to: whom it may concern; sometime in the distant future
FROM: CAMERON GERDES
SUBJECT: WHAT IT WAS LIKE 100 YEARS AGO
DATE: 4/30/2012
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I AM WRITING THIS LETTER ON THE 30TH OF APRIL 2012 ON A WARM SUNNY DAY IN HOUSTON, TEXAS. BY THE TIME YOU READ THIS LETTER I WILL HAVE LONG PASSED AND HOPEFULLY MADE A DIFFERENCE IN THE WORLD. I CAN ONLY IMAGINE WHAT LIKE WOULD BE LIKE IN 2113; I AM NOT EVEN SURE YOU WOULD STILL USE A COMPUTER TO WRITE LETTERS LIKE THIS ANYMORE. I WOULD LIKE TO SHARE WITH YOU WHAT IT’S LIKE OR WHAT IT WAS LIKE DURING THE TIME I WAS AROUND.
Currently in 2012; life travels fast; everything seems to be like information …show more content…
As an example, when a natural disaster like an earth quake or hurricane strikes, people come together to provide supplies, emotional support, and medical attention to those in need. We also work together to rebuild the areas that have been hit hard like after Hurricane Katrina hit the New Orleans area. Rather than expect others to fend for themselves or live in unsafe conditions, we believe that we are an international community who must assist others in rebuilding their lives. Even though there is a lot of war, famine, crime, we still believe that people are good and the decision to help others, in spite of the horrors that go on, is a decision that must be made. For in helping others, we ultimately help ourselves as well as I am sure you still do in your …show more content…
This play has been frequently performed at both amateur and professional levels and has been adapted for opera, film, books, stage and screen; but I am not sure if you still see it in your society today.. Often regarded as representative, the play tells of the dangers of the lust for power and the betrayal of friends. For the plot Shakespeare drew loosely on the historical account of “King Macbeth of Scotland” by Raphael Holinshed and that by the Scottish philosopher Hector Boece. There are many superstitions centered on the belief the play is somehow “cursed” and many actors will not mention the name of the play aloud, referring to it instead as “The Scottish