Relief efforts by kids show that compassion is for all ages
What a year this has been. On top of the never-ending chain effect of the pandemic, we are now faced with the cataclysmic consequences of our environmental abuse. We watch
What a year this has been. On top of the never-ending chain effect of the pandemic, we are now faced with the cataclysmic consequences of our environmental abuse. We watch
“There are hundreds of shoes on the floor and bags on all the couches, people laughing and talking, and a little girl with light-up shoes inside a box! What is going on here?” 16-year-old Kerry Tiñga asked in mock shock as she entered what was once the immaculate den of her family home.
Running, probably the country’s most popular sport activity next to basketball, yields to a higher call as St. Luke’s Medical Center (SLMC) jump-starts its fundraising program for Supertyphoon “Yolanda” survivors with a fun run on Dec. 7, 6 a.m., at the grounds of Bonifacio Global City, Taguig.
In this rare instance, you are at a loss for words, or even thoughts. You are overwhelmed by images of destruction and tragedy which aren’t newsreels from some remote place abroad. They are from right here, at home, and somehow, you know of at least one person who is a casualty of this disaster.
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