Expectedly Unexpected

30 November 2006

Taylor’s College

Filed under: Academic, Announcements, I Love Malaysia — Guang @ 10:01 pm

I just found out a couple of minutes ago that, Taylor’s College now has been awarded University College status (officially)!

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Somehow, although my connections with Taylor’s is now terminated, deep inside me, I feel some kind of joy and happiness for Taylor’s. After 37 years of being a college, it’s hard work and contributions to the country’s appalling education system is finally recognized. Unlike some other University Colleges that were upgraded in just months after establishment, Taylor’s is different and will be different from the crowd. Taylor’s College… No, Taylor’s University College (still used to the college word) shall produce high quality, highly talented and highly sort after graduates for the global industry (like me! ;)).

Congrats to the amazing people that made this a reality and of course Mrs. J, principal. Her never ending passion and continued hard work will push to improve and expand Taylor’s to achieve University status one day (that’s what she told me! :D) and I’m sure it’ll come true.

Happy! Happy!

Filed under: Announcements, Music, Travel — Guang @ 2:58 pm

I finally got the tickets! My wonderful, lovely, thin pieces of cut paper printed off a computer printer tickets!

2 tickets to be precise.

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The orange one is the ticket to watch the Department of Music’s concert featuring Sheffield University Symphony Orchestra which I was talking about in my previous post about the Sheffield University Wind Orchestra. Costs me GBP 2.50 (student price). It’s happening this Sunday, 3rd December, 1930 hours, which coincidentally happens to be my mum’s birthday too. Well, I’ve already sent the birthday card to Malaysia and I’ll give her a call to wish her. The card should be around India’s air space now (if a plane actually flies in the air for 5 days straight, if you get what I mean).

And the white ticket is my ticket to the wonderful city of York! Organized by MASSOC (the Malaysian and Singaporean Students Society) of Sheffield. It’s a day trip with tantalizing sightseeing treats and tempting Christmas shopping haven. 9th December is the day and I can’t wait for it! I heard from many that York is a wonderful place, different from other cities in a special way. Well, the only way for me to find out is to actually BE THERE! So I’ll be there on that Saturday! And the ticket is priced at GBP 7.00 (for members).

It’s going to be two wonderful weekends to usher in the Christmas holidays! :D

Malaysia bites back…

Filed under: Almost-classics, Blahs, Frustration, I Love Malaysia, Opinions — Guang @ 2:00 pm

… and industriously trades the insults.

Remember While Malaysia Fiddles, It’s Opportunities Are Running Dry article by Michael Backman? Well, after the publishing of the article, and it’s overwhelming response to both the article and the author, our country’s Iron Lady and risen up and above the fog to voice her thoughts about the article. That’s what our government likes to do. Exchange childish statements arguing about the most minute and unimportant details of our country where the bigger much more important issues that require immediately attention are swept under the carpet.

Malaysia bites back and industriously trades the insults

The Age (theage.com.au)

Michael Backman

November 29, 2006

MY LAST column on wasteful government spending in Malaysia (Business, 15/11) generated a furore. I received more than 600 emails from readers, mostly Malaysians (both expatriate and in Malaysia) and nearly all supportive.

The column was the most emailed item on The Age’s website for six days straight and it was replicated in dozens of blogs worldwide.

My personal website received more than 50,000 hits. A Malaysian Government minister criticised the column publicly. And the Malaysian Opposition Leader issued a news release in its support.

The minister, Rafidah Aziz, Malaysia’s Minister for Trade and Industry, declared somewhat imperiously that she didn’t care what I said because I am a foreigner and I probably don’t know much about Malaysia anyway.

Rafidah knows her trade brief like few others. Her knowledge of the complex rules of the international trading system, with its many trade barriers, is remarkable. In meetings with other trade ministers, she rarely needs assistance from minders. Hard working and tenacious, I once thought she might make a reasonable prime minister.

But her technical abilities are marred by her mishandling of other issues, most recently her ministry’s allocation of much coveted car import permits. Most went to a handful of well-connected businessmen, including her own relatives.

The issue exploded in Malaysia late last year and she was lucky to keep her job.

And then there are the corruption allegations. In 1995, in a report to the attorney-general, the public prosecutor said there was a prima facie basis for Rafidah’s arrest and prosecution on five counts of corruption.

