Believe or not this story happened to a friend of my father
sábado, 31 de agosto de 2013
Believe or not this story happened to a friend of my father
Believe or not this story happened to a friend of my father
I was reading some urban legends and i think they are just stories, strange and scary, some very scary stories, that were told to warn people. Because while i was reading, something came to my mind.
when
i was a kid my family and i used to go to the countryside. I remember there was, or i imagine it´s still there, a big lemongrass tree. My family and neighbors used to tell us that at nights on the tree there was a "man with no head", just because they didn´t want us to get away from the house in those nights without electricity cause it was so dark.
And this is funny cause we didn´t pay attention to that and we took it as a game: we used to go there together, very close to each other, and almost getting to the tree somebody screamed and then all of us ran screaming too. That was scary but funny at the same time.
So, i think that if some of urban legends were true, people changed or added something to created warnings, so that we are careful.
Last week in the class we were talking about baseball, and to be honest i do not like and know anything about baseball. I just know the names of the dominican teams: like Licey, Aguilas, Escogidos, ect.
So, to talk about baseball i decided to looked for some information on the internet.
I found that this game is played between two teams of nine players. In the field there are four bases: first, second, third and home plate. So, to score a point the batting, or the player who is batting, hits the ball, which is thrown by the pitcher, and by running advances around the bases and returns to home plate. If the batting has three strikes he is out or struck out.
The beginning of American Baseball and Japanese Baseball
Alexander Cartwright
Ramirez was allegedly among a group of 104 major league players who tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs during 2003.[1] In 2009 he was suspended 50 games for violating baseball's drug policy by taking human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), a women's fertility drug.[2] According to steroid dealer Victor Conte, hCG is often used to restart natural testosterone production after a steroid cycle.[3]
In the spring of 2011, Ramirez was informed by MLB of another violation to its drug policy. He chose to retire on April 8 rather than face a 100-game suspension.[
FROM: wikipedia
good afternoon.
I'm gonna start saying that i'm a storyteller.
my grand mother used to tell me all kinds of weird and incoherent stories,and all these horror stories, where there was never
a happy ending,where ghosts appear, men without heads, etc.. and I now do the same with my small nephews.And I must say that storytelling is fun ,and more when there are horror stories, it has a point of staying with the mind of a person for a few minutes , and the faces are changing and that expression motivates a little bit, and more when they are child. jeje.
The Legend:
A couple checks into a hotel and have to put up with a foul odor in their room all night. They call the staff to complain and somebody figures out the stench is coming from the bed.
Now, there's no way that scenario is going to have a good ending. You're almost hoping at that point that it'll turn out the last guest just got drunk and pooped behind the headboard. But, no, the staff take off the matress and discover the couple has been sleeping over the rotting body of a dead girl who had been stuffed in the box spring.
Read more: http://www.cracked.com/article_15628_the-5-creepiest-urban-legends-that-happen-to-be-true.html#ixzz2dZQzOsPv
viernes, 30 de agosto de 2013
Can we lernd about urban legends?
Here, in Dominican Republic we have a lot of urban legends, for example, "Maria la O".
It tells us that Maria Was a girl who lived near the river, she was a mocking liar and she didn't care what her moder said. Everybody said that she was a bad girl, she didn't belive in God.
It tells us that one holly fryday she went to the river and started swiming and then she became in a half fish, and everybody said that it was a punishment for disobey her mother and for making fun of Gad, then she started to cry so much until to converted the river in the occean.
Fathers tell taht story to teach kids obedience, they say that if they disobey they will run into problems and recieve a big punishment from Gad.
And then, I think that we can use some urban legends to teach good things and learn about life.
jueves, 29 de agosto de 2013
miércoles, 28 de agosto de 2013
Winter baseball; a real war in Dominican Republic
It starts in the regular series, where they play 160 games, and the best four of that part continue then to the ROUND ROBIN which is an exciting part of the series, in my opinion is better than the final series because it means a competition to get the best two teams. The most explosive game is when LICEY and AGUILAS face to give the audition a great exhibition of how to play basseball.
After one of thoose win the final series which is the best of seven then becomes the national champion.
That is the best baseball of las americas. Thats why we are the worl champions.
lunes, 26 de agosto de 2013
Dominican Republic’s ‘Desperate’ Baseball Culture Fuels Steroid Use, Experts SayBy Bryan LlenasFox News Latino
For boys in the Dominican Republic, it’s about becoming a major league ballplayer – at all costs.In a country where 40 percent of the nation lives at or below the poverty rate, Dominicans who are 12 to 14 years old regularly quit school to begin baseball training in private academies in the hopes of saving their families from a lifetime of poverty. For these boys, it’s baseball or failure.For Major League Baseball, like in any business, it’s about the bottom line, mainly, how to find the next franchise player at the lowest cost possible.
But the combination of both priorities mix together like a toxic concoction, in the form of steroid-filled syringes, made easily available to thousands of teenage Dominicans dreaming of lifting their families out of poverty with a swing of the bat.
The recent suspension of 13 players, 9 of whom are Dominican, by Major League Baseball in the Biogenesis scandal highlights how the growing problem in the country has affected the sport – and many are questioning whether baseball is doing enough to fight the steroid culture in the Dominican Republic, a country the majors has grown more and more reliant on for top talent."If they see that baseball is not the only way out - you’ll see a dramatic drop in use of steroids because the win at all cost mentality will disappear."
- Charles S. Farrell, Co-founder of the Dominican Republic Sports and Education AcademyAs it has each year since MLB began releasing data in 1995, the D.R. led all foreign countries with the most players in the majors in 2013 with 89 players on opening day rosters (out of 856) – the fourth most the nation has ever produced. But, at the same time, the country has a disproportionate number of players who have violated the leagues performance-enhancing drug policy. According to the MLB, thus far in 2013, 15 of the 44 players suspended for steroids in the minor leagues are Dominican and, in 2012, 31 minor league Dominicans were suspended out of 105 total suspensions.
The problem, say experts like David Fidler, co-author of “Stealing Lives: The Globalization of Baseball and the Tragic Story of Alexis Quiroz,” is Major League Baseball’s knack for being reactionary, suspending players, instead of proactive in choosing not to attack the root of the PED problem, like the drug dealers themselves.The players implicated in the Biogenesis scandal, including Alex Rodriguez, Nelson Cruz, and Jhonny Peralta, were only caught because MLB cut deals with the drug dealers themselves, who in this case, exchanged valuable information on their customers for immunity.
In the Dominican Republic, many of these dealers, who Fidler calls part of the root of the problem, are referred to as buscones – individuals who train players and then get a cut of their signing bonus, reportedly 10 to 40 percent, when they sign on to an MLB team.
“
That time when I learned about Dominican baseball with a Japanese guy
Written by: Ruth Indhira López Capellán
ID: CG-2624
domingo, 25 de agosto de 2013
Baseball as a hobby in D.R.
In our country baseball is the national sport. People, specially men like to watch it on t.v. but it's more exciting to see it in the field. It is practice by a lot of people: children, young people and adults. Some companies organize teams for their employees. It doesn't matter if they are not professional players, they enjoy to playing a friendly sport that helps them to feel out of routine. Those people play on holidays and weekends, and after games they're used to have a metting to celebrate and to talk about games, jokes, experiences, cars, etc. while they are drinking some beers or rhum. Sometimes this game is not the best for some wives that usually don't go to the game, but I consider that it's a good hobby for people that couldn´t be a professional player.
Carmen Delgado
CB-0657
viernes, 23 de agosto de 2013
- Hiroyuki Nakajima: from Oakland.
- Kyuji Fujikawa: from Chicago cubs.
- Hisashi Iwakama: from Seattle Mariners.
- Tsuyoshi Wada: form Orioles of Baltimore.
- Junis Tazawa: from the Red Sox.
- Yu Darvish: from Texas Rangers.
- Norichika Aoki: from Milwaukee.
- Ichiro Suzuki: From New York Yankees.
As a result of baseball, Japan and the United State have kept a good relation between them.
This sport has stopped conflict between those big and powerful countries. Nowaday there are a lot of japan's players in the United State and there are as many North americans' players as in Japan trained and recruiting new talent from Japan.
Hector D. Feliz Montero.
DC2869.