The rising costs of health care have become a problem for many countries in the world. To deal with this problem, it is recommended that a big part of the government's health budget be used for health education and disease prevention instead of treatment. Actually, many kinds of diseases are preventable in many ways and preventing a disease is usually much cheaper than treating it. For example, people could avoid catching a cold if they dressed warmly when the weather starts getting cold. But many people get sick because they fail to do so, and have to spend money seeing a doctor
Daily habits like eating more healthy food would have kept millions of families from becoming bankrupt if the patients had taken measures for early prevention. For instance, keeping a balanced diet, such as not consuming too much animal fat and insuring a steady intake of vegetables and fruits, seems to be quite important.
One very effective and costless way of prevention is regular exercise, which is necessary for a healthy mind and body. Regular exercise, such as running, walking, and playing sports is a good way to make people feel better or reduce stress
In addition, health education plays a key role in improving people's health. By giving people more information about health, countries could help people understand the importance of disease prevention and ways to achieve it. For example, knowing one's family medical history is an effective way to help keep healthy. Information about health problems among close relatives will make them aware of what they should do to prevent certain diseases through lifestyle changes, which will work before it is too late
However, stressing disease prevention does not mean medical treatment is unimportant. After all, prevention and treatment are just two different means toward the same effect. In conclusion, we could save money on health care and treat patients more successfully if our country spends more money on health prevention and education
1.What’s the best title of the passage?
A.Prevention or Education? B.Prevention or Treatment?
C.Health or Illness? D.Exercise or Illness?
2.Which of the following can replace the underlined word “bankrupt’’?
A.Unable to be cured B.Unable to pay one’s debts
C.Stronger than ever before D.More successful than ever before
3.We learn from the passage that
A.dressing warmly can prevent diseases
B.a balanced diet is cheaper than regular exercise
C.the more health education, the better
D.the government’s health budget should be increased
4.Which of the following shows the structure of the passage?
CP (Central Point) P (Point) Sp (Sub-point次要点) C (Conclusion 结论)
Summer Holiday Fun 2010 !
The summer holidays are upon us again Here is our guide to summer holiday fun in Peterborough!
Peterborough Museum
The Age of the Dinosaurs’is the museum’s main attraction this summer.Get up close to prehistoric creatures via some great hands—on exhibits! Watch out for monsters lurking around every ember! The museum is open from 10:00am to 5:00pm Monday to Saturday,and from 12:00pm to 4:00 pm on Sundays in August.
Call 01733 864663 for details
Saxon Youth Club
School holiday fun:Young people aged 13—19 will be able to produce their own music, compete in spots activities,or try their hand at cooking at Saxon Youth Club,Saxon Community Centre, Norman Road.Peterborough every Monday and Wednesday from 3:00pm.PLUS an aero ball tournament will take place on Thursday 12th August between 3:30pm and 6:30pm.
Call 01 353 720274 for details
Houghton Mill
Alice through the Looking Class—a new production of the family favorite on Monday 30th.August.Bring rugs or chairs to sit on and a picnic if you wish to eat during the play.Gates open 5:30pro,performance 6:30pm—8:30pm.Tea room will be open until end of the interval.Adult £10.Child£7.Family £20.
Booking advisable on 0845 4505157.
Farmland Museum and Denny Abbey
Farmland Gaines:From Wellie Wanging to Pretend Ploughing matches,come and join the Farmland Team.Collect your sporting stickers and create a colorful rosette that is fit for a winner!No need to book,just turn up between 12:00pm and 4:00pm on Thursday 19th August Suitable for children aged four and above,each child should be accompanied by an adult and all
activities are included in the normal admission price Tickets Cost£7 per child.
For further information,call 01223 810080.
1.If you are interested in cooking, you can go to .
A.Peterborough Museum B.Houghton Mill
C.Saxon Youth Club D.Farmland Museum
2.You want to watch the new play with your parents,so it will cost you .
A.£7 B.£17 C.£27 D.£20
3.If Tom comes to Peterborough for amusement on August 19,he will have activities to
choose from for himself.
A.one activity B.two activities
C.three activities D.four activities
LONDON: What could possibly be wrong with planting trees? The advantages are obvious; they firm the soil, soak up (摄取) extra water and take carbon dioxide (二氧化碳) out of the atmosphere.
However, it now turns out that planting trees could add to global warming.
Tree roots do a great job of keeping soil firmly on the ground and out of the wind’s power. The problem is that some of those dust clouds play an important part in soaking up carbon dioxide.
Huge dust storms blow out over the oceans from dry parts of North Africa and central Asia. Tons of dust are lifted and left as a thin film over the ocean surface. The dust fuels oceanic life.
Dust from China is carried east and left in the Pacific Ocean. If a tree-planting programme there is successful and the dust supply reduced, the net result may be that less carbon dioxide gets locked away in the ocean.
Andy Ridgwell, an environmental scientist from the University of East Anglia, has spent the past few years studying dust and says his work “shows clearly the complexity of the system and the importance of not tinkering(粗劣地修补) with it without understanding the results. For this reason there is the need to focus(集中) on cutting carbon dioxide giving off rather than monkeying (瞎弄) about with the land surface.”
An American scientist, Robert Jackson, has shown that when native grassland areas are invaded(侵入) by trees, carbon is lost from the soil. “We are studying why the soil carbon disappears, but one theory is that trees do a lot more of their growing above ground compared to grasses, so less carbon goes directly into the soil from trees, ” says Jackson.
