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PT93 S1 Q1
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q1 Passage:The late 1950s and early 1960s were a time of profound growth for the civil rights movement in the United States. Although racial segregation in the public schools had been outlawed in 1954, the ruling applied only to this one category of discriminatory practice in U.S. society. But it fu...
PT93 S1 Q2
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q2 Passage:The late 1950s and early 1960s were a time of profound growth for the civil rights movement in the United States. Although racial segregation in the public schools had been outlawed in 1954, the ruling applied only to this one category of discriminatory practice in U.S. society. But it fu...
PT93 S1 Q3
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q3 Passage:The late 1950s and early 1960s were a time of profound growth for the civil rights movement in the United States. Although racial segregation in the public schools had been outlawed in 1954, the ruling applied only to this one category of discriminatory practice in U.S. society. But it fu...
PT93 S1 Q4
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q4 Passage:The late 1950s and early 1960s were a time of profound growth for the civil rights movement in the United States. Although racial segregation in the public schools had been outlawed in 1954, the ruling applied only to this one category of discriminatory practice in U.S. society. But it fu...
PT93 S1 Q5
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q5 Passage:The late 1950s and early 1960s were a time of profound growth for the civil rights movement in the United States. Although racial segregation in the public schools had been outlawed in 1954, the ruling applied only to this one category of discriminatory practice in U.S. society. But it fu...
PT93 S1 Q6
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q6 Passage:Grammarians of the prescriptive school take it as part of their task to distinguish correct from incorrect usage in language and thereby to encourage the former. They believe that in so doing they play an essential role in preventing a constantly changing language from falling into disarr...
PT93 S1 Q7
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q7 Passage:Grammarians of the prescriptive school take it as part of their task to distinguish correct from incorrect usage in language and thereby to encourage the former. They believe that in so doing they play an essential role in preventing a constantly changing language from falling into disarr...
PT93 S1 Q8
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q8 Passage:Grammarians of the prescriptive school take it as part of their task to distinguish correct from incorrect usage in language and thereby to encourage the former. They believe that in so doing they play an essential role in preventing a constantly changing language from falling into disarr...
PT93 S1 Q9
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q9 Passage:Grammarians of the prescriptive school take it as part of their task to distinguish correct from incorrect usage in language and thereby to encourage the former. They believe that in so doing they play an essential role in preventing a constantly changing language from falling into disarr...
PT93 S1 Q10
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q10 Passage:Grammarians of the prescriptive school take it as part of their task to distinguish correct from incorrect usage in language and thereby to encourage the former. They believe that in so doing they play an essential role in preventing a constantly changing language from falling into disar...
PT93 S1 Q11
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q11 Passage:Grammarians of the prescriptive school take it as part of their task to distinguish correct from incorrect usage in language and thereby to encourage the former. They believe that in so doing they play an essential role in preventing a constantly changing language from falling into disar...
PT93 S1 Q12
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q12 Passage:Grammarians of the prescriptive school take it as part of their task to distinguish correct from incorrect usage in language and thereby to encourage the former. They believe that in so doing they play an essential role in preventing a constantly changing language from falling into disar...
PT93 S1 Q13
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q13 Passage:Passage A is from a newspaper article. Passage B is from UNESCO's 1999 Draft Convention on the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage.Passage AA North American company that found what is believed to be the HMS Sussex during expeditions in the Mediterranean from 1998 to 2001 has signe...
PT93 S1 Q14
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q14 Passage:Passage A is from a newspaper article. Passage B is from UNESCO's 1999 Draft Convention on the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage.Passage AA North American company that found what is believed to be the HMS Sussex during expeditions in the Mediterranean from 1998 to 2001 has signe...
PT93 S1 Q15
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q15 Passage:Passage A is from a newspaper article. Passage B is from UNESCO's 1999 Draft Convention on the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage.Passage AA North American company that found what is believed to be the HMS Sussex during expeditions in the Mediterranean from 1998 to 2001 has signe...
