Shortened Library Hours for Spring Break |
Library Hours have been shortened to 7 hours a day (9:00 a.m.— 4:00 p.m.)for Spring Break from March 24 to March 30. |
Coming Events |
On Monday, March 24, at 10:30 a.m., Scott Sutton, a children’s writer, will tell stories to kids over seven. Sutton’s attractive style will surely inspire everyone present! At 1:00 p.m., on March 26, the Georgetown Musicians will present an Irish Folk Concert, which will be entertaining for the entire family. Come for the music and stay to check out some relevant books for the rest of the week! On Thursday, March 27, at 2:00 p.m., the annual Children’s Gathering will take place in Room 201, the second-floor. Pick up an invitation in the Children’s Room and return your RSVP to reserve your seat at the table by 3:00 p.m. on Tuesday, March 25. Only children are allowed in the Gathering. At 10:30 a.m. on Friday, March 28, Enzo Monfre of the hit kid’s science show, ENZOology, will bring Fossils Live! Surely Enzo will take the audience back in time, deep beneath the surface of the earth, to uncover the mysteries of killer dinosaurs, and more. Enzo recently appeared on the Ellen DeGeneres Show — come and see him at the library! |
Please note:In case of emergency, please call the Help Desk at 926-3736 and follow the procedures outlined on the voice message. The call-down service is staffed 24 hours a day, 7 days a week for emergencies. The Help Desk supplies service to you all the year around! For questions about all these, please contact hld@wnbl.corg. |
Come for the great Fun; Stay for the relevant Books! |
To attend the annual Children’s Gathering, one has to ______.
A.buy a ticket |
B.apply in advance |
C.make a reservation |
D.contact the call-down service |
According to the passage, Enzo Monfre will ______.
A.show the children around a zoo |
B.tell stories to children over seven |
C.be present at the science show in person |
D.lead the children to the Ellen DeGenerse Show |
The Help Desk in this library supplies service ______.
A.only during the daytime |
B.in case of emergency |
C.till the end of the Spring Break |
D.after 22:00 p.m. every day |
We can learn from the passage that children ______.
A.can attend all the activities with their parents |
B.have access to some relevant books for the activities |
C.can participate in the activities from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. |
D.may choose only one of the activities according to their interest |
Thank you for trusting me. I enjoy exchanging my ideas with yours
The first thing I want to tell you is that if the boys are calling you names it is their fault, not yours. Boys, at your age, are different from girls. They are trying to prove that they are manly and then often do this by picking on someone who can’t really fight back. This is, of course, wrong but it happens. In general, the boys know they are bigger and stronger than you are, so they can make fun of you and make you cry and then laugh about it. If you let them see that they are hurting you, they will only do it more. It isn’t that they want to hurt you; they simply want to make themselves feel superior(优越的). It’s stupid, but it is common.
In English we say “ sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never hurt me.” Canadian children learn this from their mothers because the same thing that is happening to you in China also happens here. The best ways of getting the boys to stop calling your names is to simply ignore them, knowing that the names can’t hurt you and that the boys are being stupid. If you can laugh at them they will get tired of trying to make you cry and they’ll give up. It won’t be easy, but, trust me, it will work. There is also something else working in your favor and that is that you are growing up and the boys are beginning to notice you as a young woman. I suspect some of them actually like you and are making fun of you just to get your attention. Again, it’s stupid but it happens. In reality, you can control this situation by not letting them see you getting hurt. Laugh at them, tell them they’re acting like children and they should grow up and then walk away with your head held high.
One more thing, Nancy. It is very important that you stop hurting yourself. If someone else hurts you, it is bad enough but you should’t make it worse by then hurting yourself. Even sticking a pen into your finger can cause an infection and give you a lot of trouble and besides, it hurts. The next time you are disturbed by a group of stupid boys, write to me. You and I can talk about anything you like; about China, about Canada, about travel, anything. Having a conversation with me is better than sticking holes in your fingers, at least I hope it is.It can be learned from the passage that the writer is .
A.a Canadian | B.an Englishman |
C.Nancy’s schoolmate | D.Nancy’s father |
Nancy hurt herself because she.
A.couldn’t prevent the boys taking interest in her |
B.felt it her own fault to be called names by boys |
C.found herself more stupid than the boys |
D.wanted the boys to see her hurt by herself |
We can learn that the boys call Nancy names mainly because they .
A.want to prove manly | B.are bigger and stronger |
C.mean to hurt Nancy | D.actually like Nancy |
The best way for Nancy to stop being called names is to .
