Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Article #22 Supreme Court throws out 3 death sentences
In the case of LaRoyce Lathair Smith, the court set aside the death penalty for the second time. It also reversed death sentences for Brent Ray Brewer and Jalil Abdul-Kabir.
The cases all stem from jury instructions that Texas hasn't used since 1991. Under those rules, courts have found that jurors were not allowed to give sufficient weight to factors that might cause them to impose a life sentence instead of death.
The same sentencing problems applied to Brewer, convicted of fatally stabbing 66-year-old Robert Laminack, who was attacked in 1990 outside his Amarillo flooring business and robbed of $140. Brewer was abused as a child and suffered from mental illness, factors his jurors weren't allowed to consider, according to his petition.
The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals had upheld the death penalty for Brewer and Abdul-Kabir.
Forty-seven inmates on Texas' death row were sentenced under the rules that the state abandoned in 1991.
The cases are Smith v. Texas, 05-11304, Brewer v. Quarterman, 05-11287, and Abdul-Kabir v. Quarterman, 05-11284.
Article #21 Hogs quarantined after eating tainted pet food
Hogs at a farm in California ate the contaminated products, according to the Food Safety and Inspection Service. And on Wednesday, a farm in western North Carolina was quarantined after melamine was found in its hogs, state officials said.
Officials were trying to determine whether hogs in New York, South Carolina, Utah and Ohio also may have eaten the tainted food, the FSIS said. Hogs at some of the farms — it wasn’t immediately clear which — have been quarantined.
The FSIS was trying to determine whether the hog farms in the states other than California actually fed the material to their animals, spokesman Steven Cohen said in a statement. Hogs that were confirmed to have eaten the tainted food were processed at a federally inspected facility in California, Cohen said.
“All of that meat is under control at the facility,” he said. “It is important to keep in mind this is a small number of farms that may have received this feed.”
However, the Food and Drug Administration said the urine of some hogs tested positive for the chemical, melamine, in North Carolina and South Carolina as well as California.
“At this point, I don’t have a definitive answer other than to say that the issue is being addressed,” Stephen Sundlof, the FDA’s chief veterinarian, told reporters when asked if any of the hogs had entered the human food supply. A poultry farm also may be involved, he added.
The California Agriculture Department said separately it was trying to contact 50 people who bought pork that may have come from pigs fed food containing melamine. The state’s health department recommended humans not consume the meat, but said any health risk was minimal.
There is little
ARTICLE #20 Drinking heavily in college may be bad for heart
A team at the College of St. Benedict in St. Joseph, Minnesota, led by undergraduate Elizabeth Donovan, surveyed 25 college students about behaviors that can affect CRP levels.
Students were asked to complete a survey that included questions about their smoking habits, medication use, recent weight loss, alcohol consumption and other factors.
Six students did not drink and 10 were classified as moderate drinkers, defined as 2 to 5 drinks once or twice a week. Nine students were heavy drinkers, defined as 3 or more drinks at one sitting 3 or more times a week or 5 or more drinks at one sitting 2 or more days a week.
The average CRP level for the group as a whole was 0.9 milligrams per liter, which indicates an overall a low risk for heart disease. However, this increased rapidly, with moderate drinkers having CRP levels of 0.58 milligrams per liter and heavy drinkers having CRP levels of 1.25 milligrams per liter.
Male drinkers had higher average CRP levels than did female drinkers, although the difference was not statistically significant.
In an interview with Reuters Health, Donovan pointed out that the relationship between alcohol consumption and CRP levels was shaped as a J curve, with slightly lower-than-average CRP levels seen with small amounts of alcohol consumption, which then rose sharply as drinking became heavier.
Article #19
The Army tells NBC News that military police arrested Lt. Col. William H. Steele several weeks ago and that he is being held at a detention facility in Kuwait. He now faces an Article 32 hearing, the military's equivalent of a grand jury investigation, to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to prosecute him.
An Army statement listed these charges against Steele: "One specification of a violation of Article 104, aiding the enemy; one specification of a violation of Article 134, retaining classified material; two specifications of violations of Article 133, conduct unbecoming an officer, for relationships involving an interpreter and another Iraqi female; five specifications of a violation of Article 92, failure to obey lawful orders for wrongfully storing classified materials, improperly marking classified materials, failing to obey an order from a superior officer, possession of pornography and dereliction of duty as an approving official for the expenditure of government funds."
