' +JJJJ ?\>m0M='+l> /+l   d]@ŵLҦ]]L L}BBL] 鷎귭෍ᷩ췩緈JJJJx Lȿ L8ᷭ緍췩 緍i 8 `巬 췌`x (`(8`I`B` ``>J>J>VU)?`8'x0|&HhHh VY)'&Y)xꪽ)' `Hh`V0^*^*>&` aI꽌ɪVɭ&Y&&Y& 꽌ɪ\8`&&꽌ɪɖ'*&%&,E'зЮ꽌ɪФ`+*xS&x'8*3Ixix&& 8  '  & x)*++`FG8`0($ p,&"_]` L/浍굺L  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?  1#"""  (9"1 ( ,.(0# 2  /#0/#0 *?'#07#00/0/'#07#0:"4<*55/**5/*%5/)1/)1/)1/)'#0/#0*5/*75/**5/*:5//#0/#0'#07#0:::*::'#07#0EB H  @H !D)"E` @ $ C ` DQ &J80^݌Hh ü ü݌ ռ ռ ռA ļD ļ? ļAEDE?HJ>h Լ ռ ռ ռ`HJ>݌h Hh݌`HIHHHHhHH݌hHhHh݌H6 VDP (ED Z $0x8x D- ܸDD# H8`?E Vk *f???0xE Hh D#-EEE8` D ܸx D - ܸx8`-0ݩ?ʥD EEE`   vLDcpq` [` ~  LӜu`".Q`pNФbptťܥm2<(-Py0\|e<6e<g< JJJJj귍hI  aUL@ kU8  L  Q^R(jQ0l^l\  wUuW ԧ H h@ [_ /QSIRb_L`LLLL`ª`LQLYLeLXLeLee ўQH\(h0L& Ꝥ$`( R \ZLl8 ўR HH\`\Z[YS6`LxQɿu3'RͲʎRʎ]]]ɍuL͟ɍ}RLRɍg^H8 ^hZLɍR LͲɊRR% QLܤͲ Z@ -^ ş\[Z QY\[Z8`l6Lş_Ȍb_Ͳ] )Y h( ֭ͲLɍ [LLĦ__ ^ 9 LҦ3 9 a   0LjLY u< (_9 ˭ɠuɠK_9 ?LˆʎõĵL õ ĵµ aµ`` L̦µ_bJLuLz`  ȟ QlXJ̥KlV  ȟ QlV eօ3L e3L &RL &QL d L4 Ne)n `@-eff L f`L . tQLѤ LҦL` OPu d L Ne)noon 8ɍ` ^f\õL ^NR  RΩLҦ)\Z ʽ LHv 3h`0h8` [L NС õ`A@` ŵL^L iõ`  \ 濭0 \  ȟ Q ^\lZl^?cqH şch`fhjõĵ@OAP`u@`@&`QR`E Ls  @DAE@u`8` %@ @A@`@`@A`Mµ ) LЦ`8@AWc@8@-@HAȑ@hHȑ@ȑ@hHȑ@Ȋ@ch8&ȑ@Hȑ@Ah@LHȑ@ȑ@ htphso`hMhL`9V8U897T6S67`INILOASAVRUCHAIDELETLOCUNLOCCLOSREAEXEWRITPOSITIOOPEAPPENRENAMCATALOMONOMOPRINMAXFILEFINBSAVBLOABRUVERIF!pppp p p p p`" t""#x"p0p@p@@@p@!y q q p@  LANGUAGE NOT AVAILABLRANGE ERROWRITE PROTECTEEND OF DATFILE NOT FOUNVOLUME MISMATCI/O ERRODISK FULFILE LOCKESYNTAX ERRONO BUFFERS AVAILABLFILE TYPE MISMATCPROGRAM TOO LARGNOT DIRECT COMMANč$3>L[dmx- (  Ϡ@跻~!Wo*9~~~~ɬƬ~_ j ʪHɪH`Lc (L ܫ㵮赎 ɱ^_ J QL_Ls贩紎 DǴҵԵƴѵӵµȴ 7 ַ :ŵƴѵǴҵȴµ納贍﵎ٵ്ᵭⳍڵL^ѵ-I `  4 ò-յ!  8صٵ紭ﵝ 7L (0+BC  7L HH`LgL{0 HH` õL H hBL BH [ h`Lo õ ڬL B ڬ LʬH hB@ յյ [L (ȴ) ȴ 7L L ( L (ȴL{ƴѵ洩ƴǴҵ 7 ^* B0 HȱBh ӵԵ 8 L8 ݲ` ܫ  / / ED B / / ]ƴS0Jȴ ȴ)  紅D贅E B ƴ  / 0L Ν `HD٤DEEhiHLGh ` ŵBѵ-` ѵB-` ܫ XI볩쳢8 DH E𳈈췍Ȍ X0 · JLǵBȵC`,յp` 䯩 R-յյ`յ0` K R-յյ`ɵʵӵԵ` 4 K ( ѵҵLBȱBL8` DBHBH : ַ޵BȭߵBhhӵԵ RBܵmڵ޵ȱBݵm۵ߵ` 䯩LR˵̵ֵ׵`êĪLR E( 8` R` ELRŪƪ`췌 յյI뷭鷭귭ⵍ㵍跬ª 뷰` Lf ݵܵߵ޵ ^`8ܵ i B8` 4L ֵȱB׵ ܯ䵍൭嵍 ` DȑB׵Bֵ  ַ յյ`굎뵎쵬 뵎쵌``õĵBCõĵ`µµ`L õBĵCصص Qƴ0"Bƴ 󮜳` 0۰ϬBƴ8`i#`ЗLw!0>ﵭ` m ﳐ 7i볍 8 ЉLw`H h ݲL~ `浍국䵍뵩嵠Jm赍嵊mjnnn浈m浍浭m䵍䵐`"L ŵ8ŵH ~(` d ֠z# u` finished your second lesson. You will do much better than that. But even a modest gain of100 words per minute would bring you an extra hundred books a year. That would be worth doing - and you'll probably have gained that extra hundred words a minute before you have words; in a day, an extra 24,000 words. In a week of five days,you would read 120,000 more words than you are reading now, in no more time: an equivalent of two ordinary-sized books. Say you read, on and off the job, about four hours a day. Suppose you increase your speed a modest 100 words per minute. This would mean that in an hour you would read an extra 6000 creep along at 250 to 350 words per minute. Even a modest increase in that speed can result in an enormous increase of information. hat.Most people do not talk much faster than 200 words per minute, if that fast. We can only witness so many events, even with TV to help us. What we CAN do to help us accumulate more informa- tion is to increase the speed at which we read. Most peopleh would make what has happened since the invention of printing seem a mere beginning. We can only listen to so much, and relatively slowly at t Where it all will end is impossible to foretell; but it seemsthe widespread