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NEW QUESTION 103
As one who has always believed that truth is our nation's surest weapon in the propaganda war against our foes, I am distressed by reports of "disinformation" campaigns by American intelligence agents in Western Europe. In a disinformation campaign, untruths are disseminated through gullible local journalists in order to damage the interests of our enemies and protect our own. Those who defend this practice say that lying is necessary to counter Soviet disinformation campaigns aimed at damaging America's political interests. These apologists contend that one must fight fire with fire. I would point out to the apologists that the fire department finds water more effective The author's main point is that
- A. Soviet disinformation campaigns have done little to damage America's standing in Europe
- B. although disinformation campaigns may be effective, they are unacceptable on ethical grounds
- C. the temporary political gains produced by disinformation campaigns generally give way to long-term losses
- D. America's moral standing in the world depends on its adherence to the truth
- E. disinformation campaigns do not effectively serve the political interests of the United States
Answer: E
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
NEW QUESTION 104
Recent estimates predict that between 1982 and 1995 the greatest increase in the number of people employed will be in the category of low-paying service occupations. This category, however, will not increase its share of total employment, whereas the category of high-paying service occupations will increase its share.
If the estimates above are accurate, which of the following conclusions can be drawn?
- A. Many of the people who were working in low-paying service occupations in 1982 will be working in high-paying service occupations by 1995.
- B. In 1995 more people will be working in high-paying service occupations than will be working in low- paying service occupations.
- C. In 1982 more people were working in low-paying service occupations than were working in high-paying service occupations.
- D. The rate of growth for low-paying service occupations will be greater than the overall rate of employment growth between 1982 and 1995.
- E. Nonservice occupations will account for the same share of total employment in 1995 as in 1982.
Answer: C
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
NEW QUESTION 105 
- A. 2x+1
- B. 2x
- C. x+2
- D. 4x+2
- E. x+3
Answer: A
NEW QUESTION 106
The cotton farms of Country Q became so productive that the market could not absorb all that they produced. Consequently, cotton prices fell. The government tried to boost cotton prices by offering farmers who took 25 percent of their cotton acreage out of production direct support payments up to a specified maximum per farm.
The government's program, if successful, will not be a net burden on the budget. Which of the following, if true, is the best basis for an explanation of how this could be so?
- A. The specified maximum per farm meant that for very large cotton farms the support payments were less per acre for those acres that were withdrawn from production than they were for smaller farms.
- B. Farmers who wished to qualify for support payments could not use the cotton acreage that was withdrawn from production to grow any other crop.
- C. Depressed cotton prices meant operating losses for cotton farms, and the government lost revenue from taxes on farm profits.
- D. Cotton production in several counties other than Q declined slightly the year that the support-payment program went into effect in Q.
- E. The first year that the support-payment program was in effect, cotton acreage in Q was 5% below its level in the base year for the program.
Answer: C
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
NEW QUESTION 107
Taking as her focus Bengali-language books of household advice, the author traces how colonialism gradually reconfigured daily domestic life, with the result that familial and domestic authority, once held by elder women, was replaced by that of the modern colonial husband.
- A. familial and domestic authority, once held by elder women, was
- B. elder women's authority was in familial and domestic matters
- C. elder women, the authorities in familial and domestic matters, were
- D. the authority of elder women in familial and domestic matters was
- E. authority over familial and domestic matters held by elder women was
Answer: D
NEW QUESTION 108
While we believe that supporters of this measure are well-meaning, they have intentional understated of the measure and how much of an impact it has on individuals.
- A. the impact of the measure and how permanent t is
- B. the measure's impact and permanency
- C. its permanency and its impact
- D. its permanency and the impact of it
- E. the permanency of the measure and how much of an impact it has
Answer: C
NEW QUESTION 109
One way to judge the performance of a company is to compare it with other companies. This technique, commonly called "benchmarking," permits the manager of a company to discover better industrial practices and can provide a justification for the adoption of good practices.
Any of the following, if true, is a valid reason for benchmarking the performance of a company against companies with which it is not in competition rather than against competitors EXCEPT:
- A. Much of the success of good companies is due to their adoption of practices that take advantage of the special circumstances of their products of markets.
- B. Since companies that compete with each other are likely to have comparable levels of efficiency, only benchmarking against non competitors is likely to reveal practices that would aid in beating competitors.
- C. Comparisons with competitors are most likely to focus on practices that the manager making the comparisons already employs.
