Thursday, May 31, 2012

ANZAC Day

ANZAC Day is on 25th April each year. The letters stand for Australian and New Zealand Army Corps and the soldiers were known as Anzac. It originally commemorated the members of Australian and New Zealand Army Corps who fought at Gallipoli in the Ottoman Empire during World War I. Now it more broadly commemorated the soldiers who served and died for their counties.

On ANZAC Day, we show our thanks to the people who fought for our country and ceremonies are held in towns and cities. People usually leave flowers and wreaths at the bottom of war memorials as a way of saying they remember those people who have died in the war.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

News summarisation


A 14 year old girl named Mona-Lisa Tafengatoto was abducted from a south-western Sydney high school on Wednesday afternoon. She was dragged from a toilet block by her exboyfriend, 16 years old Tovila Tufuga, who was also a former student of the school.

  Ms Tafengtoto is described as 170cm tall, solid build, with brown eyes and long brown hair. She was wearing a white shirt, black tracksuit pants and black shoes with white soles. Also, she was wearing a black backpack.

  Mr Tufuga is described as 175cm tall, medium build, with brown eyes and black hair, and wearing a faded black hooded jumper, black shorts, and a black hat. He has his surname tattooed on his neck.

Police are concerned for the teenage girl's safety and are asking the public to report any sightings of the pair.

Harmony Day


 Harmony Day is a day for celebrating many different cultures and backgrounds as Australia is a cultural diversity. It began in 1999, coinciding with the United Nations international Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. It is an opportunity for everyone to come together and participate in local activities each year.

  Australians come all over the world. In the last two centuries people have come from every continent to make Australia become their home. Today there are over 21 million of people living in Australia. They contribute different ideas, religions, languages and customs to Australia and make it an interesting and unique place to live.

  This year, the theme for Harmony Day is ‘Sport: Play, Engage, Inspire’ in recognition of the positive role sport plays in uniting people from different cultures and backgrounds.

  As we know Australia is one of the most multicultural countries in the world, Harmony Day presents an opportunity for Australians to come together to celebrate this great event.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Punishment from parents

Today I read three news article.
The first article was told about a three-year-old girl from Alaska has died and her sister suffered hypothermia after their mother and the mother's boyfriend left them in a locked bedroom with an open window. The temperature there was minus 34 degrees Celsius. The mother, 28-year-old elementary school teacher Esther G Edwards-Gust and her boyfriend, 29-year-old Richard Tiden Jr have been indicted in the child's death. Mr Tilden said he opened the bedroom window because the girls wet their beds and he had been drinking the night before. Also, he said the door's latch was broken which made it impossible for anyone inside the room to open it.

The next article was told about a three-year-old boy almost died after being put in a frezzing cell at home with no lights, heating or food. The boy was so hungry, so he ripped out his hair and ate them. The mother, Lisa Brooks, 25-year-old and stepfather Tomas Lewis, 22-year-old. They had taken camera in the boy's room and saw that the boy was naked and hitted himself.

The final article was told about a 10-year-old boy, Johnathan James, died of dehydration after his father and stepmother kept water from him was being punished for wetting the bed. This boy was put in a room without air conditioning and water for five days.

The commen topic of these articles is the parents got serious punishment to their children. I can't believe what the parents had done to their children! They were so cruel and cold blood and what they did were unfair to the children. It was a crime. I sympathize the children's experience and hopefully that would not happen again.