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Reading Practice




Making Copier


At first, nobody bought Chester Carlson’s strange idea. But trillions of documents later, his

invention is the biggest thing in printing since Gutenberg

A

Copying is the engine of civilization: culture is behavior duplicated. The oldest copier

invented by people is language, by which an idea of yours becomes an idea of mine. The

second great copying machine was writing. When the Sumerians transposed spoken words

into stylus marks on clay tablets more than 5,000 years ago, the hugely extended the

human network that language had created. Writing freed copying from the chain of living

contact. It made ideas permanent, portable and endlessly reproducible.

B

Until Johann Gutenberg invented the printing press in the mid-1400s, producing a book in

an edition of more than one generally meant writing it out again. Printing with moveable

type was not copying, however. Gutenberg couldn’t take a document that already existed,

feed it into his printing press and run off facsimiles. The first true mechanical copier was

manufactured in 1780, when James Watt, who is better known as the inventor of the

modern steam engine, created the copying press. Few people today know what a copying

press was, but you may have seen one in an antique store, where it was perhaps called a

book press. A user took a document freshly written in special ink, placed a moistened sheet

of translucent paper against the inked surface and squeezed the two sheets together in the

press, causing some of the ink from the original to penetrate the second sheet, which could

then be read by turning it over and looking through its back. The high cost prohibits the

widespread use of this copier.

C

Among the first modem copying machines, introduced in 1950 by 3M, was the Thermo-Fax,

and it made a copy by shining infrared light through an original document and a sheet of

paper that had been coated with heat-sensitive chemicals. Competing manufacturers soon

introduced other copying technologies and marketed machines called Dupliton, Dial-AMatic Autostat, Verifax, Copease and Copymation. These machines and their successors

were welcomed by secretaries, who had no other means of reproducing documents in

hand, but each had serious drawbacks. All required expensive chemically treated papers.

And all made copies that smelled bad, were hard to read, didn’t last long and tended to curl

up into tubes. The machines were displaced, beginning in the late 1800s, by a combination

of two 19th century inventions: the typewriter and carbon paper. For those reasons,

copying presses were standard equipment in offices for nearly a century and a half.

D

None of those machines is still manufactured today. They were all made obsolete by a

radically different machine, which had been developed by an obscure photographic-supply

company. That company had been founded in 1906 as the Haloid Company and is known

today as the Xerox Corporation. In 1959, it introduced an office copier called the Haloid

Xerox 914, a machine that, unlike its numerous competitors, made sharp, permanent

copies on ordinary paper-a huge breakthrough. The process, which Haloid called

xerography (based on Greek words meaning “dry” and “writing”), was so unusual and

nonnutritive that physicists who visited the drafty warehouses where the first machines

were built sometimes expressed doubt that it was even theoretically feasible.

E

Remarkably, xerography was conceived by one person- Chester Carlson, a shy, softspoken patent attorney, who grew up in almost unspeakable poverty and worked his way

through junior college and the California Institute of Technology. Chester Carlson was born

in Seattle in 1906. His parents-Olof Adolph Carlson and Ellen Josephine Hawkins—had

grown up on neighboring farms in Grove City, Minnesota, a tiny Swedish farming

community about 75 miles west of Minneapolis. Compare with competitors, Carlson was

not a normal inventor in 20-century. He made his discovery in solitude in 1937 and offered

it to more than 20 major corporations, among them IBM, General Electric, Eastman Kodak

and RCA. All of them turned him down, expressing what he later called “an enthusiastic

lack of interest” and thereby passing up the opportunity to manufacture what Fortune

magazine would describe as “the most successful product ever marketed in America.”

F

Carlson’s invention was indeed a commercial triumph. Essentially overnight, people began

making copies at a rate that was orders of magnitude higher than anyone had believed

possible. And the rate is still growing. In fact, most documents handled by a typical

American office worker today are produced xerographically, either on copiers manufactured

by Xerox and its competitors or on laser printers, which employ the same process (and

were invented, in the 1970s, by a Xerox researcher). This year, the world will produce more

than three trillion xerographic copies and laser-printed pages—about 500 for every human

on earth.

G

Xerography eventually made Carlson a very wealthy man. (His royalties amounted to

something like a 16th of a cent for every Xerox copy made, worldwide, through 1965.)