- D. Managers are generally more receptive to new ideas that they find outside their own industry.
- E. Getting "inside" information about the unique practices of competitors is particularly difficult.
Answer: C
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
NEW QUESTION 110
An Australian group named Action Council on Smoking and Health (ACSH) has recently lobbied to make warnings on cigarette packets more graphic. The council proposed that striking visual photos of diseased organs should be put on at least 50% of outside packaging, in conjunction with health warnings outlining smoking hazards enumerated in a separate leaflet placed inside the cigarette packet. The ACSH claim that bland and ineffectual warnings like "Smoking is a health hazard" currently found on cigarette packets are not nearly sufficient.
Substituting those inadequate admonitions with explicit photos will provide a powerful visual stimulus to help smokers relinquish their habit. The current cautions on cigarette packets have little or no impact on smokers who have grown immune to the warnings that focus on abstract tobacco related risks and illnesses from which smokers can easily disassociate themselves. The proposed new tactics would concentrate on the perspective of the individual smoker through a demonstration of what is occurring in his body each time he reaches for a cigarette, rather than a generic cautionary word of advise.
The ACSH cited the results of recent studies conducted by psychologists at McKean University confirming that evidence related to one's own experience is more effective at influencing future behavior than a presentation of facts and figures. A further rationale for the addition of pictures to cigarette packages is the finding that smokers handle their packets 20-30 times a day, on average, thus, if graphic pictures on cigarette packets were introduced, smoker would have 20-30 chances to face the harsh reality of what damage they are doing to themselves each time they light up.
Even more essential than the pictures on the outside label, ACSH strongly advocate including warnings and helpful information in a leaflet inserted into the packet of cigarettes. Even an analgesic, ACSH adds, found in every bathroom cabinet has all possible side effects enumerated in the insert. How much more imperative is it then when the substance in question is tobacco, a dried weed that contains highly noxious nicotine that society still accepts even though it kills one of every two of its users.
Fundamentally, what is at stake here is consumer rights. Smokers should know what substances they are inhaling, and what damage they are inflicting to their bodies, though surprisingly, even today, many do not.
For this reason alone, the recommendation for more graphic pictures and warnings on cigarette packets, which many seem excessive, is being seriously considered.
It can be inferred from the passage
- A. That cigarette manufacturers would comply with regulations ordering them to add graphic pictures of diseased organs to their outside packaging.
- B. That smoker's look at their cigarette packages each time they take out a cigarette.
- C. That smoking cigarettes cause's damage to the internal organs of the body.
- D. That if the written warnings were less bland and ineffectual, smokers would not take more notice of them.
- E. That society will not continue to condone smoking if it is proven even more dangerous than was previously assumed.
Answer: C
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
We do not have information about A B & D.
From the passage E is incorrect because the passage claims that smokers have an opportunity to look at their cigarette packages, not that they actually do.
NEW QUESTION 111
George Bernard Shaw wrote: "That any sane nation, having observed that you could provide for the supply of bread by giving bakers a pecuniary interest in baking for you, should go on to give a surgeon a pecuniary interest in cutting off your leg is enough to make one despair of political humanity." Shaw's statement would best serve as an illustration in an argument criticizing which of the following?
- A. Grocers who raise the price of food in order to increase their profit margins
- B. Doctors who increase their profits by specializing only in diseases that affect a large percentage of the population
- C. Oil companies that decrease the price of their oil in order to increase their market share
- D. Dentists who perform unnecessary dental work in order to earn a profit
- E. Bakers and surgeons who earn a profit by supplying other peoples' basic needs
Answer: D
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
NEW QUESTION 112
This year the New Hampshire Division of Company X set a new record for annual sales by that division.
This record is especially surprising since the New Hampshire Division has the smallest potential market and the lowest sales of any of Company X's divisions.
Which of the following identifies a flaw in the logical coherence of the statement above?
- A. Since the New Hampshire Division has the smallest potential market, it is not surprising that it had the lowest sales.
- B. If overall sales for Company X were greater than usual, it is not surprising that the New Hampshire Division was last in sales.
- C. If this is the first year that the New Hampshire Division has been last in sales among Company X's divisions, the new record is not surprising at all.
- D. Since the division is competing against its own record, the comparison of its sales record with that of other divisions is irrelevant.
- E. If overall sales for Company X were sharply reduced, the New Hampshire Division's new sales record is irrelevant to the company's prosperity.
