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    2. Way2GO
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      2012 PSLE - final rundown

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      Even though I am not a PSLE parent this year, I am putting the prelim results for DS's school this year, but no SD.http://i45.tinypic.com/2afcs1v.jpg\"> I think there is not much benefit doing this exercise, and gathering reliable data for a large number of schools is a question mark.But I would be very much interested in this just for the sake of it I just love them numbers and playing around with them. So lets just try.
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      Duke n Duchess of Cambridge visit to SG

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      optimistforum:I watched a programme on TV alst last about the Royal Trip to the South Seas. The trip started with Singapore, which I found to be a beautiful and vibrant city. I was struck by the number of high rise flats/apartments. Do people live in houses too, or is it mostly the high-rises, because of the premium of space. I look forward to my trip next year to Malaysia and Singapore.Yes, some of us live in houses although most of us live in high rise buildings. I have always like the idea of staying on a high rise building and be able to enjoy the view. We bought our current place because from our windows, we have a view of the CBD area, the fireworks (on special occasions like the National Day and Chinese Lunar New Year, fireworks is set off as part of the celebrations), the Singapore Flyer and some parts of the Orchard Road. At night, it’s a pretty sight!
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      REMEMBER SINGAPORE - Urban Legends

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      Way2Go,you were lucky he did not harm you. Probably escorting you.btw pls type words in full can or not hah ? I was trying hard to decipher the words for the entire story so in the end, the suspense became 'diluted'.kamsiah kamsiah :evil:
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      Scientology - what it is?

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      Way2GO::rotflmao: vk2010, u mean Siantology?u must be neither a Hokkien nor Teochew? :evil:that is why don't sian people
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      d other good Dr

