Reаd the pаssаge belоw and in the text bоx answer the questiоn that follows. Part 2 America Doesn’t Need an Official LanguageBy Carlos LozadaOpinion Columnist (New York Times, March 6, 2025) In his March 1 executive order designating English as the official language of the United States, President Trump asserts that a single shared language is “at the core of a unified, cohesive society,” that it serves to “streamline communication,” promote efficiency and “empower new citizens to achieve the American Dream.” On these points, I have little disagreement. Just about every immigrant I’ve ever known in the United States — starting with my father — has sought to learn English for just those reasons. It was relatively easy for my sisters and me to pick it up as kids, and my mother had learned it well from the beloved American nuns who taught her in Peru. But my dad, coming to it later in life, always had to work at it. And work he did. His errors of pronunciation never kept him from speaking English, even singing it, loudly and proudly. I cringed a bit at the time. Now I cringe at the memory of my cringing. Had English suddenly become the official language of the United States via an executive order from President Gerald Ford, I can’t imagine that my father would have learned it any faster or that he would have felt more encouragement to do so. The need to work, to provide, was all the incentive he required. In the textbox, use your own words (not not copy from the text) write 1-2 complete sentences to answer the question. Question: According to the author, did his father and the children learn English the same way? Why or why not?
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A mоther brings in her unimmunized, оtherwise heаlthy, 7-yeаr-оld dаughter to the pediatric office where you are the charge nurse. She tells you the girl had her school concert about two weeks ago and had been totally fine. The child has nearly 100 lesions all over her body, mainly localized to her trunk. Most of the lesions are vesicular, but a few have scabbed over. According to the mother, her daughter broke out in this rash about 5 days ago. She never experienced a fever, but the rash seems to be incurably itchy. As the mother is telling you this, you see her daughter itch open one of the vesicles, revealing a clear fluid. 1. Based on the patient's symptoms, you suspect that she will be diagnosed with Smallpox, Shingles, Chickenpox, OR Measles? Explain your reasoning. 2. The mother demands antibiotics to treat her daughter's infection. Do you prescribe antibiotics or not. Explain your reasoning, including known treatments for the disease you selected in question 1. 3. While you are explaining the treatment process to the mother, one of your nurses begins calling the state health department to report a suspected case of Smallpox infection. You stop her, citing that Smallpox has been eradicated since 1977 and has significantly different symptoms than what the little girl is exhibiting. If the little girl was showing signs of Smallpox, we would see a) what symptoms caused by b) what virus? Make sure you answer ALL parts of each question to ensure you receive full credit for correct answers.