Answer:
The main purpose is to evoke fear in the reader. (In my opinion.)
3Why does Atticus think Mrs. Dubose is a “great lady”? Do you agree with him?4Jem responds to Atticus’s praise of Mrs. Dubose by saying: “A lady? After all those things she said about you, a lady?” Why does he question whether or not Atticus should refer to her as a “lady”? How does Maycomb society define a proper lady? Does Atticus agree? Do you agree?5What lesson do you think Atticus wants Jem to learn by having him read to Mrs. Dubose?6How did you define courage at the beginning of this section? How does Atticus define “real courage”? What metaphor doe she use to describe what he believes is the wrong idea about courage? Which characters in the novel so far display courage?7Scout tells Atticus that he must be wrong to represent Tom Robinson because most people in Maycomb think it is wrong. How does Atticus respond?8How did you define conscience at the beginning of this section? How would you refine your definition based on what you have read in this chapter? What does it mean to be ableto live with one’s self?9How does Atticus explain the insult “n---er-lover” to Scout? How does he answer the accusation?10Atticus advises Scout: “It’s never an insult to be called what somebody thinks is a bad name. It just shows you how poor that person is, it doesn’t hurt you.” Do you agree? Are insults harmless? When might they cause real damage?
The answer would be the second choice, "Students who receive arts education are four times more likely to have high academic achievement."
While the second and third answers seemed to both be good answers, the third one did not mention the students' performance in school. It only mentioned that the mood of the majority of students studied improved.
The answer (I believe grammatically) would be A
It would be the last one. She had made up her mind; she was going to travel the world one way or another.
Hope this helps!