Answer:
People who are interested in the causes and cures of diseases
Explanation:
From the newspaper headline, the newspapers are trying to connect with people who have an interest in the causes, prevention and cure of diseases because the headline is celebrating World AIDS say.
AIDS is an acronym for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome and is a disease that attacks the immune system of an infected person, weakening it and is an advanced form of HIV which has no medical cure as of time of writing.
Answer:
The title of the poem "If" begins many of the lines. This shows the importance of trying to follow the speaker's advice: if the son can do all of these things, says the speaker, he will be a man. Repeating "if" also helps the poet stress that nothing is certain in the world.
p.s i just took the test and its the sample response!
Answer:
The excerpt that is an example of research in “Compulsory Voting: An Idea Whose Time Has Come” that Hunter uses to support his claim is A. Since mandatory voting began in Australia, the percentage of ballots that voters intentionally complete in random or incorrect ways remains around 2 to 3%.
Explanation:
The compulsory Voting happens when people are obligated by law to vote in elections but not only that, the state can apply a penalty on them for not doing it so, it is mention that people don't really vote with conviction or a clear political idea, situation that affects the result and path that the country will take, compulsory voting covers a small percentage of population but that doesn't mean that it is not important.
Answer:
Flash light
Explanation:
Because a scansion is the rhythm of a poem, Flash light shows the rythym of the passage
If I were Harrison in exactly the same situation, I would have chosen to save other people. Since Harrison has to be smarter than the rest of the people in the story because of the insane number of handicaps he wears, I think I would have spent time prior to escaping finding a way to free other people of their handicaps and overtaking the government, especially the Handicapper General, Diana Moon Glampers.
Instead of going on national television to find an empress, I would have escaped underground and found others to help me or I would have found a way to get the weapons/fighters/etceteras to help me actually overthrow the government. I would have tried to find ways to help people celebrate their unique talents while also finding a way to make sure that people aren't discriminated against so that society could be fair to all people and still rich with culture and art and things of beauty.
As the story is told, Harrison and the empress were killed by Glampers, and because of the handicaps, nobody even knows it happened, not even his parents...and it happens on live television! There is no way a revolution could be started if there aren't people to keep the fight going. It makes a lot more sense to overthrow the government first and then find someone to dance with.
For me personally, I would want to use my talents to help other people, and, since the story seems to want the reader to think about how important individuality is, I think I would want my story to be one that embraced my talents and strengths in a way that would really help other people.