Article #18 Marijuana sold in U.S. stronger than ever
Analysis of seized samples of marijuana and hashish showed that more of the cannabis on the market is of the strongest grade, the White House and National Institute for Drug Abuse said.
They cited data from the University of Mississippi’s Marijuana Potency Project showing the average levels of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, in the products rose from 7 percent in 2003 to 8.5 percent in 2006.
The level had risen steadily from 3.5 percent in 1988.
National Institute on Drug Abuse Director Dr. Nora Volkow fears the problem is not being taken seriously because many adults remember the marijuana of their youth as harmless.
“It’s really not the same type of marijuana,” Volkow said in a telephone interview.
“This could explain why there has been an increase in the number of medical emergencies involving marijuana.”
The pharmacy department at Mississippi has compiled data on 59,369 samples of cannabis, 1,225 hashish samples, and 443 hash oil samples confiscated since 1975. “The highest concentration of (THC) found in a cannabis (marijuana) sample is 33.12 percent from Oregon State Police,” the report reads.
Article #17 More health foods recommended for U.S. school children
The institute gave new standards for school snacks and foods that would sharply limit calories, fat and sugar while encouraging more nutritious eating. The standards would not apply to bag lunches that students bring from home.
The institute is a branch of the National Academy of Sciences, an independent organization chartered by Congress to advise the government on scientific matters.
Concerned about the rise of obesity in young people, Congress asked the institute to develop the standards.
The report now goes to Congress for consideration. Copies will also go to the Departments of Agriculture, Health and Human Services and Education and will be available for state and local school boards and administrators and the food and beverage industry. Putting the recommendations into practice would involve federal, state or local laws and setting school standards and policies.
"Making sure that all foods and drinks available in schools meet nutrition standards is one more way schools can help children establish lifelong healthy eating habits," said Virginia A. Stallings, head of the committee that prepared the report.
Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, said: "For the first time, we have gold-standard recommendations for school nutrition standards from one of America's most distinguished scientific bodies. And as it turns out, they are also just common sense -- promoting fruit and vegetable consumption, and also seeking to reduce things like calories, fat, and sodium."
However, the Center for Consumer Freedom worried that the report could lead to a government "no child with a fat behind" program.
The growing rate of obesity is caused by lack of physical activity rather than overeating, argued the group, which describes itself as representing restaurants, food companies and individuals.
"These decrees may seem surreal, but many schools have already implemented similar measures. Birthday celebrations are a thing of the past with cupcakes banned in classrooms across the nation. Many schools forbid parents from bringing their kids fast food," the Center said in a statement.
The report of the Institute of Medicine lists two example tiers of food. The first tier would be allowed at all grade levels during the school day and during after-school activities, and includes whole fruit, raisins, carrot sticks, whole-grain low-sugar cereals, some multigrain tortilla chips, some granola bars and nonfat yogurt with no more than 30 grams of added sugars. Drinks would be limited to plain water, skim or 1 percent milk, soy beverages and 100 percent fruit or vegetable juice.
A second tier of foods would be available only to high school students and only after school hours. These foods would be limited in calories, salt, sugar and fat; drinks could have just have five or fewer calories per portion and no caffeine.
Sports drinks would be available to students engaged in an hour or more of vigorous athletic activity, at the discretion of coaches. Fortified water should not be available in either tier.
Article #16 Gore, Bloomberg wink at 2008 rumors
The mayor noted that Gore's recent success has even prompted some talk that he might again try for the White House and asked Gore "don't you just hate those rumors about running for president?"
Neither one has entered next year's crowded contest for the White House, but speculation persists for both.
Moments later, Gore was asked whether he believes the presidential candidates are doing enough to discuss global warming on the campaign trail. Gore deadpanned "Well, I think Mike is." The mayor turned red and laughed.
Article #15 Bin Laden overseeing Iraq, Afghanistan ops: Taliban
Bin Laden has not made any video statements for many months raising speculation that he might have died.
"He is drawing plans in Iraq and Afghanistan ... Praise God he is alive," Mullah Dadullah told Al Jazeera television.
In September, a French newspaper quoted French foreign intelligence service as saying the Saudi intelligence were convinced bin Laden had died of typhoid in Pakistan in August.
"Do you remember the martyrdom operation inside the Bagram base which targeted a senior American official ... this operation was the result of blessed plans put by him," Dadullah said. Jazeera said the U.S. official Dadullah was referring to was Cheney.
"He (bin Laden) guided us through it," he said, adding that no Afghan would have been able to penetrate the base if it was not for the world's most wanted militant.
