martes, 22 de julio de 2008

Inferred information










Inferred information






Infering means to take what you know and make a guessthe practice of inferring the meaning of an unfamiliar word or expression from the meaning of familiar words occurring with it in a context together with one's knowledge of or beliefs about the world.



Inference is the act or process of deriving a conclusion based solely on what one already knows.Inferences are either valid or invalid, but not both. Philosophical logic has attempted to define the rules of proper inference, i.e. the formal rules that, when correctly applied to true premises, lead to true conclusions. Greek philosophers defined a number of syllogisms, correct three-part inferences, that can be used as building blocks for more complex reasoning. We'll begin with the most famous of them all:



All men are mortal



Socrates is a man



Therefore Socrates is mortal.



The validity of an inference depends on the form of the inference. That is, the word "valid" does not refer to the truth of the premises or the conclusion, but rather to the form of the inference. An inference can be valid even if the parts are false, and can be invalid even if the parts are true. But a valid form with true premises will always have a true conclusion.For example, consider the form of Modus Ponens:

All A are B

C is A

Therefore C is B


For the conclusion to be necessarily true, the premises need to be true.
Now we turn to an invalid form.


All A are B.

C is a B.

Therefore C is an A.

To show that this form is invalid, we demonstrate how it can lead from true premises to a false conclusion.All apples are fruit. (true)

Bananas are fruit. (true)

Therefore bananas are apples. (false)


Incorrect inference


An incorrect inference is known as a fallacy. Philosophers who study informal logic have compiled large lists of them, and cognitive psychologists have documented many biases in human reasoning that favor incorrect reasoning.

There are three types of inference:
Deductive reasoning, finding the effect with the cause and the rule.
Abductive reasoning, finding the cause with the rule and the effect.
Inductive reasoning, finding the rule with the cause and the effect.


An example
Hooke's law is the rule that gives the elongation of a beam (that's an effect) when a force (that's the cause) is acting on a beam.
If the force and Hooke's law are known, the elongation of the beam can be deduced.
If the elongation and Hooke's law are known, the force acting on the beam can be abduced. If the elongation and the force are known, Hooke's law can be induced.

THANK YOU ^^,
Huachin , Cesar

lunes, 21 de julio de 2008

The Infantile Malnutrition

INFANTILE
MALNUTRITION







Malnutricion is one of the most controversial problems in the world therefore, a lot of activists are making foundations where people with this illness can recover .




CAUSES


*This big problem is caused by poverty that is one of the most important reasons because people don’t have enough money to get by so they don’t eat the necessary.
*Also it is caused when there isn’t a vitamin in the diet ,also could be because someone isn’t eating well.
*Another important reason is the depression.
*Also it’s easier to have this problem if someone has another illnes.

CONSEQUENCES


The complications that a child suffers when he/she is fed deficiently not only have effect in the stature and the weight. This owes to that an inadequate diet has negative consequences in the levels of vitamins, proteins and minerals, which leads to the malnutrition, suffering of prevalencia discharge in Mexico. In June, 1999 there obtained information on the nutritional condition(state) of million 300 thousand five-year-old minor children, of which 26.9 per cent presented malnutrition, according to the Program of Reform of the Sector Health.


The malnutrition damages principally the small ones that live in the extreme poverty, since they lack economic necessary resources that allow them to take a good nourishing regime.

Between the consequences of the undernourishment they stand out: incapacities of by life, major propensity to suffer diseases during the rest of its life and minor learning capacity. The causes of this serious phenomenon are multiple and of different nature: social, political, economic and cultural. For example, the diseases, the inadequate feeding, the lack of access to an education of quality and a correct information. In the world 24 million children with weight are born annually about inferior to the normal one (less than 2.5 kg), which represents a 17% of the totality of births. The majority of those children is born in the developing countries and the cause of the low weight when being born is deficient the fetal development.


The work, carried out between 221 boys by experts of the Service of Growth and Development of the Garrahan Hospital and the Service of Put Paediatrics of the Hospital, agrees with other investigations on the maturity delay. All emphasizes the negative impact on the linguistic competitions and the abilities for the resolution of problems, but the difficulties in the socialization and the incorporation of habits.

kennedy¨s assassination

The kill of John F. Kennedy (1917 - 1963), the thirty-fifth President took place on Friday, November 22, 1963, in Dallas, Texas, USA at 12:30 Central Standard Time (18:30 UTC). Kennedy was mortally wounded by gunfire while driving in the car in the presidential Dealey Plaza. It was the fourth U.S. president murdered, and the eighth who could have died in carrying out their duties. Two official investigations concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald, an employee of the store Texas School Book Depository in Dealey Plaza, was the murderer. One concluded that Oswald might have acted alone and another suggested that could have acted at least with someone else. The murder is still subject to speculation, being home to a large number of conspiracy theories.

