B because it explains Army Captain Kline's experience being home after 6 years of being in the Army.
It is usually referred to by using letters to indicate which lines rhyme; lines designated with the same letter all rhyme with each other. So it would be AA,BB
It is more than 90 years old. An American Elm Tree in the heart of downtown Oklahoma City, it survived the bomb’s blast and witnessed one of the worst terrorist attacks on American soil. Today, we call it the Survivor Tree.
Before the bombing, the tree was important because it provided the only shade in the downtown parking lot. People would arrive early to work just to be able to park under the shade of the tree’s branches.
On April 19, 1995, the tree was almost chopped down to recover pieces of evidences that hung from its branches due to the force of the 4,000 pound bomb that killed 168 and injured hundreds just yards away. Evidence was retrieved from the branches and the trunk of the tree.
When hundreds of community citizens, family members of those who were killed, survivors and rescue workers came together to write the Memorial Mission Statement, one of its resolutions dictated that “one of the components of the Memorial must be the Survivor Tree located on the south half of the Journal Record Building block.”
Any coastal area has the potential to be struck by a tsunami but out of the options you provided Alaska is definitely at most risk.
This is because Alaska is facing what scientists call a megathrust (subduction zones) in which almost three quarters of all tsunamis tend to occur.
Fun Fact: The largest tsunami ever recorded was in Alaska with waves reaching a whopping 1720 feet high (524 meters)!