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Who is the writer?

Do you know Muhammad Nurhardee? Is he a hero like Superman or a perfect man in the mean world. Maybe he just an ordinary person in Engineering Class in KBU International College.

Maybe some people know him quite well. But some people will asking, " Who the heck is Adi?". This is because he is a quiet and maybe a shy person.Do you ever watched "The Big Bang Theory"? Maybe he just like Raj Koothrappali in that sitcom. But you don't know who is he exactly. From his personality, he is a boy who loves to sing and very loves to hear music by Coldplay. He said that the music calm him and give him energy to do works.

He was born on September 30, 1991, in Batu Pahat, Johor, but he grew up in Kuala Terengganu, Terengganu. He is just a not-so-big person, but he didn't let that stop him from achieving his goals. For him, no obstacle was too great to overcome.

Live in not-so-rich family, he succeed to further his study in KBU International College and willing to fly to a great nation, Germany next year. Although some people said that the AUSMAT programme is a killer programme, he attends the course just to fulfill his dream.

Today he writing this blog to achieve success in EALD and hope to pass the course with the flying colours.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Blow Up Your Mind

i-maxiPad



wtf!! Darth Vader riding on a cat

The time is cycling ur life



Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Colours of My Life

I forgotten,

How lovely you are,
You came into my life unexpected,
Make my life wonderful, make my life colourful.

Before this,
The world maybe exciting,
I see just black and white,
Nothing to hate, nothing to love,
Nothing,
My lonely, silent world,
Had no beauty.

When you appeared,
I can feel the warmth of red deep inside my heart,
I can feel the cold of blue running through my vein,
You are the ocean,
Come to me, open my dreams,
I can't wait a new life, a new heartbeat,
You are my only colour,
Colour of my life.


Friday, April 30, 2010

Feature Article

From St. Norbert College Magazine

Everyone should be so fortunate to have a friend as giving as Dot Giovannini. Darin Schumacher has her to thank for his life.

By Mike Dauplaise

Dot Giovannini was president of the Green Bay (Wis.) ADFED in 2000 when she asked a question that would change her life and that of her vice president forever.

A
t a meeting of the local advertising professional organization, Giovannini noticed that Darin Schumacher wasn’t looking well. She didn't know it at the time, but Schumacher had never been well and his health was deteriorating rapidly due to the effects of spina bifida, a birth disorder that prevents the proper closure of the spinal cord.

Another ADFED board member informed Dot of Darin's condition, and that he and his new bride, Tia, had to postpone a planned honeymoon trip because his kidneys weren't working properly. In fact, one of them wasn't working at all and he was beginning dialysis treatments.

"That led to a conversation with Darin, and I asked him what was involved with having a test to see if I would be a compatible kidney donor," says Dot, who is the Creative Manager at American Medical Security in Green Bay. "I went and did the blood draw, and found out I was a match. I was a little floored. I thought, ‘Oh my God!' "

Dot's father, retired St. Norbert College communications professor Dan Giovannini, advised her to sleep on that news before making her decision on whether or not to actually volunteer for the transplant procedure. Along with the medical issues and gut-check questions that Dot needed to answer, the emotional stress of her mother Kathy's difficult death from cancer two years earlier weighed heavily on her mind.

"As fresh as that was, it was the deciding factor for me," Dot explains. "I felt that if I had the opportunity to keep somebody from suffering like that, I had to do it. Darin was 26 years old at the time, and he already had had 25 surgeries."

Dot consulted with her father, asking him what her mother would think of the situation, with her brothers Peter and Tony, and even with Fr. Gerry Meehan at the college.

"I thought it was a wonderful decision for her to make," Fr. Meehan says. "It was not untypical of her life attitude and her commitment to people."

Meanwhile, Darin and Tia sat on pins and needles for about two weeks, waiting to hear from Dot. Other people had offered to take the blood test as well, but whether or not anyone was truly serious about going through with a transplant was unknown.

"Tia and I were both very anxious to find out what the results of Dot's test were,"” recalls Darin, who is an account executive at The Karma Group in Green Bay. "Time went by very slowly. But when we got that call, it was the best Easter present anyone ever had."

The transplant operation took place on June 29, 2000, at University Hospital in Madison, and Darin has been healthy ever since, save for two short periods when doctors worked to narrow down the correct medicines and dosages. He can eat and drink whatever he wants now, with only a few exceptions, and no more dialysis.

