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National Law School of Indian University (NLSIU) 2007 B.A L.L.B ADMISSION TEST – ., LL.B(HONS.) - Question Paper

Sunday, 27 January 2013 12:45Web
9. For rough work there is a blank page at the end.
10. Total number of pages: 36 excluding the rough sheet at the end of the booklet.
11. The candidates shall not carry with them any cell phones, calculators or other electronic gadgets inside the exam Hall. The possession of the identical in the exam hall will disqualify the candidate for being considered for selection.
12. Adoption of any unfair means during the test will disqualify the candidate. The decision of the Superintendent of the Centre shall be final in this regard.

PART - I
OBJECTIVE

Centre: ___________________________

Application No.: _____________________

MARKS SHEET
Section Part Max. Marks Marks Secured
Objective questions
I A 10
B 05
C 05
D 05
E 05
F 05
II 25
III 24
IV 26
V 30
Descriptive questions
VI 36
VII 24
Total 200

Signature of the Tabulator/s

part – I: ENGLISH
PART – A

Instructions: Read the subsequent passage carefully before attempting the ques. provided beneath.
Example: If the improper ans is (a), shade the improper oval (Use OMR sheet).

Marks: Each ques. carries 1/2 (half) mark. (Total 10 marks)

Take a tour round the wards of a public hospital in Sub-Saharan Africa and you will soon see that basic health care can be very basic indeed. Aside from rickety metal beds, heaving with life and death, there is scarcely any equipment to be seen. It is a far cry from the high-tech hospitals in the rich world, where patients are often connected to bleeping arrays of monitors, pumps and other devices.


Such equipment is rare in poor parts of the world, however and not just because it is expensive. Electricity supplies in much of the developing world are erratic, if they exist at all, and battery packs to run medical equipment often obtain their way out of hospital and into local markets. Moreover, most modern medical devices were not designed with the developing world in mind, so interpreting their complex displays requires trained staff-who are in short supply outside big cities in developing countries. Just as scarce are spare parts; broken equipment usually stays that way.

Freeplay Energy, a British-South African firm, plans to change all that. It is famous for its wind-up radios and mobile-phone chargers which are changing the way people in poor places with little power communicate. Almost 300,000 Freeplay radios, distributed through development agencies, now brings news and vital info about HIV and other related health matters to an estimated six million people in developing countries. Because Freeplay's products need no batteries expensive luxuries which tend to be jealously guarded by wage-earning males-women and girls now have access to a world of education and entertainment by radio.



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