A.talk to the writer | B.cry and hurt herself |
C.fight back and ignore them | D.stick holes in her fingers |
QINGDAO--Water and power supplies have been restored in the East Chinese city of Qingdao, the site of an oil pipeline explosion on Friday, the local government said on Monday.
Crude oil began leaking(泄漏)from the pipeline at 3:00 an Friday in Qingdao in Shandong province. The valves(阀门)of the Huangdao oil warehouse were shut about 15 minutes later.
The oil spill(泄漏的石油)then flowed into the city’s rainwater pipe network, which empties into Jiaozhou Bay. Explosions occurred at two locations around 10:30 am Friday when workers were clearing the spill.
According to the local government, about 85 percent of public heating and 90 percent of the gas supply were also brought back to normal as of Monday.
Residents who have been taken to the temporary settlements are receiving bottled water and bread.
Many schools and kindergartens have reopened classes after Friday’s oil pipeline explosion. No injures and deaths of students or teachers have been reported following the explosions at an underground pipeline operated by Sinopec. The school buildings of one middle school in the district were seriously damaged during the explosions. Education authorities have arranged psychological help for students and teaching staff. All other 18 schools and kindergartens in the district reopened classes on Monday.
As of Monday noon, the death toll from the explosion had risen to 55, with 9 people still missing and 136 hospitalized. According to local police, 49 bodied have been identified so far, and 42 of them were male victims. As of Monday morning, the blood supply in Qingdao was enough for the injured after more than 950 people in the city donated more than 340,000 ml of blood in the wake of the incident.The underlined word “restored” in the first paragraph probable means “”.
A.cut | B.destroyed | C.recovered | D.repaired |
Explosions happened when.
A.workers were cleaning the spill |
B.valves of the oil warehouse were shut |
C.the oil spill flowed into the city’s water network |
D.crude oil began to leak from an underground pipeline |
We can learn that by Monday noon the deaths in the explosion reached at least.
A.64 | B.49 | C.55 | D.42 |
We can learn from the passage that .
A.everything was brought back to normal right after the explosion |
B.no measures were taken to help the suffering people out of trouble |
C.no more dead body was found after Monday noon |
D.all the 19 schools in the district were affected by the explosion |
One determined student stepped off the traditional job for blind people in China, and now challenges a new life at university in Britain. Being a message therapist (按摩师)is a perfect job for many people with a visual disability, but for Zheng Jianwei, it was far from enough.
The 30-year-old former massage therapist gave up his hospital job in 2009to prepare for admission to graduate school. He took IELTS(雅思考试), the language-fluency test necessary for university admission in the UK, in 2012 and scored 6.5 points. He was the first blind examinee to take the IELTS in the Southeast Chinese region. After about four year’s struggles, Zheng successfully gain an offer from the University of Essex in the United Kingdom and became a graduate student.
However,Zheng’s path to graduate school was not easy. “I can’t take China’s national entrance exam for graduate school, which doesn’t provide study material(材料)for blind students,” he says.
He then turned to search for graduate school overseas. However, English became his nightmare. Zheng studied in special schools for visually challenged students since primary school, but foreign language was never a main subject.
Before giving up his job and learning English again in 2009, Zheng only knew the alphabet, a few words and some basic expressions. “Learning English again in my late 20s is not easy,” he says.
It took him three years of intensive study to gain entrance to a graduate school overseas. Because of the lack of study material, Zheng needs to spend hours and days looking for textbooks for the visually disabled and copying them, while it may take only five minutes for a sighted person to order a plain English textbook from Amazon.
In his parents’ eyes, Zheng has been a sensible, independent and decisive man from a young age. Zheng made all the major decisions by himself, including studying abroad and choosing majors. “We just follow his decisions, ” the mother says.According to the first paragraph, a blind person in China is likely to .
A.go abroad for graduate school | B.work as a message therapist |
C.be far from pleased with life | D.enjoy a perfect job |
It can be learned from the passage that the blind students in China.
A.can’t take the national entrance exam to college |
B.can find less study material than normal students |
C.can never learn a foreign language well |
D.can’t afford the English textbooks for an entrance exam |
Which of the following can match Zheng Jianwei’s story?
A.All mankind is created equal. | B.Many hands make light work. |
C.Rome is not built in a day. | D.Nothing is impossible when mind is set. |
It can be inferred from the passage that Zheng’s .
A.parents have to follow any of his decisions |
B.parents don’t understand or care about him |
C.visual disability meant a hopeless damage to him |
D.mind is healthy though physically disabled |
In the U.S. Mother’s Day is a holiday celebrated on second Sunday in May. It is a day when children honor their mothers with cards, gifts and flowers. First observance in Philadelphia in 1907,it is based on suggestions by Julia Ward Howe in 1872 and by Anna Jarvis in 1907.
