Home
Login Register
Others   

TRADE FREELY & LiVE LONGER

 Post Reply 661-680 of 702
 
pharoah88
    06-Aug-2010 09:33  
Contact    Quote!
NO  PHILANTHROPY  amongst  WORLD  CIVIL  SERVANTS  ? ? ? ? 

pharoah88      ( Date: 06-Aug-2010 09:02) Posted:


 
 
pharoah88
    06-Aug-2010 09:22  
Contact    Quote!

A Temasek investment

Neo Chai Chin

chaichin@mediacorp.com.sg

SINGAPORE

future leaders to guide the finance sector.

It is an investment of a different kind by Temasek Holdings, which will commit $165 million to the new philanthropic ventures, it announced ahead of National Day.

The foundations will oversee five endowments named after Singapore pioneers, including Mr Eddie Barker and Mr S Rajaratnam, to groom the next generation of leaders in the various fields.

The Temasek International Foundation will oversee the S Rajaratnam and Hon Sui Sen endowments.

The latter, worth $35 million and named after former Finance Minister and the Economic Development Board’s first chairman Mr Hon, aims to develop talent in Asia’s financial industry.

The $25-million S Rajaratnam Endowment — named after the Sri Lanka-born first Foreign Affairs Minister of Singapore — will facilitate exchange and fellowship programmes to deepen international friendship.

Overseeing the other three endowments worth $35 million each is the Temasek Education Foundation.

The E W Barker Endowment — aptly named after former minister and avid sportsman Edmund William Barker — will nurture future athletes, coaches, sports therapists and specialists.

The Tay Eng Soon and David Marshall endowments will groom those gifted in science, maths and the arts.

The new foundations give Temasek the opportunity to honour these pioneer leaders’ “contribution to nation-building as Singapore celebrates her 45th year of independence”, said head of strategic relations Goh Yong Siang.

Temasek, which announced last month the growth of its portfolio assets to a record high of $186 billion as at end-March, has gifted over $800 million since 2007 to independent trustee Temasek Trust, which oversees its philanthropic endowments.— Two foundations are being set up to develop talents in sports and arts, whizzes in science and mathematics and even

 
 
pharoah88
    06-Aug-2010 09:18  
Contact    Quote!


40 US billionaires pledge at least half their fortunes to charity, 360 more on Bill Gates and Warren Buffett’s philanthropy hit list

Some 40 American billionaires have promised at least half of their fortunes to charity, joining a programme that Microsoft mogul Bill Gates and investment guru Warren Buffett started to encourage other wealthy people to give.

As of Wednesday, well-known philanthropists CNN founder Ted Turner, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and Hollywood director George Lucas had signed up for the Giving Pledge.

If Mr Gates and Mr Buffett secure pledges of half the wealth of the 400 richest in the United States, that would total more than US$600 billion ($812 billion).

Mr Buffett said they simply started working their way through

“We probably called somewhere between 70 and 80 people on the

Less familiar big donors like Mr Lorry Lokey, founder of Business Wire, also joined the Giving Pledge.

“During even the Depression’s worst years, my parents gave money — about 8 per cent of their annual income of US$2,200,” Mr Lokey wrote in a letter posted on the programme’s website. “I remember saying to my mother that we can’t afford that. But she said we have to share with others. I learned from that to SHARE.”

There will be no group decisions on how money is spent or when. Instead, club members are to set an example by funding philanthropic pet projects, including health, education and the arts.

The PLEDGE has been a matter of some debate in non-profit circles, with some experts dismissing it as a publicity stunt after the billionaires have fallen out of favour with the public following the 2008 financial collapse.

Forbes magazine’s list of 400 billionaires, who have an estimated net worth of US$1.2 trillion.Forbes list. It was a very soft sell but 40 signed up,” said the chief executive of investment firm Berkshire Hathaway. “We’ve made a terrific start.”Agencies

 

 
pharoah88
    06-Aug-2010 09:02  
Contact    Quote!

 
 
pharoah88
    05-Aug-2010 14:12  
Contact    Quote!

