501 Critical Reading Questions

(Sean Pound) #1

  1. c. It is stated throughout the passage Comiskey was a frugal man,
    yet in lines 76–77 it says that he paid for the players’ defense
    lawyers. Why? The answer to that and the biggest clue to
    answering this question lies in the last sentence of the passage:
    Comiskey’s once mighty team was decimated by the loss of its most
    talented players, and the 1921 White Sox finished the season in
    seventh place.

  2. b.Lines 47–50 state that gamblers would often target with the
    lower-paid athletesbecause the money with which these gamblers
    tempted the players was hard to refuse.The passage tells that due
    to Charles Comiskey’s stinginess with his players, there were
    many underpaid players on the White Sox who were dissatisfied(lines
    61–62) and they were the most discontentedteam in baseball (line
    35). These factors suggest that if Charles Comiskey had treated
    his players better, perhaps they might not have been so eager to
    betray him.

  3. b.A context clue to help you answer this question is found in lines
    2–3, when the author states that Herodes Atticus Street is one of
    the most retired streets of the city.Of the given answer choices, out
    of the ordinarybest describes the activity of heavy construction
    on a normally quiet street.

  4. c. The author states in lines 6–7 that the lower end of Herodes
    Atticus Street opens upon a bridge across the Ilissos, and on the oppo-
    site bank lies the Panathenaic Stadium—the Stadium at Athens.

  5. b.Lines 11–12 state the Committee decided that the Olympics
    would be held once in four years, and the next two Olympics to
    follow would be held in the years 1900 and 1904 (line 25).

  6. c. As stated in line 16, the organizers of the first modern Olympics
    were swayed partly by sentimental reasons in the choice of name and
    place.The ancient Olympics took its name from the city where
    it was held every four years: Olympia, in Greece. To honor
    those ancient games, the organizers named the modern games
    the Olympics and would play the inaugural contests in Greece.

  7. d.The Germans were involved in excavating the ancient Stadium at
    Olympia (lines 47–48). Nowhere in the passage does it mention
    that there was a vote to decide between Olympia and Athens.

  8. e.Lines 44–46 state that the problem of seating a large crowd of spec-
    tators did not come up before the International Committee(choice a).
    In fact, it was a local Athenian committee (choice e) composed of
    most of the citizens conspicuous for wealth or position, and some resi-
    dent foreigners(lines 52–53) that were posed with the question of
    seating for the games in Athens.

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