Answer: D
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
NEW QUESTION 113
Although its purpose is laudable, the exclusionary rule, which forbids a court to consider evidence seized in violation of the defendant's constitutional rights, has unduly hampered law-enforcement efforts. Even when the rights violation was a minor or purely technical one, turning on a detail of procedure rather than on the abrogation of some fundamental liberty, and even when it has been clear that the police officers were acting in good faith, the evidence obtained has been considered tainted under this rule and may not even by introduced. In consequence, defendants who were undoubtedly guilty have been set free, perhaps to steal, rape, or murder again.
The author of the passage above assumes all of the following EXCEPT:
- A. The constitutional rights of criminal defendants should be protected.
- B. Most cases in which the exclusionary rule has been invoked have involved purely technical violations of constitutional principles.
- C. Some of the defendants set free under the exclusionary rule have been guilty of serious criminal offenses.
- D. The number of cases whose outcome has been affected by the exclusionary rule is significant.
- E. Merely technical violations of the rules concerning evidence should be treated differently from deliberate assaults upon human rights.
Answer: B
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
NEW QUESTION 114
Most employees in the computer industry move from company to company, changing jobs several times in their careers. However, Summit Computers is known throughout the industry for retaining its employees.
Summit credits its success in retaining employees to its informal, non hierarchical work environment.
Which of the following, if true, most strongly supports Summit's explanation of its success in retaining employees?
- A. Many of Summit's senior employees had previously worked at only one other computer company.
- B. A hierarchical work environment hinders the cooperative exchange of ideas that computer industry employees consider necessary for their work.
- C. The cost of living near Summit is relatively low compared to areas in which some other computer companies are located.
- D. Some people employed in the computer industry change jobs if they become bored with their current projects.
- E. In a non hierarchical work environment, people avoid behavior that might threaten group harmony and thus avoid discussing with their colleagues any dissatisfaction they might have with their jobs.
Answer: B
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
NEW QUESTION 115
Men are primarily and secondarily socialized into believing certain characteristics are definitive in determining their masculinity. These characteristics range from playing violently to not crying when they are injured. The socialization of masculinity in our society begins as early as the first stages of infancy, with awareness of adult gender role differences being internalized by children as young as two years old.
Studies show that advertising imagery equates masculinity with violence by portraying the trait of aggression as instrumental to establishing their masculinity. Lee Bowker, who researched the influence of advertisements on youth, asserts that toy advertisements featuring only boys depict aggressive behavior and that the aggressive behavior produces positive consequences more often than negative.
Bowker also looked at commercials with boys that contain references to domination. His results indicated that 68.6% of the commercials positioned toward boys contain incidents of verbal and physical aggression.
However, there were no cross gender displays of aggressive behavior. Interestingly, not one single-sex commercial featuring girls showed any act of aggression. Bowker's research helps explain that it is not just the reinforcement of a child's close caretakers that lends legitimacy to aggressive masculine tendencies but society as a whole, using the medium of television.
William Pollack, a Harvard clinical psychologist, talks about how males have been put in a "gender straightjacket" that leads to anger, despair and often violence. Pollack states that society asks men to put a whole range of feelings and emotions behind a mask and shames them if they display any emotion.
Pollack contends that boys are 'shame phobic', even killing, in extreme cases, to avoid dishonor. It appears that the standard defined by society allows men to express their emotion only through anger.
Ironically, though these rigid stereotypes of what it means to be a man have been inculcated from an early age, men are often criticized for being one-dimensional in their behavior and emotions.
Women often verbalize a desire for males to be sensitive and express their emotions. But male insensitivity is the culmination of a societal indoctrination begun at birth. Realistically, men are in a damned if they do, damned if they don't situation. If they fail to show their emotions, they are berated for being detached from the essence of what constitutes a human being. On the other hand, if a male decides to expose his emotions, he is often branded effeminate and regarded as inferior to other males who stick closer to their gender's traditional doctrine.
The passage suggests that, when compared with television advertisement featuring boys, advertisements that had only girls were found
- A. To have more references to domination
- B. To be replete with extensive examples of cross gender aggression
- C. To be void of any acts of aggression
- D. To be remarkably similar in focus and content
- E. To be 68.6% less aggressive
Answer: C
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
The best answer is E.
Bowker found that not one single-sex commercial featuring girls showed any act of aggression.
