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    Amy Francis, a2l-year-old girl from Oxford in Great Britain, had to pay a lot of moneyfor the return of her nine-month-old dog, Charlie.Francis had left Charlie in her car in a supermarket car park on May 17, while she went todo her shopping. On her retuin she discovered that Charlie had been stolen from the car andwas nowhere to be found. V a*y placed posters around her hometown, offering a 750pound reward. To her sutprise the thieves answered and told her to pay 1,000 pounds.Amy and her boyfriend took all their money from the bank but realized they still did nothave enough. With the help of her friends and family, Amy was able to raise 900 pounds

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    but still did not have quite the amount the thieves wanted. V grt after asking the thievesto take the money she had raised, they arranged a meeting and she was given back herlittle Charlie.Amy said she was very relieved and happy to have her pet back home, but she also feltangry about the whole event. Her hopes of going on holiday this year have now disappearedand she will have to staft saving her money agarn,

    www.kidsnewsroom.org

    Jane Goodall is a scientist and conselationist. Now she is travelling around the world,and talking to people about ways to protect animals. Goodall always caries a shiny blackfeather. It is a symbol of hope.The feather is from a Californian condor. There used to be thousands of condors in NorthAmerica. But by 1982, there were only 22 Ieft. A group of scientists wanted to help, andbrought all of the wild condors inside. They were not free, but they were safe.The number of condors grew, and now there are more than 350 birds. About half of themhave been taken back to the wild. VIt is sometimes necessary to remove animals from the wild to save them. But even incaptivity, animals can have problems. In 1990, seven rhinos were taken fromAsia to zoosin the United States. When they arrived, the animals quickly became sick, and four died.

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  • Local people are also working to save animals. In Colombia, monkeys were sufferingbecause lubbish was ruining their habitat. A group of women are helping to clean up theforest. They collect the plastic bags from the ground and recycle them.Condors, rhinos and monkeys are still in danger. But thanks to people who care, theseanimals now have a chance"

    www.timeJbrkids.com

    Cucumbers, peppers, potatoes, and radishes entertained a German audience at a concerllast weekend in the city of Hamburg. The Viennese Vegetable Orchestra is the name of themusical group that turns carrots into flutes and cucumbers into saxophones. Believe it ornot, these healthy instruments actually produce enjoyable music.The Austrian band consists of three women and six men who freshly slice and put theirinstruments together one hour before each performance. {i Using vegetables instead ofnormal instruments can be problematic. To make spre the vegetables do not dry out, thenine-piece orchestra must put wet cloths around the vegetables when they're not in use.The audience do not only enjoy sweet melodies produced by vegetables, they also are fed.At the end of the performance, the instruments are turned into a nice soup and served tothe audience.

    www. kids new s ro om. org.

    Last month, Zac Sunderland became the flrst person under the age of I B to sail around theglobe alone.

    When he was little, Zac read a book called The Boy Who Saited Arouncl the World Aloneby Robin Lee Graham. Robin was the flrst teenager to sail around the world by himself, in1965. R-obinbeganhis journeywhenhewas 16. Hefinishedalmostfiveyears later.whenhe was 21. Zac decided he could do it faster. Y

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    Zac Sunderland becomes the first 17-year-old to sail around the world by himself

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    l",l,i;*:','#J i::i5*:::tr:: l;F"g,;*i;;;; j;s: he nxed boats in thesummer and saved enough money to buy an old;rt[;;;ii;;#'" 'xeq Doars rn theHis parents were oK with his trip as they knew how well he could sa,. Zacactually madethe plan with his family's help. VAfter a 10t of preparations, he set sail on the pacific ocean from califomia, on June 74,2008 and returned to laljrornl"

    "r hrv Ii , ,9,?r.H. h"d;"-pr"ted his journey in only13 months! Althoush that's a short time foi railing around trr" *'orra, it was a long time tobe away from his dmily. H. .outCo,t *uii see his parentsl

    :,ril'f.1;+fr""iTl a, day was rather boring. ro fight boredom, zac readbooks andhe stopped. s computer' He brought along his surfboard and surfed everywhere

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  • Montgomery has taught himself and his hard work has paid off. He was named the bestmagician in Washington four times in the past flve years. He has even performed at theWhite House!

    www.kidspost,com

    A busy mom in Montana was making a green salad to serve with dinner when sheunexpectedly came across a surprise a live surprise. Laurie Kollman was cutting upsome spinach for the salad on Sunday night when she saw something moving. It was asmall tree frog.

    When Laurie found the little, sleepy-looking frog, which was dark trrown after its weekin the refrigerator with the salad, she quickly put it in a jar and made a nice resting placefor the visitor.

