Which excerpt from the passage "Equal Justice Under Law" most effectively illustrates Thurgood Marshall's natural tendency to resist authority?
"If he wasn’t throwing chalk or teasing girls, he was arguing with teachers."
"So, one day, the principal sent him to the basement with a copy of the United States Constitution and stern orders not to come back up till he had memorized a passage."
"'Before I left that school,” Marshall said many years later, 'I knew the whole thing by heart.'"
"Parts of the Constitution, however, confused the young Marshall."
Which detail from "Mohandas Gandhi: Truth in Action" introduces the idea that Gandhi influenced people outside of India?
"In London, he trained to become a lawyer."
"He was appalled to find that in some parts of South Africa, Indians were not allowed to vote or to own more than a certain amount of property."
"He stopped wearing Western clothes, learned to spin cloth, and wore only a cotton shawl and dhoti, a kind of loincloth, which had been spun by Indian hands."
"In the United States, the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., once said that Gandhi’s words and actions showed him how to use nonviolence to lead the civil rights movement in the 1960s."
Part A
Based on the details in "Mohandas Gandhi: Truth in Action," what inference can be made?
The Indian people undervalue Gandhi.
People are mostly accepting of those who are different.
People must cooperate to make change happen.
Gandhi is most successful using aggressive forms of resistance.
Question 2
Part B
What evidence from the text best supports the answer to Part A?
"Through his efforts, Untouchables were allowed into temples and invited to participate in Indian assemblies."
"So he reached out to the outcasts of Indian society, the poorest of the poor, called the Untouchables."
"He burned piles of British clothing in front of Indians, and encouraged them to spin their own cloth and grow their own food or buy it from each other, instead of from the British."
"To win their independence, the Indians would have to overcome their differences and work together to defeat their common adversary."