Hi All,
With this question, you can 'convert' the data and use the structure of the answer choices to your advantage:
First off, in almost all cases, when the answers to a GMAT Quant question are numbers, they will be arranged from least to greatest. This will allow you to take advantage of approximation, rounding, etc., so that you can quickly eliminate answers that are "too big" or "too small"
In this prompt, we're dealing with some simple fractions (1/4 and 1/3), which you should be able to convert to decimal (you should have them memorized):
1/4 are white = .25 are white
1/3 are green = .33 are green (approximately)
.25 + .33 = .58 total of white and green (approximately)
The question asks for the probability of red or blue, so we have…
1 - .58 = .42 total of red and blue (approximately)
The answers here are arranged from least (1/6 = .1666) to greatest (5/12 = let's not mess with this just yet)
Answer D = 1/3 = .33, which is TOO LOW (we're looking for approximately .42). This means that A, B and C are also TOO LOW. There's only one answer left that would make any sense...
Final Answer:
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich