Unit 12 - In the news

Officials: Peña Nieto projected winner in Mexican presidential vote.



By Catherine E. Shoichet, CNN

updated 1:15 AM EDT, Mon July 2, 2012





Mexico City (CNN) -- Enrique Peña Nieto is the projected winner of Mexico's presidential election, according to a quick count by election officials.

Representative samples from polling stations throughout the country gave Peña Nieto the lead, with between 37.93% and 38.55% of votes, the Federal Election Institute said.

The projected victory for Peña Nieto marks a triumphant return to power for the PRI, which controlled Mexico's presidency for more than 70 years, until the election of the National Action Party's Vicente Fox in 2000.

Criticisms of Peña Nieto and concerns about the PRI's possible return to power have fueled a student movement that has staged protests throughout the country in recent weeks.

Calderon addresses Mexican citizens But the charismatic 45-year-old former governor has also galvanized fervent support among residents of his home state and party loyalists nationwide.

Young Mexicans vulnerable to crime The frontrunner's campaign platform includes plans to stop the rise in food prices, promote energy reform, give social security to all Mexicans and reduce violence nationwide.

Ghost towns of Mexico's drug war The Consulta Mitofsky, GEA/ISA and Parametria firms also said their exit poll results projected a win for Peña Nieto, with more than 40% of voters saying they cast ballots for the PRI candidate.

In addition to Peña Nieto, three other candidates were vying for the presidency in what officials called "the largest and most complex election day" in the country's history.

Ruling party candidate Josefina Vazquez Mota was trailing in exit polls.

Throughout the three-month campaign, she appeared to be distancing herself from President Felipe Calderon. Her campaign slogan was "Josefina Diferente."

But at a campaign rally Wednesday night, the National Action Party (PAN) candidate praised the "valor" of Calderon's fight against organized crime and made a surprise announcement that she would invite him to be Mexico's attorney general if she wins the presidency.

As preliminary results trickled in Sunday night, Vazquez Mota acknowledged that the trend did not appear to be in her favor.

Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador of the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD) ranked in second place in numerous polls leading up to the election. Sunday night's quick count indicated that he had received between 30.9% and 31.86% of votes.

In the 2006 presidential vote, election authorities said the former Mexico City mayor narrowly lost to Calderon. Lopez Obrador claimed election fraud and never conceded, referring to himself as "the legitimate president of Mexico."

His supporters protested nationwide. In Mexico City, they staged sit-ins and blockades.

On Wednesday, Lopez Obrador told throngs of supporters in Mexico's capital that he was confident that he would "win the presidency again."

Gabriel Quadri of the New Alliance, who lagged far behind in polls before and after the election, praised Mexico's election authorities Sunday night.

"We have very solid, democratic institutions," he said.

In polling centers throughout the country, workers began the day Sunday assembling cardboard voting booths marked with bold black letters saying, "The vote is free and secret."

But some voters said they were afraid of fraud.

From a command center in Mexico's capital, student activists tracked election irregularities reported in local media, and encouraged others to document activities at their neighborhood polling stations.

The monitoring effort was spearheaded by youth who have led a series of social media campaigns and street protests leading up to Sunday's vote.

At the Revolution elementary school near the heart of Mexico City, Martha Rojas Ramos was near the front of the line, waiting for the polls to open Sunday morning.

The 58-year-old flea market merchant, who carried bags of merchandise in her arms as she waited in line to vote before heading to work Sunday morning, said money was tight, and the economy was a key issue for her in this year's election. Peña Nieto, she said, is the right person to solve Mexico's economic problems.

"He is obviously prepared. There was obviously a dirty war against him," said Martha Rojas Ramos, 58.

Critics lamenting the possible return of the PRI to power aren't thinking straight, she said.

"That's all in the past. What's important is that he is young and has all the ability to represent us," she said.

Alejandro Garcia, a 33-year-old accountant, said he supported Peña Nieto's security strategy, which aims to decrease violence in Mexico.

Calderon, Mexico's current president, made combating cartels a top priority when he took office in December 2006. Since then, more than 47,500 people have died in drug-related violence nationwide, according to government statistics.

Garcia said the surge in violence has negatively impacted daily life throughout the country.

"People don't go out as much in the streets. People go inside their homes earlier in the day. ... Now we are seeing things that we didn't see before. Maybe they were going on, but they weren't as open as they are now," he said. "I think (Peña Nieto) is the one to stabilize the country."

Other voters were less decisive about their choices.

"We are voting for the least bad candidate," said Manuel Palomera, a 34-year-old travel agent who said he was casting his ballot for Vazquez Mota.

At one polling station in Mexico City, a 46-year-old attorney from the state of Michoacan was fuming. Thalia Vasquez was one of hundreds of out-of-town voters who went to a special polling place to vote and had to wait for hours.

Shouting matches ensued when people tried to cut in line, she said.

"Imagine how long this is going to take," she said, saying election authorities should do more to monitor the lines outside the polls.

Voters still in line after polls close at 6 p.m. were allowed to vote, election officials said.

Mexicans also cast ballots from beyond the country's borders. On Saturday, election officials said they had received 40,737 absentee ballots from Mexicans living abroad.

For the first time, more than 79 million people were registered to vote, according to election authorities. Among them are 3.5 million young people who will be casting their first vote, the institute said.

More than 2,100 federal, state and local offices will also be decided by Sunday's vote, according to Mexico's Federal Election Institute.

Voters will elect governors in the states of Chiapas, Guanajuato, Jalisco, Morelos, Tabasco and Yucatan. In Mexico City, the nation's capital, residents will elect a new mayor.

Election authorities suspended voting an hour early at nine polls in the southern state of Chiapas Sunday after clashes between political groups backing competing candidates for mayor in the town of Rincon Chamula. Several people were injured, the Federal Election Institute said.

Unit 11 - Impressions

Modal verbs




Do you want to know more about modal verbs?... 
Let's see a good example about Modal verbs. This is a conversation, so, listen.






Modal verbs come before and modify the main verb in a sentence and help explain ideas likepossibility, necessity, or obligation. Here are several modal verbs and their functions: 

Might: Expresses uncertainty about the present or future, as in, "I might quit my job next month," or, "It might be cold out, so bring a jacket."
Can: Expresses ability or possibility, as in, "I can speak French and Spanish," or, "Studentscan get cheaper tickets at the movies." Also asks permission or makes a request, as in, "Canyou come over tonight?" 
Should: Expresses obligation, as in, "I should study for my math test," or probability, as in, "The package should arrive tomorrow, since I sent it last week." Also gives advice, as in, "I think you should go out with Jesse." 
Must: Expresses necessity or obligation, as in, "I must go see my grandmother this weekend." Also gives strong advice, as in, "You must quit smoking now that you're pregnant."

Unit 10 - What's up?

My favorite movie: Back to the future 

BTTF

Director: Robert Zemeckis
Gender:  Adventure, ComedySci-Fi 
Writers: Robert ZemeckisBob Gale
Stars: Michael J. FoxChristopher Lloyd and Lea Thompson
Country: USA
Language: English 
Release Date: 3 July 1985

One of the most popular comedies of the eighties fantasy, directed by Robert Zemeckis, who shot to fame to the then young actor Michael J. Fox

The young Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) is the son of a disastrous family full of problems. It will be a tragic event that will launch the involuntarily transferred to the Hill Valley of 1955, which prevents their parents-are known. The "Doc" Emmett Brown (Christopher Lloyd), the future inventor of the time machine that brought Marty, devise how to save Marty's birth and how to return to 1985.

There has been criticism that the film ignores the now famous "grandfather paradox" (or parent, in this case): If Marty avoids the infatuation of her parents, never born ... and if never born, how could travel back in time and avoid the crush of their parents? However, the rapid pace at which runs the adventure keeps us dwell on these thoughts and share what paradoxical that the plot naturally.

