HER LIVING CONDITIONS WERE DIFFICULT. HOWEVER, SHE STUDIED VERY WE...

30. Her living conditions were difficult. However, she studied very well.A. Difficult as her living condition, she studied very well.B. She studied very well thanks to the fact that she lived in difficult conditions.C. She studied very well in spite of her difficult living conditions.D. Although she lived in difficult conditions, but she studied very well.Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C or D on your answer sheet to indicate the correctword or phrase that best fits each of the numbered blanks from 31 to 35.School exams are, generally speaking, the first kind of tests we take. They find out (31) _____ muchknowledge we have gained. But do they really show how intelligent we are? After all, isn’t it a fact that somepeople who are very successful academically don’t have any common sense?Intelligence is the speed at which we can understand and react to new situations and it is usually tested bylogic puzzles. (32) ______ scientists are now preparing advanced computer technology that will be able to“read” our brains, for the present tests are still the most popular ways of measuring intelligence.A person’s IQ is his intelligence (33) ____ it is measured by a special test. The most common IQ tests are runby Mensa, an organization that was founded in England in 1946. By 1976 it had 1,300 members in Britain.Today there are 44,000 in Britain and 100,000 worldwide, (34) ____ in the US.People taking the tests are judged in relation to an average score of 100, and those (35) _____ score over 148are entitled to join Mensa. This works out at 2% of the population.