PT93 S1 Q16
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q16 Passage:Passage A is from a newspaper article. Passage B is from UNESCO's 1999 Draft Convention on the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage.Passage AA North American company that found what is believed to be the HMS Sussex during expeditions in the Mediterranean from 1998 to 2001 has signe...
PT93 S1 Q17
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q17 Passage:Passage A is from a newspaper article. Passage B is from UNESCO's 1999 Draft Convention on the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage.Passage AA North American company that found what is believed to be the HMS Sussex during expeditions in the Mediterranean from 1998 to 2001 has signe...
PT93 S1 Q18
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q18 Passage:Passage A is from a newspaper article. Passage B is from UNESCO's 1999 Draft Convention on the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage.Passage AA North American company that found what is believed to be the HMS Sussex during expeditions in the Mediterranean from 1998 to 2001 has signe...
PT93 S1 Q19
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q19 Passage:Passage A is from a newspaper article. Passage B is from UNESCO's 1999 Draft Convention on the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage.Passage AA North American company that found what is believed to be the HMS Sussex during expeditions in the Mediterranean from 1998 to 2001 has signe...
PT93 S1 Q20
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q20 Passage:Some environmentalists claim that the higher the international debt a nation carries, the more likely it is that the quality of life in that nation will suffer. These environmentalists argue that in a variety of ways the effort a nation must expend to pay its debt hastens the depletion o...
PT93 S1 Q21
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q21 Passage:Some environmentalists claim that the higher the international debt a nation carries, the more likely it is that the quality of life in that nation will suffer. These environmentalists argue that in a variety of ways the effort a nation must expend to pay its debt hastens the depletion o...
PT93 S1 Q22
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q22 Passage:Some environmentalists claim that the higher the international debt a nation carries, the more likely it is that the quality of life in that nation will suffer. These environmentalists argue that in a variety of ways the effort a nation must expend to pay its debt hastens the depletion o...
PT93 S1 Q23
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q23 Passage:Some environmentalists claim that the higher the international debt a nation carries, the more likely it is that the quality of life in that nation will suffer. These environmentalists argue that in a variety of ways the effort a nation must expend to pay its debt hastens the depletion o...
PT93 S1 Q24
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q24 Passage:Some environmentalists claim that the higher the international debt a nation carries, the more likely it is that the quality of life in that nation will suffer. These environmentalists argue that in a variety of ways the effort a nation must expend to pay its debt hastens the depletion o...
PT93 S1 Q25
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q25 Passage:Some environmentalists claim that the higher the international debt a nation carries, the more likely it is that the quality of life in that nation will suffer. These environmentalists argue that in a variety of ways the effort a nation must expend to pay its debt hastens the depletion o...
PT93 S1 Q26
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q26 Passage:Some environmentalists claim that the higher the international debt a nation carries, the more likely it is that the quality of life in that nation will suffer. These environmentalists argue that in a variety of ways the effort a nation must expend to pay its debt hastens the depletion o...
PT93 S1 Q27
Question ID:PT93 S1 Q27 Passage:Some environmentalists claim that the higher the international debt a nation carries, the more likely it is that the quality of life in that nation will suffer. These environmentalists argue that in a variety of ways the effort a nation must expend to pay its debt hastens the depletion o...
PT93 S2 Q1
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q1 Passage:One should not do anything that has the potential to produce serious harm to one's society. The public actions—or inactions—of celebrities and of people who are widely respected are widely emulated. Some celebrities do not vote. Serious harm befalls a society in which many people refrain ...
PT93 S2 Q2
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q2 Passage:The sculptor Barajas died before she could even begin sculpting the statue called Sonora. However, because Sonora was sculpted by Barajas's assistants, working from three sketches Barajas drew in preparing to create the statue herself, the statue probably looks very much like it would hav...
PT93 S2 Q3
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q3 Passage:Although there are immediate short-term gains in crop yield from a single application of certain hydrocarbon-based pesticides to fields on which they have not been previously used, studies have shown clearly that long-term use gradually depresses crop yield from this initially elevated le...
