“Saudi Arabian women are going to have to fight for our rights, men are not going to just hand them over to us,” said Amira Kashgary, a professor who drove through Jidda on Friday for 45 minutes with her 21-year-old daughter. Women are tired of being stranded or missing appointments because their drivers disappear for the day, Professor Kashgary said. “We want to drive today, tomorrow, and every day — it’s not a one-day show. We want to make it a norm.”
The main ideas of the article "In a Scattered Protest, Saudi Women Take the Wheel" are the following:
Women should have the same rights as men in Arabian countries. Even though the country has been upgrading women's right, there is still a lot more to do.
Even though women are allowed to drive in Saudi Arabia, they complained against the country's ban on female drivers and argued that the Arab state should allow women to hold a license.
It would be the color of the sky and stillness of the air, because that's what he noticed in the very beginning. "I glanced at the sudden peculiar coloring of the sky. The seasonal hue and the stillness of the air gave me a sudden sense of nervousness."
The other Cyclopes think that Polyphemus is saying, "I am in pain, but no one has tricked me." They believe that there is nothing they can do to help Polyphemus. ... The men escape when the Cyclops releases his sheep to grave.