Keat

weekeat@mediacorp.com.sg

SINGAPORE

here can soon undergo health screenings at

nominal rates which are about the same the

price as of a plate of chicken rice.

This is part of the national implementation

of the People’s Association (PA)

Wellness Programme, which has screened

13,000 seniors since 2008.

The programme aims to help seniors

stay active and healthy, with health screening

being a key feature.

Seniors’ blood pressure, blood glucose

and blood cholesterol levels and those

found to be at risk will be encouraged to

see their family doctors and nurse educators

for follow-ups.

Three out of four seniors screened so far

have been diagnosed to be at risk, showing

symptoms that could lead to ailments such

as kidney failure, stroke or a heart attack.

Health screenings for the 12,000 more

seniors are scheduled to take place between

this month and March 2012.

Retiree Low Ngian Woo learnt he had

high blood pressure after undergoing a PA

health screening in May last year. Since

then, the 60-year-old has begun exercising

with other seniors from Paya Lebar

constituency, brisk walking twice a week.

Mr Low also visits his neighbourhood

Wellness Centre every Wednesday for a

free blood pressure check, and for social

activities such as folk dancing with his

wife. “The way we live has changed since

that screening. We no longer stay at home

the whole day and waste our time,” he said.

Besides health screenings, PA also intends

to deepen social engagement among

seniors through social interest groups such

as classes on healthy cooking.

A recent survey PA conducted of 419

seniors found little improvement in their

consumption of fruits and vegetables. Only

four in 10 eat at least two servings of fruits

a day, a slight decrease from 43 per cent a

year ago.

To address this, seniors at the Paya Lebar

Community Club formed a group advocate

healthy cooking — using more vegetables

and fruits in their dishes and cooking

methods that cut the use of fats, salt and

sugar. Members take turns to share recipes

through cooking demonstrations and a pot

luck party is held after each session.— Around 12,000 more seniors

Retiree Low Ngian Woo,

left, and his wife now lead a

more active lifestyle, after

he was diagnosed with high

blood pressure at a PA health

screening in May last year.

LEONG WEE KEAT

More check-ups that cost as little as chicken rice

Leong Wee Keat

weekeat@mediacorp.com.sg

SINGAPORE

This is part of the national implementation of the People’s Association (PA) Wellness Programme, which has screened 13,000 seniors since 2008.

The programme aims to help seniors stay active and healthy, with health screening being a key feature.

Seniors’ blood pressure, blood glucose and blood cholesterol levels and those found to be at risk will be encouraged to see their family doctors and nurse educators for follow-ups.

Three out of four seniors screened so far have been diagnosed to be at risk, showing symptoms that could lead to ailments such as kidney failure, stroke or a heart attack.

Health screenings for the 12,000 more seniors are scheduled to take place between this month and March 2012.

Retiree Low Ngian Woo learnt he had high blood pressure after undergoing a PA health screening in May last year. Since then, the 60-year-old has begun exercising with other seniors from Paya Lebar constituency, brisk walking twice a week.

Mr Low also visits his neighbourhood Wellness Centre every Wednesday for a free blood pressure check, and for social activities such as folk dancing with his wife. “The way we live has changed since that screening. We no longer stay at home the whole day and waste our time,” he said.

Besides health screenings, PA also intends to deepen social engagement among seniors through social interest groups such as classes on healthy cooking.

A recent survey PA conducted of 419 seniors found little improvement in their consumption of fruits and vegetables. Only four in 10 eat at least two servings of fruits a day, a slight decrease from 43 per cent a year ago.

To address this, seniors at the Paya Lebar Community Club formed a group advocate healthy cooking — using more vegetables and fruits in their dishes and cooking methods that cut the use of fats, salt and sugar. Members take turns to share recipes through cooking demonstrations and a pot luck party is held after each session.— Around 12,000 more seniors here can soon undergo health screenings at nominal rates which are about the same the price as of a plate of chicken rice.

 
 
pharoah88
    05-Aug-2010 13:45  
Contact    Quote!

