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Few days later, I`ll graduate Younghoon Elementary school. I have to go middle school. So before when I go middle school, I think I have to check my level that i can go to middle school and that i can study in Middle school. Now my feeling is… Sad, happy, afraid, scary, nervous… because I`ll meet new friends and I can`t study in younghoon Elementary school, but in life i`ll graduate many time also we are meeting many people and divorce many people. So I think this is the part of living in Earth!
First day in 6-4, my best friend in 5grade they all went to 6-1and6-2. My 5grade teacher divide like this, so i asked him. He said to me, “I have think, don`t worry. See you have many friend”That`s right but first almost I don`t know the friends… I know many boys but girls….half is new friend like i don`t know name and they don`t know my name… But i know their name all. Except Ji you… Because I saw Jiyou first in Younghoon. I thought I`m really hard to friend with Ji you.
In Japan. I think this is my first going to Japan. Now Japaness money is really expensive. whatever I got many friend in Japan. I start to know about Ji you and Mi jeong. Jin woo, Se hyen, Min Jeung is my 4th grade friend. Opportunity to make many friend.
I think my level is low but I think I`m low level to going middle school… But I`ll go middle school and i`ll study hard and i want meet my friends in High school!!
I think I can`t forget my friend in younghoon.
Turkey tries to be a bridge between West and East. The portion of Turkey’s land in Europe may be small (about 5 percent), but the country’s largest city, Istanbul, is there. With nearly 13 million people, Istanbul is the third most populous European urban area, after Moscow and Paris.
The Turkey wants to be a Eroupe, so some site says the Turkey is Eroupe.But however the Turkey is contain in middle east.!
Area: Approx 780,000 sq km (300,000 sq miles)
Population: 71.9m (July 2008 est)
Capital city: Ankara
People: Majority Turks. Minorities recognised under the Turkish Constitution: Jews, Armenians and Greeks. Other ethnic peoples include Kurds, Circassians and Bosnians.
Language: Turkish (official), Kurdish
Religion: Muslim
Currency: New Turkish Lira (YTL)
Major political parties: AKP (Justice and Development Party), CHP (Republican People’s Party), MHP (Nationalist Action Party), DTP (Democratic Society Party), DSP (Democratic Left Party), BBP (Great Union Party), ODP (Freedom and Solidarity Party) and DP (Democrat Party).
Government: Parliamentary republic
Head of State: President Abdullah Gul
Prime Minister: Recep Tayyip Erdogan (AKP)
Foreign Minister: Ali Babacan (AKP)
Membership of international groupings/organisations: UN, NATO, the Council of Europe, the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), an Associate Member of the Western European Union, and a candidate for accession to the European Union (negotiations started on 3 October 2005).
http://www.fco.gov.uk/en/about-the-fco/country-profiles/europe/turkey
Location: South eastern Europe and south western Asia, bordering the Black Sea, between Bulgaria and Georgia, and bordering the Aegean Sea and the Mediterranean Sea, between Greece and Syria
Geographic coordinates: 39 00 N, 35 00 E
Area: total: 780,580 sq km, land: 770,760 sq km, water: 9,820 sq km
Land boundaries: total: 2,627km, border countries: Armenia 268km, Azerbaijan 9km, Bulgaria 240km, Georgia 252km, Greece 206km, Iran 499km, Iraq 331km, Syria 822km
Coastline: 8,333km
Climate: temperate; hot, dry summers with mild, wet winters; harsher in interior
Terrain: mostly mountains; narrow coastal plain; high central plateau (Anatolia)
Elevation extremes: lowest point: Mediterranean Sea 0 m, highest point: Mount Ararat 5,166m
Natural resources: antimony, coal, chromium, mercury, copper, borate, sulphur, iron ore
Land use: arable land: 32%, permanent crops: 4%, permanent pastures: 16%, forests and woodland: 26%, other: 22% (1993 est.)
Irrigated land: 36,740 sq km
Natural hazards: severe earthquakes, especially in northern Turkey.
GDP:US$378.4 billion in 2006 (US$361.5 billion in 2005)
GDP per head: US$5,202 in 2006 (US$ 5,016 in 2005)
Annual Growth: 7.4% in 2005 (8.9% in 2004)
Inflation: Year-on-year CPI as of March 2006: 8.16%
Major Industries: Automotive, textiles, iron & steel, clothing, electrical machinery
Major trading partners: Germany, Italy, France, UK
Exchange rate: 2.38 New Turkish Lira – 1 Pound Sterling (as of 7 October 2008)
Even if you’ve never taken much interest in the founder of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk’s monumental mausoleum, the Anıt Kabir, is well worth a look to try and grasp just how much sway the man held over his adoring republic.
Further out of town in Gölbaşı, Aquapark Club Watercity has a range of outdoor, indoor and children’s pools, sports facilities, water slides and restaurants. Dolmuşes run here from Opera Meydanı.
Down south in Çankaya is the Atakule, Ankara’s landmark tower, with a revolving restaurant on top for 360° views of the city; making a reservation exempts you from the admission fee. A glass lift – not for the faint-hearted – whisks you to the top. There is also a cinema here. Get here from Ulus or Kızılay on any Çankaya-bound bus.
The Botanik Parkı, which spills into a valley beneath the Atakule in Çankaya, is an oasis in the city.
South of Ulus, the Ethnography Museum is a real treasure. It’s housed inside a white marble post-Ottoman building (1925) which once served as Atatürk’s offices (hence the equestrian statue out the front). Around the walls are photographs of Atatürk’s funeral, which illustrate a level of genuine national mourning seldom seen in Western cultures.
