Tuesday, April 1, 2008
...RoBeRtO cLeMeNtE...
I think that ATHLETES can be hero because when they play games and do good then they are all over the media which gets them famous. The effect of being famous can cause a director of movie making from HOLLYWOOD can come up to them and tell them to do an movie. That is the reigon why i think that an ATHLETES could be an hero of any thing for an example: HERO OF LONG JUMP, HERO OF TRACK, OR A MOVIE AND ETC.
VOCABULARY:
DETERMINE: I DETERMINE that there are lot of university that i can go to for I.T.
PROSPECTS: There are "prospects" of me getting visa to U.S.A.
PREJUDICE: I made the payment PREJUDICE without any Rights.
POTENTIAL: I have the potential of becoming a APPLE TECHNICIAN IN FUTURE
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Do Now: Can athletes be heroes?
Vocabulary:
Determine: Saurd was a determine neci ettle boy.
Prospects: These are prospects of me getting visa to U.S.A
what steps does roberto take to become a great baseball player?
what sets roberto above the rest of the players?
what are roberto's achievements as a player?
1. which of roberto clemente's goals was reached after his death?
2. becoming a baseball hall of fame member shows that roberto was an outtanding player. find evidence from the selection that shows him as an outstanding human being?
3. look over the details about roberto's disappearance. use the information to make a time line events?
Friday, March 14, 2008
Word to Know
Nonviolent: a nonviolent demonstration peaceful, peaceable, orderly, well-behaved.
Union: the action or fact of joining or being joined, esp. in a political context : he was opposed to closer political or economic union with Europe | a currency union between the two countries.
Motto: A motto is a phrase meant to formally describe the general motivation or intention of a social group or organization. A motto may be in any language. Latin and to a lesser degree are disproportionately frequent, because each was the principal international languages for a considerable period. The local language is usual in the mottos of governments.
Fasts: Fasting is primarily the act of willingly abstaining from some or all food, drink, or both, for a period of time. Concerning that from which one fasts, and the period of fasting, a fast may be total or partial. Fasting practices may preclude sexual activity as well as food, in addition to refraining from eating certain types or groups of foods; for example, one might refrain from eating meat. Medical fasting can be a way to promote detoxification.
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
The No-Guitar Blues by Gary Soto
(1) How does Fausto get a guitar?
- Fausto got a guitar from his grandfather garage which is old base guittarron.
- I think yes, Fausto was right to give the money to the church, because he always feel guilty and even though if he wouldn't. Instead buy guitar he wouldn't feel good himself, he would feel guilty because of taking money from the guy.
- Fausto was feeling exciting, because it was the happiest day of his life that because he got the guitar which he want it.
Television is the most used media in the world. There are a lot of shows such as news shows, sports shows comedy shows, educational show, cartoons shows, talent shows, entertainment shows and even animal shows. But, only few inpire yong adult people. One of the famous television shows in U.S. is "American Idol" or "American Dance Crew", this show can inpire yong people to sing or dance because it's giving yong people oppurtunities to rich their dreams.
Friday, February 29, 2008
...Omen Summary...
Omen begins with a speaker lying on his side in the moist grass drifting into a fitful or restless, half sleep It is nighttime. Given that Hirsch's first two poetry collections tended to focus on insomniacs, a reader familiar with the poet might assume that the speaker of Omen is regularly unable to sleep at night. During his half-sleep, the speaker listens to the wind in the trees and, in stanza 2, notices the moon coming out.
Describing the moon as One eyed Hirsch uses a poetic technique called personification or the attribution of human qualities to something that is not human. The speaker says the moon "turns away from the ground, smudged," as though looking at the ground has marked its "glassy" eye. Getting ready to describe the October sky and how.....
Thursday, February 28, 2008
The Tell-Tale Heart By Edgar Allan Poe
Make a mental picture
I. understand/retain information
II. personally connect
III.Enjoy
Vocabulary:
1.Vulture: Any of various large diurnal birds of prey having naked heads and weak claws and feeding chiefly on carrion. / Is a tiuge bird that eats dead organisms.
2.Cautious: In the streets i'm very cautious.
3.Mortal: Every human being is a mortal.
4.Precisely: Most kid will love it precisely because it will irritate their parent./ That's precisely what i looking for.
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
...Underground Railroad...
