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READING COMPREHENSION FOR gmat
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  1. #1

    Default READING COMPREHENSION FOR gmat

    The antigen-antibody immunological reaction used to be regarded as typical of immunological responses. Antibodies are proteins synthesized by specialized cells called plasma cells, which are formed by lymphocytes (cells from the lymph system) when an antigen, a substance foreign to the organism’s body, comes in contact with lymphocytes. Two important manifestations of antigen-antibody immunity are lysis, the rapid physical rupture of antigenic cells and the liberation of their contents into the surrounding medium, and phagocytosis, a process in which antigenic particles are engulfed by and very often digested by macrophages and polymorphs. The process of lysis is executed by a complex and unstable blood constituent known as complement, which will not work unless it is activated by a specific antibody; the process of phagocytosis is greatly facilitated when the particles to be engulfed are coated by a specific antibody directed against them.
    The reluctance to—abandon this hypothesis, however well it explains specific processes, impeded new research, and for many years antigens and antibodies dominated the thoughts of immunologists so completely that those immunologists overlooked certain difficulties. Perhaps the primary difficulty with the antigen-antibody explanation is the informational problem of how an antigen is recognized and how a structure exactly complementary to it is then synthesized. When molecular biologists discovered, moreover, that such information cannot flow from protein to protein, but only from nucleic acid to protein, the theory that an antigen itself provided the mold that directed the synthesis of an antibody had to be seriously qualified. The attempts at qualification and the information provided by research in molecular biology led scientists to realize that a second immunological reaction is mediated through the lymphocytes that are hostile to and bring about the destruction of the antigen. This type of immunological response is called cell-mediated immunity.
    Recent research in cell-mediated immunity has been concerned not only with the development of new and better vaccines, but also with the problem of transplanting tissues and organs from one organism to another, for although circulating antibodies play a part in the rejection of transplanted tissues, the primary role is played by cell-mediated reactions. During cell-mediated responses, receptor sites on specific lymphocytes and surface antigens on the foreign tissue cells form a complex that binds the lymphocytes to the tissue. Such lymphocytes do not give rise to antibody-producing plasma cells but themselves bring about the death of the foreign-tissue cells, probably by secreting a variety of substances, some of which are toxic to the tissue cells and some of which stimulate increased phagocytic activity by white blood cells of the macrophage type. Cell-mediated immunity also accounts for the destruction of intracellular parasites.
    1. The author is primarily concerned with
    (A) proving that immunological reactions do not involve antibodies
    (B) establishing that most immunological reactions involve antigens
    (C) criticizing scientists who will not change their theories regarding immunology
    (D) analyzing the importance of cells in fighting disease
    (E) explaining two different kinds of immunological reactions
    2. The author argues that the antigen-antibody explanation of immunity “had to seriously qualified” (line 37) because
    (A) antibodies were found to activate unstable components in the blood
    (B) antigens are not exactly complementary to antibodies
    (C) lymphocytes have the ability to bind to the surface of antigens
    (D) antibodies are synthesized from protein whereas antigens are made from nucleic acid
    (E) antigens have no apparent mechanism to direct the formation of an antibody
    3. The author most probably believes that the antigen-antibody theory of immunological reaction.
    (A) is wrong
    (B) was accepted without evidence
    (C) is unverifiable
    (D) is a partial explanation
    (E) has been a divisive issue among scientists
    4. The author mentions all of the following as being involved in antigen-antibody immunological reactions EXCEPT the
    (A) synthesis of a protein
    (B) activation of complement in the bloodstream
    (C) destruction of antibodies
    (D) entrapment of antigens by macrophages
    (E) formation of a substance with a structure complementary to that of an antigen
    5. The passage contains information that would answer which of the following questions about cell-mediated immunological reactions?
    I. Do lymphocytes form antibodies during cell-mediated immunological reactions?
    II. Why are lymphocytes more hostile to antigens during cell-mediated immunological reactions than are other cell groups?
    III. Are cell-mediated reactions more pronounced after transplants than they are after parasites have invaded the organism?
    (A) I only
    (B) I and II only
    (C) I and III only
    (D) II and III only
    (E) I, II, and III
    6. The passage suggests that scientists might not have developed the theory of cell-mediated immunological reactions if
    (A) proteins existed in specific group types
    (B) proteins could have been shown to direct the synthesis of other proteins
    (C) antigens were always destroyed by proteins
    (D) antibodies were composed only of protein
    (E) antibodies were the body’s primary means of resisting disease
    7. According to the passage, antibody-antigen and cell-mediated immunological reactions both involve which of the following processes?
    I. The destruction of antigens
    II. The creation of antibodies
    III. The destruction of intracellular parasites
    (A) I only
    (B) II only
    (C) III only
    (D) I and II only
    (E) II and III only
    8. The author supports the theory of cell-mediated reactions primarily by
    (A) pointing out a contradiction in the assumption leading to the antigen-antibody theory
    (B) explaining how cell mediation accounts for phenomena that the antigen-antibody theory cannot account for
    (C) revealing new data that scientists arguing for the antigen-antibody theory have continued to ignore
    (D) showing that the antigen-antibody theory fails to account for the breakup of antigens
    (E) demonstrating that cell mediation explains lysis and phagocytosis more fully than the antigen-antibody theory does

