Answer:
The man told me I could go swimming tomorrow.
Sarah told me that Gita had worked efficiently.
The stranger asked if I had lost my way.
Yousafzai and two other girls
Hey there!
Notice in the story how the events of a single story are told in the order that they happened. Scotty sat down on the stool, began to play "I Am a Little Lamb," then <span>“Goats Like Oats” and “A Little Tree Is Just Like Me,” then the audience reacted to the set positively. No flashbacks are utilized and no other stories are being told during the excerpt besides the one about Scotty's set.
Based on this, your answer will be the second option, "</span><span>Sequential order is used to present the events in the order they occur".
Hope this helped you out! :-) </span>
<span>The coin flip for the electric potato sorter is an important moment in Schlosser’s book—both for Simplot’s narrative, and for its larger symbolic value. For, of course, Simplot probably would not have gone on to build his potato empire without the sorter. And, more importantly, the very fact of the coin flip makes literal the function of luck in Schlosser’s broader tale of human success and failure. Yes, Schlosser implies, Simplot has worked hard and has made the most of the opportunities that came his way. But even more so, Simplot has been the beneficiary of circumstances that continually break in his favor—he is, in short, also a lucky man.
from; </span>http://www.litcharts.com/lit/fast-food-nation/chapter-5-why-the-fries-taste-good