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23. (A)
Choice (B) is a perfectly legal route, but
it is far longer than choice (A). Choices (C) and
(D) are both quick and direct, but (C) sends
you in the wrong direction on Arthur Avenue,
and (D) requires wrong-way travel on both
High Street and Sky Way.
24. (A)
Focus on the years of birth. A person
born in 1943 would be in elementary school in
1950. As years of birth, 1949, 1960, and 1924
make no sense at all.
25. (B)
A person who is 6'11'' certainly should
tower over the crowd.
26. (C)
There are 26 letters in the alphabet. No
first name could begin with the 35th letter.
27. (C)
The driver has turned onto Route 23, so
the top center number must be 23. The driver
does not make a U-turn, so the next intersect-
ing route cannot be the Route 46 from which
he has just turned. Route 23 cannot intersect
with itself, so (D) also cannot be correct.
28. (D)
The number that designates the county
has changed; the traveler has crossed a county
line. The numbers in the bottom line indicate
that the traveler has gone five miles.
29. (A)
The trooper has made a U-turn. The
trooper is still on Route 95, but the order of the
locations between which mileage is calculated
has been reversed. Distance is now being cal-
culated from locality 38 to locality 11; on the
earlier marker, it was calculated from locality
11 to locality 38.
30. (B)
Just check against the illustration, num-
ber for number and letter for letter. Remember
that Royals come in four-door sedan models.
31. (D)
Eliminate choice (A) because hatchbacks
are not assembled on Saturday; eliminate
(B) because this is not a prototype; eliminate
(C) because only sedans are assembled on the
third shift.