Although it wasn’t celebrated in the U.S. until 1907,there were days honoring mothers even in the days of ancient Greece. In those days, however, it was Rhea, the Mother of the gods that was given honor. Later,in the 1600’s,in England there was an annual celebration called “Mothering Sunday.” It was celebrated during June, on the fourth Sunday ,the servants, who generally lived with their employers, were encouraged to return home and honor their mothers. It was traditional for them to bring a special cake along to celebrate the occasion.
In the U.S., in 1907 Ana Jarvis, from Philadelphia, began a campaign to establish a national Mother’s Day. Jarvis persuaded her mother’s church in Grafton, West Virginia to celebrate Mother’s Day on the second anniversary of her mother’s death, the 2ed Sunday of May. The next day Mother’s Day was also celebrated in Philadelphia, Jarvis and others began a letter-writing campaign to ministers, businessmen, and politicians asking to establish a national Mother’s Day. They were successful. President Woodrow Wilson, in 1914,made the official announcement recognizing Mother’s Day as a national celebration that was to be held each year on the 2nd Sunday of May.
Many other countries of the world celebrate their own Mother’s Day at different times throughout the year. Denmark, Finland, Italy, Turkey, Australia, and Belgium celebrate Mother’s Day on the second Sunday in May, as in the U.S. .Mother’s Day in the U.S. was first celebrated.
A.in 1872 | B.in 1907 | C.in the 1600’s | D.in 1914 |
The underlined word “observance” in the first paragraph probably means “”.
A.celebration | B.principle | C.holiday | D.campaign |
According to the passage, which of the following is TRUE?
A.All the mothers were given honor in the days of ancient Greece. |
B.Only the servants’ mothers were given honor on Mothering Sunday in England. |
C.President Woodrow Wilson announced Mother’s Day as a national celebration. |
D.Ana Javis’s mother probably died on the 2nd Sunday of May in 1907. |
What could be the best title for this passage?
A.Mother’s Day of the U.S | B.Mother’s Day of the world |
C.Ana Jarvis and Mother’s Day | D.Styles of Mother’s Day |
Americans have always been interested in their Presidents' wives. Many First Ladies have been remembered because of the ways they have influenced their husbands. Other First Ladies have made the history books on their own.
At least two First Ladies, Bess Truman and Lady Bird Johnson, made it their business to send signals during their husbands speeches. When Lady Bird Johnson thought her husband was talking too long, she wrote a note and sent it up to the platform. It read, "It's time to stop ! " And he did. Once Bess Truman didn't like what her husband was saying on television, so she phoned him and said, "If you can't talk more politely than that in public, you come right home. "
It was First Lady Helen Taft's idea to plant the famous cherry trees in Washington, D. C. Each spring these blossoming trees attract thousands of visitors to the nation's capital Mrs. Taft also influenced the male members of her family and the White House staff in a strange way: she convinced(说服)them to shave off their beards(胡须) !
Shortly after President Woodrow Wilson suffered a stroke (中风), Edith Wilson unofficially took over most of the duties of the Presidency until the end of her husband's term Earlier, during World War I, Mrs. Wilson had sheep brought onto the White House lawn to eat t e grass. The sheep not only kept the lawn cut. but provided wool for an auction(拍卖) held by the First Lady. Almost$ 100,000 was raised for the Red Cross.
One of the most famous First Ladies was Eleanor Roosevelt, the wife of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. She was active in political and. social causes throughout her husband's term in office After his death, she became famous for her humanitarian(人道主义的) work in the United Nations. She made life better for thousands of needy people around the world.Why have First Ladies been remembered?
A.They are the wives of the presidents. |
B.They are made up of history books. |
C.Americans are interested in them. |
D.They have an effect on their husbands. |
The examples mentioned in Paragraph 2 show that
A. the two wives did business without their husbands
B. the two wives influenced the presidents' speeches
C. the two wives didn't like their husbands to make speeches
D the presidents' speeches were often interrupted by their wives.Who did the most meaningful work among the first ladies?
A.Lady Bird Johnson. |
B.Mrs. Wilson. |
C.Eleanor Roosevelt. |
D.Helen Taft |
Which of the following is considered a strange thing the First Lady did?
A. Raise sheep on the White House lawn to get money for the Red Cross.
B. Take over most of the duties throughout their husbands' Presidency.
C. Plant the cherry trees in Washington, D. C. to attract more visitors
D. Persuade the men staff in the White House to shave off their beards.How many First Ladies are mentioned in this passage?
A.3 | B.4. |
C.5 | D.6. |