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in Love, large public exhibition of the work of the most important Dutch photographer of the 20th century. Scheduled for 4 Feb. to 28 May 2017. ◆ National Holocaust Museum The newly opened museum presents Tangible Memories from the Jewish monument, exhibition of objects, photos and documents of people affected by the Holocaust(大屠殺 ). Opened 2 Sept. 2021, ongoing until the end of 2019. ◆ Dutch Resistance Museum Between 1940 and 1945 the Netherlands was occupied by Nazi Germany. Five Dutch chefs have taken on the challenge of creating dishes using only ingredients that were available during the occupation. Food in Wartime offers a particular insight into daily life during this time. Learn more and have a look at the modern chefs‘ creations at the Dutch Resistance Museum from 15 October 2021 until May 2017. 21. Whose works are about digital technology? A. Shinichi Sawada. B. Jean Tinguely. C. Jordan Wolfson. D. Ed van der Elsken 22. Which exhibition lasts the longest? A. Exhibition 1917. B. Camera in Love C. Tangible Memories. D. Food in Wartime. 23. Where can you see modern chefs‘ creation? A. Hermitage Amsterdam. B. Stedelijk C. National Holocaust Museum D. Dutch Resistance Museum B When one California construction worker, Colin Blevin arrived at work at around 7 . on Monday morning, he noticed a car was blocking the entranceway to the construction site. While asking the driver to move, Colin spotted a baby in a car seat. ―He moved the car and I pulled in,‖ Blevin said. ―The back door was cracked open and I saw a baby. Blevin had no idea that earlier that morning, a car with a 1yearold had been stolen about 90 miles away while the baby‘s father ran inside to order his lunch. ―I didn‘t know what was going on. I didn‘t know initially the baby was in danger and there was an AMBER Alert,‖ Blevin said. Even though everything appeared pretty normal, Blevin‘s instincts told him something was wrong. After parking his car, a local woman walked over and confirmed his suspicions. The lady told him quietly, ―Help me save this baby.‖ She said, ―You have to save this baby. The guy tried to give it to me.‖ He looked into the car and there was a beautiful chunky baby looking at him. The baby was calm, clean, with a bottle on his chest. Blevin met the man, 44yearold Raymond Randy Gutierrez, and asked whose baby was in the car. ―He said a lady gave him the car and left the baby in the car,‖ Blevin said. ―And right away I thought that makes no sense. The baby was well taken care of and this guy was dirty, skinny and nervous.‖ Blevin grabbed the baby from the car and Gutierrez ran away when he called 911. Police caught Gutierrez later that day and were able to reunite the baby with his parents. 24. How did the driver get the car? A. A father left it to him. B. He stole it. lady gave it to him. D. He bought it. did the driver decide to do with the baby? A. To sell it to a father. B. To give it to a woman. C. To Leave it in the car. D. To take care of it himself. 26. What does the underlined word ―it‖ in Paragraph 3 refer to? A. The baby. B. The car. C. A bottle. D. His lunch. made Blevin suspect the baby didn‘t belong to the driver? A. The expression of the driver. B. The place where the car parked. C. The time when he found the baby D. The appearance of the baby and the driver. C The digital revolution is both launching us into a nohandwriting future, and also sending us backwards in time to when the spoken words ruled. But that‘s not necessarily a bad thing. ―I don‘t think kids should be assessed on their ability to master cursive(草書 ). It‘s not something that they are going to use much in their lives as they grow older. It‘s not something most of us adults use in our lives today. ‖ Anne Trubek, an author, suggests that schools offer handwriting or cursive as an elective or art class in the future. ―Focus on how to teach kids to express their ideas, how to anize their thoughts, how to make arguments‖ she says. ―The forming of the letters are less important. And there are certainly many ways to individualize what you write beyond the way you‘ve c