Thursday 24 April 2014

A Dish of Ice Cream



In the days when an ice cream sundae cost much less, a 10 year old boy entered a hotel coffee shop and sat at a table. A waitress put a glass of water in front of him.


“How much is an ice cream sundae?”



“50 cents,” replied the waitress.



The little boy pulled his hand out of his pocket and studied a number of coins in it.



“How much is a dish of plain ice cream?” he inquired. Some people were now waiting for a table and the waitress was a bit impatient.

“35 cents,” she said brusquely.

The little boy again counted the coins. “I’ll have the plain ice cream,” he said.

The waitress brought the ice cream, put the bill on the table and walked away. The boy finished the ice cream, paid the cashier and departed.

When the waitress came back, she began wiping down the table and then swallowed hard at what she saw.

There, placed neatly beside the empty dish, were 15 cents – her tip.


Question!

1. What can you get from the story?
a. Always know your place
b. Don't judge people before you truly know them
c. Everyone has a story
d. Never give up
e. Don't give 15 cents

2. The story tells that ......
a. The story might surprise you
b. Don't buy ice cream
c. Don't forget your money
d. Failure is part of learning
e. We should be patience in life

3. The characteristic of the waitress is ....
a. Generous   b. Lousy   c. Grumbler   d. Humorous   e. Grumpy

4. The boy is a/an .... person.
a. Crazy    b. Annoying    c. Generous    d. Stubborn    e. Clumsy

5. When does the waitress see the 15 cents?
a. After she takes the order
b. After making the ice cream
c. Before wiping down the table
d. When she talks with the boy
e. After wiping down the table


Wasalam.

Wednesday 23 April 2014

TUR BUDAYA #32015!



On 3rd April 2014, 11th grader of 3 Senior High School held a trip to Bali, Indonesia. The event is called Tur Budaya. It is an annual event for the school. Well, here's the story!


#1 Day, 3rd April 2014


Here it comes, TURBUD! We were gathered at Stasiun Kebon Kawung at about 5.30 PM, but not for me.. I must arrived there earlier than other participant because I joined the committee of Turbud. We left Bandung at about 8 PM. I was on the second car. I spent most of my time on the train by sleeping.


#2 Day, 4th April 2014

Suroboyo rek! We arrived at Stasiun Gubengan and continued the trip by bus. We were heading to Pelabuhan Gilimanuk in Banyuwangi. The clock was pointing at 7 PM when we arrived at the port.We arrived at Pelabuhan Gilimanuk on 7 PM. We were going to cross Selat Bali to get to Bali. After that, we continued our trip to the hotel and arrived at the hotel on 2 AM WITA.
At the bus



#3 Day, 5th April 2014



AMAZING! It will be described by seeing these photos.


At GWK

Tanjung Benoa Watersport
Penyu Island


Tari Kecak @GWK
Dinner @Jimbaran



#4 Day, 6th April 2014



On this day, I visited Desa Adat Panglipuran, a very traditional village with very cool culture and ancient creature. After that, we went to Kintamani Restaurant, where we were going to had lunch. The scenery was very stunning, you can see Mount Batur clearly from this place. After that, we went to Pasar Sukowati but I stayed on the bus when we arrived because I'm not really interested with this place.

@Kintamani Restaurant
Mount Batur


At the night... MAKRAB #32015, it was a memorable moment! It was started from 7 PM. There were shows from various extracurriculars. After that, the #32015 awards were given to the winning nominees. I got an strange award..Tercasual. The party drop at about 00.00 AM. After that, I went back to my room, I can't sleep    until 4 AM, damn it.

Makrab


#5 Day, 7th April 2014



The last day of Turbud... I woke up with sleepy eyes because I only get an hour of sleeping. We checked out from the hotel at about 9 PM. My bus left the hotel first because we were chasing time due to our first flight. We went to Pandawa Beach, a very beautiful beach. I rode canoe there but I didn't have much time to play in Pandawa Beach, we also can't visit Kuta due to our FIRST FLIGHT. Before we went to Ngurah Rai Airport, 

we went to Khrisna to buy some souvenirs. We arrived in Bandung on 4 PM WIB, Tur Budaya was a nice trip. 





Wasalam.

Thursday 27 February 2014

Movie Review: Source Code

With his debut movie Moon, Duncan Jones made a mighty leap; now with this superb follow-up, he has hit the ground sprinting. Source Code is a terrifically exciting and hugely enjoyable sci-fi thriller, written by Ben Ripley. For pure entertainment, there's nothing around to touch it.

Source Code
Production year: 2011
Country: Rest of the world
Cert (UK): 12A
Runtime: 93 mins
Directors: Duncan Jones
Cast: Jake Gyllenhaal, Jeffrey Wright, Michelle Monaghan, Vera Farmiga

Source Code is about conspiracies, altered minds and altered states, far-fetched in the most elegant and Hitchcockian way, and the sheer outrageousness of it all is muscular and streamlined. The film is about modified reality and inner space, and there are points of comparison with Christopher Nolan's Inception. But the world of Source Code seems to me more interesting, and more able to incubate real drama, real suspense and even some real humour.

