Reading Well Read - 2
Reading Well Read - 2
Multiple Choice
Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.
Spiritualism is a religious movement that started in the United States in the 1840s and spread to other English-
speaking countries through the 1920s. The prominent feature of spiritualism is the belief that gifted
individuals called mediums can communicate with the spirits of the dead. It was believed that these spirits
lived on a higher spiritual dimension and could provide guidance and comfort to the living.
The beginning of the movement can be traced back to March 31, 1848. On that day, Kate and Margaret Fox
of Hydesville, New York reported that they made contact with the spirit of a murdered peddler. What made
this incident unique was that the spirit communicated with the women through a series of loud tapping noises,
rather than appearing to a person in a trance. This incident grabbed the imagination of many Americans, and
seances with mediums became extremely popular. This was partly because it was a new form of
entertainment, but also because it proved to be a spiritual catharsis for people grieving the death of a loved
one. The possibility of contact with a dead husband, child, or dear friend was a strong incentive to embrace
spiritualism, and many unscrupulous men and women took advantage of grief-stricken people for personal
profit.
One of the most famous cases of medium fraud involved the Davenport Brothers, Ira and Henry. The
Davenport brothers were magicians who started to report that they were having the same kinds of experiences
as the Fox sisters, and that they had the ability to communicate with the spirit world. They developed various
illusions for their stage act that they claimed were only possible because of their supernatural powers. Their
shows were even introduced by a former minister and follower of Spiritualism, J.B. Ferguson, who assured
audiences that the Davenports possessed true supernatural powers and communicated with the spirit world. A
number of famous magicians and circus impresario P.T. Barnum wrote exposés of the Davenports and
performed duplicate illusions to show how the Davenports were duping audiences.
In spite of widespread fraud, Spiritualism quickly spread through the world and became particularly popular
in England, where an enormous number of families had lost loved ones in World War I. The supposed
opportunity to speak with a someone through a medium gripped the population of England, who were trying
to cope with the massive casualties that country experienced.
The most common form of communication with the dead was the seance. These were performed with a
medium in a dark or semi-dark room with the participants sitting around a table. The seance attendees were
generally there to communicate with a loved one who had passed away, and therefore predisposed to
believing the medium. For his or her part, the medium's tricks included making the table move, having objects
appear seemingly out of thin air, or making rapping sounds or music. Possibly the most dramatic element of
the seance was channelling, or the process by which the medium allows a spirit to use their body and voice to
communicate with one of the people sitting at the table.
The tricks of the medium were all easily faked, and the Spiritualism movement also spawned many skeptics
who made it their mission to publicly expose all the frauds. However, the emotional power of hearing a
message from a dead loved one is extremely compelling to many people, and the popularity of mediums have
persisted to the present day.
____ 1. What is the main topic of the passage?
a. seances c. Spiritualism
b. the 1840s d. the spirit world
____ 2. When did the Spiritualism movement start?
a. the 1920s c. during a seance
b. during World War I d. 1848
____ 3. What is a medium?
a. someone who can communicate with the dead
b. a magician
c. a skeptic
d. a war casualty
____ 4. Who were the Davenport brothers?
a. famous skeptics who exposed fake mediums
b. famous magicians who pretended to have supernatural powers
c. circus impresarios
d. ministers in the Spiritualism movement
____ 5. Why was the Spiritualism movement popular in England?
a. there were many mediums there
b. there were many people there who enjoyed entertainment
c. there were many spirits there
d. many people there wanted to contact loved ones who had died in the war
____ 6. Which statement is a fact?
a. Kate and Margaret Fox heard a spirit make tapping noises.
b. Many people believed that spirits could speak to the living.
c. Spirits live on a higher spiritual dimension.
d. Spirits can speak to the living.
____ 7. Which statement is a fact?
a. Mediums have supernatural powers.
b. Mediums can channel spirits.
c. Spiritualists believed mediums can speak to the dead.
d. All mediums used tricks.
____ 8. Which statement is a fact?
a. Spiritualism is a very interesting religion.
b. Spiritualism began in the 1840s.
c. People should not believe in Spiritualism.
d. Spiritualism was the most important religious movement.
____ 9. Which statement is an opinion?
a. People could speak to the dead during a seance.
b. Seance participants sat at a table.
c. Some mediums said they were channelling spirits.
d. Seances were performed in a dark room.
____ 10. Which statement is an opinion?
a. Many mediums were frauds.
b. The Davenport brothers were magicians.
c. All mediums were bad people.
d. Some magicians tried to expose frauds.
Traditionally, large business corporations had very similar corporate structures and ways of doing business.
Organizational hierarchies were very tall, meaning there were many executives, each with succeedingly more
important job titles. This particular structure gave rise to the term "corporate ladder." Also, the atmosphere of
the office would be quite formal: employees had to adhere to a strict dress code and communication among
employees was conducted through very formal channels.
Beginning in the 1970s, several companies bucked this trend to establish their own new corporate cultures.
Corporate culture is the attitudes, employee experiences, beliefs, and values of an organization. This culture is
the basis for characteristics of employees' behavior toward each other and towards their individual tasks and
responsibilities at work.
One of the most successful companies to originate this corporate trend was Apple, Inc. At Apple's corporate
offices in Cupertino, California, employees are encouraged to express their individuality. This can manifest
itself in work attire, office space organization, and project group interaction. The advantages behind this
looser, more casual organization is two-fold: employees' creativity is fostered and employees have more
loyalty to a company that they feel is taking care of their personal needs. In fact, the office complex in
Cupertino is not called an office, but a campus, as in university campus. Calling a workplace a campus gives
it a more collegial, friendly feeling, since a campus is a place where individual ideas are valued over power or
superficial image.
Another company that uses a nontraditional corporate structure to great effect is, ironically, Apple's biggest
competitor--Microsoft, Inc. Microsoft, with 71,553 employees in 102 countries as of July 2006, is often
described as having a developer-centered business culture. Microsoft spends an enormous amount of time and
money recruiting young software developers from universities. Great efforts are also made to keep them in
the company. One of the ways this is done is through the office layout and organization. In many software
companies, low-level employees are often given one impersonal cubicle among many other impersonal
cubicles in a large office space. At Microsoft, newly hired developers are assigned a private or semiprivate
office space.
Another organizational innovation at Microsoft is that rather than having traditional business school
executive-types at the higher levels of the hierarchy, key decision-makers at every level of the company are,
or were, software developers. The advantage of this is that decisions are made by insiders who have been with
the company a long time and have detailed practical knowledge of the products.
Southwest Airlines, a domestic airline in the United States, also uses an unconventional business culture.
Southwest earned its success by offering low-cost flights. They could charge less for their flights by cutting
down on many of the services of traditional airlines, such as food service. As a companion to their business
model, Southwest's culture is one that emphasizes the importance of employees and customers alike.
Southwest urges employees to have fun at work; in fact, the crews on planes are known for breaking into song
or making funny boarding announcements.
Each of these companies has crafted its own unique business culture, but what they all have in common is an
enormous amount of success.
There are several populations in the world who seem to have found the key to longevity, and one of them is
the residents of the Ryukyu Islands, the southernmost islands of Japan. The inhabitants of these islands, of
which Okinawa is the largest and most well known, have the world's largest population of centenarians, with
almost 600 of its 1.3 million inhabitants living past 100 years. What's equally noteworthy about these people
is that not only do they live for a long time, but also they remain very active well into their old age and look
decades younger than their actual age. And a big part of their secret is their diet.
