| Comprehension: | ||
| Read the given passage and answer the questions that follow. The biggest bicycle boom in American history, after the one in the eighteen-nineties, took place in the nineteen-seventies, even before the gas crisis. On the first Earth Day, April 22, 1970, bicycling activists staged protests all over the country. In San Jose, they buried a Ford. Later, in Chicago, they held a “pedal-in.” Bike sales rose from nine million in 1971 to fourteen million in 1972, and more than half of those sales were to adults. Time announced a national bicycle shortage. “Look Ma, No Cars” was the motto of the New York-based group Action Against Automobiles in 1972. “Give Mom a Bike Lane,” a placard read at a bike-in rally in San Francisco that year. The following year, as Carlton Reid reported in “Bike Boom: The Unexpected Resurgence of Cycling” (2017), more than two hundred bike legislation, including proposals to establish bike lanes, were introduced in forty-two states. In 1972, 1973, and 1974, bicycles outsold cars. Within a few years, though, the automobile lobby had bulldozed its way through state legislatures, and most proposals for bicycle infrastructure had been abandoned; by the time I was in college, in the nineteen-eighties, the boom was at an end. | ||
| SubQuestion No : 25 | ||
| Q.25 | Which of the following statements is NOT true according to the passage? | |
| Ans | 1. The rate of bicycle fatalities keeps going up presently. | |
| 2. There were more men bicyclists during the pandemic than women in the US. | ||
| 3. The rate of bike accidents doubled during the pandemic. | ||
| 4. Like the rewilding of the world, the bike boom is also short lived. | ||
Correct Ans: 2