Questions Below Refer To The Following Passage. Tip: When reading historical material, it is crucial to understand cause and effect relations, chronological sequence, and comparison/contrast. As you work through these passages and accompanying exercises, keep in mind that it is not necessary to remember the specific information given here. Your purpose should be to develop the skills and strategies necessary for effective study reading. The Titanic was the last “unsinkable” ship ever to set sail. Built in 1912 for the British White Star Line, she was a colossal ship for the... Show more Questions Below Refer To The Following Passage. Tip: When reading historical material, it is crucial to understand cause and effect relations, chronological sequence, and comparison/contrast. As you work through these passages and accompanying exercises, keep in mind that it is not necessary to remember the specific information given here. Your purpose should be to develop the skills and strategies necessary for effective study reading. The Titanic was the last “unsinkable” ship ever to set sail. Built in 1912 for the British White Star Line, she was a colossal ship for the times—882 feet long, 46,328 tons, and capable of doing 25 knots an hour. Acclaimed as the zenith of luxury liners, the ship had been fitted out with palatial accoutrements. Her sixteen watertight compartments, her builders claimed, guaranteed that nothing could sink her. April 10, 1912, was a glittering occasion as the Titanic began her maiden voyage from England to New York with 2,207 people on board, some of whom were American tycoons whose estimated worth was over $250 million. At 11:40 p.m. on April 14, many of the sleeping passengers were awakened by a slight jolt. The ship had struck an iceberg, incurred a 300-foot gash in her side, and five compartments were flooded. “Unsinkable,” however, meant the ship could float if two, not five, compartments were inundated. Ten miles away from the Titanic was another ship, the Californian, which had stopped because of ice fields and which had wired six explicit warnings to nearby ships. Unfortunately, the Titanic’s wireless, a new invention on shipboard, was being employed for frivolous messages to and from the passengers. The tired wireless operator had worked long hours and impatiently told the Californian’s operator to shut up and stop annoying him. By 12:05 a.m. officers and crew fully comprehended that something was seriously amiss. Lifeboats were uncovered, and passengers and crew were mustered to the boat deck. Ten minutes later a “CQD” sent out to summon help was received by ships too distant to be of immediate help. The Californian might as well have been in the South Seas for all the assistance she ever gave. Her wireless operator, unfamiliar with the new equipment, had failed to wind up the mechanism that kept the set running. At about 11:40 he tuned in, heard nothing from his dead set, and went to bed. Secure in the knowledge that their ship was unsinkable, the White Star Line had provided enough lifeboat space for only 1,178 people. There were sixteen wooden lifeboats and four collapsible canvas boats on board for 2,207 people. The crew’s efforts to load the lifeboats in the midst of chaos and bitterly cold weather were heroic but disorganized. Women and children were supposed to be first in the lifeboats, but no matter how chivalrous the men, the women were querulous about leaving the ship for a cold, open boat and had to be cajoled into the boats. At 12:45 the Californian crew watched the Titanic’s rockets overhead and regarded them as “strange.” The first boat was being lowered into the icy sea at the same moment; with a capacity for forty, it contained twelve. Throughout the fiasco of lifeboat loading, the ship’s orchestra played ragtime, the lights blazed, and the Titanic continued to slip downward at the bow. Meanwhile, three ships had received an SOS, the first time that signal had ever been used, and they were confused. All had been advised that the Titanic was sinking. The Carpathia was fifty-eight miles away. The Californian watched the last rocket go off at 1:40. At 2:05 the last boat was lowered as the band played an Episcopal hymn, “Autumn,” not “Abide with Me,” as is usually believed. With the ship standing at a 90° angle, perpendicular in the water, at 2:10 the last SOS was sent out. At 2:20 A.M. on April 15, 1912, the Titanic sank. The crew of the Californian believed that the disappearing lights indicated that the ship was leaving the area. At 4:10 the Carpathia was the first ship to reach the scene. The Californian arrived at 5:40, too late to rescue any survivors. From eighteen boats 705 people were rescued. Following inquiries regarding the disaster, it was revealed that very few of the third-class passengers had been saved. Of 143 women in first class, 4 were lost; of 93 women in second class, 15 were lost; of 179 women in third class, were lost. All but one child in first and second class were saved, but of the 76 children in third class, only 23 survived. Show less
Questions Below Refer To The Following Passage.