PT93 S2 Q4
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q4 Passage:Economist:  Our country needs as much capital as possible from overseas investors in order to sustain our economy. Hence, we cannot afford any reduction in the amount of capital that overseas investors have invested here. Therefore, to sustain our economy, we should pass laws making it mu...
PT93 S2 Q5
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q5 Passage:Columnist:  Many people with access to the Internet express a longing for emotional connection to a global human community. This longing often leads them to use the Internet to learn about other cultures. However, learning about other cultures probably will not satisfy their longing, for ...
PT93 S2 Q6
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q6 Passage:Democratic societies in which there is widespread discontent more often blame their politicians than they do other powerful figures who are at least as responsible for those societies' woes. This is not primarily because politicians are more familiar to people than are other powerful figu...
PT93 S2 Q7
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q7 Passage:The mu mesons generated by cosmic rays just outside Earth's atmosphere travel to Earth at speeds approaching the speed of light. Mu mesons generated in the laboratory, however, are nearly at rest. Mu mesons generated in the laboratory typically decay in much less time than it takes for a ...
PT93 S2 Q8
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q8 Passage:Buyer: As a buyer for a large chain of department stores, I will buy a garment only if it is fashionable and not too expensive for our clientele. The evening dress from the fall collection by Peruka is certainly fashionable, but it is far too expensive for our clientele. Therefore, I will...
PT93 S2 Q9
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q9 Passage:Psychologists report that children in nine-month schools typically forget a significant amount of schooling during summer breaks. So, some educators have proposed a twelve-month schedule in which there are three month-long breaks spread throughout the year. We should conclude, on the basi...
PT93 S2 Q10
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q10 Passage:The Industrial Revolution decreased the value that society conferred on physical labor because it enabled unskilled workers to quickly produce goods that formerly took skilled craftspeople long periods of time to produce. Clearly, our most important intellectual skills will similarly be ...
PT93 S2 Q11
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q11 Passage:Wounds become infected because the break in the skin allows bacteria to enter. Infection slows healing. Often bacteria-killing ointment is applied to wounds after they have been cleaned, but a study at a Nigerian hospital found that cleaned wounds that were treated with honey—which conta...
PT93 S2 Q12
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q12 Passage:Art student: Great works of art evoke passionate responses in those who view them. Thus, since it is well known in art circles that the provocative work of abstract painter Ezekiel Reilly elicits intensely emotional responses in those who view them, his art is great. Stem:Which one of th...
PT93 S2 Q13
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q13 Passage:In northern Europe, archaeologists have discovered 400,000-year-old sharpened wooden poles alongside flint cutting implements and the remains of horses. Since it is normally assumed that Homo sapiens did not inhabit Europe prior to 200,000 years ago, this discovery effectively disproves ...
PT93 S2 Q14
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q14 Passage:Politician:  Our public libraries are open only on weekdays and generally at times when most children are at school and most adults at work. Hence, most taxpayers and their families have few opportunities to use public libraries. Therefore, no new taxes supporting the library system shou...
PT93 S2 Q15
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q15 Passage:The introduction of mass production techniques in modern industrial economies allowed the owners of industries to lower prices because they could employ fewer workers, many of whom required little training. The lower prices allowed workers to buy goods that they previously would not have...
PT93 S2 Q16
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q16 Passage:Child psychologist:  Psychologists have found that most children under the age of six are egocentric and selfish in their attitudes toward animals. Ordinarily, it is only between the ages of six and nine that children begin to understand that animals are independent creatures with their ...
PT93 S2 Q17
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q17 Passage:The average tax refund received by taxpayers who use tax preparation services is about 50 percent higher than the average refund received by those who do not. So if you want a large refund, you should use a tax preparation service. Stem:Which one of the following arguments exhibits flawe...
