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Nanrc

q!111i1sItcacithe lbllorvirrg passaqeand choosethe tresraltenrative


l-tr1e to cornplete
cucirol' thc lirllor.r'inrl
blanks-

'\1 onc ttrrtc. alrnost all


. [ . i i i t i i i i < l l t i r i : r 1 ' t < l r t t c r , S C O : 1tbrms
s t . : i , ] rof
e i iadvertising
a r 1 r ' t i i i i n g :by attomeys
..3h e h i r , h l ; ' 'were
i:} prohibited.

iiigrritl'o1'the profissiort. irr 1977, horvever,the United StatesSup.o'" i;ourt


stunned
thc ir-'gal prolcsstolt by holding that truthful advertisinc cannot be
cornpletely
(2) I ire Ftrst r\mendment protects such advertising. Furthermore.
advct-tisiltg dt>esnot (-1) the sarnedanger as in person solicitation bv an
--
atlonter'' rr(n) (4) of advertising is generally under verv little pressure
--
to buy ilrc :rdvcdiscd product-in this czxe, zurattorne!,s scrvices- (5)
attorncvs ciln L)rhicalll'u.. truthlirl. nonmisleading advertising to {trc general publ-
in
' , t ( i . ' f l , ) 1 , , ( I 1 u t ; r t lcl t t s i l t C s s .

Sttttitcr; lirtr,'c sltowri tliai more than one-tliird of'all attomeys in tl-re cou'try
errrr.ilgclll s()lll. lilt'ltt ol'advcrlisrns lr4oS of it (6) ol- listirrqs in thc
'r -l'hc
.:li.*' I'aqcs. Lrscrl'other rnarketinq tools is also on the
il
\ 1 o r - ' L i t l u t \ l ' ) t l t i l l t , r t t u r r s s p c n t o n t , : l c v i s i o n a < J v c r t i s i n qi n 1 9 9 0 - ( 8 )
i\i,i rrl rtthrrt,'e\ adt'.-rtising clairn that it has rnadc leqal scrviccs pr..>rc
{iii) to llte JrLrbiit:alcl ha:; provided the pul;lic rvith a be11erb:rsis lirr
i, I ]l. rs I ll
" it Il t( )tlP. .t r'.t t i :t ttl c lt t1<',iitctrs.

.r i r o s Llrc e _ astutc
ir t'lltrt:ir,c (l_ {iagiic

il banrrctl c. irrterred
lr sulliccrl d. {brfbited

iI. rcstratrt c c](oncr:lte


lr. con \;cnc t1 pose

i}, iili()ntc_\; C. solicitor


b Jrrrilcssional d rccipient

it, Ncr crtlrcless C. Hcncc


b [ ,lrlirrlrrn:rielv d . I.ikeri,ise

it L ' i ) l l : . 1\ l : , c rr.tltrqirtcs
lr :riil,llrrrrs d tllgrcsscs
-
--)
-1--

7. a , nmltitude nsc
b' dispute o ilcclinc

8- a - consequelrtlv c- as rvell
b- particula-rlv d ioi erainple

9. a- Novices Disserrtels
b Proponcnts d. Trarsients

t0- a- accessible Iinrorous


b. lucrative d. inadvertent

kk-k*-*i'J,:ir*****
F: CLOG

Nanre

Direc'ttons:Re'adthe following passage


andchr:,ose
the bestalte.mative
to complete
eacliofthe followingblanks.

Drouglrt-shessed:"r":,1 cropscanbe tricft:edinto producinga high yietd despite


poor rainfall,Germanscientis{sat JenaUniversitvhavedisconoJ.
- The applir;ationof certainnafuralnitrog,:ncompotrndsreducesthe reactionof
the plantsto (1)__ and increasJ,Or. yield.
hought generates a stressreaction,causingtlre plantsto changetheir chemicat
q)_-- - - , storingorganicnitrogen and cuttin! backthe size of
the earwith therr:sultthat the quality (3)-.- ",r*po,rtra"
bv 60 to 80 percent.
The FoodsciencesInsfituteat Jenahasrnanagedto (5) this
stressreactionttuougha simple (6)_
scientistssprayed**lt-i..iguGa b-l*y *ith nitrogen gompounds--so<;alIed
amino-alcohols-- (7) the alilrrn signal that produces the drought
stressreaction.
"This (8) r:eactionstallilised the barley plants for later real
stresssituations,"a scientistsaid.
Afler beinl;treatedjust oncewith the alarm chernical,the
- 1,ieldduringtimes of
droughtroseby 10 to 2a percenl comparedwith (9).- barle-y.
This simpletrick canb,eappliedto all *.pr r"rg" rrol_
""rr,ul
The processis alsoinelpensiveasthe nitn>gen "" "
clrnpouncls fr" uppfleOit tt.
sametime as(11) "*

1. a. cordiahity c. jeop'ardy
b. extrerru.t_v d. drought

2. a. cornposrition c. reflt:ction
b. calamily d. din

3. a. intirnidates c. decliues
tl. hibemates d. con'r'enes

4. a. relinquishes c. falls
b. tolerates d- dispenses

). il. rveaken c. ratrs:tck


b. inundate d. tral'erse
-z-

6. a. trick c. velocitv
b. pr:face d. culprit

7. a. ac,]ontmodatino c. reversing
b. activating d. eliminating

8. a. deceased c. sober
b. municipal d. initial

9. a. ilft:gible c. tmlreated
b. intimidated d. recoiled

10. a- scale c. forecast


b. a.ltitude d. vicinity

11. a. horils c. versiorx


b. her:bicides d. transients
F: CL0ZE--VOCABULARY

OIRECTIONS:Read the passagecarefu'l1y and choosethe best answerfor each


bl ank.

