jueves, 28 de octubre de 2010

My family History

        I was born in Maracaibo in a happy family.


       When I was born my father and mother were married, for reasons of late now divorced and each has its own family.


      My mother ewmarried and now i have two beautiful little brothers.


       Live in my house my brothers, my mom, my grandmother, my sofpfather and my beautiful baby Michelle..

jueves, 14 de octubre de 2010

The robber

      The robber is robbing the store, when he was surprised by the police.
      The cap catch a criminal.
      The borglar break a law.
      The criminal is making a confession. It said "It was not me"
       It was condemned 5 years of prison.

    

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Water

      The amount of water in the world is limited. The human race, and the other species which share the planet, cannot expect an infinite supply.
Water covers about two-thirds of the Earth's surface, admittedly. But most is too salty for use.
Dry riverbeds border dangerously low water levels at the Shihmen reservoir in Taiwan
Population is rising, but water supplies are not
       Only 2.5% of the world's water is not salty, and two-thirds of that is locked up in the icecaps and glaciers.
Of what is left, about 20% is in remote areas, and much of the rest arrives at the wrong time and place, as monsoons and floods.
      Humans have available less than 0.08% of all the Earth's water. Yet over the next two decades our use is estimated to increase by about 40%.
Water shortages set to grow
In 1999 the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) reported that 200 scientists in 50 countries had identified water shortage as one of the two most worrying problems for the new millennium (the other was global warming).
We use about 70% of the water we have in agriculture. But the World Water Council believes that by 2020 we shall need 17% more water than is available if we are to feed the world.
   GETTING WORSE
 Growing populations
 Inefficient irrigation
 Pollution
         So if we go on as we are, millions more will go to bed hungry and thirsty each night than do so already.
        Today, one person in five across the world has no access to safe drinking water, and one in two lacks safe sanitation.
Today, and every day, more than 30,000 children die before reaching their fifth birthdays, killed either by hunger or by easily-preventable diseases.
And adequate safe water is key to good health and a proper diet. In China, for example, it takes 1,000 tonnes of water to produce one tonne of wheat.
Inefficiency behind water crisis
          There are several reasons for the water crisis. One is the simple rise in population, and the desire for better living standards.
      In China it takes 1,000 tonnes of water to produce one tonne of wheat
Another is the inefficiency of the way we use much of our water. Irrigation allows wastage on a prodigal scale, with the water trickling away or simply evaporating before it can do any good.
          And pollution is making more of the water that is available to us unfit for use. The Aral Sea in central Asia is one of the starkest examples of what pollution can do, to the land as well as the water.
Increasingly, governments are seeking to solve their water problems by turning away from reliance on rainfall and surface water, and using subterranean supplies of groundwater instead.
         But that is like making constant withdrawals from a bank account without ever paying anything into it.
Looking for solutions
And using up irreplaceable groundwater does not simply mean the depletion of a once-and-for-all resource.
         Rivers, wetlands and lakes that depend on it can dry out. Saline seawater can flow in to replace the fresh water that has been pumped out.
Pumping groundwater is like making constant withdrawals from a bank account without ever paying anything into it
And the emptied underground aquifers can be compressed, causing surface subsidence - a problem familiar in Bangkok, Mexico City and Venice.
        There are some ways to begin to tackle the problem. Irrigation systems which drip water directly onto plants are one, precision sprinklers another.
There will be scope to plant less water-intensive crops, and perhaps desalination may play a part - though it is energy-hungry and leaves quantities of brine for disposal.
Climate change will probably bring more rain to some regions and less to others, and its overall impact remains uncertain.
        But if we are to get through the water crisis, we should heed the UNEP report's reminder that we have only one interdependent planet to share.
It said: "The environment remains largely outside the mainstream of everyday human consciousness, and is still considered an add-on to the fabric of life."

miércoles, 6 de octubre de 2010

Eat

The juice of orange has vitamin c.
The milk has very much calcium.
The fried potatoes have fat
The cakes are very rich
The food is very good but we have to to be able to feed well. For a bad supply we fall ill.
Because of it we must eat fruits, vegetables and meats

My school

 I remember my school as if I was yesterday, spend the best moments of my life there.

I studied in Francisco J. Duarte




The day of my graduation was very special, though I did not want to separate of my friends of the school.

My recollections of the school he will never forget them, they were wizards.




People in my life

My daughter Michelle is Pretty
She Born in Maracaibo
My baby is my eschequer


 My mother Yajaira
She is a better mom



My boyfriend Adrian
I am inspired love of
He is handsome






Giohana, Jean and Marilyn they are my friends
They are good persons