Punctuation
2
        2                                                                                                           2
 The overarching objective of Popper’s approach is not            9
 to choose the weaker 8 hypothesis and choose the                     A) NO CHANGE
 hypothesis which will lead us towards truth. Because                 B) static: because
 scientific theories can never be proven true, our progress           C)     static because—
 depends on using theories which, like Einstein’s theory              D) static, because,
 of gravitation, can be proven false. Statements without
 predictive power are 9 static because, they cannot
 be disproven, we cannot move forwards.
             While often no post-secondary education is
                                                                      6
required, hotel manager candidates can make themselves
                                                                          A) NO CHANGE
more competitive by earning a Bachelor’s degree in a
                                                                          B) include: the following tasks,
business-related field, or an Associate’s degree in hotel                 C) include, the following tasks:
management or operations. The duties of general managers                  D) include the following tasks;
may 6 include the following tasks: overseeing employees,
scheduling shifts, managing on-site events, ordering
supplies, and resolving customers’ issues.
Her most recent 9 job: at The Surrey in New York City,
                                                                  9
offered Kanagasingham the opportunity, to help upgrade
                                                                          A) NO CHANGE
and gain more recognition for the hotel. 10 She oversaw                   B) job, at The Surrey in New York City,
The Surrey’s redesign, which included updating the spa and                C) job at the Surrey, in New York City
adding kitchens to suites for “extended stay” customers.                  D) job; at The Surrey in New York City,
Kanagasingham says she welcomes the opportunity to
make her mark on a hotel and to meet people from all over
the world.
    In order to inspire patriotism and meet the country’s         1
economic needs during 1 World War II was why the                          A) NO CHANGE
United States government launched a massive, targeted                     B) World War II so the
propaganda campaign.                                                      C) World War II; the
                                                                          D) World War II, the
                                                              1                                              CON T I N UE
      2                                                                                                          2
       Before the war, working women were primarily                  6
young and single. Middle-aged, married women joined 6                     A) NO CHANGE
them during the war, almost one out of every four gained                  B) them; during the war—
                                                                          C) them during the war;
employment outside the home. By 1944, 62 percent of the
                                                                          D) them, during the war:
female workforce was 35 and older, and 46 percent of all
working women were wedded.
      [1]Paris’s transformation was largely the work of
                                                                     4
  4 one man: Georges-Eugene Haussmann, whose official
                                                                          A) NO CHANGE
 title was Prefect of the Seine Department. [2]He was                     B) one man; Georges-Eugene Haussmann
 appointed to recreate Paris by Napoleon III, who had                     C) one man, George-Eugene Haussmann;
 declared himself Emperor of France in 1851 and wanted to                 D) one man, George-Eugene Haussmann:
 cement his legacy by creating a modern capital.
      Not surprisingly, Haussmann’s projects cost millions of
                                                                     11
 francs, which made him a target for politicians’ criticisms.
                                                                          A) NO CHANGE
  10 Furthermore, many Parisian citizens were unhappy with
                                                                          B) Washington, D.C., all owe a debt
 how dramatically he had changed their city. Haussmann’s
                                                                          C) Washington, D.C., all owe a debt,
 ideals, however, went on to become influential in the “City              D) Washington, D.C.; all owe a debt
 Beautiful” urban planning movement in the United States.
 Cities like Chicago, Denver, and 11 Washington, D.C. all
 owe a debt, to Haussmann.
     [1] Like many scientific breakthroughs,                         6
  5 Mendeleev was partially anticipated by the work of                    A) NO CHANGE
 other scientists.[2] For example, the French geologist                   B) elements,
 Alexandre-Emile Béguyer de Chancourtois is generally                     C) elements;
                                                                          D) elements
 credited with discovering periodicity—the existence of
 recurring trends across 6 elements—in 1862. [3] Another
 key observation was made the following year by the British
 scientist John Newlands, who noted that similar elements
 were often related in mass by a multiple of eight.
                                                                2                                         CO N T I N
                                                                UE
          2                                                                                                            2
     It’s nighttime. All is still. Suddenly, the mournful howl       11 1
of a coyote drifts through the crisp night air. This isn’t the         A) A)NONO
                                                                               CHANGE
                                                                                 CHANGE
                                                                       B) B)election,
                                                                               plains’which  is considered the greatest upset in
                                                                                       of Wyoming.
New Mexico desert or the 1 plains of Wyoming. This
                                                                            a US presidential race,
is downtown Chicago, New York City’s Central Park, or                     C) plain’s of Wyoming.
