.  You expect a teenage girl to get on the phone and call for help, she says,  not to beat up a deer. 39. What was Sue doing when she was attacked by the deer?A. She was driving home. B. She was resting on the road.C. She was taking exercise. D. She was feeding wild animals.40. The underlined word  edged in paragraph 2 probably means _________.A. changed B. cut C. attacked D. moved41. What did Alexis do to save Sue?A. She pushed the deer away. B. She hit the deer with her feet.C. She drove the car to hit the deer. D. She beat the deer with a hammer.42. Which of the following words can best describe Alexis?A. Strong. B. Cruel. C. Energetic. D. Brave.CPhoneSoap: Charge and Clean Your PhoneYou may charge your phone every day, but do you clean your phone as much? Whatever your hands touch, your phones touch. It has been discovered that some phones have 18 times more bacteria (苸虄) and viruses (舥襨) than any surface in a public restroom. So it probably won t surprise you that a 2011 University of London study found that one in six of our phones have bacteria and viruses on them specifically, the bacteria called E. coli.The research on bacteria and viruses led to the invention of PhoneSoap. It is not actually liquid like dishwasher soap. It is a phone charger that uses the electromagnetic radiation used in hospitals to kill 99.9 percent of bacteria and viruses, cleaning your phone while it charges. There are really certain types of bacteria and viruses that we should not be in touch with, and they are really on our phones, says Wes Barnes, the PhoneSoap co-founder. It all started while his cousin and co-founder, Dan LaPorte, was in his cancer research lab at college.  He realized he got the idea of getting rid of bacteria and viruses on the phones, said Barnes.  In the lab they used UV-C light for destroying them. He realized this would be the fastest, most powerful way to kill any bacteria and viruses living on electronic machines. PhoneSoap looks like a little metal suitcase. Your phone rests in to charge and get cleaned at the same time. Instead of plugging your phone into the wall, you d plug it into the PhoneSoap charger box. The process only takes a few minutes but, Barnes says,  The idea is that you can leave it in there overnight if you want to keep charging. Reflective paint keeps the light completely around the phone so it cleans the phone fully. The co-founders spent 2013 finding the right companies and they started shipping the product in late November. By last week s International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, PhoneSoap was all grown-up. Both co-founders have left their previous jobs and are selling PhoneSoap nonstop.  We re shipping almost more than we can handle each day, Barnes says.  It s been a great adventure. 43. We can learn from the first paragraph that ___________.A. phones can be very dirty B. phones are where bacteria are bornC. most phones are attacked by bacteria D. phones store more bacteria in a restroom44. According to the passage, PhoneSoap ___________.A. takes a whole night to kill bacteria B. deals with bacteria with radiationC. is a kind of liquid like dishwasher soap D. has to be plugged into the wall to work45. From what Barnes said in the last paragraph, we can infer that ___________.A. PhoneSoap is in great demand now B. PhoneSoap is really hard to handleC. they can t produce enough PhoneSoap D. they ll make improvements to PhoneSoap46. What s the passage mainly about?A. Methods of cleaning phones. B. Tips on charging phones quickly.C. Soap killing harmful bacteria on phones. D. A phone charger keeping your phone clean.DIn their book Time to Eat the Dog: The Real Guide to Sustainable living, Robert and Brenda Vale say keeping a medium-sized (-NI{SO媁剉) dog has the same ecological influence as driving 10,000 km a year a 2.0 liter car. We re not actually saying it is time to eat the dog. We re just saying that we need to think about and know the ecological influence of some of the things we do and that we take for granted. Constructing and driving the jeep for a year requires 0.41 hectares (lQw? of land, while growing and manufacturing a dog s food takes about 0.84 hectares  or 1.1 hectares in the case of a large dog such as a German shepherd.Convincing flesh-eating cats and dogs to go vegetarian for the fate of the planet is a non-starter, the Vales say. Instead they recommend keeping  greener , smaller, and more sustainable (颯c韣剉) pets, such as goldfish, chicken or rabbits.The book s playful title, and serious suggestion that pet animals may be usefully  recycled , by being eaten by their owners or turned into pet food when they die, may not appeal to animal fans. Annoying as the idea may be, the question is valid given the planet s growing population and limited resources, Robert Vale said. Issues about sustainability are increasingly becoming things that are going to require us to make choices which are as difficult as eating your dog. It s not just about changing your light bulbs or taking a cloth bag to the supermarket, he said. It s about much more challenging and difficult issues, he added.  Once you see where cats and dogs fit in your overall balance of things, you might decide to have the cat but not also to have the two cars and the three bathrooms and be a meat eater yourself. 