Tip: When reading historical material, it is crucial to understand cause and effect relations, chronological sequence, and comparison/contrast. As you work through these passages and accompanying exercises, keep in mind that it is not necessary to remember the specific information given here. Your purpose should be to develop the skills and strategies necessary for effective study reading. The Titanic was the last “unsinkable” ship ever to set sail. Built in 1912 for the British White Star Line, she was a colossal ship for the times—882 feet long, 46,328 tons, and capable of doing 25 knots an hour. Acclaimed as the zenith of luxury liners, the ship had been fitted out with palatial accoutrements. Her sixteen watertight compartments, her builders claimed, guaranteed that nothing could sink her. April 10, 1912, was a glittering occasion as the Titanic began her maiden voyage from England to New York with 2,207 people on board, some of whom were American tycoons whose estimated worth was over $250 million. At 11:40 p.m. on April 14, many of the sleeping passengers were awakened by a slight jolt. The ship had struck an iceberg, incurred a 300-foot gash in her side, and five compartments were flooded. “Unsinkable,” however, meant the ship could float if two, not five, compartments were inundated. Ten miles away from the Titanic was another ship, the Californian, which had stopped because of ice fields and which had wired six explicit warnings to nearby ships. Unfortunately, the Titanic’s wireless, a new invention on shipboard, was being employed for frivolous messages to and from the passengers. The tired wireless operator had worked long hours and impatiently told the Californian’s operator to shut up and stop annoying him. By 12:05 a.m. officers and crew fully comprehended that something was seriously amiss. Lifeboats were uncovered, and passengers and crew were mustered to the boat deck. Ten minutes later a “CQD” sent out to summon help was received by ships too distant to be of immediate help. The Californian might as well have been in the South Seas for all the assistance she ever gave. Her wireless operator, unfamiliar with the new equipment, had failed to wind up the mechanism that kept the set running. At about 11:40 he tuned in, heard nothing from his dead set, and went to bed. Secure in the knowledge that their ship was unsinkable, the White Star Line had provided enough lifeboat space for only 1,178 people. There were sixteen wooden lifeboats and four collapsible canvas boats on board for 2,207 people. The crew’s efforts to load the lifeboats in the midst of chaos and bitterly cold weather were heroic but disorganized. Women and children were supposed to be first in the lifeboats, but no matter how chivalrous the men, the women were querulous about leaving the ship for a cold, open boat and had to be cajoled into the boats. At 12:45 the Californian crew watched the Titanic’s rockets overhead and regarded them as “strange.” The first boat was being lowered into the icy sea at the same moment; with a capacity for forty, it contained twelve. Throughout the fiasco of lifeboat loading, the ship’s orchestra played ragtime, the lights blazed, and the Titanic continued to slip downward at the bow. Meanwhile, three ships had received an SOS, the first time that signal had ever been used, and they were confused. All had been advised that the Titanic was sinking. The Carpathia was fifty-eight miles away. The Californian watched the last rocket go off at 1:40. At 2:05 the last boat was lowered as the band played an Episcopal hymn, “Autumn,” not “Abide with Me,” as is usually believed. With the ship standing at a 90° angle, perpendicular in the water, at 2:10 the last SOS was sent out. At 2:20 A.M. on April 15, 1912, the Titanic sank. The crew of the Californian believed that the disappearing lights indicated that the ship was leaving the area. At 4:10 the Carpathia was the first ship to reach the scene. The Californian arrived at 5:40, too late to rescue any survivors. From eighteen boats 705 people were rescued. Following inquiries regarding the disaster, it was revealed that very few of the third-class passengers had been saved. Of 143 women in first class, 4 were lost; of 93 women in second class, 15 were lost; of 179 women in third class, were lost. All but one child in first and second class were saved, but of the 76 children in third class, only 23 survived.
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