Answer: A young man planned a clever getaway from the department store.
The central idea that both "The Quinceanera" and "The Smithville Gazette: Neighborhood Thief Strickes Again" share is the fact that in both stories, a young man planned a clever getaway from the department store. Both stories feature as the main character a sales person, and they tell us the stories of their lives. However, they differ in the jewelry store setting.
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<span>They felt both frustrated and hopeful.</span>
Macbeth's strengths contribute to his downfalls because he was once honorable and strong. He let his curiosity get the best of him and as time over goes you see that he is conflicted between his good traits and his bad ones. So you see his honor slowly fades away. Macbeth (in the beginning) wants to do good but his wife pushes him into an evil monster and transforms him into an evil being.