What if someday, a horde of asteroids rained down on Earth. The whole world died, but Taiwan was spared luckily. Everyone else disappeared of the face of Earth. There were a few hundred people left on Earth, but they fought for food and resources so in the end only the strongest of the people survived. Five people were left and they decided to travel to other countries. Maybe it was coincident, but there were only five continents that they could live on. So the men had one continent for each person. The people built automatic robots to hunt and farm for them, each person had to trade to each other to survive, because there were things they could not grow or hunt. They were too busy to fly all the way over because they had to manage the robots in case the robots went haywire. So they sent planes with set destinations. The people managed survive for a 26 years, but then the robots did went haywire and killed them all.
Thursday, January 22
Wednesday, January 14
FA Cup win for holders Pompey
England striker Peter Crouch scored the first goal of the match at Ashton Gate, the Robins' home ground.
And Niko Kranjcar added the second with two minutes left, making the final score 2-0 to Pompey.
Meanwhile, Premier League bottom club, West Brom, also made it through to the fourth round, beating Peterborough 2-0.
Afterwards boss Tony Mowbray said: "Maybe Jay Simpson's quality and ability to score goals like he did tonight will help us in the Premier League.
"We saw at The Hawthorns how well Peterborough can play but I don't think they reached those heights tonight," he added.
Posted by Patrick at 3:20 AM 0 comments
Labels: Humanities
Free footie campaign gathers pace
As more and more people are being careful with their cash, clubs across the UK are noticing lots of empty seats in their grounds on match days.
A politician in Scotland want to tackle the problem by giving thousands of kids free entry to matches.
And Scotland's sports minister is backing the plan.MSP Frank McAveety has been campaigning for the idea to be brought in since December.
He thinks it would be a good way to attract new fans at little cost to the clubs.
The idea's already got the support of some Scottish clubs and players.
Former Scotland star and Hearts' captain Gary Mackay agrees that it would be a good way of getting kids involved in sport early on.
"Supporters are the lifeblood of the game and the earlier youngsters get involved the quicker they get the bug and become lifelong supporters," he said.
Posted by Patrick at 3:18 AM 0 comments
Labels: Humanities