  2. #2

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    The founders of the Republic viewed their revolution primarily in political rather than economic or social terms. And they talked about education as essential to the public good—a goal that took precedence over knowledge as occupational training or as a means to self-fulfillment or self-improvement. Over and over again the Revolutionary generation, both liberal and conservative in outlook, asserted its conviction that the welfare of the Republic rested upon an educated citizenry and that schools, especially free public schools, would be the best means of educating the citizenry in civic values and the obligations required of everyone in a democratic republican society. All agreed that the principal ingredients of a civic education were literacy and the inculcation of patriotic and moral virtues, some others adding the study of history and the study of principles of the republican government itself.
    The founders, as was the case of almost all their successors, were long on exhortation and rhetoric regarding the value of civic education, but they left it to the textbook writers to distill the essence of those values for school children. Texts in American history and government appeared as early as the 1790s. The textbook writers turned out to be very largely of conservative persuasion, more likely Federalist in outlook than Jeffersonian, and almost universally agreed that political virtue must rest upon moral and religious precepts. Since most textbook writers were New Englander, this meant that the texts were infused with Protestant and, above all, Puritan outlooks.
    In the first half of the Republic, civic education in the schools emphasized the inculcation of civic values and made little attempt to develop participatory political skills. That was a task left to incipient political parties, town meetings, churches and the coffee or ale houses where men gathered for conversation. Additionally as a reading of certain Federalist papers of the period would demonstrate, the press probably did more to disseminate realistic as well as partisan knowledge of government than the schools. The goal of education, however, was to achieve a higher form of unum for the new Republic. In the middle half of the nineteenth century, the political values taught in the public and private schools did not change substantially from those celebrated in the first fifty years of the Republic. In the textbooks of the day their rosy hues if anything became golden. To the resplendent values of liberty, equality, and a benevolent Christian morality were now added the middle-class virtues-especially of New England-of hard work, honesty and integrity, the rewards of individual effort, and obedience to parents and legitimate authority. But of all the political values taught in school, patriotism was preeminent; and whenever teachers explained to school children why they should love their country above all else, the idea of liberty assumed pride of place.
    1. The passage deals primarily with the
    (A) content of early textbooks on American history and government
    (B) role of education in late eighteenth-and early to mid-nineteenth-century America
    (C) influence of New England Puritanism on early American values
    (D) origin and development of the Protestant work ethic in modern America
    (E) establishment of universal free public education in America
    2. According to the passage, the founders of the Republic regarded education primarily as
    (A) a religious obligation
    (B) a private matter
    (C) an unnecessary luxury
    (D) a matter of individual choice
    (E) a political necessity
    3. The author states that textbooks written in the middle part of the nineteenth century
    (A) departed radically in tone and style from earlier textbooks
    (B) mentioned for the first time the value of liberty
    (C) treated traditional civic virtues with even greater reverence
    (D) were commissioned by government agencies
    (E) contained no reference to conservative ideas
    4. Which of the following would LEAST likely have been the subject of an early American textbook?
    (A) basic rules of English grammar
    (B) the American Revolution
    (C) patriotism and other civic virtues
    (D) vocational education
    (E) principles of American government
    5. The author’s attitude toward the educational system she discusses can best be described as
    (A) cynical and unpatriotic
    (B) realistic and analytical
    (C) pragmatic and frustrated
    (D) disenchanted and bitter
    (E) idealistic and naive
    6. The passage provides information that would be helpful in answering which of the following questions?
    (A) Why were a disproportionate share of early American textbooks written by New England authors?
    (B) Was the Federalist party primarily a liberal or conservative force in early American politics?
    (C) How many years of education did the founders believe were sufficient to instruct young citizens in civic virtue?
    (D) What were that names of some of the Puritan authors who wrote early American textbooks?
    (E) Did most citizens of the early Republic agree with the founders that public education was essential to the welfare of the Republic?
    7. The author implies that an early American Puritan would likely insist that
    (A) moral and religious values are the foundation of civic virtue
    (B) textbooks should instruct students in political issues of vital concern to the community
    (C) textbooks should give greater emphasis to the value of individual liberty than to the duties of patriotism
    (D) private schools with a particular religious focus are preferable to public schools with no religious instruction
    (E) government and religion are separate institutions and the church should not interfere in political affairs
    8. According to the passage citizens of the early Republic learned about practical political matters in all of the following ways EXCEPT
    (A) reading newspapers
    (B) attending town meetings
    (C) conversing about political matters
    (D) reading textbooks
    (E) attending church