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      DesertWind:I have never heard of him.I will not be surprised u r not in d majority.Here's d reason why (bold highlighted in Dr Ang Swee Chai's tribute to Dr LHS)Dr Ang Swee Chai is another SG talent who chose to live in exile with her husband, d late lawyer Francis Khoo, brother of d more familiar entertainer Victor Khoo.Dr Ang's tributeLike many, I learnt with great sadness of Dr Lim Hock Siew’s death. It is especially painful for me since I have only met him once, and so briefly on 11 February 2012. Dr Lim came to the memorial mass of my husband, Francis Khoo, when I brought his ashes back home to Singapore after 35 years of exile. It was a great honour to meet him. For many of us he is a hero of legendary status.I was too young to remember properly the mass arrest of 1963, the Operation Cold Store that incarcerated dozens of brave men and women who participated in the democratic struggle for Singapore’s independence. All I can recall was asking my mother about the many passport pictures published on the front page of the Chinese newspaper, Sin Chew Jit Poh. I asked her who those people were and why were their pictures lined up on the front page. They were arrested for political reasons was her answer. At that time it sent a shiver down my spine when I thought of that front page with rows of pictures of people detained. Years later, I was able to form my own understanding of what that meant.That front page news had become a recurrent theme for the next 24 years of Singapore political news. There were many more newspaper front pages with passport photos of others arrested in the seventies. Then in1977 it was to include friends of my husband Francis Khoo. In the eighties yet others were detained - this time my own friends.As I grew up, I made my way to study medicine in the University of Singapore. The name Dr Lim Hock Siew surfaced. This time it was in connection with Dr Beatrice Chen, the prominent and much admired renal physician, who taught us medicine. In the middle of her lecture my more politically conscious classmate whispered in my ear - “Dr Chen is the wife of Dr Lim Hock Siew, the famous founder of PAP and the Barisan Sosialis (Socialist Front) who was detained without trial because he would not kowtow to the Government.” “Oh - he must be a very brave man!” “Yes, he and his friends are all arrested and put in prison because they opposed the government.\"With this distracting conversation, I could not concentrate on Dr Chen’s lecture. That rows and columns of photographs on the front page newspaper of 1963 came back, and I wondered if Dr Lim was one of them. If so he would have been detained without trial for nearly a decade. Dr Chen came across as being extremely beautiful and dignified. My friend continued, “She is in quite a lot of trouble with the University for standing up for him and supporting him.\" “So, she has got guts too,” I replied.I grew up in PAP-controlled Singapore, qualified as a doctor in 1973 and obtained my Master of Science in Occupational Medicine in 1976 in this prosperous and successful island. While I pledged loyalty daily at flag-raising ceremonies, cheered at national day parades, convinced that everything the Government did was good and right, I occasionally remembered those photographs on the front page of 1963, and Dr Beatrice Chen and her husband, Dr Lim Hock Siew.Yet it was not possible to learn much about Dr Lim if you were growing up in the mainstream of Singapore. For a start there are no official documents about him. He was detained without trial, so I do not even know what his crimes were supposed to be. He was accused of various things, but never given the chance to agree or disagree with the accusations.But things fell into place a bit at a time when another mass arrest came in 1977. This time my husband and many of his friends were on the wanted list and, indeed, Francis was the only one who managed to escape. When I was arrested a month later, I was able to verify for myself the reality of detention without trial, and being stripped of all rights and freedom in Whitley Road Detention Centre.Unlike Dr Lim Hock Siew who refused to make any false confessions or betray his friends, I buckled under pressure and signed more than a dozen pages of “gobble-di-gook” and promised to lure Francis back to surrender himself to the secret police. I just wanted out of detention and was prepared to acquiesce.As I was leaving the detention centre, I just thought of Dr Lim and his friends who had been in prison since 1963, and never faltered. I felt ashamed of myself for being such a weakling. I have much to learn.By God’s grace, I was given a second chance. This time I made a stand and instead of pressurising Francis to return to Singapore to surrender himself, I chose to stand by him in exile.While in exile I met with many friends of Dr Lim Hock Siew, and was able to learn about him from them. I respect those friends of Dr Lim. They told me about the early fight for Singapore’s independence and the struggle against British rule. They also told me about Dr Lim. He was a leader and they respect him. From them I learnt about the days they were together building up the trade unions and the civil structures in the early fifties and sixties. I learnt that Dr Lim was a strong and principled man. He was also a great leader who led by example and humility. When it came to taking a stand he did so readily and with great generosity. Because he never betrayed his principles, and spent 19 years in prison. He stood on moral high ground until his death.My 35 years in exile, and Dr Lim’s long years in prison followed by ill-health after his release, meant that I never had a chance to get to know him personally. My husband wrote songs about him, made me watch his speeches on the internet. The most recent speech I watched on Youtube was just last year. He spoke with clarity, conviction and principles despite his age, his poor health and his long years in prison. We were so grateful that we can watch and hear him speak, and we understood why his friends and comrades respect and love him so much. That commitment to the Singapore people and his honesty, and his steadfastness will continue to inspire all of us. We are grateful that Singapore has political giants like him. We will honour his memory with our continued commitment to justice and freedom. Dr Ang Swee Chai, a prominent surgeon and author of From Beirut to Jerusalem. She was one of at least 28 people, mostly professionals, who were arrested and labelled as Euro Communists and detained without trial under the ISA by the PAP government in 1977.
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      "No need to press so hard"

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      pinky:ChiefKiasu:Lol. I like the sticker lady . She's notti but creative.And I thought the Singapore main stream media will look better with the slogan:\"Press - one can already\"press 2-ok alreadypress 3-enough alreadypress 4-too many alreadypress 5-xy#@$# already :evil: :rotflmao:what CKS meant was one press only in singapore .... the rest are all alternative news media ....... alamak why I say so loudly ..... lol
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      There are more dogs than humans in Singapore

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      AC_Power:What he has said might be hard to swallow but it is a fact. I guess it is not called the hard truth for no reason.If it is all facts, why need to \"stand corrected\"..?under pressure became not fact already....? hmmmmm....
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      One less Old Guard

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      concern2:I was also :? when LKY's wife was given a state funeral, though she was never an office holder. Really, what are the guidelines and who has the final say? My guess: there r guidelines but final decision at discretion of power dat be.concern2:And yes, you've mentioned something which has also been bothering me - who writes Singapore's history?d victor.
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      Another one bites the dust

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      Way2GO:chun bo.Only upside, downside minimal?bo chuni said what i said because that is the way the landlord work see tenants make good revenue, up the rental on renewal, squeeze them dry dryunit holders of the REIT will be happy because cash distribution will likely go up because got more rental locked in ....businesses with low margin cannot survive in this kind of rental regime operated by REIT.......as they will tell you they got future tenants lining up to take the place..
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      From Shangri-La to Paradise?