47. What does the Vales book mainly focus on?A. The animals rights. B. The way to raise pets.C. The influence of driving cars. D. The environmental protection.48. What does the underlined phrase  the idea in Paragraph 5 refer to?A. Teaching animal fans. B. Recycling pet animals.C. Killing animals for food. D. Protecting homeless animals49. What do the Vales think of creating a sustainable life?A. Easy B. Inspiring. C. Impossible. D. Challenging.50. What can we infer from the text?A. Taking a cloth bag to the supermarket is difficult to carry out.B. Raising sheep is a good idea for animal fans in the Vales opinion.C. The bigger pet animals are, the worse ecological influence they have.D. Driving cars is more environment-friendly than keeping pet animals.N 悢NYou only live once, and life is short. It s easy to look at people who are happy and assume that they don t understand your pain. The older you get, the more you realize that happiness takes work. People who smile in public have been through as much as people who cry, scream, etc. 71 So how can you live life to the fullest? Here are some tips to help you out:?Decide what s important to you. It doesn t matter what it is. 72 Your parents, friends and society in general all have their opinions, but you re the only person who will be around for every moment of your life. Do what makes you happy, and everything else will fall into place.?Ready to take risks. Sometimes, there s danger involved in life, but every reward carries risk with it. 73 However, if you never take risks, you ll never get anywhere in life. When people look back on their lives, they regret the chances they didn t take more than the ones they did.?Ignore the haters. No matter what you decide to do with your life, there will always be someone around to point out the many ways you will fail. Know that every winner loses, but not every loser wins. 74 Instead, they keep pushing through failure.? 75 Your being right about something doesn t mean there aren t other ways to look at it. Listening to ideas you don t agree with or understand keeps your brain active and healthy.A. Keep an open mind.B. Speak through your actions.C. Successful people don t start out successful.D. Don t do what you think people want you to do.E. It is true that some actions might have bad results.F. They just have the courage and strength to smile through it.G. Think about your past and future, but only focus on the present. 孾b_kXzzOne Bite at a TimeStephen was on campus to register when I first met him.One summer day ___51___ I was heading for the administration building, I heard someone call my name. I ___52___ around and saw Philip, one of my colleagues standing with another young man. As Philip introduced me to the young man, named Stephen, he reminded him that he would be taking one of my ___53___, Introduction to Literature. With a somewhat ___54___ expression, Stephen asked if my class was going to be  hard . Would he be able to pass? I ___55___ he was concerned about failing before the ___56___ day of classes. We talked about what the class would ___57___ and I saw Stephen s eyes getting big with ___58___.Then I remembered a bit of classical dialog:Question:  How do you eat an elephant? Answer:  One bite at a time. I told him to ___59___ his work that way. To do his assignment, all of them, and to get them in on time. I added that most ___60___ students I knew made a timetable of all the assignment so they could ___61___ their workload.As time went on, I learned more of Stephen s story. He had ___62___ in middle school. It had taken him longer to finish than most young people. Family members, including his mother, kept reminding him that he was a ___63___. Now, in the face of their negative saying, he had been admitted into college. He told me that before coming to our campus no one had believed he had much ___64___.Stephen didn t become an  A student. He didn t make any honor rolls. Still, he managed to ___65___ most of his courses by being in class every day, turning in all of his assignment on time and breaking down his studying into ___66___ digestible (f坢S剉) parts. By passing course after course he began to gain a measure of self-respect. He was a great singer and he was ___67___ the school s cross-country team.Every time I saw him on campus, he would brighten up and say,  One bite at a time. Whenever he introduced me to his friends, he would tell them that he was ___68___ when he was supposed to be failing. His ___69___, he said, was that he was ___70___ what I taught him before classes ever started:  Take it one bite at a time. 51. A. after B. when C. until D. once52. A. turned B. sat C. moved D. went53. A. jobs B. tests C. classes D. projects54. A. innocent B. angry C. inspired D. pained55. A. sensed B. imagined C. heard D. admitted56. A. gathering B. parting C. closing D. opening57. A. change B. adjust C. cover D. produce58. A. interest B. anger C. fear D. excitement59. A. avoid B. continue C. present D. approach60. A. quiet B. optimistic C. energetic D. successful61. A. plan B. increase C. reduce D. measure62. A. fitted B. hesitated C. struggled D. progressed63. A. cheat B. failure C. winner D. leader64. A. experience B. information C. potential D. honor65. A. pass B. begin C. take D. design66. A. full-sized B. bite-sized C. pocket-sized D. medium-sized67. A. in B. on C. at D. of68. A. changing B. recovering C. concentrating D. succeeding69. A. secret B. skill C. reply D. theory70. A. spreading B. considering C. practicing D. expressing韹誰kXzz Wang Kun and her sister Wang Wei had dreamt about taking a great bike trip for years. They decided 80 (cycle) along the Mekong River from its beginning to its end. Wang Wei 81 (insist) that they start in Qinghai 82 the river begins in order to see all of the Mekong River. Wang Kun said that would be very difficult. 83 Wang Wei refused to change her mind, saying that it would be 84 interesting experience. The Mekong River begins at a glacier(癚輂) on the Tibetan Plateau, 85 an altitude瑍  of about 5,000 meters. The river is small at first. It moves 86 (rapid) as it passes through deep valleys. Sometimes, the river enters wide valleys and becomes a waterfall. It travels slowly through hills, low valleys and plains. The Mekong River has a length of about 4,350 km. It passes through more 87 (country) than any other river in Asia. Once it 88 (flow) out of China, it continues to flow through Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam. 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