

Following are answers to the test from the Salina, KS 8th Grade Final Exam for 1895. We did not check the answers for correctness or validity, but it appears to be correct for the most part. The person who put the answers together intended for us to believe that he did it all from memory and it "only took me an hour longer than the allotted time"...our response to this is a a resounding..."YEAH....RIGHT!" There are many spots where you can tell it was a copy and paste job from an internet site on the topic of the question, because no-one actually writes like that normally.
So, whether or not they are all correct or not, we don't know, but here goes nuttin'!...
Answers to 1895 8th
Grade
Final Exam
Grammar (Time, one hour)
1. Give nine rules for the use of Capital Letters.
a.) Capitalize the first word in a sentence.
b.) Capitalize the pronoun I and the interjection O.
c.) Capitalize the first word in a quotation.
d.) Capitalize the first word in a direct question falling within a sentence.
e.) Capitalize all nouns referring to the deity and to the Bible and other
sacred books.
f.) Use a capital letter for President and Presidency when these
refer to the office of President of the United States.
g.) Use a capital letter for official titles before the names of officials.
h.) Capitalize proper nouns and adjectives formed from proper nouns.
i.) Capitalize every word, except conjunctions, articles and short prepositions
in the titles of works of literature, music, art, books, etc. The first word of
a title is always capitalized.
2. Name the Parts of Speech and define those that have no modifications.
a.) Noun
b.) Verb
c.) Adjective
d.) Adverb
e.) Pronoun
f.) Preposition
g.) Conjunction
h.) Interjection
i.) Article
Articles, interjections, conjunctions and prepositions have no modifications.
3. Define Verse, Stanza and Paragraph.
a.) Verse - A sequence of words
arranged metrically according to some system of design; a single line of poetry.
b.) Stanza - A group of lines of verse forming one of the divisions of a
poem or song. It is typically made of four or more lines of verse and typically
has a regular pattern in the number of lines and the arrangement of meter and
rhyme.
c.) Paragraph - A distinct section or subdivision of a chapter, letter,
etc. usually dealing with a particular point. It is begun on a new line, often
indented.
4. What are the Principal Parts of a verb? Give Principal Parts of lie, lay and run.
For verb forms regarded as regular and not
normally indicated include:
a.) Present tenses formed by adding -s to the infinitive (or -es
after o, s, x, z, ch, and sh) as waits, searches;
b.) Past tenses and past participles formed by simply adding -ed
to the infinitive with no other changes in the verb form, as waited,
searched;
c.) Present participles formed by simply adding -ing to the
infinitive with no other changes in the verb form, as waiting, searching;
Principal Parts - lie, lies, lied, lying; lay, lays, laid, laying; run, runs, ran, running. These are all irregular verbs.
5. Define Case, Illustrate each Case.
a.) In English syntax the term "case"
refers to the subjective (or nominative), objective, and possessive
forms of pronouns and the possessive form of nouns. I is the subjective
(or nominative) case of the personal pronoun, me is the objective
case, and my or mine are the possessive case. Mary's
is the possessive case of Mary showing ownership by Mary herself.
6. What is Punctuation? Give rules for principal marks of Punctuation.
a.) Punctuation - the act, practice or
system of using standardized marks in writing and printing in separate sentences
or sentence elements, or to make the meaning clearer.
b.) The Period [.] - use a period at the end of declarative sentences,
indirect questions and most imperative sentences, after most abbreviations. Do
no use a period at the end of a title of a book, article, poem, etc.; In a typed
manuscript, abbreviations and the initials of names do not have spacing after
the periods, i.e., U.S.A., T.S.Eliot, e.g.
c.) The Question Mark [?] - use a question mark at the end of a direct
question, after each query in a series if you wish to emphasize each element.
Use a question mark enclosed in parentheses to express doubt about a word, fact
or number. Do not use a question mark at the end of an indirect question.
d.) The Exclamation Mark [!} - use the exclamation mark after a
particularly forceful interjection or imperative sentence.
e.) The Semicolon [;] - Use a semicolon between two independent clauses
when they are not joined by a coordinating conjunction; to separate clauses
joined only by conjunctive adverbs.
f.) The Colon [:] - Use a colon before a long formal quotation, formal
statement, or a list of items. Use a colon after a main clause when the
succeeding clause or clauses explain the first clause.
g.) The Dash [-] - Use a dash to indicate an abrupt break in the
structure of the sentence or an unfinished statement. Use a dash to set off a
summary or a long appositive.
h.) Parentheses [()] - Use parentheses to enclose material that is
explanatory, supplementary, or exemplifying. Use parentheses to enclose
cross-references.
i.) Quotation Marks [" "] - Use quotation marks to enclose all
direct quotations. Use single quotation marks [' '] to enclose a quotation
within another quotation. Use quotation marks to enclose words spoken of as
words, words used in special senses, or words emphasized.
j.) The Apostrophe ['] - Use the apostrophe to indicate the possessive
case of the noun or pronoun. Use the apostrophe to indicate the omission of
letters or figures. Use the apostrophe to indicate the plurals of figures,
letters, and words referred to as such, i.e., Watch your p's and q's. There are
too many "and's" in your sentence.
k.) The Hyphen [-] - Use the hyphen to divide a word at the end of a
line. Use a hyphen between parts of a compound modifier preceding a noun.
7. Write a composition of about 150 words and show therein that you understand the practical use of the rules of grammar.
Language can be thought of as articulate mind, as the means of becoming human, as the record of wit at play, as the right hand of thought, or as a great reservoir of symbol, but as a working tool it results from the use mankind has made of it.
Literally, no one can discover how a language
is being employed, since language is always changing, and the shifts and
appearances only become apparent later. Practically, however, we have devices
for discovering what a language has been, what it is now, and even what it is
becoming.
Not always has man improved his language. As more widespread communication between peoples comes to pass, most languages are losing their "purity", becoming a polyglot of the many. This is not all bad. Each people and languages have something to give, something to share, and something to take, to enrich the lives of all mankind.
Arithmetic (Time, 1.25 hours)
1. Name and define the Fundamental Rules of Arithmetic.
a.)
