Practice
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Ready for Anything!
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Jane Goodall .................................................. Click
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After you have read each story or article, answer the questions in
the Answer Section.
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Read the
story "Ready for Anything!" before answering Numbers 1 through
8 in the Answer Section.
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ustin
was always prepared. His motto was "Never throw anything out,
you never know when it might come in handy." His bedroom was
so full of flat bicycle tires, bent tennis rackets, deflated basketballs,
and games with missing pieces that you could barely get in the door.
His parents pleaded with him to clean out his room.
"What use is a fish tank with a hole in the bottom?" his
father asked. But Justin simply smiled and repeated his motto, "Never
throw anything out, you never know when it might come in handy."
When Justin was away from home, he always carried his blue backpack.
He liked to think of it as a smaller version of his bedrooma
place to store the many objects that he collected. It was so worn
and stretched that it hardly resembled a backpack anymore. It was
full of the kind of things that seemed unimportant, but when used
with a little imagination, might come in handy.
Justin had earned a reputation for figuring things out and getting
people out of otherwise hopeless situations. Many of his classmates
and neighbors sought him out when they needed help with a problem.
On the first day of school, his friend Kenny, came looking for Justin.
"Do you think you have something in your bag that could help
me remember my locker combination?" he asked. "I lost the
scrap of paper it was written on. I have science class in two minutes
and if Im late on the first day itll make me look bad
for the rest of the year." Kenny looked genuinely worried.
"Relax," Justin said, taking his backpack off and unzipping
the top. "Remember how you borrowed my notebook in homeroom to
write the combination down? Well, I know how we can recover what you
wrote."
He took the notebook and a soft lead pencil out of his bag. The page
that Kenny had written on had left faint indentations on another page
in the notebook. Justin held the pencil on its side and rubbed it
lightly over the indentations. Slowly but surely the numbers of the
locker combination appeared in white, set off by the gray pencil rubbings.
"Thats amazing!" Kenny said. "I owe you one."
And he dashed off to open his locker.
During science class, Mr. Tran was lecturing on the structure of the
solar system using a model. He made a sudden gesture and the model
fell apart. Planets and rings and connector rods went everywhere,
rolling and clattering and disappearing under desks. The students
scrambled around on the floor for ten minutes and were finally able
to recover every piece except onea connector rod that was lodged
in a crack between two lab stations.
"If we had a magnet," said Mr. Tran, "we could easily
coax it out that way. But I loaned all of the magnet kits to the elementary
school yesterday."
Justin was already searching through his backpack. "I have some
materials that will work just as well, I think," he told Mr.
Tran. He pulled out a battery, an iron nail, and some electrical wire
and tape, while Mr. Tran and the other students looked on in amazement.
"Why do you have all of that stuff?" Louise Baxter asked.
Justin just smiled and repeated his motto. "Never throw anything
out, you never know when it might come in handy."
By wrapping the wire around the nail and taping each end to a battery
terminal, he was able to make a magnet strong enough to lift the rod
out of the crack.
"Bravo!" said Mr. Tran.
"No problem," said Justin.
After school, Justin rode the bus to the mall where he worked at a
music store. His boss, Gail, was taking inventory of all of the CDs
and tapes in the classical music section. As he helped a customer
at the register, Justin heard her exclaim, "Oh, no! I forgot
my glasses! Theres no way I can read this list without them."
Justin sighed, picked up his backpack, and walked over to Gail.
"I think I can help you out," he said, unzipping the bag.
While Gail watched in surprise, he pulled out a jar of petroleum jelly,
a washer, a glass slide, and a small bottle of water. He put the jelly
on the bottom of the washer, placed it securely, jelly-side down,
on the glass slide, and then put a drop of water in the center of
the washer.
He put the contraption on top of the inventory list and said to his
boss, "See what happens when you look through the water droplet."
Gail looked and her eyes widened with delight.
"Wow!" she cried. "It enlarges the print that Im
looking at, just like a magnifying glass!" She patted Justin
on the back. "Im all set now," she said. "Thanks."
Justin smiled. "No problem," he said, returning to the register.
It was just another day in the life of the boy whose motto was "Never
throw anything out, you never know when it might come in handy."
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Now proceed to the Answer Section below.
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Read the
article "Jane Goodall" before answering Numbers 9 through
16 in the Answer Section.
