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Message from Forest Hotel 9 March 14.30
Contact name: Mrs Helen (9) ..................
Conference facilities available: (10) .................. June
Name of conference room: (11) .................. Room
Daily rate for facilities: £(12) ..................
Maximum number of delegates: (13) ..................
Booking reference number: (14) ..................
Direct telephone number: (15) ..................
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Room 504, Xiamen Hotel
March 15th, 2005
Dear Sir or Madam,
I arrived in Xiamen from Nanjing this morning by Express Train No.25. At the Nanjing station I registered a trunk, but when I went to your luggage office to draw it this afternoon. I was told it was missing. The check I hold is No. 100694. I shall be very much obliged if you will kindly trace the missing article at once, as there are in it many important things. of which I am in urgent need. My trunk bears my personal name “James White”. I am now staying in Room 504, Xiamen Hotel. If you have retrieved it, please inform me soon or contact me by calling 8765432.
Thanks!
James White
When does he arrive in Xiamen()
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Room 504, Xiamen Hotel
Xiamen
March 15th, 2005
Dear Sir or Madam,
I arrived in Xiamen from Nanjing this morning by Express Train No. 25. At the Nanjing station I registered a mink, but when I went to your luggage office to draw it this afternoon, I was told it was missing. The check I hold is No. 100694. I shall be very much obliged if you will kindly trace the missing article at once, as there are in it many important things, of which I am in urgent need. My trunk bears my personal name "James White". I am now staying in Room 504, Xiamen Hotel. If you have retrieved it, please inform me soon or contact me by calling 8765432.
Thanks!
James White
Where does he register his trunk
At()
[单项选择]The forest from which Man takes his timber is the tallest and most impressive plant community of Earth. In terms of Man’s brief life it appears permanent and unchanging, save for the seasonal growth and fall of the leaves, but to the forester it represents the climax of a long succession of events.
No wooded landscape we see today has been forest for all time. Plants have minimum requirements of temperature and moisture and, in ages past, virtually every part of Earth’s surface has at some time been either too dry or too cold for plants to survive. However, as soon as climatic conditions change in favour of plant life, a fascinating sequence of changes occurs, called a primary succession.
First to colonize the barren land are the lowly lichens, surviving on bare rock. Slowly, the acids produced by these organisms crack the rock surface, plant debris accumulates, and mosses establish a shallow root-hold. Ferns may follow and, with short grasses and shrubs, gradually form a cov
A. Interference from foresters
B. Variations in climate
C. The absence of wooded land
D. The introduction of new types of plants