1) The glass menagerie in the play mostly represents Laura, because she lives in an imaginary world and her glass animals keeps her active.
2) Tom is confined to the horrors of his life in the family and Laura has a private world that she claims not to share in reality and Amanda, a pampered woman with unrealistic dreams. These conflicts eventually affect the lives of each characters in concluding that the cannot accept the reality that has been given to them. They purposely dodge their problem into a solution that seems to have created another problem.
My dad Mike and I were vacationing on Nantucket island, off the coast of Massachusetts. We had left home, which is Concord New Hampshire and had arrived at the ferry boat Nantucket Queen.
The next day we rented a boat and sailed into Grebers Bay, the voices of other sailors the sound of the water beneath us and the flapping of the overhead sails were pleasant, suddenly the peaceful scene, was interrupted by shouts from another boat that had turned and was heading right into us watch out two men yelled excitedly,
"We've lost control of our boat! Grab the tiller John" dad yelled to me "pull it toward you when I give the signal"
"All right dad" I responded dad grabbed the sail and as he adjusted it he yelled at me.
"Now John, pull back", I did what he said not a moment too soon, *whew* what a narrow escape! The other boat passed within twenty-two inches of ours.
Hope I helped!!
-Brandi
Answer:
The author most likely includes this supporting text to <em><u>reinforce the case study's point that bird flu is dangerous</u></em>.
Explanation:
The book "When Birds Get Flu" by John DiConsiglio delves into real cases of how people contract the bird flu. The book discusses infection cases and how avian influenza or bird flu began in Washington.
In the statement from the book, the author remarks that <em>"one or two sick chickens could infect a whole town [which could in turn] infect the country—or even the world."</em> By emphasizing the seriousness and infection level of the flu, <u>John DiConsiglio seems to reinforce the dangerousness of the bird flu.</u>
Thus, the correct answer is the first option.