20. A. in B.
off C.
for D.
about
1-5 BCDBA 6-10 BDBCA 11-15 DACCD 16-20 ABCDA
NO. 2
Most mornings, Marcus Jackson is up by 6:15. A fourteen-year old in
Harry Potter-style glasses, he wastes little 1 before rushing down the stairs of his
home. As Mom 2 breakfast, he heads straight for a
kitchen drawer and 3 out a Ping-pong paddle and ball. For the
next five minutes, Marcus practices serves off the refrigerator.
“I can hit the ball really 4
so that the other person
hardly even sees it fly 5 the table,” he says. He’s so good at his
game that he holds the number-one ranking in table tennis for boys under 15 in 6 .
He 7 his success to a set of practice that
goes 8 morning contests with his parents’ Kenmore refrigerator. Since he was six-and-a-half years
old, Marcus has spent two hours a day, six days a week, 9 with his dad, Morris, who won the
national table-tennis 10 in 1988. He also receives
lessons from Cheng Yinghua and Jack Huang, two former Chinese National Team
members.
When Marcus was eight, he 11 himself to be a force in the sport by
winning the United States Table Tennis Association National Championships
(Under-ten). Since then, his talent has led him all over the country for
competitions. Along the way, he has learned how to deal with 12 as well. “I know when to step back if I
get 13 ,” Marcus says. He’s also 14 a bit of the true spirit of
sports. During a match last year, when he was up 8 to 0, his dad flashed him a 15 - a quick move of his thumb over the shoulder - to let Marcus know he 16 allow his opponent (对手) to score 17 once. At 10 to 0, Marcus finally gave 18 a score. He took the next
point, for an 11-to-1 victory.
Apart from table tennis, Marcus enjoys Game Boy, basketball and
swimming. The straight-A student hopes to study electrical engineering at an
Ivy League college when he gets 19 . In the meantime he has two
athletic goals: “ 20 in the 2008 Olympics in China and
beating my dad on a regular basis.”