Library/PT 139/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Large, debt-heavy, mechanized farms are putting small farms out of business, but Booker T. Whatley says small farms can still make money by following a different plan: grow many crops so you have year-round income, sell directly to customers through a "clientele membership club" whose members pay ahead and pick their own produce (cutting harvest and distribution costs), and grow only what members ask for. He says farms must be near cities (within about 40 miles of 50,000+ people), have good soil and water, and carry liability insurance. If small farmers follow these steps, Whatley contends, they can profitably compete with big corporate farms while supplying fresh produce to urban consumers.

Logic Breakdown

Locate the sentence where Whatley discusses hard‑surfaced roads (the 'farm‑to‑market' remark) and infer what 'farm‑to‑market' implies about how farmers traditionally used such roads.

Passage Stimulus

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7.

Which one of the following inferences is most supported by the information in the passage?

Correct Answer
B
Support: The passage states, "Whatley reverses the traditional view of hard-surfaced roads as farm-to-market roads, calling them instead \"city-to-farm\" roads." The label "farm-to-market roads" conventionally describes routes used to move farm goods to markets in cities. Thus the passage most directly supports the inference that hard‑surfaced roads were traditionally means by which some farmers transported their produce to customers in cities.
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