In wet areas of the world, the gain from trees absorbing carbon dioxide above ground seems to be outweighed(超过) by the loss of carbon from the soil below ground. Countries that plan to combat global warming by planting trees may have to think again.
Solutions(解决办法) to environmental problems are often more complex than they first appear, and understanding the Earth’s climate is a very great challenge.
1.People usually hold the opinion that .
A.huge dust storms can destroy carbon dioxide
B.huge dust storms can destroy the oceans on the earth
C.huge dust storms can’t do anything beneficial for man
D.planting trees is the only way to control huge dust storms
2.Andy Ridgwell, the environmental scientist, believes that .
A.dust plays a more important part than trees
B.trees shouldn’t have been planted in dry places
C.carbon dioxide is harmful to everything on the earth
D.environmental problems are more complex than expected
3.Robert Jackson’s experiment proves that .
A.grassland areas should be covered by forests
B.trees hold more carbon than grass
C.carbon can turn grass into dust
D.less carbon can make trees grow faster
4.The underlined word “combat” in the last paragraph means .
A.learn about B.fight against C.live with D.give up
When Jackie Robinson walked onto Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, New York, on April 15, 1947, he changed baseball forever. As the first African American to play in the Major League in modern times, many believe he changed the country forever.
Robinson was born in 1919. He lived in a time when rules controlled what African Americans could do. He was a top athlete, playing football, basketball and baseball. But playing for a major League team was off limits to Robinson because of his race.
Branch Rickey, president and manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, signed (和……签约) Robinson in 1947. He believed that Robinson not only had the skills, but the courage to face the challenge of becoming modern baseball’s first black player.
It wasn’t easy. Robinson sometimes faced boos (嘘声) from fans. But he became a star, anyway. In 1962, he became the first African-American player chosen to enter the Baseball Hall of Fame. In 2005, he was awarded a Congressional Gold Medal, the highest award Congress can give to an American.
By breaking baseball’s color barrier (肤色障碍), Robinson opened the door for many to follow his footsteps, not only in baseball, but in other areas of life as well. After he stopped playing the game, Robinson worked as a manager for a coffee company. He wrote a newspaper column (专栏). He also started a bank.
1.Before Jackie Robinson, no African-American players could __________.
A. play baseball B. play in the Major League
C. play football and basketball D. watch Major League games
2.According to Branch Rickey, Jackie Robinson was __________.
A. poor but clever B. unlucky but confident
C. proud and strong D. brave and skilled
3.We can know that Jackie Robinson’s story __________.
A. changed many Africans’ ideas
B. had an effect on many black people’s lives
C. encouraged black people to fight with whites
D. started a hot discussion about the color barrier
4.Which of the following is NOT what he once did?
A. a newspaper column writer B. a banker
C. a university teacher D. a manager in a company
As a young man, Al was a skilled artist.He had a wife and two fine sons.One night, his oldest son developed a serious stomachache.Thinking it was only some 1intestinal (肠内的)disorder, neither Al nor his wife took the condition very seriously.But the boy 2suddenly that night.
Knowing the death could have been 3if he had only realized the seriousness of the situation, Al's emotional health became worse under the huge burden(重负) of his 4.To make matters worse his wife 5him a short time later, leaving him alone with his six-year-old younger son.The hurt and pain of the two 6were more than Al could handle, and he 7to alcohol(烈酒).In time Al became an alcoholic.
8___ the alcoholism progressed, Al began to lose everything he 9— his home, his land, his art objects, everything. 10Al died alone in a San Francisco motel room.
When I heard of Al's death, I thought that Al's life was a complete 11.
As time went by, I began to reconsider my earlier judgment.I knew Al's now 12son, Ernie.He is one of the kindest, most caring, most loving men I have ever known.I watched Ernie with his children and saw the free 13of love between them.I knew that kindness and caring had to come from somewhere.
I hadn't heard Ernie talk much about his 14__.One day I worked __15_ my courage to ask him."I'm really _16__ by something," I said."I know your father was 17the only one to raise you.What on earth did he do that you became such a special person?"
Ernie sat quietly and _18__ for a few moments.Then he said, "From my earliest _19_ as a child until I left home at 18, Al came into my room every night, gave me a kiss and said, ' I love you, son.' "
Tears came to my eyes as I realized what a fool I had been to __20_ Al as a failure.He had not left any material possessions behind.But he had been a kind loving father, and he left behind one of the finest, most giving men I have ever known.
1.A.certain B.common C.rare D.basic
2.A.dead B.passed away C.starved D.worsened
3.A.cured B.prevented C.forbidden D.saved
4.A.disease B.debt C.guilt D.duty
5.A.left B.scolded C.quarreled D.forgave
6.A.disasters B.adventures C.conflicts D.situations
7.A.got B.drank C.turned D.sank
8.A.As B.Though C.Because D.If
9.A.needed B.shared C.benefited D.owned
10.A.Eventually B.Gradually C.Therefore D.Meanwhile
11.A.trouble B.hardship C.failure D.waste
12.A.teen B.adult C.old D.adolescent
13.A.win B.fall C.space D.flow
14.A.mother B.brother C.father D.child
15.A.up B.with C.on D.through
16.A.worried B.puzzled C.interested D.attracted
17.A.especially B.basically C.hardly D.specially
18.A.argued B.searched C.analyzed D.thought
19.A.thoughts B.ideas C.minds D.memories
20.A.treat B.call C.judge D.feel
— I am going to be a volunteer at the Asian Games to be held in Guangzhou this November.
— ! Me, too.
A. That’s it B. Good luck C. No problem D. That’s great