use of computers and communications satellites will inevitably bring about an explosion of information whicppedoffice to turn out reading matter by the ream. became cheaper still, so much so that by the 1940s one could buya paperback book with the wages of a laborer's half-hour. The typewriter, the spirit duplicator, the mimeograph machine and later, the photocopier, made it easier yet for any well-equiles from their birthplace - in fact or in mind. With the nineteenth and twentieth centuries' development of mechanical typesetting and power presses, printed material class reader began to delve into history, geography and science in a way that would have amazed his ancestors who, unless they became involved in a war, never ventured more than twenty mi appealed to the growing middle class rather than to the old-timeclerical class of literates, began to flower. The same middle As soon as books became cheaper, and more people started reading, the information explosion began to occur. Over the next couple of centuries, such art forms as the novel, whichr- getting that there just wasn't that much around to read. For Charlemagne, literacy would have been about as useful as the ability to program a computer would be for a resident of the Sahara today. When books became cheaper, it became worth while for the ordinary man to learn how to read. We are inclined to look downour noses at illiterate medieval rulers like Charlemagne, foortyor fifty thousand dollars in today's money. That was because each letter in each copy had to be copied by hand. Printing made books much cheaper. highrate of change was the introduction of printing with moveable type. In the Middle Ages, the "twenty volumes of Aristotle, bound in black and red" which the clerk in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales possessed, would have cost the equivalent of perhaps ftionand communication all worked together to put an end to the era of somewhat slower change which we call the Middle Ages. One of the important elements which helped fuel that new When this era began, naturally, depends upon your perspec- tive. Many historians see it as beginning in the Renaissance, when improvements in food production, sanitation, transporta There are as many reasons for wanting to read fast as there are literate people, but all of them stem from a very important and increasingly apparent fact: we are living in an era of VERY RAPID CHANGE. you've awakened to the fact that your novel-reading pace is at a crawl, and ten minutes of reading at that speed puts you into a sound and dreamless sleep. Maybe you have recently retired and have accumulated a fifty-year backlog of things you've always wanted to read. Unfortun- ately, after fifty years of slogging through office memos, Or you are a person who has just moved into a position of newresponsibility, and you have discovered that being an executive means shuffling far too many papers, carrying a heavier brief- case full of "homework," and having less time to yourself. lack information, but rather you cannot deal with the informa- tion you do have quickly enough. Or perhaps you have just gone through a set of exams - SATs or the like - and the results were worse than you anticipated. Maybe it has occurred to you that it is not so much that you Maybe you are a student who is beginning to realize that there are more assignments than you can conveniently attend to; that just READING, to say nothing of STUDYING your assignments is seriously cutting into your loafing and socializing time. Why do you want to read fast, anyhow? Something got you or somebody else to unbelt the money for this program, to say nothing of the investment you already have in your computer. #Nby mid-course #Nby the end of the course. 