My Traveling Mom
My Mom is Chicago this week for work.
Chicago is a big city in Illinois.
It is called the “Windy City” and has the 3rd largest population in America.
But it is still not the state’s capital – Springfield is.
My Mom will be home tomorrow.
Book Report – Who Cloned The President?
Today I finished reading this book.
In this book there was some bad people who kidnapped the President and cloned him.
Nobody knew that this happened except for KC and Marshall.
They found out because they saw the fake President on TV writing with his right hand when he was supposed be a lefty.
So they got in to the White House on a tour and hid under Lincoln’s bed.
Then at night they searched everywhere and found the real President tied up in the basement.
So they freed him and the bad guys got caught.
Ron Roy also wrote the A to Z Mysteries books.
Book Report – Squanto
That’s a book I read this week.
It is a true story about an Indian boy named Squanto.
He lived in America and then he went to London with the white men.
He learned English there and stayed for many years.
Squanto wanted to go home and boarded Captain John Smith’s ship.
A bad man named Captain Hunt kidnapped him and tried to sell him as a slave.
But some good men freed him and he got back to his home in America.
My Project
That was the Italy project that my sister and I made.
We made it for our geography fair in our homeschooling group.
Everybody got to choose a different country. Some examples were: China, India, Japan, Spain, Romania, Easter Island, Galapagos Islands, Antarctica, and USA.
We made passports, visited each country, and got stamped.
Also, everyone made some food from their country. We served potato gnocchi in a sausage red sauce.
Ben Franklin
This week I read about Ben Franklin on my audio books. He discovered electricity he seemed pretty cool!
He also built a miniature tower.
Educate your children to self-control, to the habit of holding passion and prejudice and evil tendencies subject to an upright and reasoning will, and you have done much to abolish misery from their future and crimes from society.
Quote by Benjamin Franklin