The Fundamental Rules of Arithmetic are Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication
and Division.
b.) Addition - the summing of a set of numbers to obtain the total
quantity of items to which the number set refers indicated in arithmetic by +
.
c.) Subtraction - the mathematical process of finding the difference
between two numbers or quantities, indicated in arithmetic by - .
d.) Multiplication - the mathematical process of finding a number or
quantity (the product) obtained by repeating a specified number or
quantity a (the multiplicand) a specified number of times (the multiplier),
indicated in arithmetic by X .
e.) Division - the mathematical process of finding how many times a
number (the divisor) is contained in another number (the dividend);
the number of times constitutes the quotient, indicated in arithmetic by ÷
.
2. A wagon box is 2 ft. deep, 10 feet long, and 3 ft. wide. How many bushels of wheat will it hold?
The wagon box contains 2 x 10 x 3 = 60 cubic feet. A struck bushel equals 1 1/4 cubic feet. A heaped bushel in general equals 1 1/4 struck bushels. Therefore the wagon box if heaped contains 60 bushels and if struck, 1/5th less or 48 bushels.
3. If a load of wheat weighs 3942 lbs., what is it worth at 50 cts. per bu, deducting 1050 lbs. for tare?
The actual weight of the wheat, subtracting the tare of the wagon weight of 1050 lbs is 2892 lbs. A fully ripe and dried struck bushel of wheat weighs on average 58 lbs per bushel. Therefore the solution is 2892 ÷ 58 X $.50 = $24.93
4. District No. 33 has a valuation of $35,000. What is the necessary levy to carry on a school seven months at $50 per month, and have $104 for incidentals?
The cost of 7 months of school equals $50 X 7 + $104, therefore $454.The mil levy is therefore $454 ÷ $35,000 which equals .013 levy or $1.30 per $100 valuation of the district.
5. Find cost of 6720 lbs. coal at $6.00 per ton.
One ton equals 2000 lbs, therefore 6720 ÷ 2000 X $6 = $20.16
6. Find the interest of $512.60 for 8 months and 18 days at 7 percent.
A banking month is 30 days, or 360 days per year. If the principal is held for 258 days the proportional interest for the period held is 258 ÷ 360 X $512.60 X 7% or $25.72
7. What is the cost of 40 boards 12 inches wide and 16 ft. long at $20 per meter?
One board foot is measured as 1 inch thick by 12 inches wide by 1 foot long. Assuming that each board is 1 inch in thickness and the cost indicated presumes to ask for the conversion of board feet to meters the following is the answer:
1 meter = 3.28 feet therefore 16 ÷ 3.28 = 4.88 (meters) 4.88 X 40 = 195.2 (board meters) 195.2 X $20 = $3904.00
To verify the lumber is $20 (per meter) ÷ 3.28(feet in a meter) = $6.10 per board foot. There is a total of 640 board feet (16 X 40 = 640) therefore $6.10 X 640 = $3904.00
8. Find bank discount on $300 for 90 days (no grace) at 10 percent.
90 days is 3 months, 1/4 of the banking year, therefore the discount is .10 ÷ 4 X $300 = $7.50
9. What is the cost of a square farm at $15 per acre, the distance around which is 640 rods?
1 rod is 5.5 yards, an acre is 4840 square yards therefore an acre is 880 square rods (not 256) An acre is 16 rods square or 256 square rods. The farm has each side of 160 rods or 160 rods square, therefore 25600 square rods, and is 100 acres in extent and $1500 in value.
10. Write a Bank Check, a
Promissory Note, and a Receipt. Bank Check
|
Farmer's Coop Bank |
1895 |
|
|
Salina,
Kansas |
June
1, 1894 |
|
|
Received Of |
John
Q. Parent |
$57.16 |
|
Fifty Seven and 16/100
--------------------------------- |
Dollars |
|
|
1894-95 Tuition - James |
Roscoe
R. Pound,Chmn. |
|
U.S. History (Time, 45 minutes)
1. Give the epochs into which U.S. History is divided.
The History of the United States of America is divided into these several epochs:
a.)
Period of Discovery and Settlement (1492 - 1690)
b.) Expansion of the Colonies (1690 - 1763)
c.) Securing Independence (1763 - 1774)
d.) The Critical Period (1774 - 1780)
e.) Testing Self-Government and the Constitution (1780 - 1840)
f.) Straining the Constitution (1840 - 1876)
g.) The United States - A Greater Nation (to present)
2. Give an account of the discovery of America by Columbus.
Although Leif the Lucky, known to
history as Leif Ericson, a hardy Norseman from Greenland, discovered and
established outposts along the northern coasts of America fully 500 years before
Columbus, Christopher Columbus, a Genoese Italian mariner, is generally
accredited with the modern discovery of America, although he never set foot on
the mainland.
In his boyhood Columbus had studied drawing,
geography and astronomy. He had been a sailor on the Mediterranean. He made his
way to Lisbon, Spain, where he became a mapmaker, under the tutelage of a
mariner whose patron was Prince Henry the Navigator. Becoming convinced that the
world was a sphere; he sought to prove that the shortest distance to the East
Indies was by sailing westward. He had the map of Toscanelli, and believed it
was correct. Probably about 1474 he began to seek the means to furnish a fleet,
seeking aid from Genoa, Portugal, Venice, France, and England. The King of
Portugal sent a secret expedition westward to test the idea of Columbus, but
they returned without sighting land. For ten long years Columbus endured these
rebuffs, and secretly left Portugal for Spain toward the end of 1484. Queen
Isabella finally gave her approval and remained his best friend during the rest
of her life. She furnished fully half the money needed for the voyage. The fleet
consisted of three vessels, small caravels furnished by the town of Palos. The
largest, the Santa Maria was only sixty-three feet long and twenty
feet in breadth. She had a small cabin, while the other two, the Pinta
and the Nina were open boats with high bows and sterns, the better
to ride the waves. Columbus commanded the Santa Maria as well as
the fleet. The captains of the other two boats were the brothers Pinzon.
They sailed from Palos on August 3, 1492, and headed into unknown waters. It was not long before the crews wanted to turn back, threatening mutiny, as all kinds of fears and superstitions troubled them. The courage and determination of Columbus was equal to every occasion, holding the crews to their work. Early on the morning of October 12, 1492 they sighted one of the Bahama Islands. They had found a new world. Columbus thought he had found a part of India, and so he called the natives there Indians. They have been called Indians ever since. But we know they are not, they are the Native Americans. We celebrate October 12 as a school holiday, Columbus Day.
