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gged into two,and then four, and 100 job applications later, I found myself in the exact same 5 as I was before. You know that feeling when you wake up in 6 ? That feeling became a constant in my life. Days felt like weeks, weeks like months, and those many months felt like everlasting 7 .And the most annoying part was no matter how much I tried, I just couldn39??键c(diǎn)強(qiáng)化訓(xùn)練 22 九年級(jí) (全 ) Units 13~ 14 一、完形填空 (原創(chuàng) ) For most people, graduation is an exciting day, but my graduation day was not. I remember that weekend two years parents and many friends came to 1 the just like everyone else in my class, I had watched the economy turn from bad to worse in my senior all of us graduates had degrees, but very uncertain 2 . The weeks ahead weren39。t 3 .I knew my small university town couldn39。t seem to make any progress. 8 what did I do to keep my good sense? I decided to about putting words on a page made 9 seem a little clearer—a little about writing gave me hope. And if you want something badly enough, sometimes a little hope is all you 10 ! I put my dissatisfaction into a children39。t give if things look 14 now, don39。t know is that junk has bee a problem in outer space too. According to BBC News, there are more than 22?000 pieces of space junk floating around the these are just the things that we can see from the surface of the earth by telescopes(望遠(yuǎn)鏡 ).There are also millions of smaller pieces of junk that we can39。s atmosphere after that the upper parts of the atmosphere, it will burn up. Many scientists are also suggesting different ways to clean up space England scientists are testing a metal that can be fired into space catches the junk and then pulls it into the earth39。re sending more objects into space to help people use their mobile phones and puters,” says Marco Castronuovo, an Italian space researcher. “The time to act is longer we leave the problem,the bigger it will bee,” he says