Grammar American & British

Sunday, July 10, 2022

3 - ] SAT - The Critical Reading Question

3 - ] SAT - The Critical Reading Question 

The Critical Reading Question

Exercise C

This exercise provides you with a mixture of reading passages similar in variety to what you will encounter on the SAT . Answer all questions on thje basis of what is [ stated ] or [ implied ] in the passages .

The following passage is taken from the introduction to the catalog of a major exhibition of Flemish tapestries .

            Tapestries are made on looms . Their distinctive weave is basically simple : the colored weft threads interface regularly with the monochrome warps , as in darning or plain cloth , but as they do so , they form a design by reversing their direction when a change of color is needed . The wefts are beaten down to cover the warps completely . The result is a design or picture that is the fabric itself , not one laid upon a ground like an embroidery , a print ,or brocading . The back and front of a tapestry show the same design . The weaver always follows a preexisting model , generally a drawing or painting , known as the cartoon ,w hich in most cases he reproduces as exactly as he can . Long training is needed to become a professional tapestry weaver . It can take as much as a year to produce a yard of very finely woven tapestry .

            Tapestry-woven fabrics have been made from China to Peru and from very early times to the present day , but large wall hangings in this technique , mainly of wool , are typically Northern European . Few examples predating the late fourteenth century have survived , but from about 1400 tapestries were an essential part of aristocratic life . The prince or great nobleman sent his plate and his tapestries ahead of him to furnish his castles before his arrival as he traveled through his domains ; both had the same function , to display his wealth and social position . It has frequently been suggested that tapestries helped to heat stone-walled rooms , but this is a modern idea ; comfort was of minor importance in the Middle Ages . Tapestries were portable grandeur , instant splendor , taking the place , north of the Alps , of painted frescoes further south . They were hung without gaps between them , covering entire walls and often doors as well . Only very occasionally were they made as individual works of art such as altar frontals . They were usually commissioned or bought as sets , or “chambers ,” and constituted the most important furnishings of any grand room , except for the display of plate , throughout the Middle Ages and the sixteenth century .Later , woven silks , ornamental wood carving , stucco decoration , and painted leather gradually replaced tapestry as expensive wall coverings , until at last wallpaper was introduced in the late eighteenth dentury and eventually swept away almost everything else .

         By the end of the eighteenth century , the “tapestry-room” [ a room with every available wall covered with wall hangings ] was no longer fashionable : paper had replaced wall coverings of wool and silk . Tapestries , of course . were still made ,but in the nineteenth century they often seem to have been produced mainly as individual works of art that astonish by their resemblance to oil paintings , tours de force woven with a remarkably large number of wefts per inch . In England during the second half of the century , William Morris attempted to reverse this trend and to bring tapestry weaving back to its true principles , those he considered to have governed it in the Middle Ages . He imitated medieval tapestries in both style and technique , using few warps to the inch , but he did not make sets ; the original function for which tapestry is so admirably suited -- completely covering the walls of a room and providing sumptuous surroundings for a life of pomp and splendor -- could not be revived .Morris’s example has been followed , though with less imitation of medieval style , by many weavers of the present century , whose coarsely woven cloths hang like single pictures and can be admired as examples of contemporary art .    

1. Tapestry weaving may be characterized as which of the following ?

I . Time-consuming

II . Spontaneous in concept

III . Faithful to an original

(A) I only  (B) III only (C) I and II only (D) I and III only (E) II and III only

2 . The underlined word “distinctive” means

(A) characteristic (B) stylish (C) discriminatory (D) eminent (E) articulate

3 . Renaissance nobles carried tapestries with them to demonstrate their

(A) piety (B) consequence (C) aesthetic judgment (D) need for privacy (E) dislike for cold

4 . The underlined  word “ground” means

(A) terrain (B) dust (C) thread (D) base (E) pigment

5 . In contrast to nineteenth century tapestries , contemporary tapestries

(A) are displayed in sets of panels

(B) echo medieval themes

(C) faithfully copy oil paintings

(D) have a less fine weave

(E) indicate the owner’s social position

6 . The primary purpose of the passage is to

(A) explain the process of tapestry making

(B) contrast Eastern and Western schools of tapestry

(C) analyze the reasons for the decline in popularity of tapestries

(D) provide a historical perspective on tapestry making

(E) advocate a return to a more colorful way o lie

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The following passage ix taken from a book of popular history written in 1991 .