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Much of the information we have today
about chimpanzees comes from the groundbreaking, long-term research
of the great conservationist, Jane Goodall.
Jane Goodall was born in London, England, on April 3, 1934. On her
second birthday, her father gave her a toy chimpanzee named Jubilee.
Jubilee was named after a baby chimp in the London Zoo, and seemed
to foretell the course Janes life would take. To this day, Jubilee
sits in a chair in Janes London home. From an early age, Jane
was fascinated by animals and animal stories. By the age of 10, she
was talking about going to Africa to live among the animals there.
At the time, in the early 1940s, this was a radical idea because women
did not go to Africa by themselves.
As a young woman, Jane finished school in London, attended secretarial
school, and then worked for a documentary filmmaker for a while. When
a school friend invited her to visit Kenya, she worked as a waitress
until she had earned the fare to travel there by boat. She was 23
years old.
Once in Kenya, she met Dr. Louis Leakey, a famous paleontologist and
anthropologist. He was impressed with her thorough knowledge of Africa
and its wildlife, and hired her to assist him and his wife on a fossil-hunting
expedition to Olduvai Gorge. Dr. Leakey soon realized that Jane was
the perfect person to complete a study he had been planning for some
time. She expressed her interest in the idea of studying animals by
living in the wild with them, rather than studying dead animals through
paleontology.
Dr. Leakey and Jane began planning a study of a group of chimpanzees
who were living on the shores of Lake Tanganyika in Kenya. At first,
the British authorities would not approve their plan. At the time,
they thought it was too dangerous for a woman to live in the wilds
of Africa alone. But Janes mother, Vanne, agreed to join her
so that she would not be alone. Finally, the authorities gave Jane
the clearance she needed in order to go to Africa and begin her study
In July of 1960, Jane and her mother arrived at Gombe National Park
in what was then called Tanganyika and is now called Tanzania. Jane
faced many challenges as she began her work. The chimpanzees did not
accept her right away, and it took months for them to get used to
her presence in their territory. But she was very patient and remained
focused on her goal. Little by little, she was able to enter their
world.
At first, she was able to watch the chimpanzees only from a great
distance, using binoculars. As time passed, she was able to move her
observation point closer to them while still using camouflage. Eventually,
she was able to sit among them, touching, patting, and even feeding
them. It was an amazing accomplishment for Jane, and a breakthrough
in the study of animals in the wild. Jane named all of the chimpanzees
that she studied, stating in her journals that she felt they each
had a unique personality.
One of the first significant observations that Jane made during the
study was that chimpanzees make and use tools, much like humans do,
to help them get food. It was previously thought that humans alone
used tools. Also thanks to Janes research, we now know that
chimps eat meat as well as plants and fruits. In many ways, she has
helped us to see how chimpanzees and humans are similar. In doing
so, she has made us more sympathetic toward these creatures, while
helping us to better understand ourselves.
The study started by Jane Goodall in 1960 is now the longest field
study of any animal species in their natural habitat. Research continues
to this day in Gombe and is conducted by a team of trained Tanzanians.
Janes life has included much more than just her study of the
chimps in Tanzania. She pursued a graduate degree while still conducting
her study, receiving her Ph.D. from Cambridge University in 1965.
In 1984, she received the J. Paul Getty Wildlife Conservation Prize
for "helping millions of people understand the importance of
wildlife conservation to life on this planet." She has been married
twice: first to a photographer and then to the director of National
Parks. She has one son.
Dr. Jane Goodall is now the worlds most renowned authority on
chimpanzees, having studied their behavior for nearly 40 years. She
has published many scientific articles, has written two books, and
has won numerous awards for her groundbreaking work. The Jane Goodall
Institute for Wildlife Research, Education, and Conservation was founded
in 1977 in California but moved to the Washington, D.C., area in 1998.
Its goal is to take the actions necessary to improve the environment
for all living things.
Dr. Goodall now travels extensively, giving lectures, visiting zoos
and chimp sanctuaries, and talking to young people involved in environmental
education. She is truly a great conservationist and an amazing human
being.
"Jane
Goodall" by Milada Broukal, from What A Life! Stories of Amazing
People. Copyright© 2000 by Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. A
Pearson Company.
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Now proceed to the Answer Section below.
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