2006年GMAT考试最新逻辑模拟试题二
文章作者 100test 发表时间 2007:04:29 12:35:59
来源 100Test.Com百考试题网
13.The town of Stavanger, Norway, was quiet and peaceful until the early 1960 s, when Stavanger became Norway s center for offshore oil exploration. Between then and now, violent crime and vandalism in Stavanger have greatly increased. Cearly, these social problems are among the results of Stavanger s oil boom.
Which of the following , if it occurred between the early 1960 s and now, give the strongest support to the argument above?
(A) The people of Stavanger rarely regret that their town was chosen to be Norway s center for offshore oil exploration.
(B) Norwegian sociologists expressed grave concern about the increase in violent crime and vandalism in stavanger.
(C) Violent crime and vandalism have remained low in Norwegian towns that had no oil boom.
(D) Nonviolent crime, drug addiction, and divorce in Stavanger increased approximately as much as violent crime and vandalism did.
(E) The oil boom necessitated the building of wider roads for the increased traffic in Stavanger.
14.In the aftermath of a worldwide stock-market crash, Country T claimed that the severity of the stock-market crash it experienced resulted from the accelerated process of denationalization many of its industries underwent shortly before the crash.
Which of the following, if it could be carried out, would be most useful in an evaluation of Country T s assessment of the causes of the severity of its stock-market crash?
(A) Calculating the average loss experienced by individual traders in Country T during the crash
(B) Using economic theory to predict the most likely date of the next crash in Country T
(C) Comparing the total number of shares sold during the worst days of the crash in Country T to the total number of shares sold in Country T just prior to the crash.
(D) Comparing the severity of the crash in Country T to the severity of the crash in countries otherwise economically similar to Country T that have not experienced recent denationalization
(E) Comparing the long-term effects of the crash on the purchasing power of the currency of Country T to the immediate, more severe short-term effects of the crash on the purchasing power of the currency of Country T.