A typical breakfast in Okinawa is whole-grain rice and miso soup with vegetables. Lunch and dinner is a stir-
fry with goya (a gourd), imo (a sweet potato), egg, and tofu. Snacks tend to be fruit. This kind of diet is
absolutely the best for human health: it is low in fat and salt and rich in fiber and antioxidants. A key
ingredient to this diet is soy; in fact, they consume more soy than anyone on earth. Soy is packed with
flavonoids, a substance shown to protect against cancer. For Okinawans, this translates into extremely low
rates of cancer, heart disease, and stroke.
Okinawans also have a low rate of osteoporosis, with 20% fewer hip fractures than mainland Japanese, who
have 40% fewer than Americans. This is linked to the high calcium levels in their natural drinking water and
their food, the flavonoids in soy, high vitamin D levels from being outside in the sun, and the continuance of
daily physiccal exercise throughout their lives.
Another important factor in the Okinawans' longevity equation is the amount they eat. They live by the
dietary code of hara hachi bu, literally, "eight parts out of ten full," meaning that they only eat until they are
about 80% full. For the average adult, this makes for a daily intake of about 1,800 calories, which is very low.
Scientists have found that a low-calorie diet has a great impact on increasing longevity in lab animals, and the
Okinawans' eating habits seem to bear this out with humans.
It certainly is desirable to live to 100, but only if the quality of life is high. The Okinawans' diet helps with
this as well. Elderly Okinawans have a very low rate of dementia, or senility, much lower than the elderly in
the United States or Europe. This is due to the fact that Okinawans' diet has a high amount of vitamin E,
which has been shown to protect the brain.
The Okinawa diet has attracted much international attention from people who are trying to find the modern-
day fountain of youth. Many books, magazine articles, and TV programs have outlined the basic diet plan. If
there is a resulting increase in centenarians is yet to be seen.
In 1997, the world was amazed, and concerned, by a scientific breakthrough--the cloning of Dolly, the sheep
in Scotland. While the medical applications of this feat are exciting and far-reaching, the ethical concerns of
cloning continue to cause much debate in the scientific community, as well as society at large.
Cloning is the process of creating an identical copy of a living thing. Cloning can result in a molecule or
multi-cellular organism that is genetically identical to the molecule or organism being cloned. There are
different types of cloning; reproductive cloning was the technology used to create Dolly. This kind of cloning
is when the cloned animal has the same nuclear DNA as another existing animal. Whereas most people are
fascinated with the mere fact that science can create life in such a way, cloning is among the most
controversial of scientific advances.
One of the more hotly debated ethical issues surrounding cloning is the cloning of humans. One of the ethical
problems in human cloning has to with the possibility of cloning humans for the farming of organs for
transplants. In this scenario, the cloned human would be euthanized so that the organs needed could be used.
This process could potentially increase life expectancy for the original human by 50 years. Many conservative
and religious groups have called for the halt of all further experimentation on this front. However, it is not
only religious groups who are against cloning practices. Much of the general population, whether they have
religious beliefs or not, is uncomfortable with the idea of changing the natural order of life and death.
Another potential use of cloning technology is the cloning of extinct and endangered species. Even though
this has been an attractive possibility for many scientists and conservationists, the ethical questions remain for
many others. The implications of this type of cloning were depicted in the popular Jurassic Park books and
movies: dangerous extinct dinosaurs were recreated but then couldn't be controlled.
The ethical problems have not deterred many scientists from attempting to use the technology for this
purpose, however. Over the last few years, several endangered species have been cloned, with varying
degrees of success. Even the successes make the problems immediately obvious. For example, if an extinct
species were cloned, there would be no parents to teach the animal how to behave in a natural way. Therefore
these animals would most likely become mere oddities and not live to their potential as natural, living
organisms in their own right.
Many conservationists and environmentalists are opposed to this kind of cloning practice. This is because
they think that if endangered species can just be cloned, the general public will no longer feel the need to
preserve the animals' natural habitats or give donations to the organizations that work to do so.
One of the other cloning controversies is the practice of therapeutic cloning, or, the creation of human
embryos to harvest their stem cells and then destroying them. These stem cells would then be used in treating
diseases and in conducting medical research. The concerns here are that this research would lead to human
cloning, and that a huge number of human eggs would need to be harvested in order to make research
possible.
Given all the ethical concerns, there is no doubt that the public debate on cloning will continue.
True/False
Indicate whether the statement is true or false.
Spiritualism is a religious movement that started in the United States in the 1840s and spread to other English-
speaking countries through the 1920s. The prominent feature of spiritualism is the belief that gifted
individuals called mediums can communicate with the spirits of the dead. It was believed that these spirits
lived on a higher spiritual dimension and could provide guidance and comfort to the living.
The beginning of the movement can be traced back to March 31, 1848. On that day, Kate and Margaret Fox
of Hydesville, New York reported that they made contact with the spirit of a murdered peddler. What made
this incident unique was that the spirit communicated with the women through a series of loud tapping noises,
rather than appearing to a person in a trance. This incident grabbed the imagination of many Americans, and
seances with mediums became extremely popular. This was partly because it was a new form of
entertainment, but also because it proved to be a spiritual catharsis for people grieving the death of a loved
one. The possibility of contact with a dead husband, child, or dear friend was a strong incentive to embrace
spiritualism, and many unscrupulous men and women took advantage of grief-stricken people for personal
profit.
One of the most famous cases of medium fraud involved the Davenport Brothers, Ira and Henry. The
Davenport brothers were magicians who started to report that they were having the same kinds of experiences
as the Fox sisters, and that they had the ability to communicate with the spirit world. They developed various
illusions for their stage act that they claimed were only possible because of their supernatural powers. Their
shows were even introduced by a former minister and follower of Spiritualism, J.B. Ferguson, who assured
audiences that the Davenports possessed true supernatural powers and communicated with the spirit world. A
number of famous magicians and circus impresario P.T. Barnum wrote exposés of the Davenports and
performed duplicate illusions to show how the Davenports were duping audiences.
In spite of widespread fraud, Spiritualism quickly spread through the world and became particularly popular
in England, where an enormous number of families had lost loved ones in World War I. The supposed
opportunity to speak with a someone through a medium gripped the population of England, who were trying
to cope with the massive casualties that country experienced.
The most common form of communication with the dead was the seance. These were performed with a
medium in a dark or semi-dark room with the participants sitting around a table. The seance attendees were
generally there to communicate with a loved one who had passed away, and therefore predisposed to
believing the medium. For his or her part, the medium's tricks included making the table move, having objects
appear seemingly out of thin air, or making rapping sounds or music. Possibly the most dramatic element of
the seance was channelling, or the process by which the medium allows a spirit to use their body and voice to
communicate with one of the people sitting at the table.
The tricks of the medium were all easily faked, and the Spiritualism movement also spawned many skeptics
who made it their mission to publicly expose all the frauds. However, the emotional power of hearing a
message from a dead loved one is extremely compelling to many people, and the popularity of mediums have
persisted to the present day.
Traditionally, large business corporations had very similar corporate structures and ways of doing business.
Organizational hierarchies were very tall, meaning there were many executives, each with succeedingly more
important job titles. This particular structure gave rise to the term "corporate ladder." Also, the atmosphere of
the office would be quite formal: employees had to adhere to a strict dress code and communication among
employees was conducted through very formal channels.