3. Relate the causes and results of the Revolutionary War.
The causes of the War for Independence from Great Britain were many. The colonies had by 1763 already shown independence by quarreling with the royal governors, insisting on ever-greater measures of self-government. In 1763, after the Treaty of Paris, France created New France, the province of Quebec. A line was drawn along the mountain sources of the rivers flowing into the Atlantic, and the colonies were forbidden to plant settlements beyond that line.
In 1760 George III had become king and his
attempts at arbitrary rule made the Englishmen at home fear for their liberties
and finally helped drive the colonials into a rebellion.
George tried to enforce the Cromwell's old
Navigation Act of 1651 to stop smuggling, which was the life-blood of the
colonials. To do this a mean measure was adopted. This was the issuing of Writs
of Assistance. These were search warrants in blank. Any officer of the crown
could write anybody's name in the blank line and proceed to search on the
suspicion of there being smuggled goods in his home or store. Boston merchants
resisted, engaging a lawyer James Otis to take the case to court. The case was
lost, but Otis made the most eloquent speech that echoed through all the
colonies. Among other things he claimed, "A man's home was his
castle." When the case was lost, John Adams and the others left the crowded
room ready to take up arms against the Writs of Assistance. "Then and
there," wrote Adams, "the child, independence, was born."
The wrangle over taxation culminated with the
Stamp Act of 1765. The colonials did not object to taxes, they knew that
government costs money, that it was the duty of every citizen to pay his just
share of the tax. But they objected mightily to the method of levying and
collecting taxes. In Great Britain, no tax could be levied without the consent
of Parliament. In the colonies, no tax could be levied without the consent of
the legislatures. The colonials shouted: "Taxation without representation
is tyranny!" King George and his ministers paid no attention to the legal
rights of the colonials. Seeing that the Navigation Acts were not defeating
smuggling, they adopted a new tax scheme, the Stamp Act, whereby every legal
document, every newspaper, every bill of merchandise, almost every form of paper
had to bear an official stamp. Benjamin Franklin was in London as agent for
Pennsylvania and tried to prevent the enactment of the law, but he said he might
as well have tried to prevent the sun from setting.
From then on, throughout the larger cities the
colonists organized a secret society, "The Sons of Liberty." They
opposed the Stamp Act in every possible way, and were by no means gentle in
their methods. The Stamp Act was repealed in 1766, but replaced by the even more
onerous Townshend Acts of 1767. Samuel Adams, the "Father of the
Revolution" started a new and effective kind of resistance, drawing up a
circular letter, which was adopted by the Massachusetts legislature and sent to
the other colonies. This produced united action of protest against the new acts.
General Gage arrived with four regiments as
the new military governor of Massachusetts to enforce the acts. On June 17,
1774, Samuel Adams introduced a resolution to the legislature calling for a
Colonial Congress to combat these oppressive measures and acts. Gage heard about
the resolution and hurriedly sent a messenger to deliver a proclamation
dissolving the assembly. The messenger found the door locked, and was not opened
until the resolution was adopted. From then on the rest is history. The First
Continental Congress met September 5, 1774. From that moment it was clear the
colonies were ready to lay aside all their differences in the presence of
threatened attacks upon their liberties.
4. Show the territorial growth of the United States.
After the War for Independence, the acknowledged boundaries of the United States in 1783 were:
On the north the St. Lawrence River and the Great Lakes, on the west the Mississippi River, and on the south, the northern border of the Floridas extending eastward from the mouth of the Mississippi, and of course, on the east the Atlantic Ocean.
In 1803, President Thomas Jefferson acquired
the ownership of the French province of Louisiana, a vast tract extending from
the Gulf of Mexico at New Orleans west to the mountain sources of the
Mississippi tributaries, more than doubling the size of the United States. He
purchased the territory for $15,000,000 from Napoleon, then at war with Britain.
He would rather see it in the hands of the Americans than see it captured by the
ancient enemy of France. The invention of the steamboat quickly opened up
settlement of the territory.
In 1819 the Floridas were purchased from
Spain, after a treaty framed by John Quincy Adams, for $5,000,000, securing the
southern border and the whole of the Atlantic seaboard. General Andrew Jackson,
sent to stop Indian troubles along the Florida border with Georgia had, for all
intents and purposes, already militarily secured the area.
By 1843 the northern border between Canada and
the US west of the Great Lakes was fixed along the 49th parallel, and included
all of the Oregon country below that line to the Pacific Ocean.
In 1835 Texas seceded from Mexico, and at once
asked for admission to the Union. President Van Buren refused his assent,
fearing war with Mexico. Texas then became the "Lone Star Republic."
Northern opposition to annexation weakened by 1845 and the Polk administration,
and Texas was admitted as a slave state.
Due to the dispute over the southern boundary of Texas, when Mexicans crossed the Rio Grande on April 23, 1846 and killed every man of a small army scouting party, war was declared with Mexico, May 13, 1846. General Zachary Taylor, immediately after the ambush of the scouting party, began to prosecute the war, and routed the Mexicans. Subsequently much of Mexico was conquered including Mexico City, which practically ended the war. With the treaty of peace of 1848, in which we annexed all of California and New Mexico, we paid Mexico $15,000,000 "in consideration of the extension acquired by the boundaries of the United States," as the words of the treaty put it. It was thought that the boundary dispute was now settled, but another arose over the boundary of what are now Arizona and New Mexico. This was settled by acquiring more land in 1853, and paying an additional $10,000,000.
Such now are the boundary extents of the
United States of America.
5. Tell what you can of the history of Kansas.
Kansas has had a dramatic history, even before it became the 34th state in 1861. Historians have reported that Native Americans were living in Kansas as early as 12,000 B.C. (?) They were followed for centuries by many different tribes making the history of Kansas entwined with the first Americans.
Between 1541 and 1739 explorers from Spain and
France came to the area in search of gold, knowledge, and trade with the
Indians. In 1803, Kansas became a part of the United States as part of the
Louisiana Purchase. Fifty-one years later it was organized as a territory, which
included the eastern half of Colorado.
Conflict over slavery led to bloody battles
between free-staters (anti-slavery) and pro-slavery forces. This led to the
attack on Lawrence by pro-slavery forces and the widespread public outcry
associated with "Bleeding Kansas." Kansas became part of the United
States as a free state in 1861.
