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1. Answer the following questions:

  1. Who was Louis Armstrong?

  2. What was he renowned for?

  3. How did he sharpen his musical ear for harmony?

  4. Where did he learn the cornet?

  5. What respected musicians did Armstrong play with?

  6. What recordings of the Hot Fives are considered some of the most seminal pieces in the history of jazz? Prove it.

  7. Did Armstrong have any nickname over the course of his career?

  8. Where was a statue dedicated to Armstrong erected?

  9. How do you understand the following expression “scat singing”?

  10. What songs of Louis Armstrong did you listen to?

2. Make a plan to the text.

3. Retell the text according to your plan. Boxing

Boxing, athletic contest between two persons, each of whom uses the fists to try to knock the other unconscious or to inflict enough punishment to cause the opponent either to quit or to be judged beaten. A boxing match is conducted under established rules and procedures and has a referee, judges, and timekeeper. The primary aim of each participant is to strike blows to the head and torso of the opponent that will knock down and render the boxer incapable of rising to a standing position and defending himself within 10 seconds. Originally the term prize-fighting was used when money was at stake, but the term professional boxing now bears the same meaning.

In ancient Greece, boxing was a popular amateur competitive sport and was included in the first Olympic Games. In ancient Rome, boxers often wore the cestus, a metal-studded leather hand covering with which they maimed and even killed their opponents, sometimes as part of gladiatorial spectacles. The sport declined in popularity after the fall of the Roman Empire. In the 18th century, boxing was revived in London in the form of bare-knuckle prizefights in which the contestants fought for money and the spectators made wagers on the outcome.

The first boxer to be recognized as a heavyweight champion was James Figg, in 1719. In 1743 a later champion, John Broughton, formulated a set of rules standardizing some practices and eliminating others, such as hitting opponents when they are down or seizing opponents by the hair. Broughton's rules governed boxing until 1838, when the Original London Prize Ring rules, based on those of Broughton, were devised. Modifications known as the Revised London Prize Ring rules were drawn up in 1853, and they controlled the sport until the end of the 19th century, when the Queensberry rules came into use. These rules were drafted in 1857 by a boxer, John Graham Chambers, under the auspices of John Sholto Douglas, 8th marquis of Queensberry.

Emphasizing boxing skill rather than wrestling and agility over strength, the Queensberry rules helped to undo the popular image of boxing as a savage, brutal brawl. The new rules prohibited bare-fisted fighting, wrestling, hugging, hitting opponents while they are helpless, and fighting to the finish. Under the Broughton rules, a downed man was allowed 30 seconds to square off at a distance of 1 yd (90 cm) from the opponent, aided by handlers if necessary. If the boxer failed to square off, that fighter was considered beaten. Under the London Prize Ring rules, the boxer had to reach scratch (a mark located in the middle of the ring) unaided within 8 seconds after the 30-second time lapse; and a round ended when a boxer went down. Under the Queensberry rules, matches were divided into 3-minute rounds with 1-minute intervals of rest between them. A contestant who remained down, either recumbent or on one knee, after 10 seconds lost the match. The rules also stipulated that matches be conducted in a roped-in square, called a ring, measuring 7.3 m on a side.

The last bare-knuckle heavyweight champion was the American John L. Sullivan, who fought and won the last sanctioned bare-knuckle fight in 1889, against Jake Kilrain. Fighting with gloves under the Queensberry rules, the popular Sullivan lost the world heavyweight boxing championship to James J. Corbett in New Orleans, Louisiana, on September 7, 1892. The Queensberry rules have remained the code governing the conduct of professional boxing.