JAMO magazine April 2014 | Page 6

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SUper Hero

Watc atching a superhero movies or reading a comic book always brings a new enthusiasm for saving the world from crimes and for a while we even start imagining about it. What if I had such super powers just like superman had or was bitten by a spider like Peter parker in Spiderman? By this thought the whole spirit of saving the world goes down and you get back to your normal life. It's true to fight against something you need something extra but for having that it's not important you need natural powers all you need is the ability to fight against wrong.

Okay, its true always start from the bottom and then slowly, slowly you will reach to the top. The same way for being a hero starts from a small area, for example the place where you live. Try to help poor people, work with community centers for causes and more then this all you can do is by joining the army, police or become a doctor or study law to fight against crime. There have been so many people who have brought a change in the world by just being normal like

Ryan White: Raised Awareness of AIDS

Ryan White, a teen from Indiana, was a hemophiliac who contracted AIDS through a blood transfusion. He passed away at 18, with family and Elton John by his bedside. Through his struggle with the disease, White became the new face of the epidemic, debunking the myth that AIDS afflicted only drug users and the sexually promiscuous. His fight for fair and equal treatment from his public school system helped expose the discrimination faced by AIDS patients.

Frank Willis: Did His Job...and Brought Down a President.

On June 17, 1972, security guard Frank Willis was making his midnight rounds at the Watergate office building in Washington, D.C., when he noticed tape over the lock of a basement door. Thinking another worker had left it there accidentally, he removed it. Willis later found tape again in the same place. He called the police, and the rest is history. Two years later, President Nixon resigned in disgrace over his involvement in the cover-up of the Watergate break-in.

article by Mahrung al baloshi