PT93 S2 Q18
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q18 Passage:In an experiment, each of 200 randomly selected people was videotaped while describing action-packed excerpts from previously unfamiliar cartoons. Half the subjects were allowed to gesture while speaking, and the other half were not. Those who gestured spoke more quickly and repeated the...
PT93 S2 Q19
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q19 Passage:Committee chairperson: No new course will be approved for next year's schedule unless a proposal for it has already been received either by this committee or by Dean Wilson. Dean Wilson has received only one new course proposal, and all of the new course proposals that this committee has...
PT93 S2 Q20
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q20 Passage:The olecranon process is a bony part of the mammalian elbow. The shorter the olecranon process, the faster the forelimbs can typically be moved. Predatory mammals must move their forelimbs very quickly when attacking prey, and thus generally have short olecranon processes. It has recentl...
PT93 S2 Q21
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q21 Passage:Essayist:  Commitment to relationships or careers is commonly held to be virtuous. But all commitments should be seen as morally neutral. After all, what one is committed to might be either good or bad; for example, commitment to a relationship that benefits none of the people involved d...
PT93 S2 Q22
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q22 Passage:Because of the ubiquity of television in modern households, few children today spend their free time reading stories, which lack the visual appeal of flashy television programs. Thus, few children today will develop a lifelong interest in literature. Stem:The conclusion drawn above follo...
PT93 S2 Q23
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q23 Passage:Filmmaker: I use hidden cameras when filming documentaries, because people behave differently when they are aware of being filmed. Although my subjects have been told that a camera is present, they remain unaware of its location and act naturally. Hence, my documentaries are more worthwh...
PT93 S2 Q24
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q24 Passage:The more profitable a corporation is, the more valuable its managers' time is. As a result, it is especially costly for highly profitable corporations to have their managers spend time monitoring employees. Such corporations can save money by reducing this monitoring, as long as the empl...
PT93 S2 Q25
Question ID:PT93 S2 Q25 Passage:Columnist:  Consent forms filled out by subjects prior to their participation in tests of experimental medicines designed to treat the diseases from which they are suffering show that almost all subjects accept the risk of receiving ineffective substances. This casts doubt on the claim m...
PT93 S3 Q1
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q1 Passage:Over the long run, apple orchards that use organic farming methods cost no more to run than, and are just as productive as, apple orchards using conventional methods. However, organically grown apples tend to be better tasting, and thus, organic orchards are likely to be more profitable t...
PT93 S3 Q2
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q2 Passage:Banking industry visionaries foresee a bright day in the near future when customers will be able to transact all their financial business by means of computers or telephones from the comfort of their own homes. But that may be more of a paradise for banks than for their customers. As bank...
PT93 S3 Q3
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q3 Passage:Bernard:  We should not invite Carl to speak at the forum. Carl's views are clearly false, and worse, dangerous. To encourage their consideration will not only legitimize them but also help to promulgate them, both of which we should avoid, since we wish not to support their adoption.Ayla...
PT93 S3 Q4
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q4 Passage:Principle: It is unethical for someone who has bought an item to return it to the store after getting all the use from it that he or she ever intended to get.Application: James purchased a video camera and returned it to the store two weeks later. This return was unethical. Stem:Which one...
PT93 S3 Q5
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q5 Passage:Taylorism, the early-twentieth-century industrial efficiency movement pioneered by Frederick Taylor, has had a profound effect on industrialized societies. Increased productivity resulting from greater efficiency has led to increases in most workers' standards of living. At the same time,...
PT93 S3 Q6
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q6 Passage:Winchester Township cannot afford to keep its several small branch libraries supplied with a wide selection of current books. However, if the branch libraries were closed, then Winchester could afford to open one large library, which could carry broader and more current selections. Thus, ...
PT93 S3 Q7
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q7 Passage:News report:  Some recently invented television screens are built out of small tiles seamlessly joined together, each tile a separate miniature screen. Television sets with these compound screens are just a few inches thick. For a noncompound screen in a set of this thickness, the larger ...
