【正文】
. hears B. was hearing C. heard D. would hear . name B. school C. age D. address . polite B. angry C. happy D. kind . something B. everything C. anything D. no thing IV. 閱讀理解 EVERYTHING has two sides. One side of SARS is already clear. It is a deadly disease, which causes fear. There were 2,601 cases (病例 ) recorded on the Chinese mainland on April 24, according to government report. 115 people have died and numbers keep rising But, there is another side. SARS is a reminder (提醒 ) of how fragile life can be. Suddenly, it’s not just the old people who are thinking about death. Everyone now realizes there might not always be a tomorrow. Wang Xinying, a student in Taiyuan, Shanxi Province came into contact (接觸 ) with a suspected (疑似 ) SARS patient in midApril. He was told to stay at home for at least two weeks. “Watching TV about more and more SARS patients dying, I never knew that death could be so close. Life is valuable (珍貴的 ) and I’m going to treasure (珍惜 ) every single day,” he said. SARS teaches people to be grateful, both for their own lives and for others. Doctor s and nurses, for example, have to spend all their time with infected (被感染的 ) patients. As a result, more than one fifth of SARS cases in China are medical workers. Xu Bing, a student of Beijing No. 5 Middle School wants to be a doctor in the future. “Although they certainly know the dangers, doctors and nurses kept working hard on saving people’s lives. I’m deeply moved by what they have done. I think they