"Seuluran Tangan" revitalized
I have decided to reactivate my Indonesian blog: "Seuluran Tangan". Just because a friend reminded me about it. Thanks.
This is what I do. I write - about anything that cross my mind, about what concerns me, and about what excites me - and I speak up. I try to help a bit here and there. My way of chipping in to the society. while at the same time walking on my personal journey. Sometimes it works, other times it does not. But you know that's not important. What matters is we start doing something. Anything.
I have decided to reactivate my Indonesian blog: "Seuluran Tangan". Just because a friend reminded me about it. Thanks.
Posted by
Eva.M
at
2/08/2007 08:39:00 pm
Labels: personal
blister discuss | |
Definition: | (verb) Subject to harsh criticism. |
Synonyms: | scald, whip |
Usage: | The Senator blistered the administration in his speech on Friday. |
![]() ![]() The Moscow Victory Parade of 1945 (1945)A month and a half after Nazi Germany surrendered to the USSR, Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin ordered a celebratory parade through Moscow's Red Square. Thousands of troops from different regiments and fronts participated, accompanied by tanks and other military equipment. At one point, war veterans memorably threw down hundreds of Nazi banners at the foot of Lenin's mausoleum. According to legend, Stalin had initially planned to participate in the parade but changed his mind after what accident? More... Discuss |
![]() ![]() Saint John of the Cross (1542)Saint John of the Cross was a Spanish mystic, poet, and monastic reformer. A Carmelite monk, he was ordained a priest in 1567. The following year, he joined St. Teresa of Ávila in her effort to restore the Carmelites to their original austerity, cofounding the Discalced Carmelite order. He opened the first Discalced Carmelite monastery in 1569 and was imprisoned in 1577 for causing friction within the order. He escaped and later won high office in the order. What did he write while in prison? More... Discuss |
![]() ![]() Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914) Discuss |
No comments:
Post a Comment