Answer: a. He refuses to leave the hospital while Jeannette stays there.
Explanation:
Jeannette Walls spoke of how she had burnt herself whilst making hot-dogs at the age of 3 in the book, The Glass Castle.
Her mother, with the help of a neighbor, rushed her to the hospital where she got skin grafts and was bandaged.
Her father, Rex Walls did not believe in hospitals and argued with the Physician about the bandaging of Jeanette's burns which the Physician said was for reducing the risk infection. During the argument, Rex threatens to hit the Physician and was removed from the hospital by security.
A few weeks later the grabs Jeannette and flees the hospital without her being properly released so as to avoid payment which was something he called the <em>Rex Walls-style</em>.
<em>Not once in the book did Rex Walls refuses to leave the hospital while Jeannette stayed there.</em>
To show what sources you used and avoid accidental plagiarism
Answer:
Okayyyyyyy
Explanation:
When I say that I’m an experimental computer poet, what I mean is that I write computer programs that write poems. Part of what I want to do in this talk is offer a new framework for thinking about what it means to write computer programs that write poems. Because usually when we think about computer generated poetry, we think of articles like this where any instance of some human task being automated is met by some story that’s like, “I welcome our robotic X overlords” where I replace X with whatever task is being automated by a computer. Most people when they think of computer poetry think that the task of the computer poet is to recreate with as much fidelity as possible poetry that is written by humans. I have no interest in making poetry that looks like it was written by humans. I think that that’s a plainly boring task that nobody should try to attempt.
The answer is B because the author doesn’t spend to much time on making the character