            The advantage of associating the birth of democracy with the Mayflower Compact is that it is easy to do so . The public loves a simple explanation , and none is simpler than the belief that on November 11 ,1620 -- the day of the compact was approved -- a cornerstone of American democracy was laid . Certainly it makes it easier on schoolchildren . Marking the start of democracy in 1620 relieves students of the responsibility of knowing what happened in the hundred some years before , from the arrival of the Santa Maria to the landing of the Mayflower .

            The compact , to be sure , demonstrated the Englishman’s striking capacity for self-government . And in affirming the principle of majority rule , the Pilgrims showed how far they had come from the days when the king’s whim was law and nobody dared say otherwise .

            But the emphasis on the compact is misplaced . Scholarly research in the last half century indicates that the compact had nothing to do with the development of self-government in America . In truth , the Mayflower Compact was no more a cornerstone of American democracy than the Pilgrim hut was the foundation of American architecture . As Samuel Eliot Morison so emphatically put it . American democracy “was not born in the cabin of the Mayflower .”

            The Pilgrims indeed are miscast as the heroes of American democracy . They spurned democracy and would have been shocked to see themselves held up as its defenders . George Willison , regarded as one of the most careful students of the Pilgrims , stated that “the merest glance at the history of Plymouth” shows that they were not democrats .

            The mythmakers would have us believe that even if the Pilgrims themselves weren’t democratic , the Mayflower Compact itself was . But in fact the compact was expressly designed to curb freedom , not promote it . The Pilgrim governor and historian , William Bradford , from whom we have gotten nearly all of the information there is about the Pilgrims , frankly conceded as much . Bradford wrote that the purpose of the compact was to control renegades aboard the Mayflower who were threatening to go their own way when the ship reached land . Because the Pilgrims had decided to settle in an area outside the jurisdiction of their royal patent , some aboard the Mayflower had hinted that upon landing they would “use their owne libertie , for none had power to command them .” Under the terms of the compact , they couldn’t ; the compact required all who lived in the colony to “promise all due submission and obedience” to it .

               Furthermore , despite the compact’s mention of majority rule , the Pilgrim fathers had no intention of turning over the colony’s government to the people . Plymouth was to e ruled by the elite . And the elite wasn’t bashful in the least about advancing its claims to superiority . When the Mayflower Compact was signed , the elite signed first . The second rank consisted of the “goodmen .”At the bottom of the list came four servants’ names . No women or children signed .

            Whether the compact was or was not actually hostile to the democratic spirit , it was deemed sufficiently hostile that during the Revolution the Tories put it to use as “propaganda for the crown .”The monarchists made much of the fact that the Pilgrims had chosen to establish an English-style government that placed power in the hands of a governor , not a cleric , and a governor who owed his allegiance no to the people or to a church but to “our dread Sovereign Lord King James .” No one thought it significant that the Tories had adopted the principle of majority rule . Tory historian George Chalmers , in a work published in 1780 , claimed the central meaning of the compact was the Pilgrims’ recognition of the necessity of royal authority . This may have been not only a convenient argument but a true one . It is at least as plausible as the belief that the compact stood for democracy .

7 . The author’s attitude toward the general public ( lines 3 - 7 ) can best be described as    

(A) egalitarian (B) grateful (C) sympathetic (D) envious (E) superior

8. The underlined phrase “held up” means

(A) delayed (B) cited (C) accommodated (D) carried (E) waylaid

9 . According to the passage paragraph five ( Because …. to it . ) , the compact’s primary purpose was to 

(A) establish legal authority within the colony

(B) outlaw non-Pilgrims among the settlers

(C) preach against heretical thinking

(D) protect each individual’s civil rights

(E) countermand the original royal patent

10 . The author of the passage can best be described as

(A) an iconoclast  (B) an atheist (C) a mythmaker (D) an elitist (E) an authoritarian

11 . In the underlined lines in paragraph six , the details about the signers of the Mayflower Compact are used to emphasize

(A) the Pilgrims’ respect for the social hierarchy

(B) the inclusion of servants among those signing

(C) their importance to American history

(D) the variety of social classes aboard

(E) the lack of any provision for minority rule

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In this excerpt from her autobiography . One Writer’s Beginnings , the short-story writer Eudora Welty introduces her parents .

