Fateha M

Welcome! Hi everyone and welcome to my page! 😊  I am Fateha M. and I love to write. My favorite subject is Math. I am currently learning Spanish in school and German at home using Duolingo. (i’m not a fluent speaker of german at all). I am very organize with a teensy bit of  OCD. 🤣 My favorite color is mint. On this blog, I share tech backgrounds each month so make sure to stop by at the beginning of the month. 

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it's on MAY 21!!!

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Haala M.

Bienvenue, and welcome to my page! My name is HM, and I absolutely LOVE to read!!! Writing has always been a passion for me, and here, on this blog, I express myself, and write about a wide range of topics from fiction stories, to everyday life. It’s all here. A suggestion, topic, or idea? Submit anything on here and I’ll respond! https://techeducation.org/contacts/

So keep calm and read on!!!

So . . . what do I spend my time on???

Writing 13%
Reading 13%
Piano 20%
Studying 30%
Other 14%
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Latest Blogs

The Monster Under My Bed

No one believes me. They think I’m lying. But it’s really true, a big hairy monster lives under my bed and I can prove it. Last night, I slowly tip-toed to the light switch and turned the light off. Fortunately the monster didn’t grab me to death yet.

Violence (Malcolm X) vs. Non-Violence (Martin Luther King Jr.)

Did you know that Malcolm X was a minister and an activist? Most of us don’t know that because he protested with violence. Martin Luther King Jr., also known as MLK Jr., was also a minister and an activist, and is famous because of his nonviolent protests. MLK Jr. and Malcolm X did the same thing but had different ways to do it. And that’s what set forth the difference between these two men. Malcolm X was a person who valued and accepted other differences, acknowledged and fought racism, and appreciated non-violence and equality, just like Dr. King.

ALLISON PART 1

He watched as she fell down from the chair and hit her head on the refrigerator door. She tried again and again, but her efforts were all in vain. No matter what she did, she could not reach and get Annabelle from the top of the refrigerator. Liam would watch Allie fall and laugh at her, over and over again. All of a sudden as Allison got really close to Belle, she fell down onto the floor with a loud crash.

BE smart from the start

The D in Dare stands for Define in which you define your problem. The A in Dare stands for Assess. In this you list all your choices of what you can do to settle this problem. The R in Dare stands for Respond in which pick a choice from the choices you listed in assess. The E in Dare stands for Evaluate and in this you pick if your choice is reasonable.

How the Movie Tangled is a Good Personal Narrative

It shows how her feelings change after meeting the young man. The movie also shows how the young princess started to become more caring, compared to the hard-headed teenager she used to be, after meeting Flynn. It also shows how Rapunzel started to learn about love, and how she became more affectionate than ever before. The movie also shows how the young girl started to understand her life in the tower, and how she figured out why she was there. The movie also shows how Rapunzel understood that Mother Gothel wasn’t her real mother. It shows the way Gothel acted when trying to dismiss the subject of being able to explore the outside world.

Bernard Mannes Baruch

In 1916, Baruch was appointed to the Advisory Commision of the Council of National Defense by President Woodrow Wilson. During World War I he became chairman of the War Industries Bond, or WIB. He was also designated to the major civilian agency for industrial mobilization by President Wilson. Bernard Baruch was also at the center of the government’s mobilization because of the WIB and the President’s War Council. In 1919, he was a representative in the Supreme Economic Council at the Versailles Peace Conference. He was also the personal advisor on the terms of peace to President Woodrow Wilson. Baruch urged a new WIB during World War II, but President Roosevelt ignored his advice because of concern for his own power. President Truman asked Bernard Baruch to formulate a postwar international policy for atomic energy in 1946. The Baruch Plan proposed that America’s atomic secrets and production of atomic bombs be safeguarded and kept a secret, “until an international agency, over which the USSR would not have a veto, established full control of manufacturing plants anywhere in the world.” (encylopedia.com). It was rejected by the Soviet Union. In fear of inflation, Baruch unsuccessfully tried to get the Truman administration to force wage and price controls, during the Korean War. However, by then, Baruch had lost his great influence.