1. What can you do in the URS Cafeteria?
A. Add money to your ID card and play chess. B. Do your homework and watch TV.
C. Buy drinks and enjoy concerts. D. Have meals with your friends.
2. What can the URS Express do for the students?
A. To transport the students to and from the stores.
B. To take students to the Mattson Center.
C. To provide students with campus tours.
D. To carry the students to the lecture halls.
3. Whom can you get help from for your writing?
A. The professors. B. Trainers.
C. Volunteers. D. Classmates.
4. When and where can you cook for yourself?
A. The Douglas hall, Sunday.
B. The Globe, Wednesday.
C. The URS Cafeteria, Friday.
D. The Mcmillan Hall, Sunday.
One silly question I simply can't stand is "How do you feel?" Usually the question is asked by a man in action - a man on the go, walking along the streets, or busily working at his desk. So what do you expect him to say? He' 11 probably say, "Fine, I'm all right," but you have put a bug in his ear -maybe now he's not sure. If you are a good friend, you may have seen something in his face, or his walk that he overlooked that morning. It starts worrying him a little. First thing you know, he looks in a mirror to see if everything is all right, while you go merrily on your way asking someone else, "How do you feel?"
Every question has its time and place. It's perfectly acceptable, for instance, to ask "How do you feel?" if you're visiting a close friend in the hospital. But if the fellow is walking on both legs, hurrying to make a train, or sitting at his desk working, it's no time to ask him that silly question.
When George Bernard Shaw, the famous writer of plays was in his eighties, someone asked him "How do you feel?" Shaw put him in his place. "When you reach my age," he said, "either you feel all right or you're dead."