Write a dialogue between two friends, one of whom believes in ghosts while the other does not.
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Answer:
One stormy day in November two years ago, water streaked across the second floor windows of the Orpheum Theatre in downtown Phoenix. A security guard snapped a photo with her phone.
When she looked at it, the picture contained the image of a ghostly Native American woman with no makeup and bad teeth, said Patty Dunlap, the volunteer coordinator for the city of Phoenix’s convention center department, which owns and operates the theater.
“I could tell that she had died a violent death in that picture just from looking at it,” Dunlap said. “It was very, very scary. That’s the one thing that made me kind of a believer of the ghost stories. I always thought it was kind of phooey … but I just really did not believe it until I saw that picture.”
When it comes to believing in ghosts, Dunlap is not alone. Thirty two percent of Americans believe in ghosts, according to a 2005 Gallup poll. A more recent Huffington Post/YouGov poll indicated that 45 percent of American adults believe that spirits of dead people can come back.
A mixed group of skeptics and believers recently toured the theater to learn about the ghosts that haunt the building.
Answer:
(Two friends are keenly discussing about superstitions and what they can do to make people aware of the hollowness of superstitions :)
Friend A: Hey, why did you get late? We were about to start the party without you!
Friend B: Hey my parents’ superstitious nature annoys me at times. As I was about to leave, they were not letting me come as my sister sneezed! They think it is inauspicious. How unscientific!
Friend A: We cannot do anything about it. My parents also believe in superstitions.
Friend B: We must do something. See in spite of my sister’s sneeze, nothing has happened. On earlier occasions also I had to face inconvenience on account of their superstitious nature.
Friend A: What can we do?
Friend B: I think we can request our teacher to hold a seminar on ‘Superstitions’ in which she can give them an enlightening lecture on the origin of superstitions and their irrelevance in the modern times.
Friend A: It is a good idea. Most of these superstitions were made quite long ago, when man was quite backward in thinking, reasoning, and science. Superstitions are like ghosts whom no one has seen but still compulsively believe in.
Friend B: I think we also need to do some experiment! Are you a game?
Friend A: Wow! I am in. but what experiment?
Friend B: We will make a cat walk in front of our fathers in the morning, and in the evening we will tell them our result in the pre-boards. Both of us have scored CGPA 10. Then we will tell them. Look if the crossing of the cat in front of you would have been inauspicious, we would have not scored 10 CGPA. They will understand that superstitions have no influence on what happens to us.
Friend A: Great idea. If we will give them a detailed explanation about irrelevance and prove our arguments with proofs, they will definitely stop believing in superstitions.
Friend B : I agree with you. We will definitely try to convince them.
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