I would think that setting the scene of someone dying is appropriate to be in a bedroom where a sick person would most likely be (if not in a hospital) such as someone in palliative care for example and the bedroom stillness is commented on broken only by a fly and whose buzz perhaps accentuated the otherwise stillness. If the person's death was outside or in a public place it would more likely be the result of a, say an accident, or say an assassination such as that of Martin Luther King so since it is inside in a bedroom it indicates the dying is just a normal death from illness and/or old age.
Answer: Werner is one of the characters of the story childhood before war.
Explanation:
Werner was native of Zollverein, Germany. He was an orphan who had knowledge of science and mechanics. He used to live with his sister in an orphanage. He fixed a broken radio, his daughter used to listen to the French professor who was delivering a broadcast related to science. Werner used to dream about becoming a scientist. But he was sent to coal mine to work when he was 15 years old.
Dear Principal.
I come through this letter to emphasize attitudes that should be discouraged in our students and encouraged in our teachers, to make the learning process in our school more effective and strengthened, in addition to making the school life more harmonious.
In relation to students, I believe it would be beneficial if the practice of sitting, or even lying down, in the library corridors were prohibited. I have seen that many students tend to do this type of activity, which impairs the circulation of people in the library and can even cause accidents that put both the students and the library's collection at risk. A second practice among students that should be avoided is the use of calculators during classes that involve calculations. This should be avoided because, although the calculator is an efficient tool, it prevents students from being able to understand the calculation and exact it.
Among teachers, I believe it is important to encourage patience, as some of them have been a little impatient when complex concepts are not quickly understood by students. I also believe that they should encourage students to take more notes, as I have noticed that students learn more by copying than by receiving class material by email, or by handouts.
Thank you for your time and ask you to take my recommendations into account.
Graciously,
Mary Smith.
Senior Prefect