Beginning in the 1970s, several companies bucked this trend to establish their own new corporate cultures.
Corporate culture is the attitudes, employee experiences, beliefs, and values of an organization. This culture is
the basis for characteristics of employees' behavior toward each other and towards their individual tasks and
responsibilities at work.
One of the most successful companies to originate this corporate trend was Apple, Inc. At Apple's corporate
offices in Cupertino, California, employees are encouraged to express their individuality. This can manifest
itself in work attire, office space organization, and project group interaction. The advantages behind this
looser, more casual organization is two-fold: employees' creativity is fostered and employees have more
loyalty to a company that they feel is taking care of their personal needs. In fact, the office complex in
Cupertino is not called an office, but a campus, as in university campus. Calling a workplace a campus gives
it a more collegial, friendly feeling, since a campus is a place where individual ideas are valued over power or
superficial image.
Another company that uses a nontraditional corporate structure to great effect is, ironically, Apple's biggest
competitor--Microsoft, Inc. Microsoft, with 71,553 employees in 102 countries as of July 2006, is often
described as having a developer-centered business culture. Microsoft spends an enormous amount of time and
money recruiting young software developers from universities. Great efforts are also made to keep them in
the company. One of the ways this is done is through the office layout and organization. In many software
companies, low-level employees are often given one impersonal cubicle among many other impersonal
cubicles in a large office space. At Microsoft, newly hired developers are assigned a private or semiprivate
office space.
Another organizational innovation at Microsoft is that rather than having traditional business school
executive-types at the higher levels of the hierarchy, key decision-makers at every level of the company are,
or were, software developers. The advantage of this is that decisions are made by insiders who have been with
the company a long time and have detailed practical knowledge of the products.
Southwest Airlines, a domestic airline in the United States, also uses an unconventional business culture.
Southwest earned its success by offering low-cost flights. They could charge less for their flights by cutting
down on many of the services of traditional airlines, such as food service. As a companion to their business
model, Southwest's culture is one that emphasizes the importance of employees and customers alike.
Southwest urges employees to have fun at work; in fact, the crews on planes are known for breaking into song
or making funny boarding announcements.
Each of these companies has crafted its own unique business culture, but what they all have in common is an
enormous amount of success.
For years doctors and scientists have tried to unlock the secrets to longevity. Modern-day researchers have
known that genetics as well as lifestyle play their parts in how long a person will live, but just how much
influence each factor has, has been the subject of much debate. That is until 1998 when scientists in Sweden
studied identical twins separated at birth and what these scientists found was that lifestyle, what we eat, how
much we exercise, etc., is much more of a factor in predicting longevity than genetics.
There are several populations in the world who seem to have found the key to longevity, and one of them is
the residents of the Ryukyu Islands, the southernmost islands of Japan. The inhabitants of these islands, of
which Okinawa is the largest and most well known, have the world's largest population of centenarians, with
almost 600 of its 1.3 million inhabitants living past 100 years. What's equally noteworthy about these people
is that not only do they live for a long time, but also they remain very active well into their old age and look
decades younger than their actual age. And a big part of their secret is their diet.
A typical breakfast in Okinawa is whole-grain rice and miso soup with vegetables. Lunch and dinner is a stir-
fry with goya (a gourd), imo (a sweet potato), egg, and tofu. Snacks tend to be fruit. This kind of diet is
absolutely the best for human health: it is low in fat and salt and rich in fiber and antioxidants. A key
ingredient to this diet is soy; in fact, they consume more soy than anyone on earth. Soy is packed with
flavonoids, a substance shown to protect against cancer. For Okinawans, this translates into extremely low
rates of cancer, heart disease, and stroke.
Okinawans also have a low rate of osteoporosis, with 20% fewer hip fractures than mainland Japanese, who
have 40% fewer than Americans. This is linked to the high calcium levels in their natural drinking water and
their food, the flavonoids in soy, high vitamin D levels from being outside in the sun, and the continuance of
daily physiccal exercise throughout their lives.
Another important factor in the Okinawans' longevity equation is the amount they eat. They live by the
dietary code of hara hachi bu, literally, "eight parts out of ten full," meaning that they only eat until they are
about 80% full. For the average adult, this makes for a daily intake of about 1,800 calories, which is very low.
Scientists have found that a low-calorie diet has a great impact on increasing longevity in lab animals, and the
Okinawans' eating habits seem to bear this out with humans.
It certainly is desirable to live to 100, but only if the quality of life is high. The Okinawans' diet helps with
this as well. Elderly Okinawans have a very low rate of dementia, or senility, much lower than the elderly in
the United States or Europe. This is due to the fact that Okinawans' diet has a high amount of vitamin E,
which has been shown to protect the brain.
The Okinawa diet has attracted much international attention from people who are trying to find the modern-
day fountain of youth. Many books, magazine articles, and TV programs have outlined the basic diet plan. If
there is a resulting increase in centenarians is yet to be seen.
____ 51. Identical twins separated at birth always live to the same age.
____ 52. Vitamin E protects against dementia.
____ 53. The Okinawan diet is low in calories.
____ 54. Okinawans don't get a lot of physical exercise.
____ 55. Older Okinawans have a high quality of life.
In 1997, the world was amazed, and concerned, by a scientific breakthrough--the cloning of Dolly, the sheep
in Scotland. While the medical applications of this feat are exciting and far-reaching, the ethical concerns of
cloning continue to cause much debate in the scientific community, as well as society at large.
Cloning is the process of creating an identical copy of a living thing. Cloning can result in a molecule or
multi-cellular organism that is genetically identical to the molecule or organism being cloned. There are
different types of cloning; reproductive cloning was the technology used to create Dolly. This kind of cloning
is when the cloned animal has the same nuclear DNA as another existing animal. Whereas most people are
fascinated with the mere fact that science can create life in such a way, cloning is among the most
controversial of scientific advances.
One of the more hotly debated ethical issues surrounding cloning is the cloning of humans. One of the ethical
problems in human cloning has to with the possibility of cloning humans for the farming of organs for
transplants. In this scenario, the cloned human would be euthanized so that the organs needed could be used.
This process could potentially increase life expectancy for the original human by 50 years. Many conservative
and religious groups have called for the halt of all further experimentation on this front. However, it is not
only religious groups who are against cloning practices. Much of the general population, whether they have
religious beliefs or not, is uncomfortable with the idea of changing the natural order of life and death.
Another potential use of cloning technology is the cloning of extinct and endangered species. Even though
this has been an attractive possibility for many scientists and conservationists, the ethical questions remain for
many others. The implications of this type of cloning were depicted in the popular Jurassic Park books and
movies: dangerous extinct dinosaurs were recreated but then couldn't be controlled.
The ethical problems have not deterred many scientists from attempting to use the technology for this
purpose, however. Over the last few years, several endangered species have been cloned, with varying
degrees of success. Even the successes make the problems immediately obvious. For example, if an extinct
species were cloned, there would be no parents to teach the animal how to behave in a natural way. Therefore
these animals would most likely become mere oddities and not live to their potential as natural, living
organisms in their own right.
Many conservationists and environmentalists are opposed to this kind of cloning practice. This is because
they think that if endangered species can just be cloned, the general public will no longer feel the need to
preserve the animals' natural habitats or give donations to the organizations that work to do so.
