July 6, 2010

"Teen Shot During 4th Festivities Dies"

"A 16-year-old that was shot in the Mantua section of the city on the Fourth of July died Monday night from his injuries.
Kyle Featherspoon was walking with his brother and a friend when he was shot in the chest and back of the head by a gunman who opened fire on the crowd returning from watching the fireworks display, according to police.
Featherspoon was transported to the University of Pennsylvania hospital where he died around 10 p.m. Monday.
Two other teens, both male, were also shot, but are expected to recover.
Police are still searching for the shooter."

 Isn't it a shame? I did not know the person who died but, I know some people who did. He was only 16, the same age as me. I feel so bad because he will not be able to live. He wasn't even through half of his life and someone cut it short. I know a few more details about it but, I won't reveal them. It's so unfortunate how many of our lives are cut like this. I am not even surprised anymore. It's getting worse and it will continue to do so. Lastly, I'd like to express my sympathy and sorrow to the family.

May 1, 2010

"Police Break Up Large Crowd Near Temple"

Several people were arrested as police broke up a large crowd near the campus of Temple University.
Hundreds of teens and even adolescents took to the corner of Broad Street and Cecil B. Moore Avenue around 9:30 a.m. Friday, according to police.
Philadelphia Police believe many of the teens were attending movies at The Pearl Theatre at Avenue North and the crowd amassed outside after they ended.
Groups of teens played cat and mouse with officers as they darted through traffic and moved from corner to corner.
The crowd ran as police swarmed the area with batons drawn. A police tactical helicopter shone a spotlight on the teens as they retreated into the surrounding neighborhood.
Officers followed the teens north and west and onto sidestreets to ensure the crowd was fully dispersed.
Chopper 10 caught several teens being searched and then arrested during the chaos. There were no reports of injuries.
The large crowd comes on the heels of a crackdown on teen flash mobs organized over social networking sites. Police did confirm that Friday's crowd was a flash mob.
Come on guys. Whats wrong with today's generation. Although I am in deed a part of this generation, I am not particularly happy with how "we"  conduct ourselves. I am sixteen years old and I am not into any of this...this...this bullshit. There I said it. I am highly dissatisfied with how teens my age carry themselves these days. This is just so disappointing.

April 23, 2010

"We Lost An Angel" Update

Wow...So remember a few days ago I posted that story...Well today is her funeral. My sisters went there, they haven't came back yet. I can imagine how sad that could be. It's a shame how things happen. She was only 1 year old. I do not...I cannot understand how "God" could take someone so young. It's so...unexplainable...I don't know what to say. It's heart wrenching. I am done....Why would "God" do something like that? That is one of the reasons why I'm not into religion.