After the War for Southern Independence,
expansion of the rail system to Kansas and the increasing stream of immigrants
lured to the state by offers of cheap land, Native Americans were forced into
smaller and smaller reservations. Ultimately their removal to Indian Territory
forced the final confrontation in the late 1870s that ended the independent life
of the Native Americans.
The establishment of military posts, to
protect the railroads and trails used by immigrants, led to the establishment of
small towns that followed the posts. By 1870, the Kansas cow towns, following
the westward expansion of the railroads, became well established. Such towns as
Dodge City, Abilene, Caldwell, Newton, Wichita and Salina took their turns as
the Queens of the Trail. To this day, the cattle industry remains an important
part of the state's economy.
The introduction of Turkey Red Winter Wheat by
Mennonites from Russia in 1874 was a milestone in Kansas’ agriculture. The
wheat was ideally suited to the Kansas climate and has made Kansas one of the
leading wheat-producing states in the nation.
6. Describe three of the most prominent battles of the Rebellion.
The Battle of Chancellorsville, May 2 - 3,
1863 marked the turning point for the Confederates, even though it was a
victory. General Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson was killed and as General
Lee said, he had lost his "right arm".
The Battle of Gettysburg, July 1-3, 1863, was
the greatest battle of the world to that time. The Confederates were elated with
their victories at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville and Lee was urged to
carry the war into the North and compel the granting of a peace satisfactory to
the South. With an army of 70,000 men, he crossed the Potomac, marched across
Maryland and into Pennsylvania. There the Army of the Potomac overtook him,
90,000 strong, under General Meade at the village of Gettysburg. On the first
and second days the Confederates gained ground and control. On the third day the
Union troops ceased firing to let the cannons cool. Lee thought that he had
"silenced" the enemy's guns, and ordered Pickett's division of
infantry to charge across the valley and pierce the Union lines. As 15,000 men
marched out of the forest of oaks into the open valley, the Union cannons opened
fire. Great holes were torn in the ranks. As they drew nearer the Union rifles
mowed them down. They closed ranks, charged the ridge, and the advance had
reached a hand-to-hand fight when "retreat" was sounded, leaving the
valley strewn with dead. The point reached by that charge is marked by a
monument in the form of a large bronze book on which is inscribed, "High-water
Mark of the Rebellion."
The Siege of Vicksburg, May 19th
to July 4th, 1863, returned control of the entire Mississippi
River and valley to the Union. Grant and Sherman had been repulsed in their
first attempts to take that stronghold. Grant moved his army down the west bank
of the river. He had his gunboats run past the forts, and marched his troops
below Vicksburg, and re-crossed for an attack from the rear. He got between the
Confederate armies of Generals Johnston and Pemberton, made Johnston retreat and
drove Pemberton, after hard fighting, into Vicksburg. Grant then settled down
(May 19) for a siege. Continually bombarding the city, he cut the city off from
all supplies until the people were forced to eat the mules and rats. There was
no relief and no escape. Pemberton surrendered with 32,000 prisoners (July 4),
and the Union soldiers promptly shared their food with the starving men, women
and children.
7. Who were the following: Morse, Whitney, Fulton, Bell, Lincoln, Penn, and Howe?
Samuel F.B. Morse
-- inventor of the
telegraph in 1840. After waiting for four years for the needed help, the first
telegraph line in the world was built from Washington, D.C to Baltimore, and on
May 24th, 1844, Professor Morse tapped out the first message "What hath God
wrought?" in the Supreme Court room and it was returned from Baltimore.
Those four words from the Bible announced one of the greatest inventions in the
world's history.
Eli Whitney
- Inventor of the cotton
gin, in 1793, that made raising cotton profitable in the South. Without the gin,
slave holdings had been becoming unprofitable and were dying out. Before the
gin, it took a day's work by a slave to pick the seeds from a pound of cotton.
With the gin, a single slave could separate and clean a thousand pounds of
cotton a day. This led to the expansion of cotton plantings all across the South
into Texas, releasing slaves to do field work instead of picking cottonseed from
the linters, greatly prolonging the institution of slavery in the South.
Robert Fulton
- the inventor of the
first successful steam powered paddlewheel boat, the Clermont. It was
powered by an engine brought from England. On March 11, 1807, it paddled up the
Hudson River from New York to Albany, a distance of one hundred and fifty miles,
in thirty-two hours. That was an event far greater than a victory in war, for it
increased the power and advanced the civilization of the whole human race. The
era of the steamboat has opened up the west, the rivers the highways of
commerce. There have been over 10,000 steamboats operating on our rivers.
Alexander Graham Bell
- inventor of the
telephone, which made possible long-distance voice communication between people
everywhere. The invention of the telephone grew out of improvements Bell had
made to the telegraph. In 1875, along with his assistant Thomas A. Watson, Bell
constructed instruments that transmitted recognizable voice-like sounds. Bell's
first telephone patent was granted on March 7, 1876. The first telephone
company, Bell Telephone Company, was founded on July 9, 1877. We have a
telephone in our house in the hall. The line from our neighbor's to our house
runs through the barbed wire on our fences.
Abraham Lincoln
- a Representative from
Illinois and 16th President of the United States; born in Hardin County, Ky.,
February 12, 1809. He moved with his parents to a tract on Little Pigeon Creek,
Ind., in 1816 and attended a log-cabin school at short intervals and was mostly
self-instructed in elementary branches. He moved with his father to Macon
County, Ill. in 1830 and later to Coles County, Ill. He read the principles of
law and works on surveying. During the Black Hawk War he volunteered in a
company of Sangamon County Rifles organized April 21, 1832 and was elected its
captain and served until May 27 following, when the company was mustered out of
service. He reenlisted as a private and served until mustered out June 16, 1832,
returning to New Salem, Ill. He was unsuccessful as a candidate for the State
house of representatives. He entered business as a general merchant in New Salem
and was postmaster of New Salem from 1833-1836. He became deputy county surveyor
from 1834-1836. Elected a member of the State house of representatives in 1834,
1836, 1838, and 1840, he declined to be a candidate for renomination. He was
admitted to the bar in 1836, moved to Springfield, Ill. in 1837 and engaged in
the practice of law. He was elected as a Whig to the Thirtieth Congress (March
4, 1847-March 3, 1849) but did not seek a renomination in 1848. As an
unsuccessful applicant for Commissioner of the General Land Office under
President Taylor, he was tendered the Governorship of Oregon Territory, but
declined. Again he was an unsuccessful Whig candidate for election to the United
States Senate before the legislature of 1855 and again unsuccessful Republican
candidate for the United States Senate in 1858. He was elected as a Republican
President of the United States in 1860 and reelected in 1864, serving from March
4, 1861, until his death by assassination. He was shot in the head by the actor
John Wilkes Boothe as he attended a play in Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C.,
April 14, 1865. He died the following day, April 15, 1865. He was our president
and Commander-in-Chief during the War Between the States, determined that the
Union should not perish.