At its centre is Colter Stevens, played by Jake Gyllenhaal, a US army helicopter pilot who has crashed in Afghanistan. When he comes to, he finds himself in civilian clothes aboard a crowded commuter train arriving slightly late into Chicago on a glorious summer morning. He appears to be in someone else's body: that of a suburban teacher. Opposite him sits Christina (Michelle Monaghan) who behaves as if a brief nap has merely interrupted their highly flirtatious conversation, but she is then increasingly alarmed as Colter, wild-eyed and panicky, demands to know what is happening and what is going on.

After eight minutes, a catastrophic event then hurls Colter back into a situation that is in some ways even more perplexing. He is in uniform, injured and immobilised in what appears to be part of a wrecked military aircraft. Is this real? Or is it the train that's real? Through a video monitor, he must communicate with a woman who is evidently now his commanding officer. Goodwin, played by Vera Farmiga, treats him with the same unreadable solicitousness as Kevin Spacey's robot-voice did with Sam Rockwell in Moon.

Without consenting, Colter has evidently been dragooned into a new mission using futurist technology known as "source code"; he has been brought back from Afghanistan – or has he? – and ordered to relive the past eight minutes on a Chicago commuter train over and over again until he discovers vital information. Ripley and Jones show how each metaphysical go-around discloses more clues; each makes Colter fall for Christina a little more, and each makes the thought of losing her seem more unbearable.

With its train setting and Chris Bacon's score imitating the jagged clamour of Bernard Herrmann, the movie is clearly indebted to the Hitchcock of North By Northwest and Strangers on a Train. But it's also a particularly tense and fraught kind of Groundhog Day, and just as in that film, repetition endows banal, forgettable events with an eerie familiarity and inevitability.

Yet in the Bill Murray movie, our hapless hero had all the time in the world, an infinity of time, as many Groundhog Days as he needed, to learn the piano until he was at the level at which he could casually appear to be a brilliant pianist to impress a woman. Making an impression on a woman is not wholly absent from Colter's mind either, but he can't just repeat his eight minutes ad infinitum, because the security situation is pressing and time is running out. Each time he starts again, his own physical condition in the mysterious cockpit deteriorates, and Goodwin and her shadowy boss Rutledge (Jeffrey Wright) are keeping secrets from him.

Source Code is glitzy and hi-tech in a 21st-century way, but also has something from an earlier age: it is a story from the Twilight Zone, with hints of Philip K Dick, and traces of the television world of The Prisoner and The Fugitive. With its weird deployment of playing cards in one scene, Jones has channelled The Manchurian Candidate – perhaps specifically through Jonathan Demme's Iraq-themed remake – and the overall effect is smart and to the point.

In its own way, Source Code also aspires slightly to the status of comedy, and Colter's increasingly wan and desperate conversations with Goodwin from his mysterious pod reminded me a little of David Niven's radio conversations with Kim Hunter's June in A Matter of Life and Death – as he plummets to his certain death, Niven's character exploits his prerogative as a dying man to flirt with this radio operator.

This isn't exactly what is happening here, and Colter's affections are engaged with Christina, not Goodwin – but equipoised with the action and thrills, there is a serio-comic sense of fantasy and romance that have been endangered by this terrifying situation in one sense, but in another sense made possible by it. Source Code is absurd, but carries off its absurdity lightly and stylishly. It is a luxuriously enjoyable film. Jones has put himself into the front-rank of Hollywood directors, the kind who can deliver a big studio picture with brains. With twists and turns, and at breathtaking speed, this film runs on rails.

Wasalam.

Thursday 30 January 2014

Gerund and Infinitives

Gerund: 
  1. I fear losing his confidence.
  2. When I finish typing this, I’ll help you.
  3. I gave up explaining my position to them. 
  4. I often go dancing
  5. Breathing is necessary.
  6. Driving a car requires good vision.
  7. Helping other people feels good.
  8. I look forward to meeting your friend.
  9. I am interested in learning baseball.
  10. She is responsible for implementing new policy.


To Infintives:
  1. To be objective in my decision is hard. 
  2. Does Joan have enough change to make a phone call? 
  3. Always try to proofread your paper before you turn it in. 
  4. Ellen is able to swim six lengths of the pool. 
  5. The Harlow twins came to play with my little brother. 
  6. Would you like to warn me if anyone comes? 
  7. I was happy to give you a ride home. 
  8. To move to a larger house would be unwise for us now. 
  9. Fred was frightened to be alone in the old house
  10. Megan is trying to practice the piano an hour a day. 
Wasalam.

Thursday 23 January 2014

HOLIDAY!

