Answer and Explanation:
Helen's hands shook when she answered the phone. Even though she had been waiting for that call all week, she was not ready. What-if’s filled her mind uselessly. What if they said she had failed? What if they had found a better candidate for the position? What if she had not failed? What if she got the job and had to move away from everything she knew? She answered, trying to somehow disguise her trembling voice. The woman on the other side of the line sounded cheerful. It was good news; Helen got the job. She thanked the woman, once, twice. Yes, she could start in two weeks. Once she hung up, reality came rushing back. Time to tell her friends and family.
NOTE: Feel free to change any details.
Borges's story The Garden of Forking Paths can be considered to be a three dimensional chess game for a variety of reasons. First, like a game of chess, a nearly infinite number of possible outcomes are proposed through the story (just as how a chess game can allow for a variety of different outcomes). Also, chess is a game of choice, just as the Garden of Forking Paths - both the story itself and the novel of the same titles mentioned in the story - allows for the reader to, in essence, choose their own design and strategy. Furthermore, the lead character\protagonist in the story is manipulating events throughout the story to, in essence, score a "checkmate."
Well lots of business people show fake love but try their hardest to hide it so to prevent themselves from showing their true colors they avoid talking on the phone with new colleaugs.
In an "An Indian Father's Plea," Medicine Grizzlybear Lake asks the teacher to (C) Give him a second chance and treat him more fairly.
In "An Indian Father's Plea" by Robert Lake, Wind-wolf is the son of Medicine Gizzlybear. The father has faith in his son and has an argument with the teacher when the teacher calls his son a slow learner. The teacher was unable to understand the learning patter of Wind-wolf. The father then asked to the teacher to Give him a second chance and treat him more fairly.
Therefore, the correct answer is (C).
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Disclaimer:
The options for the given question are missing. The options are:
A. Teach him the white man's way so that he can fit in
B. Let him fail the class so he can come home
C. Give him a second chance and treat him more fairly
D. Make the class easier for him because of his background
I think maybe C? Not sure though, so don't take my word as gospel :)