                                                                       C) election which is considered, the greatest upset in
suburban Connecticut.                                                     D)a US
                                                                               Wyoming    plains’
                                                                                  presidential   .
                                                                                               race
                                                                       D) election, which is considered the greatest upset, in
                                                                          a US presidential race
     With ample habitat and no 10 predators, species                    10
such as the white-tailed deer have populated the eastern                        A) NO CHANGE
U.S. in unprecedented numbers. Western coyotes—small                            B) predators species, such as
and solitary hunters— are no match for even injured or                          C) predators, species, such as
                                                                                D) predators species such as
young deer.
       Using train travel in a political campaign was a fairly              3
  common practice that had begun in the nineteenth                              A) NO CHANGE
    2 century. The specific term “whistle stop” wasn't coined                   B) Truman delivered hundreds of speeches in towns
  until Truman used it to describe his whirlwind campaign                       C) Truman delivered: hundreds of speeches, in towns
  tour. 3 Truman, delivered hundreds of speeches in towns                       D) Truman delivered hundreds of: speeches in towns
  across the United States from an open platform on the back
  of his train car.
               In September, he headed west to Nevada, Utah,                5
  California, and Arizona. At one of his stops in                               A) NO CHANGE
   5 Arizona. An estimated 20,000 people waited to greet                        B) Arizona, an estimated 20,000 people waited
 him at the train station. In October, he headed back east                      C) Arizona, an estimated 20,000 people waiting
 again to Oklahoma, Illinois, Kentucky, West Virginia, and                      D) Arizona, with an estimated 20,000 people waiting
 Pennsylvania.
                                                                 3                                               CON T I N U E
       2                                                                                                            2
10 When voters went to the polls, Truman won the                    11
11 election which is considered the greatest upset in a US               A) NO CHANGE
presidential race, due to his exhaustive campaign.                       B) election, which is considered the greatest upset in
                                                                            a US presidential race,
                                                                         C) election which is considered, the greatest upset in
                                                                            a US presidential race
                                                                         D) election, which is considered the greatest upset, in
                                                                            a US presidential race
       For people born into the Russian aristocracy                  2
  in the nineteenth century, life was full of interesting                 A) NO CHANGE
  opportunities—unless they were female. At the time,                     B) married Leo Tolstoy, was
  women generally did not have careers, 1 who were                        C) married, Leo Tolstoy was
                                                                          D) married, Leo Tolstoy, was
  expected, instead, to focus fully on marrying and raising
  families. Sophia Behrs was one such young woman. The
  man she 2 married Leo Tolstoy was one of the world’s
  greatest writers.
  She also 8 wrote fiction. Including a revision of Leo’s            8
  novella The Kreutzer Sonata. In that story, a man recounts              A) NO CHANGE
                                                                          B) wrote fiction, including
  the dramatic breakdown of his marriage; Sophia retold the
                                                                          C) wrote. Fiction including
  narrative from his wife’s point of view. The famous writer
                                                                          D) wrote fiction, it included
  was himself impressed by his wife’s literary talents. “What
  force of truth and simplicity!” he wrote in his diary upon
                                                                    10
  reading one of her stories.
                                                                         A) NO CHANGE
        9 Furthermore, Sophia never sought publication for
                                                                         B) seriously; rather,
  her own work. Writing was not a pursuit that she took
                                                                         C) seriously, rather;
  10 seriously, rather, she regarded the whole enterprise
                                                                         D) seriously, rather:
  with “a certain contempt and irony.”
                                                                4                                           CON T IN U E
           2                                                                                                        2
     In the early stages of the civil rights movement,
                                                                       A) NO CHANGE
though, King struggled to reconcile the Christian doctrine
                                                                       B) world, for the rights of the oppressed,
of love with the immense challenge of achieving economic
                                                                       C) world for the rights of the oppressed:
and social rights for African Americans. During this time
                                                                       D) world for the rights of the oppressed
of soul-searching, King was introduced to the teachings of
a Hindu man who had fought on the other side of the
 1 world—for the rights of the oppressed, Mahatma
Gandhi.
  Over the next decade, King continued to rely on methods          8
of nonviolent resistance by organizing 8 marches; and                  A) NO CHANGE
giving speeches; and instituting boycotts; and leading                 B) marches; giving speeches; instituting boycotts and
“sit-ins” at public establishments that refused to serve               C) marches, and giving speeches and instituting
                                                                          boycotts, and
African Americans.
