Answer: "I am sorry that I won't be able to say everything I'd planned in my remaining time, but please let me conclude with . . ." Then state your most important idea and make your conclusion before time runs out.
Explanation: If you may be cut off by the moderator or the chairman, your audience will at least hear the conclusion you planned. If you are stopped ( and it DOES happen ) in mid-sentence or without making your most important point, the audience will see you as disorganized, or insensitive to the time limits, and may have an unfavorable impression of you-- and they will have missed the purpose of your speech.
The correct answer is B. Glenda confronts her mother and tells her what she really wants to do with her life.
This is the most climactic answer of the four and would create conflict for the main character quickly.
Answer: Romeo and Juliet, the classic piece of literature, and West Side Story, the iconic sixties musical show clear resemblances. Whether it be for the two rivalries, the star-crossed lovers, or the intense violence between them it's very clear how similar they are. For example, focusing on the diverse opposing groups between the two texts really shows how similar a play written in 1595 can be to a twentieth-century movie. When looking through a Postcolonial lens, both Romeo and Juliet and West Side Story use tribe rivalries to drive the plot.