2.D
Cassandra Feeley finds it hard to manage on her husband's income.So this year she did something more than a hobby (业余爱好):She planted vegetables in her yard.For her fist garden,Ms Feeley has put in 15tomato plants,and five rows of a variety of vegetables.The family's old farm house has become a chicken house,its residents arriving next month.Last year,Ms.Rita Gartin kept a small garden.This year she has made it much larger because,she said,"The cost of everything is going up and I was looking to lose a few pounds,too; so it's a win-win situation all around."
They are among the growing number of Americans who,driven by higher living costs and a falling economy(经济),have taken up vegetable gardening for the first time.Others have increased the size of their existing gardens.Seed companies and garden shops say that not since the 1970s has there been such an increase in interest in growing food at home.Now many gardens across the country have been sold out for several months.In Austin,Tex.,some of the gardens have a three-year waiting list.
George C.Ball Jr.,owner of a company,said sales of vegetable seeds and plants are up by 40% over last year,double the average growth of the last five years.Mr.Ball argues that some of the reasons have been building for the last few years.The big one is striking rise in the cost of food like bread and milk,together with the increases in the price of fruit and vegetables.Food prices have increase because of higher oil prices.People are now driving less,taking fewer vacations,so there more time to garden.
68.What does the word"residents"in Paragraph 1probably refer to?A
A.chickens   B.tomatoes   C.gardens   D.people
69.By saying"a win-win situation all around",Ms.Gartin means thatB.
A.she is happier and her garden bigger
B.she may spend less and lose weight
C.she is selling more and buying less
D.she has grown more varieties of vegetables
70.Why is vegetable gardening becoming increasingly popular?D
A.More Americans are dong it for fun.
B.The price of oil is lower than before.
C.There's a growing need for fruits.
D.The cost of living is on the rise.
71.Which of the following might be the best title for the text?B
A.Family Food Planning
B.Banking on Gardening
C.A Belt-tightening Move
D.Gardening as a Hobby.
1.C
While small may be beautiful,tall is just plain uncomfortable it seems,particularly when it comes to staying in hotels and eating in restaurants.
The Tall Persons Club Great Britain (TPCGB),which was formed six months ago to campaign (发起运动) for the needs of the tall,has turned its attention to hotels and restaurants.Beds that are too small,shower heads that are too low,and restaurant tables with hardly any leg-room all make life difficult for those of above average height,it says.
But it is not just the extra-tall whose needs are not being met.The average height of the population has been increasing yet the standard size of beds,doorways,and chairs has remained unchanged.
"The bedding industry says a bed should be six inches larger than the person using it,so even a king-size bed at 6′6″(6feet and 6inches) is falling short for 25% of men,while the standard 6′3″bed caters for (满足需要) less than half of the male (男性) population."Said TPCGB president Phil Heinricy,"Seven-foot beds would work fine."
Similarly,restaurant tables can cause no end of problems.Small tables,which mean the long-legged have to sit a foot or so away from them,are enough to make tall customers go elsewhere.
Some have already taken note,however.At Queens Moat Houses′Caledonian Hotel in Edinburgh,6′6″beds are now put in as standard after requests for longer beds from taller visitors,particularly Americans.
64.What is the purpose of the TPCGB campaign?C
A.To provide better services.
B.To rebuild hotels and restaurants.
C.To draw public attention to the needs of the tall.
D.To attract more people to become its members.
65.Which of the following might be a bed of proper length according to Phil Heinricy?B
A.7′2″.B.7′.C.6′6″.D.6′3″.
66.What may happen to restaurants with small tables?A
A.They may lose some customers.
B.They may start businesses elsewhere.
C.They have to find easy chairs to match the tables.
D.They have to provide enough space for the long-legged.
67.What change has already been made in a hotel in Edinburgh?B
A.Tall people pay more for larger beds.
B.6′6″beds have taken the place of 6′3″beds.
C.Special rooms are kept for Americans.
D.Guest rooms are standardized.

Is it fair for restaurants to ban little eaters? In Monronroeville, a local restaurant, McDain’s, recently decided to ban young children. Alice Roseman, its manager, says kids have bad manners and make too much noise. Other people, however, say the rule is hard to accept. Since it has become a hot topic in public, we caught several local people talking about it.

YES

There is no law stopping restaurants from banning young children. Restaurant owners should be allowed to ban them. Kids often run around and cause problems for waiters and other customers.

----Kate Barker

Kids always cause a mess, but the parents refuse to do anything about their kids’ behaviors. Although kids may be at the center of their parents’ universe, they aren’t at the center of everyone else’s.

------Mike Vuick

Adults sometimes want to talk and enjoy their dinner, but they can’t if a child is crying and running all over the place. That’s why sometimes parents don’t like eating at home. They wish they could have a good meal in the restaurants without kids’ noise.

------Dale Levitsky

NO

Banning kids from restaurants is a bad idea. If kids were banned, many restaurants would lose business. Even if restaurants gave customers the chance to buy take-away meals for their kids, many families would probably still not eat there.

--------Nicholas Song

Restaurants owners who ban kids think all children are wild and rude. But that’s not true. Most children’s eating behaviors are good enough. Even though some kids do have bad manners, banning is not a right way to teach them. I think how a society treats its children is important. After all, all kids are people, too.

-------Elliott Hall

1.The restaurant in Monronroeville refuses ___________ to eat there.

A. women

B. pets

C. men

D. kids

2.Dale Levit sky thinks parents sometimes don’t like eating at home because _________________.