10. You should be reading a hundred words a minute faster #Nimmediately #Nbefore the end of your first lesson #Ybefore the end of your second lesson #Na return to the old ways of doing things #Nnone of these. 9. In the future, you would infer, we may look for #Na slower rate of change #Nabout the same rate of change #Yan increased rate of change #Nimpoverish one's mind #Yput one to sleep. 8. Reading very slowly tends to #Nincrease concentration #Nenrich one's retirement #Nresult in improved comprehension #Nthe working class #Nroyalty 7. The novel appealed to #Nthe old clerical class of literates #Nthe upper class #Ythe middle class #N250 words per minute #N300 words per minute 6. Most people do not talk more rapidly than #N100 words per minute #N150 words per minute #Y200 words per minute #N200 words per minute #N250 words per minute #N300 words per minute. 5. If you read four hours a day, you can read an extra two books a week if you increase your speed #Y100 words per minute #N150 words per minute #Nmimeograph machines #Nthe spirit duplicator #Ncommunications satellites. 4. One method of spreading information which was NOT mentioned was #NTV #Yradio #Ytens of thousands of dollars #Nhundreds of thousands of dollars. 3. In Chaucer's day, twenty volumes would cost in the #Ntens of dollars #Nhundreds of dollars #Nthousands of dollars #Nthe discovery of the New World #Nthe new popularity of the novel #Nimproved transportation. 2. One of the reasons for the information explosion which began in the Renaissance was given as #Nimproved sanitation #Ythe invention of moveable type #Nto pass tests #Yto cope with the rapid pace of change. 01. The underlying reason for learning to read fast is #Nto become a better student #Nto handle one's job better #Nto enrich one's old age                             #Ywidely read #Na history student 10. You would infer that the author is #Na nineteenth-century scholar #Na systematic reader #Na student of theology #Nthe complexity of the murder #Nthe fact that it was not a whodunit #Nthe nineteenth-century prose 9. The hardest thing about "Crime and Punishment," according to the author, was #Nthe depth of the plot #Ythe names of the characters #Ya historical novel #Nnone of these 8. "The White Company" is #Na mystery #Na romance #Na fantasy #NRabbi Small #NHercule Poirot 7. A detective mentioned in the essay is #NNero Wolfe #NFather Brown #YPeter Wimsey #Nhis father #Yhimself 6. Oedipus, the detective, found the murderer to be #Nhis wife #Nhis son #Nhis daughter #Ntheology #Nmystery 5. Which of these fields was not mentioned? #Nfantasy #Nhistory #Yscience-fiction #NThomas Aquinas #YBunyan 4. One of these authors was NOT mentioned: #NSayers #NDostoyevsky #NTolkien #Nsoccer balls #Nsoftballs 3. The factory where the author worked made #Yfootballs #Nbaseballs #Nbasketballs #Nwrote "Lord of the Rings" #Nwas a friend to C. S. Lewis 2. A. Conan Doyle #Nwrote "Crime and Punishment" #Yapparently killed off his own detective #Ntranslated the "Divine Comedy" #Y"Lord of the Rings" #N"Macbeth" 1. One of these was NOT mentioned as a great murder story: #N"Crime and Punishment" #N"King Oedipus" #N"Agamemnon"          z #     !