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uranmaximum [27]
2 years ago
10

Imagine that your local library has invited community members to submit proposals for a fundraiser. You are the student represen

tative on the committee to choose the best proposal. Read the two proposals, paying close attention to their similarities and differences. Consider whether or not each proposal is logistically feasible, which fundraiser will most appeal to members of your community, and which fundraiser will likely raise more money.
Which proposal do you think the committee should choose? Write an essay in which you make a case for your choice. Support your argument with references to specific details in each proposal.
English
1 answer:
Llana [10]2 years ago
8 0

This question is incomplete, since it is missing the proposals. I've found them online:

Proposal 1: The best way to get people invested in the library is to show them the joy of reading. For that reason, the library should hold a book sale. People could donate books that they no longer want, and the librarians could find books that the library no longer needs. Volunteers would need to sort the books into categories and arrange them in an inviting way, like at a bookstore. Books should be inexpensive so people will buy more of them – may be fifty cents for paperbacks and two dollars for hardcover books. A book sale would appeal to people of all ages, from little kids to older people. There should also be a table where people can sign up for library cards. That way, if visitors do not find any books they want at the sale, they can come back to the library.

Proposal 2: A great way to make money for the library would be holding a car wash. The softball team at my school raised over $400 at their car wash last year! The car wash could be held in the library parking lot on a Saturday morning. You could ask local high school students to volunteer to wash the cars. That would be a great way to get students involved with the library. It takes two or three volunteers to wash a car quickly, so you would need at least ten volunteers. You could charge around ten dollars per car. Even people who are not very interested in reading like to have a clean car, so you would get a lot of people to stop by who might not otherwise come to a library fundraiser.

Answer:

The proposal I think the committee should choose is the second proposal.

Explanation:

After carefully reading both proposals for a fundraiser to help the library, I have come to the conclusion that the second proposal is likely to be more efficient.

The first proposal makes a beautiful suggestion when inviting us to try and awake people's interest in reading books. However, it takes more than just a book sale for that to happen. Besides that, the prices suggested to be charged for the books - between fifty cents and two dollars - won't be very effective. Our purpose is to raise money for the library, so we should take into consideration what will most efficiently have people spend their money.

The second proposal is more effective in its purpose. Even though it may sound strange to hold a car wash when the goal is to help a library, car washes are known to raise a good amount of money easily. Even people who do not enjoy reading at all may end up helping, either by volunteering or by having their cars washed. As said in the proposal, not many volunteers would be necessary (only around ten) and we can easily find help when the activity is fun and enjoyable.

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Drag each tile to the correct box.
monitta

Answer:

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Explanation:

5 0
1 year ago
According to Carr what is the problem with "memory maids" defense used by those who see nothing wrong with heavy internet usage?
Yuri [45]

Answer:

The problem is that it stimulates the underutilization of the brain and the waste of all its potential.

Explanation:

Nicholas Carr states in his text that memory is something built that must be stimulated and trained in order to be efficient. This causes our brain to develop and use all the potential that we know it has. With memorization, we are able to learn about everything, but memorization is decaying, since we are relying on memory devices that are becoming increasingly popular with the advancement of technology and that are extremely stimulated and defended by the people who make them. the intense use of the internet.

3 0
1 year ago
Read the incorrect sentence. Write three to five sentences explaining what kind of run-on sentence it is and how to revise it. M
shepuryov [24]
One way to fix that sentence is to switch around the two phrases used; 'My mother and father are both scientists' and 'It must have been my destiny to become interested in biology.'

It must have been my destiny to spark an interest in Biology, as my mother and father are both scientists.

That's a way to fix that sentence used in your question.

Also, 'destiny' was spelled incorrectly.

This sentence may seem run on if you don't place a conjunction between the two phrases, or if the phrases are not switched.

If the sentence is to be used with a conjunction, it may end up like this....

My mother and father are both scientists, so it must have been my destiny to become interested in biology.

Or, you may just use a period, to change the two phrases used into two separate sentences.

Like this;

My mother and father are both scientists. For that reason, it must have been my destiny to become interested in biology.

ALSO, as you can see above, I have added a few words to the last sentence. Those three words, 'For that reason', give closure to the two sentences.

Hope this helped!
6 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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The answer is:

Portia says that if Brutus were simply sick, he would do something to get better. As his wife and other half, she pleads with him to tell her what is on his mind. Then she inquires about the men who were sneaking around their house.

In Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar," Brutus' wife, Portia, seeks to know what is going through his mind. She even kneels down to ask him the reason he seems so unwell and his mind is so troubled, as promises to keep his secret. She is also worried about the men that have come to see him during the night, who are actually Caesar's conspirators.

 

7 0
1 year ago
Read 2 more answers
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vagabundo [1.1K]

Answer:

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Most yeomen had vats and presses to make cheese.

Explanation:

According to the passage from "The Time Traveler’s Guide to Elizabethan England," the author Ian Mortimer describes the storage of food. Besides, he specifically mentions that "[w]ine and meat must be kept apart." Finally, he makes reference to how winter months were expected to produce less food: "Most yeomen will have vats and presses for making cheeses—a valuable source of protein in the long winter season."  

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1 year ago
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