<p>wait was the biologist the one with the chimps?</p>
<p>@Harvard I’m just looking to break the 200 barrier at this point, because unless the NY score suddenly drops to like a 202 or something then I’m out of luck lol. Right now I think I’m hovering around the 200 mark, unless some of the contributors on here are wrong! lol. Harvardjunkie ur probs around the mid-high 220’s; kudos to yall</p>
<p>how many no errors were there in total?</p>
<p>Conversely, can someone explain why it was NOT the oceanographer professor who told stories about photography underwater?</p>
<p>also was one of the answers sensory simulation?</p>
<p>I remember the two hat one now. The right answer was (E) I believe, because the example with the hypothetical E showed a scientist who is doing reserach and advocating policy based on research. He is wearing two-hats: being a reseracher and being a policy-maker/advocate or whatever you want to call it. That directly related to Article II as well.</p>
<p>no Harvard, that was an option but it was incorrect, I remember. But what was the question?</p>
<p>@harvard yes i put down sensory stimulation</p>
<p>sensory stimulation for what problem?</p>
<p>I put down overwhelming clamor</p>
<p>@SignatureCC what did you put?</p>
<p>@harvard yeah that sensory stim. was one of them. the Q pretty easy i thought</p>
<p>clamor refers to loud noises
but it was talking about cars honking and parking
women carrying grocery bags
ice cream dripping
and the smell of garlic
so i dont think it was clamor</p>
<p>did mantle mean appearance?</p>
<p>overwhelming clamor, although the passage described his senses a lot, it was not to stimulate your senses, it was to show the chaos and clamor in the market, all the noises, commotion, people dropping ice cream, etc. Essentially it was a general mess, hence clamor.</p>
<p>EDIT: Now that I think about it, sensory stimulation does make a little more sense.</p>
<p>the Sensory sttim Q was from the Indian girl’s excerpt, referencing the lines that described the business of San Fran. all the words were sensory words describing the 5 senses…foods, smells, sights, tastes, etc. Therefore sensory stimulation</p>
<p>it wasnt the haste option, but sensory stimulation makes most sense thinking about it…That was the passage about the Indian girl finding the neighborhood similar to her former home in India</p>
<p>@harvard the noises smell and sounds all refer to the senses, hence sensory stimulation</p>
<p>does anyone remember questions from the tv passage?</p>
<p>@Signature, Harvard’ post says it well. Why would the author mention such things as the smell of garlic and the Indian food smells, and the cambodian bread or w/e? That is not emphasizing businesses, thats playing to the readers senses.</p>