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Jesse Aarons or Jess as everybody calls him, comes from a poor farmer family with four annoying sisters, he finds no haven at school where he's teased by everyone. The only thing Jess has is running; after training all summer for the big race on the school athletic day, he and every other boy racing are beat by new girl Leslie Burke. Like Jess, Leslie is teased by her fellow students, but unlike Jess she doesn't let it bother her. After a rocky start, they find common ground and together create the imaginary world of Terabithia as a haven from their struggles at school and at home. Leslie teaches Jess to open his mind to every possibility and leave reality behind. But, after a tragedy occurs, Jess must trust in what Leslie has taught him to help over come the horrors that reality can bring.



I last saw the movie Bridge to Terabithia about a month ago since I had to read the book for another class.  I have seen this movie several times and there hasn’t been a time that I haven’t cried. I find Jess and Leslie’s friendship so innocent and pure that the way they compliment each other can’t be described in words. When you loose someone, no matter whim it is, it is very painful. But, loosing that special someone that you spend most of the day every day, is even harder. Together they had lots of fun and with each other by their side they where invincible. This movie is very powerful for me since I believe that children now a days don’t know what it is to go outside an use their imagination. Technology is so advanced that kids don’t have the opportunity to even think nor imagine new things since everything is already given to them. This movie is wonderful for me since it always brings back memories of when I was younger and spent hours a day all over the neighborhood playing new games and running freely with no stress on my mind. We would never sit behind a computer and communicate throughout internet like most children do now a days. Bridge to Terabithia is a symbol of friendship and innocence and I can’t think of anything better than that.


 
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  1. I really never thought about anything negative aabout Disney. I mean come on! It's Disney! I grew up with all the Disney characters and I fell in love with all the characters and I learned from them how to speak English.  I never considered myself as a Disney fan, but I've seen each movie more than 10 times so I guess I am really a fan without even noticing.
  2. After watching that documentary I found out that not knowing I was a true fan was not the only thing I didn't notice. I was in total shock and I felt a little betrayed. I never gave much attention to anything that wasn't the happy ending. I learned that in this life you can't trust anybody, not even Disney.
  3. What most amazed me was how Disney is sexist. Every single woman or princess depended on the rescuing of a male figure to save her. The women would give up their most prized possessions to make their best approach to the male. For example, Little Mermaid gave up her voice to find "the man of her dreams." They would be ok after being locked up and threatened not to be given food if they did not do what the male desired. For example, Belle in Beauty and the Beast. Finally, how they used their bodies to seduce male figures for distraction, for example, Jasmine in Aladdin. I would have never thought about these things while watching the films. I don't even want to get started in how racist Disney is that they didn't create a black princess nor a male figure. I think that the darkest skin colored character is Tarzan and I would just marry that man!
  4. Although I was shocked and impressed about all these things, I can admit that I am still going to watch these movies because besides all of these hidden messages, the explicit messages are good ones that help children grow. Disney was a big part of my childhood and I would like for it to be part of my children's childhood too.

 
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     When I saw this it called my attention since I have heard
 that the noise we hear when boiling lobster is in fact air gasping. But, what do we really know? They are probably yelling because of the pain. This should be considered animal cruelty since although they can’t talk nor express
 themselves, they probably feel pain. Who are we to burn another living thing to death just for the pleasure of our mouth and stomach?


 
     My favorite editorial out of the 4 I chose is editorial #3, Inadequate Treatment of Ovarian Cancer. I chose this one since I have heard of many women dying from ovarian cancer and I was recently treated with the anti-ovarian cancer vaccination. This editorial talks about the amount of women that have lost their lives because of not receiving the correct treatment by their doctors. I think that the author is well informed, but I would have liked for more evidence.  
"The study, presented at a conference on gynecologic cancers on Monday, analyzed the treatment of more than 13,000 women with ovarian cancer who received their diagnoses between 1999 and 2006. Only 37 percent received the care recommended in guidelines set by the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, an alliance of 21 major cancer centers."
     I think that the author is passionate and absolutely concerned about what is going on. It is not fair that women keep dying of ovarian cancer because of the incorrect treatments.
"Lack of experience with ovarian cancer among many doctors may be a factor in poor treatment. But even patients treated by surgeons with 10 or more ovarian-cancer patients a year, or in hospitals with 20 or more such patients a year, received the recommended therapy only about half the time."



