Answer:
Jess Bhamra is an 18-year old girl who is crazy about football but is prohibited from playing it due to being born into a traditional indian family which forbids girls from such activities. Jules Paxton is another 18 year old who is born in an English family. One day, they cross paths and Jules gets to know about Jess' talent in football. She invites Jess to a football team for women, coached by Joe. Seeing her talent, Jess gets accepted into the team. However, Jess' parents get to know about her playing football behind their backs. They forced her to stop playing and later, the football team gets into an important final. Joe requests Mr. Bhamra to let Jess play but was denied since it was on the same day as Jess' sister's wedding. Thankfully, Jess was allowed to take part in the competition halfway through the wedding. Unfortunately, when she arrived, their team was on the losing end. The scores were 0-1 and then 1-1. When there came a free kick, Jess bent the ball around the other players and lead her team to victory. A University in California offered soccer scholarships to Jess and Jules considering their outstanding performance and invites them to the University. Jess convinced her parents to let her go abroad and she takes off with Jules. They send team photos to their families now and then.
D. replace a semicolon
hope this helps :)
Summary
US: Disastrous Toll of Criminalizing Drug Use
October 12, 2016
US: Disastrous Toll of Criminalizing Drug Use
Enforcement Destroys Families, Undermines Health
Interview: Why the US Should Decriminalize Drug Use
October 12, 2016
Interview: Why the US Should Decriminalize Drug Use
Neal Scott may die in prison. A 49-year-old Black man from New Orleans, Neal had cycled in and out of prison for drug possession over a number of years. He said he was never offered treatment for his drug dependence; instead, the criminal justice system gave him time behind bars and felony convictions—most recently, five years for possessing a small amount of cocaine and a crack pipe. When Neal was arrested in May 2015, he was homeless and could not walk without pain, struggling with a rare autoimmune disease that required routine hospitalizations. Because he could not afford his $7,500 bond, Neal remained in jail for months, where he did not receive proper medication and his health declined drastically—one day he even passed out in the courtroom. Neal eventually pled guilty because he would face a minimum of 20 years in prison if he took his drug possession case to trial and lost. He told us that he cried the day he pled, because he knew he might not survive his sentence.[1
in here i guess:
a entire = an entire
and of end to end = no need of word ( and end to end)
He would also great appreciate it= in here also i think no need great word
if the minister count the stars an the sky as well = if the minister count the stars and the sky as well
the minister say= the minister said