                                                                       D) marches, giving speeches, instituting boycotts,
                                                                          and
      From discovering the causes of polio and smallpox to         1
 controlling epidemics all around the world, epidemiologists               A) NO CHANGE
 have been behind many of our current advancements                         B) to: a single story,
                                                                           C) to a single story:
 in public health. While the field of epidemiology now
                                                                           D) to: a single story
 encompasses a wide range of skills and methods, its origin
 is commonly traced back 1 to a single story; the tale of
 John Snow and the Broad Street pump.
      The Venezuelan government began implementing                     5
 Abreu’s ideas right 5 away, by the end of 1975, it had                     A) NO CHANGE
                                                                            B) away
 opened the first núcleos. More soon opened, and students
                                                                            C) away;
 congregated 6 together at these centers after school to
                                                                            D) away, it was
 play music.
                                                               5                                         CON T I N U E
       2                                                                                                          2
It is a quantitative discipline built on probability, statistics,       8
and research 8 methods, a method of causal reasoning                        A) NO CHANGE
                                                                            B) methods; a method of causal reasoning based on
based on developing and testing hypotheses, and a tool to
                                                                               developing and testing hypotheses; and
promote and protect the health of the public. Examples                      C) methods, a method of causal reasoning based on
of applied epidemiology include monitoring reports                             developing and testing hypotheses; and
                                                                            D) methods; a method of causal reasoning based on
of communicable diseases in the 9 community; and
                                                                               developing and testing hypotheses, and
tracking down the cause of a food-borne outbreak. While
many epidemiologists work for health departments at                     9
the local and state levels, a number are also employed by                   A) NO CHANGE
colleges and universities.                                                  B) community—and
                                                                            C) community: and
                                                                            D) community and
      [1] El Sistema, the nickname for the Fundación                    2
 Musical Simón Bolívar, was founded in 1975 by Dr. José                     A) NO CHANGE
 Antonio Abreu. [2] He envisioned this government-funded                    B) orchestra, Abreu
 program not only as a vehicle for music instruction, but                   C) orchestra; Abreu
 also for social change. [3] Disappointed that Venezuela did                D) orchestra: Abreu
 not have its own 2 orchestra—Abreu wanted to educate
 children about classical music on the national level. [4]
      The defense maintained that, because molasses made                3
 the industrial alcohol used to produce munitions for 3                     A) NO CHANGE
                                                                            B) World War I;
 World War I—USIA had a plausible claim of sabotage.
                                                                            C) World War I
 Rampant anarchist activity had plagued the nation, and
                                                                            D) World War I,
 anti-war posters covered the area surrounding the tank.
 USIA had even received a threatening phone call before the
 accident.
                                                                    6                                     CON T IN U E
      2                                                                                                           2
    Born in Cuba in 4 1956, the granddaughter of                     4
Eastern European Jewish émigrés. Behar moved with her                     A) NO CHANGE
                                                                          B) 1956. The granddaughter of Eastern European
family to New York in 1962. These early experiences
                                                                             Jewish émigrés,
 5 in her younger years generated an interest in how                      C) 1956, the granddaughter of Eastern European
                                                                             Jewish émigrés,
people form identity based on community, eventually
                                                                          D) 1956, the granddaughter of Eastern European
leading Behar to pursue a PhD in cultural anthropology at                    Jewish émigrés;
Princeton.
                                                                     9
     8 Because she maintains an objective tone for most
                                                                          A) NO CHANGE
of the book, the final chapter of Translated Woman offers a
                                                                          B) Latin America—her birthplace—
personal reflection on Behar’s struggle to define her own
                                                                          C) Latin America—her birthplace
cultural identity, influenced by 9 Latin America, her
                                                                          D) Latin America; her birthplace;
birthplace—and the United States. This chapter garnered
a divided critical 10 reception, some anthropologists                10
insisted, that Behar had strayed beyond the bounds of                     A) NO CHANGE
her field, while others lauded her unique approach.                       B) reception some anthropologists insisted
                                                                          C) reception: some anthropologists insisted
                                                                          D) reception: some anthropologists insisted,
                                        A valued public
                                                                      6
intellectual figure, 5 Eliot’s skills as a writer, editor, and
                                                                          A) NO CHANGE
lecturer were in high demand. Noted scholar Helen 6
                                                                          B) Gardner, has also suggested that,
Gardner, has also suggested that this quartet required more
                                                                          C) Gardner has also suggested that
careful composition, and therefore more time, than did                    D) Gardner has also suggested, that
the other three poems.
