单选题 {{B}}In this section there are four passages followed by questions or unfinished statements, each with four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer.{{/B}}
Micah True went off alone on a Tuesday morning to run through the rugged trails of the Gila Wilderness, and now it was already Saturday and he had not been seen again. The search for him, once hopeful, was turning desperate. Weather stoked the fear. The missing man was wearing only shorts, a T-shirt and running shoes. It was late March. Daytimes were warm, but the cold scythed through the spruce forest in the depth of night, the temperatures cutting into the 20s.
For three days, rescue teams had fanned out for 50 yards on each side of the marked trails. Riders on horseback ventured through the gnarly brush, pushing past the felled branches of pinyon-juniper and ponderosa pine. An airplane and a helicopter circled in the sky, their pilots squinting above the ridges, woodlands, river canyons and meadows.
"We're in the middle of nowhere, and this guy could be anywhere," Tom Bemis, the rescue coordinator appointed by the state police, said gloomily. He was sitting in a command center, marking lines on a map that covered 200,000 acres. Some 150 trained volunteers were at his disposal, and dozens of others were there too, arrived from all over the country, eager and anxious, asking to enlist in the search.
Not only did Micah True have loyal friends, but he also had a devoted following. At age 58, he was a mythic figure, known by the nickname Caballo Blanco, or White Horse. He was a famous ultrarunner, competing in races two, three or four times as long as marathons. The day he vanished, he said he was going on a 12-mile jaunt, for him as routine as a lap around a high school track.
But True's mythic renown owed less to his ability to run than to his capacity to inspire. He was a free spirit who survived on cornmeal, beans and wild dreams, aloof to the allure of money and possessions. He lived in the remote Copper Canyons of northern Mexico to be near the reclusive Tarahumara Indians, reputed to be the greatest natural runners in the world.
His story was exuberantly molded into legend in the 2009 best-seller Born to Run by Christopher McDougall. Micah True, however private and self-effacing, was suddenly delivered to the world as a prophet, "the lone wanderer of the High Sierras." To many, he represented the road not taken, a purer path, away from career, away from capitalism, away from the clock.
单选题 According to the first three paragraphs, which of the following statements is NOT true of Micah True?
  • A. Micah True was missing in the Gila Wilderness.
  • B. Searching for him was hopeless from the beginning.
  • C. Adverse weather reduced the chances of Micah True's survival.
  • D. More and more volunteers were willing to join in the rescue team.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】
单选题 Which of the following can be inferred from Paragraph 5 about the personality of Micah True?
  • A. Micah True is inclined to be intimate with nature by going away from the world into solitude.
  • B. Micah True has gotten hooked on the ability to run.
  • C. Micah True is a man immersed in dangerous fantasy worlds.
  • D. Micah True is eager to become the most outstanding runner around the world.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】
单选题 The word "aloof" in Paragraph 5 is closest in meaning to "______".
  • A. distant
  • B. ready
  • C. nimble
  • D. delicate
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】
单选题 According to the last sentence in the passage, which of the following is true?
  • A. Micah True had a general aversion to the secular life.
  • B. Micah True's outlook had not been understood by most people.
  • C. Micah True just enjoyed the feeling on the road, feeling the power of nature and life.
  • D. Micah True did not have any ambition for career and money.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】
单选题 Which of the following is suitable to be the title of the passage?
  • A. A Mysterious Man.
  • B. Search and Rescue.
  • C. The Missing Person in the Gila Wilderness.
  • D. Micah True's Last Run.
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】