Thursday, November 23, 2006
Tuesday, November 14, 2006
bounce bounce bounce
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Had another formal in college last Thursday...this time a toy formal! After much deliberation as what to go as I decided to make myself a spacehopper costume. I wasn't much in the mood for a formal after a more than stressful week (as the senior tutor kindly commented that I looked really ill that night! thanks!) but after a lot of alcohol I soon forgot about everything and had no more worries until the next morning! I literally spent all evening bouncing around and the efforts everyone went to with their costumes was just phenomenal! A successful formal all in all. Bring on the Xmas formals (which scarily aren't very far away now)
Sunday, November 12, 2006
to kiss or not to kiss...
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Isänpäivä
it's also Father's day in Finland...again, memories, but wont bore you with all the details. and just because I've been doing my homework! it's called Isänpäivä. But with his birthday a couple of weeks ago, and a trip to the States ahead of him a week today Dad's just gonna have to wait until June for a proper Father's Day from his daughter!
remember, remember, the 11th of november
It's 4.20am and I'm sat looking at my red poppy unable to sleep so figured I may as well do a post about it! Remembrance Sunday is another national tradition in which the soldiers who died in World Wars I and II, and consequently wars such as the Falklands War and the Gulf War, are remembered. It is held on the nearest Sunday to the 11th November as this is the day that peace was declared for WWI. The day is commemorated by church services around the country and a parade of ex-service personnel in London’s Whitehall. Wreaths of poppies are left at the Cenotaph, a war memorial in Whitehall, built after the First World War. By tradition, at 11:00am on Remembrance Sunday a two minute silence is observed at the Cenotaph and elsewhere in the country to honour those who lost their lives. The reason for poppies is to represent the poppies that grew in the cornfields of Flanders in the First World War where many thousands of soldiers lost their lives. The paper poppies that are worn today are made by ex-service personnel and are sold by representatives of the Royal British Legion, an organisation of ex-servicemen and women.
Wednesday, November 08, 2006
Helsinki the 'cult'
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Death Penalty
Wrote all these details for my international students in Durham about what goes on in November as you've already seen from Halloween and Bonfire Night. This fact just interested me. Then they told me they were so impressed with the email they were sending it home to their parents! Think I maybe need to reconsider what goes in next months and not show my crazy side so much!
The last public hanging took place in England on the 7th November 1783. The man was John Austin, a forger who met his fate at Tyburn.
Thought it was quite apt in the end though with everything that's been going on this week in the news...
The last public hanging took place in England on the 7th November 1783. The man was John Austin, a forger who met his fate at Tyburn.
Thought it was quite apt in the end though with everything that's been going on this week in the news...
Monday, November 06, 2006
Back to the dark ages...
Monday 6th November. I opened a book I started last night and read a couple of chapters on how New Religious Movements are affecting people through brainwashing, in particular Satanism (which just as a matter of interest the book doesn't believe is happening!). I then spent the majority of the day flicking through the English newspapers online to find out what they say about exorcisms. I've just returned back to my computer and checked my emails which I haven't really read over the last four or five days. Amongst them was an email from Youth 2000, a Catholic Youth Group based near Ampleforth in England. I've included the links that they gave from media coverage, and also their statement on what happened:
Here are some examples of the coverage:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2436968,00.html
http://www.guardian.co.uk/religion/Story/0,,1939477,00.html
http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2006510299,00.html
You can read their statement on the matter on the website:
http://www.youth2000.org/knowledge/Glastonbury_statement.html
I've had a few experiences of Y2K and with that and what I've been reading all week, I'm going to keep my opinions to myself- unless you ask me personally! But with pages and pages of quotes driven from newspapers today, who said evil, demonology and exorcisms are antiquated ideas amongst the general public?!
Here are some examples of the coverage:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2436968,00.html
http://www.guardian.co.uk/religion/Story/0,,1939477,00.html
http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2006510299,00.html
You can read their statement on the matter on the website:
http://www.youth2000.org/knowledge/Glastonbury_statement.html
I've had a few experiences of Y2K and with that and what I've been reading all week, I'm going to keep my opinions to myself- unless you ask me personally! But with pages and pages of quotes driven from newspapers today, who said evil, demonology and exorcisms are antiquated ideas amongst the general public?!
Sunday, November 05, 2006
My bonfire night
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It's always a bit of a contradiction Bonfire night. Everyone goes, but it's about burning up Catholics! Hardly anyone actually thinks back to the events of 1605 anyway! We always went as kids, but when we were older it became, traditionally, a night to rent films from the video store and buy sweets! Last night I
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Bonfire/Fireworks/Guy Fawkes Night
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In 1605 Guy Fawkes, a Roman Catholic, and his fellow conspirators attempted to blow up King James I and the Houses of Parliament, as they disagreed with the King’s Protestant policies. They succeeded in storing some 30 barrels of gunpowder in a cellar under the Houses of Parliament, but before Parliament opened on November 5th, the ‘gunpowder plot’, as it has come to be known, was discovered. Guy Fawkes and his colleagues were executed for treason.November 5th was designated by King James I (via an Act of Parliament) as a day of thanksgiving for "the joyful day of deliverance." This Act remained in force until 1859. On the very night of the thwarted Gunpowder Plot, it is said that the populace of London celebrated the defeat by lighting fires and engaging in street festivities. Since then, the 5th of November has been celebrated in England by the burning of stuffed figures of Guy Fawkes on bonfires, usually accompanied by firework displays. These may be large organised events open to members of the public, or smaller, private gatherings of family and friends held in people’s gardens. ‘Guy Fawkes Night’ is also known as ‘Bonfire Night’ or ‘Firework Night’. In the days leading up to the 5th of November children traditionally take their home-made Guys out onto the streets of their town or village and ask passers-by for ‘a penny for the Guy’. This money is supposedly used as a contribution towards their fireworks.