                                                                     3
     At the beginning of the 1930s, 3 San Francisco along
                                                                          A) NO CHANGE
with the rest of the country was reeling from the effects of
                                                                          B) San Francisco, along with the rest of the country
the Great Depression.
                                                                          C) San Francisco, (along with the rest of the
                                                                             country),
                                                                          D) San Francisco (along with the rest of the country)
                                                                 7                                        CO N TINU E
          2                                                                                                            2
                                                                       6
     To help get Americans who had lost their livelihoods
                                                                           A) NO CHANGE
back to 6 work. President Roosevelt established the
                                                                           B) work. President Roosevelt establishing
New Deal programs in 1933.
                                                                           C) work, President Roosevelt established
                                                                           D) work, President Roosevelt establishing
they were able to build the island to a mere 13 feet above             8
sea level. [4] It was named Treasure Island as a tribute to                    A) NO CHANGE
                                                                               B) Rush; the economic venture
California’s Gold 8 Rush—the economic venture, that
                                                                               C) Rush—the economic venture
had allowed the state to succeed early in its history. 9
                                                                               D) Rush; the economic venture,
    The story of these eccentrically concealed microfilm               3
images—affectionately, if inaccurately, dubbed the                             A) NO CHANGE
‘pumpkin papers’ by the 3 press—had begun a decade                             B) press, had
                                                                               C) press; had
earlier when Whittaker Chambers, 4 the man who
                                                                               D) press had
revealed the evidence on that December evening, decided
to defect from the underground Communist party.
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  Although Chambers had deliberately chosen not to reveal
                                                                           8
 the microfilm, this legal attack convinced him to tacitly
                                                                                A) NO CHANGE
 admit its existence to Robert Stripling, the chief investigator                B) Chamber’s farmhouse
 of HUAC. When two investigators traveled to 8                                  C) Chambers farmhouses’
   Chambers’ farmhouse the following evening, he led                            D) the farmhouse of Chamber’s
 them to the backyard and revealed the evidence hidden
 inside the hollow pumpkin.
                                                                   8                                            CON T I N U E
         2                                                                                                      2
      Dr. M. Edwards Walker was one of the bravest army
surgeons during the American Civil War. In addition to
                                                                       A) NO CHANGE
working on the frontlines of the Union Army from 1863                  B) spy, Walker relayed
to 1865, Walker was also a Union 1 spy. Who relayed                    C) spy, relaying
Confederate secrets across enemy lines while treating                  D) spy. Relaying
civilians in the South.
                 In 1866, Walker was even elected president
                                                                   8
 of the National Dress Reform Association, and prided
                                                                        A) NO CHANGE
 herself in being arrested numerous times for wearing full
                                                                        B) a winged collar; bow-tie, and top hat.
 male attire, including 8 a winged-collar; bow-tie; and,                C) a winged collar, bow-tie; and top hat.
 top hat. Towards the end of her life, Walker went on                   D) a winged collar, bow-tie, and top hat.
 to become involved in a number of other progressive
 movements in the United States, including the suffragette
 movement and the temperance movement.
      Though she was unaware of it at the time, Mary
                                                                   11
Edwards Walker was at the forefront of a monumental                     A) NO CHANGE
shift in the role of women in medicine. 10 Walker was                   B) field she
not only a trailblazer in the medical 11 field, she was also            C) field; she
a relentless visionary who bravely challenged many of the               D) field: she
social prejudices of her day, and contributed as much to
advancing gender equality in the United States as she did
to healing injured soldiers during the Civil War.
                                                                   2
       1 What types of food are most easily digested?
                                                                       A) NO CHANGE
At first glance, the process by which food fuels our daily
                                                                       B) digestion: the breakdown of food into smaller
activities might seem inexplicable. However, upon closer                  components, to provide the body with necessary
                                                                          nutrients and energy,
examination, 2 digestion—the breakdown of food into
                                                                       C) digestion; the breakdown of food, into smaller
smaller components to provide the body with necessary                     components to provide the body with necessary
                                                                          nutrients and energy
nutrients and energy— is a chemical and mechanical
                                                                       D) digestion, the breakdown of food—into smaller
process with a consistent sequence of steps.                              components to provide the body with necessary
                                                               9          nutrients—and energy