    On Monday she brought the visitor to her third-grade classroom at St. Matthew's School,where she introduced it to her 20 students. Vfn. kids named it Popeye after anotherfamous spinach-eater. Popeye looked quite different from what it had looked like onSunday. It changed colour to leaf green outside the refrigerator, became energetic andstarted hopping around.

    The Pacific Tree Frog is one of the smallest but loudest fiogs inAmerica. It can changecolour in green and brown tones in a few minutes depending on the temperature andamount of moisture in the air.

    The little tree frog was lucky that he was not eaten with the salad butfed with it instead.www,kidsnewsroom.org

    Two teenagers spent six days lost at sea, in their small sailboat without food or freshwater. Troy, aged 15, and his best friend Josh, aged 17, were found by a fishing boat 10kilometres off Cape Fear, North Carolina, USA. They were more than 160 kilometresfrom their starting point in South Carolina.The boys had set out on their sailboat on April 24,bttt did not pay attention to the weatherforecast. V There were strong winds at sea and they immediately reaTized that they werein trouble and tried to swim to the coast, pulling the boat behind them. But the stronswinds swept them even fuilher out to sea.Troy and Josh lost their flshing equipment on the second day, so they were unable tocatch any fish. They drank sea water because they were also without fresh water. The

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    boys slipped into the ocean to cool off a few times, but were scared back onto the boatby sharks swimming nearby. At night, temperatures were cooler. The teens had to share asingle wetsuit to keep warm. VAs days went by, the boys began to lose hope. Larger boats had passed them severaltimes, but none noticed them although they were shouting and waving with their paddles.Finally, they were found by men on a fishing boat.The two teens were taken to hospital. They were dehydrated, exhausted, and had sunbums,but were otherwise in good condition. The boys agreed that they didn't ever want to seetheir sailboat again.

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    A deliveryman for a Chinese restaurant in New York City spent three and a half days in alift that was stuck between floors. He was tired and thirsW but he was in sood conditionwhen firefighters rescued him.

    Last Friday evening Ming Kuan Chen walked out ofthe Happy Dragon Restaurant carryingtwo take-away meals to deliver them to customers. His colleagues became worried whenhe didn't returrl, and went looking for him at the last address where he delivered meals. VChen's bike was found in front of a 3S-storey apartment building. The friends then calledthepolice, who began their search using police dogs.For three days police searched for Chen, going door-to-door to more than 800 flats. Theyeven searched a nearby park with their dogs. As they didn't flnd anything, they gave upthe search.

    In the meantime, Chen was very near, trapped in the express lift of the 38-storey apartmentbuilding. Nobody heard his loud screams, and no one thought to check this particular lift.V Chen also tried using the emergency phone in the lift, but because he speaks onlyMandarin Chinese, he could not make himself understood.

    Finally, early on Tuesday morning, workers in the building heard his calls and called theFire Brigade. When the fire brigade arrived, they lowered the lift and let Chen out. He wasable to walk out of the lift without help. Someone gave him a bottle of water, which hequickly drank, and then he was taken to hospital.When they asked him if he would continue to work as a deliveryman, Chen said he wasn'tsure yet.

    www.kidsnewsroom.orp

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  • Sarah Scantlin has not spoken a single word following an accioent twenty years ago -

    until now. Sarah was an l8-year-old student when she was hit by a car. She was badlyinjured and lost her ability to speak. Finally, she leamed to answer questions with her eves-

    one blink for "no" and two blinks for,,yes.,,Sarah has been a resident at a hospital in Kansas since the accident. That's where shebegan talking last month during a group speech therapy session with other residents.Therapists and nurses began working with her more intensively, but kept the secret fromSarah's family. VSarah wanted to keep her secret until Valentine's Day, and surprise her parents then, butshe just couldn't wait that long. So last Friday, a nlrrse dialled the number for Sarah'smother. she answered the phone and the next words came from Sarah: ,,Hi, Mom.,,Her parents and brother have been amazed at her new skil1. They had thought they wouldnever heat her voice again. V They have also discovered that Sarah has regained hermemory as well' When her father asked her about the names of family pets from herchildhood and many other details from her past, she answered all the questions correctlv.Doctors do not know why Sarah has regained her speech.

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    Have you ever lost a pet? The McElroy family in Wisconsin, USA recently lost their catand then found her in another country!