PT93 S3 Q8
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q8 Passage:Anthropologist: For early humans who moved from a hunter-gatherer lifestyle to agriculture, the transition must have been traumatic. There would have been increased incidence of disease and injury and a more homogeneous diet lacking vital nutrients more easily obtainable from the richly v...
PT93 S3 Q9
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q9 Passage:Most lawyers hold that violations of the rights of those who possess sites on the web are best prevented using copyright law. Yet many of the words used to describe such sites evoke ideas that are usually associated with real estate:  for example, the word "site" itself and the term "visi...
PT93 S3 Q10
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q10 Passage:Journalist:  Contrary to popular opinion, it is more dangerous for an individual to drive during the day than during the night. A recent study found that in each of the last ten years, the number of traffic accidents that resulted in death was greater during the day than during the night...
PT93 S3 Q11
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q11 Passage:Biologist:  The evolutionary advantage of sexual reproduction is that it increases the range of genetic variation in a species, which is an advantage for the species as a whole. However, an increased range of genetic variation in a species is not advantageous for any individual member of...
PT93 S3 Q12
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q12 Passage:Columnist: Vagrancy laws are supposed to reduce criminal activity, but they don't. Making vagrancy illegal means transforming many innocuous everyday occurrences into crimes. Thus, vagrancy laws increase crime while purporting to reduce it. Stem:The reasoning in the columnist's argument ...
PT93 S3 Q13
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q13 Passage:Political theorist: The purpose of government is to prevent individuals from injuring others in the pursuit of their own welfare. Hence, if most individuals take a reasoned approach to getting what they want, the power of government should be less. Stem:Which one of the following is an a...
PT93 S3 Q14
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q14 Passage:Food critic:  One of the chief competitors of Chris's restaurant claims that Chris's okra supplier cannot reliably supply fresh okra. If this claim were true, Chris's customers could not count on getting good seafood gumbo, Chris's specialty, because the best seafood gumbo requires fresh...
PT93 S3 Q15
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q15 Passage:Ants sometimes live in hollow places in the roots of a certain orchid species.  Those orchids of that species that house ants are far healthier than those that do not.  Since the ants store organic matter in the orchids' roots, an explanation for the superior health of the orchids that h...
PT93 S3 Q16
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q16 Passage:Future overall demand for professors can be predicted with reasonable accuracy from current birth rates. But the accuracy of predictions of future demand for music professors is lower, and that for jazz studies professors lower still. Stem:The situation described above best illustrates w...
PT93 S3 Q17
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q17 Passage:Anarchist:  People can either fight for anarchy or they can tolerate totalitarian government control. But history shows that government control of all facets of human life destroys the spirit, making life miserable. So, people should fight for anarchy, which allows each individual the fr...
PT93 S3 Q18
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q18 Passage:Consumer demand for personal computers continues to increase each year, which might lead one to think that the profits earned selling personal computers at the retail level are very high relative to total retail sales of personal computers. Yet the retail profit margin on personal comput...
PT93 S3 Q19
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q19 Passage:If a film is accepted by the festival committee, then one of the distributors attending the festival buys it. If a distributor buys a film, the film's financial backers are assured of recouping their investment. This film was not accepted by the festival committee, so this film's financi...
PT93 S3 Q20
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q20 Passage:Psychologist:  In an experiment, business managers who normally drank coffee on a daily basis were given more than their normal amount. The managers got faster at processing new information, but were less able to integrate it with past information when making decisions. Because successfu...
PT93 S3 Q21
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q21 Passage:Orator: Moral excellence can be achieved only by repeatedly overcoming inclinations to do the wrong thing. Overcoming these inclinations is often difficult to do, even for a morally virtuous person, but the only way to become a morally virtuous person is through the achievement of moral ...
PT93 S3 Q22
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q22 Passage:Philosopher:  Philosophers usually treat emotions as nonrational. But emotion is not nonrational:  it only seems that way because language lacks the ability to convey adequate conceptions of emotion. The words we use to refer to emotions name only very general kinds of inner experience—e...
