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听力原文:M: Mary,has your uncle moved to the new house already?
W: No,he's still living in a town far from my home. And my father is helping him.
Q: Where does Mary's uncle live?
(17)

A. In the new house.
B. In Mary's home.
C. In a town.

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A.It has a beautiful campus.B.It is in an urban setting.C.The tuition fees are not too

A. It has a beautiful campus.
B. It is in an urban setting.
C. The tuition fees are not too expensive.
D. All courses are taught by professors.

听力原文: Hundreds of species of marine life manage to survive even in the darkest depths of the ocean. These tenants of the sea have evolved some extremely ingenious devices for locating their food and enemies.
Where the light is very dim, some of these deepwater species have developed enormous eyes with almost telescopic lenses, very much like those of owls. Others, especially the fish that survive where there is no light at all, are quite blind but have developed long feelers that enable them to identify and collect stray bits of food that come within a considerable radius of them.
Some inhabitants of the sea supply their own light. They have built-in torches that they can switch on and off, depending on whether they are pursuing or being pursued. Some have regular lamps, spots of steady light, which spread a faint glow through the water around them. One deepwater squid (鱿鱼) can spray a luminous fluid that lights up its immediate vicinity, a neat variation on the ink ejected by its cousins nearer the surface to becloud and darken the water. It is supposed that about half of the varieties of fish living in the dark depths of the ocean have some power of illumination.
(30)

A. Supply their own light.
B. Locate food and enemies.
Compensate for the lack of light.
D. Both B and C.

A.The laboratories are not well equipped.B.The classes are too big.C.The tuition fees

A. The laboratories are not well equipped.
B. The classes are too big.
C. The tuition fees are too expensive.
D. There are not enough teachers.

听力原文:W: Hello, John, you must be pleased. After all, how many students are lucky enough to be accepted at the first and second choices?
M: Not many I know. But I am not sure yet which one to choose.
W: You seem to have doubts about the State University. But its biology department has good facilities all the biology majors want.
M: Yeah. They also have internship for seniors. But a friend told me that for the first two years some lectures have a hundred and fifty students. You probably wouldn't get to know any of your teachers.
W: Well, you might actually because those classes also have small discussion sections twice a week which have no more than twenty students.
M: I know. But I've heard they were usually taught by graduate students. At White Stone College all classes are taught by professors.
W: What about studying? Do you prefer a small town like White Stone or a bigger place like the state capital?
M: That doesn't matter to me. What I do care about is getting individual attention from the faculty and making friends.
W: Look. I've known you for four years now, and you seem to be a pretty out-going person. I don't think you'll have any trouble making friends at State University. It sounds to me like you are leaning toward White Stone though.
M: I am. The only problem is that the White Stone's tuition fees are really high and I'm not sure I can afford them.
W: You could still apply for a student loan or sign up for a work-study program.
M: Yeah, I think I'll look into that.
(23)

A. To apply for a student loan.
B. To discuss which university to choose.
C. To sign up for a work-study program.
D. To find out which colleges would accept him.

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