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      caroline3sg:Bhutanese replies to Khaw Boon Wan's 'Shangri-la' comments Wow, this is interesting. An ordinary Bhutanese wrote on his blog a reply to Khaw Boon Wan's comment that Bhutan wasn't the last Shangri-la on Earth.This guy goes by the name of PasSsu. (This is in reply to National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan of Singapore on his comments made on our country )Dear Mr. Khaw, I was not surprised when you said Bhutan is not the last Shangri-la on Earth, because I had a friend from your country who found Bhutan only \"full of mountains and valleys\". When you visited Bhutan, what did you expect? Those flying mountains you saw in Avatar? or Every Bhutanese merrily dancing in designer clothes? Well, you must have at least expected fancier cars and taller buildings but we only have taller mountains (not flying ones) and thicker forest (truly natural). I am not surprised even when you said \"Most of the time, I saw unhappy people, toiling in the field, worried about the next harvest and whether there would be buyers for their products.\" because I heard a proverb in school that goes, \"Two men looked through the prison window, one saw the mud and other saw the horizon\". I am only surprised that you have spend \"Most of your time\" in Bhutan looking in the fields. I am amazed at your ability to figure out whether the people are happy or unhappy just by looking at them- O' you even knew they were \"worried about the next harvest\". No wonder you country export human resources.I visited your wonderful country sometime ago, and it felt like a city from the future. The transportation system held me spell bound, Cleanliness of the street is so much that I didn't find a fragment of dust on my shoes after walking for the hours, Every building and car looks new, and there is no question about the civic sense among the people. Four days after I landed in Bhutan I woke up and started sharing the stories of your wonderful country- yes it took me four days of sleeping to shake of the hangover of many sleepless nights in your 24X7 country. I read the amazing history of your country and thought to myself, if Bhutan's to develop, Singapore can be our vision.But since you questioned the presence of happiness in Bhutan, let me answer by telling you few things that you overlooked when you visited my country. Those people you saw in the fields weren't unhappy, if you have gone closer you would have heard them singing and enjoying the social lives, perhaps you won't understand that. If you have spent a little longer time watching them, you would have seen and a woman with basket on her back and holding arms with several children coming with steaming food- we don't have McDonald or KFC. Then everybody will sit down to eat their lunch, laughing and joking, feeding babies, for over an hour- you wouldn't have had so much time to sit and watch I know, times means money in your country. But we have luxury of time. People don't worry \"about the next harvest and whether there would be buyers for their products.\" In fact, we don't do much commercial farming, we do most of them to keep with the tradition. And when the sun sets, doesn't really matter what time, people leave for their homes where they have a large family waiting. Large family because we don't chase away our children when they become 18 or children cast away their parents when they age.We don't need Health Insurance to survive, no have to go for Education Loan for educating our children. We don't hang the drug users, we counsel them to hang on to their lives, we don't have to have a job to survive, and when we fall sick even the furthest cousin comes to attend without having to update Facebook status.If you reread our history you will find that our wise kings have hidden us from the outside world so that we could remain the way we are today. If we start mining our mountains and lumbering our forests, we can become Singapore in a year but no matter what you do you can never become Bhutan. It is far too difficult. We shall be the last breath of oxygen on earth.Bhutan may not be the Last Shangri-la but we are happy.http://forums.asiaone.com/showthread.php?p=696267caroline3sg and way2go, :goodpost: make me for SG when i read this blog to our Minister.We may have all the \"creatures comfort ? ....but we still \"misssing the Mark\" to go back to the basic to be truly Happy :hi5:
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