B. Why the Pathans resented the British rule. \fphM6([RK
C. The popularity of rifles among the Pathans. EOrWax@k$}
D. The Pathans at war. \`#;J?Y|`F
Questions 11-15 Ever since its discovery, Pluto has never really fitted in. After the pale and glowing giant Neptune, it is little more than a cosmic dust mite, swept through the farthest reaches of the solar system on a plane wildly tilted relative to the rest of the planets. It is smaller than Neptune's largest moon, and the are of its orbit is so oval that it occasionally crosses its massive blue neighbor's path. Sq&*K9:z
For years, it has been seen as our solar system's oddest planet. Yesterday, however, scientists released perhaps the most convincing evidence yet that Pluto, in fact, is not a planet at all. For the first time, astronomers have peered into a belt of rocks beyond Pluto unknown until 10 years ago-and found a world that rivals Pluto in size. The scientists posit that larger rocks must be out there, perhaps even larger than Pluto, meaning Pluto is more likely the king of this distant realm of space detritus than the tiniest of the nine planets. _F^k>Lq&