ıҠıҠİҠ2ıҠıҠıҠıҠıҠıҠıҠard" 71 <"If you don't have the Apple ][e"L ="you will also need:"R Ao F" -> a Language Card" d(4);"BRUN SRT" :4:76 "LOADING Speed Reading Tutor">:k" This program is designed to run on:"q" Apple ][,][plus,][e,//c"#::("If you don't have the Apple //c")"you will need:"- 2" -> an 80 column C 8. Reading over 1000 wpm is #NStage One #NStage Two #NStage Five #YJoshua #NBud. 7. The author has a child named #NJacob #NJoseph #NJesse #Nmaybe #Nnone of your business. 6. The author's answer to "Do you read every single word?" is #Nyes #Nno #Yyes and no #Ndevelop a photographic eye #Ystop hearing it all in your head. 5. If you want to read faster than 600 wpm, you'll need to #Nstop reading silently #Nread and chew gum at the same time #Nskip every other word #Nmiserable #Nefficient oral movement. 4. Moving tongue or larynx while reading is called #Nvocal equipment #Na big step forward #Ywasteful and useless movement #Na child #Nimpolite #Na letter-by-letter reader. 3. In our society a person who moves his lips while reading is regarded as #Ya dimwit #Na Stage One reader #Nwithout pictures #Ysilently. 2. When a child first learns to read, he cannot imagine reading #Nfast #Nword by word #Nletter by letter #Nown logic #Noleaginous mass. 1. Each stage of learning to read seems to have its #Nspeech patterns #Nsystem of sound #Yspeed limits          #Nresolving to stop hearing the words #Na photographic eye. 10. To get to a reading speed of 1000 to 3000 wpm requires #Nan effort of will #Nreading punctuation #Ya lot of practice #NEvery Single Word #Nyour practice readings. 9. The author says you read without hearing #Y"TWO WAY TRAFFIC AHEAD" #N"SLOW" on a stop sign #N"TO HELL WITH GEORGIA" #Nletter-by-letter reading #Yunreliable. 8. You should go after the main idea in a piece of writing because #Nthe facts are not important #Nthe facts are pipe dreams #Yin what he reads and how fast he reads #Nbecause he is very selective. 7. The good reader is flexible #Nbecause he has three reading speeds #Nin what he reads and when he reads #Nbecause he always has a book with him #Nbegin reading it #Nare trained to read it. 6. You ought to read stuff as fast as you #Ncan #Ycan understand it #Ncan speed read #Nconstant #Naggressive. 5. The author's reading speed is #Yvaried #N3000 wpm #N6000 wpm #Nbeing seen on the streets of Manhattan #Nan example of circular process. 4. A bagel twister is described as #Nreading only technical reports #Yhaving a powerful right arm, wrist and shoulder #Nreading all sorts of material #Nemulate Mozart or Washington #Nhave your head examined. 3. If you want to be a good reader, you need to #Nread the lives of great people #Nstand on your head five minutes a day #Yact like a good reader #Nsomething to emulate #Nflexible. 2. One trait of the good reader is that he finds most things #Ntedious #Yinteresting #Nwhere they belong #NJohn F. Kennedy #NJohn S. Bach 1. Which of the following "great people" was mentioned? #NSusan B. Anthony #NGeorge Washington Carver #YAbraham Lincoln          #Nabout every two weeks #Nfor facts. 10. The author often reads #Ngarage calendars #Nbooks about cats #Yin bits and pieces #Ndisagree #Nlook alert. 