NEW QUESTION 116 

Answer:
Explanation:
Explanation
NEW QUESTION 117
Public health professional: The Shoreville Department of Environmental Services (OES) has Inspected area beaches for pathogenic bacteria for more than 20 years. Currently, DES monitors 50 freshwater beaches and
10 coastal beaches on a weekly basis. Program participation by owners of beaches that are open to the public is voluntary. Owners of beaches who choose not to participate in the Program are allowing the public to recreate on entirety unmonitored beaches.
The DES now proposes adoption of the Adopt-a-Beach Program, designed to promote health and environmental education as well as public involvement in the protecting of public beaches. The program would require DES to collect biological data from all area beaches. It will also help reduce the number of beach advisories, whereby the public must be warned of dangerous conditions on certain beaches.
On the basis of the pubic heath professional's statement, indicate which of the following is most likely True of the Adopt-a-Beach program at the time of writing, and indicate which of the following is most likely False (A the program at the time of writing. Make only two selections, one in each column.
Answer:
Explanation:
Explanation
NEW QUESTION 118 
The graph summarizes data on a sample of 100 automobiles requiring warranty service within one year of purchase.
Each automobile required service in exactly one of seven categories.
For each category, the frequency\& the number of automobiles in the sample requiring service in that category; the cumulative frequency\s the total number of automobiles in (he sample requiring service in that category or in any of the categories to the left in the graph. In the graph, the frequency scale is on the left and the cumulative frequency scale is on the right.
From each drop-down menu, select the option that creates the most accurate statement based on the information provided.
Answer:
Explanation:
70, 30
NEW QUESTION 119
Millions of people in the United States are affected by eating disorders, more than 90% of those afflicted are adolescents or young women.
- A. eating disorders, of which more than 90%
- B. eating disorders; more than 90%
- C. Eating disorders. Ninety percent more
- D. Eating disorders, over 90%
- E. eating disorders, more than 90%
Answer: B
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
b. Choice a is a run-on sentence, which choice b corrects by changing the comma to a semicolon. Choice c creates a wordy and awkward sentence. Choice d changes the meaning of the sentence and makes it unclear - 90% more of what? Choice e is also a run-on.
NEW QUESTION 120
Which of the following statements concerning the valence model and the approach-withdrawal model most accurately reflects information provided in the Passage?
- A. Each of the two models explains how emotional information affects the processing of cognitive information in the human brain.
- B. Both models seek primarily to describe how emotion is expressed in behavior.
- C. Each of the two models implicates both hemispheres of the human brain in the processing of emotion.
- D. Both models suggest that cognitive information is processed by only one brain hemisphere in humans.
- E. The assumptions of both models concerning the processing of visuospatial information are identical with those made by Karev.
Answer: C
Explanation:
Explanation
Despite overall physiological bilateral symmetry, many species exhibit
lateralized biases, i.e., preferences for right- or left-oriented behavior. When approaching prey, for example, some predator species favor their right eye; some prey species respond more quickly when their left eye detects a predator. Similar behavioral asymmetries occur in humans. Most notable is right- and lefthandedness; less notable is the tendency to turn right when entering a room.
Paul Farnsworth found that more successful students tended to choose seats near the front, a little to the right. He argued that external factors such as teacher location might have affected this lateral bias. But it is now known that processing differences between the two brain hemispheres can also contribute to behavioral asymmetries.
George Karev found that when presented with a movie theater seating
diagram, right-handed people were more likely than left-handed people to choose a seat on the right, facing front. But he hypothesized that, since the right hemisphere processes visuospatial and emotional information, the people who chose right-side seats did so because that would put the screen in their left visual field, optimizing information flow to the right hemisphere.
Although the right hemisphere is thought to be dominant in processing
emotion, some evidence suggests that the left hemisphere plays a role. The valence model proposes that the left and right hemispheres process positive and negative emotion respectively, while the approach-withdrawal model posits that the left hemisphere processes emotion expressed in approach behavior and the right hemisphere processes emotion expressed in withdrawal behavior.
Victoria Harms and colleagues suggested that since a paper seating plan was used in the theater-seating studies by Karev and others, the exhibited preference might be due simply to handedness: people choose the same side of the paper as their favored hand. Consequently, the Harms research was designed to study choices in an actual movie theater. Also, hoping to distinguish between various explanations, they studied seating choices for comedies (presumed to contain Positive emotional content), dramas (presumed to contain negative emotional content), and documentaries (presumed to have balanced emotional content).