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Article #14 Lockheed profit up on tech systems, one-time gains
Lockheed, maker of F-16 fighter jets, Patriot missiles and an array of systems for the U.S. government, reported quarterly profit of $690 million, or $1.60 per share, compared with $591 million, or $1.34 per share, a year earlier.
That beat Wall Street's average forecast of $1.37 per share, according to Reuters Estimates.
Lockheed's quarterly profit was boosted by one-time gains related to the sale of land and reversing some legal reserves after settling litigation. It also had lower pension costs.
Article #13 Expedition 14 Back on Earth
Article #12 Russian manned spaceship heads back home
The Soyuz capsule, which separated with the ISS at 13:10 Moscow time (0710 GMT), will carry back to the Earth the 14th ISS crew, Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Tyurin and NASA astronaut Michael Lopez-Alegria, who had worked there for 215 days.
The Soyuz spaceship blasted off from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on April 7. Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Oleg Kotov on board will stay in the station as the 15th crew.
The U.S. software tycoon Charles Simonyi will also conclude his paid visit to the station, one day more than the slated 12 days in orbit due to a landing delay caused by weather conditions at the planned landing site in Kazakhstan.
The spacecraft is scheduled to land at a planned site in Kazakhstan at 16:30 Moscow time (1230 GMT), the Itar-Tass news agency said, citing Mission Control Center's spokesman Valery Lyndin.
The spacecraft engine will start working to brake 50 minutes before landing. The parachute will be deployed at the altitude of some 10 kilometers, Lyndin said.
Russian search and rescue teams, including helicopters, planes, search and communication vehicles as well as more than 150 civilian and military specialists have been ready for the landing, he said.
The main crews and cargoes to the ISS will be delivered by Russian spaceships till 2011, including the manned Soyuz spaceships and cargo spacecraft of the Progress type, according to a Russian-U.S. space agencies contract inked earlier this month.
NASA was forced to pay for places aboard Soyuz crafts and Russian ferries after the Columbia disaster in 2003 and subsequent suspension of shuttle flights.
Article #11 Countdown in India for first commercial satellite launch
The Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) is scheduled to blast off at 3:30 pm (1000 GMT) from Sriharikota spaceport, 80 kilometres (50 miles) north of Chennai in southern India, space agency officials said.
"The countdown, which involves a series of precisely timed operations, is going on," a spokesman for the Bangalore-based Indian Space Research Organisation said. "The PSLV has been mated with its payload and the fully integrated vehicle is standing on the launchpad."
The 15-storey-high rocket is being pumped with liquid propellant and undergoing pre-launch tests, said the spokesman.
It will launch the 352-kilogram (774-pound) Italian astronomical satellite Agile that will be used to gather information about the origins of the universe.
"The payload will be separated from the vehicle in its orbit 23 minutes after the takeoff," the spokesman said.
The 48-hour countdown began on Saturday, setting the stage for a launch that India hopes will win it membership of an exclusive club of nations to successfully put their space programmes to commercial use.
Capable of placing 1,500-kilogramme satellites into orbit, the rocket has been modified to launch the much smaller Agile, together with which it will carry a space module to test avionic systems like mission computers and navigation systems.
Article #10 Man gets 5,000 calls for YouTube posting
So, he decided to offer his ear, to anyone who wants to call. After posting a video with his cell phone number on YouTube on Friday, the 20-year-old told The Boston Globe he has received more than 5,000 calls and text messages.
Fitzgerald said he wanted to "be there," for anyone who needed to talk. "I never met you, but I do care," a spiky-haired Fitzgerald said into the camera on his YouTube posting.
He planned to take and return as many calls he could, but on Monday at 5 a.m., his T-Mobile cell phone payment will begin charging him for his generosity when he is no longer eligible for free weekend minutes.
"I haven't quite figured out what I'm going to do about it," he said. "Come Monday, no way I'm going to just hang up on people and say, 'I don't have the minutes.'"
Fitzgerald, who said people consider him "easy to talk to," was inspired by Juan Mann. YouTube video clips of Mann offering "Free Hugs" to strangers became wildly popular on the user-controlled Internet site.
"Some people's own mothers won't take the time to sit down and talk with them and have a conversation," Fitzgerald said. "But some stranger on YouTube will. After six seconds, you're not a stranger anymore, you're a new kid I just met."
Article# 9 NASA astronomers create first 3-D images of Sun
The new view, they say, will greatly aid scientists' ability to understand solar physics and thereby improve space weather forecasting.