9. To be an aggressive reader means to #Nbe hostile #Yquestion, evaluate and relate material to experience #Nuse energy sparingly #Nthe main idea includes the most important fact #Nthe main idea is like a dragon in a cellar #Yyou can more easily remember secondary ideas. 8. You would infer from the story that Holmes knows a good deal about #Ncrime #Ngeography #Ymore ability to perceive than Watson #Nbetter manners than Watson. 7. Holmes, the introduction says, has #Nbetter eyes than Watson #Na better education than Watson #Na better brain than Watson #Nthe owner's muscularity #Nthe state of the owner's teeth #Nthe owner's carelessness #Nthe owner's finances. 6. Holmes deduced all the following things except one about the owner of the pipe from the pipe itself; the one he did not is #Ythe owner's age #Ngaslamps #Ybootlaces #Nhats. 5. Pipes, Holmes said, have a lot of individuality; so he said, do #Nglasses #Nshoes #NHolmes smokes a pipe, but we can tell nothing about Watson #NWatson smokes a pipe, but Holmes smokes cigars. 4. From the evidence in the story, #YWatson smokes a pipe, but we can tell nothing about Holmes #Nboth Holmes and Watson smoke pipes #Nneither Holmes nor Watson smokes a pipe #Nlove of amber with embedded flies #Yaffection for the pipe #Nname. 3. From the fact that the pipe had been mended twice, Holmes deduced the owner's #Nsaving habits #Ncomfortable station in life #N"The Stockbroker's Clerk" #N"Why Didn't You Pipe Up?" 2. An appropriate title for this selection might be: #N"A Nervous Client" #N"So Much for Exercise" #Y"How to Read a Pipe" #NDick Tracy #NSir Henry Merrivale #YLew Archer 1. Which of the following detectives was mentioned in the introduction? #NTravis McGee #NSolar Pons          #Nalready known to Holmes and Watson #Nin poor health #Na fellow-detective. 10. When the owner of the pipe appears, you would infer from his appearance and manner that he is #Npoor but well-educated #Ycomfortably off, well-mannered, in good health #NDr. Watson #NGrosvenor. 9. The Holmes stories were written by #NMiss Marple #YA. Conan Doyle #NNero Wolfe #Nhistory #Nastronomy #Ytobacco. 8. Octopuses generally make their homes #Yin caves #Non underwater cliffs #Non the ocean floor #NSanta Monica #NAcapulco. 7. The World's Octopus Wrestling Championship is held in #Nthe Bahamas #NHawaii #YPuget Sound #Ngrow at an average rate and live for many years #Ygrow quickly to adulthood and die at an early age. 6. Octopuses #Ngrow slowly and live long lives #Ngrow quickly and live long lives #Ngrow slowly and die young #N25 years #N40 years. 5. The life-span of the giant octopus, on the outside, is #N15 years #N10 years #Y5 years #Nreluctance to fight #Ypotent stare #Ngrip. 4. The article claims the most impressive thing about the giant octopus is its #Nfriendly nature #Ntendancy to pounce on divers #Yrespect #Njoy #Nrepulsion. 3. Jacques Cousteau said that when a diver sees a giant octopus, he feels a sense of #Nfear #Nhumor #Nforgetful #Nsix-lobed. 2. The brain of the octopus is #Nthe smallest of all sea creatures #Ymore highly developed than its cohabitators of the sea #Nlarge in size but small in capacity #Y"Gravity's Rainbow" #N"Mystic Realms of the Deep" 1. The Thomas Pynchon novel mentioned in this article is #N"Eight Arms to Hold You" #N"Octopuses' Revenge" #N"Agamemnon"          #Nstrong beast of the sea #Nhard animal to appreciate. 