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Wednesday, September 11, 2019

A True Disaster.

Image result for world burning

Kia Ora Whanau,
For my post this is a picture that describes a word, my word is disaster and this is a true disaster cause the world is burning and that is terrifying and a true disaster looks like this.

AHHHHHH!!!!!! 😩😢😭👎🌋🌎

Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Employee gets promoted for assisting a loyal customer.


Employee gets promoted for assisting a loyal customer.

Local man, Phil Phillips, age 35, breaks his arm fighting over a Television with a savage
customer. Phil Phillips was in queue in front of the warehouse for an hour so he could
get the Black Friday Advantage.   


When the doors opened everybody rushed in, some of the customers said it was like
getting stuck in traffic. Some people rushed for the sale on gas, some for the sale on
wood, but Phil Phillips was determined to get a brand new 55 inch T.V.

Phil Phillips asked a man kindly for his help, out of nowhere the man tried to take the TV for
himself and crashed into the massive queues in front of the cashier, dropping the 36 pounds
onto Phil Phillips’ arm.

Employee, Thomas Crapper, rushed to help Phil Phillips as he was in agonizing pain, people was
surrounding him like a flock of seagulls rushing for food. Phil Phillips is resting at home
recovering. The man who attempted to take the T.V for himself  has been put in community
service for 5 months. Phil Phillips got given the 55 inch T.V for free.

Thomas Crapper got promoted from assistant manager to manager. He replaced the
original manager who got fired for stealing stock.
Image result for manager on duty sign

Wednesday, August 14, 2019

Digestive system report

Digestive system report

Have you ever thought about where the food you eat goes?


The digestive system is made up of the gastrointestinal tract—also called the GI tract or
digestive tract—and the liver, pancreas, and gallbladder. The hollow organs that make up the
GI tract are the mouth, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine, and anus.


Here are 3 points on the digestive system:

1. Digestion Is Important for Your Health

While you know that food is important for sustenance, you may not know that digestion is the
process that turns food into energy and nutrients. Digestion is especially important for nutrition,
energy, and cell repair.

2. Your Stomach Doesn't Play the Biggest Role in Digestion

The stomach begins the digestion process by churning food and breaking it down using digestive
acids. This is referred to as mechanical digestion. Then, the small intestine does most of the
work of digestion using enzymes and absorbing nutrients for the body to use.

3. You Can Eat Upside Down.

Food doesn't need gravity to reach your stomach. When you eat something, the muscles in
your esophagus constrict and relax in a wavelike manner, which is called peristalsis and pushes
food along the esophagus and into the stomach. It's difficult to eat upside down, but it's possible.



These 3 reasons are; Digestion is important for your help, your stomach
doesn’t play the biggest role in digestion, and you can eat upside down.
These reasons are explaining things that you might have never known.

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Maori Hero - Maui Pomare


Maori Hero - Maui Pomare

Where he was born, lived and died
Sir Maui Pomare - full name is Sir Maui Wiremu Pita Naera Pomare, (born January 13, 1876, Pahou Pa, New Zealand - died in June 27, 1930, Los Angeles, California, U.S.). Sir Maui Pomare was a Maori statesman and physician whose public health work helped revive New Zealand’s Maori population, which had declined nearly to extinction by the late 19th century.

Where he went to school and education
Maui attended primary schools at Waitara and the Chathams, St Stephen's Native Boys' School, and the Church of England Grammar School in Parnell, Auckland. Because his parents were followers of Te Whiti he also sometimes lived at Parihaka, and was present when the Armed Constabulary invaded the settlement in 1881.

What he was famous for and what he did
As a member of Parliament from 1911 to 1930 and minister for the Maori race (1912–28), Pomare helped form two royal commissions that allowed the Taranaki Maori to buy back their ancestral lands, and compensated tribes that had lost land in the Waitara district. His term as Minister of Health (1923–26) under William F. Massey was noted for the reorganisation of New Zealand’s mental hospitals. 
As minister for the Cook Islands (1916–28), Pomare helped to improve the islands’ educational and legal systems and fought monopoly trading interests. 
After his health declined in 1928, he collaborated with James Cowan in writing The Legends of the Maori.
He was knighted in 1922.