PT93 S3 Q23
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q23 Passage:Superstring theory is a controversial new theory in physics that purports, unlike more established physical theories, to explain the nature and existence of gravity. A major problem with superstring theory is that to test it we would have to build a particle accelerator 100 trillion kilo...
PT93 S3 Q24
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q24 Passage:A smaller number of short documentary films than of full-length science-fiction films are commercially successful, even though there are more short documentary films than there are science-fiction films. Therefore, a higher proportion of full-length science-fiction films than of short do...
PT93 S3 Q25
Question ID:PT93 S3 Q25 Passage:To test the claim that vitamin C is effective in treating acne, scientists administered it to one group of subjects and a placebo to a control group. The group receiving vitamin C had less severe acne during the study than did the control group. It was subsequently discovered, however, t...
PT93 S4 Q1
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q1 Passage:A corporation is planning separate travel itineraries for two representatives, Frank and Gloria, each of whom must visit exactly three of the following cities: Houston, Montreal, Seattle, and Toronto. Each city must be visited by at least one of the representatives and at most once by eac...
PT93 S4 Q2
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q2 Passage:A corporation is planning separate travel itineraries for two representatives, Frank and Gloria, each of whom must visit exactly three of the following cities: Houston, Montreal, Seattle, and Toronto. Each city must be visited by at least one of the representatives and at most once by eac...
PT93 S4 Q3
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q3 Passage:A corporation is planning separate travel itineraries for two representatives, Frank and Gloria, each of whom must visit exactly three of the following cities: Houston, Montreal, Seattle, and Toronto. Each city must be visited by at least one of the representatives and at most once by eac...
PT93 S4 Q4
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q4 Passage:A corporation is planning separate travel itineraries for two representatives, Frank and Gloria, each of whom must visit exactly three of the following cities: Houston, Montreal, Seattle, and Toronto. Each city must be visited by at least one of the representatives and at most once by eac...
PT93 S4 Q5
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q5 Passage:A corporation is planning separate travel itineraries for two representatives, Frank and Gloria, each of whom must visit exactly three of the following cities: Houston, Montreal, Seattle, and Toronto. Each city must be visited by at least one of the representatives and at most once by eac...
PT93 S4 Q6
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q6 Passage:A corporation is planning separate travel itineraries for two representatives, Frank and Gloria, each of whom must visit exactly three of the following cities: Houston, Montreal, Seattle, and Toronto. Each city must be visited by at least one of the representatives and at most once by eac...
PT93 S4 Q7
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q7 Passage:A city manager is determining the order in which the city's two snowplows—plow 1 and plow 2—will clear six streets—Gilman, Hickory, Juniper, King, Lime, and Main. Each street will be cleared exactly once, with each snowplow clearing three streets, in order from first to third. The streets...
PT93 S4 Q8
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q8 Passage:A city manager is determining the order in which the city's two snowplows—plow 1 and plow 2—will clear six streets—Gilman, Hickory, Juniper, King, Lime, and Main. Each street will be cleared exactly once, with each snowplow clearing three streets, in order from first to third. The streets...
PT93 S4 Q9
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q9 Passage:A city manager is determining the order in which the city's two snowplows—plow 1 and plow 2—will clear six streets—Gilman, Hickory, Juniper, King, Lime, and Main. Each street will be cleared exactly once, with each snowplow clearing three streets, in order from first to third. The streets...
PT93 S4 Q10
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q10 Passage:A city manager is determining the order in which the city's two snowplows—plow 1 and plow 2—will clear six streets—Gilman, Hickory, Juniper, King, Lime, and Main. Each street will be cleared exactly once, with each snowplow clearing three streets, in order from first to third. The street...
PT93 S4 Q11
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q11 Passage:A city manager is determining the order in which the city's two snowplows—plow 1 and plow 2—will clear six streets—Gilman, Hickory, Juniper, King, Lime, and Main. Each street will be cleared exactly once, with each snowplow clearing three streets, in order from first to third. The street...
