The answer is: Grow Tobacco (APEX)
Hi, you've asked an incomplete question. However, I added the missing explanations below.
<u>Quotation/Explanation:</u>
- <em>"But that's chicken and I've got a reputation to consider." </em>Meaning: <em>The fact is "Squeaky sees things in Raymond that other people don't."</em>
- <em>"I almost stop to watch my brother Raymond on his first run." </em>Meaning: What this quotation show is that <em>"Squeaky thinks kids are as important as adults".</em>
- <em>"People like to act like things come easy to them...Not me." </em>Meaning: His willingness to state his opinion despite been different shows that <em>"Squeaky values honesty."</em>
- <em>"He's got no right to call me Squeaky, if I can't call him Beanstalk." </em>Meaning: <em>It shows that "Squeaky pays more attention to people she respects."</em>
- <em>"Besides, there's just me and Gretchen standing there really." </em>Meaning:<em> It shows that "Squeaky cares what other girls think about her."</em>
The correct order of events in Ivan Ilyich's life is:
1- Ivan Ilyich graduates from the School of Law and qualifies for the tenth rank of the civil service.
2- Ivan Ilyich is offered the post of examining magistrate in a Russian province.
3- Ivan Ilyich becomes assistant public prosecutor, a position that he serves in for seven years.
4- Ivan Ilyich becomes a public prosecutor and is transferred to another province.
5- Ivan Ilyich meets Zachar Ivanovich in St. Petersburg and receives a guaranteed appointment in the Department of Justice.
<em>The Death of Ivan Ilyich </em>is a novella written by Leo Tolstoy. It was published in 1886 and it is considered a classic of Russian literature. <u>The book tells the story of a high-court judge that experiences an existential crisis after he finds out he is ill</u>. Moreover, the novel starts at the chronological end of the story; in other words, it starts with the death of the main character. In <em>The Death of Ivan Ilyich</em>,<u> Tolstoy presents his philosophy of life and portrays death as an enemy of men</u>.