General Reading Test - 04

LONDON UnderGround

The London Underground rail network or “the Tube” is a great way to travel to and from central London and will be an integral part of most people’s stay in the UK capital.

Greater London is served by 11 Tube lines, along with the Docklands Light Railway (DLR) and an interconnected local train network. Underground trains generally run between 5am and midnight, Monday to Saturday, with reduced operating hours on Sunday.

For more detailed traveller information on which stations to use and suggestions for the best route to reach your destination, use Transport for London’s Journey Planner.

What are the London Underground zones?
London’s public transport network, locally called the London Tube, is divided into nine travel zones. Zone 1 is in central London and zones 6 to 9 are on the outskirts of the city.

What are the London Tube prices?
Buy a Visitor Oyster card, Oyster Card, Travelcard or use a contactless payment card to get the best value as cash is the most expensive way to pay. Check out our guide to cheap travel for more money-saving tips when travelling in London.

An adult cash fare on the London metro for a single journey in zone 1 is £4.90. The same Tube fare with Visitor Oyster card, Oyster card or contactless payment card is £2.40. For more details about London Tube prices, see the Transport for London website. For contactless payment cards issued outside the UK, please check for transaction fees or bank charges.

There are various discounts available for children, students, and elderly travellers on the London subway.

If you plan on travelling around London to do some sight-seeing and visit some of London’s best attractions, why not get a London Pass and save even more money.

THE ORIGINS OF THE OSCAR

Since 1929, Hollywood has revolved around the golden Oscar statue. The prized award has gone through facelifts since first debuting as a knight figure.

The first Oscar statue sketch was not how it looks today. MGM art director Cedric Gibbons sketched the first figure of a knight holding a sword and standing on a reel of film with spokes representing the five branches of the Academy. The sword represented protection for the welfare and advancement of the industry.

Later, Los Angeles sculptor George Stanley redesigned the statue with an improved knight figure, but removed the reel of film.

One popular story suggests the “Oscar” was named after someone’s uncle. Academy librarian Margaret Herrick thought the statue resembled her Uncle Oscar. In 1934, Sidney Skolsky used the name in his Hollywood column to describe Katharine Hepburn’s win. The Academy made the name official in 1939.

The Oscar was first officially named the Academy Award of Merit. It stands 13.5 inches tall and weighs 8.5 pounds.

Over 3,000 statuettes have been presented. Due to a metal shortage during World War II, Oscars were made of painted plaster for three years.

The Academy keeps extra Oscar statues on hand in case of emergencies. In 2000, the annual shipment of Oscars was stolen, so now they keep backup trophies in a vault.

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Hot Vegetables This Summer

The following is a list of vegetables that will be hot this summer season:

1. Arugula
Arugula is an excellent source of folate and vitamin C. Although arugula is typically mildly flavored, larger leaf varieties can have a more peppery, almost hot taste than the smaller, softer leaf variety, so choose your arugula accordingly. Arugula is typically best served in a salad with olives, hard-boiled eggs, onions and salty cheeses.

2. Avocados
Although available year round, avocados are at their peak in the summer months! Touted most frequently for their high quantity of good fat, avocados are also an excellent source of potassium, folate and vitamins C and B6. To pick the perfect avocado, look for those that have a uniform and unblemished skin that gives gently when pressed.

3. Cucumbers
A member of the squash family, cucumber’s high water content makes it a refreshing addition to summer menus. Cucumber is also a good source of vitamin C and silica, which is important for connective tissue health and also does wonders for the skin (both when ingested and applied topically to reduce swelling or redness). In addition, the skin of the cucumber is a great source of fiber, potassium and magnesium.

4. Eggplant
Although it is assumed that an eggplant would have a purple skin, eggplants can come in just about any shade from black to a near-translucent white. Although selecting an eggplant is easy enough—again, just look for those with smooth, taut skin and those that feel heavy for their size – cooking can be a little bit more complicated. If the eggplant is young, the skin is edible, but if it’s a little bit older, the skin will taste bitter and is best removed.

5. Kohlrabi
Often referred to as cabbage turnip, this green vegetable looks almost like an oversized radish, complete with a ball-like bulb and bushy sprouting leaves. When selecting a kohlrabi, look for smallish, firm bulbs less than 3 inches in diameter. Kohlrabi is an excellent source of vitamin C as well as potassium. When raw, it can be added to salads and vegetable platters or served as relish. When cooked, it can be steamed for inclusion in casseroles or hollowed out, and stuffed with a meat or vegetable filling.

6. Mushrooms
Different types of mushrooms are available year round. With low sodium and fat content and high levels of fiber and riboflavin, niacin, potassium and riboflavin, mushrooms are an excellent way to add bulk to a meal without dramatically changing the nutrition content of foods. When shopping for mushrooms, they should be dry and firm and, if open, should have gills that are intact and appear fresh.

7. Shallots
Of all the vegetables in the onion and leek family, shallots have one of the highest concentrations of antioxidants. In addition, they have also shown to have anti-bacterial, anti inflammatory, and anti-allergic properties. Shallots are associated with a reduction in risk for several cancers, including those affecting the liver and colon as well as heart disease and diabetes.