"The improvement with STEREO's 3D view is like going from a regular X-ray to a 3D CAT scan in the medical field," said Dr. Michael Kaiser, STEREO Project Scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, US.
The STEREO spacecraft were launched October 25, 2006. On January 21 they completed a series of complex manoeuvres, including flying by the moon, to position the spacecraft in their mission orbits.
Researchers say just as the slight offset between a person’s eyes provides depth perception, the separation of spacecraft allow 3-D images of the Sun.
"In the solar atmosphere, there are no clues to help us judge distance. Everything appears flat in the 2D plane of the sky. Having a stereo perspective just makes it so much easier," said Dr. Russell Howard of the Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, the Principal Investigator for the SECCHI (Sun Earth Connection Coronal and Heliospheric Investigation) suite of telescopes on the spacecraft.
"With STEREO's 3D imagery, we'll be able to discern where matter and energy flows in the solar atmosphere much more precisely than with the 2D views available before. This will really help us understand the complex physics going on," he said.
Dr. Howard said STEREO's depth perception would also help improve space weather forecasts.
Of particular concern is a destructive type of solar eruption called a Coronal Mass Ejection (CME), which are eruptions of electrically charged gas, called plasma, from the Sun's atmosphere.
“In addition to the STEREO perspective of solar features, for the first time STEREO will allow imaging of the solar disturbances the entire way from the Sun to the Earth. Presently, scientists are only able to model this region in the dark, from only one picture of solar disturbances leaving the Sun and reaching only a fraction of the Sun-Earth distance,” added Dr. Madhulika Guhathakurta, STEREO Program Scientist, NASA Headquarters. Washington. (ANI)
Article #8 Sunnis complain about new Baghdad barrier
The U.S. military says the wall in Baghdad is meant to secure the minority Sunni community of Azamiyah, which "has been trapped in a spiral of sectarian violence and retaliation." The area, located on the eastern side of the Tigris River, would be completely gated, with entrances and exits manned by Iraqi soldiers, the U.S. military said earlier this week.
But some residents of the neighborhood, which is surrounded by Shiite areas, complained that they had not been consulted in advance about the barrier.
"This will make the whole district a prison. This is collective punishment on the residents of Azamiyah," said Ahmed al-Dulaimi, a 41-year-old engineer who lives in the area. "They are going to punish all of us because of a few terrorists here and there."
Article#7 Tamil Rebels Launch Air Attack
The attack came amid rising fears that the government may be preparing a major assault on rebels in the north, and followed a bomb blast Monday aboard a bus that killed five passengers and wounded 35 near the frontier between government- and rebel-controlled areas.
Lt. Col. Upali Rajapakse, a senior military official, said only one light aircraft was involved in the attack and that troops opened fire on it, forcing it to turn back before it reached the Palay base. But the plane dropped two bombs on nearby bunkers while rebels shelled the area.
Six soldiers were killed by the airstrike and shelling, Rajapakse said.
Vavuniya, about 130 miles north of the capital, Colombo, is where the government has its last key garrison before the start of rebel-controled territory.
A cease-fire mediated by Norway in 2002 brought hopes of peace for a few years, but violence over the past 18 months has killed 4,000 people, taking the death toll from more than two decades of war past 69,000.
Article #6 Navy Investigates Blue Angels Crash
Lt. Cmdr. Kevin J. Davis of Pittsfield, Mass. was in his second year with the Blue Angels, the team known for its high-speed, aerobatic demonstrations, Lt. Cmdr. Garrett Kasper said.
At Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort, the site of Saturday's crash, a somber crowd watched Sunday as six jets flew overhead in formation. Smoke streamed behind one of the jets as it peeled away from the others to complete the ``missing man formation,'' the traditional salute for a lost military aviator.
Moments later, his jet crashed just outside Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort, hitting homes in a neighborhood about 35 miles northwest of Hilton Head Island, S.C. Debris - some of it on fire - rained on homes. Eight people on the ground were injured, and some homes were damaged.
The squadron's six, F/A-18 Hornets routinely streak low over crowds of thousands at supersonic speeds, coming within feet, sometimes inches, of each other. The pilots, among the Navy's most elite, are so thoroughly trained and their routines so practiced that deadly crashes are rare; the last one happened in 1999.
The Navy said it could be at three weeks before it announces what may have caused the crash. The squadron was scheduled to return to its home base of Pensacola Naval Air Station late Sunday.
