Professor Susan Bonilla, UC Berkley, California, 2002.
Idea taken from History 101, on the Stories Thread
"Welcome students, to another year at Berkley. My name is Susan Bonilla, Professor Bonilla please, and I will be your teacher for this semester. In this class you will learn all about the great nations of our world, from the past to the present."
"We shall waste no time, as obviously we have a lot of material to cover. I shall start with the basic nations. In the begining, around 4000bc, the 13 original nations made their capitals. I will talk about the first three. On the largest continent, Sanchoperica, there was the Jewish, Island nation of Jehuda. Their main goal, obviously, was to live according to God and spread the Jewish religion to every person."
"Not long after the first nation, Jehuda, grew, the next nation of California establish San Francisco, as you know it is just a couple miles from here. Californian people represented the Catholic religion at it's greatest, and with it got many a person to its empire. They spread amongst the grassland and San Francisco Bay brought them many good fishing spots and food."
"Pheonecia, the kingdom of trade and beauty, cam after California by about 10 years historians predict. The great city of Baalbeck, on the shores of the Splitting Sea, remained the most beautiful city in the world. Great gardens hover over golden balconies, and it is most known for the gardens that surround the city, called the Hanging Gardens now."
"All the other nations grew out of these cultures - Jewish, Catholic - and non religious, or Beauty. It was actually later, near the time or 3991bc, were the nations of Atlantis finally established. These sea-goers were the most peaceful nations in the world, though one leader of Supremecia proved short tempered."
"Did a war ever happen on the Atlantis contiinent, Professor?" Interrupted a young man sitting near the front. The Professor stared at the man hard for interruption, but continued on with a smile for the answer.
"Why that will come tomorrow, sir. Which is where I leave you for our first discussion. See you Friday." The class got up, and quietly shuffled out, while other students talked to Susan about the time period of the first nations.