Here comes project X Ah Long

1-800- 924-5664

S RAMESH

rameshs@mediacorp.com.sg

SINGAPORE

Project “X Ah Long” promises anonymity as no details of the caller will be taken unless he volunteers the information. Information from the hotline callers, which will be kept confidential, will be channelled to the police to assist them in their work.

Efforts by the police against loansharks have shown positive results.

Between January and June, 789 people were arrested for unlicensed moneylending and harassment, up from 419 during that period last year.

This despite the fact that the number of unlicensed moneylending and harassment cases has decreased from 9,424 cases in the first half of 2009 to 8,654 cases in the same period this year, the police said.

And the community is playing a pivotal role in tackling these crimes, especially in the heartlands, said the chairman of the Government Parliamentary Committee (Law and Home Affairs), Mr Alvin Yeo.

The formation of Neighbourhood Watch Groups was useful because the police cannot be everywhere, 24 hours a day, he said.

The other aspect is public education. “The public needs to know that, if they have financial difficulties, they should approach the right people, the credit counselling service and not borrow from loansharks,” said Mr Yeo.

The hotline number 1-800- 924-5664 will be publicised on new media platforms like NCPC’s website, Facebook page and forums.

It will be on trial for a year.
— The National Crime Prevention Council (NCPC) will launch a hotline project called “X Ah Long” today in an effort to complement the police’s battle against loanshark activities. The hotline offers an option for people who may not want to approach the police directly, said the NCPC.

 

 
Hulumas
    05-Aug-2010 12:29  
Contact    Quote!
So seducing HuuuuuuuuuuuuuH.

pharoah88      ( Date: 04-Aug-2010 12:18) Posted:

DIY lip care: Recipes for homemade lip gloss & tint

pharoah88      ( Date: 03-Aug-2010 19:22) Posted:



gOlfer  versus  fOOtballer

gOlfer  MUST  hIt One small ball  intO  ALL  18  small  hOles  by  hImself  wIth  Own  stIcks.

fOOtballer is FREE to hIt  One BiG bAll intO One BiG  hOle  wIth anyOne's  lEg.


 
 
pharoah88
    05-Aug-2010 11:49  
Contact    Quote!


cIgarette

is 

crImes  drIver
 
 
pharoah88
    05-Aug-2010 11:46  
Contact    Quote!

smOkIng  is  crImInal

tO

nOn-smOker



pharoah88      ( Date: 04-Aug-2010 11:53) Posted:

SMOKE still gets in our EYES

STRICTER LAWS are NEEDED

Letter from Yee Ming Fai

I REFER to the letter from Tang Li (“It’s time to relook our anti-smoking strategy”, Aug 2).

Mr Tang is absolutely right in drawing attention to the problem of the growing number of smokers. However, the CRUX remains that smoking harms “innocent bystanders” and therefore it cannot be regarded simply as an activity of personal choice.

I do not find the new rules prohibiting on smoking in certain public areas effective.

The young children who breathe in the second-hand smoke of their caregivers or parents, whether at home or outdoors, are not protected. In sheltered hawker centres, designated smoking areas are located adjacent to non-smoking tables or tables designated for the mobility-impaired, so there is no protection for the public occupying such seats. At bus-stops and MRT stations, we are still assailed by cigarette smoke generated just outside the no-smoking zones.

More can be done to protect the PUBLiC from Second-Hand SMOKE.

We have put into place drastic measures on chewing gum successfully; I wonder WHY the smoking problem is not dealt with more aggressively.

When in Japan, I observed no one smokes while on the move. They make it a point to stop at a isolated corner or smoking room before lighting up. If a change of the collective smoker mindset toward civic consciousness cannot be engendered, harsher laws will have to suffice instead.

 

Out of sight, out of mind?

Letter from Karsten Cramer

WHILE I agree with Mr Tang that different approaches are needed to supplement Singapore’s anti-smoking efforts, I DISagree with the letter’s contention that “short of banning cigarettes, we have done everything possible to stop people from smoking”.

One of the more obvious strategies that has not yet been implemented is to prohibit shops from openly displaying cigarettes and other tobacco products for sale.

