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Dear Jack£¬
Glad to receive your e-mail£®                    £®
Yours£¬
Li Hua£®

·ÖÎö Actually£¬£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍÒ»£©Guangpan Campaign£¬which means"clear your plate"£¬has nothing to do with music CDs£®
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¸ß·Ö¾äÐͶþ£©By no means can we waste a grain!
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½â´ð Dear Jack£¬
Glad to receive your e-mail£® Actually£¬£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍÒ»£©Guangpan Campaign£¬which means"clear your plate"£¬has nothing to do with music CDs£®£¨½âÊ͹âÅÌÒâ˼£©It is a campaign to promote the spirit of saving and stopping wasting at dinner table£®Many people order big meals but cannot eat up all the food eventually£¬only to show their generosity£®£¨½øÒ»²½½âÊÍ£©This also affects a lot of school students£®They often buy some food£¬find it not so delicious and leave the food untouched in the plate when they finish their meals!What a terrible waste!
£¨ÎÒµÄÀí½â£©Many people are going hungry for lack of food£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐͶþ£©By no means can we waste a grain!So I'll join in the campaign£¬£¨·¢³ö³«Ò飩order what I can finish every dinner and make clear!
Yours£¬
Li Hua

µãÆÀ ¸ÃÊéÃæ±í´ïµÄʱ̬ʹÓõõ±£¬¸ÅÀ¨ÎÄÕÂËùÒªÇóµÄÈ«²¿Òªµã£¬¶øÇÒÄܹ»ÓÐЧµØʹÓÃÓï¾äÖ®¼äµÄÁ¬½Ó³É·Ö£¬ËùдÄÚÈÝÁ¬¹á£¬½á¹¹½ô´Õ£¬ÍêÈ«´ïµ½ÁËÔ¤ÆÚµÄд×÷Ä¿µÄ

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13£®Guide dogs are going to be available for the children who are unable to see normally in the UK for the first time£¬as the age limit is to be removed£®The Guide Dogs for the Blind Association is to begin training dogs to help blind people under the age of 16£®
The association says too many youngsters with impaired eyesight are lacking in independence£®They have only a limited social life because of their disability£®Giving some of them guide dogs at a younger age is intended to help them to widen their range of activities and to improve their sense of self-confidence and independence£®Guide dogs for these teenagers will begin to be provided from next year£®There has been an experimental project to test the use of guide dogs with younger people£®
Charlotte£¬aged 14£¬was among the youngest guide dog owners£®She had been gradually losing her eyesight since the age of eight£¬and lost her eyesight completely this year£®She has been assisted by a two-year-old guide dog£®Charlotte used to have a long stick to help her move around£¬but having a guide dog allows her much more freedom and makes her feel safer£®
However£¬the association says there is a worryingly patchy supply of services for the young blind people across the UK£¬and it calls for national standards to be introduced£®As with adult blind people£¬only a small number of them are likely to be considered suitable for a guide dog£®Most will continue to rely on extra help and training from education and social services£®

