a lecture on the topic \makes a hero?\The topic has aroused great interest among students on campus. The weblog has been updated almost every minute, which involves even students from other departments, students who preferred not to do 3)
(enroll in / take)
any course in the humanities. People have made 4)
(invented / coined)
the phrase everyday heroes for those ordinary people who sacrifice themselves for others at the moment of life and death. The inspiring stories of the heroes have made 5)
(created / gave)
a vivid and moving impression on all of us.
12/02/2014
Lately I've been thinking about everyday heroes. There really are many heroes among us who make 6)
(put in / devote)
an effort to find ways to make the world different. We may know some of them, but I assume that most of them we've never heard of. I read a weblog article a few days ago. The author made 7)
(delivered / gave / offered)
remarks that the guy who finds a lost wallet and returns it to the owner is called a hero. Similarly, the guy who hits the go-ahead run to win the baseball game is called a hero. But are they? Are those two guys really heroes? Can anyone make 8)
(put forward / offer / provide)
suggestions about who decides who is a hero anyway? And what makes a hero?
12/11/2014
The end of the semester is coming. Students are busy preparing to do 9)
(take)
exams. And I will have to do 10)
(write / finish / complete)
assignments for the courses I have taken. However, the weblog is still hot, students' enthusiasm is not fading, and I will ponder on the topic of everyday hero continuously.