One of the other cloning controversies is the practice of therapeutic cloning, or, the creation of human
embryos to harvest their stem cells and then destroying them. These stem cells would then be used in treating
diseases and in conducting medical research. The concerns here are that this research would lead to human
cloning, and that a huge number of human eggs would need to be harvested in order to make research
possible.
Given all the ethical concerns, there is no doubt that the public debate on cloning will continue.
Completion
Complete each statement.
The beginning of the movement can be traced back to March 31, 1848. On that day, Kate and Margaret Fox
of Hydesville, New York reported that they made contact with the spirit of a murdered peddler. What made
this incident unique was that the spirit communicated with the women through a series of loud tapping noises,
rather than appearing to a person in a trance. This incident grabbed the imagination of many Americans, and
seances with mediums became extremely popular. This was partly because it was a new form of
entertainment, but also because it proved to be a spiritual catharsis for people grieving the death of a loved
one. The possibility of contact with a dead husband, child, or dear friend was a strong incentive to embrace
spiritualism, and many unscrupulous men and women took advantage of grief-stricken people for personal
profit.
One of the most famous cases of medium fraud involved the Davenport Brothers, Ira and Henry. The
Davenport brothers were magicians who started to report that they were having the same kinds of experiences
as the Fox sisters, and that they had the ability to communicate with the spirit world. They developed various
illusions for their stage act that they claimed were only possible because of their supernatural powers. Their
shows were even introduced by a former minister and follower of Spiritualism, J.B. Ferguson, who assured
audiences that the Davenports possessed true supernatural powers and communicated with the spirit world. A
number of famous magicians and circus impresario P.T. Barnum wrote exposés of the Davenports and
performed duplicate illusions to show how the Davenports were duping audiences.
In spite of widespread fraud, Spiritualism quickly spread through the world and became particularly popular
in England, where an enormous number of families had lost loved ones in World War I. The supposed
opportunity to speak with a someone through a medium gripped the population of England, who were trying
to cope with the massive casualties that country experienced.
The most common form of communication with the dead was the seance. These were performed with a
medium in a dark or semi-dark room with the participants sitting around a table. The seance attendees were
generally there to communicate with a loved one who had passed away, and therefore predisposed to
believing the medium. For his or her part, the medium's tricks included making the table move, having objects
appear seemingly out of thin air, or making rapping sounds or music. Possibly the most dramatic element of
the seance was channelling, or the process by which the medium allows a spirit to use their body and voice to
communicate with one of the people sitting at the table.
The tricks of the medium were all easily faked, and the Spiritualism movement also spawned many skeptics
who made it their mission to publicly expose all the frauds. However, the emotional power of hearing a
message from a dead loved one is extremely compelling to many people, and the popularity of mediums have
persisted to the present day.
61. Many ____________________ people tried to take money from grieving family members.
62. She said that she could speak to the ____________________ of the dead.
63. The ____________________ in the book club talked about the new book.
64. He said that he had ____________________ powers and could speak to spirits.
65. Everyone at the ____________________ sat around a table in the dark.
Spiritualism is a religious movement that started in the United States in the 1840s and spread to other English-
speaking countries through the 1920s. The prominent feature of spiritualism is the belief that gifted
individuals called mediums can communicate with the spirits of the dead. It was believed that these spirits
lived on a higher spiritual dimension and could provide guidance and comfort to the living.
The beginning of the movement can be traced back to March 31, 1848. On that day, Kate and Margaret Fox
of Hydesville, New York reported that they made contact with the spirit of a murdered peddler. What made
this incident unique was that the spirit communicated with the women through a series of loud tapping noises,
rather than appearing to a person in a trance. This incident grabbed the imagination of many Americans, and
seances with mediums became extremely popular. This was partly because it was a new form of
entertainment, but also because it proved to be a spiritual catharsis for people grieving the death of a loved
one. The possibility of contact with a dead husband, child, or dear friend was a strong incentive to embrace
spiritualism, and many unscrupulous men and women took advantage of grief-stricken people for personal
profit.
One of the most famous cases of medium fraud involved the Davenport Brothers, Ira and Henry. The
Davenport brothers were magicians who started to report that they were having the same kinds of experiences
as the Fox sisters, and that they had the ability to communicate with the spirit world. They developed various
illusions for their stage act that they claimed were only possible because of their supernatural powers. Their
shows were even introduced by a former minister and follower of Spiritualism, J.B. Ferguson, who assured
audiences that the Davenports possessed true supernatural powers and communicated with the spirit world. A
number of famous magicians and circus impresario P.T. Barnum wrote exposés of the Davenports and
performed duplicate illusions to show how the Davenports were duping audiences.
In spite of widespread fraud, Spiritualism quickly spread through the world and became particularly popular
in England, where an enormous number of families had lost loved ones in World War I. The supposed
opportunity to speak with a someone through a medium gripped the population of England, who were trying
to cope with the massive casualties that country experienced.
The most common form of communication with the dead was the seance. These were performed with a
medium in a dark or semi-dark room with the participants sitting around a table. The seance attendees were
generally there to communicate with a loved one who had passed away, and therefore predisposed to
believing the medium. For his or her part, the medium's tricks included making the table move, having objects
appear seemingly out of thin air, or making rapping sounds or music. Possibly the most dramatic element of
the seance was channelling, or the process by which the medium allows a spirit to use their body and voice to
communicate with one of the people sitting at the table.
The tricks of the medium were all easily faked, and the Spiritualism movement also spawned many skeptics
who made it their mission to publicly expose all the frauds. However, the emotional power of hearing a
message from a dead loved one is extremely compelling to many people, and the popularity of mediums have
persisted to the present day.
Traditionally, large business corporations had very similar corporate structures and ways of doing business.
Organizational hierarchies were very tall, meaning there were many executives, each with suceedingly more
important job titles. This particular structure gave rise to the term "corporate ladder." Also, the atmosphere of
the office would be quite formal: employees had to adhere to a strict dress code and communication among
employees was conducted through very formal channels.
Beginning in the 1970s, several companies bucked this trend to establish their own new corporate cultures.
Corporate culture is the attitudes, employee experiences, beliefs, and values of an organization. This culture is
the basis for characteristics of employees' behavior toward each other and towards their individual tasks and
responsibilities at work.
One of the most successful companies to originate this corporate trend was Apple, Inc. At Apple's corporate
offices in Cupertino, California, employees are encouraged to express their individuality. This can manifest
itself in work attire, office space organization, and project group interaction. The advantages behind this
looser, more casual organization is two-fold: employees' creativity is fostered and employees have more
loyalty to a company that they feel is taking care of their personal needs. In fact, the office complex in
Cupertino is not called an office, but a campus, as in university campus. Calling a workplace a campus gives
it a more collegial, friendly feeling, since a campus is a place where individual ideas are valued over power or
superficial image.
Another company that uses a nontraditional corporate structure to great effect is, ironically, Apple's biggest
competitor--Microsoft, Inc. Microsoft, with 71,553 employees in 102 countries as of July 2006, is often
described as having a developer-centered business culture. Microsoft spends an enormous amount of time and
money recruiting young software developers from universities. Great efforts are also made to keep them in
the company. One of the ways this is done is through the office layout and organization. In many software
companies, low-level employees are often given one impersonal cubicle among many other impersonal
cubicles in a large office space. At Microsoft, newly hired developers are assigned a private or semiprivate
office space.
