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  Martin Luther King, the son of a minister in the church, was born in 1929 in the southeast of the United States. When he was a boy, he  1 making friends and disliked  2 in any form. At the age of fifteen, he  3 an entrance prize to a college in one of the  4 states, where black people have equal  5 and were free to live, study and work  6 they wished. But, at this  7 ,the southern states  8 their laws to continue the  9 of blacks and whites, though slavery was  10 early in 1865.

  In the southern states  11 were passed to forbid(禁止) whites to marry blacks. There  12 shops, restaurants. Hospitals, buses, trains and schools for blacks. Blacks were not  13 to vote(選舉) in the southern states  14 they passed a reading test.

  King thought it was  15 and necessary for blacks to win  16 civil(國內(nèi)的) rights by  17 revolution, not by fighting and killing. He  18 the government so set blacks free and give them  19 .

  In 1964, he got the Nobel Prize for  20 and gave the whole of the $ 54,600 prize to the  21 movement. In the same year a new Civil Rights Act was passed to  22 blacks equally. In 1965 a new Voting Rights Bill became law.  23 , all blacks had the rights to vote.

  King was  24 on April 4th, 1968, because he made many  25 in the black liberation movement. He was considered as an important leader in the black liberation movement.

1

[  ]

A.started   B.hated   C.continued   D.liked

2

[  ]

A.speaking   B.playing   C.fighting   D.working

3

[  ]

A.brought   B.won   C.caught   D.stole

4

[  ]

A.free   B.other   C.southern   D.northern

5

[  ]

A.life   B.conditions   C.rights   D.education

6

[  ]

A.a(chǎn)s   B.so   C.when   D.a(chǎn)s

7

[  ]

A.college   B.time   C.end   D.beginning

8

[  ]

A.planned   B.broke   C.passed   D.improved

9

[  ]

A.relations   B.separation   C.fights   D.opinions

10

[  ]

A.on   B.over   C.refused   D.ended

11

[  ]

A.rules   B.orders   C.laws   D.suggestions

12

[  ]

A.separated   B.newly-built   C.special   D.cheap

13

[  ]

A.a(chǎn)llowed   B.a(chǎn)sked   C.hoped   D.invited

14

[  ]

A.so that   B.because   C.if   D.unless

15

[  ]

A.valuable   B.right   C.possible   D.useful

16

[  ]

A.a(chǎn) few   B.equal   C.a(chǎn) great many   D.simple

17

[  ]

A.hard   B.peaceful   C.fighting   D.public

18

[  ]

A.forced   B.ordered   C.a(chǎn)greed   D.organized

19

[  ]

A.truth   B.everything   C.rights   D.food

20

[  ]

A.Physics   B.Politics   C.Science   D.Peace

21

[  ]

A.slave   B.peace   C.progress   D.freedom

22

[  ]

A.receive   B.help   C.treat   D.educate

23

[  ]

A.Also   B.However   C.Once   D.From then on

24

[  ]

A.murdered   B.destroyed   C.forbidden   D.finished

25

[  ]

A.decisions   B.changes   C.plans   D.enemies

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This program is a ________ TV show, so you can phone the station directly to vote(選舉,投票)your favorite singer.

[  ]

A.live

B.lively

C.alive

D.lovely

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閱讀理解

  The sometimes tense relationship between presidents and New York City mayors was seemingly set 30 years ago with the famous Daily News headline following President Gerald R.Ford's decision not to help the city out from a financial crisis.(“Ford to City:Drop Dead,” it read.)

  But yesterday provided something of a role of the opposite:President Bush came to promote strong national economic data and to do it in the glow of a New York City economy that he said was “booming with a bond rating(債券評級)at an all-time high, and unemployment near an all-time low.”

  The moment highlighted the unique relationship Mr.Bush has with New York City, to which he has been linked since the 2001 terrorist attacks, even though he is unpopular with many voters here.

  And as he spoke at the Federal Hall National Memorial on Wall Street for an event held by the Association for a Better New York, he addressed an audience that included not only business leaders but also three New York City mayors-one of them a Republican, two of them Democrats.

  There was Mayor Michael R.Bloomberg, a late-blooming Republican, who kept his distance from the president throughout the 2005 mayoral campaign in case the president's low poll(選舉投票)ratings rub off on him.