"I am very fortunate," he states. "I believe in the Catholic faith, and this proves to me that someone’s up there, watching out for me. There's a reason for me to be here, and my time just wasn’t up yet."

Dot, Darin and Tia share a special friendship now, and they jokingly refer to his current ADFED presidency and Dot's position as past president as the "renal ticket."

"I think my mom is proud of me. If she would have been here, she would’ve told me to do it," Dot says. "I tell people to do what your heart tells you to do. If it means putting that orange sticker on your driver’s license, do that, but let your family members know, in case you don’t have control over that situation."



Tuesday, March 16, 2010

A.D.I.D.A.S



Should sex education be implemented in our education syllabus as a compulsory subject?


In my opinion, sex education should not be in syllabus especially in Malaysia. As we may know, sex is more like a taboo to the three main races in Malaysia. People in our country not only cannot teach anything about it but also speak about it in public. I agree that sex education is necessary, but everyone gets knowledge about it in a particular age. Providing sex education in school is nothing but just spoiling the whole environment. After all, this education does not support our culture. It also difficult to make it suitable to all religion in Malaysia. Maybe certain religion accept it, maybe some are not. In Malaysia, especially in East culture, sex is a sensitive issue to talk about. Other problem that may arise is, how many teachers who are willing to teach sex and if there is a teacher who can teach about it, in what way the teacher will teach it? Theoretically or practically? In this situation, theoretical way usually is not very effective because the lesson will only tell the student to imagine it. Usually when the lesson is part of our life, practical is needed to train the student to understand and use in the future. It is hard to think when sex being taught in practical way. Kids never think of the negative things and the impacts of those. Sex is something which is pure and very necessary thing in life. There is no doubt about it. But it does not mean that it has to be taught in school.


Thursday, January 14, 2010

Alice in Wonderland

Questions to ponder upon throughout the reading of the text.

1. Discuss Alice’s treatment by the different characters she encounters in the books. Why do you think they act they way they do, and what does their behaviour say about Alice?

Different characters act differently to Alice. They act like that because their own characteristic. Their behaviour to Alice say that she must try to adapt to new world to survive in another world. We can say the new world is the adulthood. Some people do not know how to live in the mean world. So, we must try harder to adapt to new world.

2. What is the significance of Alice’s fluctuations in size and shape in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland?

The fluctuations in size and shape show that sometimes we need to get older to do certain things. But sometimes we need to get younger. For instance, for the workers. Maybe sometimes they want to be a child, just relaxing and eating, without worrying the problems.

3. Throughout the story, there are occasional oblique references to death. What purpose do these references serve in the stories, and why might Carroll include them?

Alice frequently makes references to her own death without knowing it. Childhood is a state of peril in Carrol's view: children are quite vulnerable , and the world presents many dangers. Another aspect of death is its inevitability. Since the Alice books are at root about change (the transition from childhood to adulthood, the passage of time), mortality is inescapable as a theme. Death is the final step of this process of growth.

4. What role does the garden play in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland?

The most beautiful garden imaginable. Alice sees this garden, with bright flowers and fountains, through the tiny door soon after she arrives in Wonderland. She longs to get out into the garden, but she is unable to do so until after she leaves the Mad Tea Party. The garden is part of the realm of the King and Queen of Hearts.

5. Discuss the significance of the Queen of Hearts in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.

Nasty, brutal, and loud, the Queen delights in ordering executions, although everyone seems to get pardoned in the end. The people of Wonderland are terrified of her. Although Alice initially thinks she is silly, she grows frightened of her. In the end, however, a giant-size Alice is able to stand up to the Queen's temper and her threats.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Working Retired

