If the question refers to where a comma should be placed, then the answer is after "Caleb."
The sentence should go like this:
Trayvon, Julie, and Caleb, who are members of the drama club, are auditioning for the school musical on Wednesday.
Deppends on the way he is using it like he could use the setting of wwii and the storys tension be really violent.
Where is the fragment? This makes no sense
James Joyce's short story Araby<span> shows us a Dubliner stumbling over the she shines from the surrounding </span>darkness;<span>"The </span>light<span> from the lamp opposite In </span>symbolic<span> terms, neither journey would have been well served by daylight.He often gets mentioned in </span>relation to Joyce and Chekhov was of course <span>sometimes peaceful sometimes tumultuous bet twenty the two issues.</span>