the answer is B. when the story is at its most intense point
<span>Approaching the curve is the participal phrase and the word modified is slowed.</span>
A way you can show charity without having to give out money are by supporting. Support is something that anyone is grateful for, knowing you're there for someone even if you can't help financially. Let them know you're there for them for things other than money. Furthermore spreading the situation with people to help find a solution, sharing with your friends, family, or even making flyers. This action is charitable because you may not be helping with money cases but your giving time, effort and support. Spreading or making a movement on this could change someone's life, helping with kindness is always the way to go. Finally, I believe that your heart can be so big that when it comes to showing how you respond to someone in need of charity, a simple I'm here for you is better than money.
The 1920s through the 1940s was a time of great change in the United States, as war mobilization had sparked the economy and brought it back from the Great Depression.
<span>Charlie is overcome by a sequence of flashbacks to occurences from his youth. These flashbacks are stimulated by experiences in the present: when Charlie is propositioned by the pregnant woman in Central Park, for example, he recalls his mother’s pregnancy with his sister. All of Charlie’s memories come in the form of such revelations and recall events of which he was not previously aware. These new memories hold new lessons for Charlie about his past and shed new light on his present neuroses. </span>