            My father loved all instruments that would instruct and fascinate . His place to keep things was the drawer in the “library table” where lying on top of his folded maps was a telescope with brass extensions , to find the moon and the Big Dipper after supper in our front yard , and to keep appointments with eclipses . In the back of the drawer you could find a magnifying glass , a kaleidoscope , and a gyroscope kept in a lack buckram box , which he would set dancing for us on a string pulled tight . He had also supplied himself with an assortment of puzzles composed of metal rings and intersecting links and keys chained together , impossible for the rest of us , however patiently shown , to take apart , he had an almost childlike love of the ingenious .

            In time , a barometer was added to our dining room wall , but we didn’t really need it . My father had the country boy’s accurate knowledge of the weather and its skies . He went out and stood on our front steps first thing in the morning and took a good look at it and a sniff . He was a pretty good weather prophet .

            “Well , I’m not ,” my mother would say , with enormous self-satisfaction .

            He told us children what to do if we were lost in a strange country . “Look for where the sky is brightest along the horizon ,” he said . “That reflects the nearest river . Strike out for s a river and you will find habitation .” Eventualities were much on his mind . In his care for us children he cautioned us to take measures against such things as being struck y lightning . He drew us all away from the windows during the severe electrical storms that are common where we live . My mother stood apart , scoffing at caution as a character failing . “Why , I always loved a storm ! High winds never bothered me in West Virginia ! Just listen at that ! I wasn’t a bit afraid of a little lightning and spread my arms wide and run in a good big storm !”

            So I developed a strong meteorological sensibility . In years ahead when I wrote stores , atmosphere took its influential role from the start . Commotion in the weather and the inner feelings aroused by such a hovering disturbance emerged connected in dramatic form . ( I tried a tornado first , in a story called “The Winds .” )

            From our earliest Christmas times , Santa Claus brought us toys that instruct oys and girls ( separately ) how to build things -- stone locks cut to the castle-building style , Tinker Toys , and Erector sets .Daddy made for us himself elaborate kites that needed to e take miles out of the town to a pasture long enough ( and my father was not afraid of horses and cows watching ) for him to run with and get up on a long cord to which my mother held the spindle , and then we children were given it to hold , tugging like something alive at our hands . They were beautiful , sound , shapely box kites , smelling delicately of office glue for their entire short lives .And of course , as soon as the boys attained anywhere near the right age , there was an electric train , the enguine with its pea-sized working headlight , its lines of cars , tracks equipped with switches semaphores , its station , its bridges , and its tunnel , which blocked off all other traffic in the upstairs hall . Even from downstairs , and through the cries of excited children , the elegant rush and click of the train could be heard through the ceiling , running around and around its figure eight .

            All of this , but especially the train , represents my father’s fondest beliefs -- in progress , in the future . With these gifts , he was preparing his children .

            And so was my mother with her different gifts .

            I learned from the age of two or three that any room in our house , at any time , was there to read in , or be read to . My mother read to me . She’d read to me in the big bedroom in the mornings , when we were in her rocker together , which ticked in rhythm as we rocked , as though we had a cricket accompanying the story . She’d read to me in the dining room on winter afternoons in front of the coal fire , with our cuckoo clock ending the story with “Cuckoo ,” and at night when I’d ot in my own bed . I must have given her no peace . Sometimes she read to me in the kitchen while she sat churning , and the churning sobbed along with any story . It was my ambition to have her read to me while I churned ; once she granted my wish , but she read off my story before I brought her butter.  She was an expressive reader . When she was reading “Puss in Boots ,” for instance , it was impossible not to know that she distrusted all cats .

