Read this excerpt from I Never Had It Made.

Thirty-five years later, while I was lying awake nights, frustrated, unable to see a future, Mr. Rickey, by now the president of the Dodgers, was also lying awake at night, trying to make up his mind about a new experiment.

He had never forgotten the agony of that black athlete. When he became a front-office executive in St. Louis, he had fought, behind the scenes, against the custom that consigned black spectators to the Jim Crow section of the Sportsman's Park, later to become Busch Memorial Stadium. His pleas to change the rules were in vain. Those in power argued that if blacks were allowed a free choice of seating, white business would suffer.

Which detail best supports the central idea that many people oppose Branch Rickey’s ideas?

"Mr. Rickey, by now the president of the Dodgers, was also lying awake at night, trying to make up his mind about a new experiment."
"He had never forgotten the agony of that black athlete."
"[H]e had fought, behind the scenes, against the custom that consigned black spectators to the Jim Crow section of the Sportsman's Park"
"Those in power argued that if blacks were allowed a free choice of seating, white business would suffer."

Respuesta :

Answer:

"Those in power argued that if blacks were allowed a free choice of seating, white business would suffer."

Explanation:

The detail that best supports the central idea is that: "Those in power argued that if blacks were allowed a free choice of seating, white business would suffer." (Option D)

What is a Central Idea?

What a text, poem, article, song, or book is primarily about is characterized as its fundamental theme or idea.

The fundamental idea is the key message the author is aiming to convey, not the text's topic. The central idea may usually be expressed in a single statement or phrase.

Learn more about Central Idea at:

https://brainly.com/question/1914190

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