Seven Tips to Nail a Skype Interview

A. Look the Part

Do your research: Check out the company’s website, Facebook page and Twitter feed to get a feel for how employees dress and behave, then take your cues from that when prepping for your interview.

 

 

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The History Of The Olympic Torch

A. Oddly, it all began with Hitler. For the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, Adolf Hitler wanted to draw on the ancient Greeks to bring a certain authoritative, classical air to modern Germany. The head of the Reich sports office had just the plan to do it: hold an elaborate relay to bring a symbol of Olympic flame from Greece to the games.

The original design by the German engineering giant, Krupp Company, was simple, with one primary function: to keep the flame burning. That’s still the goal today. Since 1936, the torch has taken on a different form for every Olympic relay and undergone various transformative redesigns to make it more resilient and less likely to burn out. It’s a strangely singular goal for an engineering project, but it allows for almost limitless creativity: The torch design can vary in almost every aspect, it just can’t go out.

B. Engineers all over the world have brought their creativity to bear in designing flame that resists extinction, to varying degrees of success. But Olympic organizers know better; each year they arrange complex contingency plans in an effort to ensure that the final torch flame, come from that original fire lit in Greece. The reason for these elaborate backup plans is a good one: carrying a flame for thousands of miles and across varying landscapes is, unsurprisingly, an incredibly difficult feat. There are so many steps along the way that can wreak havoc—no one starts with the initial lighting.

C. The original Olympics looked almost nothing like the modern ones, but we like to draw on the ancient origins and so we still hold a ceremony at their birthplace: Olympia, Greece. Like children igniting ants with a magnifying glass, the actresses playing the part of Greek priestesses light the flame at Olympia torch with a mirror. Specifically, they use a parabolic mirror, which is curved and looks a bit like a small satellite dish. The curvature focuses light in one spot, where the beams all meet at a single, intense spot. The one used in the ceremony at the Temple of Hera in Olympia has a focal point just above the mirror’s surface. A “priestess” simply has to hold the torch in that spot and wait for the light the fuel enough for it to ignite.

D. The ceremonial lighting is always held in Greece, and the flame is then symbolically transferred from person to person in an elaborate relay to whichever city is hosting the games. Greece is a fairly sunny place, so lack of available fuel igniting is rarely a problem. But just in case, Olympic organizers hold a dress rehearsal on a bright day leading up to the real ceremony and light a flame, thus creating a backup source should the mirror fail to work during the ceremony.

E. And thus begins a little-known Olympic tradition: keeping a backup flame. Yes, that flame that’s never supposed to extinguish sometimes probably does — we just never hear about it. To ensure that no one has to lie and say that the flame used to light the torch at the opening ceremony of the games isn’t actually derived from that initial light, they light multiple miners lamps from the original flame and keep those backups lit, just in case.

As the relay moves along its course, each torch-bearer only carries a lit flame for a short while — about 20 minutes according to one report. That’s because the fuel in a torch of that size simply can’t last very long. The fuel should, in theory, last for longer than that to ensure that if something goes wrong on a leg of the relay, the team has some wiggle room. Still, rain and wind have put out the torch before, and organizers have had to relight the flame from the backup lanterns every time.

F. The 1972 Munich games were the first to use liquid fuel, which today is usually some combination of butane, propane, and propylene. Mixing each in varying amounts helps to control the brightness and color of the flame. Each chemical gives off a certain characteristic color of light and burns at slightly different temperatures; a higher temperature results in a brighter color.

Most importantly, having a pressurized tank of fuel allows for a pilot light hidden inside the top of the torch. This little flame can reignite the whole thing if the main flame goes out, which is crucial given that torch-bearers have to sometimes run in the rain and up mountains where the air gets thin. In an interview, Sam Shelton, who created the torch for the 1996 Atlanta games, said that he tested the torch’s endurance by having members of his team carry it to the top of Pikes Peak in Colorado, a 15,000 foot summit.

G. At the opening ceremony, engineers need to ensure everyone there is able to see the flamed flame. Sometimes they design the fuel to smoke a bit, making the light more visible. Other times they just need to make the flame brighter by igniting more gas at once or choosing a fuel that burns at a higher temperature.

This went disastrously wrong in 1956, when the Olympics were held in Melbourne. The engineers had put a combustion of magnesium and aluminium inside the torch so the flame would sparkle and burn brightly, which it did. But it also spewed bits of hot metal and sparks that burned the arm of the poor torch-bearer. Now, designers mostly use liquid fuels that have a more brilliant or larger flame to increase the visibility.

H. No matter what, though, the flame you see igniting the cauldron at the opening ceremony did somehow come from a fire lit in Olympia. It just takes an intricate system of backups and contingency plans to do it. And even if all of those plans failed, rest assured that you will never know the difference. The next time you see the Olympic flame being carried in a relay through your country, you can feel smug in the knowledge that the bearer may very well not know how many times the flame has been re-lit, or even if this is the torch the runner was supposed to be carrying, or a backup one! But the audience most likely does not know or even care; the torch is a symbol, signifying the essential spirit of the games, and that is all that really matters.

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