Monday, November 30, 2009

Journal- November 30th

Root

Culp= guilt

Click on the following link to listen to the news story or read it below.

1. In one sentence, what is the main idea the article is presenting?

2. What are some of the reasons why people want to get rid of the penny?
A.

B.

3. What are some of the reasons why people want to get rid of the penny?

A.

B.

4. Do you think we should keep the penny as a currency or get rid of it? Explain your reason.



November 29, 2009

This month the U.S. Mint releases the last of four special Abraham Lincoln pennies, which coincide with the 200th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's birth.

Not everyone is celebrating.

The future of America's one-cent coin has been the subject of much debate, and one store owner in Berkeley, Calif., has decided to take a personal stand.

Not Even One Red Cent

Alko Office Supply in downtown Berkeley is an average-looking store, with one exception. Hanging above the cash register, a sign reads: "We are a penny free store."

Cashier Andrew Allen says that with so many people using credit and debit cards, he only has to explain the no-penny rule about once a day.

ALKO Office Supply cashier Andrew Allen says most customers laugh at the penny-free policy.

I purchased a 2010 planner. Total: $15.53. Allen asked for $15.50. I proffered $15.53, pennies and all, and Allen didn't accept the superfluous cents.

"I won't take them," Allen said. "I refuse to take them."

But Is It Legal?

While all U.S. currency is legal tender for paying debts, public charges, taxes and dues, the Treasury Department says private business can decide, as a matter of policy, whether to accept currency as payment, and if so, in which denominations. About a year ago, Gary Shows, the owner of Alko Office Supply, felt pennies were no longer worth the hassle for customers and cashiers.

"One evening, I had this idea," Shows says, "That if we went penny free and rounded everything down to the customer's favor to the nearest nickel — if everybody was four cents, I decided that we would lose about $500 a year."

Shows says that the lost $500 is likely overcome by customers who remember the store and come back. For Shows, it was an issue of convenience. But there are other figures starting to stack up against the penny. For instance, since 2006, producing a penny has cost more than one cent due to the rising price of zinc, the main ingredient in the coin. Inflation is also an issue.

"It's important to separate the idea of something being used, and something being useful," says Jeff Gore, the founder of a group called Citizens for Retiring the Penny. Gore points out that every year, our currency is worth less.

"There's just a very natural process where we have to retire currency," Gore says. "The penny used to be a useful coin. But it hasn't been useful for many decades."

Penny Proponents

But the penny has some serious fans — and lobbyists — behind it. Mark Weller is the executive director of Americans for Common Cents. He represents zinc producers, coin manufacturers, coin collectors and various other penny-loving constituencies. Weller's economic theory is that if the penny is eradicated, prices of everyday goods will rise.

"The alternative to the penny," Weller says, "is rounding to the nickel, and that's something that will negatively impact working families every time they buy a gallon of gas or a gallon of milk."

Weller also argues that charities would suffer greatly without pennies.

Only a couple miles away from the penny-free office supplies store, Dagmar Serota is weighing the pennies collected by a class of pre-kindergarten boys at Linda Beach Cooperative preschool in Piedmont, Calif. She calls the pennies "good cents."

In 2005, Serota founded Good Cents for Oakland, a nonprofit organization that helps children raise money for charity. Since then, she's helped school children raise more than $35,000 for homeless shelters, soup kitchens and other charities by collecting pennies and other coins. This haul — $159.54 — will be donated to the local food bank.

"Pennies are easy to ask for and they are easy to give," Serota says. "And it's very easy for a child to say, 'Will you help me support this nonprofit, will you give me your pennies?'"

When Rep. Jim Kolbe, a Republican from Arizona, introduced bills in the House to quash the penny, charities such as Serota's came out in full force to object. The bills went nowhere, and Kolbe is no longer in office. So it doesn't seem that the Lincoln coin will be disappearing any time soon.

Penny lovers and haters have plenty of time to debate what makes sense — one cent at a time.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Journal- November 24th

Root Word

neuro= nerve

In honor of Thanksgiving,

1. What are you thankful for in your life? Why?

2. Do you think people focus on the negatives in their lives more than the positives? Why or why not?

Monday, November 23, 2009

Journal- November 23rd

Root Word: Jud= Judge

John Steinbeck's "Flight" deals with a young man growing up.

1. Do you consider yourself mature for your age? Why or why not?


2. What are some privileges that you're giving as you grow up? Do you think people should have to prove that they're mature before they get those privileges?