Many people suspect that he could have been killed because he mateined a relation with the actress Marilyn Monroe nobody know how he was killed , but he might have been one of the biggest presidents of the U.S.A


THE BLACK DAHLIA (Distinguishing the fact from theory)

Elizabeth Short has been portrayed many ways in the six decades since her body was dumped in two pieces on an empty lot in Los Angeles.Above all, time has immortalized Elizabeth Short as the pin-up girl of Los Angeles Noir. The Black Dahlia. Fascination with her life, and especially her death — her gruesome, violent and unsolved murder — continues to this day.
The story of the unemployed 22-year-old waitress has inspired dozens of books, Web sites, a video game and even an Australian swing band. The quest to pinpoint her killer has become a hobby for generations of armchair detectives. And two years ago, Hollywood will recast her tragic fate in a star-studded Black Dahlia movie.

The Los Angeles Police Department has given up of ever closing the Dahlia case; the department has more urgent crimes to investigate, and the killer has likely been dead for years. Yet, it is precisely the unsolved status of Elizabeth Short's murder that gives it such an enduring allure.
We need to emphasize here that the case is so cold, the information so musty and bungled, that it's difficult to get a lucid picture of Elizabeth Short's brief life, much less her grisly death. The Crime Library will not attempt to solve the Black Dahlia murder in these pages, but to simply relate Short's story based on the most unbiased, accepted facts available, including historical newspaper articles and law enforcement records, as well as contemporary literature.

MACABRE DISCOVERY


On the morning of January 15, 1947, a housewife named Betty Bersinger was walking down a residential street in central Los Angeles with her 3-year-old daughter when something caught her eye. It was a cold, overcast morning, and she was on her way to pick up a pair of shoes from the cobbler. At first glance, Bersinger thought the white figure laying a few inches from the sidewalk was a broken store mannequin. But a closer look revealed the hideous truth: It was the body of a woman who'd been cut in half and was laying face-up in the dirt. The woman's arms were raised over her head at 45-degree angles. Her lower half was positioned a foot over from her torso; the straight legs spread wide open. The body appeared to have been washed clean of blood, and the intestines were tucked neatly under the buttocks. Bersinger shielded her daughter's eyes, then ran with her to a nearby home to call the police. Two detectives were assigned to the case, Harry Hansen and Finis Brown. By the time the duo arrived at the crime scene — on Norton Avenue between 39th and Coliseum streets in Los Angeles — it was full of reporters and gawkers who were carelessly trampling the evidence. The detectives ordered the crowd to back off, then got down to business. From the lack of blood on the body or in the grass, they determined the victim had been murdered elsewhere and dragged onto the lot, one piece at time. There was dew under the body, so they knew it had been placed there after 2 a.m., when the outside temperature dipped to 38 degrees. The victim's face was horribly defiled: the murderer had used a knife to slash 3-inch gashes into each corner of her mouth, giving her the death grin of a deranged clown. Rope marks on her wrists and ankles indicated she'd been restrained, and possibly tortured. By measuring the two halves of the corpse, the detectives estimated the victim's height to be 5'6 feet and her weight to be 115 pounds. Her mousy brown hair had been recently hennaed, and her fingernails were bitten to the quick. After calling the Los Angeles County Coroner to retrieve the body, the detectives were left with a daunting assignment: finding out who the woman was.

THE INVESTIGATION




In the 1940s, the police and the press lived in a symbiotic relationship. Reporters used the cops for inside work and info and the cops used reporters to disseminate information to the public that they hoped would help solve crimes. In the Black Dahlia case, detectives gave the Los Angeles Examiner fingerprints lifted from the dead woman and reporters used their "Soundphoto" machine — a precursor to a modern fax machine — to send enlargements of the prints to FBI headquarters in Washington, D.C. FBI technicians compared the prints with 104 million fingerprints they had on file, and quickly made a match to one Elizabeth Short. Short's fingerprints were taken for a mail room job she'd had at an army base in California — and for an arrest record for underage drinking in Santa Barbara. The FBI also sent the paper Short's government application photo. When reporters saw how attractive the 22-year-old victim was, they knew they had a sensational tale on their hands. This was news noir at its best. To juice up the story, Examiner reporters resorted to an unethical ploy; they called her mother, Phoebe Short, and told her that her daughter had won a beauty contest. After getting as much personal information about Elizabeth from Mrs. Short as possible, they informed her that her daughter was actually dead. Sex, beauty, violence. The story had it all, and soon made front page news across the nation. "Police seek mad pervert in girl's death," said one headline in the Washington Post.