William Penn
- The founder of the
colony of Pennsylvania in 1682, who had earlier bought the Jerseys as a refuge
for Quakers. He was a prolific writer, and his greatest book was entitled
"No Cross, No Crown", which gained him reputation even among those who
hated his religion. The king of England owed Penn's estate a very large debt,
fifteen thousand pounds, and by granting Penn's request for a tract of land,
settled the debt. When the boundaries were finally set, the tract contained
about 45,000 square miles. Penn was liberal to all white men and Indians, early
deciding that in Pennsylvania there should be perfect freedom of conscience, and
freedom of worship. Knowing that people loved freedom of government as well as
freedom of conscience, he decided that the people themselves should rule. In
1683 he laid out the plan of a city, which he called Philadelphia, meaning
"brotherly love." All treaties and agreements that were made with the
Indians and others were faithfully kept. The government that Penn established
for his colony was true to his promises of freedom. Each settler as he became a
landholder or taxpayer had the right to vote, electing the members of the
council and the assembly. The people, in that way, made their own laws. The
first laws provided for the kind treatment of the Indians, that prisoners should
be treated humanely, that each child should be schooled and taught a trade, that
trial by jury should be extended to all, and that death should be the penalty
for only two crimes, murder and treason. His beneficent understanding of the
importance of freedom to prosperity of a people presaged much of the ideals of
our Constitution.
Elias Howe - Inventor of the sewing machine, was the son of a Massachusetts farmer, and worked in a factory for fifty cents a day. In his spare moments he worked on his invention, which appeared in 1845 as the first sewing machine. His patents earned for him more than two million dollars.
8. Name events connected with the following dates: 1607, 1620, 1800, 1849, and 1865?
1607
- Establishment of Jamestown
colony, May 1607, in what is now Virginia. Captain John Smith had but one rule, "He
that will not work shall not eat."
1620
- On December 21, 1620, the
landing of the Pilgrims in Plymouth harbor began the settlement of New England
under William Bradford, loved and respected as a man of courage and gentleness
from the time of his first election as governor in 1621 until his death in 1657.
Myles Standish was the captain of the little army protecting the colony, a wise,
courageous and helpful soldier, kind to the sick and needy.
1800
- In the election of 1800, Thomas
Jefferson and Aaron Burr received an equal number of votes.
As the Constitution provided that the person having the greatest number
should be president, it became the duty of the House of Representatives, voting
by states, to decide between the two. After thirty-five ballots the choice fell
upon Thomas Jefferson, our third and greatest president, author of the
Declaration of Independence, and the mentor of James Madison, "Father of
the Constitution". It was on Jefferson's insistence that Madison championed
the first 10 articles of amendment to the Constitution, "The Bill of
Rights."
1849
- The Gold Rush to California
began after discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill on the "American Fork"
of the Sacramento River February 1848. The great discovery was made just as
California became American territory. In the first year more than 80,000 men
flocked to the "diggings", risking all to the dangers from Indians,
starvation, accident, mountains, deserts and plains, tropical fevers and of the
sea in the voyage around Cape Horn. The rapid growth of California in people and
business greatly affected the nation as a whole. At that time 300,000 people
every year were streaming in from Europe to escape the tyranny and wars there.
1865
- The end of the “War Between
The States” signified with the raising of the flag again at Fort Sumpter,
April 14, 1865, the assassination of President Lincoln at Ford's Theater that
day, and his death April 15, 1865. The war was over; a million troops of the
Union armies marched through Washington in a last review, were mustered out, and
returned to their homes to resume their work as citizens of a reunited nation.
Orthography (Time, one hour)
1. What is meant by the following: Alphabet, phonetic orthography, etymology, syllabication?
a.) Alphabet - A system of characters,
signs and symbols used to indicate letters or speech sounds, the basis of all
writing.
b.) Phonetic orthography - The standardization of the sounds of the
letters of the alphabet in accordance with accepted usage. This varies from area
to area within our nation, but is becoming more and more uniform as
communication and travel between the sections increases.
c.) Etymology -- The study of the origin and development of a word,
tracing it back to its original language and to its sources in contemporary or
earlier languages.
d.) Syllabication - The process of dividing a word into syllables, to
determine the phonemic sound, the accent, and roots, to enable the reader to
better grasp the meaning and pronounce the word in speech and writing.
2. What are elementary sounds? How classified?
The elementary sounds are the consonants
and vowels. A consonant is any speech sound produced by stopping
and releasing the air stream (p, t, k, b, d, g), by stopping it at one point
while it escapes at another (m, n, l, r), by forcing it through a loosely closed
or vary narrow passage (f, v, s, z, sh, zh, th, H, kh, h, w, y) or a combination
of these means. A vowel (a, e, i, o, u and sometimes y) is a voiced
speech sound characterized by generalized friction of the air passing in a
continuous stream through the pharynx and open mouth, but with no constriction
narrow enough to produce local friction.
Phonemes
include all significant
differences of sound, including features of voicing, place and manner of
articulation, accent, and secondary features of nasalization, glottalization,
labialization, and the like. Labial sounds are mainly formed by the lips;
glottal speech sounds are formed mainly by closure of the glottis; nasal sounds
are formed primarily by resonance in the nasal passages.
3. What are the following, and give examples of each: Trigraph, subvocals, diphthong, cognate letters, linguals?
a.) A trigraph is a combination of
three letters representing one sound. An example is eau as in bureau.
b.) A subvocal is beneath the voice, a silent or nearly silent sound.
c.) A diphthong is a complex vowel sound made by gliding continuously
from the position of one vowel to that for another within the same syllable. An
example is (ou) as in down.
d.) Cognate letters are related in derivation, for instance, i and
y.
e.) Linguals are sounds articulated by using the tongue, for instance the
sound th.