They found significant-though not universal-preference for seats on the right, facing front, regardless of movie genre and of handedness.
NEW QUESTION 121
An Australian group named Action Council on Smoking and Health (ACSH) has recently lobbied to make warnings on cigarette packets more graphic. The council proposed that striking visual photos of diseased organs should be put on at least 50% of outside packaging, in conjunction with health warnings outlining smoking hazards enumerated in a separate leaflet placed inside the cigarette packet. The ACSH claim that bland and ineffectual warnings like "Smoking is a health hazard" currently found on cigarette packets are not nearly sufficient.
Substituting those inadequate admonitions with explicit photos will provide a powerful visual stimulus to help smokers relinquish their habit. The current cautions on cigarette packets have little or no impact on smokers who have grown immune to the warnings that focus on abstract tobacco related risks and illnesses from which smokers can easily disassociate themselves. The proposed new tactics would concentrate on the perspective of the individual smoker through a demonstration of what is occurring in his body each time he reaches for a cigarette, rather than a generic cautionary word of advise.
The ACSH cited the results of recent studies conducted by psychologists at McKean University confirming that evidence related to one's own experience is more effective at influencing future behavior than a presentation of facts and figures. A further rationale for the addition of pictures to cigarette packages is the finding that smokers handle their packets 20-30 times a day, on average, thus, if graphic pictures on cigarette packets were introduced, smoker would have 20-30 chances to face the harsh reality of what damage they are doing to themselves each time they light up.
Even more essential than the pictures on the outside label, ACSH strongly advocate including warnings and helpful information in a leaflet inserted into the packet of cigarettes. Even an analgesic, ACSH adds, found in every bathroom cabinet has all possible side effects enumerated in the insert. How much more imperative is it then when the substance in question is tobacco, a dried weed that contains highly noxious nicotine that society still accepts even though it kills one of every two of its users.
Fundamentally, what is at stake here is consumer rights. Smokers should know what substances they are inhaling, and what damage they are inflicting to their bodies, though surprisingly, even today, many do not.
For this reason alone, the recommendation for more graphic pictures and warnings on cigarette packets, which many seem excessive, is being seriously considered.
Which of the following, if true, would be most useful in supporting the claims made by the ACSH?
- A. There is firm evidence that information conveyed in the form of visual depictions is more convincing than the same information communicated in a textual format.
- B. There is firm evidence that information communicated in a textual format is more convincing than the same information conveyed in the form of visual depictions.
- C. A survey reveals that 79% of smokers look at their cigarette packages when taking out a cigarette.
- D. A study of over 3000 individuals shows a statistically significant relationship between levels of nicotine in cigarettes and pulmonary damage.
- E. A study of over 3000 individuals shows a statistically significant relationship between smoking and pulmonary damage.
Answer: A
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
The best answer is B.
If smokers were more convinced of the dangers of smoker by pictures than by text, they would be more likely to be influenced by the pictures that the ACSH is proposing.
NEW QUESTION 122
A manufacturer of men's dress socks sought to increase profits by increasing sales. The size of its customer pool was remaining steady, with the average customer buying twelve pairs of dress socks per year. The company's plan was to increase the number of promotional discount-sale periods to one every six months.
Which of the following, if it is a realistic possibility, casts the most serious doubt on the viability of the company's plan?
- A. The manufacturer's competitors would match its discounts during sale periods, and its customers would learn to wait for those times to make their purchases.
- B. The cost of the manufacturer's raw materials would remain steady, and its customers would have more disposable income.
- C. Inventory stocks of merchandise ready for sale would be high preceding the increase in the number of discount-sale periods.
- D. New manufacturing capacity would not be required if the company were to increase the number of pairs of socks sold.
- E. New styles and colors would increase customers' consciousness of fashion in dress socks, but the customers' requirements for older styles and colors would not be reduced.
Answer: A
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
NEW QUESTION 123
In Asia, where palm trees are non-native, the trees' flowers have traditionally been pollinated by hand, which has kept palm fruit productivity unnaturally low. When weevils known to be efficient pollinators of palm flowers were introduced into Asia in 1980, palm fruit productivity increased - by up to fifty percent in some areas - but then decreased sharply in 1984.
Which of the following statements, if true, would best explain the 1984 decrease in productivity?