SUSPECTS


The LAPD has refrained from speculating on the identity of killer. The truth is that Elizabeth Short's killer is most likely dead — if not of disease, of old age — and will never be brought to justice. This fact hasn't stopped a large group of amateur sleuths from picking up the torch in an attempt to solve the case. Their conclusions range from fanciful to downright risible: Mary Pacios pins the blame, incredibly, on movie director Orson Welles, who once did a magic act where he "sawed" a woman in half. In another book, "Daddy Was the Black Dahlia Killer," a public relations specialist named Janice Knowlton blames her father for the murder. She writes that therapy helped her recover childhood memories of her father forcing her to watch him torture, murder and hack up Short. Knowlton goes on to accuse her father of nine such killings, including that of a son he engendered with her. Her book was a flop, but Knowlton harassed anyone writing about the case who did not support her claims until she committed suicide in 2004 with a drug overdose.

Here are some of the suspects who've topped the list as the could-haves the last 60 years:

Robert Manley
Manly was the last known person to see Short alive. He was initially booked as a suspect, but released after he passed a polygraph test. Beset by a long history of mental health problems, in 1954, his wife committed him to a psychiatric hospital after he told her he was hearing voices. That same year, doctors gave him a shot of sodium pentothal — aka the "truth serum" — in another attempt to glean information about the Black Dahlia murder from him. He was absolved a second time. He died in 1986, 39 years to the day after he left Short at the Biltmore. The coroner attributed his death to an accidental fall.

Mark Hansen
Hansen's name was written on the address book that was mailed to the Examiner; it's unclear how the item fell into Short's hands. The 55-year-old Denmark native was the manager of the Florentine Gardens, a sleazy Hollywood nightclub featuring burlesque acts. Many of the young women working for Hansen lived at his home, which was located behind the club. Short was his guest for several months in 1946, and the aging lothario is rumored to have tried to bed her - unsuccessfully.

George Hodel
In 2003, a retired LAPD detective named Steve Hodel published another daddy-did-it tract, but this one became a national bestseller. According to the "Black Dahlia Avenger: A Genius for Murder" Hodel Jr. depicts his dad as a tyrant and misogynistic pervert who held orgies at the family home and was put on trial for raping own his 14-year-old daughter (he was acquitted). After his father died in 1999, Steve Hodel acquired his father's private photo album, which contained two snapshots of a dark-haired woman. Hodel claims the woman was Short, but Short's family has refuted his claims.

Jack Anderson Wilson
In "Severed: The True Story of the Black Dahlia Murder," actor-cum-crime writer John Gilmore fingers an alcoholic drifter named Jack Anderson Wilson. When Gilmore interviewed him in the early 80s, Wilson purportedly divulged details about the murder that only the killer would have known, including knowledge a supposed vaginal defect which would have prevented Short from having sexual intercourse. A few days before his pending arrest, Wilson died in a hotel fire. The book's validity has been questioned by other Dahlia devotees who have failed to track down many of Gilmore's primary sources - leading them to question the sources' very existence.

Walter Alonzo Bayley
In 1997, a Los Angeles Times writer named Larry Harnisch suggested yet another suspect: Dr. Walter Alonzo Bayley, a surgeon whose house was located one block south of the lot where Short's body was found. Bayley's daughter was a friend of Short's sister Virginia. Harnisch theorizes that Bayley suffered from a degenerative brain disease that made him kill Short. While the police believe Short's killer was affiliated with a cutting profession — a surgeon or butcher, say — Bayley was 67 at the time of the murder and had no known record of violence or crime. Neither is it known whether he ever met Short.

None of these suspects have been endorsed by the LAPD. And because most of the key physical evidence has disappeared from the Black Dahlia file — including 13 scornful letters the killer sent the police and the media — it's unlikely the case will ever be solved. Det. Brian Carr, who inherited it in 1996, has publicly stated as much.