12 . In saying that her father used the telescope to “keep appointments with eclipses” , Welty means that  

(A) the regularity of eclipses helped him avoid missing engagements

(B) his attempts at astronomical observation met with failure

(C) he made a point of observing major astronomical phenomena

(D) he tried to instruct his children in the importance of keeping appointments

(E) he invented ingenious new ways to use the telescope

13. We can infer from the underlined lines in paragraph two that Welty’s father stood on the front steps and sniffed first thing in the morning

(A) because he disapproved of the day’s weather

(B) because he suffered from nasal congestion

(C) to enjoy the fragrance of the flowers

(D) to detect signs of changes in the weather

(E) in an instinctive response to fresh air

14 . The underlined word “measures” in paragraph three means

(A) legislative actions (B) preventative steps  (C) yardsticks (D) food rations (E) warnings

15 . When Welty’s mother exclaims “Just listen at that !”  at the end of paragraph three , she wants everyone to pay attention to

(A) her husband’s advice

(B) her memories of West Virginia

(C) the sounds of the storm

(D) her reasons for being unafraid

(E) the noise the children are making

16 . Compared to Welty’s father , her mother can best be described as

(A) more literate and more progressive

(B) proud of her knowledge of the weather , but imprudent about storms

(C) unafraid of ordinary storms , but deeply disturbed by tornadoes

(D) more protective of her children , but less patient with them

(E) less apt to foresee problems , but more apt to enjoy the moment

17 . The underlined word “fondest” means

(A) most affectionate

(B) most foolish

(C) most radical

(D) most cherished

(E) most credulous

18. By the the underlined phrase “brought her butter” , Welty means that she

(A) manufactured butter

(B) fetched butter

(C) spread butter

(D) purchased butter

(E) melted butter

19 . Why does Welty recount these anecdotes about her parents ?

(A) She wishes to prove that theirs was an unhappy marriage of opposites

(B) The anecdotes are vivid illustrations of truths that she holds dear

(C) She seeks to provide advice for travelers lost in the wilderness

(D) She envisions her parents chiefly as humorous subjects for ironic characterization

(E) She wishes to provide background on early influences on her as a writer

Answer Key

1 . D 2. A 3 . B 4 . D 5 . D 6 . D 7 . E 8 . B 9 . A 10 . A 11 . A 12 . C 13 . D

14 . B 15 . C 18 . E 17 . D 18 . A 19 . E 

2 - ] SAT - The Critical Reading Question

 2 - ] SAT - The Critical Reading Question

The Critical Reading Question

Exercise B

This exercise provides you with a mixture of reading passages similar in variety to what you will encounter on the SAT . Answer all questions on thje basis of what is [ stated ] or [ implied ] in the passages .

            The best Eskimo carvings of all ages seem to possess a powerful ability to reach across the great barriers of language and time and communicate directly with us . The more we look at these carvings , the more life we perceive hidden within them . We discover subtle living forms of the animal , human , and mystical world . These arctic carvings are not the cold sculptures of a frozen world . Instead , they reveal to us the passionate feelings of a vital people well aware of all the joys , terrors , tranquility , and wildness of life around them .  

            Eskimo carvers are people moved by dreams . In spite of all their new contacts with the outsiders , they are still concerned with their own kind of mystical imagery . The most skillful carvers possess a bold confidence , a direct approach to their art that has a freedom unsullied by any kind of formalized training . Eskimo carvers have strong , skilled hands , used to forcing hard materials with their simple tools . Their hunting life and the northern environment invigorates them . Bad weather often imposes a special kind of leisure , giving them time in which to perfect their carvings .

            They are among the last of the hunting societies that have retained some part of the keen sense of observation that we have so long forgotten . The carvers are also butchers of meat , and therefore masters in the understanding of animal anatomy . Flesh and bones and sheaths of muscle seem to move in their works . They show us how to drive the caribou , how to hold a child , how to walk cautiously on thin ice . Through their eyes we understand the dangerous power of a polar bear . In the very best of Eskimo art we seevibrant animal and human forms that stand quietly or tensely , strongly radiating a sense f life . We can see , and even feel with our hands , the cold sleekness of seals , the bulking weight of walrus , the icy swiftness of trout , the flowing rhythm in a flight of geese. In their art we catch brief glimpses of a people who have long possessed a very different approach to the whole question of life and death .

            In Eskimo art there is much evidence of humor which the carvers havce in abundance . Some of the carvings are caricatures of themselves , of ourselves , and of situations , or records of ancient legends . Their laughter may be subtle , or broad and Chaucerian .

