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Julia Barenboim - My Blog
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AMBER Alert


Recently a girl near where I live went missing. Until then I had never heard of AMBER Alerts. This program was created 12 years ago in Texas when Amber Hagerman went missing. A neighbor heard her scream and notified the police but there was no way to quickly distribute the information.  While Amber was found dead a few days later, the result of this incident is lasting. 

Now when ever a case of a missing child meets the criteria and
has enough information for an AMBER Alert to be helpful, the information is sent out through the AMBER portal. This sends the updates to registered cell phones, emails, faxes, bill boards and many other places. It often gets broadcasted on TV, the radio and put in both local and national papers. 

According to the AMBER Alert website the criteria recommended by the U.S. Department of Justice is: 
  • a reasonable belief by law enforcement the an abduction has occurred
  • the child abducted was 17 or under
  • the law enforcement agency believes that the child is in danger of bodily injury or death
  • there is a descriptive enough description about the victim and the abduction for law enforcement to believe that the public will be able to assist in the recovery of the child            
Currently there are two active alerts out. One for Treshaun Williams a 1 year old from Alabama and one for Brooke Bennett a 12 year old from Vermont. It is really sad that these people are gone in the first place but with the AMBER Alert out there is a much bigger chance that they will be found. The alert system has helped over 200 children be found and is giving hope to many more. 

Do you know someone who has gone missing? Did something like this help? 
What are your thoughts on alert systems like this? Do you think they work well? How could they be improved? 

Picture found on CBSnews.com

June 29, 2008 | 12:06 PM Comentarios  0 comentarios



____day Story Ideas: Robots.

Here on the East Coast it's Saturday, and the day's just turned in the Midwest too, but all you Mountain/Western girls are officially getting your story ideas on Friday, just as I intended.



And why, you ask, did I just get home an hour ago? I was seeing Wall-E, arguably the most adorable movie ever. So when I returned home and started to consider what the story idea should be, my somewhat tired mind jumped quickly to the subject of robots. To get you started, I thought I'd share an excerpt of The Girl Who Couldn't Be Helped, by Joe Wakeman.

We built them with ourselves in mind

To fill our lives with ease

Workers who can work for days

Who you never have to please


So tell me...what do you think of robots? Are they too smart and probably already beginning to plot our destruction? What are some cool things that robots are used for, and what do you think they could be used for in the future? Do any of you take robotics classes? This also could be a great prompt for some really fun fiction.



As always, comment away and send any content to gweb@newmoongirlmedia.com!

June 28, 2008 | 12:06 PM Comentarios  0 comentarios

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New Airport Scanners


Relaxing in the library last month, I was perusing the magazine selection when the current New Yorker cover caught my eye. I pulled it out of the rack, smoothed out the wrinkles and saw a man walking through an airport security arch, his clothing and shoes and bag in a bin on the conveyor belt. I raised my eyebrows and shoved it back into the magazine rack.
Then, yesterday, wandering through the internet, I came across an article "New 'clothes removing' airport scanners." The first thing i remembered was that New Yorker cover. I have included both an image of the cover and the link to the article for your education and the benefit of thought. What do you think about this? Is it a total invasion or privacy or our government just trying to keep us safe? Or just one elaborate hoax?

June 26, 2008 | 1:06 AM Comentarios  0 comentarios

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Looking for Alaska

Looking for Alaska: A Review

Looking for Alaska, written by John Green, is 221 pages long. The story takes place at a boarding school called Culver Creek in Alabama, although Culver Creek is actually a pen name for a real boarding school in the state known as Indian Springs, where John Green went.

The main character in the story is Miles Halter, a small, skinny, and relatively unpopular boy who is obsessed with last words. He has just decided to enroll at Culver Creek to seek the “Great Perhaps,” which involves the last words of Francois Rebelais. Alaska Young, clever, mischievous, and notoriously attractive, ends up becoming Miles’ friend, although she has some unknown, disturbing quality. Miles’ roommate, The Colonel, as he is known, is infamous for pulling pranks.
From the very beginning of the book, it is evident that Miles feels awkward at his current school and is overall unremarkable. His mother throws him a going-away party for boarding school, but only one of his classmates, and her boyfriend, attend for a short while. Miles’ father also went to Culver Creek, and he warns Miles to stay out of trouble, although his advice is… not exactly taken.

