Answer: Hasty generalization.
Explanation: You immediately assumed that because you met two Californians that were tan, you assumed that all Californians are tan, despite only meeting two. Thus, it's a hasty generalization.
excused
pickup trucks, however, were excused from the seatbelt law for years……..
Sylvia runs home with dollar signs in her eyes but realizes that she physically can't "tell the heron's secret and give its life away" (2.13). It's never explicitly stated why she does this, but we'd peg her obvious love of nature as Exhibit A and her intense experience atop the oak tree as Exhibit B (for more on this tree experience, check out the "Symbolism, Imagery, Allegory" section—there's more there than meets the eye).
Although Sylvia remains in the forest, she never forgets the hunter, nor is she ever quite sure that she's made the right choice. Although Sylvia is a proto-hippie country gal at heart, she knows that the hunter represented a very different path her life could've taken, and as the story ends, she still wonders where it might have taken her. It doesn't exactly reek of regret, but seems more like a sort of forlorn daydream about what might have been. But hey—we all do that sometimes.
When the Youth takes the glass of milk and the plate of waffles from the woman at the counter and starts crying in shame, for he is not able to pay for them, represents the climax in <span>"The Glass of Milk".
Faith xoxo</span>