4. Give four substitutes for caret 'u'.
Substitutes for caret 'u' are oo as in tool, eau as in bureau, ew as in crew.
5. Give two rules for spelling words with final 'e'. Name two exceptions under each rule.
a.)
When spelling words having a final silent e, drop the e when adding a
suffix beginning with a vowel. Exceptions - knowledgeable, despiteous
b.) If the suffix or verb ending begins with a consonant, keep the final e.
Exceptions - truly, judgment
6. Give two uses of silent letters in spelling. Illustrate each.
Sometimes
words have silent letters. These follow patterns that can be memorized.
Examples:
gn, pn, kn = n as in gnome, pneumonia, knife
rh, wr = r as in rhyme, wrestle
pt, ght = t as in ptomaine, height
ps, sc = s as in psalm, science
wh = h as in whole
7. Define the following prefixes and use in connection with a word: bi, dis, mis, pre, semi, post, non, inter, mono, sup.
a.)
bi - having two elements or natures, i.e., biangular, bifurcated.
b.) dis - meaning away or apart from, i.e., disassemble, disregard.
c.) mis - meaning wrong, wrongly, bad, badly, i.e., misstep, misapply.
d.) pre - meaning before, ahead of, i.e., predate, prescience.
e.) semi - meaning not whole, partly, not fully, i.e., semicircle, semifinal.
f.) post - meaning after, behind, i.e., postscript, postpartum.
g.) non - meaning not, i.e., nonhuman, nonagressive.
h.) inter - meaning between, among, or reciprocal, i.e., intercede,
interchangeable.
i.) mono - meaning one, single, alone, i.e., monocline, monotheism.
j.) sup - meaning above, over, on top of, i.e., superabundant, superpose.
8. Mark diacritically and divide into
syllables the following, and name the sign that indicates the sound: Card, ball,
mercy, sir, odd, cell, rise, blood, fare, last.
[ Note: due to the limitations of html, the "macron" diacritical mark
for vowels, a dash over the vowel, signifying the sound of the vowel name, is
shown as ¯a, ¯e, ¯i, ¯o, ¯u ]
card = cärd, ball = bôl; mercy = mur'c¯e; sir = sur; odd = ãd; cell = sel; rise = r¯is; blood = blud; fare = fer; last ~ last
9. Use the following correctly in sentences, Cite, site, sight, fane, fain, feign, vane, vain, vein, raze, raise, rays.
a.)
The cite which was given as a source for the quote was incorrect.
b.) The site was surveyed yesterday.
c.) My rifle has a front and a rear sight.
d.) We celebrated the re-birth at fane.
f.) She would fain stay with her husband.
g.) Can she feign surprise and excitement?
h.) The vanes on the windmill are broken.
i.) It is vain to think you are better than others.
j.) Mother has a varicose vein in her leg.
k.) Tomorrow they will raze the old barn.
l.) Today they started to raise a new barn.
m.) The rays of the sun feel good in the spring.
10. Write 10 words frequently
mispronounced and indicate pronunciation by use of diacritical marks and by
syllabication.
a.)
anonymity == an' o nym' i ty
b.) bestial == b¯es' tyal
c.) Capernaum == Ca pur' na um
d.) datum == d¯at' um
e.) either == ¯e' ther
f.) financier == fin' an sir'
g.) get == get
h.) homonym == häm' a nim
i.) inchoate == in k¯o' it
j.) I couldn't think of one starting with a "j", so, Salina == Sa l¯i'
na , not Sa l¯e' na
Geography (Time, one hour)
1. What is climate? Upon what does climate depend?
a.) Climate is the prevailing or average
weather of a place as determined by the temperature and meteorological changes
over a period of years.
b.) The climate of a place depends largely on the latitude of the place, the
features of the surrounding terrain, the nearness to an ocean, or a mountain
range which channels and directs wind patterns. We have seasons in our weather
pattern, and changes in the length of the warming day throughout the year, due
to the ecliptic of the earth's annual path around the sun. It is the daily
warming and cooling of the land and oceans that is the prime generator of the
world weather system.
2. How do you account for the extremes of climate in Kansas?
The extremes of climate in Kansas are
predicated on the fact that the state is in the middle of the continent and the
great plains, not near any mountains or oceans, exposed in winter to cold winds
from the north in Canada, and in summer to heavy moisture laden winds from the
Gulf of Mexico. It is the meeting of these two wind sources in fall that creates
the huge wind vortices and deep moist convections that become the tornadoes that
are a yearly danger in Kansas.
3. Of what use are rivers? Of what use is the ocean?
a.) Rivers have many uses: first, to drain off
excess water from the land surface; secondly, to replenish the aquifers under
their stream bead and underlying all of Kansas and from which we get most all of
our water for irrigation and human consumption; thirdly, the river is a highway
of commerce, with the steamboats reaching far into the west; and fourthly, as an
area of recreation, fishing, boating and swimming.
b.) Oceans are the reservoir for the majority of heat received from the sun, for
the runoff of all rivers and aquifers, the source of most all rain from the
evaporation of the surface waters, and the engine which drives our weather
patterns, and the moderator of coastal climates. The ocean fisheries are a major
source of protein to many of the world's peoples. International commerce would
not be possible except for the navigation of the oceans.
4. Describe the mountains of North America.
The mountains of North America lay in four
great chains, oriented generally north to south. They are in order from East to
West, the Appalachian/Adirondack chain inland from the Atlantic Coast, which
includes the Blue Ridge and Smokey Mountains. They are an old range, worn down
thru the eons. Across the Great Planes from them, midway to the Rocky Mountains,
are the Black Hills of the Dakotas, somewhat isolated from the Rockies. The
Rocky Mountains, consisting of many parallel ranges, are located at the western
boundary of Montana, running southeasterly from the Yukon to Arizona and New
Mexico. They form the Continental Divide, which determines the course of the
rivers emptying into the Mississippi drainage, and those emptying into the
Pacific Ocean. The high plateaus and basins of Utah and Nevada by and large
intervene between the Rockies and the next great chain, the Sierra mountain
range in California and the extension northward in Oregon and Washington State,
where they are called the Cascade Range. Beyond the Sierra/Cascades across the
interior valleys of California and Oregon is the Coastal Range, lying quite
close to the Pacific Ocean. Westerly from the Cascades in Washington on the
Pacific Coast is the Olympic range north of the Columbia River forming the
Olympic peninsula. The Olympics have one of the important rainforests of the
world and are a valuable source for timber, as are all the mountain ranges of
North America. Most mining in North America is in the mountains, the Eastern
Mountains are a source of coal and iron, and the Rockies and Sierras are a
source of gold, silver and other metals.
