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[简答题]It was not hot that day, but many were sweltering.
{{U}}Julius Stretcher. the Jew - baiter of Nuremberg. was there. This sadist and pornographer, whom I had once seen striding through the streets of the old town brandishing a whip seemed to have wilted. A bald, decrepit-looking old man, he sat perspiring profusely, glaring at the judges and convincing himself--so a guard later told me--that they were all Jew.{{/U}} There was Fritz Sauckel, the boss of slave labor in the Third Reich ,his narrow little slit eyes giving him a porcine appearance, lie seemed nervous, swaying to and fro. Next to him was Boldnr yon Sehaeht, the first Hitler Youth Leader and later Gauleiter of Vienna, more Amex-icon by birth than German and looking like a country college boy who has been kicked out of school for some folly. {{U}}There was Walther Funk, the shifty - eyed nonentity who had succeeded Schacht. And there was Dr. Schacht himself, who had spent the last months of the Third Reich as a prisoner of
[单项选择]Passage Four
On a hot summer’s day many years ago, I was on my way to pick up two items at the supermarket. I was then a frequent visitor to it because there never seemed to be enough money for a whole week’s food-shopping at once.
My wife, after a tragic battle with cancer, had died just a few months earlier. There was no insurance -just many expenses and a mountain of bills. I held a part-time job, which barely generated enough money to feed my two young children. Things were really bad.
And so, with a heavy heart and four dollars in my pocket, I was on my way to the supermarket to purchase a gallon of milk and a loaf of bread. The children were hungry and I had to get them something to eat. As I came to a red traffic light, I noticed on my right a young couple and a child on the grass next to the road. The noonday sun beat down on them without mercy.
The man held up a sign which read, “Will Work for Food.” The woman stood next to him, staring at the cars stopped
A. The author went to the supermarket once a week.
B. The author went to the supermarket several times a week.
C. The author knew that milk and bread are the kids’ favorite food.
D. The author would buy a whole week’s food every time he went shopping.
[单项选择]
How many times a day do you check your email When you wake up Before bed A dozen times in between The technology that was supposed to simplify our lives has become the ultimate time-suck: the average teen spends more than seven hours a day using technological devices, plus an additional hour just text-messaging friends.
The advantage to all that gadgetry, of course, is connectedness: email lets us respond on the go, and we are in touch with more people during more hours of the day than at any other time in history. But is it possible we’re more lonely than ever, too That’s what MIT professor Sherry Turkle observes in her new book, Alone Together, a fascinating portrait of our changing relationship with technology, the result of nearly 15 years of study. Turkle details the ways technology has redefined our perceptions of intimacy and solitude--and warns of the perils of embracing such virtual relationships in place of lasting emotional connections.
For
A. complicated.
B. high-tech.
C. time-consuming.
D. appealing.
[单项选择]It was a hot day and the bus was filled with people. A good-looking young man (41) near the front of the bus. (42) near him was a beautiful girl. The man still had a long journey (旅程) to do (43) he began talking to the girl. He told her he (44) a sheep farm and was very rich—the girl looked at (45) with deep interest. Then he told her that he was sad (46) he was still single.
When the bus got to a (47) , the man said to the woman, " (48) we get off the bus and have a meal together " The girl (49) and got off the bus. She didn’t look behind her. He (50) her seat!
A. ran
B. took
C. built