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Dear Lisa,

There is nothing wrong with you and this boy be friends and studying together. Of course a boy and a girl can be good friend. Ending your friendship with this boy would be stupid thing to do. You would lose a good friend and someone to study for.

Teenagers are like to gossip, and they often see something which isn't real. Perhaps your classmates can understand your friendship with the boy. However, there has no reason to stop it. My advice is to ignore your classmates. That way you will show us that you are much grown-up than they are.

Yours,

Miss Wang

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Death Valley is one of the most famous deserts in the United States, covering a wide area with its alkali sand. Almost 20 percent of this area is well below sea level, and Badwater, a salt water pool, is about 280 feet below sea level and the lowest point in the United States.

Long ago the Panamint Indians called this place ¡°Tomesha¡±¡ª the land of fire. Death Valley¡¯s present name dates back to 1849, when a group of miners coming across from Nevada became lost in its unpleasantness and hugeness and their adventure turned out to be a sad story. Today Death Valley has been declared a National Monument(¼ÍÄî±®) and is crossed by several well-marked roads where good services can be found easily. Luckily the change created by human settlement has hardly ruined the special beauty of this place.

Here nature created a lot of surprising, almost like the sights on the moon, ever-changing as the frequent wind moves the sand about, showing the most unusual colors. One of the most astonishing and variable parts of Death Valley is the Devil¡¯ s Golf Course, where it seems hard for one to tell reality from terrible dreams. Sand sculptures(ɳµñ) stand on a frightening ground, as evening shadows move and lengthen.

¡¾1¡¿_______ is the lowest place in the desert.

A. Tomesha B. Death Valley

C. Nevada D. Badwater

¡¾2¡¿The name of the valley comes from _______.

A. an Indian name

B. the death of the miners

C. the local people

D. a National Movement

¡¾3¡¿From the passage we can learn that _______.

A. no one had ever known the desert before the miners

B. it¡¯s still not easy to travel across the desert

C. people can find gas-stations, cafes and hotels in the desert

D. people have changed the natural sight of the desert

¡¾4¡¿Devil Golf Course is famous for _______.

A. the frequent wind B. the colors of the sand

C. dream-like sights D. the sand sculptures

¡¾5¡¿From the passage we can see that the writer _______ the Death Valley.

A. appreciates B. is fearful of

C. dislikes D. is tired of

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿When Josephine Cooper was growing up£¬she learned the importance of charity from her parents£®Although they made a modest living for their family of 10£¬they insisted on sharing with those less fortunate£®

Half a century later£¬Mrs Cooper became a beloved volunteer at the San Diego Food Bank£¬where she devoted herself to helping others£®She organized and ran a distribution center from a church£¬helping it become the organization¡¯s largest emergency food distribution center in San Diego£®She was one of 25 outstanding senior volunteers in the nation selected and invited to Washington D£®C£®to receive the award£®

¡°She was the main person who helped us make that program grow,¡± said Mike Doody£¬former director of the Food Bank£®¡°She had a way of getting people to work together and to work hard£®She was determined and stubborn£¬but in a good way£®She had a good heart£®¡± People knew her as ¡°Grandma¡± because of her selflessness and her devotion to helping hungry children and families£®¡°She reminded people of their Grandma£®¡± Doody said£®

As a widow with a young child in 1979£¬Mrs£®Cooper was helped through a difficult financial time when the Food Bank provided her with groceries£®¡°She dedicated her life to giving back,¡± said her daughter£¬Monica Cooper£®It wasn¡¯t unusual for a local church to call Mrs Cooper to ask her to aid a needy family£®¡°She would give people food out of her cupboard£®Sometimes we would cook a meal for a family living out of their car,¡± Cooper said£®

Although Mrs Cooper was honored to receive the national award for her volunteer work£¬she said being able to help others was her reward£®She died of liver disease and kidney failure£¬aged 93£®

¡¾1¡¿The underlined word ¡°charity¡± in Paragraph 1 refers to £®

A£®offering help B£®donating money

C£®providing services D£®showing sympathy

¡¾2¡¿Which of the following is true of Mrs Cooper?

A£®She died at an early age£®

B£®She refused the national award£®

C£®She was kind and devoted£®

D£®She was not easy to get along with£®

¡¾3¡¿Mrs Cooper¡¯s story suggests that £®

A£®everyone needs a Grandma nearby

B£®children are what their parents are

C£®a sound mind is in a sound body

D£®a mother¡¯s love never changes

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