PrepTest 59, Section 1, Question 3
A law firm has seven departments�family law, health law, injury law, labor law, probate, securities, and tax law. The firm is to occupy a building with three floors�the bottom floor, the middle floor, and the top floor. Each floor can accommodate up to four departments, and no department is to be on more than one floor. Assignment of departments to floors is subject to the following constraints:
A law firm has seven departments�family law, health law, injury law, labor law, probate, securities, and tax law. The firm is to occupy a building with three floors�the bottom floor, the middle floor, and the top floor. Each floor can accommodate up to four departments, and no department is to be on more than one floor. Assignment of departments to floors is subject to the following constraints:
A law firm has seven departments�family law, health law, injury law, labor law, probate, securities, and tax law. The firm is to occupy a building with three floors�the bottom floor, the middle floor, and the top floor. Each floor can accommodate up to four departments, and no department is to be on more than one floor. Assignment of departments to floors is subject to the following constraints:
A law firm has seven departments�family law, health law, injury law, labor law, probate, securities, and tax law. The firm is to occupy a building with three floors�the bottom floor, the middle floor, and the top floor. Each floor can accommodate up to four departments, and no department is to be on more than one floor. Assignment of departments to floors is subject to the following constraints:
Probate must be on the same floor as tax law.
Health law must be on the floor immediately above injury law.
Labor law must occupy an entire floor by itself.
Which one of the following CANNOT be the assignment for any of the floors?
family law, health law, probate, and tax law
family law, injury law, probate, and tax law
family law, probate, securities, and tax law
health law, probate, securities, and tax law
injury law, probate, securities, and tax law
0 Comments