Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
In 1963, mostly moderate African American ministers in Brooklyn led a three-week protest at the Downstate Medical Center to demand fair hiring by the government and unions. They used their churches and donations to bring many people, and CORE asked them to lead because they could organize large groups. Leading a protest risked their usual role of working with officials, but they went ahead. The protest ended with an agreement that promised to enforce existing anti-discrimination laws but did not create new laws or guarantee specific jobs. The campaign made people notice Northern job discrimination and showed that ministers could protest while still keeping political ties, becoming a model for later local activism.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on explicit statements about the ministers' prior political stance and what they did during and after the campaign; the correct answer will be directly supported by lines indicating the ministers remained politically moderate and continued to work through established channels.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage5.The passage most clearly suggests that which one of the following is true of the group of ministers who led the Downstate campaign?
Correct Answer
A
Choice A is correct. The passage explicitly notes that the ministers 'had remained politically moderate until then' and that 'throughout the campaign, the ministers managed to maintain their moderate political ties.' It also states that the ministers acted as 'activists who nonetheless continued to work through established political channels,' indicating the Downstate campaign did not represent a significant change in their general political and social goals.
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