A stroke of success was to design a time machine. Always represented as a wit still for science fiction, this time is a car that also functions as such. In fact, it is necessary to run at a certain speed so you can travel in time.

The sequences where "Doc" Brown in 1955 talking to Marty about the "futuristic" 1985 are excellent, as we refer to "how" imagined sci-fi of the fifties that was to be the world within thirty years (a future "Buck Rogers"). Phrases like "the plutonium you can buy in pharmacies," "radiation increase due to nuclear war" or "will there be serious problems in the future?" Are of anthology. The same is true of scenes like when some farmers confuse the modern DeLorean with a UFO invasion, or when Marty, wearing anti-radiation suit, frightening your future father George McFly (Crispin Glover), who believes that an alien ...

The suspense is given, not only by the intervention of Biff Tannen (Thomas F. Wilson), the increasingly distant romance of McFly or difficulty operating the DeLorean again, but for one important caveat that Marty has to Ask the "Doc", about his fate in 1985, the night of the game ...

BACK TO THE FUTURE is the best movie ever made.

Unit 9 - Tech savvy?

Do You want to become a tech savvy? 
Just follow this simple points...



Geek (:

An easy-to-follow guide on how to become comfortable cool and "savvy" with technology


1. Use Google. Google is your friend. If you have a question about something or need to research a certain topic, search using Google.


2. Find info about Computers. Find info about computers. Info can be in E-books, on websites, or even in books you can find at your local library. As it says in the last tip use Google to find them. Also you might want to use Usenet to find some info about computers.


3. Be knowledgeable in many fields. For example, you may never need or want to pick up a digital camera or be able to answer questions about it but it is worth your while to get an understanding of what a digital camera is because it increases your know-how. Everything you learn will come in handy at some point in your life.


4. Become an expert. What is something technology-related that interests you and that you enjoy? Say it's blogging using Wordpress; research the topic and get to know how to use things first hand.


5. Learn how to treat computer Viruses, Spyware, and And learn how to avoid Malware. Some great Anti-Virus/Spyware programs are Avast, Malwarebytes, Spybot, AVG, and Spyhunter. There are many Anti-Virus/Spyware programs out there, and some are free.


6. Learn How to Program. Programming is one of the most important skills in technology, if no one could program there would be no world wide web or even Windows! We wouldn't even have video games, Mp3 players, or just about anything else electronic. (We would still have lights, of course.) Some programming languages are Python (Recommended for beginners), C, C++, C#, Java and PHP. You can learn some programming at websites all over the web. If you want to start programming, try HTML. There are some very nice tutorials at http://www.w3schools.com/


7. Use a Unix or Linux The Unix family of operating systems are very common with some of the most tech savvy people in the world. This family of operating systems is free, in there price and you are free to view the source code used in them. In these families of operating systems there is also better programming tools and better technical tools than what you can find on windows. A easy distribution of Linux for people who are new to Linux is the Ubuntu Linux Distribution, It can be found at http://www.ubuntu.com


8. Join an online community of other tech gurus and don't be afraid to ask questions.




Do you want to know how Tech Sawwy you are?
Check this Test: http://www.oprah.com/home/How-Tech-Savvy-Are-You



Song

Code Red - What would you do if (Song)



Unit 8- What if?

What would you do?


















Unit 7 - Realtionships

My best friend



Trizia is my best friend. She’s the one who is always there for me. I met her five years ago in high school, she didn’t talk a lot, maybe she was a little shy, though but when I started to talk I found she was friendly.
We started to talk because both of us enjoy mathematics and the competition that was like a friendship competition. Neither of us was very good in sports.
She’s a very talented person, she draw and paint on an amazing way. She’s the person I most trust.
Both of us get along but she moved away one year ago to Mexicali and came back only on vacations but we still in contact through Facebook, text messages, Messenger and skype.