  3. #3

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    The health-care economy is replete with unusual and even unique economic relationships. One of the least understood involves the peculiar roles of producer or “provider” and purchaser or “consumer” in the typical doctor-patient relationship. In most sectors of the economy, it is the seller who attempts to attract a potential buyer with various inducements of price, quality, and utility, and it is the buyer who makes the decision. Where circumstances permit the buyer no choice because there is effectively only one seller and the product is relatively essential, government usually asserts monopoly and places the industry under price and other regulations. Neither of these conditions prevails in most of the health-care industry.
    In the health-care industry, the doctor-patient relationship is the mirror image of the ordinary relationship between producer and consumer. Once an individual has chosen to see a physician—and even then there may be no real choice—it is the physician who usually makes all significant purchasing decisions: whether the patient should return “next Wednesday,” whether X-rays are needed, whether drugs should be prescribed, etc. It is a rare and sophisticated patient who will challenge such professional decisions or raise in advance questions about price, especially when the ailment is regarded as serious.
    This is particularly significant in relation to hospital care. The physician must certify the need for hospitalization, determine what procedures will be performed, and announce when the patient may be discharged. The patient may be consulted about some of these decisions, but in the main it is the doctor’s judgments that are final. Little wonder then that in the eyes of the hospital it is the physician who is the real “consumer.” As a consequence, the medical staff represents the “power center” in hospital policy and decision-making, not the administration.
    Although usually there are in this situation four identifiable participants—the physician, the hospital, the patient, and the payer (generally an insurance carrier or government)—the physician makes the essential decisions for all of them. The hospital becomes an extension of the physician; the payer generally meets most of the bona fide bills generated by the physician/hospital; and for the most part the patient plays a passive role. In routine or minor illnesses, or just plain worries, the patient’s options are, of course, much greater with respect to use and price. In illnesses that are of some significance, however, such choices tend to evaporate, and it is for these illnesses that the bulk of the health-care dollar is spent. We estimate that about 75-80 percent of health-care expenditures are determined by physicians, not patients. For this reason, economy measures directed at patients or the general public are relatively ineffective.
    1. The author’s primary purpose is to
    (A) speculate about the relationship between a patient’s ability to pay and the treatment received
    (B) criticize doctors for exercising too much control over patients
    (C) analyze some important economic factors in health care
    (D) urge hospitals to reclaim their decision-making authority
    (E) inform potential patients of their health-care rights
    2. It can be inferred that doctors are able to determine hospital policies because
    (A) it is doctors who generate income for the hospital
    (B) most of a patient’s bills are paid by his health insurance
    (C) hospital administrators lack the expertise to question medical decisions
    (D) a doctor is ultimately responsible for a patient’s health
    (E) some patients might refuse to accept their physician’s advice
    3. According to the author, when a doctor tells a patient to “return next Wednesday,” the doctor is in effect
    (A) taking advantage of the patient’s concern for his health
    (B) instructing the patient to buy more medical services
    (C) warning the patient that a hospital stay might be necessary
    (D) advising the patient to seek a second opinion
    (E) admitting that the initial visit was ineffective
    4. The author is most probably leading up to
    (A) a proposal to control medical costs
    (B) a discussion of a new medical treatment
    (C) an analysis of the causes of inflation in the United States
    (D) a study of lawsuits against doctors for malpractice
    (E) a comparison of hospitals and factories
    5. The tone of the passage can best be described as
    (A) whimsical
    (B) cautious
    (C) analytical
    (D) inquisitive
    (E) defiant
    6. With which of the following statements would the author be likely to agree?
    I. Most patients are reluctant to object to the course of treatment prescribed by a doctor or to question the cost of the services.
    II. The more serious the illness of a patient, the less likely it is that the patient will object to the course of treatment prescribed or to question the cost of services.
    III. The payer, whether insurance carrier or the government, is less likely to acquiesce to demands for payment when the illness of the patient is regarded as serious.
    (A) I only
    (B) II only
    (C) I and II only
    (D) II and III only
    (E) I, II, and III
    7. The author’s primary concern is to
    (A) define a term
    (B) clarify a misunderstanding
    (C) refute a theory
    (D) discuss a problem
    (E) announce a new discovery
    8. The most important feature of a “consumer” as that term is used in line 33 of the passage is that the “consumer” is the party that
    (A) pays for goods or services
    (B) delivers goods or services
    (C) orders goods or services
    (D) reimburses a third party for goods or services
    (E) supplies goods and services to a third party

