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1. The author suggests which of the following about New York Socialists' commitment to the cost-of-living movement?
The factual basis for searching the text is plain here: We need to find what the NY Socialists did or didn't do with regard to the cost-of-living movement.
The interplay between NY Socialists and the COL movement takes up most of ¶2. Here is what ¶2 has to say about the topic; I've put the parts that bear most directly on the Socialists" "commitment to the COL movement" (i.e., the topic of the question) into
purple boldface.
The highlighted part is especially attractive because it contains the actual word "commitment", guaranteeing its relevance to the problem. When it's time to look through the answer choices, we should definitely look for that fact first!
New York Socialists, whose customary spheres of struggle were electoral work and trade union organizing, seized the opportunity and quickly organized an extensive series of cost-of-living protests designed to direct the women’s movement toward Socialist goals. Underneath the Socialists’ brief commitment to cost-of-living organizing lay a basic indifference to the issue itself. While some Socialists did view price protests as a direct step toward socialism, most Socialists ultimately sought to divert the cost-of-living movement into alternative channels of protest.
So we have 4 things, with the middle two given primary importance (because they appear in a treatment that specifically mentions "commitment"):
The NY Socialists' commitment to / involvement in the COL movement was ...
[b]• begun hurriedly and opportunistically;
• short-lived;
• fundamentally insincere;
• reshaped into subsequent activism on other issues.Let's go to the choices.
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(A) It lasted for a relatively short period of time
Hey look—Short-lived. This is the correct answer. Done and dusted.
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(B) It was stronger than their commitment to the suffrage struggle.
Unsupported. Trending wrong-way, because a short-lived commitment that was quickly twisted into other things certainly couldn't have been all that strong to begin with.
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(C) It predated the cost-of-living protest that erupted in 1917.
Backwards. The Women's protest came first, and then the Socialists opportunistically jumped at the chance to "direct the Women's movement toward" their own ends.
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(D) It coincided with their attempts to bring more women into union organizing.
Unsupported. Women in the workplace are mentioned at the very end of the passage—but only in a context that deals with their organization [b]at places where they already had jobs. There's nothing here about putting more Women into jobs.
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(E) It explained the popularity of the Socialist party in NYC.
Backwards (in the same way as choice C). "The Socialist party had established itself as a major political presence in New York City" before it jumped into the cost-of-living issue.