Sunday, July 6, 2008

Monday july 7, 2008 morning blog

Use your voc words proportion, scheme, register
Pick out a few articles to read...............underline the important events in the reading then when it is 8:30 start typing your blog.
Title
8sentence summary including who what when where why how
3 reflection- your opinion& 1 interesting fact learned

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Top-level insider of CAF reveals the cartel's most guarded info

What I read today on the news, was that a high ranking lieutenant in the CAF(Cartel Arellano Felix) revealed guarded secrets. He revealed how a in a mistaken identity they assassinated Mexico's Roman Catholic cardinal, Juan Jesus Posadas Ocampo. And how they bribed Rodolfo Leon Aragón, the chief of the Mexican attorney general's Federal Judicial Police. equivalent to that as U.S. FBI. The bribe was an astonishing $10 million bribe. All this was caused becuase of false information that CAF enemy Joaquin "el chapo" Guzman was goin to be in Guadalajara.

Anonymous said...

The article I read was about A 40-year-old man that was hospitalized Monday with a non- life threatening gunshot wound that he suffered in an apparent gang-related shooting in Normal Heights. The man had just stepped into the west alley of the 4200 block of 36th Street when he heard a shot around 5:30 p.m. Sunday and felt a pain in his shoulder, The cop Bob Dare said. He did not see where the shot came from, Dare said. San Diego police gang detectives were investigating the shooting.
My opinion about this article is that I think It could have been a gang related thing but at the same time it could of just been a shot were some just wanted to get revenge by someway or something he had did.
One interesting fact is always watch your back.

►►►Jaime◄◄◄ said...

“Russian, American leaders break ice”
►Today on the PROPORTION of the newspaper that I read, I read that they REGISTERED that President Bush met today with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, the first time the leaders have sat down since Medvedev took office last month as former President Vladimir Putin's hand-picked successor. Meeting on the sidelines of the Group of Eight summit in Japan, Bush and Medvedev emphasized that there were issues of agreement between their countries – such as dealing with North Korea and Iran – but also areas of disagreement, such as U.S. plans for a European-based missile shield. But Bush would not go so far as to say he got a sense of Medvedev's soul, as he famously said of Putin after their first meeting. Putin still wields enormous influence as prime minister.
►I agree because there was no SCHEME.
►I also agree because they aren’t doing anything illegal.
►I agree because they can solve differences.
►I think the most interesting fact is that they are talking with words and not with bombs.

Anonymous said...

Today in the union tribune, the PROPORTION I read that For more than 10 years, John Lotter has faced death in Nebraska's electric chair for the grisly 1993 triple murder that spawned the movie Boys Don't Cry. John Lotter leaves court after receiving a death sentence in a case made famous by the film Boys Don't Cry. But the state Supreme Court made that sentence uncertain for Lotter and the nine other men on death row in its February ruling that electrocution Nebraska's only means of execution is cruel and unusual punishment. Lawyers involved in those death-row cases are now asking if an inmate who is sentenced to die in the electric chair can be executed by another means. Attorneys for the Nebraska Commission on Public Advocacy who REGISTER many of the men on death row disagree. Not only does the law specify electrocution, many of the actual sentencing orders specify that method, said James Mowbray, chief counsel for the commission. Complicating the situation is that months after the court's action, the governor hasn't proposed a new execution method and the state legislature hasn't met to consider changing the law. Gov. Dave Heinemann says he doesn't want to rush. For one thing, he waited until the U.S. Supreme Court upheld lethal injection in April in a Kentucky case. Heinemann has asked Bruning, the Nebraska attorney general, to look into the possible methods of execution, a process he says could take several months. Lethal injection is the most likely, although firing squad, hanging and the gas chamber could be options. The governor has the power to call state senators back for a special session to try to change the law this year. Heinemann said that wasn't likely.

Anonymous said...