  4. #4

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    About twice every century, one of the massive stars in our galaxy blows itself apart in a supernova explosion that sends massive quantities of radiation and matter into space and generates shock waves that sweep through the arms of the galaxy. The shock waves heat the interstellar gas, evaporate small clouds, and compress larger ones to the point at which they collapse under their own gravity to form new stars. The general picture that has been developed for the supernova explosion and its aftermath goes something like this. Throughout its evolution, a star is much like a leaky balloon. It keeps its equilibrium figure through a balance of internal pressure against the tendency to collapse under its own weight. The pressure is generated by nuclear reactions in the core of the star which must continually supply energy to balance the energy that leaks out in the form of radiation. Eventually the nuclear fuel is exhausted, and the pressure drops in the core. With nothing to hold it up, the matter in the center of the star collapses inward, creating higher and higher densities and temperatures, until the nuclei and electrons are fused into a super-dense lump of matter known as a neutron star.
    As the overlying layers rain down on the surface of the neutron star, the temperature rises, until with a blinding flash of radiation, the collapse is reversed. A thermonuclear shock wave runs through the now expanding stellar envelope, fusing lighter elements into heavier ones and producing a brilliant visual outburst that can be as intense as the light of 10 billion suns. The shell of matter thrown off by the explosion plows through the surrounding gas, producing an expanding bubble of hot gas, with gas temperatures in the millions of degrees. This gas will emit most of its energy at X-ray wavelengths, so it is not surprising that X-ray observatories have provided some of the most useful insights into the nature of the supernova phenomenon. More than twenty supernova remnants have now been detected in X-ray studies.
    Recent discoveries of meteorites with anomalous concentrations of certain isotopes indicate that a supernova might have precipitated the birth of our solar system more than four and a half billion years ago. Although the cloud that collapsed to form the Sun and the planets was composed primarily of hydrogen and helium, it also contained carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, elements essential for life as we know it. Elements heavier than helium are manufactured deep in the interior of stars and would, for the most part, remain there if it were not for the cataclysmic supernova explosions that blow giant stars apart. Additionally, supernovas produce clouds of high-energy particles called cosmic rays. These high-energy particles continually bombard the Earth and are responsible for many of the genetic mutations that are the driving force of the evolution of species.
    1. Which of the following titles best describes the content of the passage?
    (A) The Origins and Effects of Supernovas
    (B) The Life and Death of Stars
    (C) The Origins and Evolution of Life on Earth
    (D) The Aftermath of a Supernova
    (E) Violent Change in the Universe
    2. According to the passage, we can expect a supernova to occur in our galaxy
    (A) about twice each year
    (B) hundreds of times each century
    (C) about once every fifty years
    (D) about once every other century
    (E) about once every four to five billion years
    3. According to the passage all of the following are true of supernovas EXCEPT that they
    (A) are extremely bright
    (B) are an explosion of some sort
    (C) emit large quantities of X-rays
    (D) result in the destruction of a neutron star
    (E) are caused by the collision of large galaxies
    4. The author employs which of the following to develop the first paragraph?
    (A) Analogy
    (B) Deduction
    (C) Generalization
    (D) Example
    (E) Refutation
    5. It can be inferred from the passage that the meteorites mentioned by the author at line 39
    (A) contain dangerous concentrations of radioactive materials
    (B) give off large quantities of X-rays
    (C) include material not created in the normal development of our solar system
    (D) are larger than the meteors normally found in a solar system like ours
    (E) contain pieces of a supernova that occurred several billion years ago
    6. The author implies that
    (A) it is sometimes easier to detect supernovas by observation of the X-ray spectrum than by observation of visible wavelengths of light
    (B) life on Earth is endangered by its constant exposure to radiation forces that are released by a supernova
    (C) recently discovered meteorites indicate that the Earth and other planets of our solar system survived the explosion of a supernova several billion years ago
    (D) lighter elements are formed from heavier elements during a supernova as the heavier elements are torn apart
    (E) the core of a neutron star is composed largely of heavier elements such as carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen
    7. According to the passage what is the first event in the sequence that leads to the occurrence of a supernova?
    (A) An ordinary star begins to emit tremendous quantities of X-rays.
    (B) A neutron star is enveloped by a superheated cloud of gas.
    (C) An imbalance between light and heavy elements causes an ordinary star to collapse.
    (D) A cloud of interstellar gas rich in carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, collapses to form a neutron star.
    (E) An ordinary star exhausts its supply of nuclear fuel and begins to collapse.
    8. According to the passage a neutron star is
    (A) a gaseous cloud containing heavy elements
    (B) an intermediate stage between an ordinary star and a supernova
    (C) the residue that is left by a supernova
    (D) the core of an ordinary star that houses the thermonuclear reactions
    (E) one of billions of meteors that are scattered across the galaxy by a supernova
    9. The author is primarily concerned with
    (A) speculating about the origins of our solar system
    (B) presenting evidence proving the existence of supernovas
    (C) discussing the nuclear reaction that occurs in the core of a star
    (D) describing the sequence of scientific events
    (E) disproving a theory about the causes of supernovas

