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Week 23

Week 23. The Cricket in Times Square. (Thanks to Clare Pechon , Independence, Lousiana ) for voc. Slides. forlornly. If you do something forlornly, you do it in a way that shows you feel sad and lonely. What is something a person might do forlornly?. fidget.

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Week 23

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  1. Week 23 The Cricket in Times Square

  2. (Thanks to Clare Pechon, Independence, Lousiana) for voc. Slides.

  3. forlornly If you do something forlornly, you do it in a way that shows you feel sad and lonely. What is something a person might do forlornly?

  4. fidget People might fidget, or more around restlessly, when they are bored or nervous. What might make you fidget at a movie?

  5. pathetic A person or thing that is pathetic is sad and helpless. You usually feel sorry for pathetic people or things. Which might make a person feel pathetic, having a bad cold or winning a race?

  6. resolved When you have resolved to do something, you have made up your mind to do it. If you resolved to exercise more, what might you do?

  7. scrounging If an animal is scrounging, it is looking around trying to find food. What might a person be scrounging for in the kitchen?

  8. noble If you describe someone as noble, you think that person is honest and unselfish. Why would you want a noble person to be president?

  9. stingy Someone who is stingy doesn’t like to spend money or share what they have. If a stingy person found ten dollars, what might he or she do with the money?

  10. suspicion If you think someone is guilty of doing something wrong, you have a suspicion about him or her. Why might you have a suspicion about an unfamiliar person in your neighborhood?

  11. Practice Book page 132

  12. Practice Book page 135

  13. Sequence is the order in which events happen. Authors of fiction stories usually write the story eventsin sequence. An author may use time-order words such as first, next, then, and finally to show the sequence. Keeping track of the sequence of events can help you understand what you read.

  14. Read the paragraph below. Then look at the graphic organizer. It shows the sequence of events in the paragraph.

  15. George Gopher wanted to have the longest tunnel on the block. Early in the morning, he started digging. After several hours, he curved his tunnel upward. To his surprise, he found himself directly under the Maytown Library! George gave the problem much thought. He decided he might as well make the best of things. The next day, George got a library card. Did George get a library card right away? No, he got it the next day. The time-order words “the next day” show this. How long did it take for George to build the tunnel?

  16. To understand the sequence of events in a story, look for time- order clues. The second sentence begins, “Early in the morning.” That tells when the first event happens.

  17. Practice Book page 134

  18. p. 598 Crumbs for the Taking Mira Mouse was not happy with the new family that had moved into her house. They kept the kitchen floor much too clean. Every day, Mira spent hours scrounging for crumbs, but she found only a few.

  19. One morning, Mira hid behind a plant, forlornly gazing at the family as they ate breakfast. Mira’s sister Mitsy was visiting, and Mira told her sister about her problem. “This family is very stingy with food,” she said. She gave a pathetic sigh. “Perhaps I’ll have to move.”

  20. What was Mira scrounging for in the kitchen? If Mira was watching the family forlornly, how was she looking at them? In what way was the family stingy with their food? What is the difference between a happy sigh and a pathetic sigh?

  21. Mitsy was a noble sort of mouse. She resolved to help her sister. Mitsy studied the situation. “Look at the boy fidget!” she whispered. “I’ll bet he drops a lot of crumbs.”

  22. “His parents sweep the floor after breakfast,” Mira said sadly, “right after the boy leaves for school.”

  23. Mitsy cried, “There’s your solution!” When the family left the table, the mice sped to where the boy had eaten, and gathered as many delicious crumbs as they could carry. They made it back into the mouse hole before the parents returned to sweep.

  24. “I have a suspicion you won’t go hungry anymore,” Mitsy said with a grin.

  25. What qualities do you think Mitsy had if she was a noble mouse? What is another way you might say that Mitsy resolved to help her sister? What do you think might have made the boy fidget at the table? What gave Mitsy the suspicion that Mira would have enough food in the future?

  26. Genre Study A fantasy is an imaginative story that may have characters and events that are not realistic. As you read, look for characters who behave in an unrealistic way. story events that happen in time order.

  27. Harry Cat purred his chuckle. “Good night, Chester,” he said. “I’m going back to the drain pipe, where I can stretch out.” He jumped to the floor. “Good night, Harry,” Chester called. Soft and silent as a shadow, Harry slipped out the opening in the side of the newsstand and glided over to the drain pipe.

  28. Chester hopped into his matchbox. He had gotten to like the feeling of the tissue. It was almost like the spongy wood of his old tree stump—and felt much more like home than the cricket cage. Now they each had their own place to sleep.

  29. “Good night, Tucker,” Chester said. “’Night, Chester,” Tucker answered. Chester Cricket burrowed down deeper into the tissue. He was beginning to enjoy life in New York. Just before he fell asleep, he heard Tucker Mouse sighing happily in the cage.

  30. Chester Cricket was having a dream. In his dream he was sitting on top of his stump back in Connecticut, eating a leaf from the willow tree. He would bite off a piece of leaf, chew it up, and swallow it, but for some reason it didn’t taste as good as usual. There was something dry and papery about it, and it had a bitter flavor.

  31. Still, Chester kept eating, hoping that it would begin to taste better. A storm came up in his dream. The wind blew clouds of dust across the meadow. They swirled around his stump, and Chester began to sneeze because the dust got in his nose. But he still held on to the leaf. And then he sneezed such a big sneeze that it woke him up.

  32. Chester looked around him. He had been walking in his sleep and he was sitting on the edge of the cash register. The storm had been a gust of air that blew into the newsstand when the shuttle pulled up to the station. He was still choking from the dirt that flew around him.

  33. Chester looked down at his two front legs, half expecting to find the willow leaf. But it was no leaf he was holding. It was a two-dollar bill and he had already eaten half of it.

  34. He dropped the bill and leaped over to the cricket cage, where Tucker Mouse was sleeping peacefully. Chester shook the silver bell furiously; it rang like a fire alarm. Tucker jumped out from under his blanket of dollar bills and ran around the cage shouting, “Help! Fire! Murder! Police!”

  35. Then he realized where he was and sat down panting. “What is the matter with you, Chester?” he said. “I could have died from fright.” “I just ate half of a two-dollar bill,” said Chester. Tucker stared at him with disbelief.

  36. “You did what?” he asked. “Yes,” said Chester, “look.” He fetched the ruined two-dollar bill from the cash register. “I dreamed it was a leaf and I ate it.” Oh ohohoh,” moaned Tucker Mouse. “Not a one-dollar bill—not even a one-dollar bill and a fifty-cent piece—two dollars you had to eat! And from the Bellinis too—people who hardly make two dollars in two days.”

  37. “What am I going to do?” asked Chester. “Pack your bags and go to California,” said Tucker. Chester shook his head. “I can’t,” he said. “They’ve been so good to me—I can’t run away.”

  38. Tucker Mouse shrugged his shoulders. “Then stay and take the rap,” he said. He crept out of the cage and examined the remains of the money. “There’s still half of it left. Maybe we could put tape along the edge and pass it off as a one-dollar bill.”

  39. Tucker had one more idea: he was going to volunteer to go over and swipe two dollars from the lunch counter. But before he could suggest that, the top of the stand was suddenly lifted off. They had forgotten what time it was.

  40. Mama Bellini, who was on duty in the morning, stood towering, frowning down on them. Tucker let out a squeak of fear and jumped down to the floor. “Catch the mouse!” shouted Mama. She picked up a magazine—very big and heavy—and heaved it after Tucker.

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