During Miles’ first night at Culver Creek, the Wednesday Warriors (the non-boarding rich kids) duct tape his hands, feet, and mouth and throw him into the school lake, where a swan eager to attack resides. After barely managing to make his way out of the lake alive, Miles returns soaked and shivering to his room, where the Colonel is waiting. The Colonel explains that there has been a long-time feud between the “scholarship kids” and the Wednesday Warriors, and Miles and he become good friends as they begin to create a prank to get back at the Warriors.

They end up setting off a series of fireworks and replacing one of the Weekday Warrior’s shampoos… while Alaska completes the most conniving and cunning prank. To avoid getting caught, they spend some time at the Colonel’s house. One of the most important “rules” among the group is taking the blame for each other and backing each other up.

The climax of the book is when Alaska, abstruse as ever, wakes up after getting drunk and sleeping most of the night. She is crying hysterically, and keeps murmuring that she forgot something, sparked by a drawing of a flower. The Colonel and Miles, both suffering from hangovers themselves, and familiar with Alaska’s unpredictability, do not stop her as she leaves, behind the wheel, to go to some unknown place.

The Colonel and Miles later realize that she was going to put flowers on her mother’s grave, which she had forgotten to do a few days earlier on the anniversary of her mother’s death. When Alaska was little, her mom had an aneurysm, but she was so frightened she didn’t call 911, and her dad was not there. This always haunted her, and was probably why she was so upset she forgot about her mother’s death anniversary.

On the way to her mother’s grave, something happens to Alaska that changes Miles and the Colonel forever. The last few paragraphs of the book include Miles’ essay at the culmination of the school year. There he addresses Simon Bolivar’s last words (Alaska’s personal favorite) “How will I ever get out of this labyrinth!” As Alaska says, “That’s the mystery, isn’t it? Is the labyrinth living or dying? Which is he trying to escape—the world or the end of it?”
And Miles responds in his essay “Before I got here, I thought for a long time that the way out of the labyrinth was to pretend that it did not exist, to build a small, self-sufficient world in a back corner of the endless maze and pretend that I was not lost, but home.” But ultimately, Miles realizes, there is no beginning or end to the labyrinth. “If you take Alaska’s genetic code and you add her life experiences and her relationships with people, and then you take the size and shape of her body, you do not get her. There is something else entirely. There is a part of her greater than the sum of her knowable parts.” Alaska had changed him forever.

The title of the book, Looking for Alaska, was significant because Miles and The Colonel never really understood Alaska, and yet she changed them in permanent and life-altering ways. They continued to look for Alaska in themselves and the way she affected the world around her.
Looking for Alaska is one of my favorite books because it offers a new perspective on the things which are inevitably a part of life: friendships and grief and forgiveness. John Green crafts a mesmerizing story which dares to ask the questions we are so often afraid to confront.

How would you respond to the quote “How will I ever get out of this labyrinth!” Do you agree with Alaska or Miles, or do you have a completely different opinion?

For those of you who have read the book, what did you think of it? What do you think really happened to Alaska?

June 24, 2008 | 7:06 AM Comentarios  0 comentarios



To See or Not to See -- how important are photos online?

I was just reading an article from this article list* about research that showed that photos on websites, and social-networking sites in particular, increased the chance that people would log into the site and continue to return there.

This didn't really come as a surprise to me -- I don't know about you, but when I open a website that's nothing but screen after screen after screen of text, my eyes sort of glaze over (and I love to read!). Does the same thing ever happen to you? And if you do like to see images with the text you read, what kinds of images do you like? Photos of real people (i.e.: the people who wrote the piece), clip-art, paintings, logos?

On September 1st (it's just around the corner!) New Moon Girl Media will launch New Moon Girls Online, which will be an online experience for girls ages 8 - 12. Girls using the site will be able to choose Luna Tics as their avatars.
We're not sure whether girls will be uploading real photos of themselves to New Moon Girls online or orb28, though. On the one hand, I think it's awesome for girls -- and the world! -- to see lots of different kinds of real girls. We're all here and we're all beautiful. But on the other hand, lots of social networking sites that allow users to upload photos end up feeling a little bit like a beauty contest -- and sometimes images people post for fun come back to haunt them later.

What do you think about girls uploading photos of themselves online? Should sites like MySpace or Facebook put less emphasis on photos? Do you prefer to use (or see!) generic avatars, like LiveJournal and other blogging sites allow you to use? (i.e.: a picture from a movie, a piece of artwork, or something else you feel expresses yourself). Do you think it's unsafe for girls to post photos of themselves online? I can't wait to hear your thoughts!

* Warning: this webpage is one of those pages that has lots of text and no pictures!

June 23, 2008 | 4:06 AM Comentarios  0 comentarios

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