  5. #5

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    The uniqueness of the Japanese character is the result of two seemingly contradictory forces: the strength of traditions and selective receptivity to foreign achievements and inventions. As early as the 1860s, there were counter movements to the traditional orientation. Yukichi Fukuzawa, the most eloquent spokesman of Japan’s “Enlightenment,” claimed: “The Confucian civilization of the East seems to me to lack two things possessed by Western civilization: science in the material sphere and a sense of independence in the spiritual sphere.” Fukuzawa’s great influence is found in the free and individualistic philosophy of the Education Code of 1872, but he was not able to prevent the government from turning back to the canons of Confucian thought in the Imperial Rescript of 1890. Another interlude of relative liberalism followed World War I, when the democratic idealism of President Woodrow Wilson had an important impact on Japanese intellectuals and, especially students: but more important was the Leninist ideology of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. Again in the early 1930s, nationalism and militarism became dominant, largely as a result of failing economic conditions.
    Following the end of World War II, substantial changes were undertaken in Japan to liberate the individual from authoritarian restraints. The new democratic value system was accepted by many teachers, students, intellectuals, and old liberals, but it was not immediately embraced by the society as a whole. Japanese traditions were dominated by group values, and notions of personal freedom and individual rights were unfamiliar.
    Today, democratic processes are clearly evident in the widespread participation of the Japanese people in social and political life: yet, there is no universally accepted and stable value system. Values are constantly modified by strong infusions of Western ideas, both democratic and Marxist. School textbooks expound democratic principles, emphasizing equality over hierarchy and rationalism over tradition; but in practice these values are often misinterpreted and distorted, particularly by the youth who translate the individualistic and humanistic goals of democracy into egoistic and materialistic ones.
    Most Japanese people have consciously rejected Confucianism, but vestiges of the old order remain. An important feature of relationships in many institutions such as political parties, large corporations, and university faculties is the oyabun-kobun or parent-child relation. A party leader, supervisor, or professor, in return for loyalty, protects those subordinate to him and takes general responsibility for their interests throughout their entire lives, an obligation that sometimes even extends to arranging marriages. The corresponding loyalty of the individual to his patron reinforces his allegiance to the group to which they both belong. A willingness to cooperate with other members of the group and to support without qualification the interests of the group in all its external relations is still a widely respected virtue. The oyabun-kobun creates ladders of mobility which an individual can ascend, rising as far as abilities permit, so long as he maintains successful personal ties with a superior in the vertical channel, the latter requirement usually taking precedence over a need for exceptional competence. As a consequence, there is little horizontal relationship between people even within the same profession.
    1. The author is mainly concerned with
    (A) explaining the influence of Confucianism on modern Japan
    (B) analyzing the reasons for Japan’s postwar economic success
    (C) discussing some important determinants of Japanese values
    (D) describing managerial practices in Japanese industry
    (E) contrasting modern with prewar Japanese society
    2. Which of the following is most like the relationship of the oyabun-kobun described in the passage?
    (A) A political candidate and the voting public
    (B) A gifted scientist and his protégé
    (C) Two brothers who are partners in a business
    (D) A judge presiding at the trial of a criminal defendant
    (E) A leader of a musical ensemble who is also a musician in the group
    3. According to the passage, Japanese attitudes are influenced by which of the following?
    I. Democratic ideals
    II. Elements of modern Western culture
    III. Remnants of an earlier social structure
    (A) I only
    (B) II only
    (C) I and II only
    (D) II and III only
    (E) I, II, and III
    4. The author implies that
    (A) decisions about promotions are often based on personal feelings
    (B) students and intellectuals do not understand the basic tenets of Western democracy
    (C) Western values have completely overwhelmed traditional Japanese attitudes
    (D) respect for authority was introduced into Japan following World War II
    (E) most Japanese workers are members of a single political party
    5. In developing the passage, the author does which of the following?
    (A) Introduce an analogy
    (B) Define a term
    (C) Present statistics
    (D) Cite an authority
    (E) Issue a challenge
    6. It can be inferred that the Imperial Rescript of 1890
    (A) was a protest by liberals against the lack of individual liberty in Japan
    (B) marked a return in government policies to conservative values
    (C) implemented the ideals set forth in the Education Code of 1872
    (D) was influenced by the Leninist ideology of the Bolshevik Revolution
    (E) prohibited the teaching of Western ideas in Japanese schools
    7. Which of the following is the most accurate description of the organization of the passage?
    (A) A sequence of inferences in which the conclusion of each successive step becomes a premise in the next argument
    (B) A list of generalizations, most of which are supported by only a single example
    (C) A chronological analysis of historical events leading up to a description of the current situation
    (D) A statement of a commonly accepted theory that is then subjected to a critical analysis
    (E) An introduction of a key term that is then defined by giving examples
    8. Which of the following best states the central thesis of the passage?
    (A) The value system of Japan is based upon traditional and conservative values that have, in modern times, been modified by Western and other liberal values.
    (B) Students and radicals in Japan have Leninist ideology to distort the meaning of democratic, Western values.
    (C) The notions of personal freedom and individual liberty did not find immediate acceptance in Japan because of the predominance of traditional group values.
    (D) Modern Japanese society is characterized by hierarchical relationships in which a personal tie to a superior is often more important than merit.
    (E) The influence on Japanese values of the American ideals of personal freedom and individual rights is less important than the influence of Leninist ideology.
    9. The tone of the passage can best be described as
    (A) neutral and objective
    (B) disparaging and flippant
    (C) critical and demanding
    (D) enthusiastic and supportive
    (E) skeptical and questioning

