[听力原文]
W: I heard that your family went to visit your aunt last weekend. Did you have a good time
M: Yes. But it is a little far. The car ran 90 miles per hour, and it still took us 3 hours.
[听力原文]
Whenever you visit a foreign country, you must carry a passport. This document contains your photograph and gives your name, country, place and date of birth, height and any distinguishing marks. These details are checked by customs officers at the airport. They are trained to make sure that the photograph and details in your passport match your appearance.
Customs officers also check the passports of people returning from a foreign country. This is called immigration control. Some passengers may have to carry a special entry form called a visa. This allows them to stay in a country only for a given length of time.
If a customs officer suspects a passenger, he or she can feed the passport number into a computer. This will check the number to see if the passport is stolen or belongs to someone wanted by the police.
[听力原文]
W: I went to a classical art exhibition yesterday. It is really abstract. Do you like modem art
M: I certainly do, yet not so much as the pop music.
Conversation 1
[听力原文]6-7
M: I went to Professor Smith’s office to turn in my paper yesterday, but I found the door was locked.
W: Why did you go there yesterday It was Saturday.
M: Well, you told me to hand it in on Saturday.
W: I said nothing of the sort. What I actually said was you had to turn in your paper by Friday.
M: Oh, really That’s too bad. Professor Smith will be mad at me since I have been late in turning in my homework for a few times this term already.
W: Oh, he will understand. It’s not easy for you to study and work part time as well. But you do need to give him an apology.
M: Yes, I’ll do that.
[听力原文]11-15
All the housewives who went to the new supermarket had one great ambition: to be the lucky customer who did not have to pay for her shopping. For this was what the no rice just inside the entrance promised. It said: "Remember, once a week, one of our customers gets free goods. This may be your lucky day!"
For several weeks Mrs. Edwards hoped, like many of her friends, to be the lucky customer. Unlike her friends, she never gave up hope. The cupboards in her kitchen were full of things which she did not need. In vain her husband tried to dissuade her. She dreamed of the day when the manager of the supermarket would approach her and say: "Madam, this is your lucky day. Everything in your basket is free."
On Friday morning, after she had finished shopping and had taken it to her car, she found that she had forgotten to buy any tea. She dashed back into the supermarket, got the tea and went towards the cash desk. As she did so,
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