Read the excerpt from We Shall Not Be Moved.

Everywhere in the garment district, by the front gates of little shops and big ones, picketers marched and sang. "O Dubinushka," they sang, and "Tortured and Enslaved," and other Russian folk and revolutionary airs. Icy rains poured down on them, some were in danger of frostbite — a winter of record-breaking cold had already begun — but there they were and there they stayed.
The union men were amazed. "There never was anything like it," one ILGWU official declared. "An equal number of men never would hold together under what these girls are enduring.”
How would a careful rereading of this excerpt help a reader understand who made up the ILGWU?
a. The reader could make a connection between the quote by one ILGWU official and the author’s reference to “union men” just before it. *******
b. The reader could make a connection between the quote by one ILGWU official and the reference to “these girls” in the same quote.
c. The reader could make a connection between the quote by one ILGWU official and the author’s description of “other Russian folk” in the first paragraph.
d. The reader could make a connection between the quote by one ILGWU official and the descriptive phrase “they sang” in the first paragraph.

Disagree, B

A careful rereading of this excerpt would help a reader understand who made up the ILGWU by making a connection between the quote by one ILGWU official and the reference to "union men" just before it. The mention of "union men" suggests that the ILGWU is a union consisting of men, which helps the reader understand the makeup of the ILGWU. Therefore, the correct answer is a. The reader could make a connection between the quote by one ILGWU official and the author’s reference to “union men” just before it.