Recent media roundup (for Grandma, etc, have mercy thanks):
1) “Waiting for my byline,” courtesy of News 8 Austin. How romantic!
2) This article in Jawa Pos, one of Indonesia’s major newspapers, about my recent visit with some of their journalists. I wish I could read it but I don’t know Javanese. Bahasa Indonesian. Regrettably. Maybe you will fare better.
UPDATE: a translation!!
According to Leah Finnegan, editor in chief, along with Vikram Swaruup, executive editor, now tirasnya lived 15 thousand copies. Go down about 5 thousand compared to before.
A newspaper published Monday through Friday that is distributed free to students and general citizens in the City of Austin, Texas. Newspaper ads that were funded from student fees and tuition are through there since 1900. However, the operational costs of print and that the management will make a big selling machine printed.
”We will print the outside of course, cheaper. We would like to outsourcing ,” said Leah, 21, who later diwisuda May and also means that the end of tenure Pemred it.
4 thoughts on Texas: day 3.183
your’e so cute
AHAHHA let’s run away to Java
FYI, it is in Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian), the official language of Indonesia. This language is spoken by almost 100% of 240 million Indonesian population, along with regional language or dialect. Javanese language spoken by some but not all. For example, I am a Dayak (of Borneo part of Indonesia), I speak Dayak Ngaju (my mother tongue), Banjarese (of Banjarmasin, regional language of South Borneo) and Bahasa Indonesia. I understand some Javanese but not speaking it. Also, an interesting sidebar, Bahasa Indonesia has other dialect and spoken by Malaysian (known as Bahasa Melayu or Malays), Singaporean (mostly by Malays in Singapore) and many Chinese, Hongkong, Australian and Japanese for those and has relatives or families that has historical relation with Indonesian back to Pacific war time. I lived in Jakarta, BTW.
oh wow, thanks!