PT93 S4 Q12
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q12 Passage:A city manager is determining the order in which the city's two snowplows—plow 1 and plow 2—will clear six streets—Gilman, Hickory, Juniper, King, Lime, and Main. Each street will be cleared exactly once, with each snowplow clearing three streets, in order from first to third. The street...
PT93 S4 Q13
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q13 Passage:For a group show, an art dealer selects exactly five of an artist's eight paintings:  Funscape, Golem, Helios, Incorrigibility, Quisling, Rhododendra, Salvation, and Verisimilitude. The art dealer's selection must be consistent with the following:If either or both of Golem and Helios are...
PT93 S4 Q14
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q14 Passage:For a group show, an art dealer selects exactly five of an artist's eight paintings:  Funscape, Golem, Helios, Incorrigibility, Quisling, Rhododendra, Salvation, and Verisimilitude. The art dealer's selection must be consistent with the following:If either or both of Golem and Helios are...
PT93 S4 Q15
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q15 Passage:For a group show, an art dealer selects exactly five of an artist's eight paintings:  Funscape, Golem, Helios, Incorrigibility, Quisling, Rhododendra, Salvation, and Verisimilitude. The art dealer's selection must be consistent with the following:If either or both of Golem and Helios are...
PT93 S4 Q16
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q16 Passage:For a group show, an art dealer selects exactly five of an artist's eight paintings:  Funscape, Golem, Helios, Incorrigibility, Quisling, Rhododendra, Salvation, and Verisimilitude. The art dealer's selection must be consistent with the following:If either or both of Golem and Helios are...
PT93 S4 Q17
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q17 Passage:For a group show, an art dealer selects exactly five of an artist's eight paintings:  Funscape, Golem, Helios, Incorrigibility, Quisling, Rhododendra, Salvation, and Verisimilitude. The art dealer's selection must be consistent with the following:If either or both of Golem and Helios are...
PT93 S4 Q18
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q18 Passage:A movie studio will release exactly seven movies next year: Half-Hearted, Jujitsu, Kiley, Lowball, Meanderers, Ollie, and Periwinkle. Based on the studio's marketing plan, the movies will be released, one at a time, in accordance with the following conditions:Jujitsu must be released ear...
PT93 S4 Q19
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q19 Passage:A movie studio will release exactly seven movies next year: Half-Hearted, Jujitsu, Kiley, Lowball, Meanderers, Ollie, and Periwinkle. Based on the studio's marketing plan, the movies will be released, one at a time, in accordance with the following conditions:Jujitsu must be released ear...
PT93 S4 Q20
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q20 Passage:A movie studio will release exactly seven movies next year: Half-Hearted, Jujitsu, Kiley, Lowball, Meanderers, Ollie, and Periwinkle. Based on the studio's marketing plan, the movies will be released, one at a time, in accordance with the following conditions:Jujitsu must be released ear...
PT93 S4 Q21
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q21 Passage:A movie studio will release exactly seven movies next year: Half-Hearted, Jujitsu, Kiley, Lowball, Meanderers, Ollie, and Periwinkle. Based on the studio's marketing plan, the movies will be released, one at a time, in accordance with the following conditions:Jujitsu must be released ear...
PT93 S4 Q22
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q22 Passage:A movie studio will release exactly seven movies next year: Half-Hearted, Jujitsu, Kiley, Lowball, Meanderers, Ollie, and Periwinkle. Based on the studio's marketing plan, the movies will be released, one at a time, in accordance with the following conditions:Jujitsu must be released ear...
PT93 S4 Q23
Question ID:PT93 S4 Q23 Passage:A movie studio will release exactly seven movies next year: Half-Hearted, Jujitsu, Kiley, Lowball, Meanderers, Ollie, and Periwinkle. Based on the studio's marketing plan, the movies will be released, one at a time, in accordance with the following conditions:Jujitsu must be released ear...
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