A. they are too busy

B. kids are too noisy

C. they dislike doing the dishes

D. restaurant food is more delicious

3.Who thinks it is wrong to ban kids?

A. Mike Vuick

B. Kate Barker

C. Nicholas Song

D. Alice Roseman

4.Which of the following opinion is mentioned in the passage?

A. Not all kids have bad behaviors.

B. Children waste too much food.

C. Boys make more noise than girls.

D. Restaurants needn’t help parents.

News Review

APEC Blue People in Beijing got the saying after the APEC meeting in Beijing. It refers to(指) the clear blue sky during the meeting. To get such a blue sky, many factories in Beijing and nearby cities stopped work, and the number of cars on the road was cut.

A Warning Ticket A 24-year-old woman in Nanjing was given a warning ticket for eating food on the subway. Eating is not allowed on Nanjing subway. Up to now, 2,698 people have been punished(惩罚) because of their eating, smoking or selling goods on the subway.

A Teacher-free Exam Recently, students at Ningbo Huamao Foreign Language School in Zhejiang took their mid-term exam –a teacher-free exam. After handing out the exam papers, the teachers left the classroom, leaving the students to take the exam without being watched. They only came back to collect the papers at the end.

A Tomato Fight Do you want a tomato shower Come to the “tomato fight” in Spain! Once every year, people in the town of Bunol throw tomatoes at each other. Don’t worry. It’s not a real fight. People do this only for fun.

1.What did APEC Blue refer to in Beijing during the APEC meeting?

A. The people.

B. The factories.

C. The clear blue sky.

D. The cars on the road.

2.A 24-year-old woman in Nanjing was given a warning ticket for _____ on the subway.

A. eating food

B. smoking

C. selling goods

D. drinking

3.In a teacher-free exam, students take their exam _____.

A. at the end of the term

B. without being watched

C. outside the classroom

D. without giving answers

4.Why did people throw tomatoes at each other In the town of Bunol, Spain?

A. To have fun

B. To enjoy dinner

C. To take a shower

D. To start a fight

Roald Dahl was one of the most successful writers of children’s books. He sold millions of books all over the world. Many of his books have been made into films and videos. He is so famous that there is even a Roald Dahl Museum you can visit.

Roald Dahl was born in 1916 in Wales, Britain. His father was rich but he died when Roald was very young. Roald and his mother lived a hard life. He had to leave school and went to Africa where he worked for an oil company.

In 1939 Roald became a pilot, but he had a bad accident. It made him limp(瘸的) for the rest of his life. After this, Roald went to America where he wrote a story about his experience as a pilot. It was so good that it was put in a magazine.

Roald married an American film star. They bought a house in England and had five children. From 1960 to 1965, : Theo, one of his children, was hit by a taxi and was seriously hurt. Olivia, one of Roald’s daughters, died of a strange illness. Soon after this, his wife also had a serious illness. It took her years to get completely better.

Gradually Roald became more and more successful. He always did his writing in an old shed(棚) at the back of his house. He always sat in the same old armchair with a wooden board on his lap.

“One of the nice things about being a writer,” he once said, “is that all you need is what you’ve got in your head and a pencil and a bit of paper.”

In 1983 Roald won a big prize for his book The BFG. During his life, Roald wrote many famous books, such as Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Matilda, Fantastic Mr. Fox.

After he died in 1990, Roald left money to help people with serious illnesses and those with problems with reading and writing.

1.Roald Dahl was famous as a (an) ___________.

A. doctor

B. writer

C. actor

D. teacher

2.After Roald went to America, he_____________ .

A. lost his parents as in a plane accident

B. won a big prize for his book Matilda

C. got married with an English film star

D. wrote a story about his pilot experience

3.Which of the following is the best for the blank in Paragraph 4?

A. they lived a happy life .

B. he went on writing books.

C. three terrible things happened.

D. he created some unlucky characters.

4.What can we know from what Roald said in Paragraph 6 ?

A. Being a writer was a popular job at that time.

B. Though he was successful, Roald lived a simple life .

C. One needs to practice a lot if he wants to be a writer .

D. Roald loved writing very much and was talented in it.

Do you ever watch old movies? Maybe you will see one with Carole Lombard. She was a famous ________ in the 1930s. She died when she was only 34. In her _________life she made 70 movies!

Lombard’s real name was Jane Alice Peters. In 1921, she was playing baseball in the _________near her home. A movie director _________ her and decided to put her in a movie. She was only 13 at the time. The movie was one of the last silent movies. She acted(表演) so well that she ________ the hearts of some people. At 16, she left school to act.

In 1925, she had an agreement with a _________ studio, 20th Century Fox. The studio gave her a mew________, and she acted in several films. Then, at age 18, she was in a bad car accident. The accident left scars(伤疤) on her face. The studio broke the agreement, but she did not ________. She continued to act.

It was Paramount Studio that made Lombard a _________. She made many movies for the studio. She also married two of their stars. Lombard was married to actor William Powell for only 23 months. ________ seven years later, she married the great love of her life, actor Clark Gable. It was a great Hollywood love story.

1.A. nurse B. doctor C. actress D. teacher

2.A. lazy B. short C. long D. humorous

3.A. street B. kitchen C. cinema D. classroom

4.A. forgot B. pushed C. hurt D. saw

5.A. won B. broke C. avoided D. treated

6.A. film B. dance C. music D. school

7.A. job B. name C. story D. partner

8.A. put away B. try out C. give up D. make sure

9.A. scientist B. writer C. driver D. star

10.A. As B. But C. Since D. Before

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