An opposition activist later acquired official documents that appeared to confirm this. He was jailed for two years under the Official Secrets Act simply for possessing them. Rafidah, on the other hand, was not even charged.

Rafidah added to her remarks about my column that no Malaysian should say such things. It’s little wonder that she doesn’t welcome scrutiny from her own people. But then the idea that Malaysians cannot comment publicly about how their country is run but a non-Malaysian can, is disgraceful.

Perhaps Rafidah needs to be reminded who pays her salary.

And as if to underscore my points about waste, on the day that my column was published, an assistant minister told the Malaysian Parliament that Malaysia’s first astronaut to be sent into space next year aboard a Russian space mission will be tasked to play batu seremban, a traditional Malay children’s game played with pebbles, will do some batik painting and will make teh tarik, a type of Malaysian milky tea, all to see how these things can be done without gravity.

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The day before, the Government announced that a new RM400 million ($A142 million) palace will be built for Malaysia’s king, a position that is almost entirely ceremonial.

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And the week before a groundbreaking ceremony was held for a second bridge between Penang and the Malaysian peninsular costing RM3 billion, a bridge that many consider unnecessary. (Editor’s note: Okay, I admit, he’s a little off note here)

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Where would the money be better spent?

Education is the obvious answer. But not on school buildings, for it matters less in what children are educated than how. And how children are educated in Malaysia is a national disaster.

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Learning is largely by rote. In an email to me last week, one Malaysian recalled her schooling as being in a system “all about spoon-feeding, memory work and regurgitation. Students are not encouraged to think for themselves and they become adults who swallow everything they’re told.”

Even the existing system fails many. It has just emerged that in Sabah state, only 46 per cent of the students who had sat the UPSR — the exam that students sit before going to secondary school — had passed. One small school actually had a 100 per cent failure rate.

But does the Malaysian Government want creative, critical thinkers? Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi said to the ruling party’s recent general assembly Malaysia needed to make students creative. But that means they must be questioning and thus critical; what hope is there of that when one of Abdullah’s own ministers tells Malaysians that they cannot say the things that I can and hundreds of them write to me to complain because they don’t feel that they can complain to their own Government?

Malaysia needs to do something. Its oil will run out soon and it has lost much of its appeal to foreign investors — recent UN figures show that from 2004 to 2005, foreign investment in Malaysia fell by 14 per cent, when the world economy was enjoying one of its longest periods of growth. One might wonder what the Trade and Industry Minister has actually been doing.

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But, while politicians from the ruling party preach about Malay nationalism, there are at least some who quietly go about the business of trying to secure the country’s future. Not all of them are Chinese.

Two weeks ago, Malaysia’s MMC Corporation, together with a local partner, won a $US30 billion infrastructure deal in Saudi Arabia. That’s a huge undertaking for any company, let alone a Malaysian one, and just as well too — someone has to pay the bills.

Related post - While Malaysia Fiddles, It’s Opportunities Are Running Dry

29 November 2006

Loo

Filed under: Blahs, Frustration — Guang @ 8:09 pm

Look what I found in the toilet today.

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It’s just sad reading it. Aren’t the English people more civilized than that of the majority of Asians (except Japanese)? I guess some of the students in my corridor can’t be classified as real Englishmen.

I guess it’s all down to bad parenting or selfishness. I still yet to look upon the face of the culprit of this impeding disaster for all D-floor occupants. Whatever it is, it’s either that jerk changes his habit or removed from this floor in all. Since solution #1 is has a very low probability and solution #2 has a even lower probability, I guess the holocaust is confirmed. T_T

27 November 2006

New, bigger Palace

Filed under: Blahs, Frustration, I Love Malaysia, Opinions — Guang @ 2:54 pm

The Star newspaper reported that Malaysia is going to build a new, bigger and better Istana Negara (Malay for National Palace). it’s going to cost the country MYR 400 million to build this new palace complex for our King. Apparently the reason for not using the current Istana Negara is because it’s too small and has only 1 room for all functions held in the palace.

Well, if that’s the “real” reason then by all means go ahead and build the new palace. However, they’re forgetting something. What about Istana Melawati in Putrajaya? Isn’t that one-of-the-King’s palaces? According to the official Putrajaya website, Istana Melawati is a venue for certain official and private functions hosted by the King. Why”certain” functions? Why not all functions? It’s brand new isn’t it? It ’s definitely much bigger than the present Istana Negara.

