A maths talent who won fame this week for giving up a milliondollar prize is living with his mother ina flat in St Petersburg, coexisting on her £ 30amonth pension, because he has been unemployed for many years. The Sunday Telegraph tracked down the strange recluse(隐士) who shocked the maths world when he solved a centuryold puzzle known as the Poincar? Conjecture. Grigory Perelman's trouble comes from a split with a leading Russian mathematical institute, the Steklov, in 2003. When the Institute in St Petersburg failed to reelect him as a member, Dr Perelman was left feeling an "absolutely ungifted and untalented person", said a friend. He became unconfident and cut himself off. Other friends say he cannot afford to travel to the International Mathematical Union's congress inMadrid, where many people want him to receive the maths equivalent(等价物) of the Nobel Prize, andthat he is too modest to ask anyone to pay for his trip. Interviewed in St Petersburg, Dr Perelman insisted that he was unworthy of all the attention, and was uninterested in the prize. "I do not think anything that I say can be of the slightest public interest," he said. "I am not saying that because I value my privacy, or that I am doing anything I want to hide.There are no topsecret projects going on here. I just believe the public has no interest in me." He continued: "I know that selfpromotion happens a lot and if people want to do that, good luck tothem, but I do not regard it as a positive thing. I realized this a long time ago and nobody is going tochange my mind. Newspapers should be more discerning(有洞察力的) over who they write about. They should have more taste. As far as I am concerned, I can't offer anything for their readers." Dr Perelman has some small savings from his time as a lecturer, but is apparently unwilling to increasethem with the D$1 million offered by the Clay Mathematics Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts,for solving one of the world's seven "Millennium Problems". 1. Grigory Perelman lives with his mother because ________. A. he has to look after herB. his mother has a million dollarsC. he has been out of work for a long timeD. he is badly paid at the mathematical institute 2. The phrase"absolutely ungifted and untalented person"shows that Dr Perelman felt ________. A. angry B. discouragedC. proud D. confident 3. Grigory Perelman refused to accept the prize because ________. A. he thought the prize was worthlessB. he didn't believe the newsC. he couldn't afford to travel to MadridD. he showed no interest in it 4. From the passage, we can infer that Grigory Perelman ________. A. solved the most difficult maths problemB. has a strong personalityC. wanted to make himself known to allD. didn't get on well with the press 5. What's the best title for the passage? A. Great Mathematician Leads LifeB. Maths Genius Abandons a Milliondollar PrizeC. Mathematics Institute Offers Grigory D$1 MillionD. One of the World's Seven "Millennium Problems" Solved