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Once inside Clinton Hall, the writer found a different climate. At the end of a swarming corridor a fortification had been set up, made of desks and tables; this was the League's information bureau, where scores of confused, excited workers waited to register for the union. Heavily bearded old men pushed through the crowd selling apples and pretzels from baskets.

Which best states the author’s purpose for describing the inside of Clinton Hall in the text?

to challenge the reader’s ideas about the importance of the league
to help the reader imagine what the hall looked, felt, and smelled like
to give the reader facts about the hall’s size and the number of people there
to show the reader how the league in the past is the same as it is today

2 Answers

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Answer:

The hall, a long winding path of white walls smelled of sharpened pencil shavings. The hall was wide and bustling with people. Now the hall still is cheery as always with the faint scent of pencil shavings.

Step-by-step explanation:

User Adprocas
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3 votes

Answer: B, to help the reader imagine what the hall looked, felt, and smelled like

Explanation: This is the answer on Edge 2020.

User Rism
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