Elie Wiesel's inheritance is a knife and a spoon that his father leaves to him when he dies. His father tries to give it to him a few times when his name is called during selection, but Elie does not take until the very end. This shows that the fortunes of the Wiesel family have drastically changed since chapter 1 when the family buried their most prized possessions to keep them out of the hands of the German soldiers. This was true for many Jews at the end of WWII. Their homes had been raided and all of their possessions taken. Many Jews had nowhere to go and no money after they were liberated from the concentration camps.
I can't answer this because I have no idea what line 35 was... But I would probably assume it's c
In a negative way the will focus on scandals of that sports personalities as bad people and this will ruin their reputation and this will influence people not to trust or believe in what there doing....
The answer is C. "the man's behavour led me to guess...upset in someone."
Sentences A and B describe the actions and manners, showing the man's behaviour and anxiety: casting quick glances, his foot beating on the hot pavement etc. appearing he could even explode with anger. At some point (C), <em>he changed and just got calm, wainting silently, leading the speaker to wonder if the cause of all this could be the bus' delay.</em>