Another organizational innovation at Microsoft is that rather than having traditional business school
executive-types at the higher levels of the hierarchy, key decision-makers at every level of the company are,
or were, software developers. The advantage of this is that decisions are made by insiders who have been with
the company a long time and have detailed practical knowledge of the products.
Southwest Airlines, a domestic airline in the United States, also uses an unconventional business culture.
Southwest earned its success by offering low-cost flights. They could charge less for their flights by cutting
down on many of the services of traditional airlines, such as food service. As a companion to their business
model, Southwest's culture is one that emphasizes the importance of employees and customers alike.
Southwest urges employees to have fun at work; in fact, the crews on planes are known for breaking into song
or making funny boarding announcements.
Each of these companies has crafted its own unique business culture, but what they all have in common is an
enormous amount of success.
71. There is a(n) new ____________________ towards having gourmet food in office cafeterias.
72. The ____________________ of our company is very formal and impersonal.
73. Microsoft is one of the most successful ____________________ in the world.
74. One work place ____________________ was to allow employees to bring their pets to the office.
75. Joe's Italian Restaurant's main ____________________ is Maria's Italian Cafe across the street.
Traditionally, large business corporations had very similar corporate structures and ways of doing business.
Organizational hierarchies were very tall, meaning there were many executives, each with suceedingly more
important job titles. This particular structure gave rise to the term "corporate ladder." Also, the atmosphere of
the office would be quite formal: employees had to adhere to a strict dress code and communication among
employees was conducted through very formal channels.
Beginning in the 1970s, several companies bucked this trend to establish their own new corporate cultures.
Corporate culture is the attitudes, employee experiences, beliefs, and values of an organization. This culture is
the basis for characteristics of employees' behavior toward each other and towards their individual tasks and
responsibilities at work.
One of the most successful companies to originate this corporate trend was Apple, Inc. At Apple's corporate
offices in Cupertino, California, employees are encouraged to express their individuality. This can manifest
itself in work attire, office space organization, and project group interaction. The advantages behind this
looser, more casual organization is two-fold: employees' creativity is fostered and employees have more
loyalty to a company that they feel is taking care of their personal needs. In fact, the office complex in
Cupertino is not called an office, but a campus, as in university campus. Calling a workplace a campus gives
it a more collegial, friendly feeling, since a campus is a place where individual ideas are valued over power or
superficial image.
Another company that uses a nontraditional corporate structure to great effect is, ironically, Apple's biggest
competitor--Microsoft, Inc. Microsoft, with 71,553 employees in 102 countries as of July 2006, is often
described as having a developer-centered business culture. Microsoft spends an enormous amount of time and
money recruiting young software developers from universities. Great efforts are also made to keep them in
the company. One of the ways this is done is through the office layout and organization. In many software
companies, low-level employees are often given one impersonal cubicle among many other impersonal
cubicles in a large office space. At Microsoft, newly hired developers are assigned a private or semiprivate
office space.
Another organizational innovation at Microsoft is that rather than having traditional business school
executive-types at the higher levels of the hierarchy, key decision-makers at every level of the company are,
or were, software developers. The advantage of this is that decisions are made by insiders who have been with
the company a long time and have detailed practical knowledge of the products.
Southwest Airlines, a domestic airline in the United States, also uses an unconventional business culture.
Southwest earned its success by offering low-cost flights. They could charge less for their flights by cutting
down on many of the services of traditional airlines, such as food service. As a companion to their business
model, Southwest's culture is one that emphasizes the importance of employees and customers alike.
Southwest urges employees to have fun at work; in fact, the crews on planes are known for breaking into song
or making funny boarding announcements.
Each of these companies has crafted its own unique business culture, but what they all have in common is an
enormous amount of success.
76. The company has a very tall ____________________. It takes a long time to move up the corporate ladder.
77. On Fridays we are allowed to wear casual work ____________________.
78. My boss is very ____________________. We are not allowed to make any personal phone calls, and we only
get thirty minutes for lunch.
79. The ____________________ at work is much happier since we got a great new boss.
80. The ____________________ at my company have their own separate lunch room and bathroom.
For years doctors and scientists have tried to unlock the secrets to longevity. Modern-day researchers have
known that genetics as well as lifestyle play their parts in how long a person will live, but just how much
influence each factor has, has been the subject of much debate. That is until 1998 when scientists in Sweden
studied identical twins separated at birth and what these scientists found was that lifestyle, what we eat, how
much we exercise, etc., is much more of a factor in predicting longevity than genetics.
There are several populations in the world who seem to have found the key to longevity, and one of them is
the residents of the Ryukyu Islands, the southernmost islands of Japan. The inhabitants of these islands, of
which Okinawa is the largest and most well known, have the world's largest population of centenarians, with
almost 600 of its 1.3 million inhabitants living past 100 years. What's equally noteworthy about these people
is that not only do they live for a long time, but also they remain very active well into their old age and look
decades younger than their actual age. And a big part of their secret is their diet.
A typical breakfast in Okinawa is whole-grain rice and miso soup with vegetables. Lunch and dinner is a stir-
fry with goya (a gourd), imo (a sweet potato), egg, and tofu. Snacks tend to be fruit. This kind of diet is
absolutely the best for human health: it is low in fat and salt and rich in fiber and antioxidants. A key
ingredient to this diet is soy; in fact, they consume more soy than anyone on earth. Soy is packed with
flavonoids, a substance shown to protect against cancer. For Okinawans, this translates into extremely low
rates of cancer, heart disease, and stroke.
Okinawans also have a low rate of osteoporosis, with 20% fewer hip fractures than mainland Japanese, who
have 40% fewer than Americans. This is linked to the high calcium levels in their natural drinking water and
their food, the flavonoids in soy, high vitamin D levels from being outside in the sun, and the continuance of
daily physiccal exercise throughout their lives.
Another important factor in the Okinawans' longevity equation is the amount they eat. They live by the
dietary code of hara hachi bu, literally, "eight parts out of ten full," meaning that they only eat until they are
about 80% full. For the average adult, this makes for a daily intake of about 1,800 calories, which is very low.
Scientists have found that a low-calorie diet has a great impact on increasing longevity in lab animals, and the
Okinawans' eating habits seem to bear this out with humans.
It certainly is desirable to live to 100, but only if the quality of life is high. The Okinawans' diet helps with
this as well. Elderly Okinawans have a very low rate of dementia, or senility, much lower than the elderly in
the United States or Europe. This is due to the fact that Okinawans' diet has a high amount of vitamin E,
which has been shown to protect the brain.
The Okinawa diet has attracted much international attention from people who are trying to find the modern-
day fountain of youth. Many books, magazine articles, and TV programs have outlined the basic diet plan. If
there is a resulting increase in centenarians is yet to be seen.
81. The two girls are ____________________. No one can tell them apart.
82. Because of better healthcare, ____________________ rates in many countries have increased.
83. Our town's ____________________ has a birthday tomorrow. She'll have one hundred candles on her cake!
84. They are very healthy because their ____________________ is low in fat and salt.
85. All the ____________________ of Okinawa have a good chance of living to one hundred.
For years doctors and scientists have tried to unlock the secrets to longevity. Modern-day researchers have
known that genetics as well as lifestyle play their parts in how long a person will live, but just how much
influence each factor has, has been the subject of much debate. That is until 1998 when scientists in Sweden
studied identical twins separated at birth and what these scientists found was that lifestyle, what we eat, how
much we exercise, etc., is much more of a factor in predicting longevity than genetics.