Elizabeth Short have finally made it onto the big screen the last year — six decades after her death — in a Universal Pictures release based on the 1987 James Ellroy novel ''The Black Dahlia.''
ANGEL POMA (GROUP 5)

domingo, 20 de julio de 2008

GENERATIONAL DIFFERENCES AT WORK

This article is about the generational differences at work in the United States. We talk about the relationship between traditionalists, baby boomers, gen Xers and millennials.






  • The Traditional Generation also known as the Silent Generation comprises employees and retirees born between 1922 and 1943.

  • A Baby Boom is any period of greatly increased birth rate during a certain period and it most often refers to the dramatic post-World War II baby boom (1946 to 1964).

  • The Generation X is a term used to describe generations in many countries around the world born from 1965 to around 1982.

  • The Millennial Generation or Generation Y refers to a specific group of individuals born between 1980 to1995.



How is the relationship between workers of different generations in a workplace?
Every generation is influenced by its period’s economic, political and social events so it follows that generational issues may affect the way people work.

Nowadays some younger workers are often baffled by older traditional administrators’ tendency to reject their new ideas and resist change. That’s why some of them are apathetic people who are not motivated to do a good job.

A lack of understanding across generations can have negative effects on communication and working relationships. For that reason some researchers are making studies about this problem, in the hopes of better understanding how generational diversity may affect work dynamics.

In the last decade, several differences in the work habits of younger and older women have been observed by psychologies. They noticed that the younger women tend to more often question workplace expectations, such as long work hours or taking work home, and the older women are more aware of their obligations and responsibilities.

Some studies suggest that differences are accounted by worker’s values. A survey reported that people from generation x (1965 – 1982) are less loyal to their companies and they want to be promoted more quickly.

Sometimes generational differences may cause clashes in the workplace. For example, baby boomers may believe gen Xers are impatient, while gen Xers may view boomers as always trying to say the right thing to the right person.
And traditionalists may view millennials as visionaries, while millennials may view traditionalists as dictatorial and rigid.

After all, each generation brings a unique perspective to work- related tasks.

Carhuamaca Estacio, Maria

Intermediate Six- 2008: THEORIES: DEATH OF FAMOUS PEOPLE

Intermediate Six- 2008: THEORIES: DEATH OF FAMOUS PEOPLE
Mysteries:
What Did Happen In Hanging Rock?














This strange history has turned into a famous episode. Two books and a movie have turned into topic of countless theories, numerous articles of magazines, at least, Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975). But as in so many other historical mysteries, the happened in Hanging Rock is not everything what shows off to be.

The history tells us that the group of girls and teachers divided in a car rented to go to Hanging Rock to celebrating the rural annual lunch. A typical place of excursion to which there were in the habit of coming the people of beginning of century was an unusual geological formation called Hanging Rock. This formation of volcanic origin and of several million years of antique gets up majestically approximately 150 meters over the plain in which it is located, and culminates with the mixture of stones and monoliths in balance that they gave the Hanging Rock's name. Closely together of the base of the rock there was a good place to eat and to rest, consisting of some unexpected tables of stone and a suitable and discreet service of washes.






The school group was composed by 19 girls, the majority teenagers; and two teachers; Mademoiselle Diane of Poitiers, the younger of the two, was teaching Frenchman and dance, and Greta McCraw, a Scotch old maid of medium age, was the teacher of mathematics. Another adult of the group was Ben Hussey, driver of the car rented by the college. Mistress Appleyard, the director, wasn’t forming a part of the expedition.

The group divided early that Saturday morning and they came little before the midday. The day was hot and sunny, and after eating the majority of the girls they were sleeping pleasantly in the shade of the trees and the rocks. Slightly farther, to another side of a small creek that was flowing of the wall of the rock, one had installed another small group. There was composed by the colonel Fitz Hubert (veteran of the Army of the India, now withdrawn from softer climates), Mistress Fitz Hubert, his nephew, the honourable Michael Fitz Hubert (of visit and from England) and the lackey Albert Crundall.

Around three o'clock in the afternoon, three of the major girls asked the Frenchman's teacher for permission to explore the rock. Three young women; Irma Leopold, Marion Quade and a girl to whom it is remembered simply as Miranda - had all seventeen years and were standing out for being sensible and responsible. After a brief commentary among the adults (during which was observed that Ben Hussey's clocks and of Miss McCraw had stopped to midday),
Later they gave also permission to Edith Horton, one more girl fourteen-year-old young woman, to accompany them. One warned at four o'clock that they should not rise too much for the rock, which the crags, caves and precipices were trying to avoid, and that they had care with the serpents, spiders and other dangerous insects.

