Питання до тесту:

Read the texts below. For questions (6-10) choose the correct answer (A, B, C or D). Write your answers on the separate answer sheet.

Ski Patrol: Always on Alert for Avalanche Safety

When he was about 10 years old, Doug Driskell narrowly escaped an avalanche. He and some friends were waiting for a tram to carry them down a mountain at a ski resort, and they started fooling around. “We were just walking around having snowball fights,” he says. “All of a sudden, the snow layer took off and I ran and jumped out of the way.”

5 Within five seconds of taking off, an avalanche can move at 80 miles an hour (129 kilometers an hour), so people rarely have time to jump or run out of harm’s way like Driskell did as a kid. But these days, avalanches don’t often overtake skiers at resorts because the ski patrol makes sure the slopes are safe.

10 As long as skiers stay in the official ski areas, they don’t have to worry. “We control the hazard, so it is unlikely you’ll get caught,” Driskell explains. “We do that by compacting the snow, and we use explosives to make an avalanche move or to test an area to see if it is unstable.” This work can be dangerous, so ski patrol members look out for each other and keep the public at a safe distance.

15 People going out into the backcountry often carry a special instrument called an avalanche transceiver that sends out a radio signal. All members of the ski patrol carry one as well, in case they get caught in an avalanche while working. The signal tells the patrol where to dig if someone ends up under the snow. Once the patrol identifies the area where a 20 person might be, they push a probe down into the snow. When it hits an object, they start digging with the shovels they always carry. Everyone on the ski patrol has studied first aid, and many are Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) or paramedics, so they can start treating life-threatening injuries right there on the mountain.

25 An Australian shepherd, a Labrador retriever, and a German shepherd are important members of the Aspen Mountain Ski Patrol team. These amazing dogs are trained to use their keen sense of smell to seek out people unseen beneath the snow. First, they learn to find their master, then someone else they know, then a stranger.

Which of the following is TRUE about Doug Driskell, according to the text?

Варіанти відповідей на тест:
  • He luckily avoided an accident in his childhood.

  • He dreamed to be a patroller in his childhood.

  • He is good at persuading skiers to be careful.

  • He is the master of four well-trained dogs.