10. Overall, the octopus is a #Nvicious creature #Yshy, sensitive, emotional creature #Nstupid creature #Noctopuses of the opposite sex #Nthe color red. 9. Divers get the octopuses out of their caves with #Nbait #Ynoxious chemical smoke-outs #Nropes #Nin coral reefs #Nin sunken vessels. 8. Hallmark turns out #Y10 million cards a day #N10 million cards a year #N80 million cards a year #Na hotbed of poetic talent #Nhaving poor management. 7. Hallmark has a reputation as #Nan unstable institution #Ya proud and dignified company #Na peddler of ego sugar #Yadvertises mostly during the "Hall of Fame" specials on TV #Nhas fired more ad agencies than any other U.S. company. 6. Regarding advertising, Hallmark #Ndoes not believe in advertising #Ncan't seem to find an effective vehicle for their ads #Nadvertises only in magazines and newspapers #Nthe largest private company in the U.S. #Nsuffering in today's marketplace. 5. Hallmark is #Na publicly owned conglomerate #YAmerica's largest "social expression" company #Non the verge of bankruptcy #YHallmark's huge real estate venture #Na gallery displaying paintings used on greeting cards. 4. Crown Center is #Nan auditorium in Kansas City #Nthe nickname for Joyce Hall's house #Nthe part of the brain that sentiment appeals to #Ncreating a market out of Valentine's Day #Ncomputer-authored sentiments. 3. The big change pertaining to greeting cards in the 1950s was #Nputting photographs on them #Nmaking them humorous #Yputting them on display racks in stores #NSeattle #YKansas City 2. In 1915, the first two Hallmark cards went on the market in #NNew York City #NAtlanta #NNashville #YJoyce Hall #NSamuel Johnson 1. The name of the founder of Hallmark is #NDarryl Hall #NRichard Hallmark #NRobert Hall          #N50% cards, 25% school books, 25% paints & pencils #N75% cards, 25% restaurants. 10. Hallmark's total business consists of #Nonly greeting cards #Y60% cards, plus calendars, bath products and figurines #N90% cards, plus a line of candles #Na pioneer in television programming #Nnone of the above 9. Hallmark Hall of Fame has been described as #Na sad waste of the advertising budget #Yan oasis in television's wasteland #Nan obnoxious excuse for TV drama #N50 million cards a day #N5 million cards a month. 8. The story took place in #Nl770 #N1810 #Y1830 #Nfishing #Nnone of these. 7. Murlock made his living by #Ytrapping #Nagriculture #Nodd jobs #Yscared off was a panther #Nbitten in the ear was a leopard. 6. The animal that was #Nkilled was a puma #Nwounded was a wildcat #Ngrazed was a mountain lion #Ndied shortly before Murlock #Nwas well-remembered for her grace and beauty. 5. Murlock's wife #Ndied of a fever #Ndied in childbirth #Yfell into a coma and was revived by shock #Nmusic #Yan artist. 4. Bierce compares grief to #Na fog #Na robber #Na preacher #Nbecause he was depressed #Nto discourage visitors. 3. Murlock boarded the window #Nto keep out the sunshine #Yafter his wife died #Nout of anger #Yfifty and looked seventy #Nof an unspecified age. 2. Murlock was #Nthirty and looked fifty #Nfifty and looked thirty #Nseventy and looked fifty #NAkron #NMilwaukee. 1. The site of Murlock's cottage was near the present city of #NChicago #YCincinnati #NCleveland          #Nhumor #Nnostalgia. 10. This is a tale of #Yhorror #Nadventure #Nromance #Na folk tale told in his town #Ya tale told by his grandfather. 