The girls moved away from the zone of picnic, crossed the creek and got lost of sight about 3:30 p.m. Michael Fitz Hubert and Albert Crundall, that they were sat close to the creek, saw them to pass
Albert gave up a hiss paying compliments to them, and Mike got up with the intention of continuing them, but he desisted after covering only a few meters, when they disappeared for the trees.





In the place of the luncheon they all were sleeping. Around 4:30, Hussey wanted already to bring together to the whole personnel. He and mademoiselle Poitiers realized that McCraw was absent also miss; nobody had seen her to go, but one believed that she had continued the exploratory girls. The group of Fitz Hubert had just gathered their things and they had left.

Irritated initially and later increasingly dismayed, Hussey and mademoiselle of Poitiers they looked for the absent ones. Hussey organized the girls in order that they were searching for couple. The alarmed trippers searched during almost an hour; around 5:30, Edith Horton worked out average stupefied of the bushes of the side southwest of the rock. She was shouting hysterically and she could not tell whom were interrogating her anything from what she had happened. There was no sign of Miranda, Irma, Sturgeon and Miss McCraw

When the night came, both adults decided to bring together the girls who were staying and to return to the college. To the return, they stopped in Woodend's police station; where Hussey informed about the happened the agent Bumpher.

The following day, on Sunday, there began an active search of the women who were absent. There was thought that the girls and then teacher simply had got lost in the forest, and the police enlisted a series of volunteers, between which Mike Fitzhubert and Albert Crundall were situated, to look for them in the rock. After a day of search, nothing they had been Meanwhile, the doctor of Woodend, the doctor McKenzie, was examining Edith Horton. She seemed to suffer a slight commotion and was presenting numerous hurt in the body due to her career among the bushes, but not serious wounds. She could not remember anything of all that she lived in the rock. Nevertheless, on the following week, Wednesday, she was interrogated by the agent Bumpher, to whom unusually she revealed that when she was returning there had passed near miss McCraw, which was going towards the rock. She saw her to certain distance, and the teacher had not payed attention to Edith's shouts. In addition, Edith confessed shamed that the old maid, habitually so cautious, was dressing in an indecent way: skirt was not taking above, only her panties.



The search continued for several days, while the police were interrogating systematicly all the witnesses. The young man Michael Fitzhubert seemed to be the most suspicious in case an immodest act had been realized, since he had been the last person who had seen the girls and he admitted that he had started following them. Nevertheless, there was no any other indication of which he had been the person in charge of the disappearance of the girls and, possibly due to the pressure exercised by the influential Fitz Hubert, the police left this part of the investigation.

On Thursday following the excursion, the police resorted to an aboriginal scanner and to a bloodhound. After McCraw having smelt clothes of miss, the bloodhound followed a track that was ascending for the rock; then he stopped, with the hair of top and barking almost 10 minutes, in a circular platform to half a way of the top; nevertheless, he didn’t find any tangible track. Convinced that nobody might have survived during so long time in the thickness of the bushes, the police decided to leave the investigation.

The following day, on Friday, Mike Fitz Hubert and Albert Crundall decided to investigate for their account. At the end of the day, without having found anything, Mike decided to pass the night in the rock. Albert returned to the residence of the colonel Fitzhubert to excuse Mike. On the following morning, when he returned to the rock, he continued Mike's track and found it unconscious, with a sunstroke and a seriously twisted ankle. Mike was taken to house and visited by the doctor McKenzie; that night Albert found in Mike's pocket a note corresponded with rainfall and that in spite of his incoherence, he was reflecting that Mike had found something in the rock. On Sunday morning another investigation was carried out and, with great surprise for their part, the seekers found Irma Leopold

Arisen From Nothing?





She was unconscious. She was suffering several blows and small cuts in the head, and the nails of her hands were broken, but on the other hand more than one week did not seem to be very affected after having happened in the forest: her feet, barefooted, were clean and without brands. The most extraordinary thing of everything was that she was lacking the corset, but they had not abused sexually her. When she recovered the knowledge, she could not remember anything of what had happened to her.

And here ends the history. Irma could not say anything of what had happened to her; Miranda, Marion and Miss McCraw would not be seen nevermore. As consequence of the episode, the pupils of the college Appleyard were changed of college, and that one was closed. A few months later, mistress Appleyard went to Hanging Rock and rose alone. Her body was found later nearby the rock.


End...


Theories

The first theory is that the girls may have fallen down in a hole. But until now, researchers haven't found evidence.