EDITORIAL #4
By Editorial Board, Published: March 17
DEMAND FOR AMBULANCE SERVICE drops off at 1 a.m. and doesn’t pick up again until about 7 a.m. D.C. fire and emergency medical officials argue it makes sense to move some crews and equipment that are sitting idle to 
times when they are needed. The fact that such a common-sense change has yet to happen is testament to the dysfunctional politics that have brought the department to what Kenneth B. Ellerbe, chief of Fire and Emergency Medical Services, called a “tipping point.”

A series of incidents in which people in the District were 
kept waiting for ambulances — one man died of a heart attack after waiting 29 minutes for help — has brought renewed scrutiny to a department that is generally seen as having made enormous strides since the controversy caused by its mishandling of the case of retired New York Times reporter David E. Rosenbaum seven years ago. But the incidents — most recently, the need to summon an ambulance from a different jurisdiction to transport a D.C. police officer seriously injured in a hit-and-run because no city vehicle was available — have created a debate over the department’s needs and how best to deliver services. D.C. Council member Tommy Wells (D-Ward 6), who chairs the committee that oversees the department, will hold a hearing March 28.

Pitted against each other, as The Post’s Peter Hermann reported, are a firefighters union that blames bad management and lack of resources for the department’s problems and an administration that sees union intransigence imperiling initiatives that would better serve public safety.

It is clear that a factor in the increasingly ugly debate (for which both sides bear blame) is Mr. Ellerbe’s proposal for a dramatic change in firefighters’ work schedules so that they would work shorter but more frequent shifts. The plan, opposed by firefighters who have built lives around a schedule that requires only eight or nine workdays a month, is mired in an impasse over a contract. The separate plan to concentrate more paramedic shifts during peak times also hasn’t progressed because, we were astonished to learn, the fire chief — unlike the police chief who is entrusted with deployment decisions — can’t make the changes without the D.C. Council’s approval. Significantly, the union that represents the department’s civilian paramedics agrees with the chief that the issue is not, as the firefighters union argues, insufficient resources but instead a lack of flexibility in the system.

Mr. Ellerbe makes a strong case for breaking with tradition in how the department schedules and deploys its staff. The mission of the department has changed as the result of advances in building safety and fire prevention; more than 80 percent of calls are for medical emergencies, not fires. There is no understating the importance of firefighters or the considerable risks they take, and they have raised issues that bear scrutiny. But decisions about the direction of the department should be made by those in charge, based on what best serves public needs.

EDITORIAL#3
Inadequate Treatment of Ovarian Cancer By 
THE EDITORIAL BOARDPublished: March 13, 2013 

A new study has found widespread failure among doctors to follow clinical guidelines for treating ovarian cancer, which kills 15,000 women a year in this country. This disturbing news shows the kind of challenge that health care reformers are up against in improving medical care — even when cost is not the issue.

The study, presented at a conference on gynecologic cancers on Monday, analyzed the treatment of more than 13,000 women with ovarian cancer who received their diagnoses between 1999 and 2006. Only 37 percent received the care recommended in guidelines set by the 
National Comprehensive Cancer Network, an alliance of 21 major cancer centers.

This kind of failure is not uncommon in American medicine. A decade ago, RAND Corporation researchers reported that just 55 percent of a large sample of patients suffering from a broad range of diseases received care that met quality guidelines. Numerous studies since then focusing on specific diseases have found similar problems.

In the case of ovarian cancer, the consequences of inadequate care are tragic. The recommended guidelines specify combinations of surgery and chemotherapy, depending on the stage of the disease, including debulking surgery to remove all visible traces of the tumor and aggressive chemotherapy that can prolong life. Women who received the recommended treatment were 30 percent less likely to die than those who did not. Among those with advanced cancer, the stage at which ovarian cancer is usually first found, 35 percent of the women treated in accordance with the guidelines survived at least five years compared with 25 percent for those whose care fell short.

Lack of experience with ovarian cancer among many doctors may be a factor in poor treatment. But even patients treated by surgeons with 10 or more ovarian-cancer patients a year, or in hospitals with 20 or more such patients a year, received the recommended therapy only about half the time.

The poor showing raises perplexing issues for health care reform. The Affordable Care Act has many provisions intended to improve the quality of care. They include new research organizations to help doctors and patients understand which treatments work best as well as pilot projects to test new ways of paying for and organizing health care delivery to reduce costs and improve quality.

