Atticus said that Bob Ewell spit in his face because Ewell needed "to have some kind of comeback." Ewell felt that Atticus had wronged him and in order to get his anger out, he spit in Atticus' face. Atticus doesn't react to it because a little spit in his face is better than Ewell going home and giving a beating to one of his children. Atticus has enough social status and respect from the community that allowing Ewell to get away with spitting in his face doesn't affect his reputation around town. This entire situation shows Atticus' patience with situations and his ability to stay calm and think clearly about consequences and the motive behind people's actions.
“Fast food restaurants need to create more varied menus,” I believe. Hope this helped!
Answer:
The Birth of Food Culture
Everybody has to eat. It’s obvious, right? And eating has been a large part of every human enterprise in existence. (Clearly the Magna Carta was not written on an empty stomach and World War II was not won by a starving army.) So it might surprise you that humans have only really thought critically about food in the last couple centuries.
Explanation:
that the answer
A. Interrogative, question mark. "Have you ever been to North Carolina?" is a question, hence the question mark. If one is being interrogated, he or she is being questioned.