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【单选题】

Greg Woodburn, a sophomore at the University of Southern California, spends a lot of time cleaning sneakers. Some of them once belonged to him; some belonged to his friends. But soon the shoes will have new owners: underprivileged children in the United States and 20 other countries, thanks to Woodburn’s Share Our Soles (S.O.S.) charity.
"I started thinking about all the things I got from running—the health benefits, the friendships, the confidence," he says. "And I realized there are children who don’t even have shoes." Woodburn gathered up his own stash of slightly worn sneakers, then put out a call to teammates and the town. His goal was to have 100 pairs by this Christmas. When the count climbed to more than 500 pairs, he decided to turn the shoe drive into a year-round endeavor.
Back then, the sneakers came from donation boxes at the YMCA (Young Men’s Christian Association) and the local sporting goods store and from door-to-door pickups. Woodburn has now set up collection boxes at two high schools, USC’s gym and recreation center, and area races, and he has started accepting sizes and sandals. To date, S.O.S. has collected and donated more than 3,000 pairs.
And Woodburn has cleaned almost all of them (his parents and trackmates help at exam time). "People think of it as dirty work," he says. "But I like doing it. It’s inspiring. It’s not work I want to pass off to someone else. " After sorting the shoes by size, Woodburn selects the sturdiest pairs for the washing machine and the threadbare ones for recycling. The rest he piles up by the kitchen sink at his family home in Ventura, and using a scrub brush and dishwashing liquid, he gets in the zone. "As I work, I imagine who will get each pair," he says. It takes three to five minutes to clean one pair, he estimates, and he’ll do up to 100 pairs at a time. "I try to set aside a good amount of time."
To ship the footwear, Woodburn teamed with Sports Gift, a non-profit organization that provides soccer and baseball equipment to children around the world. Keven Baxter, founder and president, says, "We’d send kids shin guards (护腿,护胫), balls, and shoes, and I’d hear that for many of these kids, the cleats (防滑) were the only pair of shoes they had. They’d wear them to school and to do their chores. So Greg’s running shoes were a nice addition for us."
In just under three years, Woodburn has started three chapters of Share Our Soles: the original in Ventura, another at USC, and one at the College of the Holy Cross in Massachusetts last January, when a student there wrote asking to get involved.
For many recipients, the shoes represent opportunity. Two young boys in Southern California attended school on alternate days because they shared a pair of shoes, held together with duct tape (胶带). They were too big for one boy and too small for the other. Thanks to S.O.S., each brother received his own pair of shoes. The boys now attend school every day. When they graduate, they say, they will help a stranger, just as Woodburn helped them.
Woodhurn’s S. O. S. charity collected shoes by the following ways EXCEPT ______.

A.
gathering up his friends’ stash of slightly worn sneakers
B.
recycling shoes with little fault from the sporting goods store
C.
collecting from the students of two high schools and the USC
D.
picking up worn shoes from door to door in the town
题目标签:护腿
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【单选题】Greg Woodburn, a sophomore at the University of Southern California, spends a lot of time cleaning sneakers. Some of them once belonged to him; some belonged to his friends. But soon the shoes will ha...

A.
He is a sophomore at the University of Southern California.
B.
He has cleaned almost all of the shoes by himself.
C.
He paid Sports Gift to ship the shoes to children around the world.
D.
He has started three chapters of Share Our Soles charity.

【单选题】冰球运动所穿的护腿太短会造成什么影响?

A.
运动被限制
B.
冰球鞋和护腿之间的部分暴露在外
C.
损伤膝盖

【单选题】冰球运动所穿的护腿过长会造成什么影响()。

A.
踝关节和膝盖运动的不舒服和限制
B.
冰球鞋和护腿之间的部分暴露在外
C.
损伤膝盖

【单选题】冰球运动所穿的护腿过长会造成什么影响?

A.
踝关节和膝盖运动的不舒服和限制
B.
冰球鞋和护腿之间的部分暴露在外
C.
损伤膝盖

【单选题】Greg Woodburn, a sophomore at the University of Southern California, spends a lot of time cleaning sneakers. Some of them once belonged to him; some belonged to his friends. But soon the shoes will ha...

A.
Because he believed running can bring good health, friendships and confidence.
B.
Because he thought it was a waste of money to get rid of worn shoes.
C.
Because he wanted to help the poor children who don’t even have shoes.
D.
Because he hoped more children would like to help strangers as him.