Monday, December 17, 2012

Adam Lanza

Trey Wright
12/15/12
    
The event took place at 12/14/12   9:41 am Friday a day before the weekend A man named Adam Lanza came in with a  The rifle used was a Bushmaster .223-caliber, according to an official with knowledge of the investigation who was not authorized to speak about it and talked on condition of anonymity. The gun is commonly seen at competitions and was the type used in the 2002 sniper killings in the Washington, D.C., area. Also found in the school were two handguns, a Glock 10 mm and a Sig Saucer 9 mm. Adam Lanza the name of a brutal murder who cut 20 kids live short and killed 7 teachers who had done nothing wrong.
\Read more: http://www.wxyz.com/dpp/news/authorities-ask-how-did-adam-lanza-obtain-the-guns-used-in-sandy-hook-elementary-school-shooting#ixzz2FKO2Eska

Adam Lanza   was born April 22 1992 he was an autistic child. definition for autistic is under this article that I have written. Adam grew up in Newton Connecticut where his mother was the teacher at the school for 30 years. Adam father was there throughout the whole childhood but at 2009 the father Peter Lanza divorce Adam mother.

What Does Autism Mean?

People usually call it autism (say: aw-tih-zum), but the official name is autism spectrum disorders. Why? Because doctors include autism in a group of problems that kids can have, including Asperger syndrome and others. These problems happen when the brain develops differently and has trouble with an important job: making sense of the world.
Every day, our brains interpret (understand) the things we see, smell, hear, taste, touch, and experience. But when someone's brain has trouble interpreting these things, it can make it hard to talk, listen, understand, play, and learn.
A kid's symptoms could be very mild, severe, or somewhere in the middle. For example, some kids might be upset by too many noises or sounds that are too loud. Kids who have milder symptoms don't mind loud noises so much. Someone with mild symptoms might need only a little bit of help. But a kid with severe symptoms might need a lot of help with learning and doing everyday stuff.

Kids with autism often can't make connections that other kids make easily. For example, when people smile, you know they feel happy or friendly; when people look mad, you can tell by their face or their voice. But many kids who have autism spectrum disorders have trouble understanding what emotions look like and what another person is thinking. They might act in a way that seems unusual, and it can be hard to understand why they're doing it.
A kid with an autism spectrum disorder might:
  • have trouble learning the meaning of words
  • do the same thing over and over, like saying the same word
  • move his or her arms or body in a certain way
  • have trouble adjusting to changes (like trying new foods, having a substitute teacher, or having toys moved from their usual places)
Imagine trying to understand what your teacher is saying if you didn't know what her words really mean. It is even more frustrating if a kid can't come up with the right words to express his or her own thoughts, or tell a parent what he or she needs or wants. Sometimes this can make a kid very upset and frustrated.

Some issues — like not wanting to try new foods or not wanting anyone to move your toys — affect lots of kids, not just those who have an autism spectrum disorder. But kids with these disorders have more trouble "growing out of it" and learning to handle stuff that's challenging and annoying.
http://kidshealth.org/kid/health_problems/brain/autism.html

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