Michael Greenberg is a very popular New Yorker. He is not famous in sports or the arts, But people in the streets 16 him, especially those who are 17 . For those people, he is "Gloves" Greenberg. How did he get that 18 He looks like any other businessman, wearing a suit and carrying a briefcase (公文箱). But he’s 19 . His briefcase always has some gloves。 In winter, Mr.Greenberg does not 20 like other New Yorkers, who look at the sidewalk and 21 the street. He looks around at 22 .He stops when he 23 someone with no gloves. He gives them a pair and then he 24 ,looking for more people with cold 25 . On winter days, Mr.Greenberg 26 gloves. During the rest of the year, he 27 gloves. People who have heard about him 28 him gloves, and he has many in his apartment. Mr. Greenberg 29 doing this 21 years ago. Now, many poor New Yorkers know him and____30____his behavior. But people who don’t know him are sometimes 31 him. They don’t realize that he just wants to make them 32 . It runs in the 33 .Michael’s father always helped the poor as he believed it made everyone happier. Michael Greenberg feels the 34 .A pair of gloves may be a 35 thing, but it can make a big difference in winter. (29)应选()
A. delayed
B. remembered
C. began
D. enjoyed
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B In 1947 a group of famous people from the art world headed by an Austrian conductor decided to hold an intemational festival of music,dance and theatre in Edinburgh.The idea was to reunite Europe after the Second World War. It quickly attracted famous names such as Alec Guinness, Richard Burton, Dame Margot Fonteyn and Marlene Dietrich as well as the big symphony orchestras (交响乐团). It became a fixed event every August and now attracts 400,000 people yearly. At the same time, the “Fringe” appeared as a challenge to the official festival.Eight theatre groups turned up uninvited in 1947,in the belief that everyone should have the right to perform,and they did so in a public house disused for years. Soon,groups of studentsfirstly from Edinburgh University, and later from the universities of Oxford and Cambridge,Durham and Birmingham were making the journey to the Scottish capital each summer to perform theatre by little-known writers of plays in small church halls to the people of Edinburgh. Today the “Fringe”,once less recognized, has far outgrown the festival with around 1,500 performances of theatre,music and dance on every one of the 21 days it lasts.And yetas early as 1959,with only 19 theatre groups performing,some said it was getting too big. A paid administrator was first employed only in 1971, and today there are eight administrators working all year round and the number rises to 150 during August itself.In 2004 there were 200 places housing 1,695 shows by over 600 different groups from 50 different countries.More than 1,25 million tickets were sold. We may learn from the text that Edinburgh Festival.()
A. has become a non-official event
B. has gone beyond an art festival
C. gives shows all year round
D. keeps growing rapidly
期末处理后,“待处理财产损溢”账户应无余额。
A. 对
B. 错
In a telephone survey of more than 2,000 adults, 21% said they believed the sun revolved (旋转) around the earth. An (1)7% did not know which revolved around (2) I have no doubt that (3) all of these people were (4) in school that the earth revolves around the sun; (5) may even have written it (6)a teat. But they never (7) their incorrect mental models of planetary (行星的) (8) because their everyday observations didn’t support (9) their teachers told them: people see the sun "moving (10) the sky as momin8 turns to night, and the earth seems stationary (静止的) (11) that is happening.Students can leant the right answers (12) heart in class, and yet never combined them (13) their working models of the world. The objectively correct answer the professor accepts and the (14) personal understanding of the world can (15) side by side, each unaffected by the other.Outside of class, the student continues to use the (16) model because it has always worked well (17) that circumstance. Unless professors address (18) errors in students’ personal models of the world, students are not (19) to replace them with the (20) one. 7()
A. formed
B. altered
C. believed
D. thought
A Doctor are known to be terrible pilots. They don’t listen because they already know it all. I was lucky: ] became a pilot in 1970, almost ten years before I graduated from medical school. I didn’t realize then, but becoming a pilot makes me a better surgeon. I loved flying. As I flew bigger, faster planes, and in worse weather. I learned about crew resource management (机组资源管理), or CRM, a new idea to make flying safer. It means that crew members should listen and speak up for a good result, regardless of positions. I first read about CRM in 1980. Not long after that, an attending doctor and I were flying in bad weather. The controller had us turn too late to get our landing ready. The attending doctor was flying; I was safety pilot He was so busy because of the bad turn, he had forgotten to put the landing gear (起落架) down. He was a better pilot - and my boss - so it felt unusual to speak up. But I had to: Our lives were in danger. I put aside my uneasiness and said, "We need to put the landing gear down now!" That was my first real lesson in the power of CRM, and I’ve used it in the operating room ever since. CRM requires that the pilot/surgeon encourage others to speak up. It further requires that when opinions are from the opposite, the doctor doesn’t overreact, which might prevent fellow doctors from voicing opinions again. So when I’m in the operating room, I ask for ideas and help from others. Sometimes they’re not willing to speak up. But I hope that if I continue to encourage them , someday someone will keep me from ” landing gear up”. What dose the author say about doctors in general().
A. They like flying by themselves.
B. They are unwilling to take advice.
C. They pretend to be good pilots.
D. They are quick learners of CRM.