单选题 Whenever I see anyone buying a National Lottery ticket I want to stop them and ask if they know just where their money is going.
The lottery money is supposed to go to charity--but it makes me angry to see some of the so-called "good causes" it's being used to support. Also, Camelon, the organizers, have made a profit of £10.8 million in five months. We hear now that a lot of that money is boosting the pay packets of the company's bosses.
For the past 10 years I've been helping to raise funds for a cancer research charity called Tenovus. My husband, Sandy, died from cancer 11 years ago--he was only 51. There's been a long line of deaths in our family through cancer and it's been devastating. I've also lost two sisters-in-law, my brother, Michael, my father-in-law and my father. That's apart from several close friends.
The charity is 50 years old now and raises money mainly for breast cancer research. It also runs a support line for the families of cancer sufferers. Our local group raises money through dances, sales and coffee mornings, and all the funds go directly to cancer research. In 1993 Tenovus raised£3 million--and half that money came from sales of our own lottery tickets at supermarkets. But our income has dropped by half since the National Lottery was introduced.
I'm not against people playing the National Lottery, but they should think about what they're doing. The chances of winning the jackpot are so small; they might as well throw their money away. The government tells us that the proceeds are going to things like the arts and sports, but what about the National Health Service? They should give some cash to that, too. How can they justify spending ridiculous amounts of cash on so-called works of art--like displays of pictures--or buying up Winston Churchill's papers at a cost of £12 million?
So who really are the winners in the National Lottery? When I think of all that money people could be donating to cancer research, I could weep. It's time people realized how charities across the country are suffering because of the National Lottery. It's disheartening and so infuriating.

单选题 The writer seems to hope that ______.
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】[精解] 本题考查考生的推理能力。作者是在惋惜彩票业的收入不能全用于慈善事业,A项明显不对;B项曲解了作者的意思;C项不全面;D项包含了C项的含义。故答案为D。
单选题 The reason why the writer raises funds for cancer research is that ______.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】[精解] 推理题,考查考生对文章细节的把握和对原因的推理。第三段有明确表述“作者的丈夫等很多亲人被癌症夺去生命”,这正是作者热衷于为癌症治疗事业筹集资金的动力和原因。只有答案C符合题意。
单选题 In this text the writer is expressing ______.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】[精解] 推理题。考查考生对全文的整体把握,通过对全文内容的把握,提炼出一些隐含的观点。文中作者处处流露出个人的观点与情绪,如文章第一段就提到“每每看到有人购买国家彩票时,我都想阻止他们并问他们是否知道他们的钱将流向何处”。故选C。
单选题 The organization "Tenovus" is ______.
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】[精解] 释义题。第四段第三句中提到“我们当地的团体组织”,即“Tenovous”的下属机构。A项文中未提到;D项与文意符合;B项和C项明显不对。故选D。
单选题 From the text we can conclude that ______.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】[精解] 推理题。通看全文,很明显作者的观点是反对国家彩票的,所以A项是错误的;B项是正确的;作者说“彩票收入本应用于慈善事业”,并没有说用于癌症研究。所以C不正确;D项的表述不能概括作者对彩票业与慈善事业关系的看法。故选B。