I'd say I guess C. asking the advice of a reference librarian
Answer:
Option A and D
Explanation:
This excerpt is gotten from activist Cesar Chavez’s 1984 address to the Commonwealth Club of San Francisco.
Cesar Chavez was a Mexican American descent labor leader and civil rights activist popular for his efforts to gain better working conditions for the thousands of workers who labored on farms for low wages and under severe conditions by leading labor campaigns. Inspired by Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr, he employed nonviolent means to bring attention to the plight and made people aware of the struggles of farm workers caused across the Nation and especially in southwestern USA.
From the excerpt delivered and address to the Commonwealth Club of San Francisco, Cesar Chavez has a singular objective to change farming practices and the injustice so workers are respected and his dream for change came from his own experiences of racism and mistreatment which made him to understand the pledge of the workers as a result of their working condition caused by the growers to correct the injustice he saw his people suffer.
The most appropriate to include in a summary are :
My singular objective has been to change farming practices so workers are respected.
This dream for change came from my own experiences of racism and mistreatment.
Answer:
Walter would probably agree with the idea that:
c. money can solve any kind of problem.
Explanation:
This question refers to "A Raisin in the Sun," a play by Lorraine Hansberry. Walter is one of the main characters, along with Mama and his sister, Ruth. For most of the play, Walter has the firm belief that money can solve any kind of problem. However, he has trouble making money. He also has trouble understanding that the money itself should not be an end to a means. Instead, it should be the means to an end, the resource used to get something that will help make people happy and comfortable. It is only at the end of the play that Walter is able to open his eyes to that. He finally sees that his mother's and sister's dreams are more important than to simply possess money.