Passage 2
Questions 6 to 10 are based on the following passage.
I saw Jane last night for the first time in years. She was miserable. She had bleached her hair, trying to hide its true color, just as her rough appearance hid her deep unhappiness. She needed to talk, so we went for a walk. While I thought about my future, the college applications that had recently arrived, she thought about her past, the home she had recently left. Then she spoke. She told me about her love -and I saw a dependent relationship with a dominating man. She told me about the drugs and I saw that they were her escape. She told me about her goals and I saw unrealistic material dreams. She told me she needed a friend -and I saw hope, because at least I could give her that.
We had met in the second grade. Jane was missing a tooth, I was missing my friends. I had just moved across the continent to find cold metal swings and cold smirking faces outside the foreboding doors of my new school. I asked her if I could see her Archie comic book, even though I didn't really like comics; she said yes, even though she didn't really like to share. Maybe we were both looking for a smile. And we found it. We found someone to giggle with late at night, someone to slurp hot chocolate with on the cold winter days when school was canceled and we would sit together by the bay window, watching the snow endlessly falling.
In the summer, at the pool, I got stung by a bee. Jane held my hand and told me that she was there and that it was okay to cry-so I did. In the fall, we raked the leaves into piles and took turns jumping, never afraid because we knew that themulticolored bed would break our fall.
Only now, she had fallen and there was no one to catch her. We hadn't spoken in months, we hadn't seen each other in years. I had moved to California, she had moved out of the house. Our experiences were miles apart, making our hearts much farther away from each other than the continent she had just traversed. Through her words I was alienated, but through her eyes I felt her yearning. She needed support in her search for strength and a new start. She needed my friendship now more than ever. So I took her hand and told her that I was there and that it was okay to cry so she did.
It is implied in Paragraph 1 that Jane's misery might have been caused by______
(67)
(65)
(66)
What are the reasons for the success of eugenics in the U.S.?
(64)
Millions of years later, the earth has stopped rotating on its axis.[ (63)The machine. lands on. a desolate beach where. she Time Traveler discovers the only inhabitants. are giant, evil-looking crabs.] He sets the machine in motion again, and now, thirty million years after leaving the safety of his laboratory, (64)he finds the world . cold, still hulk. faintly ]it by a dying sun.
[(65)Horrified the. Time Traveler sets the machine back. for the return journey, ]and eventually reaches home where he tells his story to his friends. [(66)Disillusioned though he is with she future, the Time Traveler has st off again on a journey through time,]Three years later he has still not returned, and[ (67)his friends can only speculate about what misadventure has overtaken him in the depths of time.]
(From The Time Machine)
(63)
(59)
(60)
What are the influences of eugenics in the U.S. in the 1920s?
(57)
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