Holiday.. Such a miracle invention for human being. This is my boring holiday, happy reading!

CHAPTER ONE: BACK DESK 
Bakdes or Bakti Desa is a routine school program which held once a year for the eleventh grader. It was held to fulfill our 60 hours of field duty related to 1567. I don't really know which number is related to Bakdes but I think it was 9. Let me start my Bakdes Journal.

I went to Sukapura, a village in South Bandung on 17th December 2013. I went there by a army's truck. The journey took about 3 hours from my school to the village. After we arrived, we did some boring activity in the village hall but it was paid when we arrived at my foster parents house. I stayed there for 3 days with Chiko and A Dude. The house is nice, especially the food and bathroom. It was an honor to take a bath in a bathroom with a window facing the kitchen.. My foster parents is very very nice, she's Ms. Any and Mr. Emen. I did a lot fun activity there, I don't have much time to explain it with words, so I'll explain it with some pictures.
Pirates as teachers, worst school ever.


My favorite student. I named him Adam.

My polychromatic task

My friends happy resting and eating while the parents working

My messy long hair

My family

A happy frog enjoying the view

Charm Seller

Chiko's butt
Bonus:
Harvest Moon: Back to Sukapura
CHAPTER TWO: GO TO A VERY BEAUTIFUL BEACH IN BABEL BEACH WITH NONSTOP RAIN POURING WHICH SCREW MY HOLIDAY

CHAPTER THREE: STAYING AT HOME LIKE A BOSS

That's my holiday. Sorry for the randomness. Enjoy breathing!

Waslam.

Wednesday 22 January 2014

Natural Phenomenon: Volcanic Lightning

Lightning in the ash cloud from the 11:20 PM March eruption at 11:26.  Photo by Bretwood Higman
These photos of lightning in a volcanic ash cloud from Redoubt Volcano were taken by Bretwood Higman. The camera was mounted under the yurt where he lives in Seldovia, Alaska, and was set to automatically take a 30 second photo every two minutes. Seldovia is 80 miles from the volcano, on the far side of Cook Inlet. Two eruptions are captured in the photos, the first at 11:20 pm on March 27, and the second two hours later. The camera, a Canon Digital Rebel XTi with a Canon 70-200mm L lens, was only barely able to resolve the eruption cloud illuminated by the lightning, which is why the images appear noisy. 

For both of these eruptions, the lightning did not begin until several minutes after the explosion began. How lightning forms in general is still debated among scientists, and volcanic lightning is even less well understood. What is mostly agreed upon is that the process starts when particles separate, either after a collision or when a larger particle breaks in two. Then some difference in the aerodynamics of these particles causes the positively charged particles to be systematically separated from the negatively charged particles. Lightning is the electrical flow that results when this charge separation becomes too great for air to resist the flow of electricity. Some of the lighting strokes in these photos are at least 2 miles long, so the separation of charged particles must occur on this scale.
Lightning in the as cloud from the 11:20 PM March 27 eruption at 11:28 PM. Photo by Bretwood Higman.
Lightning in the ash cloud from the 11:20 PM March 27 eruption at 11:32 PM. Photo by Bretwood Higman.

Wasalam.





Next Leader

I forgot the old speech, so these speech is probably shorter than the old ones. 

Assalamualaikum.

Good morning boys, girls, teachers and parents my name is Syifaulqulub. Even though I only started here at at the beginning of this year for the School Captain, I’ve already been involved in many aspects of School life here. I’ve represented or participated in numerous school events such as district football, ICT, Badminton, friendship buddies, Movie Production, DKM, Inter School Chess and many more. At each of these events I have always tried my best or pursued the school motto “knowledge is power but character is more” as well as and displayed good sportsmanship.

Why am I going for school captain? I am going for school captain because I want to represent my school in the best way possible and put something back into the school which has given me so many opportunities not available at my previous school. I am also going for Captain because I want to make the best commitment to this school. I will lead this school so it can have a tighter relationship with both students and the community. I understand that I have to give up my own time for this school and everyone at this school but I’m very happy to do just that.

I believe if elected, I would make a great school Captain as I enjoy helping others and believe I always set a good example for other students to follow, both in and outside the classroom. I always like to try my best at anything and everything I do and I enjoy contributing to the school in any way possible.

The school motto is “Knowledge is Power But Character is More” and that is what I hope to do if I am elected Captain. I see a School Captain as having a key role in being a good role model and leader to the younger students, especially through our four main School Rules related to being environmentally friendly, being a good learner, respectful and safe. These are all areas in which I have a strong conviction and I believe that I would be just that person.

So you should remember to make me school Captain because I’m fit for the job and make sure you put the number 1 next to my name and photo which is at the bottom right of the voting card. I would like to finish by wishing the other nominees good luck and thank you for listening to my speech. 

Remember Vote #4 Syifaulqulub!

Wasalam.