Ernie Christensen, a retired rear admiral and former Vietnam fighter pilot who flew with the Blue Angels and later commanded the Navy's Top Gun fighter school in California, said he did not want to speculate about what could have caused Saturday's crash. But he said the intense flying leaves no room for human or mechanical error.
Article #5 20-ton cocaine bust biggest in Coast Guard's history
The cocaine was seized in mid-March off the coast of Panama by officials on the Coast Guard Cutter Sherman, based in Alameda, and the Hamilton, based in San Diego.
A Coast Guard patrol aircraft spotted a motor vessel, the Gatuan, on March 17 while the crew was patrolling the waters about 20 miles southwest of Isla de Coiba, Panama. Officials discovered the cocaine after searching the ship and arrested 14 crewmembers.
The bust was the largest in the Coast Guard's history. Previously, the largest seizure was in 2004, when the agency seized more than 30,000 pounds of cocaine from a ship.
Article #4 Iraq Suicide Bomb Kills Nine U.S. Soldiers, Wounds 20
The bomber detonated the blast next to a U.S. military base yesterday in Diyala province, where fighting between U.S. forces and insurgents has increased in recent months. Fifteen soldiers were returned to duty after medical attention, five others and an Iraqi civilian are being treated in a coalition medical center, the U.S. military said in an e-mailed statement.
U.S.-led coalition and Iraqi forces are fighting an insurgency and attempting to stem sectarian violence between Shiite and Sunni Muslim communities. More than 70 U.S. service members have been killed in action this month as they intensify efforts to quell violence in Baghdad and the western province of al-Anbar.
Bombings across Iraq yesterday killed at least 33 people and wounded about 49. The worst attack took place in the western city of Ramadi, where at least two car bombs killed 15 people and wounded five others, state television reported.
Article #3 GA wildfire has locals praying for rain
That's the message being posted on signs outside businesses and churches in southeast Georgia as a raging wildfire continues to burn into its second week.
It even prompted special prayers Sunday night at the Church of God of Prophecy in the little town of Manor.
By Monday night, the blaze, dubbed the Sweat Farm Road fire, had consumed some 56,000 acres and continued to fill the sky with dense smoke. The smoky conditions – expected to worsen in the early morning hours Tuesday when it combines with fog – prompted Ware County public schools to remain closed through at least Tuesday.
Visibility was so limited that some roads were closed. Winds were forecast to push the smoke toward Waycross over the next few days, making driving hazardous and causing renewed health concerns. The Satilla Regional Medical Center in Waycross was restricting some entrances to its facility and shutting down some elevators, among other precautions, to limit smoke in the building.
Smoky conditions from the fire spread hundreds of miles over the weekend into Florida and north into Tennessee.
Firefighters reported making progress in battling the blaze Monday after using bulldozers to widen firebreaks. The fire was reported 45 percent contained but officials estimated that full containment was not expected for another week. Hundreds of firefighters from several states were fighting the fire.
The blaze, which began April 16 apparently when a tree fell on a power line, has destroyed 18 homes. It was reported about 10 miles west of Waycross and five miles from Manor.
It has also moved to within less than half a mile of the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, one of the nation's oldest and most well-preserved wetland areas.
Thursday, April 5, 2007
Article # 2: Friendly fire possibly hit two soldiers in Iraq
The Army is investigating the deaths of Pvt. Matthew Zeimer, 18, of Glendive, Mont., and Spc. Alan E. McPeek, 20, of Tucson, Ariz., who were killed in Ramadi, in western Iraq, on Feb. 2. Their families were initially told they were killed by enemy fire.
It took another month before the families of the two soldiers were told March 31 that friendly fire was suspected.
A report in the Army Times newspaper said the two soldiers ran to a roof to fight back, but a shot was fired through a concrete wall near them and the impact killed them.
As a result of those problems, the Army made changes in its notification process. Unit commanders now must investigate every hostile death, in part to ensure families get accurate information about how their loved one died.
McPeek was a member of the 16th Engineer Battalion based in Germany, and Zeimer was a member of the 3rd Battalion, 69th Armor Regiment, 3rd Infantry Division, based at Fort Stewart, Ga.
Article # 1: Iraq ambush kills 4 U.K. soldiers, Kuwaiti
Prime Minister Tony Blair has announced that Britain will withdraw about 1,600 troops from Iraq over the next few months and hopes to make other cuts to its 7,100-strong contingent by late summer.
Thursday’s attack also came as 15 British sailors and marines held captive for nearly two weeks left Iran aboard a commercial flight bound for London, ending a standoff that began when they were detained off the southern Iraqi coast. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced their surprise release on Wednesday.