5. Name and describe the following: Monrovia, Odessa, Denver, Manitoba, Hecla, Yukon, St. Helena, Juan Fernandez, Aspinwall and Orinoco.
a.) Monrovia City is the capital of the nation
of Monrovia, on the Atlantic Ocean, at the mouth of the Saint Paul River.
Situated on Bushrod Island and Cape Mesurado, it is the nation's chief port and
commercial center. It has extensive docks. Iron ore and rubber are major
exports; substantial quantities of imports are transshipped to neighboring
countries. The University of Liberia (founded in 1862) is here.
Monrovia was founded in 1822 by the American Colonization Society as a
refuge for freed slaves from North America; it was named in honor of United
States president James Monroe. Large numbers of former slaves have been
resettled here.
b.) Odessa is capital of Odessa region of the
Ukraine, a port on Odessa Bay of the Black Sea. The third largest Ukrainian city
after Kiev and Kharkiv, Odessa is an important rail junction and transportation
hub. Grain, sugar, coal, cement, metals, jute, and timber are the chief items of
trade at the port of Odessa, which is the leading Ukrainian Black Sea port.
Odessa is also a naval base and the homeport of fishing and an Antarctic whaling
fleet. The city's industries include shipbuilding, machine building,
metalworking, food processing, and the manufacture of chemicals, machine tools,
clothing, and products made of wood, jute, and silk. Health resorts are located
nearby. Odessa has a university (est. 1865), an opera and ballet theater (1809),
a historical museum (1825), a municipal library (1830), an astronomical
observatory (1871), and an opera house (1883-87). Ukrainians, Russians, Jews,
and Greeks predominate in Odessa's cosmopolitan population. The city is said to
occupy the site of an ancient Miletian Greek colony (Odessos, Ordyssos, or Ordas)
that disappeared between the 3d and 4th century. In the 14th century the site,
then under Lithuanian control, became a Crimean Tatar fortress and trade center
called Khadzhi-Bei. In 1764 it passed to the Turks, who built a fortress (Yenu-Duniya)
to protect the harbor. The Russians captured Odessa in 1789.
c.) Sited on high plains at the eastern base
of the Rocky Mountains, Denver, the capital of Colorado, has a sunny,
cool, dry climate, averaging 13 inches of precipitation a year. The sun shines
300 days a year. A party of prospectors established Denver on November
22, 1858, after a gold discovery at the confluence of Cherry Creek and the South
Platte River. Town founders named the dusty crossroads for James W. Denver,
Governor of Kansas Territory, of which eastern Colorado was then a part. Other
gold discoveries sparked a mass migration of some 100,000 in 1859-60, leading
the federal government to establish Colorado Territory in 1861.
Before the great Colorado gold rush, the Rocky
Mountains offered little to attract settlers, except "hairy bank
notes," the beaver pelts prized by fur trappers, traders and fashionably
hatted gentlemen in Eastern America and Europe. The gold rush changed that, as
the rudely dispossessed Cheyenne and Arapaho soon discovered.
The Mile High City's aggressive leadership,
spearheaded by William N. Byers, founding editor of the Rocky Mountain News, and
Territorial Governor John Evans, insisted that the Indians must go. After
dispossessing the natives, Denver-ites built a network of railroads that made
their town the banking, minting, supply and processing center not only for
Colorado, but also for neighboring states. Between 1870 when the first railroads
arrived and 1890, Denver grew from 4,759 to 106,713. In a single generation, it
became the second most populous city in the West, second only to San Francisco.
Although founded as the main supply town for Rocky Mountain mining camps,
Denver also emerged as a hub for high plains agriculture. Denver's breweries,
bakeries, meat packing and other food-processing plants made it the regional
agricultural center, as well as a manufacturing hub for farm and ranch
equipment, barbed wire, windmills, seed, feed and harnesses.
d.) Manitoba, a province in south
central Canada and the easternmost of Canada's three Prairie provinces, was part
of the Hudson's Bay Company's holdings in North America known as Prince Rupert's
Land, founded in 1670. Chief interests for its first two centuries were the fur
trade, the province's major economic activity, exploration and settlement. After
1870, Prince Rupert's Land was incorporated into the Dominion of Canada. As
large numbers of settlers came, agriculture and wheat growing became dominant.
Manitoba province has been known as the Keystone Province ever since Canada's
Governor-General Lord Dufferin described the province in 1877 as "the
keystone of that mighty arch of sister provinces which spans the continent from
the Atlantic to the Pacific." Manitoba lies in the geographic center of
Canada. Manitoba and is a
transportation and processing center for the agrarian west.
e.) Mount Hecla is one of the most
active volcanic constructs in Iceland is also the site of descent into the
interior in Jules Verne's "Journey to the Center of the Earth," which
we have in the bookcase at the back of the room. One of my favorite poems, by
Richard Hovey, that I just recently read is "The Quest of Merlin",
which mentions Mount Hecla in the prelude: "Interior of a cavern in the
bowels of the earth, beneath Mount Hecla. Huge rock-fragments, amid which twists
tortuously a great root of the tree Yggdrasil. A flickering flame, by the light
of which are seen the NORNS, colossal but shadowy shapes, about a gigantic but
indistinct Loom. Dull, heavy sounds, out of which arises a strange music, which
resolves itself continually into imperfect harmonies, which leave the heart in
unrest. A sense of striving and struggle beats through the music."
f.) The Yukon is Alaska's largest
river. It originates in Canada in the Yukon Basin of the Northwest Territory and
flows 2,000 miles west into the Bering Sea. From the third week in May when the
ice breaks up until mid-October when it re-freezes, it is a summer waterway.