Walk south from Ulus Meydanı along Atatürk Bulvarı and you’ll soon reach the entrance to Gençlik Parkı, where Atatürk had a swamp converted into an artificial lake. The Luna Park funfair provides amusement for children and several pleasant çay bahçesi (tea gardens); single women should go for those with the word aile (family) in their name.
Ankara’s most revered mosque is Hacı Bayram Camii, near the Temple of Augustus & Rome. Hacı Bayram Veli was a Muslim ’saint’ who founded the Bayramiye dervish order around 1400. Ankara was the order’s centre and Hacı Bayram Veli is still revered by pious Muslims. The mosque precincts are ringed with shops selling religious paraphernalia (including wooden toothbrushes as used, supposedly, by the Prophet Mohammed).
The outline of the huge Kocatepe Camii in Kızılay is now the symbol of Ankara. It may be one of the largest mosques in the world but it is also very new. However, Ankara does still have one or two older mosques, and the relics in the Ethnography Museums are poignant reminders of others that have long since disappeared.
One of the oases in an often wearing city is Kuğulu Parkı, at the southern end of Tunalı Hilmi Caddesi.
Still proudly displaying its 1997 Best European Museum award, Ankara’s superb Museum of Anatolian Civilisations is the perfect introduction to the complex weave of Turkey’s chequered ancient past, housing artefacts cherrypicked from just about every significant archaeological site in Anatolia.
The Museum of The War of Independence is where the republican grand national assembly held its early sessions. Before it was Turkey’s first parliament, the building was the Ankara headquarters of the Committee of Union & Progress, the party of ‘Young Turks’ that overthrew Sultan Abdül Hamit II in 1909 and attempted to bring democracy to the Ottoman Empire. Today you’ll see photographs, documents and a throng of soldiers, here to learn about the campaigns.
The Open-Air Steam Locomotive Museum is a collection of slowly rusting vintage engines on the southwestern side of the station. To find it, descend the underpass as though you were going to the train platforms, but keep walking straight on. Just before entering the Tandoğan Kapalı Çarşı shopping area, climb the steps to your left, then turn right and continue for around 800m.
The Painting & Sculpture Museum occupies an equally elaborate building and showcases mainly modern and contemporary Turkish works.
In the old Çengelhan the new Rahmi M Koç Industrial Museum is perfect for kids (and adults) who prefer a hands-on approach to staring at a bunch of pots behind glass, and has slightly less emphasis on transport than its original branch in İstanbul .
Walk straight ahead once you’ve entered the gate and you’ll see, on your left, the citadel mosque, the Alaettin Camii, which dates from the 12th century but has been extensively rebuilt.
While waiting for a train at Ankara station you may want to take a look at the Railway Museum & Art Gallery, a small building on platform one that served as Atatürk’s residence during the War of Independence. Right beside it is Atatürk’s private rail coach, a gift from one Adolf Hitler.
The Republic Museum was the second headquarters of the grand national assembly, and its early history appears in photographs and documents. The captions are in Turkish but you don’t need to read anything to get a sense of the republic’s modest beginnings. The assembly itself is now housed in a rather more imposing building in Bakanlıklar.
Right on Cankırı Caddesi you’ll discover the sprawling ruins of the 3rd-century Roman Baths, about 500m north of Ulus Meydanı. The layout of the baths and the system for heating them are clearly visible; look for the standard Roman facilities: an apoditerium (dressing room), frigidarium (cold room), tepidarium (warm room) and caldarium (hot room). Remains dating back to Phrygian times (8th to 6th centuries BC) have been found beneath the baths.
If you’re staying in Opera Meydanı and your bathroom isn’t up to much, never fear because there are several hamams (bathhouses) in the streets immediately east of the square. The best is Şengül Merkez
video-frorjlkdjlfj video-frorjlkdjlfj1 when you click the blue one you can see video of in space.
space work
Astronauts are going space. In space their work is all different! Because they have different mission to slove. Now they can stay for

On 1961, Yuri Gagarin is the first person in space. He is Russian and his job was polot and astronaut. He just ride 1hour 48minutes but he is first people in space!! On 1957 Laika was the first dog in space.
ning: Astronauts are must be clean, too. So they has thier own toothbrush, toothpaste, combs, brushes, and shavers. So it help to keep in a Personal Hygiene Kit. Thyd don`t have sink so astronauts have to spit into a washcloth.They use special soap and special shampoo!HE IS THE MEN WHO WENT TO SPACE FIRST. HE JUST RIDE 1 HOUR 48 MINUTES, BUT HE IS THE HISTORY OF SPACE PERSON. IT`S SO SAD BUT HE DIED AT JUST 34. I WAS REALLY SURPRISE. HE WAS PILOT ALSO ASTRONAUT.
HE IS THE MEDICAL DOCTOR HE HAS A 6 MISSION AND HE RIDE 53DAYS 9HOUR 55MINUTES.
MY Pencilcase reflection!This picture is my pecil case and I made it so this pecil case has my one`s true heart. Also my mind is on this pencil case. Fisrt I have do drew a blueprint.It was very hard to do my self and how did I make it, I want to do it with acryloyl but my mom said it is so hard to cut and there is no gluegun so i have to changed and i had a motive P2 case. I don`t know how to make it so my mom helped me.
I thougt really many and I choosed Golpanji, and i drew on Golpanji that what i drew on blueprint.BUt something got error, that the size doesn`t fit so I think it more and more so i bought some paper it feels towel, i stock it but i use a lot of bond so the smell is little bit shock!! I really do it well…… But now i like my pencil case. I love my pencil case!! Oh inside of color is white, but the smell.ㅜ.ㅠ…
Now my trademark is kind of elephant and it has sticker. The sticker means like a heart of that.