    Emily, the cute cat was given to the McElroy family last Christmas. She liked adventure,and often ran away from home to explore the neighbourhood. Whenever she got lost,she ended up in the pet shelter, where the family could collect her. V Her most recenradventure, however, was a little differentl Emily walked into a local warehouse wherethere were huge boxes ready to travel overseas by ship. Somehow she ended up in one ofthe containers, and was taken on board. She was found by workers at a company when theship arrived in France three weeks later.Emily managed to find food and water for herself during her three-week excursion andshe was in relatively good shape when she was found. V Luckily, she was wearing a tagon her neck with a phone number, so the company called her family in the U.S. to say shewas all right.The McElroy family was relieved to hear their little Emily was found safe and well, andthey started to make plans to get her back to the U.S.

    www.kidsnewsroom.org

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    Last week Brita Loevaas, a Norwegian woman, was shocked when a postman knocked onher door and delivered two things: a bunch of flowers and a letter. What was so shockingabout this delivery? The letter was more than 50 years late. VThe letter to Brita Loevaas was postedfrom her mother-in-law, who lived lesswhere Brita lives, last week. The letter contathat were important at the time. Brita's sonhe is nearly 60, and Brita,s mother_in_law has died. VThe postmaster at the post offrce was not sure what had happened to the letter, but he saidit was possible that the letter had been behind shelves for the past nearly 60 years. Thepostman brought her flowers to apologise for the long delay.

    When Mafty Sallin, 34,electronics class: Createclock.

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    an interesting task to do indecided to create an alarm

    "Alarm clocks are extremely unpleasant,,, he says. He asked different people what they,dlike to wake up to instead of a noisy alarm. A lot of them said, ,,The smell of bacon.,,So Sallin and two classmates invented a new kind of alarm clock: a wooden box with apig face and a digital clock that uses the smell of cooking bacon instead of an annoyingsound to wake someone-up. v H. explains, "There,s no danger of burning, because Ibuilt it carefully. It uses halogen light bulbs instead of a flame ior cooking and turns offautomatically after ten minutes.',You can set the "ararm" easily. "Just put a

    19ugle of frozen strips of bacon in the nightbefore," he says. "If you set the alarm for g:00, it will tum on at i:50 and cook the baconfor ten minutes under the halogen bulbs," he says. Then the bulbs turn off and a fan blowsthe smell out through tle noge of the pig. V so instead of an alarm or a beep or aradio,you smell yourself awake. Then yo, tun open the door on the side and pull the bacon outand eat it.

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    Wft.t S"ffit *us u kiA, he spent a lot of time making drawings of invcntions. He want.mako a lift in the baek yard and a special trec house, trut he nevcr really thought he u.beeome an invcntor!

    People cmail him every day asking whcre they ean buy his alarm eloek.These days he designs eomputer softwarc, but if hc deeides to produee and scll his arcalarm, maybc he ean devclop some othcr modcls.

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    When Captain Sidney Clark was a kiel, hc spent Sunday afternoons watehing planes takeoffand land at airports in Mississippi. Fron thc first day of kindergarten he wantod to bea pilot.

    At that timc, though, there were no airline pilots u,ho werc Afriean Amcriean. Blt "if it issomcthing you really want to do," clark said, "yon don't leeognize diffleulty."At thc age of 16 he began learning to fly, and paid for the lessons himself. One year later,evcn before going to collegc, he hacl hrs plivate pilot's Iie ene e. V pot a private licenee atthat time, somebody necdcd a minimum of 40 hours of flight tirnc, whieh eost about $12an hour.

    During his collegc years, hc flcw whenever hc had enough lxoney to rent a plane. Somepilots learn to fly in the military" othcrs do it differently, just likc clark did.After eollege he dceided to get a profcssional pilot's licence altliough an instructor toldhirn that he would never gct a job as a pilot bceause he u'as blaek. Hc studied with aninstruetor in Florida and got his professional liecnce, whieh rnade it possible for him tofly passenger plancs.Aetually, clark didn't find it diffieult to find a job. He got a job with u.S" Airways. He hasbcen working for thc same airline for the past 30 y.utu. VEnglish is the intcrnational languagc of flight, so that's not a problcm forAmeriean pilots.But understanding accents is important, Clark said" Landing in another eountry ean bcdifficult if the air trafflc controllcr has an aeeent that is hald to understanel.Sidney Clark somctimes wcars glasses. Somc people thinlc that airlinc pilots must haveperfeet vision and ean't bc colour-b1ind. Not true. Professional pilots must have perfcetvision whcn eoreeted with glasses or eontact lcnscs if neeessary. Thcy only need to beablc to see ecrtain eolours on the eontrol oancl.

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  • Clark's luggage is always packed. In his traveller's bag, he keeps a shaving kit, an electricalvoltage converler (for European countries, which use different outlets), a sweater, moneyin different currencies and some tourist maps.

    www.kidspost.com

    In high school, I needed money because I had a girlfriend, and liked going out with myfriends. I'd already done jobs working at restaurants and grocery stores and wanted to trysomething more interesting. while searching around, I stopped atthe zoo.As it turned out, the zoo director liked my style and said he had an interesting job that Icould do. We walked to the gorilla cage. But, it was empty.

