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docker41 [41]
2 years ago
15

Roger and Tara are planning a day at the beach with their kids Mark, Kyle, and Becca. Roger packs a lunch for the family, with t

urkey sandwiches for everyone except Kyle, who only seems to like peanut butter and jelly. Tara is busy making sure that Becca has her asthma inhaler, and that the family has enough sun screen to last the entire day. Mark, the eldest, is helping his dad by packing the family van, and by securing the beach chairs to the roof. Who has asthma?*
English
1 answer:
Anastasy [175]2 years ago
7 0
A lot of that information is to just throw you off track. You just need to focus on the information that is important! Like this: Tara is busy making sure that Becca has her asthma inhaler. Tara is helping Becca, not getting the asthma inhaler herself, so don't get confused. Becca is the person with asthma.
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Coach Motivates Her Girls, Both On and<br> Off the Court<br> GO ON<br> Page 2
OverLord2011 [107]

Coach Motivates Her Girls ,Both On and Off the Court in the following way

Explanation:

The coach leans forward, her hands pressed on a table in a room off the gymnasium. A basketball game is about to start. She is silent for a minute or two. Her players shift uncomfortably.

When Dorothy Gaters finally speaks, her message is familiar and firm. As usual, it's about fundamentals.

"Move your big feet." ''Box out." ''No fouls."

If they don't do that, she doesn't hesitate to take it up a notch on the court.

"You're embarrassing yourselves!" she tells them. She is the same, even when they're winning handily.

That candor might be hard for the members of the girls' basketball team at John Marshall Metropolitan High School to hear. But they listen. They know this is a woman who can take them places.

For 40 years, Gaters has brought respect and pride to a West Side Chicago neighborhood that has seen more than its share of hard times. They understand this and also how much Gaters cares about them and their futures. And that's whether they end up playing basketball after high school or not.

"Just do something. So that you can be self-supportive, help your family, and set an example for those who are going to follow you," the coach tells her players. They call her Ms. Gaters or often just "G."

This current crop of players helped Gaters reach her 1,000th career win in November. The victory placed her among an elite group of coaches at any level of basketball.

Gaters' attention to detail and her competitiveness have led her teams to eight Illinois state titles and 23 city titles.

"She's the first coach who really taught me the game of basketball," says Pondexter, whom Gaters first saw play in a YMCA recreational league and then helped hone her talent. "I credit it all to her, my humble beginnings."

"School before basketball," says Tineesha Coleman, a junior who hopes to play in college.

"She's a sweetie pie," Greyer says, quickly adding, "Off the court. OFF the court!"

But though Gaters is tough, it is a tough love, her former players say. They recall a coach who occasionally took them to movies or out for burgers and fries.

They note how Gaters has quietly provided a coat, clothing or shoes for a player who needs them.

Gaters started coaching in 1975, and understands how one can learn and succeed, in big ways.Gaters liked basketball, even played a bit herself. But she didn't know much about coaching, so she watched the boys' coaches carefully and took in any games she could find. She won her first state championship in 1982.

7 0
2 years ago
Read the excerpt from "Let Bindi Have the Limelight."
Softa [21]
<span>After Terri told attendees about the Steve she knew and loved, his dreams for wildlife protection, and the Irwin family's determination to continue his work, it was Bindi's turn to take the podium. With conviction and poise, she offered her perspective on the topic that had defined her eight years to date. "It's very sad, but in my lifetime, a lot of wildlife could disappear," she said. "We could lose tigers, gorillas, and even my favorite koalas could become extinct. We need to continue my daddy's work and make this place safer for animals." 
This excerpt shows a connection between :
</span>
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2 years ago
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Read the poems. A haiku by Buson and an excerpt from "Wine of the Fairies" by Percy Bysshe Shelley. What motif is addressed in b
Nuetrik [128]

Answer: The motif addressed in both forms of poetry is nature.

Explanation: A Motif is a symbolism that is repeated throughout the poem in different forms. The poem "Wine of the Fairies" by Percy Bysshe Shelley, and the majority of the haikus (Japanese poems) by Buson, use the motifs of nature and fantasy, mentioning fairies, flowers, seasons, and more. We can see this in the haiku "Natsukawa wo/ Kosu ureshisa yo/ Te ni zori", by Buson, where we can see verses such as:

The summer river.

It’s happy to walk across it.

My hands with zori sandal.

Likewise, in "Wine of the Fairies" Shelley describes his love for these elements when being drunk in the lines: "Which fairies catch in hyacinth bowls." "And when ’tis spilt on the summer earth", "Of the fairies bear those bowls so new!"

 

8 0
2 years ago
Based on the excerpt from Lawrence Ferlinghetti's poem "To the Oracle at Delphi," what does the Oracle symbolize?
mart [117]
<span>In classical antiquity, an oracle was a person or agency considered to provide wise and insightful counsel or prophetic predictions or precognition of the future, inspired by the gods. As such it is a form of divination.</span>
5 0
2 years ago
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In at least one hundred words, describe the interactions between Rowlandson and the Native Americans she lived with.
Mashcka [7]
Mrs. Rowland's story can either be good or bad. She was captured along with her children, and she was separated from them against her will. She had sewn clothes for the Indians in exchange for food, but they did not harm her. Instead, they have given her a Bible and was released after the ransom was paid by her husband. Her family was reunited after their captivity in 11 weeks.
8 0
2 years ago
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