The answer is b i hope that helps
<span>30-year-old Nellie has
been diagnosed with schizophrenia, then her selective attention is deficient,
she is unable to ignore irrelevant stimuli, and she often gives her undivided
attention to minute stimuli, thus this type of attention problem is thought to
contribute to the disorganized thoughts.</span>
The first thing the driver should ask if he is thinking about passing or overtaking a car is if it is legal to make such a maneuver and is it safe to do so. There are areas where overtaking is prohibited and there are prerequisites and restrictions accompanied to such maneuver like the visibility of incoming traffic for at least 10 sec, speed must be higher by 10 kph, no solid yellow line along the road and prohibition of passing 100 meters before railroads, hills, and tunnels.
In 1849 Tubman's owner<span>, Edward Brodess, needed to sell </span>slaves<span> in order to cover his debts. ... When </span>her<span>prayers </span>did<span> not work she changed it to: “Oh Lord, if you ain't never ... They </span>did<span> not want to leave traces, all they </span>wanted<span> was a total break from their ... </span>Harriet<span> had already resolved to </span>free<span> herself and after making sure </span>her<span> ...</span>
Answer:
Number 1 and 2 are correct. Number 3 is "yes". Number 4 is "yes". Number 5 is "no". Number 6 is "no". Number 7 is "yes". Number 8 is "no".
Explanation:
Number one isn't fair because the juvenile wouldn't know what to say and would be confused about what's happening or going to happen because they didn't have enough time to prepare. Number 2 isn't fair because she might say something that she didn't know she was/wasn't supposed to say that the lawyer would have told her. Number 3 is fair because they aren't supposed to lie in court and the judge needs to know what happened to know how much trouble the person gets and who gets it. Number 4 is fair because since the person is underage and doesn't have enough money to buy a lawyer, the court should assign one to the juvenile. Number 5 is no because the judge or the person going against the juvenile could say something that never happened or never been said at the hearing. Number 6 is no because there's nothing against the juvenile about what happened and he/she could be innocent. Number 7 is yes because the court needs all the evidence and proof about what happened so the judge knows what to do. Number 8 is no because the parents might not be able to make it because they might forget the date of the hearing and they need writing for when the date is and where the hearing is, incase they forgot. I really hope i helped.