首页
登录
职称英语
(1)When a customer fell deathly ill, waitress Jessica Grant called on a skill
(1)When a customer fell deathly ill, waitress Jessica Grant called on a skill
游客
2024-09-08
11
管理
问题
(1)When a customer fell deathly ill, waitress Jessica Grant called on a skill she never thought she’d need.
(2)The man eating chicken chimichangas at table 25 asked for more tortillas and a Dr Pepper. Jessica Shafer Grant, eight hours into a 12-hour double shift at Abuelo’s restaurant in Abilene, Texas, checked on her other customers, then made her way downstairs to the kitchen to place the order. Grant, 29, called "Jay," was well liked at work. The starting shortstop on the restaurant’s softball team, she had recently moved to Abilene with her five-year-old daughter and was supplementing the income she earned as a dental assistant by waiting tables on weekends.
(3)In the restaurant’s courtyard, Walter Wheat, 74, had just polished off a plate of enchiladas. A former sergeant major in the U.S. Army, the grandfather of four had taken on a job as a substitute teacher at an elementary school. "I’ve been doing that for ten years," he’d recently quipped. "I’ve been quitting for nine." Wheat signed his credit card bill and stood up to leave. He dropped his jacket and staggered. His wife, Doris, 67, and the dinner companion grabbed Wheat’s arms and brought him carefully to the floor. Then Wheat, who’d survived a heart attack eight years earlier, stopped breathing and stared up vacantly.
(4)Doris fell to her knees and leaned over her husband. "Daddy, breathe! Breathe! " A man who identified himself as a doctor shot up from a nearby table and rushed to Wheat’s side. Wheat’s skin was pale, and his lips were turning blue. A crowd of patrons gathered as the man placed his fingers on Wheat’s neck. He looked up and shook his head. Wheat had no detectable pulse. Doris turned to a nearby waitress. "Help my husband! " she cried. "Please! "
(5)Grant was coming down the stairs when she saw a crowd in the courtyard, with Doris sitting on the floor near the center of the group. Then Grant saw Wheat on the ground. She pushed her way in.
(6)"What’s going on?" she asked.
(7)"He doesn’t have a pulse," the doctor said.
(8)Grant had learned CPR as part of her dental training, though she’d never had to use it before. "Can I give him mouth-to-mouth?" she asked Doris.
(9)"Please! "
(10)The doctor backed away and left the restaurant before anyone got his name. Grant knelt by Wheat’s head and bent close to listen for his breath. Then she felt for his pulse. Nothing. He looks pretty bad, she thought. He’s not going to make it. She began CPR anyway—I need to do that for him, she thought—alternating between two consecutive bursts of mouth-to-mouth breathing and a series of chest compressions.
(11)Within a couple of minutes, bartender Jeff Womble was at Grant’s side. He had been mixing margaritas when the restaurant’s manager alerted him to the crisis downstairs. A nursing student, Womble wordlessly took over the chest compressions on Wheat.
(12)Soon the two workers had synchronized their efforts: Grant breathed into Wheat’s mouth, then counted as Womble launched into compressions. "One one-thousand, two one-thousand..."
(13)The restaurant was nearly silent. Some patrons prayed softly. Doris twisted a napkin in her hands, repeating to herself, "God, please don’t take him from me yet."
(14)Grant and Womble persisted for nearly ten minutes. Then Wheat gasped. Grant sat back and told Womble to stop. "Keep going! " someone shouted. "Why are you stopping?"
(15)But Grant followed her instincts. "Let’s not mess with this," she instructed. "He’s breathing."
(16)The restaurant erupted into applause.
(17)But Grant was already upstairs delivering tortillas and a Dr Pepper to table 25, apologizing profusely to the patrons for the delay. After she explained the situation, the customers tipped her $100. It took Grant an hour to realize the magnitude of the incident, and she trembled from head to toe. Meanwhile, doctors determined that Wheat had suffered a ruptured aortic aneurysm, which kills 90 percent of its victims. A few days later, Grant and her daughter paid a visit to Wheat in the hospital, where he was recovering from surgery. She hugged him carefully, and Wheat managed a cheerful greeting. "I couldn’t believe he was actually talking," Grant says. Doris sat by Wheat’s bedside, and everyone in the room held hands, cried, and prayed together. "It was amazing," says Grant. "They treated us like family." [br] What is true about Walter Wheat?
选项
A、He went to the restaurant with his wife and daughter.
B、He had never told his wife about his heart disease.
C、He was treating his wife and a friend to dinner at the restaurant.
D、He showed the same symptom as eight years ago.
答案
C
解析
第3段第5句提到是由Walter Wheat付账的,第7句中的his wife和companion“同伴”表明Walter Wheat在餐厅是请客吃饭的,因此,本题应选C。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3749180.html
相关试题推荐
Severalexpertshavebeencalledintoplan______forboating,tennis,refreshm
PASSAGETWOTheymaynotmakeitanybetterforthecustomers.原文最后一段提及,鉴于TCCWNAc
Iwastohavemadeaspeechif______.A、IwasnotcalledawayB、nobodywouldhav
YoucanneverimaginewhatgreattroubleIhavehad______thecustomertowithd
(1)Whenacustomerfelldeathlyill,waitressJessicaGrantcalledonaskill
(1)Whenacustomerfelldeathlyill,waitressJessicaGrantcalledonaskill
[originaltext]W:Goodafternoon,thisisBEScustomersserviceline,Maggiespe
[originaltext]W:Goodafternoon,thisisBEScustomersserviceline,Maggiespe
[originaltext]W:Goodafternoon,thisisBEScustomersserviceline,Maggiespe
[originaltext]M:HelloJessica.W:HiBob.M:Jessica,what’swrong?Yousound
随机试题
WhentoWorryAboutaFeverTHEPANICKEDCALL
WhichofthefollowingisNOTtrueforeachofthefivewinners?[br][original
能使能量代谢增加的因素有( )A.运动 B.寒冷 C.进食
项目融资与传统的贷款相比较,具有的特点包括()。A:资金的来源主要是依赖项目的
暗涵是指涵洞()。A.洞顶填土大于0.5m B.洞顶填土厚0.5~1.0m之
化学发光与荧光的根本区别是A:化学发光需要酶催化,而荧光不需要B:化学发光和荧
为鉴别炭疽芽胞杆菌和类炭疽杆菌,将待检菌接种于含0.3U/ml青霉素培养基上,3
患者男性,42岁。入院时呼之不应,双眼瞪视不动,伴擦鼻、咀嚼,醒后可继续原来的动
根据外力施加方向的不同,材料强度又可分为()等。A.抗震强度 B.抗拉强度
激烈的行业竞争必然形成优胜劣汰,如果缺乏独特的品牌形象和吸引力,将可能遭遇严重
最新回复
(
0
)