3. Do you think going through difficult experiences makes a person more mature? Why or why not?

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Journal- November 19th

Root:

Voc = Call

Free Write--What's on your mind? What are your worries right now? How do you think class is going? What's frustrating you? How are you excited about? What are you confused by?

If you have time, proofread another journal.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Journal- November 18th

Root

Retro= Back

In "The Killers", Nick Adams comes to Ole Andreson, an old boxer, to tell him that two gangsters are planning to kill him. Surprisingly, Ole seems indifferent saying, "there isn't anything I can do about it" and "it wouldn't do any good[calling the police]".


1. Why do you think Ole doesn't take action and leave?

2. Is he brave and noble of him or is he being foolish and stubborn? Explain why you think so.


3. Do you think sometimes it's okay to run from a problem or should you face it already right away? Why?

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Journal- November 17th






"Rather fail with honor than succeed by fraud."
--Sophocles (Greek philosopher)

1. What is Sophocles arguing with this quotation?



2. What does having honor mean?


3. What's more important to you: to be successful or to have honor? Why?


4. Who do you think people respect more: those who have honor or those who are successful? Why or why not?

5. What's an example of a person who succeeded in life but not in an unhonorable way?


Root Word: Mono= One

Monday, November 16, 2009

Journal- November 16th

Root Word: Micro= small
Come up with own example words

Read the article below about militias in America.

Then answer these questions

1. In complete sentences, write three main ideas from the article.

A.

B.

C.

2. Do you think these militias have the right to train? Why or why not?



3. Do you think these militia's fears about having their gun taken away are valid? Why or why not?

4. Look at the title of this blog. Are these militias patriots or extremists? Explain your answer fully.

Militias: Patriots or extremists?

Posted: 05:50 AM ET
Jim Acosta - Correspondent, CNN's American Morning
Filed under: Controversy

By Jim Acosta

Out in the woods, 30-minutes from the nearest city, the Southeast Michigan Volunteer Militia meets for training once a month.

Armed with a small arsenal of semi-automatic weapons, the question that crosses your mind at one of these exercises is: training for what?

That depends on who you ask.

Our visit with the militia is the first installment of our three part series on something called "the Patriot movement."

The members of the militia in Michigan would certainly call themselves patriots. The folks at the civil rights organization, the Southern Poverty Law Center prefers to use the word "extremists."

Critics of the modern-day militia point out how some of the members of this movement are highly secretive. For example, we contacted nearly a dozen militias for permission to observe their exercises. The militia in Michigan is the only one that said yes.

Watch: Patriots or Extremists? Video

Still, some of its members would not give us their names. Others wore masks.

Then there are the members' constant fears the Obama administration will eventually take away their gun rights.

Another member told us he thinks the president could be "dangerous for the nation."

In nearly the same breath that member said he hopes the militia's training exercises would give some in Washington "pause."

Not to worry, says the group's leader Lee Miracle. A military veteran and postal worker, yes postal worker, Miracle says he urges respect for the president.

He's out to change the way the world views militia groups. We get an up-close look at his family in part two of our series. A family Miracle refers to as "Lee and Kate plus eight plus a gun rack." That's because they have eight kids and 22 guns in the house. And the kids take part in militia day.

In part three of our series, we go to Las Vegas to go behind the scenes with an organization called "Oathkeepers." It's a group of ex-law enforcement officials and military veterans who say they've sworn an oath to the Constitution, not the president. The president they're referring to, of course, is Mr. Obama.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Journal- November 12th

Living well is the best revenge.

--George Herbert

1. What do you think George Herbert means?


2.Do you agree that being a bigger person than the person who wronged or harmed you instead of going to down their level? Why or why not?



If you have extra time, edit and revise your other journals this week.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Journal- November 11th

1. In honor of Veteran's Day, do you think it's an important holiday? Why or why not?


2. Do you think organizations like the Veterans of Foreign Wars and American Legion will still be around in 20 years? Why or why not?


3. Do you think Americans show enough respect to our veterans? Why or why not?

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Journal- November 10th

Today, we're going to beginning reading an excerpt of an autobiography by Lorraine Hansberry entitled "To Be Young, Gifted and Black". In the excerpt, the author describes how she developed pride in herself.

1. What does it mean to 'have pride in yourself'?


2. Is 'having pride in yourself' always a good thing? Why or why not?


3. What are some ways a person can develop 'pride in themselves'?


4. Can parents or other adults teach children to be proud or do children have to learn it on their own?

Monday, November 9, 2009

Journal- November 9th

Read the the following article from CNN.

Then answer these questions

1. In one sentence, write a summary of the main idea of the article

2. Write down four interesting, important facts that you learned.

A.