April 20, 2010

North Penn teachers' strike has parents scrambling


Students in the North Penn School District voiced varied opinions Monday about the teachers' strike that has suspended classes. But one thing they agreed on: Snow days plus strike days equals a threat to vacation days.
"I don't mind the strike as much as some," said Blase Porretti, 16, a sophomore at North Penn High School, in Towamencin Township. "But I mind staying in school until June 30."
Porretti spent Monday skateboarding with friends at White Road Community Park in Lansdale, while other students spent their day off shooting basketballs, sleeping in, or staging their own counterdemonstration.
The strike shut down classes in Montgomery County's largest school district, leaving 12,700 students and their parents to find alternate plans for their days.
Officials representing the school district and the North Penn Education Association (NPEA), the union representing teachers, are tentatively scheduled to return to the bargaining table Tuesday, said union president Alan Malachowski. Talks broke off Sunday.
The walkout can last only through next Tuesday because state law requires students to have 180 school days before June 30. Each missed day adds another to the end of the school calendar.
The union proposed no salary increase in the first year and raises of between 2.50 and 2.85 percent in each of the next four years.
The union recommendation was initially suggested by a three-member panel during nonbinding-arbitration proceedings. While the union accepted it, the school board did not, even though the agreement was recommended by its representative on the arbitration panel.
Instead, the school district proposed a zero percent increase in the first year and a 2 percent salary increase in each of the next four years.
School Board President Vince Sherpinsky argued that the district must pay additional millions to finance salary increases, due to changes in seniority.
When those figures are considered, the district's last offer amounts to an 18.81 percent cumulative pay raise; the union's proposal is 22.74 percent, Sherpinsky said.
The union offered to reduce its proposal by $1.25 million to address the seniority issue, but that, too, was rejected by the school board.
"We realize what's happening with the economy," Malachowski said while picketing at Penndale Middle School in Lansdale. "We've offered to smooth out the increments in the [seniority] steps."
Meanwhile, students and families planned their own strategies.
For nurse Tamyra Reser of Upper Gwynedd Township, the strike meant taking her twins to the park at a time when she would usually be sleeping after three 12-hour weekend shifts.
Reser, 41, sat curbside while her 6-year-old twins, Morgan and Cella, students at Gwynedd Square Elementary School, played at Parkside Place in Upper Gwynedd Township.
"I think people have forgotten that it wasn't too long ago that banks were failing and we were facing this economic devastation," Reser said. "Now things are a little better, and we just want."
Laura Apple, a sixth grader at North Wales Elementary School, said she understood both sides of the issue, even though she didn't want to delay her vacation to make up strike days.
"Teachers should be able to strike if they're not getting paid what they need to protect their families," said Apple, 12.
Parent Stephanie Pyne said she blamed neither the teachers nor the school board.
"I can't point a finger," said Pyne, 44, of Lansdale, who has three children in the district. "But nobody wins: parents, teachers, staff, and, most importantly, the kids."
At Penndale, six students at the school conducted their own demonstration. Yelling "Strike the strike," the students walked the block across the street from their teachers.
"We love our teachers," said Ali Corr, 15, a ninth grader. "But there is not enough money for their contract."
Back at Parkside Place, a weary Reser just wanted it to end.
"We've had a hard winter, lots of snow days, vacation days taken off of spring break," Reser said. "Let's just put this behind us and work together."

I am  a little upset myself. Although I don't go to that school, I feel bad for the people who do. The teachers were not thinking about the students there. So this means the they can't graduate when they are supposed to, they've got to postpone any plans they had intertwining with their graduation, it also means a shorter summer vacation. It's just really to bad for the students. The teachers should of thought of the students before they did this...

"We Lost An Angel"

Three days ago, there was a very tragic event. We lost a child. One year old Lisa-Michelle Smalls fell out of a car and passed. She was a very beautiful little girl. She and here family were in some way friends of the family. Here's the story:


A 2-year-old girl died from her injuries after falling out of a moving car in West Philadelphia Friday.
Investigators say the tragic incident happened about 10:15 a.m. on the 4000 block of Lancaster Avenue when the toddler, Lisa Michelle Smalls, opened the rear door of the car while her mother was driving.
The little girl was rushed to Children’s Hospital in critical condition. But on Saturday, family members of Lisa Michelle made the decision to take her off life support and donate her organs.
“I’m gonna miss her a whole lot. Beautiful little girl,” the girl’s cousin Jamie Wong said.


The child’s mother tells NBCPhiladelphia six people were inside of the car, a Ford Escort, at the time of the accident—two adults and four children. She said when she turned from Fairmount Street onto Lancaster Avenue Lisa flew out the car. The girl’s mother said the doors on the Escort were always weak.
“I saw my cousin fly out the car. I don't want this to happen to another little girl. We lost an angel,” Wong said.
Philadelphia police are investigating the car doors for defects but investigators also say Lisa wasn't belted in her car seat.
The family plans to hold a vigil in West Philadelphia on Sunday at 6:30 p.m.
The incident is still under investigation. Charges are pending.

View more news videos at: http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/video.



Rest In Peace little one...Gone But, Not Forgotten.