  6. #6

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    Public general hospitals originated in the almshouse infirmaries established as early as colonial times by local governments to care for the poor. Later, in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the infirmary separated from the almshouse and became an independent institution supported by local tax money. At the same time, private charity hospitals began to develop. Both private and public hospitals provided mainly food and shelter for the impoverished sick, since there was little that medicine could actually do to cure illness, and the middle class was treated at home by private physicians.
    Late in the nineteenth century, the private charity hospital began trying to attract middle-class patients. Although the depression of 1890 stimulated the growth of charitable institutions and an expanding urban population became dependent on assistance, there was a decline in private contributions to these organizations which forced them to look to local government for financial support. Since private institutions had also lost benefactors; they began to charge patients. In order to attract middle-class patients, private institutions provided services and amenities that distinguished between paying and non-paying patients and made the hospital a desirable place for private physicians to treat their own patients. As paying patients became more necessary to the survival of the private hospital, the public hospitals slowly became the only place for the poor to get treatment. By the end of the nineteenth century, cities were reimbursing private hospitals for their care of indigent patients and the public hospitals remained dependent on the tax dollars.
    The advent of private hospital health insurance, which provided middle-class patients with the purchasing power to pay for private hospital services, guaranteed the private hospital a regular source of income. Private hospitals restricted themselves to revenue-generating patients, leaving the public hospitals to care for the poor. Although public hospitals continued to provide services for patients with communicable diseases and outpatient and emergency services, the Blue Cross plans developed around the needs of the private hospitals and the inpatients they served. Thus, reimbursement for ambulatory care has been minimal under most Blue Cross plans, and provision of outpatient care has not been a major function of the private hospital, in part because private patients can afford to pay for the services of private physicians. Additionally, since World War II, there has been a tremendous influx of federal money into private medical schools and the hospitals associated with them. Further, large private medical centers with expensive research equipment and programs have attracted the best administrators, physicians, and researchers. As a result of the greater resources available to the private medical centers, public hospitals have increasing problems attracting highly qualified research and medical personnel. With the mainstream of health care firmly established in the private medical sector, the public hospital has become a “dumping ground.”
    1. According to the passage, the very first private hospitals
    (A) developed from almshouse infirmaries
    (B) provided better care than public infirmaries
    (C) were established mainly to service the poor
    (D) were supported by government revenues
    (E) catered primarily to the middle-class patients
    2. It can be inferred that the author believes the differences that currently exist between public and private hospitals are primarily the result of
    (A) political considerations
    (B) economic factors
    (C) ethical concerns
    (D) legislative requirements
    (E) technological developments
    3. It can be inferred that the growth of private health insurance
    (A) relieved local governments of the need to fund public hospitals
    (B) guaranteed that the poor would have access to medical care
    (C) forced middle-class patients to use public hospitals
    (D) prompted the closing of many charitable institutions
    (E) reinforced the distinction between public and private hospitals
    4. Which of the following would be the most logical topic for the author to introduce in the next paragraph?
    (A) A plan to improve the quality of public hospitals
    (B) An analysis of the profit structure of health insurance companies
    (C) A proposal to raise taxes on the middle class
    (D) A discussion of recent developments in medical technology
    (E) A list of the subjects studied by students in medical school
    5. The author’s primary concern is to
    (A) describe the financial structure of the healthcare industry
    (B) demonstrate the importance of government support for health-care institutions
    (C) criticize wealthy institutions for refusing to provide services to the poor
    (D) identify the historical causes of the division between private and public hospitals
    (E) praise public hospitals for their willingness to provide health care for the poor
    6. The author cites all of the following as factors contributing to the decline of public hospitals EXCEPT.
    (A) Government money was used to subsidize private medical schools and hospitals to the detriment of public hospitals.
    (B) Public hospitals are not able to compete with private institutions for top flight managers and doctors.
    (C) Large private medical centers have better research facilities and more extensive research programs than public hospitals.
    (D) Public hospitals accepted the responsibility for treating patients with certain diseases.
    (E) Blue Cross insurance coverage does not reimburse subscribers for medical expenses incurred in a public hospital.
    7. The author’s attitude toward public hospitals can best be described as
    (A) contemptuous and prejudiced
    (B) apprehensive and distrustful
    (C) concerned and understanding
    (D) enthusiastic and supportive
    (E) unsympathetic and annoyed
    8. The author implies that any outpatient care provided by a hospital is
    (A) paid for by private insurance
    (B) provided in lieu of treatment by a private physician
    (C) supplied primarily by private hospitals
    (D) a source of revenue for public hospitals
    (E) no longer provided by hospitals, public or private
    9. Which of the following titles best describes the content of the passage?
    (A) Public versus Private Hospitals: A Competitive Mismatch
    (B) Historical and Economic Factors in the Decline of the Public Hospital
    (C) A Comparison of the Quality of Care Provided in Public and Private Hospitals
    (D) A Proposal for Revamping the Health Delivery Services Sector of the Economy
    (E) Economic Factors That Contribute to the Inability of the Poor to Get Adequate Care

