Part III Fast Reading (2’×10=20’)Directions: Each of the ten statements below contains information given in on of the sections in the text. Each section is marked with a letter. Identify the section from which the information is derived. More than one statement may refer to the same section.A Bennett works in a sound-proof recording booth in her home, a tin of lozenges at the ready. Her voice is transmitted to the world, while she -- if she so chooses -- sits in her jammies, or more likely her Zumba clothes. Auditions are done by e-mail. She can grocery shop and go unrecognized.It's not as though her natural speaking voice, heard out of context in the produce aisle, sparks reactions.B So the idea of coming out as the voice of Siri was one she pushed aside. It probably wouldn't have even occurred to her if not for the goading of others, including her 36-yearold son -- whom she, and he, jokingly refers to as "Son of Siri."C "Her voice has been everywhere throughout my life. I'd call my bank while I was in college in Colorado, and it was my mom telling me I had $4," said Cameron Bennett, a photographer in Los Angeles.D He first found out she was the voice of Siri while watching an iPhone 4S commercial on TV. There, on the screen, was director Martin Scorsese talking to his mother. When Cameron bought the phone himself, she began barking at him through its GPS feature, prompting him to yell, "Mom, stop!"E "She's part of history," he said. "It was funny trying to explain to her how big it was. She uses her cell phone for 8% of what it can do."F When Bennett upgraded her phone and first talked to ... well, herself, she says she was a little horrified. It was weird, to say the least. But she was blown away, she said, to play a part in such a technological feat.G Being the voice of Siri, though, doesn't mean she's immune to the sorts of frustrations others sometimes have with the technology.H "But I never yell at her -- very bad karma," Bennett said. That said, she knows not everyone is as gracious: "Yes, I worry about how many times I get cursed every day."I Now, though, with iOS 7 she is passing the telephonic torch to a new Siri. Bennett would be lying if she said she wasn't a bit disappointed, but in her field of work she's learned to expect evolution -- and even revolution.J As technology improves, and the concatenation process becomes less robotic and more human, Bennett thinks anything will be possible.K "I really see a time when you'll probably be able to put your own voice on your phone and have your own voice talk back to you," she said. "Which I'm used to, but maybe you aren't."Bennet's son thinks it funny trying to explain to bennett how big the issue was.