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> Learning Task: Copy the article below. Encircle the verbs, box the adjectives, and underling the adverbs that express strong or pressing points. Jose Yulo: The Old-Fashioned Virtues He is intelligent. He passed the bar examinations at 19, was not given a license to practice law because he was under age. But in his thirties he was already topnotch Philippine corporation lawyer, helped draft the Philippine corporation law. His briefs were so logical and forceful that he seldom had to appear in person for his Big Business clients. He is wealthy. A corporation lawyer is one lawyer that is sure of making money, if he is any good. Yulo's income, before he became Secretary of Justice and had to abandon private practice, was estimated at about P50,000 a year. Shareholder in Negros sugar centrals, chairman of the board of the Philippine National bank (he has cut interest rates on loans, continues to show a good profit), he is still no pauper. He is modest. Few men in Philippine public life are less known-through their own fault. Favorite adviser at Malacañan, he makes important statements-to the President. Front page copy for the last month, he has still to talk about himself. All those weary reporters can get from him is noncommittal: "I do not cross my bridges until I come to them." Not a streamlined slogan, just an old-fashioned proverb.​