This is unlikely to stop a diehard smoker from asking for a pack from the shop attendant, but it might help to cut down on those who are just adopting the habit and making a purchase on impulse.

This approach has proven effective in other jurisdictions, such as some Canadian provinces. Over time, perhaps “out of sight, out of mind” could help to cut down on smoking in Singapore, too.

The peak-hour smokeout

LIKE Mr Tang, I, too, believe more can be done about the problem of smoking.

It’s not uncommon to see smokers lighting up and puffing away along pathways leading to MRT stations during morning peak hours, while non-smokers behind them hold their breath and try to overtake them to minimise the amount of smoke they inhale.

Why should smokers get to enjoy themselves at the expense of non-smokers’ health?

Perhaps it is time to designate all pathways as non-smoking zones — at least during peak hours, when so many people are on the pavements rushing to or from work.

Letter from Chan Lai Ying


 
 
pharoah88
    05-Aug-2010 10:20  
Contact    Quote!
ImagelIve  lOngly
 

 
pharoah88
    04-Aug-2010 18:01  
Contact    Quote!
 
 
pharoah88
    04-Aug-2010 17:55  
Contact    Quote!




龙头
 
 
pharoah88
    04-Aug-2010 12:54  
Contact    Quote!
Former SPD welfare worker fined $10,000 on corruption charges

pharoah88      ( Date: 03-Aug-2010 17:18) Posted:



retirER 

always  retIres

retirEE

NEVER  RETiRES

OWN-SELF

 

 
 
pharoah88
    04-Aug-2010 12:29  
Contact    Quote!


pharoah88      ( Date: 04-Aug-2010 09:21) Posted:



bOgUs stUdents

bOgUs stUdents

 
 
pharoah88
    04-Aug-2010 12:18  
Contact    Quote!
DIY lip care: Recipes for homemade lip gloss & tint

pharoah88      ( Date: 03-Aug-2010 19:22) Posted:



gOlfer  versus  fOOtballer

gOlfer  MUST  hIt One small ball  intO  ALL  18  small  hOles  by  hImself  wIth  Own  stIcks.

fOOtballer is FREE to hIt  One BiG bAll intO One BiG  hOle  wIth anyOne's  lEg.

 

 
pharoah88
    04-Aug-2010 12:13  
Contact    Quote!
Did Mel Gibson cause this?
 
 
pharoah88
    04-Aug-2010 11:53  
Contact    Quote!

SMOKE still gets in our EYES

STRICTER LAWS are NEEDED

Letter from Yee Ming Fai

I REFER to the letter from Tang Li (“It’s time to relook our anti-smoking strategy”, Aug 2).

Mr Tang is absolutely right in drawing attention to the problem of the growing number of smokers. However, the CRUX remains that smoking harms “innocent bystanders” and therefore it cannot be regarded simply as an activity of personal choice.

I do not find the new rules prohibiting on smoking in certain public areas effective.

The young children who breathe in the second-hand smoke of their caregivers or parents, whether at home or outdoors, are not protected. In sheltered hawker centres, designated smoking areas are located adjacent to non-smoking tables or tables designated for the mobility-impaired, so there is no protection for the public occupying such seats. At bus-stops and MRT stations, we are still assailed by cigarette smoke generated just outside the no-smoking zones.

More can be done to protect the PUBLiC from Second-Hand SMOKE.

We have put into place drastic measures on chewing gum successfully; I wonder WHY the smoking problem is not dealt with more aggressively.

When in Japan, I observed no one smokes while on the move. They make it a point to stop at a isolated corner or smoking room before lighting up. If a change of the collective smoker mindset toward civic consciousness cannot be engendered, harsher laws will have to suffice instead.

 

Out of sight, out of mind?

Letter from Karsten Cramer

WHILE I agree with Mr Tang that different approaches are needed to supplement Singapore’s anti-smoking efforts, I DISagree with the letter’s contention that “short of banning cigarettes, we have done everything possible to stop people from smoking”.

One of the more obvious strategies that has not yet been implemented is to prohibit shops from openly displaying cigarettes and other tobacco products for sale.

