16. It can be inferred from the passage that .
A. no measures can be taken to regulate the home: school
education
B. most parents are not satisfied with public education
C. it is wiser for schools to accept enrollment part time
D. the home-schooled have no difference with those in
public schools
E
Most ,young people enjoy some form of physical activity. It
may be walking, cycling, or swimming, or in winter, skating or skiing. It may
be a game of some form-football, basketball, hockey, golf or tennis. It may be
mountaineering,
Those who have a passion for climbing high and difficult
mountains are often looked upon with astonishment. Why are men and women
willing to suffer cold and hardship, and to take risks in high mountains? This
astonishment it caused, probably, by the difference between mountaineering and
other forms of activity to which men give their leisure.
Mountaineering is a sport and not a game. There are no
man-made rules, as others, as there are for such games as golf. and football.
There are, of course, rules of different kind which it would be dangerous to
ignore, but it is this freedom from man-made rules that makes mountaineering
attractive to many people. Those who climb mountains are free to use their own
methods.
If we compare mountaineering and other more familiar
sports, we might think that one big difference is that mountaineering is not a
"team game". We should be mistaken in this. There are, it is true, no
"matches" between "teams" of climbers, but when climbers
are on a rock face linked by a rope on which their lives may depend, there is
obviously teamwork.
The mountain climber knows that he may have to fight forces
that are stronger and more powerful than man. He has to fight the forces of
nature. His sport requires high mental and physical qualities.
A mountain climber continues to improve in skill year after
year. A skier is probably past his best by the age of thirty. But it is not
unusual for men of fifty or sixty to climb the highest mountains in the Alps.
They may take more time than younger men, but they perhaps climb with more
skill and less waste of effort, and they certainly experience equal enjoyment.