            Perhaps no one can accurately define the right way or wrong way to create a carving . Each carver must follow his own way , in his own time . Technique in itself is meaningless unless it serves to express content . According to the Eskimo , the best carvings possess a sense of movement that seems to come from within the material itself , a feeling of tension , a living excitement .

1 . The author is primarily concerned with   

(A) showing how Eskimo carvings achieve their effects

(B) describing how Eskimo artists resist the influence of outsiders

(C) discussing the significant characteristics of Eskimo art

(D) explaining how Eskimo carvers use their strength to manipulate hard materials

(E) interpreting the symbolism of Eskimo art

2 . The author’s attitude toward Eskimo art is one of

(A) condescension (B) awe (C) admiration (D) regret (E) bewilderment

3 . With which of the following statements would the author most likely agree ?

(A) formal training may often destroy an artist’s originality .

(B) Artists should learn their craft by studying the work of experts .

(C) The content of a work of art is insignificant .

(D) Caricatures have no place in serious art .

(E) Eskimo art is interesting more as an expression of a life view than as serious art form .

4 . The author gives examples of the subjects of Eskimo carvings primarily to

(A) show that they have o relevance to modern life

(B) indicate the artist’s lack of imagination

(C) imply that other artists have imitates them

(D) prove that the artists’ limited experience of life has been a handicap

(E) suggest the quality and variety of the work

5 . According to the passage , Eskimo carvings have all the following EXCEPT

(A) wit (B) subtlety (C) emotional depth (D) stylistic uniformity (E) anatomical accuracy

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            Charlotte Stanhope was at this time about thirty-five years old ; and , whatever may have been her faults , she had none of those which belong to old young ladies . She neither dressed young , nor talked young , nor indeed looked young . She appeared to be perfectly content with her time of life , and in no way affected the graces of youth . She was a fine young woman ; and had she been a man , would have been a fine young man . All that was done in the house , and was not done by servants , was done by her . She gave the orders , paid the bills , hired and dismissed the domestics , made the tea , carved the meat , and managed everything in the Stanhope household . She , and she alone , could ever induce her father to look into the state of his worldly concerns . She , and she alone , could in any degree control the absurdities of her sister . She , and she alone , prevented the whole family from falling into utter disrepute and beggary . It was by her advice that they now found themselves very unpleasantly situated in Barchester .

            So far , the character of Charlotte Stanhope is not unprepossessing . But it remains to be said , that the influence which she had in her family , though it had been used to a certain extent for their worldly well-being , had not been used to their real benefit , as it might have been . She had aided her father in his indifference to his professional duties , counseling him that his livings were as much his individual property as the estates of his elder brother were the property of that worthy peer . She had for years past stifled every little rising wish for a return to England which the reverend doctor had from time to time expressed . She had encouraged her mother in her idleness in order that she herself might be mistress and manager of the Stanhope household . She had encouraged and fostered the follies of her sister , though she was always willing , and often able , to protect her from their probable result . She had done her best , and had thoroughly succeeded in spoiling her brother , and turning him loose upon the world n idle man without a profession , and without a shilling that he could call his own .

            Miss Stanhope was a clever woman , able to talk on most subjects , and quite indifferent as to what the subject was . She prided herself on her freedom from English prejudice , and she might have added , from feminine delicacy . On religion she was a pure freethinker , and with much want of true affection , delighted to throw out her own views before she troubled mind of her father . To have shaken what remained of his Church of England faith would have gratified her much , but the idea of his abandoning his preferment in the church had never once presented itself to her mind . How could he indeed , when he had no income from any other source ?

6 . The passage as a whole is best characterized as

(A) a description of the members of a family

(B) a portrait of a young woman’s moral and intellectual temperament

(C) an illustration of the evils of egotism

(D) an analysis of family dynamics in aristocratic society

(E) a contrast between a virtuous daughter and her disreputable family

7 . The tone of the passage is best described as

(A) self-righteous and moralistic

(B) satirical and candid

(C) sympathetic and sentimental

(D) bitter and disillusioned

(E) indifferent and unfeeling

8 . On the basis of the passage , which of the following statements about Dr. Stanhope can most logically be made ?

(A) He is even more indolent than his wife .

(B) He resents having surrendered his authority to his daughter .

(C) He feels remorse for his professional misconduct

(D) He has little left of his initial religious beliefs .

