The price of wheat has crashed to the lowest level in a decade as huge harvests pile up in big growers from Russia to the US, cutting the cost of staple foods around the world. the major factor for the decline in grange membership is the <span>wheat prices declined</span>
If your choices are the following:
<span>A.When you were in school, you got to take a wide variety of electives, and you grew up to become members of the school board!
B.A poll of the student body shows that 88 percent of struggling students feel more motivated to come to school because of their electives. 
C.I am a straight-A student, and my art class is one of the best parts of my day. Without it, I wouldn't look forward to coming to school.
D.You might not remember this, but teenagers don't like being forced to spend all their time studying boring subjects.
So the answer, for me, would be </span>B.A poll of the student body shows that 88 percent of struggling students feel more motivated to come to school because of their electives.  This will give a proof about my claim.
<span>One example could be the Christmas tree. The idea of a tree used to celebrate the Christmas season was brought to the US from Germany and Bavarian culture. These were not traditions that were native to our country; they were brought here by our ancestors.</span>
In Homer’s <em>Odyssey</em>, Telemachus is the son of Odysseus and Penelope. In Book 1, when Odysseus is meant to come home, the goddess Athena disguises herself as Mentes, king of the Taphians, and goes to Ithaca to pay Telemachus a visit. The suitors have been taking advantage of Odysseus’ absence for years, and Telemachus dreams of getting rid of them.
Athena has taken it upon herself to ensure the safe return of Odysseus, and when she sees the situation Telemachus is in, she advises him to get rid of his mother’s suitors and travel to Pylos and Sparta to find information about his father.
Telemachus’ attitude towards Mentes is respectful. He offers him food and drink, and listens attentively to his advice. Upon hearing the advice of the stranger, Telemachus feels stronger, and the memory of his father becomes more lively. He feels so convinced by it he then advises Penelope to do the same: to keep the memory of her husband alive and gain strength through it, and to remember that it is the will of the Gods which has put Odysseus in that situation.
He learns news of his father from Mentes, but he also regains a sense of right and wrong and a sense of purpose. He recuperates the strength and courage to face the suitors, protect his mother and look for his father.
Athena is pleased with Telemachus because of this recovery but also because of his treatment of her and his respect and trust in the Gods.