</p>(A) Joan is stationed at window 1.
+ ]7 \: O/ A6 w- i(B) Joan is stationed at window 2.: v& I' U) X( ]
(C) Karim is stationed at window 2' H5 L2 p; K. Y. ]
(D) Nora is stationed at windows 3.
& U0 K$ O4 N" y, ?9 A(E) Patrick is stationed at window 1.
* |) ^' M1 \6 z# x' \ S17.If during this period Mark is stationed at a window,which of the following CANNOT be stationed at a window during this period?3 Z$ ?& Z- E( E" z4 Q' }
(A) Joan7 U J/ |1 v0 A
(B) Karim
. }0 J1 f" _: w5 ` D" H1 j(C) Lorraine6 [. B8 U2 L7 `" H8 R$ ]& {3 E8 c
(D) Nora; Y9 ^2 u: M- j; o9 q$ `, b
(E) Patrick
% X0 k, r' d) Y w6 R/ h3 eQuestions 18-22 Seven photographs—three landscapes: F, H, and J; and four still lifes:Q, R, T and W—will appear on the first seven pages—numbered consecutively from page 1 through page 7—of an exhibit catalog. Each page will contain exactly one of the photographs. The ordering of the photographs in the catalog is governed by the following conditions. J and W, not necessarily in that order, must appear on consecu- tively numbered pages. The three landscapes cannot appear on-consecutively numbered pages. Neither page 2 not page 4 is a page on which a landscape can appear. A landscape must appear on page 7 18.Which of the following is an acceptable ordering of the photographs in the catalog?0 F! r! H8 p, v
Page 1 Page 2 page 3 Page 4 page 5 page 6 page 7
- E# U2 `1 g" c6 a2 d) ^4 X(A) F T H Q W R J
3 h9 }- L; v7 y2 V3 Q(B) H Q J W R F T
/ \& B1 r7 \ R% z* L: [" I5 H(C) J W H R T Q F
/ f8 T# _ `% d v: N8 g(D) Q T R W J F H4 X3 C' e+ v& k# n- F' S
(E) T F Q W J R H F2 U3 K- G. @5 P9 I
19.Any of the following can appear on page 3 EXCEPT
) y% }& ?0 @( |(A) J
; a- z4 C" ^$ O+ C# S0 t$ j. @8 `(B) Q! x" M7 X, L7 r/ r
(C) R# o2 q* K8 x$ ` A
(D) T
9 v: [: @3 j# U5 z(E) W/ O2 J: j, a: o) i* f; [
20. If F appears on page 6, H must appear on page$ M6 [; X1 {+ [: L, f: r' e0 C
(A) 1
5 `9 i& o- \& V(B) 2
% L7 Q! l- @" c- P5 r" U(C) 35 e% j% w; C' n8 I" {% ]
(D) 5+ @ i9 H( C6 I% t
(E) 7
- m, M- z; |2 R9 I& w+ b21.If the still lifes all appear on consecutive pages,which of the following must be true?) F, }3 u% ]; ~# Q1 M. P* j J9 Z7 J
(A) A still life appears on page 1.
9 I7 O" N8 ?4 }$ _- k: `(B) A still life appears on page 5.
8 e* W7 g. |8 A( j* m$ R(C) J appears on page 6.
: S4 i5 H% u, E8 g' Z4 W(D) T appears on page 4.
$ v6 {0 v/ @9 c- K$ K(E) W appears on page 5/ @+ ]/ w% u: k+ Q' A8 P( G, t
22.If F and H, not necessarily in that order, appear on consecutive pages, which of the following can be true?2 o4 r# c) q0 o7 M8 z. |
(A) J appears on page 1
2 M/ o4 E: G' U# B(B) J appears on page 50 y2 @& S0 w; g) d) m Q
(C) R appears on page 6' V# i- V$ Y j! [ @
(D) W appears on page 1$ P+ ~- ^/ \, r" Z' V
(E) W appears on page 5. _3 Z% w) _( p
23.The organizers of tomorrow‘s outdoor concert announced that it will go on tomorrow on schedule unless bad weather is forecast or too few advance tickets are sold. If the concert is canceled, refunds will be made to ticket holders. Since some ticket holders have already been issued refunds even though more than enough advance tickets were sold, it must be the case that bad weather is forecast.
% G" ]1 u: c% a. ?+ t: tWhich of the following is an error of reasoning con- tained in the argument?
v* T/ T: k2 l f5 T& {(A) It proceeds as if a condition, which by itself is enough to guarantee a certain result, is the only condition under which that result would occur.
7 m3 w" e* A# S+ S0 G' M(B) It bases a conclusion that is known to require two conditions on evidence that bears on only one of those conditions.
, N7 c5 N2 R! ?/ H4 g(C) It explains one event as being caused by another event, even though both events must actually have been caused by some third, unidentified event.
7 u# C" n" Z' e3 I1 p0 R(D) It treats evidence for the absence of one condi- tion under which a circumstance would occur as conclusive evidence that that circumstance will not occur.
2 i5 P" {% a- j r4 m(E) Evidence given to support the conclusion actually undermines it.
# M; f; r6 Y% Y' b+ H4 l( W9 c24. Although the prevailing supposition has been that it is too hot for microorganisms to survive deep below the Earth‘s surface, some scientists argue that there are living communities of microorganisms there that have been cut off from surface life for millions of years. These scientists base their argument on the discovery of living microorganisms in samples of material that were taken from holes drilled as deep as 1.74 miles.+ |! ?% {$ d- H
The scientists‘ argument depends on which of the fol- lowing assumptions?4 A6 B0 |9 Y+ Q
(A)The microorganisms brought up were of a species that is related to those previously known to science.9 z6 s# d `% r8 a; i5 Y; {
(B)No holes have been drilled into the Earth‘s surface to a distance deeper than 1.74 miles: R; x4 D1 Y4 s4 ^
(C)The microorganisms did not come from surface soil that came into contact with the drilling equipment.
6 [% S t+ d7 i. i8 u- d; }1 E" [
(D) The stratum from which the samples came has been below the surface of the Earth ever since the Earth came into existence. |