Monday, October 29, 2007

THE YOUTH PARK PICNIC





Our Kindergarten class recently went to Parcul Tineretului, a large park in our city, for a Fall picnic with their teacher, Ms. Karpovck.

Monday, October 15, 2007

BOY SCOUT "FALL CAMPOUT"






We had a great weekend despite the cold weather and rain. We had a nice hike along a river and skipped stones, worked more at starting a fire with a "fire bow", and played floor hockey (rain sent us indoors to the gym on Sat. afternoon). It was a nice weekend!

HOW IT WORKS!

MS. ROGNSTAD'S 5TH & 6TH GRADERS WROTE EXPOSITORY PARAGRAPHS
THAT TELL US "HOW TO DO IT!"


HOW MATCHES WORK
by Emma


This is how matches work. Matches have phosphorous on one side of the match. Phosphorous is something that if it gets friction it burns. You rub the side of the match that has phosphorous against the match box. The match box is made to have rough edges. Don't try to light a match on the white smaller side which hold the matches because it doesn't work. On a match the red side on the match is where the phosphorous is. That is how a match works.


HOW TO THROW A FOOTBALL
by Andrew


The first step is to stand up and your feet should be apart from each other. Hold the ball (with your strong hand) by putting your pinky between the 2nd and 3rd stitching. Now turn your body to one side (optional) but look forward. Put your weak hand on the ball and bring the ball up (still with pinky in place) so that it is level with your chest. Next, bend your elbow down. Then pull your strong arm back and throw the ball forward, so the ball is rolling off your fingers. Try to throw the ball higher and it might make the ball fly farther. Then you should do the steps faster. Good luck!!!!


HOW TO MAKE SMASHED POTATOES
by Angie

Cut off the skin of five potatoes, then cut them in half. Boil the potatoes in water in a pot until they get soft. Then take out all the water out without the potatoes, But be careful not to spill the hot potatoes. Put all the potatoes in a big bowl. Smash them until there are no big clumps of potato pieces. Put some butter. Put about 1 cup of milk in the smashed potatoes. Put 2 teaspoons of salt in it and mix it. Eat it!


HOW A GRAND PIANO WORKS
by Heather

To make a note on the piano you press down a white key on the piano. When you press down a white key you can see the piano hammer hit the string under the piano the string vibrates like a guitar's strings. Under each piano key there is a string and above each string there is a hammer. Each key has it's own hammer which hits it's own string. Each key also has it's own note. There are white keys and black keys on the piano. The keys on the left are low notes and the keys on the right are high notes. You can create many beautiful songs on the piano.

FALL POETRY





Ms. Opris' 4th graders share their views on FALL

Sunday, October 7, 2007

JOY

JOY
By Sarah M. (10th grade)
I saw joy clearly
She was plump and round, but not at all ashamed of
her size that was so frequently laughed at.
She turned, her dark curls bouncing about, and
smiled with a glow I had never seen before.
Then I saw her eyes;
past the sparkle of beautiful green that shared love with the world.
I could see that her lifewas far from perfect.
There was pain in her past; that'swhy I didn't understand.
I heard her speak so gently, her loving words floated
across the room unheard by sadness and fury,
ignoredby loneliness and jealousy, and discarded by boredom
and doubt.
How could they not see as I did?
I felt so ignorant to have not noticed her before.
I hadbeen just like the others who never saw her true
beauty.
Her love astounded me: the gentleness of her
smile, the encouragement in her words, and the
excitement in her spirit.
She had chosen God's grace.
Chosen His grace over the sorrow that tried to conquer her life.
Her past was no longer her burden,
she was joy.

Monday, October 1, 2007

THE ANNUAL EGG DROP





The high school physics class is in a unit on momentum and energy. When a fast-moving object hits another object, its fate depends on how long it takes to come to a complete stop. A skydiver whose parachute fails to open might survive if they hit a haystack instead of bare ground. For the egg drop, the students had to design a container that would protect a raw egg so it would not break when dropped from the patio on the roof of BCA. Two of the students’ eggs survived, and two didn’t.