There are several populations in the world who seem to have found the key to longevity, and one of them is
the residents of the Ryukyu Islands, the southernmost islands of Japan. The inhabitants of these islands, of
which Okinawa is the largest and most well known, have the world's largest population of centenarians, with
almost 600 of its 1.3 million inhabitants living past 100 years. What's equally noteworthy about these people
is that not only do they live for a long time, but also they remain very active well into their old age and look
decades younger than their actual age. And a big part of their secret is their diet.
A typical breakfast in Okinawa is whole-grain rice and miso soup with vegetables. Lunch and dinner is a stir-
fry with goya (a gourd), imo (a sweet potato), egg, and tofu. Snacks tend to be fruit. This kind of diet is
absolutely the best for human health: it is low in fat and salt and rich in fiber and antioxidants. A key
ingredient to this diet is soy; in fact, they consume more soy than anyone on earth. Soy is packed with
flavonoids, a substance shown to protect against cancer. For Okinawans, this translates into extremely low
rates of cancer, heart disease, and stroke.
Okinawans also have a low rate of osteoporosis, with 20% fewer hip fractures than mainland Japanese, who
have 40% fewer than Americans. This is linked to the high calcium levels in their natural drinking water and
their food, the flavonoids in soy, high vitamin D levels from being outside in the sun, and the continuance of
daily physiccal exercise throughout their lives.
Another important factor in the Okinawans' longevity equation is the amount they eat. They live by the
dietary code of hara hachi bu, literally, "eight parts out of ten full," meaning that they only eat until they are
about 80% full. For the average adult, this makes for a daily intake of about 1,800 calories, which is very low.
Scientists have found that a low-calorie diet has a great impact on increasing longevity in lab animals, and the
Okinawans' eating habits seem to bear this out with humans.
It certainly is desirable to live to 100, but only if the quality of life is high. The Okinawans' diet helps with
this as well. Elderly Okinawans have a very low rate of dementia, or senility, much lower than the elderly in
the United States or Europe. This is due to the fact that Okinawans' diet has a high amount of vitamin E,
which has been shown to protect the brain.
The Okinawa diet has attracted much international attention from people who are trying to find the modern-
day fountain of youth. Many books, magazine articles, and TV programs have outlined the basic diet plan. If
there is a resulting increase in centenarians is yet to be seen.
In 1997, the world was amazed, and concerned, by a scientific breakthrough--the cloning of Dolly, the sheep
in Scotland. While the medical applications of this feat are exciting and far-reaching, the ethical concerns of
cloning continue to cause much debate in the scientific community, as well as society at large.
Cloning is the process of creating an identical copy of a living thing. Cloning can result in a molecule or
multi-cellular organism that is genetically identical to the molecule or organism being cloned. There are
different types of cloning; reproductive cloning was the technology used to create Dolly. This kind of cloning
is when the cloned animal has the same nuclear DNA as another existing animal. Whereas most people are
fascinated with the mere fact that science can create life in such a way, cloning is among the most
controversial of scientific advances.
One of the more hotly debated ethical issues surrounding cloning is the cloning of humans. One of the ethical
problems in human cloning has to with the possibility of cloning humans for the farming of organs for
transplants. In this scenario, the cloned human would be euthanized so that the organs needed could be used.
This process could potentially increase life expectancy for the original human by 50 years. Many conservative
and religious groups have called for the halt of all further experimentation on this front. However, it is not
only religious groups who are against cloning practices. Much of the general population, whether they have
religious beliefs or not, is uncomfortable with the idea of changing the natural order of life and death.
Another potential use of cloning technology is the cloning of extinct and endangered species. Even though
this has been an attractive possibility for many scientists and conservationists, the ethical questions remain for
many others. The implications of this type of cloning were depicted in the popular Jurassic Park books and
movies: dangerous extinct dinosaurs were recreated but then couldn't be controlled.
The ethical problems have not deterred many scientists from attempting to use the technology for this
purpose, however. Over the last few years, several endangered species have been cloned, with varying
degrees of success. Even the successes make the problems immediately obvious. For example, if an extinct
species were cloned, there would be no parents to teach the animal how to behave in a natural way. Therefore
these animals would most likely become mere oddities and not live to their potential as natural, living
organisms in their own right.
Many conservationists and environmentalists are opposed to this kind of cloning practice. This is because
they think that if endangered species can just be cloned, the general public will no longer feel the need to
preserve the animals' natural habitats or give donations to the organizations that work to do so.
One of the other cloning controversies is the practice of therapeutic cloning, or, the creation of human
embryos to harvest their stem cells and then destroying them. These stem cells would then be used in treating
diseases and in conducting medical research. The concerns here are that this research would lead to human
cloning, and that a huge number of human eggs would need to be harvested in order to make research
possible.
Given all the ethical concerns, there is no doubt that the public debate on cloning will continue.
In 1997, the world was amazed, and concerned, by a scientific breakthrough--the cloning of Dolly, the sheep
in Scotland. While the medical applications of this feat are exciting and far-reaching, the ethical concerns of
cloning continue to cause much debate in the scientific community, as well as society at large.
Cloning is the process of creating an identical copy of a living thing. Cloning can result in a molecule or
multi-cellular organism that is genetically identical to the molecule or organism being cloned. There are
different types of cloning; reproductive cloning was the technology used to create Dolly. This kind of cloning
is when the cloned animal has the same nuclear DNA as another existing animal. Whereas most people are
fascinated with the mere fact that science can create life in such a way, cloning is among the most
controversial of scientific advances.
One of the more hotly debated ethical issues surrounding cloning is the cloning of humans. One of the ethical
problems in human cloning has to with the possibility of cloning humans for the farming of organs for
transplants. In this scenario, the cloned human would be euthanized so that the organs needed could be used.
This process could potentially increase life expectancy for the original human by 50 years. Many conservative
and religious groups have called for the halt of all further experimentation on this front. However, it is not
only religious groups who are against cloning practices. Much of the general population, whether they have
religious beliefs or not, is uncomfortable with the idea of changing the natural order of life and death.
Another potential use of cloning technology is the cloning of extinct and endangered species. Even though
this has been an attractive possibility for many scientists and conservationists, the ethical questions remain for
many others. The implications of this type of cloning were depicted in the popular Jurassic Park books and
movies: dangerous extinct dinosaurs were recreated but then couldn't be controlled.
The ethical problems have not deterred many scientists from attempting to use the technology for this
purpose, however. Over the last few years, several endangered species have been cloned, with varying
degrees of success. Even the successes make the problems immediately obvious. For example, if an extinct
species were cloned, there would be no parents to teach the animal how to behave in a natural way. Therefore
these animals would most likely become mere oddities and not live to their potential as natural, living
organisms in their own right.
Many conservationists and environmentalists are opposed to this kind of cloning practice. This is because
they think that if endangered species can just be cloned, the general public will no longer feel the need to
preserve the animals' natural habitats or give donations to the organizations that work to do so.
One of the other cloning controversies is the practice of therapeutic cloning, or, the creation of human
embryos to harvest their stem cells and then destroying them. These stem cells would then be used in treating
diseases and in conducting medical research. The concerns here are that this research would lead to human
cloning, and that a huge number of human eggs would need to be harvested in order to make research
possible.
Given all the ethical concerns, there is no doubt that the public debate on cloning will continue.
Essay
Spiritualism is a religious movement that started in the United States in the 1840s and spread to other English-
speaking countries through the 1920s. The prominent feature of spiritualism is the belief that gifted
individuals called mediums can communicate with the spirits of the dead. It was believed that these spirits
lived on a higher spiritual dimension and could provide guidance and comfort to the living.
The beginning of the movement can be traced back to March 31, 1848. On that day, Kate and Margaret Fox
of Hydesville, New York reported that they made contact with the spirit of a murdered peddler. What made
this incident unique was that the spirit communicated with the women through a series of loud tapping noises,
rather than appearing to a person in a trance. This incident grabbed the imagination of many Americans, and
seances with mediums became extremely popular. This was partly because it was a new form of
entertainment, but also because it proved to be a spiritual catharsis for people grieving the death of a loved
one. The possibility of contact with a dead husband, child, or dear friend was a strong incentive to embrace
spiritualism, and many unscrupulous men and women took advantage of grief-stricken people for personal
profit.
One of the most famous cases of medium fraud involved the Davenport Brothers, Ira and Henry. The
Davenport brothers were magicians who started to report that they were having the same kinds of experiences
as the Fox sisters, and that they had the ability to communicate with the spirit world. They developed various
illusions for their stage act that they claimed were only possible because of their supernatural powers. Their
shows were even introduced by a former minister and follower of Spiritualism, J.B. Ferguson, who assured
audiences that the Davenports possessed true supernatural powers and communicated with the spirit world. A
number of famous magicians and circus impresario P.T. Barnum wrote exposés of the Davenports and
performed duplicate illusions to show how the Davenports were duping audiences.
In spite of widespread fraud, Spiritualism quickly spread through the world and became particularly popular
in England, where an enormous number of families had lost loved ones in World War I. The supposed
opportunity to speak with a someone through a medium gripped the population of England, who were trying
to cope with the massive casualties that country experienced.
The most common form of communication with the dead was the seance. These were performed with a
medium in a dark or semi-dark room with the participants sitting around a table. The seance attendees were
generally there to communicate with a loved one who had passed away, and therefore predisposed to
believing the medium. For his or her part, the medium's tricks included making the table move, having objects
appear seemingly out of thin air, or making rapping sounds or music. Possibly the most dramatic element of
the seance was channelling, or the process by which the medium allows a spirit to use their body and voice to
communicate with one of the people sitting at the table.
The tricks of the medium were all easily faked, and the Spiritualism movement also spawned many skeptics
who made it their mission to publicly expose all the frauds. However, the emotional power of hearing a
message from a dead loved one is extremely compelling to many people, and the popularity of mediums have
persisted to the present day.
101. Do you believe in the spirit world or an afterlife? Why or why not? Use words from the passage.
102. What are other supernatural occurrences that many people believe in? Why do you think people believe in
them? Use words from the passage.
Traditionally, large business corporations had very similar corporate structures and ways of doing business.
Organizational hierarchies were very tall, meaning there were many executives, each with succeedingly more
important job titles. This particular structure gave rise to the term "corporate ladder." Also, the atmosphere of
the office would be quite formal: employees had to adhere to a strict dress code and communication among
employees was conducted through very formal channels.
Beginning in the 1970s, several companies bucked this trend to establish their own new corporate cultures.
Corporate culture is the attitudes, employee experiences, beliefs, and values of an organization. This culture is
the basis for characteristics of employees' behavior toward each other and towards their individual tasks and
responsibilities at work.
One of the most successful companies to originate this corporate trend was Apple, Inc. At Apple's corporate
offices in Cupertino, California, employees are encouraged to express their individuality. This can manifest
itself in work attire, office space organization, and project group interaction. The advantages behind this
looser, more casual organization is two-fold: employees' creativity is fostered and employees have more
loyalty to a company that they feel is taking care of their personal needs. In fact, the office complex in
Cupertino is not called an office, but a campus, as in university campus. Calling a workplace a campus gives
it a more collegial, friendly feeling, since a campus is a place where individual ideas are valued over power or
superficial image.
Another company that uses a nontraditional corporate structure to great effect is, ironically, Apple's biggest
competitor--Microsoft, Inc. Microsoft, with 71,553 employees in 102 countries as of July 2006, is often
described as having a developer-centered business culture. Microsoft spends an enormous amount of time and
money recruiting young software developers from universities. Great efforts are also made to keep them in
the company. One of the ways this is done is through the office layout and organization. In many software
companies, low-level employees are often given one impersonal cubicle among many other impersonal
cubicles in a large office space. At Microsoft, newly hired developers are assigned a private or semiprivate
office space.
Another organizational innovation at Microsoft is that rather than having traditional business school
executive-types at the higher levels of the hierarchy, key decision-makers at every level of the company are,
or were, software developers. The advantage of this is that decisions are made by insiders who have been with
the company a long time and have detailed practical knowledge of the products.
Southwest Airlines, a domestic airline in the United States, also uses an unconventional business culture.
Southwest earned its success by offering low-cost flights. They could charge less for their flights by cutting
down on many of the services of traditional airlines, such as food service. As a companion to their business
model, Southwest's culture is one that emphasizes the importance of employees and customers alike.
Southwest urges employees to have fun at work; in fact, the crews on planes are known for breaking into song
or making funny boarding announcements.
Each of these companies has crafted its own unique business culture, but what they all have in common is an
enormous amount of success.
103. What other nontraditional company do you know about? Why do you think employees like to work there?
Use words from the passage.
104. Imagine you run a large successful business. What would your offices be like? Use words from the passage.
For years doctors and scientists have tried to unlock the secrets to longevity. Modern-day researchers have
known that genetics as well as lifestyle play their parts in how long a person will live, but just how much
influence each factor has, has been the subject of much debate. That is until 1998 when scientists in Sweden
studied identical twins separated at birth and what these scientists found was that lifestyle, what we eat, how
much we exercise, etc., is much more of a factor in predicting longevity than genetics.
There are several populations in the world who seem to have found the key to longevity, and one of them is
the residents of the Ryukyu Islands, the southernmost islands of Japan. The inhabitants of these islands, of
which Okinawa is the largest and most well known, have the world's largest population of centenarians, with
almost 600 of its 1.3 million inhabitants living past 100 years. What's equally noteworthy about these people
is that not only do they live for a long time, but also they remain very active well into their old age and look
decades younger than their actual age. And a big part of their secret is their diet.
A typical breakfast in Okinawa is whole-grain rice and miso soup with vegetables. Lunch and dinner is a stir-
fry with goya (a gourd), imo (a sweet potato), egg, and tofu. Snacks tend to be fruit. This kind of diet is
absolutely the best for human health: it is low in fat and salt and rich in fiber and antioxidants. A key
ingredient to this diet is soy; in fact, they consume more soy than anyone on earth. Soy is packed with
flavonoids, a substance shown to protect against cancer. For Okinawans, this translates into extremely low
rates of cancer, heart disease, and stroke.
Okinawans also have a low rate of osteoporosis, with 20% fewer hip fractures than mainland Japanese, who
have 40% fewer than Americans. This is linked to the high calcium levels in their natural drinking water and
their food, the flavonoids in soy, high vitamin D levels from being outside in the sun, and the continuance of
daily physiccal exercise throughout their lives.