The second theory is that the girls were caught by a UFO, so the rock would have been a base of communications or something like that.

Another theory is that the girls could have done a journey through time into the past or the future. This theory is related to the pink cloud that some girls said they have seen. Scientists believe that this cloud was a distortion of the sight because of the speed of travel through time.

Other ideas are less accepted. One is that the girls were introduced in a parallel universe. And the other one is that mysteriously they were absorbed by the rock.

So what really happened that day? Scientists are still investigating. So far we only know that this story remains an unsolved mystery.

Cuadros Durand, Mirian ( Group 3).

sábado, 19 de julio de 2008

THEORIES: DEATH OF FAMOUS PEOPLE



Theories: death of famous people

Adolfh Hitler

Along of the history, the death of Adolph Hitler has been considered a totally mystery. Scientist, historians and some spiritits have been created many theories about his death.

One of the most important developments theories is the wich one created by the German army. They theorized that Hitler, Eva Brawn and the Goebbels family were totally burned after found them. They may have been killed when they were sheltered.

Also, Russia found a small piece of skull with a hole. It must have been made bye a bale impact, that according with them, it may have belonged to Adolph Hitler. He could have committed suicide after he killed Eva Braun when they were sheltered in his famous BUNKER in Berlin.

Another similar speculation is that Adolph Hitler may have token a cyanide pill and in this form dead. But no one have evidence that endorse this affirmation.



South America is present in this enigma, too. According with Richard Evelyn Bird, a famous adventurer and colonel to the American army, Hitler could have been concealed in a site of the Antarctic and he may have arrived first in Argentina and after that in Chile




QUIROZ CONTRERAS, LESLIE








How did Marilyn die?

Marilyn died late on the evening of August 4th, 1962 of acute barbiturate poisoning. She overdosed on the drugs Nembutal and Chloral Hydrate, both prescribed for insomnia. How this overdose came about is the subject of much curiousity and controversy. The death theories can be summed up into four main categories: Suicide, Self-administered accidental overdose, Accidental overdose administered by someone else, and Murder. Here are the basic theories:SUICIDE: I suppose that Marilyn depressed over her firing from her last film and the failure of her romantic relationships and I'm pretty sure that Marilyn consumed a lethal dose of sleeping pills with the intention of ending her own life. "Probable suicide" was the official verdict on Marilyn's death.


SELF-ADMINISTERED ACCIDENTAL OVERDOSE: Marilyn ingested a fatal overdose of sleeping pills without realizing what she was doing. Either she took more pills having forgotten how many she had taken before, or she had ingested so many pills over the preceding days and hours that a lethal build-up of the drugs had occured in her system, so that the final dose was fatal.





ACCIDENTAL OVERDOSE ADMINISTERED BY SOMEONE ELSE: Marilyn was given the fatal dose through either an enema or an injection administered by someone else; most commonly named are Dr. Ralph Greenson and Marilyn's housekeeper, Eunice Murray.







MURDER: Marilyn was deliberately given the fatal dose with the intention of killing her, either via enema or injection (a "hot shot"). The most commonly named suspects, either directly or indirectly, are the Kennedys, with the motive that Marilyn "knew too much" that she had learned due to her affairs with these powerful men. Other suspects who have been named include the Mafia, most specifically Sam Giancana.





While every theory has its believers, it is most commonly held that whatever truly happened on August 4th, 1962, it wasn't suicide. An overwhelming propensity of evidence suggests that Marilyn did not die by orally ingesting sleeping pills. The scene of death appears to have been tampered with and important tissue samples from the autopsy mysteriously dissappeared, among other odd occurrances. There is very strong evidence that the circumstances surrounding Marilyn's death were covered up for some reason. The theories continue being debated to this day.








SUAREZ CARRION, JAIME





ELVIS PRESLEY


Elvis dead in august 16 of 1977 in Graceland. There are a lot of legends about Elvis. Especially his death .but one is the most important.

The legend say that the same day of elvis´ death ,one men names JOHN BORROWS got a ticket of plane with direction to argentine .the rare is that his letter and Appearance was very similar of him .some years borrows with the artistic name of ORION worked imitating to elvis and his spectacles were very similar. But he always worked using a mask .with this , many people said that he could have been elvis “the king” really. Maybe it will never verified because ORION (BORROWS) dead in the year of 1998 . another important information is that his family haven’t received the life insurance.

ITS VERY POPULAR THA IDEA THAT HE COULD HAVE PRETENDED HIS DEATH.



CABEZAS FLORES, RENE