Alright, so amongst starters, you have a few you can use to show you'll have evidence:
According to text
According to the passage
According to the information provided
As the information shows
As the text mentioned, (include direct quote here)
Based on the information in the passage/text, (include reasoning here)
Etc. There are quite a few options, really, these are just a few. Based on whatever you are providing the information ON, the words information, text, and passage can be changed to suit your needs, such as article, newspaper, website, etc.
In the fourth episode, the Servant actually eagerly answers to Oedipus's questioning about his heritage - that he was abandoned by his parents and that he is that same baby he had been asking around about.
Here is the answer to the given question above. Caroll Spinney, who turns 83 today, is famous for voicing big bird and <span> Oscar the Grouch on </span>Sesame Street. He is an<span> American puppeteer, cartoonist, author and speaker most </span>famous<span> for playing </span>Big Bird<span> and Oscar the Grouch on </span>Sesame Street<span> since 1969. Hope this answers your question.</span>
Cultural images and myths are nothing new, of course. Every culture has them. They provide a kind of glue that simultaneously helps to bond disparate people together into a unified whole and also helps explain and give order to a sometimes chaotic and confusing world. And Luce was hardly the first or only promoter of contrived or idealistic images.
The idealistic image of a "hero" goes as far back in time as civilization itself, because each civilization and culture needed role models to teach their young what they should aspire to become. During the Depression and World War II, Norman Rockwell's images of American home life -- and his "Four Freedoms" series in particular -- helped remind weary Americans what they were fighting to preserve -- and raised millions in war bonds.