(E) He has disinherited his son without a shilling .

9 . It can be inferred from the passage that Charlotte’s mother ( the underlined lines in paragraph two ) is which of the following ?

I . An affectionate wife and mother

II . A model of the domestic arts

III . A woman of un assertive character 

(A) I only (B) II only (C) III only (D) I and III only (E) II and III only

10 . The passage suggests that Charlotte possesses all of the following characteristics EXCEPT

(A) an inappropriate flirtatiousness

(B) a lack of reverence

(C) a materialistic nature

(D) a managing disposition

(E) a touch of coarseness

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The following passage on the nature of the surface of the earth is taken from a basic geology text .

            Of the 197 million square miles making up the surface of the globe , 71 percent is covered by interconnecting bodies of marine water ; the Pacific Ocean alone covers half the earth and averages near 14,000 feet in depth . The continents -- Eurasia , Africa , North America , South America , Australia , and Antarctica -- are the portions of the continental masses rising above sea level . The submerged borders of the continental masses are the continental shelves , beyond which lie the deep-sea basins .

            The oceans attain their greatest depths not in their central parts , but in certain elongated furrows , or long narrow troughs , called deeps . These profound troughs have a peripheral arrangements , notably around the borders of the Pacific and Indian oceans . The position of the deeps near the continental masses suggests that the deeps , like the highest mountains , are of recent origin , since otherwise they would have been filled with waste from the lands . This suggestion is strengthened by the fact that the deeps are frequently the sites of world-shaking earthquakes . For example , the “tidal wave” that in April , 1946 , cused widespread destruction alongt Pacific coasts resulted from a strong earthquake on the floor of the Aleutian Deep .

            The ropography of the ocean floors is none too well known , since in great areas the available soundings are hundreds or even thousands of miles apart. However , the floor of the At is becoming fairly well known as a result of special surveys since 1920 . A broad , well-defined ridge - the mid-Atlantic ridge -- runs north and south between Africa and the two Americas , and numerous other major irregularities diversify the Atlantic floor . Closely spaced soundings show that many parts of the oceanic floors are as rugged as mountainous regions of the continents . Use of the recently perfected method of echo sounding is rapidly enlarging our knowledge of submarine topography . During World War II great strides were made in mapping submarine surfaces , particularly in many parts of the vast Pacific basin .

            The continents stand on the average 2870 feet --slightly more than half a mile -- abpve sea level . North America averages 2300 feet ; Europe averages only 1150 feet ; and Asia , the highest of the larger continental subdivisions , averages 3200 feet . The highest point on the globe , Mount Everest in the Himalayas , is 29 , 000 feet above the sea ; and as the greatest known depth in the sea is over 35,000 feet , the maximum relief ( that is , the difference in altitude between the lowest and highest points ) exceeds 64,ooo feet , or ecceeds 12 miles . The continental masses and the deep-sea basins are relief features of the first order ; the deeps , the ridges , and volcanic cones that diversify the sea floor , as well as the plains , plateaus , and mountains of the continents , are relief features of the second order . The lands are unendingly subject to a complex of activities summarized in the term erosion , which first sculptures them in great detail and then tends to reduce them ultimately to sealevel . The modeling of the landcape by weather , running water , and other agents is apparent to the keenly observant eye and causes thinking people to speculate on what must be the final result of the ceaseless wearing down of the lands . Long before there was a science of geology , Shakespeare wrote “the revolution of the times makes mountains level .”

11 . It can be inferred from lines 1 - 3 that the largest ocean is the

(A) Atlantic (B) Pacific (C) Indian (D) Aleutian Deep (E) Arctic

12 . According to the underlined lines in paragraph two , the peripheral furrows or deeps are found

(A) only in the Pacific and Indian oceans

(B) near earthquakes

(C) near the shore

(D) in the center of the ocean

(E) to be 14,000 feet in depth in the Pacific

13 . The passage indicates that the continental masses

(A) comprise 29 percent of the earth’s surface

(B) consist of six continents

(C) rise above sea level

(D) are partially underwater

(E) are relief features of the second order

14 . The “revolution of the time” as used in the final sentence means

(A) the passage of years

(B) the current rebellion

(C) the science of geology

(D) the action of the ocean floor

(E) the overthrow of natural forces

5 . From this passage , it can be inferred that earthquakes

(A) occur only in the peripheral furrows

(B) occur more frequently in newly formed land or sea formations

(C) are a prime cause of soil erosion

(D) will ultimately “make mountains level”

(E) are caused by the weight of water pressing on the earth’s surface

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Ever since America’s founding fathers established the legislative branch of our government , the Senate and House of Representatives have been the target of periodic criticisms . In this speech dating from the 1950s , we learn of one accusation made against the House .

            Mr. Speaker , ours is an open society . It is a pluralistic society . Its strength lies in its institutions . Those institutions remain viable only as long as the majority of our citizens retain a meaningful belief in them . As long as Americans feel that their institutions are responsive to the wishes of the people , we shall endure and prevail .

            Everyone will admit freely that today there is a crisis in our institutions and the faith people have in them . No institution is more basic than the Congress -- in this case the House of Representatives , in which we have the privilege to serve .

            Over the past year or so , the Nation has been awakened to the fact that the House -- this House -- our institution -- has been less than responsive to the requirements of modern times . The Nation has read one article after the other that finds this institution wanting . One of the most pertinent and irrefutable accusations has to do with the fact that the House operates with too great an emphasis on secrecy , with too great an imbalance of power and too little attention paid to the wishes of the majority of its Members . In effect , this House of the people has been operating all too often in an undemocratic manner .

            We cannot pretend to stand for pluralistic democracy for the Nation if we daily deny the democratic process in our procedures and deliberations . This is what is going on each day , nonetheless . It is folly to deny the need for reform . We only add fuel to the fires already being set by reactionaries of every stripe who have a vested interest in the failure of democracy . They anticipate reaction , claiming our lack of response as reason enough for seeking the overthrow of the society we are all a part of . Reform on our part in response to a proven need will cut short the fuse of rebellion , cut short those who seek the defeat of democracy .

         Such reform can only be accomplished through existing institutions ; it can only be accomplished through reform of them , beginning with the rules and procedures of the House of Representatives . We must let the people and their news media see what is transpiring here in their name , rather than shut them out in the name of fear and breach of security . This is their House , and they have a right to know what is happening here .

            Mr. Speaker , we should have little to hide from the people . The national security argument has been worked to death . Recently , an article in the Wall Street Journal  by DR. Edward Teller , no raving liberal , attacks secrecy for its own sake . We defeat our own purposes by being overly secretive .

            By closing the House of the people to those very same people , we only alienate growing segments of society , stifle the democratic process and undermine the foundations of the institution and the Nation we all love so deeply . If we do not take the initiative in instituting reform , we merely reaffirm the worst that has been state about the lack of progressivism in the Congress . We add strength to the arguments of the radical revolutionaries among us . We contribute to the erosion of this House and its role .

16 . Which of the following does the author appear to value LEAST ?    

(A) Legislative reforms

(B) Press coverage of Congressional sessions

(C) His responsiveness to his constituents

(D) The rhetoric of left wing extremists

(E) The opinion of Dr. Edward Teller

17 . The author’s primary purpose in this passage is to

(A) encourage Congress to limit the powers of the media

(B) call for an end to undemocratic practices in Congress

(C) answer the radicals who want to overthrow the government

(D) define the powers of Congressional committees

(E) analyze the needs for security of governmental agencies

18 . The underlined phrase “stand for” means  

(A) tolerate (B) withstand (C) surpass (D) advocate (E) arise

19 . The attitude toward closed Congressional hearings is one of

(A) cautious skepticism

(B) grudging tolerance

(C) outright rejection

(D) wholehearted acceptance

(E) fundamental indifference

20 . The tone of the passage as a whole is best described as

(A) satirical (B) cautionary (C) alienated (D) objective (E) elegiac

Answer Key

1. C 2 . C 3 .A 4 . E 5 . D 6 . B 7 . B 8 . D 9 . C 10 . A 11. B 12 . C 13 . D 14 . A

15 . B 16 . D 17 . B 18 . D 19 . C 20 . B

209-] English Literature

209-] English Literature Charles Dickens  Posted By lifeisart in Dickens, Charles || 23 Replies What do you think about Dickens realism? ...