TEXT EIGHT
After receiving a six-year prison sentence on July 31st, Sanjay Dutt, an Indian film star, begged for bail while he appealed against it. "Sir, I made a mistake," he said. But the judge said no. Mr Dutt's crime-to have procured two guns from Muslim mobsters who were responsible for bomb attacks in Mumbai in 1993-was serious. Yet he urged Mr Dutt, 48, to return to the silver screen after serving his sentence. "Don't get perturbed," he said. "You have many years to go and work, like the 'Mackenna's Gold' actor Gregory Peck."
Thus ended one of the longest song-and-dances in India's criminal legal history. Mr Dutt was convicted last year, having already spent 16 months in jail. He was acquitted of direct involvement in the bombings, which killed 257 people. They were carried out in 1993 in revenge for the demolition of an ancient mosque in the Hindu holy city of Ayodhya by Hindu fanatics, and subsequent Hindu-Muslim rioting. Some 100 people have been found guilty of the bombing. They have all been sentenced in the past three months, including a dozen to death and 20 to life- imprisonment. But the alleged masterminds of the attacks are still at large. One of them, a Mumbai gangster called Dawood Ibrahim, is alleged by Indian officials to be linked to al-Qaeda and to be hiding in Pakistan.
Then again, Bollywood is rather shady. Gangsters and crooked politicians have long laundered ill-gotten money through film productions. Indeed Mr Dutt was investigated over money-laundering allegations in 2001. Other recent Bollywood stars to grace the courts include Monica Bedi, an actress convicted of dealing in fake passports. Her accomplice was another Mumbai gangster, Abu Salem, who delivered the guns to Mr Dutt, and is currently awaiting trial for his alleged part in the 1993 bombings.
An even bigger Bollywood star, Salman Khan, is appealing against two prison sentences of five years and one year for poaching respectively an endangered antelope and two gazelles. A Bollywood film about the case has been scheduled. Mr Khan has also had to battle a four-year-old charge that he recklessly drove his car over five people sleeping on a pavement in Mumbai, killing one of them.
Bollywood's biggest star, Amitabh Bachchan, also known as "the Big B", is, in contrast, venerated. Where Mr Khan is vain and brash, he has a reputation for humility and Hindu piety. But even this has been imperilled of late by revelations that Mr Bachchan and his film-star son, Abhishek, bought valuable plots of land reserved for farmers. They registered themselves thus after being allotted farmland by a former government of the state of Uttar Pradesh, led by the Samajwadi party. Mr Bachchan is close to one of the party's leading lights, Amar Singh, a famed socialite. Mr Bachchan's wife, Jaya, an actress, is now also a Samajwadi politician.
1.The judge said no because _____.
[A] he believed Dutt was wronged and showed no sympathy.
[B] he did not think Dutt had committed a crime.
[C] he thought Dutt had committed a serious crime.
[D] he thought Gregory Peck was Dutt's good example.
2. The comparison of Bollywood stars' support for Dutt to Holleywood's worries about global warming implies_____.
[A] Bollywood stars are more sympathetic than their Hollywood peers.
[B] Bollywood stars express their support in a modest way.
[C] Bollywood stars back up Dutt with strong support and full passion.
[D] Bollywood stars are also concerned with environmental issues.
3. The phrase "grace the courts" (Line 3, Paragraph 4) most probably means_____.
[A] present oneself in the courts
[B] appeal against the courts
[C] be sentenced by the courts
[D]show respect to the courts
4. Accroding to the passage, the following adjectives can be used to describe Mr. Khan except_____.
[A] venerated
[B] vain and brash
[C] reckless and mindless
[D] cruel
5. The best title of this passage can be _____.
[A] The Shady Bollywood
[B] Mr Dutt's Legal History
[C] Shady Stars of Bollywood
[D] Bollywood or Bullywood