- A. The weevil population in Asia remained at approximately the same level between 1980 and 1984.
- B. Prior to 1980 another species of insect pollinated the Asian palm trees, but not as efficiently as the species of weevil that was introduced in 1980.
- C. Imported trees are often more productive than native trees because the imported ones have left behind their pests and diseases in their native lands.
- D. Prices for palm fruit fell between 1980 and 1984 following the rise in production and a concurrent fall in demand.
- E. Rapid increases in productivity tend to deplete trees of nutrients needed for the development of the fruit-producing female flowers.
Answer: E
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
NEW QUESTION 124
Job candidates are prescreened through using administrative plus management skills assessments.
- A. assessing administrative and managerial skills
- B. assessing their skills in administration and management
- C. by assessments of administration and of management skills
- D. with assessments of administrative and management skills
- E. through using administrative plus management skills assessments
Answer: B
NEW QUESTION 125
Men are primarily and secondarily socialized into believing certain characteristics are definitive in determining their masculinity. These characteristics range from playing violently to not crying when they are injured. The socialization of masculinity in our society begins as early as the first stages of infancy, with awareness of adult gender role differences being internalized by children as young as two years old.
Studies show that advertising imagery equates masculinity with violence by portraying the trait of aggression as instrumental to establishing their masculinity. Lee Bowker, who researched the influence of advertisements on youth, asserts that toy advertisements featuring only boys depict aggressive behavior and that the aggressive behavior produces positive consequences more often than negative.
Bowker also looked at commercials with boys that contain references to domination. His results indicated that 68.6% of the commercials positioned toward boys contain incidents of verbal and physical aggression.
However, there were no cross gender displays of aggressive behavior. Interestingly, not one single-sex commercial featuring girls showed any act of aggression. Bowker's research helps explain that it is not just the reinforcement of a child's close caretakers that lends legitimacy to aggressive masculine tendencies but society as a whole, using the medium of television.
William Pollack, a Harvard clinical psychologist, talks about how males have been put in a "gender straightjacket" that leads to anger, despair and often violence. Pollack states that society asks men to put a whole range of feelings and emotions behind a mask and shames them if they display any emotion.
Pollack contends that boys are 'shame phobic', even killing, in extreme cases, to avoid dishonor. It appears that the standard defined by society allows men to express their emotion only through anger.
Ironically, though these rigid stereotypes of what it means to be a man have been inculcated from an early age, men are often criticized for being one-dimensional in their behavior and emotions.
Women often verbalize a desire for males to be sensitive and express their emotions. But male insensitivity is the culmination of a societal indoctrination begun at birth. Realistically, men are in a damned if they do, damned if they don't situation. If they fail to show their emotions, they are berated for being detached from the essence of what constitutes a human being. On the other hand, if a male decides to expose his emotions, he is often branded effeminate and regarded as inferior to other males who stick closer to their gender's traditional doctrine.
According to Pollack, one of the reasons for male violence is that
- A. Men kill in extreme cases to avoid dishonor
- B. Society shames men who display feelings and emotions other than anger
- C. Society uses television as a symbol of its desires
- D. Reinforcement from child's close caretakers lends legitimacy to aggressive masculine behavior
- E. Men are often criticized for being one-dimensional in their behavior and emotions
Answer: B
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
The best answer is A.
B. is incorrect because it does not give a reason for violence.
C. is a result of the conditioning that leads to violence, not a reason.
D & E are incorrect because they are not opinions expressed by Pollack.
NEW QUESTION 126
A lottery box contains 8,000 tickets, each of which is red or blue or green. The box contains twice as many blue tickets as red tickets. The number of green tickets is 20 more than the number of red and blue tickets combined. Which of the following Is the best approximation to the probability that the first ticket randomly drawn from the box will be blue?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)
- A. Option B
- B. Option D
- C. Option C
- D. Option E
- E. Option A
Answer: E
NEW QUESTION 127
Researchers studying long-term changes In regional mouse populations have found that by focusing on the populations of a rare but widespread and easily identifiable species of mouse (Species X), they can make fairly accurate estimations about the total regional mouse populations.
In a report on a recent study that Included the data tables that follow, the researchers provided some addenda:
1. "The Species X population of Region CV increased by 123,995 between 1990 and 2005.
2. In contrast, the Species X population of Region EW declined by about 52% during that same time.

Answer:
Explanation:
Explanation
NEW QUESTION 128
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