George asks Whit if he knows where the new kid went with Curley's wife. Whit responds that they went to the Riverside dance palace.
lennie , george , candy , slim , curley , curleys wife , crooks , and more
If this relates to Of Mice and Men, Lennie crushed it in the fight when he and George first arrived
He is fairly old. I have always pictured him 40-50 years old.
After accidentally killing Curley's wife in "Of Mice and Men," Lennie flees to a nearby hiding spot in the brush by the Salinas River where George had instructed him to go if he ever got into trouble.
Whit is a ranch hand that seemingly does nothing through the course of the novel. The only part he plays is when he brings in a letter from a long lost friend. this shows their longing for friendship.
The characters in this story that are mentioned often are George, Lennie, Candy, Slim, Carlson, Whit, Curley, Curley's wife, the boss, Crooks, and Aunt Clara
eventually lennie, and georgre and lennie's dream
Bill Tenner was a man who worked on the ranch and loved this magazine. He wrote a letter to the magazine and Slim and Whit saw this and remembered him. Bill Tenner was a man who worked on the ranch and loved this magazine. He wrote a letter to the magazine and Slim and Whit saw this and remembered him.
Al Wilts - deputy sheriff of Soledad. Curley sends Whit to find him when his wife is murdered.
Some of the characters on the ranch in "Of Mice and Men" include George, Lennie, Candy, Slim, Curley, Curley's wife, Crooks, and Carlson. Each character plays a significant role in the story's development and themes.
ok if you are talking about mice and men i know what you mean but if you are not talking about the flim/book of mice and men then i don't know what you mean at all. when curleys wife died in mice and men every one went running after Lennie because he is the one that killed her and Lennie dies in the end. (george hsi best friend kills him because he was going the die anyway.)
Whit shows Slim the magazine with the letter that was published about Bill Tenner's dog in the novella "Of Mice and Men" by John Steinbeck. The magazine that Whit shows Slim serves as a commentary on the harsh realities faced by migrant workers and the bond between humans and their animals.