B.

C.

D.

3. What does the tearing of the Berlin Wall symbolize 20 years ago? Do think the tearing of the wall is still an important event to remember today? Why or why not?


4. Do you think that a small group of individuals can really change the course of history, or is the Berlin Wall story an exception?

Berlin, Germany (CNN) -- Thousands of people joined world leaders in the German capital Monday to remember the night 20 years ago when a euphoric wave of people power swept away the Berlin Wall and consigned the Cold War to history.

In scenes calmly mirroring the events of November 9, 1989, crowds thronged through the center of the once-divided city, joining German Chancellor Angela Merkel in a symbolic re-enactment of the first crossing of the breached Wall.

"It was worth fighting for," Merkel said, after crossing the Bösebrücker bridge on Bornholmer Strasse, the checkpoint where people first poured across the frontier.

Merkel, the first former East German to lead the reunified country, was accompanied by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and Polish ex-president Lech Walesa as she kicked off events to celebrate the demise of the iconic structure and remember the darker sides of the communist regimes behind it.

"It is not only a day of celebration for Germans. It is a day of celebration for the whole of Europe," Merkel said.

Merkel was expected to join Britain's Gordon Brown, France's Nicolas Sarkozy and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in a series of events, including solemn tributes and boisterous music concerts.

At the climax, a line of 1,000 giant dominoes is to be knocked over along a 2-kilometer strip where the Wall once stood --representing the domino effect the structure's collapse had in ending communism across Eastern Europe.

Memorials were to be held for the 136 lives lost of those who tried to eascape through the barrier that cut Berlin in two -- many in the so-called "death strip" at the heart of the Wall's fortifications.

Read more in our Autumn of Change special report

A crowd of 10,000 people is later expected to converge on the Brandenburg Gate, the symbol of reunified Germany which once stood at the center of the no man's land between East and West Berlin.

Rock acts including Bon Jovi will join the festivities, echoing the popular music of the late 80s which soundtracked the cold night when rigid communist control gave way to an exhilarating tide of people clamoring for freedom.

Testament to the powerful legacy of the Wall's collapse have been the vivid memories recounted by many of the dramatic and emotional events before and after the fall.

"It was a circus-like atmosphere, people were enthused and exuberant and thrilled to see the Wall coming down," said David Paul Noel of Maryland, who was working for the U.S. State Department in Germany at the time.

Former CNN correspondent Richard Blystone, who watched the Wall collapse was struck by the difference in appearance of each side of the Wall

"On the west side, there was all this graffiti and dirty words, and names of rock groups and 'down with that' -- all the chaos of a pluralistic society," he said. "On the eastern side, it was clean and white, just so sterile."

Though dominated by nostalgia, Monday was also an opportunity to assess progress in a reunified Germany and democratized Eastern Europe, with many airing concerns that the world still has lessons to learn from the events of 1989.

With many in Germany feeling the economic, social and psychological divisions once demarcated by the Wall, Merkel said Monday that the country had yet to fulfil promises made when East and West reunited in 1990.

"Germany unity is not yet complete," Merkel told public broadcaster ARD earlier.

At an event in Berlin on Sunday, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called for renewed global action to liberate those still living under repressive regimes.

"Our history did not end the night the Wall came down," Clinton said. "It began anew. And this matters not only to tens of millions of Europeans, and to the United States, but to people everywhere."

She added: "To expand freedom to more people, we cannot accept that freedom does not belong to all people. We cannot allow oppression, defined and justified by religion or tribe to replace that of ideology.

"We have a responsibility to address conditions everywhere that undermine the potential of boys and girls and men and women that sap human dignity and threaten global progress."

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Journal- November 5th

Read the following article
(Notice your can also listen to the article)
1. What are three facts that you learned from the article

A.

B.

C.

2. In one sentence, write a summary of the main idea of the article?


3. Do you use a social networking site? If so, which one? Why do you use this one?


4. Do you think that the article is correct that MySpace and Facebook have different target audiences? Why or why not?

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Journal- November 4th


The reputation of a thousand years may be determined by the conduct of one hour.
--Japanese Proverb


1. What do you think the proverb means?


2. Do you think that people should be judged by one decision they make or their overall behavior? Why or why not?

3. Do you think actions speak louder than words? Why or why not?



Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Journal- November 3rd

Currently, the Obama administration is debating whether or not to sent additional troops to Afghanistan.

What's your opinion on this?

In one sentence, give your opinion on what the United States should do or not do in Afghanistan


Now, give three reasons why you believe this. Write in complete sentences and explain them fully

1.


2.

3.