单选题
Restaurants And Health

"Clean your plate!" and "Be a member of the clean-plate club!" Just about every kid in the U.S. has heard this from a parent or grandparent. Often, it's accompanied by an appeal: "Just think about those starving orphans (孤儿) in Africa!"
Sure, we should be grateful for every bite of food. Unfortunately, many people in the U.S. take a few too many bites. Instead of saying "clean the plate", perhaps we should save some food for tomorrow.
According to news reports, U.S. restaurants are partly to blame for the growing bellies (肚子). A waiter puts a plate of food in front of each customer, with two to four times the amount recommended by the government, according to a USA Today story.
Americans traditionally associate quantity with value and most restaurants try to give them that. They serve large portions to stand apart from competitors and to give the customers value. They prefer to have customers complain about too much food rather than too little.
Barbara Rolls, a nutrition professor at Pennsylvania State University, told USA Today that restaurant portion sizes began to grow in the 1970s, the same time that the American waistline began to expand.
Health experts have tried to get many restaurants to serve smaller portions. Now, apparently, some customers are calling for this too. A restaurant industry trade magazine reported last month that 57 percent of more than 4,000 people surveyed believed that restaurants serve portions are too large; 23 percent had no opinion; 20 percent disagreed.
But a closer look at the survey indicates that many Americans who can't afford fine dining still prefer large portions. 70 percent of those earning at least $150,000 per year prefer smaller portions. But only 45 percent of those earning less than $25,000 want smaller.
It's not that working class Americans don't want to eat healthy. It's just that after long hours at low-paying jobs, getting less on their plate hardly seems like a good deal. They live from paycheck to paycheck, happy to save a little money for next year's Christmas presents.

单选题 By saying "Be a member of the clean-plate-club!" (Par
【正确答案】
【答案解析】本题是细节题,出现在文章的第一段第一句。"Clean your plate!" and "Be a member of the clean-plate club!" Just about every kid in the U.S. has heard this from a parent or grandparent.所以B选项是正确答案。
单选题 According to news reports, U.S. restaurants ______.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】本题是细节题,出现在文章第三段的第一句。According to news reports U. S. restaurants are partly to blame for the growing bellies.“根据最新的报道,民众逐渐增胖的部分原因是由美国的餐馆所引起的”。A选项是该句的同义替换,为正确答案。
单选题 U.S. restaurants provide large portions of food because ______.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】本题是细节题,出现在文章第四段第二句。They serve large portions to stand apart from competitors and to give the customers value.“这些餐馆给食客们提供大份的食物,这样他们就和其他的竞争者有别,以此来满足他们对质量的要求。”所以B选项是正确答案。这里考查了考生在阅读中把握细节的能力。
单选题 According to the passage, working class Americans dining in restaurants ______.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】本题是细节题。本题原文中的内容出现在最后一段。并不是这些美国的工薪阶层不想吃得健康一些,而是他们在长时间工作之后,所得薪水又很少,如果他们盘子中的食物分量不足,在他们看来,这顿饭钱就花得不值。所以C选项是正确答案。
单选题 A proper title of the passage is ______.
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】本题是主旨题。考查了考生对整篇文章宏观把握的能力。通读全文,可以知道该篇文章从美国日常生活中的琐事谈起,引出了在美国社会餐馆往往提供超大份量的食物这一奇怪现象,随后给出了造成这种现象的部分原因,紧接着作者援引教授的话来分析美国人尤其是工薪阶层对这种现象的看法。结合选项,可知A、B、C选项都过于片面,不能反映文章的主要内容,而D选项有一定的迷惑性。事实上,文章正是强调了这样一个主题:盘子中的食物少一些,对顾客们的身体健康更为有益。围绕这一主题,展开了文章的论述。所以D选项是正确答案。