【正文】
be most amazed to see loads of costumes (服 裝 ) and sets from the beloved Harry Potter films. Led by tour guides, many of whom worked on the films themselves, this is your chance to climb aboard Hagrid?s Motorcycle, ride on a broomstick, and walk through the Great Hall at Hogwarts. 21. Where can a teenager experience the firefighter?s role? A. In London Dungeon. B. In KidZania. C. In London Bridge Experience. D. In Warner Bros Studio Tour. 22. What do London Dungeon and London Bridge Experience have in mon? A. Business practice. B. Interesting rides. C. Live actors. D. Role plays. 23. What can we learn about Warner Bros Studio Tour? A. It?s where the Harry Potter films were made. B. It focuses on teamwork and independence. C. It?s a magic journey through the film history. D. It sells costumes from the Harry Potter films. B Tracey?s husband told her, “If you build it, they will e.” So Tracey built a dance studio four years ago, and he was right. Tracey built Revere Dance Studio in an old large church in Cincinnati, Ohio. It may seem like an odd place to run a dance studio, but this church was disability accessible and that?s just what Tracey was looking for. Tracey needed a new home for her wheelchair dance students after the studio that was hosting the classes closed. Now Tracey has been teaching free dance classes to students in wheelchairs for over four years. This season, her class is made up of six boys and girls ranging in age from 6 to 11 who attend dance rehearsals (排練 ) twice a month. Tracey says these classes are about more than the dancing. “For any child to get out on stage is an acplishment,” Tracey said. Tracey has always considered the students in her “Wonders on Wheels” class to be talented, but this week she got to share their talents with the world. On Sunday, the WOW class debuted (初次登臺 ) a dance routine they?ve been working on since October. Last October, one week before the dance class reunited for a new season, one of the WOW children, Katie, passed away unexpectedly. Her teammates were heartbroken. They decided to honor their friend by giving this season?s dance to her. Everyone knew how much Katie loved Celine Dion, so the group chose the song My Heart Will Go On for the dance routine. The six WOW dancers, dressed in white, were surrounded by fourteen dancers dressed in black. These “shadows” are high school girls who volunteer to dance alongside the children in wheelchairs, helping them move across the dance floor. As the song came to an end, a huge round of applause erupted from the audience. 24. Why did Tracey build the dance studio in the church? A. It is free of charge. B. It is near her home. C. It?s easy for the disabled to use. D. It is big enough to hold dancers. 25. Tracey offered her dance class________. A. for free B. twice a week C. only to girls in wheelchairs D. with the help of volunteers 26. What can best describe Tracey? A. Brave and determined. B. Talented and strict. C. Devoted and hopeful. D. Generous and kind. 27. What could be the best title for the passage? A. Tracey and her Dancing Career B. A Wonderful Dance Performance C. Children in Wheelchairs Struggle in the Dance Studio D. Children in Wheelchairs Realize Dancing Dreams C A biologist once criticized for stealing eggs from the nests of the rarest bird in the world has been awarded the “Nobel Prize” of conservation after his methods saved nine species from extinction. Professor Carl Jones won the 2020 Indianapolis Prize — the highest accolade in the field of animal conservation — for his 40 years of work in Mauritius, where he saved an endangered kestrel from being the next Dodo. When the 61yearold first travelled to the east African island in the 1970s, he was told to close down a project to save the Mauritius kestrel. At the time there were just 4 left in the wild, making it the rarest bird on Earth. However he stayed, using the techniques of captive breeding(人工繁殖 ), which involved taking eggs from the birds? nests and hatching them under incubators, forcing the mothers to lay another set of eggs in the wild. A decade later, the number of Mauritius kestrels had increased to over 300 and today there are around 400 in the wild. It has also been necessary for the biologist in efforts to bring other rare species back from the edge of extinction, including the pink pigeon, echo parakeet and Rodrigues warbler. Prof. Jones was awarded the $ 250,000 prize at a ceremony in London. “As a young man in my 20s, I certainly didn?t enjoy the stress and the tension of the criticism I received.” Reflecting on the start of his career, he said the Mauritius kestrel project had been seen as a “dead loss” at the time. In the 1970s there was fierce opposition to the captive breeding techniques, with critics arguing that they were too risky and took the emphasis off breeding in the wild. Prof. Jones has devoted his whole life to his work, only being a father for the first time eight years ago, at 53. He said receiving the prize was particularly important to him, because it proved that his work to save birds was right. 28. What does