Nevertheless, he lived simply. He never owned a second home or a second car, and his

wife had to urge him not to buy third-class train tickets when he traveled in Europe. People

who knew him casually seldom suspected that he was rich or even well-to-do; when

Carlson told an acquaintance he worked at Xerox, the man assumed he was a factory

worker and asked if he belonged to a union. “His possessions seemed to be composed of

the number of things he could easily do without,” his second wife said. He spent the last

years of his life quietly giving most of his fortune to charities. When he died in 1968, among

the eulogizers was the secretary-general of the United Nations.

 

 

Questions 1-6

Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?

In boxes 1-6 on your answer sheet, write

TRUE if the statement agrees with the information

FALSE if the statement contradicts the information

NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this


1..................... The earliest languages were recorded on papyrus.

2..................... when applying Johann Gutenberg’s printing machine, it requires lots of

training.

3..................... James Watt invented a modem steam engine before he made his first

mechanical copier.

4..................... using the Dupliton copiers and follower versions are very costly.

5..................... The typewriters with carbon papers were taken place of very soon because

they were not sold well

6..................... The Haloid Xerox 914 model also required specially treated paper for

making copies.


Questions 7-13

Reading Passage.

Write your answers in boxes 7-13 on your answer sheet.

 

 

Calson, unlike a 20-century 7....................., like to work on his own. In 1937, he

unsuccessfully invited 20 major 8..................... to make his discovery. However, this action

was not welcome among shareholders at the beginning, all of them

9...................... Eventually, Calson’s creation was undeniably a 10...................... Thanks for

the discovery of Xerography, Calson became a very 11..................... person. Even so, his

life remains as simple as before. It looks as if he can live without his 12..................... At the

same time, he gave lots of his money to 13......................




Solution:

1. FALSE                                                     8. corporations

2. NOT GIVEN                                           9. turned him down

3. NOT GIVEN                                          10. commercial triumph

4. TRUE                                                     11. wealthy

5. FALSE                                                   12. possessions

6. FALSE                                                   13. charities

7. inventor




Questions 1–6 (True/False/Not Given)

  1. The earliest languages were recorded on papyrus.

    • Answer: False
    • Explanation: The text states that the Sumerians recorded spoken words into stylus marks on clay tablets, not papyrus. (Paragraph A)
  2. When applying Johann Gutenberg’s printing machine, it requires lots of training.

    • Answer: Not Given
    • Explanation: The passage mentions Gutenberg’s printing press but does not discuss the training required to use it. (Paragraph B)
  3. James Watt invented a modern steam engine before he made his first mechanical copier.

    • Answer: Not Given
    • Explanation: While James Watt is known for inventing the steam engine, the passage does not clarify if this occurred before his work on the copier. (Paragraph B)
  4. Using the Dupliton copiers and follower versions are very costly.

    • Answer: True
    • Explanation: The text mentions that these machines required expensive chemically treated papers. (Paragraph C)
  5. The typewriters with carbon papers were taken place of very soon because they were not sold well.

    • Answer: False
    • Explanation: Typewriters and carbon paper displaced earlier copying machines due to their convenience, not poor sales. (Paragraph C)
  6. The Haloid Xerox 914 model also required specially treated paper for making copies.

    • Answer: False
    • Explanation: The Haloid Xerox 914 made copies on ordinary paper, which was a major breakthrough. (Paragraph D)

Questions 7–13 (Fill in the blanks)

  1. Carlson, unlike a 20-century ___, liked to work on his own.

    • Answer: inventor
    • Explanation: Carlson is described as working alone on his invention in 1937. (Paragraph E)
  2. In 1937, he unsuccessfully invited 20 major ___ to make his discovery.

    • Answer: corporations
    • Explanation: Carlson offered his invention to corporations like IBM and General Electric, all of which rejected it. (Paragraph E)
  3. However, this action was not welcome among shareholders at the beginning, all of them ___.

    • Answer: turned him down
    • Explanation: The passage states that all the corporations showed “an enthusiastic lack of interest.” (Paragraph E)
  4. Eventually, Carlson’s creation was undeniably a ___.

    • Answer: commercial triumph
    • Explanation: The invention became an overwhelming success in the market. (Paragraph F)
  5. Thanks to the discovery of xerography, Carlson became a very __ person.

    • Answer: wealthy
    • Explanation: Carlson earned royalties and became rich, although he lived simply. (Paragraph G)
  6. Even so, his life remains as simple as before. It looks as if he can live without his ___.

    • Answer: possessions
    • Explanation: Carlson’s possessions were minimal, and he avoided extravagant purchases. (Paragraph G)
  7. At the same time, he gave lots of his money to ___.

    • Answer: charities
    • Explanation: Carlson donated most of his fortune to charities before his death. (Paragraph G)


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