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  By 1910, the motor car was plainly conquering the highway. The private car was now part of every rich man’s establishment, although its price made it as yet an impossible luxury for most of the middle class. But for the adventuresome youth, there was the motorcycle, a fearsome invention producing accidents and ear-splitting noises. Already the dignified carriages and smart pony-traps were beginning to disappear from the roads and coachmen and grooms unless mechanically minded, were finding it more difficult to make a living.

The roads which had gone to sleep since the coming of the railway now awoke to feverish activity. Cars and motorcycles dashed along them at speeds which rivalled those of the express trains and the lorry began to appear. Therefore, the road system was compelled to adapt itself to the volume and speed of traffic for which it had never intended. Its complete adaptation was impossible, but the road surface was easily transformed and during the early years of the century, the dustiness and greasiness of the highways were lessened by tar-spraying. To widen and straighten the roads and get rid of blind corners and every steep gradient were tasks which had scarcely been tackled before 1914. The situation was worst of all in towns where not only was any large scheme of road widening usually out of the question but also where crowding and danger were all too frequently increased by the short-sighted eagerness of town authorities in laying down tramlines.

 

Yet, it was not only the road system that was in need of readjustment; the nervous system of those who used and dwelt by the road suffered. The noises caused by the conversion of the roads into speedways called for a corresponding tightening up of the nerves and especially in the towns, the pedestrian who wished to preserve life and limb was compelled to keep his attention continually on the stretch; to practise himself in estimates of the speed of approaching vehicles and to run or jump for his life if he ventured off the pavement.

 

2706

The writer uses the expression unless mechanically minded to refer to

  • A. coachman and grooms adaptable to the new technology
  • B. coachmen and grooms who chose to become mechanics
  • C. town authorities laying down tramlines
  • D. those amenable to change and development
View Answer & Discuss (1) JAMB 2001
2707

The statement 'By 1910, the motor car was plainly conquering the highway' means that

  • A. By 1910, many people knew how to drive motor cars
  • B. The motor car was invented in 1910
  • C. Highway codes for motor cars came into effect by 1910
  • D. By 1910, motor cars became a common sight on the highways
View Answer & Discuss JAMB 2001

  Although our aim is to nurture healthy children, Nigerian children are still subjected to severe physical and mental stress as they develop.
So far our interest and activities have been to ensure their physical well-being through the reduction of high mortality and morbidity rates, still inadequate as this may be. But we need to examine from time to time the other needs of the Nigerian child which will ensure a totally healthy development.
We are split between two cultures – our traditional and the Western, a relic of our colonial past. This also affects our child-rearing practices. Therefore, these practices must have a very important bearing on how the child is prepared for our world of today so that he fits into our disturbed cultural milieu.
Different styles of child-rearing and education can produce different personalities in terms of motivation, aggressiveness, achievement and integration of the individual into the community socially and culturally. It is important that, while we struggle with the visible organic disease, we fix our gaze on the other important measures to attain this end – a healthy child.
The process of social adjustment begins from the moment of birth. Many of our traditional birth practices ensure that the mother either carries or suckles her child immediately after birth. The baby therefore comes into close contact with the mother at this critical time.
Moreover she is forced to stay indoors with the baby for varying periods of time. By this means, the attachment of the baby to the mother, so essential for the child’s ability to relate to her in future is secured.
This crucial moment in the baby’s life is now being recognized in the Western countries, whilst birth practices in some hospital and maternity homes separate mother and child immediately after birth to the extent that their ability to develop a close relationship may be jeopardized.
Our Nigerian child of today may, therefore, be worse off than that of yesterday. As we move towards the training of our traditional birth attendants with a view to incorporating them into our health services, healthy practices such as the one described above must be maintained and encouraged

2708
it is said that differences in ways of bringing up children and educating them
  • A. achieve the same results
  • B. are reflected in the personalities , attitudes and achievements of thye individual
  • C. make people aggressive
  • D. have nothing to do with educational attainments
  • E. are a matter of the cultural background of the people
View Answer & Discuss JAMB 1980
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Post UTME Past Questions Agent
2709
since the training for social adjustment begins from the moment of birth, our traditional practices
  • A. are too uncivilized to be helpful to the child
  • B. need to be mordenized
  • C. are very helpful to the proper growth of the child
  • D. make the child a stranger to modern civilization
  • E. are the cause of underdevelopment
View Answer & Discuss JAMB 1980
2710
in spite of the fact that the Western country now recognize the importance of the early period of childhood in forming a relationship, Nigerian hospital and maternity home.
  • A. copy the wrong Western practise noe being criticized in Western countriesd
  • B. improve on local practises and make the future of the child secure
  • C. ensure that the child is brought up in the right way
  • D. ensure that the child develops the right skills for establishing relationships
  • E. do not know which practise to choose
View Answer & Discuss JAMB 1980
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