Beauty: for fans of the arts. Beauty is a necessary magazine in your spare time. It brings you academic (学术的) articles written by internationally famous scholars, yet with easy-to-understand examples, as well as information on exhibitions and sales all over the world.

World weekly: it gives you a global view with articles from four of the world’s most famous newspapers. Read the news from different views and draw you own conclusions on the stories influencing our world. Try it for six months for just $30. Besides, you can get a free copy of World Weekly 2012.

New View: full of excellent writing and photography, it covers one key subject each month, from human rights to poverty(贫困) to environment. Reports from around the world provide you with all-sided world view. Besides, you can be told lots of fresh reports and the latest stories on world events and activities.

The Week: it is the only summary(摘要) giving you the best of British and foreign newspapers in just 35 pages. Designed to be read in just 1 hour. Try it now with 13 copies for just $25. if you decide it’s not for you, just tell us within 3 weeks and you can get your money back within 10 work days.

1.___________ will probably provide you with articles about music and paintings.

A. New View B. World Weekly

C. Beauty D. The Week

2.Which of the following is NOT probably included in New View?

A. A short statement of the main points of the latest news in China Daily.

B. A discussion on water pollution in India.

C. An article about hungry children in Africa.

D. A report on medical care in China.

3.Which of the following is TRUE according to the ads above?

A. Beauty is an English newspaper.

B. It takes an hour to read a copy of The Week.

C. There are not any pictures in New View.

D. You can get a free copy of World Weekly 2012 if you like it.

完形填空

The United States is full of automobiles (机动车). There are still many families without cars. But some families have two or more cars. However, cars are used for more than pleasure. They are a part of life.

Cars are used for . They are driven to offices and factories by workers who have no other way to their jobs. When salesmen are sent to parts of the city, they have to drive in order to their products. Farmers have to drive into the city in order to shop for hecessities.

Sometimes, small children must be driven to . In some cities, school buses are used only when children more than a mile from the school. When the children are too to walk that far, their parents take to drive them to school. One drives on Mondays, taking her children and the neighbors' children as well. Another mother drives on Tuesdays, another on Wednesdays and so on. This is forming a car pool (拼车). Working people also form car pools, with three or four people taking turns to drive to the place they work. More car pools should be formed in order to put cars on the road and to use less oil. is a great problem, and so is the traffic in and around cities. Too many cars are being driven. Something should be done about the use of cars.

1.A. even B. much C. little D. such

2.A. great B. necessary C. proper D. possible

3.A. families B. business C. education D. Farms

4.A. get to B. look for C. find out D. use up

5.A. same B. different C. every D. each

6.A. catch B. create C. cover D. carry

7.A. cities B. schools C. parks D. gardens

8.A. move B. study C. live D. Work

9.A. small B. big C. young D. old

10.A. money B. time C. pride D. turns

11.A. parent B. child C. way D. car

12.A. call B. calling C. to call D. called

13.A. where B. that C. which D. when

14.A. more B. fewer C. many D. less

15.A. Driving B. Running C. Parking D. Forming

It was my first day at school in London and I was half-excited and half-frightened. On my way to school I wondered what sort of questions the other boys would ask me and practiced all the answers: “I am nine years old. I was born here but I haven’t lived here since I was two. I was living in Farley. It’s about thirty miles away. I came back to London two months ago.” I also wondered if it was the custom(习惯)for boys to fight strangers like me, but I was tall for my age. I hoped they would decide not to risk(冒险)it.

No one took any notice of me before school. I stood in the center of the playground, expecting someone to say “hello”, but no one spoke to me. When a teacher called my name and told me where my classroom was, one or two boys looked at me but that was all the curiosity my arrival aroused(唤醒).

My teacher was called Mr. Jones. There were 42 boys in the class, so I didn’t stand out there, either, until the first lesson of the afternoon. Mr. Jones was very fond of Charles Dickens and he had decided to read aloud to us from David Copperfield, but first he asked several boys if they knew Dickens’ birthplace, but no one guessed right. A boy called Brian, the biggest in the class, said: “Timbuktu”, and Mr. Jones went red in the face. Then he asked me. I said: “Portsmouth”, and everyone stared at me because Mr. Jones said I was right. This didn’t make me very popular, of course.

“He thinks he’s clever,” I heard Brian say.

After that, we went out to the playground to play football. I was in Brian’s team, and he obviously had Dickens in mind because he told me to go in goal. No one ever wanted to be the goalkeeper.

“He’s big enough and useless enough,” Brian said when someone asked him why he had chosen me.

I suppose Mr. Jones remembered Dickens, too, because when the game was nearly over, Brian pushed one of the players on the other team, and he gave them a penalty(罚球). As the boy kicked the ball hard along the ground to my right, I threw myself down instinctively(本能地)and saved it. All my team crowded round me. My bare knees were grazed(擦伤)and bleeding. Brian took out a handkerchief and offered it to me.

“Do you want to join my team?” he said.

At the end of the day, I was no longer a stranger.

1.The writer prepared to answer all of the following questions EXCEPT “_________”.

A. How old are you?

B. Where are you from?

C. Do you want to join my team?

D. When did you come back to London?

2.We can learn from the passage that _________.

A. boys were usually unfriendly to new students

B. the writer was not greeted as he expected

C. Brian praised the writer for his cleverness

D. the writer was glad to be a goalkeeper

3.The underlined part “I didn’t stand out” in paragraph 3 means that the writer was not _______.

A. noticeable(值得注意的) B. welcome

C. important D. popular

4.What can we infer from the fact that the writer was offered a handkerchief?

A. He threw himself down and saved the goal.

B. He pushed a player on the other team.

C. He was beginning to be accepted.

D. He was no longer a new comer.

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