4. Which of the following sentences if used in place of the blank line labeled Part 7 in the first paragraph would best support the main idea of the first paragraph?

Bread lines, shanty towns called Hoovervilles, and thousands of wandering vagrants witnessed the destructive conditions Roosevelt faced.
The New Deal lasted until the beginning of World War II.
Those terrible dust storms had created a “Dust Bowl” where no crops could grow.
In fact, many people blamed former President Herbert Hoover for these terrible conditions.

4. The correct choice is A.

Sentence 4 asserts the need for "something new." Sentences 5 and 6 provide specific examples to support sentence 4. Choice A includes more specific examples that support sentence 4. Choices B, C, and D are separate topics that do not make a direct connection to sentences 4-6.


(1) In the 1930s the entire world was in a state of turmoil. (2) The United States, however, had very little energy to pay attention to problems outside it’s borders. (3) Franklin D. Roosevelt became President in March 1933 and pledged himself to “a new deal for the American people.” (4) They certainly needed something new. (5) National income and productivity were only half what they had been just four years earlier. (6) The disappearance of so many jobs and the terrible dust storms in the Midwest contributed to the 12 million people who were unemployed and living in crippling poverty. (7)

Bread lines, shanty towns called Hoovervilles, and thousands of wandering vagrants witnessed the destructive conditions Roosevelt faced.

(8) Roosevelt began by restoring confidence in the banking system. (9) ____, he closed all the banks; ______, he reopened only the solvent ones, after instituting new rules about required reserves. (10) He also put many of the unemployed to work on federal projects. (11) Many of today’s schools and parks, for example, were constructed during this period. (12) On the farm front, Roosevelt got production of some crops limited so that prices would naturally rise. (13) In fact, so popular was the New Deal that Roosevelt was reelected in 1936 by a plurality of more than 9 million votes.