9. The narrator represents the story as #Nfiction #Na memory of his youth #Na tale told by his father #N1842 #N1914. 8. The amount of baseball cards worth over $10 is #Nabout 5 #Nabout 20 #Yabout 200 #Nscorecards #Yhand-painted figurines #Nuniforms 7. Of all baseball memorabilia the largest percentage gainers in recent years are: #Nbaseball cards #Nprograms #Nwas the first card ever put out #Nhas more than one player on it #Nis the only one of its kind in existence 6. The most valuable card that is commonly traded in the $5000-$10,000 range: #Nwas issued by the Topp's Company #Yis of Honus Wagner, a Pittsburgh Pirates Hall of Famer #Yalmost every week #Nonly in major cities 5. Today, there are baseball card meetings or conventions: #Nheld every day #Nbefore the World Series #Nin New York, Mexico and Japan #Nhis teammate was pictured instead of him #Nhe retired before the season so his card should not have been published 4. A mistake made on Lew Burdette's card was: #Yhis name was misspelled #Nit was in black and white #Nhe posed as a right-hander #NTed Williams #NLew Burdette 3. The reigning "glamour boy" of baseball cards is: #NBabe Ruth #YMickey Mantle #NJoe DiMaggio #Y$100 #N$1000 2. Hank Aaron's 1954 baseball card recently sold for: #N$1 #N$10 #N$15 #Ngetting Eddie Plank's card #Ngetting a card in mint condition 1. One great attraction of collecting baseball cards is: #Nthey don't weigh as much as coins #Nthey are remarkably colorful #Ypractically everybody can afford them         #Nread The Sporting News as often as possible #Nlook for cards that are "mistakes" #Yfind out about and collect the cards of today's superstars 10. The author's concluding advice to investors who don't know or care about baseball is: #Nfind another hobby you're really interested in #Ntry to collect the oldest cards you can #NSports Illustrated #NThe Baseball Investor 9. One publication listed in the article is: #YBaseball Hobby News #NThe Wall Street Journal #NBusiness Week #Nabout 2000 #Nover 5000 8. Reading a book at 200 wpm is compared to #Ymarriage #Na ten-year contract #Na house note #N"The Moon is a Harsh Mistress" #N"Number of the Beast" 7. A novel mentioned was #N"Friday" #N"The Star Beast" #Y"Double Star" #YHeinlein #NAnderson 6. An author mentioned was #NAsimov #NClarke #NPohl #Y"White Heat" #N"Catch-22" 5. A movie mentioned in the article was #N"Star Wars" #N"Dial M for Murder" #N"2001" #Nagreement with Aristotle's "Poetics" #Nscholarly reputation 4. A classic is a classic because of its #Nantiquity #Yrepeatability #Nadherence to critical standards #Ymore than twenty times #Nmore than fifty times 3. The author says he has read the "Odyssey" #Ntwice #Nmore than five times #Nmore than ten times #Nthirsty man at an oasis #Ngoat in a junkyard 2. The fast reader reads books like a #Ndrunk in a whiskey store #Nstarving man in a delicatessen #Yglutton eating peanuts #NDostoyevsky #NPushkin 1. The author mentioned a novel by #YTolstoy #NGogol #NHesse !! ! ! ! ! !!!!!!!!!""" " " " ste #Nrereading is necessary only for the slow reader #Nrereading is desirable only for those reading over 2000 wpm 10. You would infer that the author feels that #Nrereading books is a waste of time #None should reread a book only if he has forgotten it #Yrereading books may give one pragmatic standards of ta #NRacine #Ynone of these 9. A tragedian mentioned is #NEuripides #NAeschylus #NShakespeare #Nraising a child #Nnone of these