Answer:
There are not enough bicycles for the residents of the Kilbarchan Home for Boys.
Explanation:
Phillip Hoose's short story "Justin Lebo" tells the story of a ten-year-old boy named Justin Lebo who decided to make bikes from worn-out bike parts for a good cause. The struggle and the determination that the young boy had in his aim to make bikes for every single boy in the Home made him a sensation and also provides him the happiness and contention he needed about himself.
In the given passage, Justin and his mother were driving back from the home. His mind was racing for he had only given two repaired bikes for a number of boys in a shelter home. His question <em>"How would all those kids decide who got the bikes?"</em> reveals the main conflict of who gets the two bikes out of the many boys in the home.
Thus, the correct answer is that there are not enough bikes for the boys in the Kilbarchan Home.
"The Bat Poet" is written in the first person point of view. Using this POV it allows inside knowledge and understanding into the theme of looking at something from another POV.
Native Americans had grown corn for more than 2000 years. They ate it and used it to brew beer way before the Europeans landed on America on the late 15th century, led by Christopher Columbus.
When the settlers arrived to the West Indies, they were offered corn by the Native American Indians. They learned how to grow it, took seeds back with them and introduced it in Europe.
Answer:
He was sexually active and uninhibited with the Worcester girls.
Explanation:
From the book Ethan Frome by Edith Wharton, Ethan was a sexually active man in his college days at Worcester and those times were in stark contrast to how his marriage stifling marriage to Zeena was and how he sought to recapture his college days with his wife's cousin named Mattie Silva.