Another important factor in the Okinawans' longevity equation is the amount they eat. They live by the
dietary code of hara hachi bu, literally, "eight parts out of ten full," meaning that they only eat until they are
about 80% full. For the average adult, this makes for a daily intake of about 1,800 calories, which is very low.
Scientists have found that a low-calorie diet has a great impact on increasing longevity in lab animals, and the
Okinawans' eating habits seem to bear this out with humans.
It certainly is desirable to live to 100, but only if the quality of life is high. The Okinawans' diet helps with
this as well. Elderly Okinawans have a very low rate of dementia, or senility, much lower than the elderly in
the United States or Europe. This is due to the fact that Okinawans' diet has a high amount of vitamin E,
which has been shown to protect the brain.
The Okinawa diet has attracted much international attention from people who are trying to find the modern-
day fountain of youth. Many books, magazine articles, and TV programs have outlined the basic diet plan. If
there is a resulting increase in centenarians is yet to be seen.
105. Is it important to you to live to be 100? Why or why not? Use words from the passage.
106. Is the average diet in your country healthy? Use words from the passage.
In 1997, the world was amazed, and concerned, by a scientific breakthrough--the cloning of Dolly, the sheep
in Scotland. While the medical applications of this feat are exciting and far-reaching, the ethical concerns of
cloning continue to cause much debate in the scientific community, as well as society at large.
Cloning is the process of creating an identical copy of a living thing. Cloning can result in a molecule or
multi-cellular organism that is genetically identical to the molecule or organism being cloned. There are
different types of cloning; reproductive cloning was the technology used to create Dolly. This kind of cloning
is when the cloned animal has the same nuclear DNA as another existing animal. Whereas most people are
fascinated with the mere fact that science can create life in such a way, cloning is among the most
controversial of scientific advances.
One of the more hotly debated ethical issues surrounding cloning is the cloning of humans. One of the ethical
problems in human cloning has to with the possibility of cloning humans for the farming of organs for
transplants. In this scenario, the cloned human would be euthanized so that the organs needed could be used.
This process could potentially increase life expectancy for the original human by 50 years. Many conservative
and religious groups have called for the halt of all further experimentation on this front. However, it is not
only religious groups who are against cloning practices. Much of the general population, whether they have
religious beliefs or not, is uncomfortable with the idea of changing the natural order of life and death.
Another potential use of cloning technology is the cloning of extinct and endangered species. Even though
this has been an attractive possibility for many scientists and conservationists, the ethical questions remain for
many others. The implications of this type of cloning were depicted in the popular Jurassic Park books and
movies: dangerous extinct dinosaurs were recreated but then couldn't be controlled.
The ethical problems have not deterred many scientists from attempting to use the technology for this
purpose, however. Over the last few years, several endangered species have been cloned, with varying
degrees of success. Even the successes make the problems immediately obvious. For example, if an extinct
species were cloned, there would be no parents to teach the animal how to behave in a natural way. Therefore
these animals would most likely become mere oddities and not live to their potential as natural, living
organisms in their own right.
Many conservationists and environmentalists are opposed to this kind of cloning practice. This is because
they think that if endangered species can just be cloned, the general public will no longer feel the need to
preserve the animals' natural habitats or give donations to the organizations that work to do so.
One of the other cloning controversies is the practice of therapeutic cloning, or, the creation of human
embryos to harvest their stem cells and then destroying them. These stem cells would then be used in treating
diseases and in conducting medical research. The concerns here are that this research would lead to human
cloning, and that a huge number of human eggs would need to be harvested in order to make research
possible.
Given all the ethical concerns, there is no doubt that the public debate on cloning will continue.
107. Do you think cloning humans is unethical? Why or why not? Use words from the passage.
108. Do you think it is important to continue cloning research? Why or why not? Use words from the passage.
test1
Answer Section
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. ANS: C PTS: 1
2. ANS: D PTS: 1
3. ANS: A PTS: 1
4. ANS: B PTS: 1
5. ANS: D PTS: 1
6. ANS: B PTS: 1
7. ANS: C PTS: 1
8. ANS: B PTS: 1
9. ANS: A PTS: 1
10. ANS: C PTS: 1
11. ANS: A PTS: 1
12. ANS: C PTS: 1
13. ANS: D PTS: 1
14. ANS: A PTS: 1
15. ANS: C PTS: 1
16. ANS: B PTS: 1
17. ANS: D PTS: 1
18. ANS: A PTS: 1
19. ANS: C PTS: 1
20. ANS: C PTS: 1
21. ANS: B PTS: 1
22. ANS: C PTS: 1
23. ANS: D PTS: 1
24. ANS: A PTS: 1
25. ANS: C PTS: 1
26. ANS: B PTS: 1
27. ANS: D PTS: 1
28. ANS: C PTS: 1
29. ANS: B PTS: 1
30. ANS: A PTS: 1
31. ANS: B PTS: 1
32. ANS: A PTS: 1
33. ANS: B PTS: 1
34. ANS: B PTS: 1
35. ANS: A PTS: 1
36. ANS: D PTS: 1
37. ANS: B PTS: 1
38. ANS: B PTS: 1
39. ANS: D PTS: 1
40. ANS: A PTS: 1
TRUE/FALSE
COMPLETION
PTS: 1
62. ANS: spirits
PTS: 1
63. ANS: participants
PTS: 1
64. ANS: supernatural
PTS: 1
65. ANS: seance
PTS: 1
66. ANS: faked
PTS: 1
67. ANS: casualties
PTS: 1
68. ANS: gifted
PTS: 1
69. ANS: imagination
PTS: 1
70. ANS: fraud
PTS: 1
71. ANS: trend
PTS: 1
72. ANS: culture
PTS: 1
73. ANS: corporations
PTS: 1
74. ANS: innovation
PTS: 1
75. ANS: competitor
PTS: 1
76. ANS: hierarchy
PTS: 1
77. ANS: attire
PTS: 1
78. ANS: strict
PTS: 1
79. ANS: atmosphere
PTS: 1
80. ANS: executives
PTS: 1
81. ANS: identical
PTS: 1
82. ANS: longevity
PTS: 1
83. ANS: centenarian
PTS: 1
84. ANS: diet
PTS: 1
85. ANS: inhabitants
PTS: 1
86. ANS: ingredients
PTS: 1
87. ANS: researchers
PTS: 1
88. ANS: population
PTS: 1
89. ANS: lifestyle
PTS: 1
90. ANS: typical
PTS: 1
91. ANS: organs
PTS: 1
92. ANS: endangered
PTS: 1
93. ANS: amazed
PTS: 1
94. ANS: ethical
PTS: 1
95. ANS: conservative
PTS: 1
96. ANS: extinct
PTS: 1
97. ANS: donations
PTS: 1
98. ANS: habitats
PTS: 1
99. ANS: harvest
PTS: 1
100. ANS: Conservationists
PTS: 1
ESSAY
101. ANS:
Answers will vary.
PTS: 1
102. ANS:
Answers will vary.
PTS: 1
103. ANS:
Answers will vary.
PTS: 1
104. ANS:
Answers will vary.
PTS: 1
105. ANS:
Answers will vary.
PTS: 1
106. ANS:
Answers will vary.
PTS: 1
107. ANS:
Answers will vary.
PTS: 1
108. ANS:
Answers will vary.
PTS: 1