english4u 2007.09.pdf

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15217876 UNPDF
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contents
CultperSon
NEWS4U
.......................................................................................4
CINEMA: Fun with Woody Allen
......................................................5
CULTPERSON: Ninja
....................................................................8
8
PHENOMENON: Right Handedness
.............................................10
THE MEALS SERIES: Lunch
.......................................................11
SCienCe
SCIENCE: Microbes - the Good They Do
.....................................12
RELATIONS: Dealing with Being Dumped
....................................16
HEALTH: Working with idiots can kill you!
....................................18
12
FUN: A Stupid Person’s Guide to Life
...........................................19
JOKES: The Male/Female Stages Of Life
....................................20
LIFETIME: About Women
.............................................................22
rel ationS
HUMOR: Deja Vu Variants
............................................................23
BUSINESS: Working Well With Others
........................................24
LANGUAGE: List of Portmanteau
................................................26
16
ENTERTAINMENT: Mind Benders
................................................28
QUIZ: Mythological Monsters Quiz
..............................................29
entertainment
LIFEUP: Blonde & Brunette Jokes
...............................................30
FICTION: Cassandra (by Cathy Kelly)
..........................................32
NOTABENE: Сколько слов нужно знать
.....................................36
28
GRAMMAR: Phrasal Verbs: To Run
.............................................38
91029
Учредитель ЧП Хозин Д.С.
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Отдел распространения: (056) 788 22 08
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Thai cops punished by hello KiTTy
Police chiefs in Bangkok have come up with a
new way of punishing oficers who break the rules
- an eye-catching Hello Kitty armband 1 .
The armband is large, bright pink and has a Hello
Kitty motif with two hearts embroidered 2 on it.
From today, oficers who are late, park in the wrong
place or commit other minor transgressions 3 will
have to wear it for several days, reports the BBC.
The armband is designed to shame 4 the wearer,
police oficials said.
“This is to help build discipline. We should not let
small offences go unnoticed,” Police Colonel Pongpat Chayapan said.
“Guilty oficers will be made to wear the armbands in the ofice for a few days, with instruc-
tions not to disclose their offences. Let people guess what they have done,” he said.
Further offences would be dealt with using a more traditional disciplinary panel 5 , he said.
The cartoon character Hello Kitty was irst introduced by Japanese company Sanrio in 1974.
The cute round-faced cat has become an Asia-wide marketing phenomenon, with Hel-
lo Kitty products such as stationery, hair accessories and kitchen appliances available
across the region.
smudGe 11 of Jesus sold
An oil stain 12 on a garage floor that
vaguely resembles the face of Jesus
has fetched 13 more than £750 in an
online auction.
Deb Serio found the image on her garage
loor in Forest, Virginia, and sold it on eBay
for $1,525.69, reports the Daily Telegraph.
Ms Serio, a high school teacher, said
she was surprised anyone wanted to buy
the oily slab of concrete 14 .
“I really never thought I’d get any (mon-
ey), to be honest,” she said.
She received hundreds of messages
from around the world from people inter-
ested in the “smudge of Christ”.
The family has now hired a contractor to
remove the section of concrete.
The slab will then be delivered to the
winner of the online auction, who is identi-
ied only as ‘islandoffthecoast’.
An active Lutheran, Ms Serio consid-
ers the smudge a slightly odd occurrence,
rather than a divine sign or miracle.
“There are some people who need this
kind of thing to sort of start them on their
faith journey. I don’t,” she said.
“That’s why I don’t mind parting with it.”
Two rugby fanatics nearly lost out on a £5m lot-
tery jackpot because they did not want to miss the
start of a match.
Paul and Denise Hardware had still not bought
a ticket for Saturday’s draw 6 minutes before Wales
kicked-off 7 against Argentina.
Denise, 46, said: “I left a note on the kitchen table re-
minding Paul to do the lottery but he didn’t have time.
“There were only a few minutes to go before the
match started on TV and I didn’t want to miss it. It
was pouring with rain.
“But it only took a few minutes to nip out and buy a ticket. It’s the best thing I’ve done.”
Paul said: “Denise wasn’t happy having to go out in the rain but I had to be back at work.
If I’d gone down there at a different time we probably wouldn’t have got the numbers.”
The 51-year-old pub chef revealed that a week earlier he saw a shooting star as he left
his snooker club and made a wish to win the lotto.
“Ever since, I’ve been in luck. I won £10 on the lottery on Wednesday and then I found a
£10 note in the street,” he said. “Then, on Saturday, I hit the jackpot. I can’t believe it.”
The couple, from Street, Somerset, were handed their cheque for £4,986,272 by Wales
rugby legend Gareth Edwards on the pitch of the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.
all The eiGhTs for baby lulu
GianT leap for manKind
A baby was born in Liverpool at 8.08am on the
eighth day of the eighth month weighing 8lbs after
her mum endured eight hours of labour 8 .
Mel Byrne, 31, gave birth to Lulu with help from
Chinese-born midwife 9 Bea Fung, who helped de-
liver 10 eight babies that day, reports the Daily Mirror.
Mrs Fung said: “In Chinese culture the number eight
is considered very lucky. I was watching the clock as
the birth approached and was counting the minutes
and she arrived at just the right time.
“Straight away I told Mel and Pete their daugh-
Chinese man Bao Xishun has lost his
title as the world’s tallest man to a Ukrai-
nian who is EIGHT inches taller.
Leonid Stadnik, a 36-year-old vet from
the village of Podolanci in the Ukraine, is
now oficially recognised by the Guinness
Book of Records.
Measuring eight feet and ive inches he
has eclipsed the record previously held by
56-year-old Xishun.
Stadnik’s growth spurt 15 started at
age 14 after a brain operation apparently
stimulated his pituitary gland 16 , which
produces the human growth hormone.