This is unlikely to stop a diehard smoker from asking for a pack from the shop attendant, but it might help to cut down on those who are just adopting the habit and making a purchase on impulse.

This approach has proven effective in other jurisdictions, such as some Canadian provinces. Over time, perhaps “out of sight, out of mind” could help to cut down on smoking in Singapore, too.

The peak-hour smokeout

LIKE Mr Tang, I, too, believe more can be done about the problem of smoking.

It’s not uncommon to see smokers lighting up and puffing away along pathways leading to MRT stations during morning peak hours, while non-smokers behind them hold their breath and try to overtake them to minimise the amount of smoke they inhale.

Why should smokers get to enjoy themselves at the expense of non-smokers’ health?

Perhaps it is time to designate all pathways as non-smoking zones — at least during peak hours, when so many people are on the pavements rushing to or from work.

Letter from Chan Lai Ying

 
 
pharoah88
    04-Aug-2010 11:30  
Contact    Quote!

Can aspirin prevent recurrence of colorectal cancer?

NCCS to lead regional clinical trial to find out

SINGAPORE

That will be the subject of a regional clinical trial which the National Cancer Centre Singapore (NCCS) will be leading.

Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer worldwide and the NCCS says that new therapies are urgently needed to tackle this disease.

In the past year, several articles have been published that seem to suggest that patients with colorectal or even breast cancer who were started on aspirin had a significant reduction in the risk of recurrence and death.

Dr Toh Han Chong, head of the Medical Oncology Department at the NCCS, said the impact would be huge if the results prove positive, given that aspirin costs only 3 cents a tablet.

The NCCS has set up a network of 19 centres across Asia, including Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, China and India, and more centres are scheduled to join the study.

After completion of standard surgery and chemotherapy, patients with high risk Stage 2 or Stage 3 colorectal cancer will be given either aspirin or a placebo for three years and be closely monitored for recurrence over a period of five years.

However, cancer specialists added a word of caution: Because aspirin thins the blood and increases one’s risk of bleeding, patients who wish to take it for colorectal cancer need to do so under strict supervision and monitoring.— Can aspirin, a drug used by heart patients to thin the blood, be effective in reducing the risk of recurrence of colorectal cancer following surgery and chemotherapy?

 
 
pharoah88
    04-Aug-2010 09:21  
Contact    Quote!


bOgUs stUdents

bOgUs stUdents
 
 
pharoah88
    04-Aug-2010 09:18  
Contact    Quote!

bogus students

iN  SiNGAPORE

? ? ? ?



pharoah88      ( Date: 03-Aug-2010 20:13) Posted:

Fresh warnings of UK

immigration lOOphOle

LONDON

Figures showed the number of students entering Britain from countries outside the European Union increased by more than 75,000 in 12 months, despite unprecedented demand for college and university places at home.

The influx was exacerbated by a further 31,000 dependants accompanying foreign students.

It followed the introduction of Labour’s points-based immigration system which was supposed to make it harder for unskilled immigrants to come to Britain.

But the system made it no harder for immigrants to enter the country on student visas, according to campaign groups.

The British government said on Sunday that the student visa system had been open to “significant abuse”. Immigration Minister Damian Green said there would be a thorough review of the rules and new measures to “tighten the system further”.

Many students enter Britain to take legitimate degrees but tens of thousands of other foreigners have been admitted to 600 “lower tier” colleges, at which it is easier to gain a place but which are still accredited to hand out degrees.

Last year, it emerged that some of these colleges offered qualifications in subjects such as circus skills, acupuncture and ancient medicine. Many of their students are given the RiGHT to wOrk in Britain after graduating.

About 4,000 illegal immigrants are also thought to have used bogus colleges to slip into the country.

Mr Andrew Green, chairman of the group Migrationwatch, said: “There is growing evidence the points-based system has provided a back door for bogus students.”— The number of foreigners entering the United Kingdom on student visas rose by a third to more than 300,000 last year, prompting renewed warnings of a loophole in immigration law.

The Daily Telegraph


 
Important: Please read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy .