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Practice Questions (Reading for the Main Idea)
1. Americans have always been interested in their Presidents' wives.
Many First Ladies have been remembered because of the ways they have
influenced their husbands. Other First Ladies have made the history
books on their own.
At least two First Ladies, Bess Truman and Lady Bird Johnson, made
it their business to send signals during their husbands' speeches. When
Lady Bird Johnson thought her husband was talking too long, she wrote a
note and sent it up to the platform. It read, “It's time to stop!” And
he did. Once Bess Truman didn't like what her husband was saying on
television, so she phoned him and said,” If you can't talk more
politely than that in public, you come right home.”
Abigail Fillmore and Eliza Johnson actually taught their husbands,
Millard Fillmore and Andrew Johnson, the thirteenth and seventeenth
Presidents. A schoolteacher, Abigail eventually married her pupil,
Millard. When Eliza Johnson married Andrew, he could not read or write,
so she taught him herself.
It was First Lady Helen Taft's idea to plant the famous cherry
trees in Washington, D. C. Each spring these blossoming trees attract
thousands of visitors to the nation's capital. Mrs. Taft also
influenced the male members of her family and the White House staff in
a strange way: she convinced them to shave off their beards!
Shortly after President Wilson suffered a stroke, Edith Wilson
unofficially took over most of the duties of the Presidency until the
end of her husband's term. Earlier, during World War I, Mrs. Wilson had
had sheep brought onto the White House lawn to eat the grass. The sheep
not only kept the lawn mowed but provided wool for an auction sponsored
by the First Lady. Almost $100,000 was raised for the Red Cross.
Dolly Madison saw to it that a magnificent painting of George
Washington was not destroyed during the War of 1812. As the British
marched toward Washington, D. C., she remained behind to rescue the
painting, even after the guards had left. The painting is the only
object from the original White House that was not burned.
One of the most famous First Ladies was Eleanor Roosevelt, the wife
of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. She was active in political and
social causes throughout her husband's tenure in office. After his
death, she became famous for her humanitarian work in the United
Nations. She made life better for thousands of needy people around the
world.
What is the main idea of this passage?
A. The Humanitarian work of the First Ladies is critical in American government.
B. Dolly Madison was the most influential president's wife.
C. Eleanor Roosevelt transformed the First Lady image.
D. The First Ladies are important in American culture.
E. The First Ladies are key supporters of the Presidents.
2. Of the many kinds of vegetables grown all over the world,
which remains the favorite of young and old alike? Why, the potato, of
course.
Perhaps you know them as “taters,” “spuds,” or “Kennebees,” or as
“chips,” “Idahoes,” or even “shoestrings.” No matter, a potato by any
other name is still a potato- the world's most widely grown vegetable.
As a matter of fact, if you are an average potato eater, you will put
away at least a hundred pounds of them each year.
That's only a tiny portion of the amount grown every year, however.
Worldwide, the annual potato harvest is over six billion bags- each bag
containing a hundred pounds of spuds, some of them as large as four
pounds each. Here in the United States, farmers fill about four hundred
million bags a year. That may seem like a lot of “taters,” but it
leaves us a distant third among world potato growers. Polish farmers
dig up just over 800 million bags a year, while the Russians lead the
world with nearly 1.5 billion bags.
The first potatoes were grown by the Incas of South America, more
than four hundred years ago. Their descendants in Ecuador and Chile
continue to grow the vegetable as high as fourteen thousand feet up in
the Andes Mountains. ( That's higher than any other food will grow.)
Early Spanish and English explorers shipped potatoes to Europe, and
they found their way to North America in the early 1600s.
People eat potatoes in many ways-baked, mashed, and roasted, to
name just three. However, in the United States most potatoes are
devoured in the form of French fries. One fast-food chain alone sells
more than $1 billion worth of fries each year. No wonder, then, that
the company pays particular attention to the way its fries are
prepared.
Before any fry makes it to the people who eat at these popular
restaurants, it must pass many separate tests. Fail any one and the
spud is rejected. To start with, only russet Burbank potatoes are used.
These Idaho potatoes have less water content than other kinds, which
can have as much as eighty percent water. Once cut into “shoestrings”
shapes, the potatoes are partly fried in a secret blend of oils,
sprayed with liquid sugar to brown them, steam dried at high heat, then
flash frozen for shipment to individual restaurants.
Before shipping, though, every shoestring is measured. Forty
percent of a batch must be between two and three inches long. Another
forty percent has to be over three inches. What about the twenty
percent that are left in the batch? Well, a few short fries in a bag
are okay, it seems.
So, now that you realize the enormous size and value of the potato
crop, you can understand why most people agree that this part of the
food industry is no “small potatoes.”
What is the main idea of this passage?
A. Potatoes from Ireland started the Potato Revolution.
B. The average American eats 50 lbs of potatoes a year.
C. French fries are made from potatoes.
D. Potatoes are a key vegetable in America.
E. The various terms for potatoes have a long history.
3. What does the word
patent
mean to you? Does it strike you as being something rather remote
from your interests? If it does, stop and think a moment about some of
the commonplace things that you use every day, objects that you take
for granted as part of the world around you. The telephone, radio,
television, the automobile, and the thousand and one other things (even
the humble safety pin) that enrich our lives today once existed only as
ideas in the minds of men. If it had not been possible to patent their
ideas and thus protect them against copying by others, these inventions
might never have been fully developed to serve mankind.
If there were no patent protection there would be little incentive
to invent and innovate, for once the details of an invention became
known, hordes of imitators who did not share the inventor's risks and
expenses might well flood the market with their copies of his product
and reap much of the benefit of his efforts. The technological progress
that has made America great would wither rapidly under conditions such
as these.
The fundamental principles in the U. S. patent structure came from
England. During the glorious reign of Queen Elizabeth I in England, the
expanding technology was furthered by the granting of exclusive
manufacturing and selling privileges to citizens who had invented new
processes or tools- a step that did much to encourage creativity.
Later, when critics argued that giving monopoly rights to one person
infringed on the rights of others, an important principle was added to
the patent structure: The Lord Chief Justice of England stated that
society had everything to gain and nothing to lose by granting
exclusive privileges to an inventor, because a patent for an invention
was granted for something new that society never had before.
Another basic principle was brought into law because certain
influential people in England had managed to obtain monopoly control
over such age-old products as salt, and had begun charging as much as
the traffic would bear. The public outcry became so great that the
government was forced to decree that monopoly rights could be awarded
only to those who created or introduced something really unique. These
principles are the mainstays of our modern patent system in the United
States.
In colonial times patent law was left up to the separate states.
The inconsistency, confusion, and unfairness that resulted clearly
indicated the need for a uniform patent law, and the men who drew up
the Constitution incorporated one. George Washington signed the first
patent law on April 10,1790, and less than four months later the first
patent was issued to a man named Samuel Hopkins for a chemical process,
an improved method of making potash for use in soapmaking.
In 1936 the Patent Office was established as a separate bureau.
From the staff of eight that it maintained during its first year of
operation it has grown into an organization of over 2500 people
handling more than 1600 patent applications and granting over 1000
every week.
The Patent Office in Washington, D. C., is the world's largest
library of scientific and technical data, and this treasure trove of
information is open for public inspection. In addition to more than 3
million U. S. patents, it houses more than 7 million foreign patents
and thousands of volumes of technical literature. Abraham Lincoln
patented a device to lift steam vessels over river shoals, Mark Twain
developed a self-pasting scrapbook, and millionaire Cornelius
Vanderbilt invented a shoe-shine kit.
A patent may be granted for any new and useful process, machine,
article of manufacture, or composition of matter ( a chemical compound
or combinations of chemical compounds), or any distinct and new
variety; of plant, including certain mutants and hybrids.
The patent system has also helped to boost the wages of the
American worker to an unprecedented level; he can produce more and earn
more with the computer, adding machines, drill press or lathe. Patented
inventions also help keep prices down by increasing manufacturing
efficiency and by stimulating the competition that is the foundation of
our free enterprise system.
The decades of history have disclosed little need for modification
of the patent structure. Our patent laws, like the Constitution from
which they grew, have stood the test of time well. They encouraged the
creative processes, brought untold benefits to society as a whole, and
enabled American technology to outstrip that of the rest of the
civilized world.
What is the main idea of this passage?
A. The patent system encourages free enterprise.
B. The Constitution protects the patent system.
C. The patent system in England has been influential in American patent development.
D. Patents are important tools for inventors.
E. Patented inventions protect the inventor, free enterprise, and the creative process.
4. Most people think it's fine to be “busy as a beaver.” Little
do they know. Beavers may work hard, but often they don't get much
done.
Beavers are supposed to be great tree cutters. It is true that a
beaver can gnaw through a tree very quickly. (A six-inch birch takes
about ten minutes.) But then what? Often the beaver does not make use
of the tree. One expert says that beavers waste one out of every five
trees they cut.
For one thing, they do not choose their trees wisely. One bunch of
beavers cut down a cottonwood tree more than one hundred feet tall.
Then they found that they could not move it.
In thick woods a tree sometimes won't fall down. It gets stuck in
the other trees. Of course, doesn't think to cut down the trees that
are in the way. So a good tree goes to waste.
Some people think that beavers can make a tree fall the way they
want it to. Not true. (In fact, a beaver sometimes gets pinned under a
falling tree.) When beavers cut a tree near a stream, it usually falls
into the water. But they do not plan it that way. The fact is that most
trees lean toward the water to start with.
Now what about dam building? Most beaver dams are wonders of
engineering. The best ones are strongly built of trees, stones, and
mud. They are wide at the bottom and narrow at the top.
Beavers think nothing of building a dam more than two hundred feet
long. One dam, in Montana, was more than two thousand feet long. The
largest one ever seen was in New Hampshire. It stretched four thousand
feet. It made a lake large enough to hold forty beaver homes.
So beavers do build good dams. But they don't always build them in
the right places. They just don't plan. They will build a dam across
the widest part of the stream. They don't try to find a place where the
stream is narrow. So a lot of their hard work is wasted.
Beavers should learn that it's not enough to be busy. You have to
know what you're doing, too. For example, there was one Oregon beaver
that really was a worker. It decided to fix a leak in a man-made dam.
After five days of work it gave up. The leak it was trying to block was
the lock that boats go through.
What is the main idea of this passage?
A. Beaver's may be hard working animals, but they don't always choose the most efficient mechanisms.
B. Beavers are excellent dam builders.
C. New Hampshire was the site of the largest beaver dam.
D. Beavers are well developed tree cutters.
E. Beavers are poor surveyors of aquatic environments in some cases.
5. The raisin business in America was born by accident. It
happened in 1873 in the San Joaquin Valley of California. Many farmers
raised grapes in this valley. That year, just before the grape harvest,
there was a heat wave. It was one of the worst heat waves ever known.
It was so hot the grapes dried on the vines. When they were picked,
California had its first raisin crop.
People were surprised to find how good raisins were. Everybody
wanted more. So the San Joaquin farmers went into the raisin business.
Today, of course, they do not let the grapes dry on the vines. They
treat them with much more care.
In late August the grapes start to ripen. They are tested often for
sweetness. The growers wait until the sugar content is twenty-one
percent. Then they know the grapes are ripe enough to be picked.
Skilled workers come to the vineyards. They pick the bunches of
grapes by hand. The workers fill their flat pans with grapes. They
gently empty the pans onto squares of paper. These squares lie between
the long rows of vines. They sit in the sun.
Here the grapes stay while the sun does its work. It may take two
weeks or longer. The grapes are first dried on one side. When they have
reached the right color, they are turned to dry on the other side. The
grapes are dried until only fifteen percent of the moisture is left.
Then they have turned into raisins.
The raisins are rolled up in the paper on which they have dried.
Trucks take them from the fields. They are poured into big boxes called
sweatboxes. Each box holds one hundred and sixty pounds of raisins.
Here, any raisins that are a bit too dry take moisture from those that
have a bit too much. After a while they are all just moist enough.
The big boxes are trucked next to the packaging plant. They are
emptied onto a conveyor belt that shakes the raisins gently. This
knocks them from their stems. A blast of air whisks the stems away. The
water bath is next. Then the plump brown raisins have a last
inspection. They are again checked for moisture and sugar. Then they go
on a belt to packing machines. Here they are poured into packages,
which are automatically weighed and sealed. The raisins are now ready
for market.
What is the main idea of this passage?
A. The creation of raisins in America was an accident.
B. The process of raisin development requires multiple steps.
C. Raisins on the grocery store shelf undergo a brief fermentation process.
D. Raisins are cleaned thoroughly at the packing plant.
E. California has been the leader in American raisin development.
6. In 1976, Sichan Siv was crawling through the jungle, trying
to escape from Cambodia. By 1989, however, Siv was working in the White
House, in Washington D. C., as an advisor to the President of the
United States. How did this strange journey come about?
Like millions of Cambodians, Siv was a victim of a bloody civil
war. One of the sides in this war was the Cambodian government. The
other was a group called the Khmer Rouge. When the Khmer Rouge won the
war, the situation in Cambodia got worse. Many people were killed,
while others were forced into hard labor. Sometimes entire families
were wiped out.
Siv came from a large family that lived in the capital of Cambodia.
After finishing high school, Siv worked for a while with a Cambodian
airline company. Later, he taught English. After that, he took a job
with CARE, an American group that was helping victims of the war.
Siv had hope to leave Cambodia before the Khmer Rouge took over the
country. Unfortunately, he was delayed. As a result, he and his family
were taken from their homes and forced to labor in rice fields. After a
while, Siv managed to escape. He rode an old bicycle for miles, trying
to reach Thailand where he would be free and safe. For three weeks he
slept on the ground and tried to hide from the soldiers who were
looking for him. Caught at last, he was afraid he would be killed.
Instead, he was put into a labor camp, where he worked eighteen hours
each day without rest. After several months, he escaped again; this
time he made it. The journey, however, was a terrifying one. After
three days of staggering on foot through mile after mile of thick
bamboo, Siv finally made his way to Thailand.
Because he had worked for an American charity group, Siv quickly
found work in a refugee camp. Soon he was on his way to the states. He
arrived in June of 1976 and got a job-first picking apples and then
cooking in a fast-food restaurant. Siv, however, wanted more than this;
he wanted to work with people who, like himself, had suffered the
hardship of leaving their own countries behind. Siv decided that the
best way to prepare for this kind of work was to go to college. He
wrote letters to many colleges and universities. They were impressed
with his school records from Cambodia, and they were impressed with his
bravery. Finally, in 1980, he was able to study at Columbia University
in New York City. After finishing his studies at Columbia, Siv took a
job with the United Nations. He married an American woman and became a
citizen. After several more years, he felt that he was very much a part
of his new country.
In 1988, Siv was offered a job in the White House working for
President Reagan's closest advisors. It was a difficult job, and he
often had to work long hours. However the long hard work was worth it,
because Siv got the opportunity to help refugees in his work.
What is the main idea of this passage?
A. Persistence and courage are global ideas.
B. Siv covered a large area during his life.
C. Siv persevered to become an American citizen
D. Siv overcame numerous challenges to come to American and help others.
E. Siv persevered to become an American citizen.
7. When you want to hang the American flag over the middle of a
street, suspend it vertically with the blue field, called the union, to
the north and east-west street. When the flag is displayed with another
banner from crossed staffs, the American flag is on the right. Place
the staff of the American flag in front of the other staff. Raise the
flag quickly and lower it slowly and respectfully. When flying the flag
at half-mast, hoist it to the top of the pole for a moment before
lowering it to mid-pole. When flying the American flag with banners
from states or cities, raise the nation's banner first and lower it
last. Never allow the flag to touch the ground.
What is the main idea of this passage?
A. The American flag is the symbol of American freedom.
B. The American flag has fifty stars.
C. Placing the American flag inappropriately will draw government intervention.
D. American flag should be flown differently in certain situations.
","The flag should be lowered quickly and respectfully.
8. What if someone told you about a kind of grass that grows as
tall as the tallest trees? A grass that can be made as strong as steel?
A grass from which houses, furniture, boats, and hundreds of other
useful things can be made? A grass that you would even enjoy eating?
Would you believe that person? You should, for that grass is bamboo,
the “wood” of 1,001 uses.
Bamboo may look like wood, but it is part of the family of plants
that includes wheat, oats, and barley. It is a kind of grass. This
grass is not just a material for making useful products. Young bamboo
is eaten, often mixed with other vegetables, in many Asian foods.
Bamboo grows in many parts of the world. In the United States it
grows in an area from Virginia west to Indiana and south to Florida,
Louisiana, and Texas. Most bamboo, however, is found in warm, wet
climates, especially in Asia and on the islands of the South Pacific
Ocean.
In most Asian countries, bamboo is nearly as important as rice.
Many Asians live in bamboo houses. They sit on bamboo chairs and sleep
on bamboo mats. They fence their land with bamboo and use the wood for
cages for chickens and pigs.
Bamboo is used to build large buildings as well as homes. When it
is glued in layers, it becomes as strong as steel. On some islands in
the South Pacific, bamboo is even used for water pipes. This
extraordinary material has many other uses. It is used to make musical
instruments, such as flutes and recorders. Paper made from bamboo has
been highly prized by artists for thousands of years.
Bamboo is light and strong, and it bends without breaking. It is
cheap, floats on water, almost never wears out, and is easy to grow.
Nothing else on earth grows quite so fast as bamboo. At times you can
even see it grow! Botanists have recorded growths of more than three
feet in just twenty-four hours! Bamboo is hollow and has a strong root
system that almost never stops growing and spreading. In fact, only
after it flowers, an event that may happen only once every thirty
years, will bamboo die.
There are more than a thousand kinds of bamboo. The smallest is
only three inches tall and one-tenth of an inch across. The largest
reaches more than two hundred feet in height and seven inches in
diameter. No wonder, then, that the lives of nearly half the people on
earth would change enormously if there were no longer any bamboo. No
wonder, too, that to many people bamboo is a symbol of happiness and
good fortune.
What is the main idea of this passage?
A. Bamboo has at least 2,000 uses.
B. Bamboo grows at an amazing rate and is found primarily in Asia.
C. Bamboo is an amazing grass that can be used in multiple ways.
D. There are at least a 1,000 types of bamboo.
E. Bamboo could be considered a flower in some cases.
9. Every year since 1986, some of the world's most daring
runners have gathered in the desert of Morocco. They are there to take
part in one of the most difficult races in the world. The Marathon of
the Sands, as it is called, covers over 125 miles of desert and
mountain wilderness. The runners complete the course in fewer than
seven days, and they run with their food, clothing, and sleeping bags
on their backs.
The Marathon of the Sands was founded in 1986 by Patrick Bauer. His
idea was to give the runners, who come from all over the world, a
special kind of adventure. Most of the runners in this race have found
that they form deep friendships with the other runners during their
days and nights in the desert. Facing terrible heat and complete
exhaustion, they learn much about themselves and each other.
For most of the runners, though, the challenge of the race is the
main reason for coming. On the first day, for example, they run fifteen
miles across a desert of sand, rocks, and thorny bushes. Few runners
finish the day without blistered and raw feet. They also suffer from a
lack of water. (They are allowed less than nine quarts of water during
each day of the race.) Most of all, they are exhausted when they arrive
at the campsite for the night.
The second day, the runners are up at 6:00 A. M. Within a few
hours, it is 100 degrees F, but the runners do not hesitate. They must
cover eighteen miles that day. That night, they rest. They must be
ready for the next day's run.
On the third day, the runners must climb giant sand dunes- the
first they have faced. Dust and sand mix with the runners' sweat. Soon
their faces are caked with mud. After fifteen miles of these
conditions, the runners finally reach their next camp.
The race continues like this for four more days. The fourth and
fifth days are the worst. On the fourth day, the runners pass through a
level stretch and a beautiful, tree-filled oasis, but then, on this and
on the next day, they cross more than twenty-one miles of rocks and
sand dunes. The temperature soars to 125 degrees F, and many runners
cannot make it. Helicopters rush fallen runners to medical help.
Runners who make it to the end of the fifth day know that the worst is
over.
On the sixth day, heat and rocks punish the racers terribly. In the
Valley of Dra, the wind picks up and, as the desert heat is thrust
against them with great force, they grow more and more exhausted.
The seventh day is the last, with only twelve miles to be covered.
The dusty, tired, blistered runners set out at daybreak. Near the
finish line, children race along with the runners, for everybody has
caught the excitement. The ones who have run the whole marathon know
they have accomplished what most people could not even dream of.
“During the hard moments,” says one contestant who has raced here
twice, “I'd think, ‘Why am I here?' Then I'd realize I was there to
find my limits.”
What is the main idea of this passage?
A. The Marathon of the Sands race tests the limits of human endurance.
B. The runners run at their own pace.
C. The race causes the strong to stumble and the weak to not finish.
D. The seventh day is the hardest day of the race.
E. Every runner runs the race to find their human limits.
10. High in the Andes Mountains in Peru stands the ancient city
of Machu Picchu. No one knows why this great city was built, nor is it
likely that we will ever know. Nevertheless, the deserted city of Machu
Picchu is important for what it reveals about the ancient Inca people
of South America.
The Incas once ruled a great empire that covered a large part of
the South American continent. The empire was more than five hundred
years old when the first Spanish explorers, looking for gold, went to
that continent in the sixteenth century.
The Incas were an advanced people. They were skillful engineers who
paved their roads and built sturdy bridges. They plowed the land in
such a way that rains would not wash away valuable soil. They dug
ditches to carry water into dry areas for farming.
Even though they did not know about the wheel, the Incas were able
to move huge stone blocks- some as heavy as ten tons- up the sides of
mountains to build walls. The blocks were fitted so tightly, without
cement of any kind, that it would be impossible to slip a knife blade
between them! The walls have stood firm through great storms and
earthquakes that have destroyed many modern buildings.
The Incas were great artists, too. Today, Incan dishes and other
kinds of pottery are prized for their wonderful designs. Since both
gold and silver were in great supply, the Incas created splendid
objects from these precious metals.
While it is true that the Incas had no written language, they kept
their accounts by using a system of knotted strings of various lengths
and colors. The sizes of the knots and the distances between them
represented numbers.
At its height, the Incan empire included as many as thirty million
people. The emperor ruled them with an iron hand. He told his subjects
where to live, what to plant, how long they should work-even whom they
could marry. Since he owned everything, the emperor gave what he wished
when he wished- and in the amount he wished -to his people.
In 1533 Spanish explorers led by Francisco Pizarro murdered the
emperor of the Incas. Earlier, the heir to the Incan empire had also
been killed. The Incas, who had always been entirely dependent on their
emperor, now had no recognized leader. The Spaniards easily conquered
the empire and plundered its riches.
Have the Incas disappeared from South America? Not at all. In Peru
alone, once the center of that great empire, eighty percent of the
twenty million people are descendants of the Inca people. Evidence of
the Incan empire can be found in many other places in South America as
well. You can even visit Machu Picchu. The remains of this ancient city
still stand high in the mountains of Peru, an awesome tribute to this
once powerful empire.
What is the main idea of this passage?
A. The Incas once inhabited the ancient city of Machu Picchu.
B. Peru was the primary country of the Incas.
C. The Incan empire can be found in ancient cities and was plundered by the Spanish.
D. Spanish conquerors destroyed the Incan empire in the thirteenth century.
E. Machu Picchu was the capital of the Incan empire.
Answer Key
1. D
2. D
3. E
4. A
5. B
6. D
7. D
8. C
9. A
10. C
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