0i1, t'imber and are amongthe many 2, natural


resources that society e x p l o i t s f o r i t s 3 . , But not all r esour cesar e
n e c e s s a r il y " n a t u r a 1" o r t a n g ' i b l e , nor does this prevent them from being
+. a s w e ll .

R a n k i n gh i g h a mo n ga nation's5. r esour cesar e its intellectual s - -


i t s a c a d e mi csa n d w ri te rs. F o r centur ies l' iter atur e has been 6.
w i n d o wi n t o t h e 7 . o f society, an jntellectual pr oper ty that
6. r e v e a l sa s o c j e t y ' s w i s d o m . A s s u c h , i t j s n u r t u r e da c c o r d ' i n g ' l y .

I r o n i ca l l y, h o w e ve r,th i s aspect of liter atur e - - ' its position as a


v a l u a b l e r eso u rce i n T h a i so ci ety is being g. as pr ofessl ona'l
writersbecomeincreas.ingly10.-withtheamountofmoneytheyreceive
for their 11. W r i t e r s , i t a p p e a r s , a r e n o t i m m u n et o t h e
12.-of''moremoney'.andareno.longerhappyif.'al1.'theyhave to show
'is a h'jgh-qualitypiece
for their 13. of writing publishedin a giossy
14. __ t h e y w a n t t h e i r b a n k a c c o u n t t o s h o wt h e 1 5 . as we]1.

T h e w h o l e c o u n t r y , a l o n g w i t h t h e r e s t o f S o u t h e a sA t s i a , i s m o v i n gi n t o
the 16. ca p j t a l ' i s t m a i n s t r e a m . E v e r y t h j n gt h a t s e l l s j s t u r n e d i n t o
-- 'literature included. 18
a 17.
'l'iterary , publishers havebecome
m o r eb u s j n e s s - m i n d eadn d p u b l i s h i n g o f p i e c e s r s d o n ef o r p r o f i t r a t h e r
than for 19. o r t h e s p r e a d ' i n go f 2 A , thought among the
p u b ' il c .

1. a. wi lderness species
b. wildl ife d. necess' ity

2, a. tangible c. imm aculate


b. convaI escent d. invisible

3. a. dravrback c. 1oss
b. p o 1y g i o t d. benefit

4. a. exp'lo'ited f
exonerated
b. corrected d. ext ri cated
c
a. concrete i n t a n g bi l e
h t o u c h a b le d. qui ntessentia'l

6. d'isp I ayed c. cons'idered


written d. i gnored

7. sou1 c. benedict'ion
eye d. contort i on

L never hard'ly
'ly
vividl y d. f i na1

9. exh'ilarated c. contempiated
pri zed d. overiooked
10. a. scrupulous c. preoccupied
b. typical d. loathed
{t {t . a, w o rk c. coi nc'idence
b. bliss d. lackluster

1' a. co n tro ve rsy c. fate


b. rival d. lure

13. a, co u n te rp a rts c. eccentricity


b. efforts d, amb'iguity

14, a. agony c. magazine


b. legislature d. postscript

{E
a. rarity c. jurisdiction
b. d i ffe re n ce d. multitude

16. a. facetious c. g ' l o b al


b. p u n ctu a l d. illegib'le

17. a. c o ll a t ' i o n c. culprit


b. business d. jeopardy

18. a. Ambiguously c. Inadvertentiy


b. C o r d i a1l y d. Consequently

tY. a. e n te rta i n me n t c. rebuke


b. s u r v e iI l a n c e d. nonentity

20. a. reticent c. inte'l'lectual


b. exempt d. perennial

****t
F:VOCKEY

ANS\\/ER K.EY
Attornel, Advertising

1.b 2.a 3.d 4. 5.c 6.a 7.c 8.d 9.b 10.a


Comet

1. a 2. c 3.b 4.b 5.c 6.c 7.a 8.d 9.c 1 0 .b 1 1 . a


Drought

l.d 2.a 3.c 4.c 5a 6.a 7.b 8.d 9.c l0.a 11.b
Literature

il, timber and I wildlife are


among rhe many2-tangible
naturalresource.s that socieq,
exploltslor ltsrbenefit.But
not all resources ireiiiessur-
ily "natural" or tangibJe, noi does this
preventthemfrombeinCrexploited aswell.
Rantiinghigh amonga;;iiG1 iffanei_
.ble resourcesare its intellecrusl5-fi1,
academics anp^writers.For cenruries litera_
h1t b.:ntglgggg a windowinrorhe
.r*r..
.,/j9{ot soctery,
g,uf_yidly
an intellectualproperlythat
revealsa sociery's wisdom. As
such,it is nurruredaccordingly.
Ironically,
however, this aspec( of Iitera_
ture- itspositionasa valuable resource in
Thai sociery- is being?overlooked as
,^professionalrvriters beco-ffitGingly
luggglggpieg with rhe amount of rnon-ev
they receive for rheir/lu,ork.Writers. it
appeaf are not immurG-io-the/4ure of
"more money" andareno longerfi'aoovif
"all" theyhavero shou,for tf,.i/{ffii, i,
a high-qq.aiirypieceof writing pubiisf,Ed-in
a gloss/Tnagazinc
zlhey u,anttheirbank
accountloshowthe'difference as well.
Tl. wholecounrryJtone;.ithrhe,yesr of
^
Southeast Asia, is moving inro th/Qtobal
capitalist mainsrrein.Everyrhi ng ttriTselts
lt .tuT9dr.,into /)'busines_s- Iiterature
tncluded/JQonggqggnl!]y, publishers have
becomemorebusiness-minded andpublish_
ing of literary pi,egesis done f"'r-pr"nt
rather..than*forlTg4grtgln**1 oi tt.
spreading
ofugerlgg! thoue['iamong
the
puDltc.

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