Subject: Molly Huffaker- What I want to know about this class.
Dear Kumu Lum,
There are many things that I would like to learn in this class. One of them would be how to write a good resume. I have written them before, but I would like to know how I can make it better. Another thing that I would like to learn about is how to advertise a business online. I am not sure all that we will be learning in this class, but that is something that I am interested in if we do.
Thanks, Molly Huffaker
October 3, 2022
To: Kumu Lum
From: Molly Huffaker
Subject: How to make people like you
Do you know how to make people like you quickly? Try a little experiment. Pick out someone you meet and try to make that person like you. Obviously, to do this, you must say something nice, and not about yourself. Ask yourself what there is about that person that you can honestly admire. Do you admire their head of hair? Or their eyes? Or their deep voice? We are talking here of honest and justified appreciation, not cheap flattery. Then tell them about what you have found to admire.
You will have practiced the one all-important law of human conduct, and that is: Always make the other person feel important. It is this desire to feel important that makes you want to wear the latest styles, drive the latest cars, and quote your favorite actors. It is this desire that lures many boys and girls into joining gangs and engaging in criminal activities.
October 3, 2022
Kimberly Lum
High School Teacher
440 Wasatch Dr, Layton, UT 84041
Dear Kumu Lum:
Rabbits became a menace in Australia because they breed so quickly and eat almost any vegetable. Three pairs of rabbits were introduced into the country in the eighteenth century. They multiply so rapidly that, with the addition of others who were brought over, they spread over most of the continent and caused a tremendous amount of damage.
The female rabbit, or doe, produces four to eight litters of five to eight young in a year. at the age of six months, they can breed. It is reckoned that a pair of rabbits, given ideal conditions, could in three years have over thirteen million descendants. Many costly attempts to control the rabbits failed in Australia. By the middle of the twentieth century, a virus disease was introduced which destroyed eighty percent in three years. They are still a problem
Sincerely,
Molly Huffaker
High School Student
440 Wasatch Dr, Layton, UT 84041