29£®We can learn from the text that owning guide dogsA£®
A£®is beneficial to blind children's development
B£®may meet with difficulties sometimes
C£®became possible in the UK recently
D£®is quite universal in the UK
30£®According to the text£¬Charlotte's example proves thatC£®
A£®the association's opinion is not quite right
B£®guide dogs can get along well with disabled people
C£®it is necessary to carry out the experimental project
D£®youngsters need companions and friends
31£®What does the underlined word"patchy"in the last paragraph probably mean£¿D
A£®Endless£®      
B£®Perfect£®
C£®Diverse£®        
D£®Inadequate£®
32£®What is the main idea of the text£¿B
A£®Blind people need guide dogs'assistance in their daily life£®
B£®Age limit for the blind to have guide dogs is to be removed£®
C£®More guide dogs will be trained in the UK£®
D£®The project of using guide dogs is to begin£®
20£®Six years ago£¬a Miami woman walking through the hall of an office building casually noticed two men standing together£®Several minutes after her leaving£¬the men murdered a person working in the building£®Police investigators determined that the woman was the only witness who had seen the two suspects£¬and could possibly describe them£®In an interview with police£¬her memory of the men proved disappointingly unclear£®
Several days later£¬psychologist Ronald P£®Fisher was brought in to get a more complete description from the woman£®Fisher's interview produced a breakthrough £¨Í»ÆÆ£©-the woman reported a clear picture of one of the suspects£®She then recalled several details about his appearances£®This information gave police important leads that enabled them to arrest the suspects and close the case£®
Police investigators found the help from Fisher because of his rich knowledge in conducting the so-called cognitive £¨ÈÏÖªµÄ£© interview£¬a kind of memory-rebuilding process£®In its original form£¬the cognitive interview focuses on guiding witnesses through four general recalling techniques£ºthinking about physical surroundings and personal feelings that existed at the time of past events£¬reporting everything that comes to mind about those events no matter how broken or unconnected£¬retelling events in kinds of time orders£¬beginning to end£¬end to beginning£¬forward or backward£¬and accepting different views while recalling events£®
Usually£¬an interviewer begins the cognitive approach by encouraging the witness to take an active role in recalling information rather than giving answers only to someone else's questions£®The witness first describes what happened in his or her own words£¬with no interviewer interruptions£®The interviewer then goes further with specific techniques£¬such as having the witness tell the details of what happened from different aspects£®
Experiments with police detectives trained in this demanding interview method find that they get nearly 50% more information from witnesses than before training£¬while error rates remain about the same£®
67£®What is the purpose of this passage£¿D
A£®To give an description of a murder case in an office£®
B£®To explain why Fisher was invited to a police interview£®
C£®To describe how cognitive method helps the woman to recall£®
D£®To give the readers an idea of cognitive interview£®
68£®The cognitive interview helped the woman to recall more byC£®
A£®strengthening her memory           
B£®giving her encouragement
C£®rebuilding her memory              
D£®giving her more time
69£®It can be inferred from the passage that in a cognitive interview£¬the interviewer mainly plays aArole£®
A£®directing         
B£®questioning   
C£®disappointing      
D£®interrupting
70£®What is the key point of the cognitive interview£¿B
A£®The interviewer should interrupt the witness from time to time£®
B£®The witness is encouraged to take an active role in recalling information£®
C£®The interview should take place outside the police station£®
D£®The witness should recall details at the scene of the event£®
10£®Living alone in a foreign country can be difficult£®Safety is a big problem£¬and I must be careful and stay vigilant £¨¾¯ÌèµÄ£© all the time£®
Boston is a strange city£®It may look wonderful in one area but£¬just a block later£¬you no longer feel safe£®Run-down buildings£¬scary-looking sculpture£¬and suspicious robber-like people£ºIt makes my hair stand up to walk alone after dark£®Therefore£¬I try to go to the city during the day and only when I really have to£¬I had to go there today to get some Chinese food for my presentation on Chinese snacks£®
Unfortunately£¬I missed the 5£º50train back to Andover and the next one wouldn't come for three hours£®Rich£¬a guy I met on the way to the station£¬also missed the train£®He said his friends would pick him up by car and could give me a ride if I wanted£®I decided to accept his offer£¬because I thought I would be able to get home more quickly this way£®
The next thing I knew£¬Iwas on the subway to Rich's apartment in another part of Boston£®On the ride£¬he told me about his Scottish origins£¨ÑªÍ³£©and poor family background£®I knew he wasn't the kind of"proper"guy you met in Andover£®Although I trusted Rich£¬I didn't go up to his apartment£®Entering a stranger's house is dangerous so I stayed outside and waited for his friends£®It was a long wait and Rich came down to chat with me£®I learned then that he had been a drug addict£¨ñ«¾ý×Ó£©and was still a drug dealer£®He showed me his parts£¬where he used to inject heroin£®
Although he didn't make his money legally£¬I was sure he would not harm me£®And indeed£¬Rich got me back to campus safely£®

51£®What does the author think of living alone in a foreign country£¿D
A£®It would be hard work£®
B£®It would be an easy experience£®
C£®It would be a test of his struggle£®
D£®It would be difficult£®
52£®What does the underlined sentence £¨in para.2£©mean£¿B
A£®I'm much frightened to walk alone after the day breaks£®
B£®I'm much frightened to walk alone after it is dark£®
C£®I'm standing up to walk alone after it is dark£®
D£®I'm standing up to walk alone after the day breaks£®
53£®Where does the author live£¿C
A£®In Boston£®
B£®In China£®
C£®In Andover£®
D£®In Scotland£®
54£®Which of the following is true to Rich£¿A
A£®Rich was a drug addict but friendly to the author£®
B£®Rich got some Chinese food and met the author on the way to the station£®
C£®Rich's family was poor and he wanted to find out his Scottish origins£®
D£®Rich's apartment in another part of Boston was big but very dangerous£®

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