Library/PT 129/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

For a long time the FCC mostly listened to TV and radio companies and ignored ordinary viewers. A church complained that a Mississippi station was promoting segregation, but the FCC refused to give the church a real hearing. The church kept appealing, and a judge eventually revoked the station’s license, saying citizens have a right to challenge broadcasters. That court fight changed things so the public can now raise many concerns (race, children’s shows, violence, political fairness) at license renewal hearings.

Logic Breakdown

Ask what function the final sentence serves: it enumerates specific topics to show the practical effect of the Jackson case. Support from passage: 'The case established a formidable precedent for opening up to the public the world of broadcasting.' and 'Along with racial issues, a range of other matters—from the quality of children's programming and the portrayal of violence to equal time for opposing political viewpoints—are now discussed at licensing proceedings because of the church's intervention.'

Passage Stimulus

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2.

The author mentions some additional topics now discussed at FCC hearings (last sentence of the passage) primarily in order to

Correct Answer
A
The list of additional topics is presented to illustrate the broader consequences of the court decision — showing concrete areas that are now open to public scrutiny. Thus the sentence functions as evidence supporting the claim that the case helped 'open up to the public the world of broadcasting.'
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