  7. #7
    jameslemo
    Guest

    Default Supernova Answers

    Quote Originally Posted by daffodil View Post
    About twice every century, one of the massive stars in our galaxy blows itself apart in a supernova explosion that sends massive quantities of radiation and matter into space and generates shock waves that sweep through the arms of the galaxy. The shock waves heat the interstellar gas, evaporate small clouds, and compress larger ones to the point at which they collapse under their own gravity to form new stars. The general picture that has been developed for the supernova explosion and its aftermath goes something like this. Throughout its evolution, a star is much like a leaky balloon. It keeps its equilibrium figure through a balance of internal pressure against the tendency to collapse under its own weight. The pressure is generated by nuclear reactions in the core of the star which must continually supply energy to balance the energy that leaks out in the form of radiation. Eventually the nuclear fuel is exhausted, and the pressure drops in the core. With nothing to hold it up, the matter in the center of the star collapses inward, creating higher and higher densities and temperatures, until the nuclei and electrons are fused into a super-dense lump of matter known as a neutron star.
    As the overlying layers rain down on the surface of the neutron star, the temperature rises, until with a blinding flash of radiation, the collapse is reversed. A thermonuclear shock wave runs through the now expanding stellar envelope, fusing lighter elements into heavier ones and producing a brilliant visual outburst that can be as intense as the light of 10 billion suns. The shell of matter thrown off by the explosion plows through the surrounding gas, producing an expanding bubble of hot gas, with gas temperatures in the millions of degrees. This gas will emit most of its energy at X-ray wavelengths, so it is not surprising that X-ray observatories have provided some of the most useful insights into the nature of the supernova phenomenon. More than twenty supernova remnants have now been detected in X-ray studies.
    Recent discoveries of meteorites with anomalous concentrations of certain isotopes indicate that a supernova might have precipitated the birth of our solar system more than four and a half billion years ago. Although the cloud that collapsed to form the Sun and the planets was composed primarily of hydrogen and helium, it also contained carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, elements essential for life as we know it. Elements heavier than helium are manufactured deep in the interior of stars and would, for the most part, remain there if it were not for the cataclysmic supernova explosions that blow giant stars apart. Additionally, supernovas produce clouds of high-energy particles called cosmic rays. These high-energy particles continually bombard the Earth and are responsible for many of the genetic mutations that are the driving force of the evolution of species.
    1. Which of the following titles best describes the content of the passage?
    (A) The Origins and Effects of Supernovas
    (B) The Life and Death of Stars
    (C) The Origins and Evolution of Life on Earth
    (D) The Aftermath of a Supernova
    (E) Violent Change in the Universe
    2. According to the passage, we can expect a supernova to occur in our galaxy
    (A) about twice each year
    (B) hundreds of times each century
    (C) about once every fifty years
    (D) about once every other century
    (E) about once every four to five billion years
    3. According to the passage all of the following are true of supernovas EXCEPT that they
    (A) are extremely bright
    (B) are an explosion of some sort
    (C) emit large quantities of X-rays
    (D) result in the destruction of a neutron star
    (E) are caused by the collision of large galaxies
    4. The author employs which of the following to develop the first paragraph?
    (A) Analogy
    (B) Deduction
    (C) Generalization
    (D) Example
    (E) Refutation
    5. It can be inferred from the passage that the meteorites mentioned by the author at line 39
    (A) contain dangerous concentrations of radioactive materials
    (B) give off large quantities of X-rays
    (C) include material not created in the normal development of our solar system
    (D) are larger than the meteors normally found in a solar system like ours
    (E) contain pieces of a supernova that occurred several billion years ago
    6. The author implies that
    (A) it is sometimes easier to detect supernovas by observation of the X-ray spectrum than by observation of visible wavelengths of light
    (B) life on Earth is endangered by its constant exposure to radiation forces that are released by a supernova
    (C) recently discovered meteorites indicate that the Earth and other planets of our solar system survived the explosion of a supernova several billion years ago
    (D) lighter elements are formed from heavier elements during a supernova as the heavier elements are torn apart
    (E) the core of a neutron star is composed largely of heavier elements such as carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen
    7. According to the passage what is the first event in the sequence that leads to the occurrence of a supernova?
    (A) An ordinary star begins to emit tremendous quantities of X-rays.
    (B) A neutron star is enveloped by a superheated cloud of gas.
    (C) An imbalance between light and heavy elements causes an ordinary star to collapse.
    (D) A cloud of interstellar gas rich in carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, collapses to form a neutron star.
    (E) An ordinary star exhausts its supply of nuclear fuel and begins to collapse.
    8. According to the passage a neutron star is
    (A) a gaseous cloud containing heavy elements
    (B) an intermediate stage between an ordinary star and a supernova
    (C) the residue that is left by a supernova
    (D) the core of an ordinary star that houses the thermonuclear reactions
    (E) one of billions of meteors that are scattered across the galaxy by a supernova
    9. The author is primarily concerned with
    (A) speculating about the origins of our solar system
    (B) presenting evidence proving the existence of supernovas
    (C) discussing the nuclear reaction that occurs in the core of a star
    (D) describing the sequence of scientific events
    (E) disproving a theory about the causes of supernovas
    My Response...

    1)b 2)c 3)e 4)a 5)c 6)e 7)e 8)b 9)d Please confirm

  8. #8
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Posts
    1

    Default Answer Key

    Hi...wer can I get the key for the RC's...thanks for the reply!!

  9. #9
    cososy
    Guest

    Default

    i need the answer. thanks a lot

  10. #10
    kristiskis
    Guest

    Default READING COMPREHENSION FOR gmat

    A simple program that show how to read data from Microsoft Access.
    In this case we read data from MS Access Table: PA0001 with 2 field: PERNR and Name.
    MS Access file is: Data.mdb and saved in drive C.

    Type and Data declaration:

    Code:

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