Begins when Melba and eight other black men and women in their forties return to their home state of Arkansas to meet the then-governor, Bill Clinton. Melba, the narrator and author, explains that the group, called the Little Rock Nine, is visiting Central High School in Little Rock.
Answer:
"Our Neighbors, Japanese Spies" and "Japanese Americans, Foes Not Friends"
Answer:
the ancient tale
Explanation:
In this poem, the Swan is a metaphor for the spiritual pursuit of one who treads the path of self-realization. The metaphor refers to the ability of the bird to move between different planes of reality (earth, water, air) without clinging to any of them.
In the poem Kabir indicates a place where the swan can be free of doubt and sadness, this place would be the heaven that the author compares with an old tale in the passage:
"There, woods flourish in everlasting spring,
And its fragrance makes us move forward more and more.
Immersed in it, the heart, like a bee, was inebriated.
Immense in her, she no longer wants any joy"
B. He wants to make social connections to help advance his career.