He had previously said he did not
want the title of the world’s tallest man
or to feature in the Guinness Book of
Records as a freak.
He said he was not proud of being so
tall and that it had brought him nothing but
problems, including having trouble inding
a girlfriend.
He has been declared an invalid by au-
thorities after doctors said his huge height
is causing him serious health problems.
ter was very lucky indeed.”
Mrs Fung, who has been at Liverpool Women’s Hospital for 33 years, added: “The number
of eights linked to Lulu is incredible. I consider myself very lucky to have been there.”
The couple, from Woolton, Liverpool, already have a two-year-old daughter, Maisy.
Photographer Peter, 30, said: “Bea was very excited and kept telling us how lucky we were
and how lucky Lulu is.
“I think I will be letting Lulu choose the lottery numbers as soon as she is old enough.”
[`Rmbxnd] нарукавная повязка
2 embroidered [Im`brOIdqd] украшенный вышивкой
3 transgression[trxnz`greS(q)n] проступок; нарушение
10 todeliver
[dI`lIvq] рожать
11 smudge
[smAG] грязное пятно
12 stain
[steIn]
пятно
(закона, обязательства и т. п.)
13 tofetch
[feC]
приносить доход,
4 toshame
[SeIm]
стыдить; срамить; позорить
зарабатывать
5 panel
[`pxn(q)l] совет, комиссия
14 slabofconcrete
бетонная плита
6 draw
[drL]
лотерея
[spWt] внезапное резкое усилие,
рывок
16 pituitarygland [pI`tjHIt(q)rI`glxnd] гипофиз
7 tokickoff [kIk]
начинать
8 labour
[`leIbq]
родовые муки, роды
9 midwife
[`mIdwaIf] акушерка
ruGby nearly cosT fans £ 5m
1 armband
15 spurt
15217876.009.png
medium
llan Stewart Konigsberg,
a.k.a. Woody Allen, was
born in the Bronx on
December 1, 1935 to
Martin Konigsberg and
Nettie Cherry.
At the age of three he got
hooked on movies when his moth-
er took him to see Snow White .
From that day the movie theaters
became his second home.
At his irst year of school he
was put in an accelerated class
because of his high IQ. But he
hated school from day one and
became rebellious. He didn’t do
his homework, was rude to the
teachers and sometimes dis-
ruptive 2 in class. Surprisingly
he was very good in sports (bas-
ketball, stickball, football, base-
ball) in his early years and was
always among the irst picked
in teams in the neighbourhood.
He also liked boxing and even
trained for several months until
his parents asked him to stop.
However, sports and movies
were not his only interests. He
Woody Allen
In 1964, Woody entered the
film industry when he was hired
to do the screenplay What’s
New Pussycat .
His large body of work and cerebral ilm style, mixing satire, wit and humor, have
made him one of the most respected and proliic 1 ilmmakers in the modern era. Allen
writes and directs his movies and has also acted in the majority of them.
Early ilms
His irst movie production
was What’s New, Pussycat? in
1965, for which he wrote the
initial screenplay. He was hired
by Warren Beatty to re-write a
script, and to appear in a small
part. Over the course of the re-
write, Beatty’s part grew smaller
and Allen’s grew larger. Beatty
was upset and quit the produc-
tion. Peter O’Toole was hired for
the Beatty role, and Peter Sellers
was brought in as well; Sellers
was a big enough star to demand
many of Woody Allen’s best
lines/scenes, prompting hasty re-
writes. This experience with med-
dling producers, egotistical stars,
became obsessed with magic
and music; later characterising
elements in his movies. At the
age of ifteen he started play-
ing the clarinet 3 and he plays it
daily, ever since.
In 1952 Allan S. Konigsberg
changed his name to Woody Al-
len. He was sixteen and starting
to write jokes which he sent to
several of the major New York
newspapers hoping them to be
used by some of the gossip col-
umnists. From that point on the
wheels started rolling for Woody
as a comedy writer.
After high school, he went to
New York University where he
studied communication and ilm,
but, never committed as a student,
he was thrown off his course due
to lack of punctuality and commit-
ment. He later briely attended
City College of New York.
In November 1958, Woody
began co-writing with Larry
Gelbart for The Chevy Show on
NBC. The show, starring the fa-
mous Sid Caesar, stayed on TV
for ten years. For several years,
Woody was reasonably content
writing for TV, making $1,700
a week. But after seeing Mort
Sahl performing onstage, and
little by little losing interest in
writing TV, he decided to launch
a carrier of his own as a stand-
up comedian.
In 1958, Woody met his fu-
ture managers Charles H. Joffe
and Jack Rollins. Ever since,
they’ve negotiated millions of
dollars worth of contracts on
his behalf with others but no
formal contract exists among
them, only a handshake. They
convinced him to do his own
material onstage.
Woody was a stand-up come-
dian from 1960 to 1968. Allen
turned his weaknesses into his
strengths, developing his neu-
rotic, nervous, and intellectual
persona, becoming more popu-
lar as such with every year that
passed. In 1960 he only made
$75 per week, but in 1964 he was
an established comic in demand
across the country, making $5000
a week, and appeared frequently
in nightclubs and on television.
PSyCHOANALySIS
Allen spent at least 30 years undergoing psychoanalysis,
some three days a week. Many of his ilms contain a psy-
choanalysis scene.
Moment Magazine says “it drove his self-absorbed work”.
John Baxter, author of Woody Allen - A Biography , wrote
“Like Catholic confession, Allen’s form of analysis let the
penitent go free to sin again,” and that “Allen obviously
found analysis stimulating, even exciting.”
Allen says he ended his psychotherapy visits around the
time he began his relationship with Previn. He says he still
is claustrophobic and agoraphobic.
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