After it freezes, it is a winter highway. About 200 riverboats and steamers
carry freight during the summer months. I have heard that gold has been
discovered along the Yukon.
g.) St. Helena is an island in the
Atlantic about mid-way between South America and Africa. It was uninhabited when
first discovered by the Portuguese in 1502. The British garrisoned the island
during the 17th century. It became famous as the place of Napoleon Bonaparte's
exile, from 1815 until his death in 1821. It is located at 15º 56' South
Latitude, 5º 42' West Longitude.
h.) The Juan Fernandez Islands, (33º
50'S, 80º 00'W) have developed in isolation, about 400 miles west of Santiago
in Chile, on two small islands of volcanic origin, Robinson Crusoe Island and
Santa Clara Island. The most ancient of these islands, Robinson Crusoe Island,
thought to be some 4 million years old, harbors plant communities including
survivors of many ancient plant groups that were once much more widespread in
the southern hemisphere. The first human occupation of the islands was in 1574
when the Spanish explorer Juan Fernandez discovered the islands.
i.) Aspinwall is a town in Georgia. It
is in the area where the Seminole/Muskogee Indians lived.
j.) The Orinoco River in Venezuela is
one of South America's longest rivers, extending 1,590 mi. Its source is in the
Guiana Highlands, on the slopes of the Sierra Parima, in extreme southeastern
Venezuela, on the border of Brazil. It flows northwest to a point near La
Esmeralda, where it divides. One arm, the Casiquiare River, goes south and after
a course of 180 mi enters theRio Negro, a tributary of the Amazon River. The
main branch continues northwest to the town of San Fernando de Atabapo and,
flowing generally north, forms the border between Venezuela and Colombia. After
passing over the Maipures and Atures Rapids it meets the Apure River. The
Orinoco then turns northeast and traverses the plains of Venezuela before
emptying into the Atlantic Ocean. The Orinoco averages 4 mi in width. The delta
of the river begins 120 mi from the Atlantic. The Orinoco is navigable for
oceangoing ships for 260 miles, from the mouth to the city of Ciudad Bolivar. It
is navigable for smaller craft for a distance of 1,000 miles. The Orinoco was
sighted in 1498 by Christopher Columbus and was first explored by Europeans
(1530-1531) to the confluence with the Meta River. The German naturalist
Alexander von Humboldt explored the upper reaches in 1799.
6. Name and locate the principal trade centers of the U.S.
The principal trade centers of the United States are New York, New York, located at the mouth of the Hudson River; Boston, Massachusetts, located in Boston Harbor; Chicago, Illinois, located at the south end of Lake Michigan; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, located on the reaches of Delaware Bay; Baltimore, Maryland, located on the reaches of Chesapeake Bay; New Orleans, Louisiana, located between Lake Pontchartrain and the Mississippi River inland from the Gulf of Mexico; St. Louis, Missouri, located at the confluence of the Missouri River and the Mississippi; Kansas City, Missouri, located on the Missouri River at the Kansas River confluence, also being a great rail hub; Denver, Colorado, situated at the eastern slope of the Rockies as noted above; Los Angeles, California, in southern California at Los Angeles Harbor; San Francisco in the north of California at San Francisco Bay; and Seattle, Washington, located on east side of Puget Sound in Washington State, now becoming an important trade center in addition to its primary lumber industry and naval shipyards.
7. Name all the republics of Europe and give capital of each.
France with its capital at Paris, and Switzerland with its capital at Bern are the only republics in Europe. There are no other republics in Europe, as we know a republic to be, all the other nations are constitutional monarchies, or principalities. The major monarchies are Great Britain, London; Germany, Berlin; Russia, St. Petersburg; Ukraine, Kiev; Austria/Hungary, Vienna; Italy, Rome; Spain, Seville; Portugal, Lisbon; Belgium, Brussels; Holland, Amsterdam; Denmark, Copenhagen; Norway, Oslo; and Sweden, Stockholm.
8. Why is the Atlantic Coast colder than the Pacific in the same latitude?
The Atlantic coast is colder because the northward flow of the Japanese current prevents the majority of cold artic air from sinking south along the Pacific coast, until east of the Rocky Mountains, sweeping thence across the northern plains, sinking to lower latitudes bringing freezing weather south as far as Florida.
9. Describe the process by which the water of the ocean returns to the sources of rivers.
As the sun heats the ocean waters the evaporate rises into the prevailing wind currents which flow generally from west to east. On reaching mountainous areas the wind currents rise and are cooled, condensing the evaporate into rain, hail, or snow, which then returns to earth, the excess which is not absorbed becoming run-off and forming rivulets, streams, then rivers, returning to the sea to repeat the process over again. Eventually, even the water, which is absorbed in the earth, returns to the sea, as in our Colorado/Kansan aquifer, although that may take many thousands of years.
10. Describe the movements of the earth. Give inclination of the earth.
Today we know that the earth is involved in five motions, Rotation, Revolution, Precession, Motion around the galactic nucleus, and Motion of the galaxy. The rotation or spinning motion of a planet about an axis is the most basic of the five planetary motions. The earth rotates about its axis once every 24 hours, producing changes in what portion of the Earth is illuminated by the Sun, creating our day and night. The term "revolution" refers to the orbital motion of the earth as it travels an elliptical path around the sun. The earth's period of revolution, i.e., the time to complete a revolution is 365.25 days. As the earth's axis is inclined 23.4 degrees relative to the orbital plane, this produces our seasons. The Earth's axis is "wobbling", meaning that the axis changes its orientation with respect to celestial objects. This wobbling motion is referred to as "precession". Precession is similar to the wobbling motion of a top as it spins. The earth's period of precession is about 26,000 years. As we look out into the nighttime sky we cannot help but ponder the vastness of space and the innumerable stars that fill it. Our Sun is one of 100 billion stars that are gravitationally bound and make up the Milky Way Galaxy. Because we are a part of the galaxy, it is difficult for us to determine its shape and size and our location in it. However, based on the best available information, the Milky Way is a spiral galaxy similar in structure to its nearest neighbor, the Andromeda Galaxy. Our Sun is located in the flattened disk approximately two-thirds of the way from the central bulge in a spiral arm. Just as the planets orbit the Sun, the Sun orbits around the galactic nucleus. The velocity of the Sun and the planets around the galactic nucleus is consistent with the laws of Kepler and Newton. Astronomers calculate that this period of revolution around the galaxy center is 240,000,000 years. The suspected motion of the galaxy through space has not yet been determined.