Today I read about a drunken driver who killed 5 people while he was driving on the wrong side of the road. He was charged with 5 counts of aggravated man slaughter and two counts of aggravated vehicular assault. Gagnon 24, had more than twice the legal drinking limit in his system and marijuana. The family was on there way home from a Christmas trip when Gagnon was driving on the wrong side of the freeway for four miles when he hit there car. Gagnon will not be eligible for release until he reaches his mid 60’s.
Interesting facts- Danny Griffin who was driving the van of the family was only injured.
My Opinion- I think that its said that Gagnon was not responsible and killed all those people.

Anonymous said...

Maria's labored breath echoes within the walls of her family's mud hut. Her tiny, bony hands open and close in slow claw-like motions. Aid officials say severe drought has destroyed crops, and it's difficult to get necessary aid to remote villages. She's 15 months old, but weighs just 10 pounds one of countless children under the age of 5 facing severe malnutrition in Indonesia's West Timor. A typical infant weighs about 24 pounds at 15 months. Maria sleeps most of the time. Sometimes she cries but not often, her 25-year-old mother Adelphia Fao says softly. Maria is fighting to live, wasting away in her remote village where aid officials say climate change has brought on a severe drought in recent years. It's nearly impossible for residents to live off the land like they have for generations. It's hard to feed her," her mother says. "Some are good days, some are bad. Sometimes she eats a whole plate, sometimes nothing.
I think that its wrong that they don’t have doctors in remote villages because a lot of baby's die because of the reason that they don’t have doctors and people should care about that and do something about it.

Anonymous said...

Today on CNN news I read about the hostages that were held by FARC rebels. The PROPORTION of people held captive started to get frustrated and began to fight each other and make sexual threats. They had been tied up to trees and to each other. There was two hostages that attempted escape, they jumped in a river and tried to swim to Brazil. They failed and had to face worse treatment from there captives, but not only them but all the hostages, which brought more tension within the people held captive. This was a crazy SCHEME. A 46 year old woman described the treatment that they gave them as not human like, she said that you wouldn’t even treat a dog like that not even a plant. I think this sucks because there is people like that out in the world, i think there mind turns on them.

Anonymous said...

The article I read today is about a Will Smith movie packs in millions of people over Fourth of July weekend. No surprises there.
Yet Smith's "Hancock," the tale of an anti-social boozer who happens to be a superhero, comes with an abrupt plot twist, one that has divided critics and the moviegoing public in the real world. (Critics and everyone else can't agree. Now there's a real surprise.)
For those who have yet to see "Hancock," we won't give the secret away, but it has something to do with why Charlize Theron's soccer-mom-style character doesn't want Smith's surly superhero anywhere near her family.
Critics generally thought the turn the movie takes halfway through was a cheat, spoiling what had been a promising idea that was a fresh twist on the superhero genre in its own right. (CNN.com's Tom Charity described the twist as coming "so far out of left field you would need a crystal ball to see it coming."

Anonymous said...

CHOLESTEROL DRUGS URGED FOR KIDS WITH HEART RISKS!
Today in the CNN news i read,something very interesting doctors are recommending thats some children as young as 8 be given cholesterol-fighting drugs due to future heat problems.
The pill is one of the strongest guidance ever given on the issue by the American Academy of Pediatrics, which released its new guidelines Monday. The academy also recommends low-fat milk for 1-year-olds and wider cholesterol testing.
Dr. Stephen Daniels, of the academy's nutrition committee, says the new advice is based on mounting evidence showing that damage leading to heart disease, the nation's leading killer, begins early in life.

It also stems from recent research showing that cholesterol-fighting drugs are generally safe for children, Daniels said.

Several of these drugs are approved for use in children and data show that increasing numbers are using them.
REFLECTION:I agree wit the doctors about having medicine for young kids with heart problems.Its safe and doctors recommend it for kids that have heart problem.i also think its good because if they take the medicine now they wont have future heart problems and they can have a longer life to live.

!!!WORDz FROM $HANNON!!!