閱讀理解
After retirement from medical,my wife and I built our home in a gated community surrounded by yacht clubs and golf courses on Hilton Head Island. But when I left for the other side of the island,I was traveling on unpaved roads lined with leaky cottages. The“lifestyle”of many of the native islanders stood in shocking contrast to my comfortable existence.
By talking to the local folks,I discovered that the vast majority of the maids,gardeners,waitresses and construction workers who make this island work had little or no access to medical care. It seemed outrageous to me. I wondered why someone didn’t do something about that. Then my father’s words,which he had asked his children daily when they were young,rang in my head again:“What did you do for someone today?”
Even though my father had died several years before,I guess I still didn’t want to disappoint him. So I started working on a solution. The island was full of retired doctors. If I could persuade them to spend a few hours a week volunteering their services,we could provide free primary health care to those so desperately in need of it. Most of the doctors I approached liked the idea,so long as they could be relicensed without troubles. It took one year and plenty of persistence,but I was able to persuade the state legislators to create a special license for doctors volunteering in not-for-profit clinics.
The town donated land,local residents contributed office and medical equipment and some of the potential patients volunteered their weekends ornamenting the building that would become the clinic. We named it volunteers in Medicine and we opened its doors in 1994,fully staffed by retired physicians,nurses and dentists as well as nearly 150 nonprofessional volunteers. That year we had 5000 patient visits;last year we had 16000.
Somehow word of what we were doing got around. Soon we were receiving phone calls from retired physicians all over the country,asking for help in starting VIM clinics in their communities. We did the best we could—there are now 15 other clinics operating—but we couldn’t keep up with the need. Yet last month I think my father’s words found their way up north,to McNeil Consumer Healthcare,the maker of Tylenol(泰諾:一種感冒藥). A major grant from McNeil will allow us to respond to these requests and help establish other free clinics in communities around the countr
61. What is the passage mainly about?
A. The contrast between the rich and the poor on an island.
B. The story of a man who likes to give others advice.
C. The life and work of a great father.
D. The inspiration of a father’s words.
62. The author of the passage is .
A. a retired physician B. a retired teacher
C. a retired medical researcher D. a retired construction worker
63. The purpose of Volunteers in Medicine is to .
A. help retired medical workers improve their incomes
B. provide free medical services to those who need them
C. urge the government to set up non-profit clinics
D. make the dream of the author’s father come true
64. Which of the following has been done by the author himself?
A. Buying the medical equipment.
B. Finding the land and the office.
C. Decorating the building that would become the clinic.
D. Getting a special license for the retired doctors.
65. In the last paragraph,“I think my father’s words found their way up north to McNeil”implies that .
A. my father’s words finally reached McNeil
B. McNeil decided to do something for the needy people
C. My father decided to assist us in opening more clinics in the north
D. McNeil community was badly in need of free health care programs
考前須知:申碩考試時間安排 ♦準考證下載入口 ♦考前必知注意事項 ♦歷年同等學力真題
沖刺指南:英語寫作模板匯總♦考前沖刺必備知識點♦英語寫作高分30篇♦考前模擬試題
入門須知:什么是在職研究生 ♦在職讀研六大方式 ♦在職研報考條件 ♦讀在職研有用嗎
特別聲明:①凡本網(wǎng)注明稿件來源為"原創(chuàng)"的,轉(zhuǎn)載必須注明"稿件來源:育路網(wǎng)",違者將依法追究責任;
②部分稿件來源于網(wǎng)絡,如有侵權(quán),請聯(lián)系我們溝通解決。
2019年同等學力申碩統(tǒng)考將于5月19日舉行,我們將于考后發(fā)布2019年同等學力申碩真題及答案解析。以下為2018年同等學力申碩各科
評論0
“無需登錄,可直接評論...”