    The director told me that their gorilla named Kong was iil. Y He was getting old and theywere even now looking for a gorilla to replace him, since Kong just sits on a tree branchholding onto a rope all day. When the crowds started arriving at the weekend, they'd bedisappointed to have no gorilla. Everyone enjoys the gorilla exhibit, even a boring oldgorilla.

    The director said he had a gorilla suit I could wear if I would be interested in sitting on thebranch for 4 hours a day so the people would at least have something to look at. It soundedgood to me, not the usual high school job, so I told him I would be interested.The next day I went to the zoo, put on the gorilla suit and climbed into the cage. I sat onthe branch holding the rope and soon there was a crowd of children pressing their faces tothe bars. I got bored soon, so I started to scratch my armpits, and play with the rope. Anhour later I began to really get into this gorilla stuff. I took the rope and swung across thecage. The kids thought it was great so I started swinging higher and higher.In the next cage there was a lion and he was becoming irritated by my activity and beganto walk up and down in his cage and roar. V I kept swinging and started to swing to thelion's side of the cage and I used my feet to push off of his bars. He roared louder andlouder. It was actually pretty fun and the kids were really enjoying the show.All of a sudden I missed the bars, flew through, and dropped right into the lion's cage! Ilanded on my back and was shocked but immediately got up and ran to the front of thecage to the crowd, screaming "Help me, help me, I'm not who you think I am!"

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    Have you ever imagined getting paid for doing your favourite thing -

    playing with toys allday long? That dream has come true for Jason Poland of Houston, Texas. The 23-year-oldstudent has just won a national competition at Legoland California. As a result, he got oneof the rarest jobs in the world: Lego model builder for the theme park.Only 20 arlists worldwide are responsible for creating the thousands of models in fourLegoland theme parks around the world. Jason will join five other model builders at theCalifornia park, which holds more than 15,000 creations built from the small, colourfulbricks.VJason received his first Lego set atthe age of four. His mother told the Houston Chronicle,"I put together the first castle for him. After that, he always did it himself." Many moreLego sets were added to his collection over the years. Later, when the time came to go tocollege, Jason took his Legos with him. VJason began competing at a regional contest held in Dallas, where he impressed judges withthe pirate that he created. He quickly moved on to the national competition in California.For the final test, twenty-two competitors had two hours, and up to five kilograms ofLegos, to complete their original works. Jason's winning model was a snowman.Jason will begin his new job in July

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    www.kidsnewsroom.org

    It is almost lunchtime at Pasta Plus, an Italian restaurant and market in New Jersey.Sabatino Mazziotti has worked here as chief chef since he opened it in 1983. In minutesthe doors will open, and he makes sure everything is ready by then: handmade pasta,tomato sauce, meat and much more.

    Sabatino wears a white chef's coat, which makes him look professional, and keeps hisclothes clean. He thinks of cooking as a form of arl. Some of his recipes he learned fromhis mother while growing up in Italy. But it wasn't until he came to the United States

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    40 years ago that he began cooking for a living. He perfected his skills byother chefs where he worked.Sabatino Mazziolti was a sweater-maker in Italy before he came to this country in hisearly 20s with his parents and older brother, Massimo. V Sabatino found work in variousrestaurant kitchens where he first leamed English and,Tater, Spanish. Twenty-four yearsago, the brothers opened Pasta plus.

    Operating a successful restaurant is not easy. Pasta Plus restaurant is open six days a week(it is closed on Mondays), and the market is open every day. That keeps the Mazziottisbusy running a staff of about 50 people. VAt flrst, Sabatino worried that the stress of the business would lead to family conflicts, butthat has never happened. "I have never had an argument with my brother. Never,,,he says.The toughest part of operating a business, he says, is how much time it requires. .,Anykind of business, you have to give up yourself. It,s not easy if you have a family. you arenot able to spend as much time with them as you want.,,The business has continued as a family affair. His mother and aunt used to make the pasta.Now his two sons work at the restaurant part-time. Sabatino or Massimo has to be at therestaurant every morning to open the doors, and one of them is always there at closingtime. The brothers, now in their 60s, each work 60 to 70 hours every week. If one of theiremployees can't come to work, the Mazziottis have to be ready to filI in

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    0. student1. zoo2. not3. cage4. illisick/unwell5. fourl46. bored7, lion8. eatlkill

  • houted/screamed

    ren/people/human(s)rbs =m

    ee.b.t'reR*

    34BAB

    5

    AB6

    A