There are only a few magic numbers in American civic life.You can vote(and get drafted)at age 18.You can drink at 21.You can become president at 35.You can retire at 65.
But on that last one-do Americans really want to?Now that so many Americans are living healthfully until 85,fewer and fewer actually retire at 65.Today there are 5 million people 65 or older in the U.S. labor force,almost twice what there were in the early 1980s.And that number is about to explode.
Some people are working past 65 because they have to:Health care costs are rising,and Social Security payments-at an average of about $1,000 a month-don't cover what they used to.But the bigger trend in Senior Work is the fact that Americans love -and now that we're living longer,we want to work longer too.We just can't get enough.My friend and mentor Harold Burson,the co-founder of the global PR firm Burson Marsteller,where I am CEO,just turned 86,and comes to work every day,bursting with ideas.
On average,Americans work over 1,800 hours per year,substantially more than most workers around the world.Although we get fewer vacation days per year than other Western countries(13 days,compared to 28 in the UK,and 37 in France),we let more than twice as many go unused.And really,what's a vacation to us these days without our BlackBerry?In 2006,almost a quarter of us (23%) checked our work e-mail and voice mail while away-up from just 16% in 2005.A lot of us love to work.
In fact,the impulse to work is so basic that the Fourth Commandment is to take off one day a week.Not working for a day is right up there with not murdering,not committing adultery,and not stealing.We tend to assume that most people want off-waiting all week for the Friday afternoon whistle so they can stream out of work.To be sure,many jobs are terrible-even life-threatening-and people reasonably can't wait to get home.But as work overall has become more managerial,consulting,and software-oriented-and as manufacturing jobs have been on the decline-a lot of people have changed their attitude toward work,and the number of workaholics has skyrocketed.How many times have you heard the old saying that no one ever lay on his deathbed wishing he had spent more time at the office?And yet,a lot of people are doing just that.The sandwich generation is going to be in for a shock when they call their 70-year old parents at the office and find they are just too busy to babysit their grandkids.
Add to America's general obsession with work the fact that it is now the baby boomer generation who is nearing 65,and it becomes clear that the traditional idea of "retirement"-with its gold watch,rocking chair,and golf course-is just about ready for retirement itself.
Boomers reinvented youth in the 1960s and economic success in the 1980s;they are not to do their senior years by someone else's formula.According to a 2005 survey by Merrill Lynch,more than 3 in 4 boomers say they have no intention of seeking a traditional retirement.Rather they look ahead to their 20 more years (when Social Security was created in 1935,a 65 year old could expect just 13 more years)_and they say Bring It On.Some want to keep their health insurance,or have enough funds for the extra years-but more of the boomers surveyed said they wanted to keep working in order to stay mentally and physically active and to stay connected to people.

1. What do the magic numbers of 18, 21, 35 and 65 represent in American civic life?

Certain activity at certain age. The Americans can vote at age 18 .They can drink at 21.You can become president at 35. They can retire at 65.

2. Why do some people work past 65?

Because they can live healthy until reach 85 and the health care costs are also high nowadays. So they need to work to gain some money to pay for the costs.

3. What does the phrase " bursting with ideas"when he comes to work at the age of 86 implies about Mr. Harold Burson?

He still can provide useful ideas to the company eventhough he is old.

4. Give examples to show that American employees are workaholics by choice?


On average, Americans work over 1,800 hours per year,substantially more than most workers around the world. Although they get fewer vacation days per year than other Western countries(13 days,compared to 28 in the UK,and 37 in France), they let more than twice as many go unused.

5. What is the tone of the writer when he mentions that "not working for a day is right up there with not murdering,not committing adultery and not stealing"?

All people need a day break in a week.

6. What example is given to show that the grandparents of the present generation do not fit with the traditional stereotypical image of grandparents in the past?


The sandwich generation is going to be in for a shock when they call their 70-year old parents at the office and find they are just too busy to babysit their grandkids.

7. Explain in your own words the sentence"it becomes clear that the traditional idea of "retirement" - with its gold watch, rocking chair, and golf course - is just about ready for retirement itself."

Many people nowadays choose to work eventhough they reached the retirement age because they will get a lot of benefits to them in particular in finance and health.























































The advertisements above were put up to promote movie-viewing by a group of cinemas.

1. What is the underlying message of the advertisements to encourage more people to go to the cinema to watch movies?

The movie is one of the fantasy worlds and totally different from real life. We can expect anything unusual to happen in movies.

2.How is the idea of fantasy as seen in the romantic movie "Titanic" and the idealized version of whales in the movie " Free Willy" contrasted with the slogan "reality sucks" of the print advertisements?

The advertisements show what can be happen actually in real life. The idea of fantasy like in "Titanic" and "Free Willy" is only the imagination of man.

3.What is the stereotypical image of wild animals in captivity and love cruises?

It means the killer whale will eat you and the tern will ruin your love cruise. Real life is completely different from fantasy.