Underground Railroad By Mary L. Bushong | |
2 You might wonder how this organization got its name. It was first described as a railroad in some printed material in the early 1840s. Passengers were runaway slaves. The shelters where they rested were the stations, and those who led them were conductors. It was not a highly organized system. Sometimes it was simply a stranger taking pity on another stranger, giving food, shelter, or a ride for a short time.
3 Many of those who played major parts in the Underground Railroad were free blacks living in both the North and South. Sometimes escaping slaves received help from slaves on another plantation. The majority of help was not available until they reached a "free" state. On reaching the larger northern cities, the railroad became much more highly organized.
4 Abolitionists of every race were the main sympathizers of the Underground Railroad. They were committed to ridding the country of slavery any way they could. While they did not help vast numbers of people to escape bondage, the steady trickle of escapees was more than irritating to the slave owners.
5 It is estimated that of the approximately one million slaves, only a few thousand escaped every year between 1840 and 1860. Though small in number, the daring escapes were often exaggerated when reported in the various newspapers.
6 In the early days of the Underground Railroad, many former slaves were grateful just to reach "free" soil. They were more than ready to start living the free life as soon as possible. For many it was a dream they had cherished their whole life. Harriet Tubman was one of those slaves. It did not take her long to become involved in rescuing as many people as possible. She is credited with leading close to 1,000 people to freedom. The last run was the most dangerous of all. Though the authorities were looking for her, she returned to her former plantation to rescue her parents. She wanted them to know freedom before the end of their lives.
7 The Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 changed how many people reacted to runaway slaves. Anyone caught helping the runaways could be prosecuted. The runaway slaves themselves were no longer safe just getting to the northern states. Their journeys suddenly became longer and even more dangerous. Now they had to make it across the border to Canada.
8 Men like the Reverend Josiah Henson set up colonies in Ontario and Nova Scotia. These colonies were places where black families could live and learn farming skills or a trade. Josiah Henson established Canada's first African American newspaper, the "Voice of the Fugitive." It encouraged other fugitive slaves to settle in Canada.
9 More than 3,000 people are estimated to have worked on the Underground Railroad. Some of them were well known names like Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, and Susan B. Anthony.
10 One of the strongest arguments many of the proslavery people used was that blacks were unable to look after themselves. That was refuted by Austin Steward, a former slave who lived in one of the Canadian slave colonies. He said, "The colored man can not only take care of himself, but is capable of improvement; as industrious and intelligent as themselves, when the yoke of slaver is taken from off their necks."
11 The Underground Railroad was not a great success in rescuing the vast number of slaves held in bondage. It was extremely successful in giving hope to them, that one day they might be able to use it to win freedom, the most precious treasure of all.
Copyright © 2008 edHelper
Name: Jonathan Espin | Date: 02/13/2008 |
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Name: Jonathan Espin | Date: 02/13/2008 |
Name: Jonathan Espin | Date: 02/13/2008 |
IF I WAS SLAVE I WOULD SCAPE BY KILLIN MY OOWNERS AND I WOULD FIVE A DOES WHO ARE SLAW I WOULD GO HOUSE TO HOUSE AND I WOULD THE ALL SLAVES AND START A NEW LIFE IN OTHER PLACE, MY PLAN TO ALL SERIOUS THEY BE TOGETHER GUARDS AT THE VILLA CAMPESTRE PUTTING ONE NUCLEAR BOMB ATOMICA ALSO ACABE GIVING THEM WELL WITH ALL THE SLAVES UNOS MANY DIE BUT I STILL LIVE. IMPORTANT THAT IS WHAT THE REST DIE, I RUN AWAY AND I DO MY NEW LIFE OUTSIDE SOCIETY OF THE POOR OF THE BLACK...
Name: JONATHAN ESPIN | ___________ (Key 1 - Answer ID # 0725050) |
w |
1. | slaver PRISON | |||||
2. | dangerous WARNING | |||||
3. | succesful EXCELLENT | |||||
4. | yoke PIRECCTION | |||||
5. | actually IN PRESENT | |||||
6. | treasure VALUES OBJECTS | |||||
7. | extremely HIGH | |||||
8. | industrious FACTORY | |||||
9. | runaway ESCAPE | |||||
10. | former BACAME | |||||
11. | various VARIATY | |||||
12. |
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13. | trickle DRIP |