湖北省2012高考英语二轮复习专题训练:阅读理解(82).doc
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1、湖北省2012高考英语二轮复习专题训练:阅读理解(82)阅读下列短文,从每篇短文后所给各题的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。AGrandma, Grandma, tell us a story! Four darling children sat by my feet, looking up at me expectantly. Suddenly, we were interrupted by clapping. Terrific, the director said, stepping up to the stage from the aisle(过道). “Except, co
2、uld you kids face the audience a bit more? The kids shifted to face the empty seats, which would be filled in a few days for the church play. Perfect, the director said. Now, Grandma, read to your grandchildren. A pang of sadness hit me. If only I could read to my real grandchildren! I had a grandda
3、ughter, but Id never met her. Sixteen years earlier my son was involved in a relationship that ended badly. But out of it came a blessing: a baby girl named Lena. I hoped to be a grandmother to her- but shortly after the birth, the mother moved without any address left. Over the years, I asked aroun
4、d town to try and find my sons ex-wife, but it seemed that she didnt want to be found. Id just joined this new church a week earlier, and was at once offered the part of Grandma in the play. At least now I could pretend to be a grandma. The rehearsals went well, and finally the day of the show arriv
5、ed. The performance was great. You all looked so natural up there, one of my friends said. Afterward, we went to the church basement for refreshments. I walked over to one of the girls in the play. Rehearsals had been in such a hurry that we never really got to talk. Hows my granddaughter? I joked.
6、Fine! she answered. Just then, someone else walked up and asked the girl her name. I wasnt sure I heard the girls answer correctly. But it made me ask her another question. Whats your mothers name? She told me. I was still in shock. And whats your fathers name? I asked. It was my son. Shed only star
7、ted going to that church a week before I did. Since that day of the play, weve stayed close. Not long ago, she even made me a great grandma.1. What was the author doing at the beginning of the story? A. Telling a story B. Playing a game. C. Preparing for a play. D. Acting in a movie.2. Why did the a
8、uthor feel a pang of sadness at the words of the director? A. The directors words reminded her of her lost granddaughter. B. The directors words hurt her badly. C. She wished that she had a real grandchild. D. The director wasnt content with her performance.3. What happened in the church basement af
9、ter the play? A. The author played a joke on Lena. B. Lena treated the author as a friend. C. The author got to know who Lena was. D. Lena mistook the author for her grandmother.4. We can infer that when writing the story, the author felt _. A. light-hearted B. heartbroken C. confused D. anxiousBSch
10、ool districts are turning to high-tech solutions-from fingerprint scans to electronic cards to track kids on school buses and keep them from getting off at the wrong stops. A fingerprint scanning system, approved this month for testing at the Desert Sands district, northeast of San Diego. Students w
11、ill be scanned as they get on and off the bus.Kids get lost. It happens in every school district, every year, says John DeVries, president of Global Biometrics Security, which developed the Biometric Observation Security System (BOSS) thats being tested. It happened Oct. 13 when a Prince Georges Cou
12、nty (Md.) school employee took a 5-year-old student to the wrong bus and the student got off several blocks from home. With BOSS, students fingerprints are scanned and sent to a database. When they get off, they provide a check out print. An alarm sounds if the child tries to get off at the wrong pl
13、ace. The fingerprints are not stored, DeVries says. They are converted into a series of numbers that cannot be used to re-create the print, he says.Margaret Gomez of Palm Springs, Calif., whose daughter, then 6, was let off a bus about a mile from her home three years ago, supports the idea. Anythin
14、g is better than what they have in place now. Other tracking systems include the ZPass from Seattle-based Zonar Systems, which uses a programmed card carried by students or tied to a backpack. It is in about 30 districts, including North Kansas City Schools and Illinois School District 128 in Palos
15、Heights, company executive Chris Oliver says.Paul Stephens, of the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse in San Diego, says tracking students is reasonable, but the data could fall into unauthorized hands. What if a child predator was able to get access to this? he says.5. What is the purpose of schools turn
16、ing to high-tech solutions?ATo make school buses safer for kidsBTo prevent kids from getting lost CTo help parents locate their missing kidsDTo save some time for school children 6. What can we learn from the third paragraph?AStudents will have to carry a database with themBAn alarm will go off ever
17、y time kids get off CThe fingerprints will be stored in the databaseDStudents information cant be used for other purposes7. What is Margaret Gomezs attitude toward the new solution?ASupportive BPessimistic CDoubtful DWorried8. What is Paul Stephens mainly concerned about?AWhether this new solution i
18、s reasonableBHow this tracking can be accepted by parentsCThe safety of childrens personal informationDWho should be authorized access to such informationCWhen people search online, they leave atrailthat remains stored on the central computers of firms such as Google, Yahoo and Microsoft.Analyzing w
19、hat were looking for on the Web can offer a remarkable understanding of our anxieties and enthusiasms.UKwriter John Battelle wrote on his blog, This can tell us extraordinary things about who we are and what we want as a culture.Googlesexperimentalservice Google Trends, for example, compares the num
20、bers of people searching for different words and phrases from 2004 to the present.According to these graphs, sometimes peoples interests are driven obviously by the latest news: when the Spice Girls, a pop group, announce a reunion, theres an immediate rush to find out more about them. Other results
21、 arestrikinglyseasonal: people go shopping online for coats in winter andsandals(凉鞋)in summer.The most fascinating possibility is that search data might help predict behavior.Perhaps we search for a political candidates name when we are thinking about voting for him or her. This information could cl
22、early be useful to a marketer - its already how Google decides which ads to show on its search results pages or to a political campaign manager.Marissa Mayer, a Google vice-president, argues that Google Trends correctly predicted George Bushs victory over John Kerry in the 2004 election. The graph c
23、learly shows that Bushcontinuedhis lead over Kerry, in terms of search volumes, even when polls(民意测验)suggestedthe race was on a razors edge. However, thats not always the case. For instance, the same approach predicted Hillary Clinton would beat Barack Obama in the race for the Democratic presidenti
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