Answer:
Astronomers are telling people to be especially watchful this evening, as a rare event could be making a very special appearance. The release of energised particles from the sun, coupled with particularly helpful overnight conditions, is predicted to make the Northern Lights (Aurora Borealis) visible much further south than normal. Interviewed earlier today by Chris Ross, Channel Six’s science correspondent, Derwent University’s Professor Andrew Higgins told her that, "It's a once-in-a-decade opportunity that people really shouldn’t miss. Thanks to several fronts of high air pressure, the skies tonight will be particularly clear. Ill is over the moon comes the dawn."
Hope it helps
More than any other part of America, the South stands apart. Thousands of Northerners and foreigners have migrated to it but Southerners they will not become. For this is still a place where you must have either been born or have "people" there, to feel it is your native ground. Natives will tell you this. They are proud to be Americans, but they are also proud to be Virginians, North Carolinians, South Carolinians, Tennesseeans, Mississippians and Texans. But they are conscious of another loyalty too, one that transcends the usual ties of national patriotism and state pride. It is a loyalty to a place where habits are strong and memories are long. If those memories could speak, they would tell stories of a region powerfully shaped by its history and determined to pass it on to future generations.
Answer:
"Gives thy pen both skill and argument,"
"Spend'st thou thy fury on some worthless song,"
"the ear that doth thy lays esteem,"
Explanation:
"Marigolds" takes place in a town which is a slum area, in rural Maryland during the Great depression. The narrator, Elizabeth, remembers it as a "Dry September" which the situation with Miss Lotties marigolds took place. (hopefully that helps for a start, of course you can always take something out or add more information) good luck :)
D because it tells you in the queation