However, such measures won’t accomplish much if doctors continue to ignore the recommendations made by experts from their own professional societies. One of the surest ways to improve performance would be to analyze and make public how well individual doctors and hospitals do in treating various diseases. This is controversial among many doctors, who question the accuracy of measures used or fear their records will look bad. While some data are kept on a fragmented basis around the country, the reform law gives doctors incentives to report various quality measures to the federal government.

The law promotes treatments based on sound evidence and electronic health records (which allow for data collection), two advances that could make it easier for patients
and their primary-care doctors to find specialists who have had superior results.

EDITORIAL #2
Cruelty to Women OverseasBy
 
THE EDITORIAL BOARDPublished: March 17, 2013
Each year some 
47,000 women around the world die as a result of unsafe abortions. Efforts to reduce that toll are severely hampered by the Helms amendment, which was originally enacted in 1973 and restricts the use of United States foreign aid money to finance abortions overseas, even in places where abortion is legal.

President Obama can significantly reduce the harm by directing the State Department and the United States Agency for International Development to reject a longstanding misinterpretation of the amendment under which aid cannot be used to help women whose lives are endangered or in cases of rape or incest. According to the amendment, foreign assistance money may not be used to “pay for the performance of abortion as a method of family planning or to motivate or coerce any person to practice abortions.” That wording plainly excludes cases of life endangerment, incest and rape.

Providing abortions to women and girls subjected to rape as a weapon of armed conflict obviously has nothing to do with planning family. Yet this has not stopped successive Republican and Democratic administrations from treating the amendment as an absolute abortion ban. The misinterpretation has also prevented foreign aid recipients from offering abortion information even though a separate 1994 amendment makes clear that providing information does not amount to improper coercion. There is a strong case to be made that the current reading of the amendment violates Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, which entitles all victims of armed conflict, including rape victims, to complete and nondiscriminatory medical treatment, like access to abortions.

Anti-abortion zealots in Congress may oppose a change in the implementation of the Helms amendment, but virtually every federal abortion policy includes exceptions for life endangerment, incest and rape. Mr. Obama has room under the law to abide by the amendment in a way that is true to its wording, more humane and consistent with his own ideals. He shou
ld use it.

EDITORIAL #1

16 de marzo de 2013

Ataquemos el flu responsablementeEs necesario que la población tome conciencia y asuma su responsabilidad ciudadana para contribuir a la prevención y diseminación de la influenza tomando medidas preventivas de higiene y de vacunación, la vía más efectiva para evitar el contagio.

Cada año hay miles de adultos y menores en el mundo que mueren innecesariamente por enfermedades que se pueden prevenir y para las cuales también existen vacunas. Uno de estos casos es el de la influenza que ya ha afectado a alrededor de 9,400 personas en la Isla desde que comenzó la temporada el 1 de octubre. Y la enfermedad continúa en alza. Afortunadamente, no se ha reportado ninguna fatalidad, pero el 57% de los que se han contagiado son menores de 19 años, en su mayoría niños de cuatro años o menos, justo los más vulnerables a sufrir complicaciones y a ser hospitalizados.

Y mientras hay asuntos de salubridad pública en que el Estado tiene responsabilidad absoluta, en lo que respecta al contagio de influenza, la principal razón de que estemos en la antesala de una epidemia viral es porque la ciudadanía ha desoído los llamados a que se vacunen. El que apenas un 35% de la población está vacunada es inaceptable porque hay disponibilidad de dosis de la vacuna contra la influenza.

Y no es por falta de exhortación. En los últimos tres años fiscales (2010-12) el Departamento de Salud ha invertido más de $500,000 de fondos federales en campañas educativas de vacunación, según datos suministrados por la agencia. A ello se suman clínicas de vacunación masiva que la agencia realiza anualmente en los que se provee la vacuna gratuitamente. Desde octubre, cuando comienza a circular el virus con mayor fuerza, Salud ha realizado más de una docena de estos eventos en diferentes puntos de la Isla; sin embargo, apenas 11,000 personas se vacunaron.

El designado secretario de Salud, Francisco Joglar Pesquera, hizo bien en declarar un alerta de vacunación y tiene razón cuando señala que el problema de la influenza aquí no es la supuesta escasez de Tamiflu, un medicamento que no detiene el contagio y cuya eficacia para tratar la influenza o evitar hospitalizaciones es cuestionada por gran parte de la comunidad científica, sino la apatía ciudadana en asumir la responsabilidad preventiva. En consecuencia, aquí lo que hay que atacar es la apatía ciudadana hacia la vacunación.

