Maybe 10 years old Elizabeth put it best when she said to her father, "But, Dad, you can’t be healthy if you are dead."
Dad, in a hurry to get home before dark so he could go for a run, had forgotten to wear his safety belt--a mistake 75% of the US population make every day. The big question is why.
There have been many myths about safety belts since their first appearance in cars some forty years ago. The following are three of the most common.
Myth Number One: It’s best to be "thrown clear" of a serious accident.
Truth: Sorry, but any accident serious enough to "throw you clear" is also going to be serious enough to give you a very bad landing, and chances are you’ll have travelled through a windshield or door to do it. Studies show that chances of dying after a car accident are twenty-five times greater in cases where people are "thrown clear".
Myth Number Two: Safety belts "
A. He was driving at great speed,
B. He was running across the street.
C. He didn’t have his safety belt on.
D. He didn’t take his medicine on time.
American architecture is (1) its best when it is concerned with (2) that have a practical purpose. Factories, office buildings, public buildings, rail terminal and airports, and other such (3) show American architecture at its (4) imaginative and graceful, as well as its most (5) . The single most important American (6) design is the skyscraper, a style (7) in the late nineteenth century and since (8) as the trademark of American building. (9) the development of the steel skeleton and brick for buildings, the weight and low strength of stone and brick limited the (10) of the city office buildings (11) about twelve floors. (12) American cities grew larger in closing years of the 19th century, the (13) on which the structures might be placed because more valuable, the (14) for taller buildings increased. The use of steel (15) for construction was a direct response (16) t
A. design
B. architecture
C. buildings
D. technique
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