Lifeguard, sportscaster, movie star, governor,
president——there wasn’t much Ronald Reagan didn’t do in life.
“The world was a vast opportunity
for him,” Lou Cannon wrote in his biography(傳記) of the
former US president, who died on June 5,2004, aged 93.
Reagan’s final years saw him fight
a losing battle against Alzheimer’s disease(老年癡呆癥). But
his positive attitude toward life has given hope to many people.
Born in 1911 to a poor family in a
small town in Illinois, his father was a failed salesman who drank too much. It
was in these difficult times, though, that Reagan developed the powerful
optimism(樂觀) that would serve him so well. He always
believed better times lying ahead, and this was reflected in his high school
yearbook entry. “Life is one grand, sweet song, so start the music,” he wrote.
As a teenager, Reagan spent summers
working as a lifeguard at a local beach, saving 77 lives in seven years. He
graduated from college in 1932 with a degree in economics and sociology. But
America was still in the middle of the Great Depression, and jobs were hard to
find. Reagan finally found work as a radio sports announcer and this road led
him to Hollywood in 1937.
During the 20---year film career,
he never became a leading star. As in his lifeguard days, Reagan loved to play
the hero and only took the role of a bad guy once in more than 50 films.
A talented speaker who was always
able to connect with his audience, Reagan became involved in politics in the
1950s. This popular touch led to him being elected the governor of California
in 1967.
All the while Reagan was in
California, he had his eye on the White House. In 1980, aged 69, he became the
oldest man ever elected president.
He held office from 1981 to 1989,
the first president to serve two complete terms after World War Ⅱ. When he left, aged 77, he held the highest
popularity rate of any retiring president in US history.
He remained positive even when he
discovered he had an illness that would destroy him. “I will leave with the
greatest love for this country of ours and eternal(永恒的optimism(樂觀) for its
future,”he wrote.
1.Reagan can be best described as a man with ______.
A. firmness B. humour C.
optimism D. talent
2.What didn’t Reagan do in his life time?
A. Playing the role of a bad guy.
B. Being a leading star of the film.
C. Saving people’s lives.
D. Working as a radio sports announcer.
3.Which is the correct order of events described in
the passage?
a. Reagan fought a losing battle against Alzheimer’s
disease.
b. Reagan became an actor.
c. Reagan worked as a lifeguard.
d. Reagan graduated from college.
e. Reagan was elected the governor of California.
A. a, c, d, e
,b B. e, c, d, b, a
C. b, a, c, d,
e D. c, d, b, e, a
4.When
the writer of Reagan’s biography says “The world was a vast opportunity for
him,” he really means that _______.
A. Reagan achieved much in his whole life
B. Reagan could have done much better
C. Reagan did much for America and the world
D. Reagan was a very lucky man