Istana Negara is only 78 years old. Compared to other palaces in the world, 78 isn’t old enough to be called old. For example, Buckingham Palace, it’s been the official residence of Britian’s sovereigns since 1837. That’s 169 years! The Imperial Palace in Japan has been home to Japan’s Emperor’s since 1888. So what is 1928 compared to those? The ultimate comparison is China’s Forbidden City. Built in 1420 and was home to 24 emperors from 2 of China’s greatest dynasties until the fall of the Qing Dynasty in 1912. That’s 498 years! Yes, it may be the biggest palace in the world today but Malaysia’s royal families aren’t as big as those of the emperor’s in China. The emperor only has 1 official empress which bears the first-born male in the palace but the emperor has an additional 100 concubines where most of them have children too. Not to mention thousands of eunuchs and servants that also live in the palace. So a family so big would only be fit for a big palace. The situation in Malaysia is totally different, so why do we need a bigger palace? It’s more than adequate to comfortably house the King and his immediate family.

MYR 400 million would be much more useful if it were to be used to build more schools, improve current facilities in other deprived schools, providing research grants for research groups in universities, providing grants and bursaries for the poor to further their education and so many more. Even the space program is in a similar case. Why spend so much money just for a Malaysian to go to space and toss roti canai (an Indian bread) or make teh tarik (a drink found in Malaysia which translates to “pulled tea”). It’s not our space program in the first place, it’s not our technical expertise and it’s even not our rocket! Only the astronaut, teh tarik and the roti canai is ours. What difference would it make if he were to go into space or stay firm on Malaysian soil?

26 November 2006

Food For Thought

Filed under: Academic, Blahs, Opinions — Guang @ 6:46 pm

It just crossed my mind something that I’ve never notived before although it’s like so obvious in front of my eyes.

Ever notice universities in the UK, there’s always a university that has an almost duplicate name with another univeristy in the same city? For example, Sheffield has two universities. The University of Sheffield and Sheffield Hallam University.

Other examples include, Nottingham University and Nottingham Trent University. Oxford University and Oxfird Brookes University. University of Manchester and Manchester Metropolitan University. The University of Bath and Bath Spa University.

An interesting thought to ponder…

23 November 2006

Jannock.wordpress.com

Filed under: Announcements, Blahs — Guang @ 8:33 pm

Okay. So here’s the new blog. Jannock.wordpress.com. Costus.wordpress.com is gone and will be gone forever. Had some problems relating to the blog. So here I am, once again, I’m torn into pieces. Okay, not in reality but figuratively. And I’m not going to talk about it here.

So, jannock.wordpress.com. Why jannock? I have no idea myself! It just crossed my mind and here it is. For those that don’t know the meaning of this word, here’s a short description of it from The Dictionary of Difficult Words:

jannock

a. pleasant; outspoken; honest; generous.

I can’t really say that those four words represent me in every way but I do have some “resemblance” of those words.

Another description from Dictionary.com:

jan‧nock/ˈdʒænək/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[jan-uhk]

–adjective British, Australian Informal.

honest; fair; straightforward.

There isn’t much I can say right now. I’ll still be blogging as usual just that now under a different blog. So see you next time!

 

19 November 2006

Sheffield University Wind Orchestra

Filed under: Blahs, Music, Opinions — Guang @ 10:25 pm

Yup. That’s what I went for today. I just had the best evening of my life. I went for an evening concert organized by the music department of the university.

A full wind orchestra on stage with a leading conductor. And the best thing of all, LIVE music! A list of instruments are 12 flutes, 2 piccolos, 6 oboes, 1 cor anglais, 2 bassoons, 1 eb clarinet, 12 clarinets, 1 alto clarinet, 1 bass clarinet, 5 alto saxophones, 2 tenor saxophones, 1 baritone saxophone, 2 horns, 13 trumpets, 4 trombones, 4 euphoniums, 3 tubas, 1 string bass, 6 percussion and finally 1 piano.

They even had a complimentary glass of wine for each and everyone! 1 hour of music, a 10 minute interval for everyone to drink wine and then another hour of music till the end.

And all I paid was GBP 2.50! I definitely think that the money was very well spent. Next, 3rd December - Sheffield University Symphony Orchestra! I can’t wait!

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