Thursday, March 8, 2007
Human Rights
Don't Discriminate
Human Right #3
The Right to Life
Human Right #12
Human Right #19
Human Right #20
Human Right #22
Human Right #25
Human Right #27
Human Right #28
Human Right #29
Responsibility
Tuesday, February 6, 2007
The Doctor and the Model.
One evening it was a perfect day; there was birds outside, and the sky was blue like in a beautiful day to spend out side. Suddenly he turned on the TV and while changing channels, he saw a modeling channel. He stop for a second, and started to watch it.
It was a model standing in the TV. But, good gracious! what a sight the lights and the make-up had made her look beatiful and proffetional. The make-up, her hair and clothes were perfect on her; the dress ran down onto the toes of her shoes and out again at the heels. Then, since he knew that on the channel he was watching the models were real, he said in his mind
“Well, we’ll soon find that out”. But then he went into the bed-room, took all the pillows and setted on top of the mattresses; He went into a deep sleep.
In the morning he packed all his stuff and when on search of the model he saw on the TV. He didn't care where she was, he just wanted to find her and marry her. The night before, he had bough a new bed with pillows, so that means he wasn't used to the new mattress. When he woke up, he had back pain and even neck pain, but he didn't really care.
Now hey knew where to find her because he called the agency of the modeling channel and asked them where the show was filming or where was it located.
After all the effort he made, he found her and married her. They had a son and they were really happy because of the way they met eachother.
So the doctor took her for his wife, for now he knew that he had a real model; and their son was the reason of their happiness, where he was loved, and wanted.
There, that is a true story.
Monday, January 22, 2007
Defining Words
- Main Idea: The central, or most important, idea in a paragraph or passage.
- Supporting Details: Are facts and secondary ideas that an author uses to develop and sopport the main idea.
- Context Clues: The sentence, paragraph, or passage that surround a word and make it meaningful.
- Authors Purpose: Determine whether the story or article is written for information (to give facts), for entertainment (for your enjoyment), or to persuade (make you think a certain thing).
- Organizational Pattern: Ideas in some clearly organized way.
- Fact and Opinion: Facts is based on direct evidence, actual experience, or observation and opinion is a statement that expresses an author's beliefs, judgements, and values.
- Bias: A predisposition, prejudice, or prejudgment; bias may be in favor or against something or someone.
- Tone: Is the attitutde or feeling he creates in writing about his subject; the reader can recognize a mood or feeling in written material in the same way as he would recognize a mood or feeling from a speaker's tone of voice.
- Relationship within Sentences: A contrast between parts of a sentence.
- Relationships between Sentences: A difference between parts of a sentence.
- Valid Arguments: A statement that fits into a logical pattern of reasoning and/or which makes use of revelant, verifiable proof to support a particular conclusion.
- Inference and Conclusions: Is that a reader thinks the writer is suggesting through the words or ideas presented, because he can assume things that are not ddirectly stated by the author.
Monday, January 8, 2007
My Life Style
When I came here to the United States, I started middle school in 7th grade. I went to Lakes Stevens Middle School, where I participated in the soccer team and also in the softball team. I almost got a medal for being a good player but I didn’t because I got into trouble and I got suspended. But after that I just concentrated on studying. In middle school I had a lot of friends, I had fun as everybody, even thou I didn’t go to field trips but I still had fun.
After middle school, I went to American Senior high, where I graduated with a GPA of 3.7. I was I really good student, but I think that I could of done better. As a fresh man in high school, I played in the soccer team. It was hard for me because the practices where after school and till late night. But I just wanted to have fun I wasn’t taking it serious. Once in 10th grade I decided to play baseball, and I made it into the team. I was happy because baseball is my favorite sport, and I always wanted to play in a team, here in America. It was like a dream for me. But after 10th grade, as a Junior I didn’t played anymore, because I didn’t go to practice. So I just study. That was the time that I got better grades and starting to bring my GPA up. But once as a senior, I started to feel more comfortable about my self-getting out of high school. Is like, you care less, you start to skip with your friends to the beach or anywhere. But I didn’t get in trouble in all my senior year, so it was perfect for me. I will never forget all the time that I spend in the school, all the teacher that helped me out, and counselors and even friends that I still have.
Now that I’m here in college, everything is different, now I have more responsibilities and I now that all depends on me now, if I want to be someone in life, I have to take advantage of this opportunity and just do my best. Im here to accomplish all my goals.