Answer:
Nobel Lecture delivered December 11, 1986. As a survivor of the Holocaust of World War II, Wiesel relates the past to the future through memory, the source, he asserts, of hope as well as despair.
Explanation:
Answer and Explanation:
Since your question does not present any options to choose from, I'll answer based on my knowledge of the story.
<u>In the short story "To Build a Fire", by Jack London, the immediate danger that concerns the man is freezing to death.</u> The character of the story has ignored a warning an old man gave him about roaming in the forest by himself when the cold weather is harsh. He chose to trust his abilities against nature, only to be humbled by it. The man did not have the knowledge, wisdom, and capacity to survive in the wild. The freezing temperatures were going to kill him if he didn't build a fire to keep himself warm. Even the dog that accompanies the man knew that, and couldn't seem to understand why the man wouldn't do it. However, when the man finally realized the urgent need for fire, he was not able to start one, and ended up dying. That is indeed a common theme in Jack London's work - the survival of the fittest. Had the man been smarter or stronger, he would have survived.
The answer is "plentiful"
a science teacher who wants to show the basic structures of a cell,
a statistician who wants to illustrate how a math problem was solved, and
a senator who wants to visualize the process a bill takes to become law.
I could be wrong.
X 1000 so the answer will be 200000000