<u>Original sentences:</u> José received a college scholarship for baseball from Vanderbilt University. He has been playing for years. He will attend this fall.
<u>Correct</u><u> </u><u>combination</u><u>:</u> Playing for years, Jose who will be attending this fall, received a college scholarship from Vanderbilt University.
<u>Reasoning</u>
1. <em>since</em><em> </em>and <em>for</em><em> </em>cannot be used together for time depiction.
2. "..and attending this fall" seems incomplete due to incorrect use of tense.
<em>Hope</em><em> </em><em>this</em><em> </em><em>helps</em><em> </em><em>:</em><em>)</em>
I believe that you would be giving permission for someone to do something.
anao dnejo euuebebvwbvwvwvwv
So it looks like you pick a scenario, and you pretend you were there. type how you would feel and react, then type what you would want the manager of the establishment to do and how he\she would react