  Mr.Bloomberg seemed to receive slightly louder applause than Mr.Bush did yesterday, though, to be fair, both were warmly received and many of Mr.Bloomberg's own officials were in the audience.

  But Mr.Bush did not seem to take offense either way.

  “Mr.Mayor, thanks for being here, I appreciate your coming,” Mr.Bush told Mr.Bloomberg.“You're doing what people want you to do, and that is to lead this city.”

  Then there was former Mayor David N.Dinkins, the liberal Democrat.“Mr.Mayor-David Dinkins, thank you for being here,” Mr.Bush said from the lectern.“Proud you're here.”

  His warmest words were for Mayor Edward I.Koch, the Democrat who crossed party lines to endorse Mr.Bush in 2004.

  “And it's good to see my buddy(密友), Mayor Ed Koch,” Mr.Bush said.“Mr.Mayor, thank you for coming.”

  One former mayor who was not there:Rudolph W.Giuliani, the man at or near the top of many polls of possible Republican presidential contenders(競爭者), who, according to an aide, was at tending a fund-raiser out of town.

(1)

How many New York City mayors are mentioned in the passage?

[  ]

A.

Two.

B.

Three.

C.

Four.

D.

Five.

(2)

According to the passage, what was the cause of the tense relationship between President Ford and New York City mayors?

[  ]

A.

The misleading of the famous Daily News.

B.

His decision not to help the city out from a financial crisis.

C.

His refusal to promote strong national economic data.

D.

His often attending fund-raisers.

(3)

What was the attitude of the New York voters towards Mr.Bush?

[  ]

A.

They all supported him and voted for him.

B.

All of them did not vote for him.

C.

They received him as they had done to Mr.Ford.

D.

He was unpopular with them.

(4)

Why did Mr.Bloomberg receive slightly louder applause than Mr.Bush at the Federal Hall National Memorial?

[  ]

A.

Because Mr.Bush was not warmly received by the audience.

B.

Because Mr.Bush had seldom visited City before.

C.

Because Mr.Bloomberg was one of the possible Republican presidential contenders.

D.

Because many of Mr.Bloomberg's own officials were in the audience.

(5)

What is the best title for the passage?

[  ]

A.

Ford's Tragedy in City.

B.

Mayors in New York.

C.

Bush Has 3 Mayors to Thank in City.

D.

Booming of City's Economy.

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完形填空

Who elects the president?

  November 7,2000 is a very special day in the United States. Voters all across the nation are 1 representatives in local and national races. Some people think that they're voting for the president of the country, too. They're not! Again, they're voting for 2 . These representatives are called electors(有選舉權(quán)的人). They are part of a system called the Electoral College(總統(tǒng)選舉團).

  In most states the electors are chosen on a winner take-all basis. That makes it possible for one candidate(候選人) to win the most electors while getting less popular votes nationally than his 3 .

  The electors will meet in their respeetive(各自的) states and cast their votes for president and vice-president on December 18,2000. The Constitution(憲法) does not 4 the electors to vote for the candidates that they are pledged to, but they almost always do. On January 6,2001, just two weeks 5 the new president and vice-president take office, the votes will be counted in Congress.

  If no one gets a majority (more than half) of the electoral votes, at least 270 out of 538, the 6 will be chosen by Congress. The House of Representatives will choose (one vote per state) the 7 and the Senate will choose the vice-president. It's not likely, but we could actually end up with a president from one party and a vice-president from another.

  In an extremely close election, all kinds of strange outcomes are 8 . Will the 9 that most voters prefer be the next 10 ? And when will we even know?

1.

[  ]

A.phoning
B.a(chǎn)sking
C.wishing
D.electing

2.

[  ]

A.president
B.someone
C.candidates
D.representatives

3.

[  ]

A.mother
B.election
C.memory
D.opponent

4.

[  ]

A.force
B.see
C.remind
D.popcorn

5.

[  ]

A.before
B.a(chǎn)fter
C.when
D.while

6.

[  ]

A.voters
B.winners
C.people
D.guys

7.

[  ]

A.president
B.electors
C.winner
D.voters

8.

[  ]

A.possible
B.impossible
C.good
D.bad

9.

[  ]

A.food
B.election
C.car
D.candidate

10.

[  ]

A.diner
B.victor
C.dog
D.president

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