Es imperativo que los proveedores privados aumenten sus porcentajes de vacunación y ayuden al Gobierno a neutralizar los mitos contra la vacuna, siendo uno de los principales que los efectos secundarios de la vacuna son peores que la misma gripe. 

La ciudadanía, por su parte, tiene que aceptar la vacunación como la herramienta de mayor eficacia contra el contagio.

Asimismo, es necesario adoptar hábitos de higiene básica y medidas preventivas ampliamente diseminadas desde que el 2009 hubo una pandemia de gripe y se detectaron casos en Puerto Rico, como son el lavado frecuente de manos, cubrirse la boca al toser o estornudar con pañuelos desechables o con el ángulo interno del codo, nunca con las manos. 

Y si alguna persona está atravesando por un proceso gripal debe abstenerse de asistir a sitios de aglomeración humana como cines, lugares de trabajo, iglesias, e incluso asistir a clases para evitar la propagación viral.

Lo único que debe imperar con respecto a la influenza es un sentido de responsabilidad ciudadana en torno a la prevención. Todos estamos obligados a cumplir con nuestro deber cívico de protegernos y proteger a otros, de los altos riesgos de las complicaciones de la influenza.


 

The items that I classified in social are social since they are things that usually bother others too. They are more generals things in society that I can't have control over them. On the other hand, the personal items are those little things that are too close to me and piss me off and I can't to anything about it at the moment and that drives me crazy.

Those items became social since they are things that surround me and that I can't do much about them. They are mostly all very different and I can't find much similarities between the items I chose, but the mayority have to do with the human body. For example: fighting, someone having boogers, dirty ears, being cold, sweaty, backache, period, acne, lack of excercise, being hungry, etc. These are all things produced by one's or other's body that I can't stand. 

1. Dirty ears: I had an extreme crush on the same guy for several time. I always imagined what would it be like if he would ask me out on a date or I would just imagine him kissing me. All of that went away the day he sat one stair below me and I saw inside his ear the most disgusting yellow-green thing that I almost puked myself! There hasn't been a day since that experience that I haven't used q-tips. I obviously did before, but now it is something I just HAVE to do. 

2. Spiders: I still don't know why, but since I was little I am terrified of spiders. Being arachnophobic is no fun for me since spiders are usually everywhere. I have cried many times because of having a spider near me. Once in highschool they brought me a dead tarantula and I almost fainted. Once my father showed me a frame with a dessicated  spider inside and I cried for like half an hour. spiders deffinetly creep me out.

Arachnophobia or arachnephobia  is a specific phobia, the fear of spiders and other arachnids such as scorpions.

The reactions of arachnophobics are often irrational (though not all arachnophobics acknowledge this irrationality). It is one of the most common specific phobias, and some statistics show that 50% of women and 10% of men show symptoms. It may be an exaggerated form of an instinctive response that helped early humans to survive, or a cultural phenomenon that is most common in predominantly European societies

The fear of spiders can be treated by any of the general techniques suggested for specific phobias. As with all phobias, the strength of the associations means the individual must not actively pursue the consequences, and outsiders should not in any way undermine and "play" with the phobia in the meantime.

 
SOCIAL

Spiders

Fighting

Relationship endings

Lord of the Rings

Harry Potter

Someone having a boogger on their nose

Dirty ears

Being in a cold place

Not having enough money

Sweaty people touching me

Fire burning song

Being mad at my best friend

Pizza

Abuse

Rapes

Murder

Crossing paths with my ex boyfriend

Backache

Period

Acne

Not getting tanned

Not being fit

Not having the motivation to exercise

Reading novels

Others littering

Needles

People begging for money

Feeling sad

Waiting anxiously for something

Playstation & Nintendo

Going to the beach and it starts raining

Hurting myself and getting ANOTHER cast

Being hungry with no food around

Contamination








PERSONAL

My dad’s attitude towards some things

Having a curfew

Others liking my same favorite flowers 

Being too many hours inside a house

Not having gum 

My grandma giving me speeches about my facebook pictures


 
My favorite entry was the one where we had to pick a picture and develop a story with it. As I was writing I felt like I was living the story I invented and I really enjoyed it. I am sure that I gave it my all and I am happy with what came out of me.
My least favorite entry was the one where I had to find the best and worst Valentine's Day songs since I wasn't in a very "lovy" mood and it was hard for me that day to accomplish my work.

    Author

    Hi! My name is Marisol and I am 20 years old. I am studying to become an English teacher for both Secondary and Elementary and I can't wait to start working. I am a very outgoing person, very friendly and trustworthy. You can always count on me!

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