May 2007 Archives

Meet Baby Ledge!

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Baby Euclid Cool Jnr Daole!Baby Euclid Cool Jnr Daole!Baby Euclid Cool Jnr Daole!Baby Euclid Cool Jnr Daole!Standard post-delivery nutrition.Baby Euclid Cool Jnr Daole!

Our friend's new-born son. He's cute.
Brilliance Mall Recycling Performance Brilliance Mall Recycling Performance

Linda and I found ourselves out at the Brilliance West Mall (百联西郊购物中心) on Xianxia Lu during the weekend, and we were met with this odd sight.

An environmental and recycling awareness talent show-come-fashion competition involving kids and their parents (or extended family in one case).

Brilliance Mall Recycling Performance
RSS feed reader that ports new entries to your chat program.

This little gem of Vernacula australiana best describes the last four weeks in my hectic life.

I am glad to announce that I have moved on from my former life as a TUB, and I'm now dipping my toes back into the 'half-pat' lifestyle.

I'm going to expand on some of the points I make here, but this is what has been going on over the last few weeks...

  • Parental Unit Entertainer
    A three-week visit by my parents coincided with most of what I'm writing below. It was great to spend time with them in Shanghai, although I think they would feel differently about my recommendation on attending the insanely crowded Longhua Temple Festival over the May Holiday break. Other highlights were non-stop eating, buying massive amounts of pearl jewellery, tailored clothes, gifts, and sharing a number of Guinness at The Blarney Stone with my family and Shanghai pals. Mum & Dad also hit Xi'an on a tour, and later traveled to HK on their way home to Brisneyland, but I didn't join them for those adventures. Probably the highlight of the time I spent with them was a brief Suzhou day-trip for a garden tour (much to my mother's delight). The perfect bookend for the day was the marvellous Bullet train service. The Nanjing-Shanghai express stops briefly in Suzhou. Nothing beats the experience of firstly standing on the train platform in Suzhou at 8:30pm, and scarcely one hour later we were all at home in my Jing'an District apartment. Amazing. The only sour note during their whole trip was my Dad's incessant handkerchief use, which I think was the source of the contagion my 'Olds' brought with them from Oz. I also felt a touch guilty that during their visit as I was working my arse-off smashing all of the below things together at one time.
  • Charity Guy
    In my last blog entry, I wrote about the ChinaNext charity auction that I organised through the Shanghai Flickr Meet up group. Our evening was a success, raising just over RMB9,500 for Xin Shi Ji Xiao Xue (New Century Primary School) in Pudong. 1750 students, no library. Well, not anymore. I hope to put something similar together again before we leave China.
  • SHiist Happenings
    From the end of April until the last 2 weeks, I have been writing consistently for Shanghaiist. At one point I took over the editing duties while Dan covered an Asian golf tournament in Nanjing. That was an interesting time, particularly after publishing this piece that I drew a lot of criticism for. Gotta love it. I haven't even had a chance to write that long-waited for, cunning rebuttal. I put it somewhere around here...
  • The Blogger
    I've already chatted about my column in The City Weekend magazine. So far, four of my pieces have been published, with another in the works as we speak. Reporting on the blogging world is a bit tough as not a lot seems to be happening out there (except for the reaction to Ben Ross' barber shop experiment), but I got onto that one for this coming issue a week or so ago.
  • Tutors In China
    I registered for this tutoring and teaching service over a month ago now hoping to pick up a few extra RMB over the close to the northern hemisphere school year. Despite the travel out to expat-havens of Kangqiao and Minhang, I've picked up some nice work teaching predominantly mathematics to IB students. It has been fun teaching again.
  • Pearls of wisdom...
    Linda mentioned in her blog yesterday that Zhulin Pearls has been growing steadily over the past few months, and that there are a few interesting developments coming up soon. It seems everyone loves pearl jewellery in Australia, despite the fact that pearls are considered 'elderly' or 'American'. You can be the judge of that statement.
  • You can call me Sir...
    Just after my parent's departure for HK, I accepted a sub-teaching contract the Puxi campus of The British International School. I'm teaching ICT (information and computing technology) and also history to middle-school students. The best thing about this experience is that the pay is good and that I love teaching, but I love teaching science a lot more. The worst thing is the early morning commute and relatively long-school days. I'll be out here for the next week or so.
  • Chinese biotech reemerges in my life...
    I'm not going to say too much about this right at the moment, but it looks like I may be going back to my A-game of biotechnology for a crust. Stay tuned.

So that's about it. The last week or so in my life has been spent getting up before 6am and spending the bulk of my day running around the place, or at least commuting from meetings, work commitments, and fitting in a smidgen of socialising.

Also, congratulatiosn to Matt-man and Shirl who got hitched recently, and DaDan and Lozza who just delivered baby Euclid Cool Jnr. into the world. It's all happening!

"Neither the police nor Wu's parents had provided a reason for the attacks, but a villager was quoted as saying the wounded students had asked Wu for protection money,"
"the famous Shaolin monks hope to build - at a cost of up to $800 million - a temple, martial arts and Chinese medicine complex, with a golf course, hotel and housing,"
"They may be Australia's cutest icons, but these twins are 100 per cent made in China,"
"the first time it has built a commercial satellite and put it into orbit on contract for another country,"
"Untreated sewage from factory discharges and urban centres now accounts for 10 per cent of the Yellow River's flow,"
"Most of the loans went to the manufacturing, water conservancy, real estate and retail and wholesale sectors,"
"The investment spree has aroused concern from the industry watchdog."
The national headquarters for the prevention of forest fires sent about 10,000 fire-fighters, together with airplanes, to help extinguish the fire. The fire was put out five days later.
"Somehow, the cat survived at least 35 days inside a container filled with motorcycle gear."
"The crew of the Chinese ship - the 4,800-ton JinSheng - was unharmed and made it back to Dalian where they reported the collision to Chinese authorities, Suh said, delaying search and rescue operations for several hours."
"A light regulatory regime, lightning fast flows of information and gossip, plus a get-rich-quick-at-all-costs ethos make markets such as Hong Kong open to abuse,"
"An anti-satellite test is not necessarily a clear indication of a desire for peaceful utilization of space. It is a confusing signal, shall we say, for a country who desires, in China's words, a peaceful rise."
"Spraying chemicals on crops improperly or using products that may be fake or banned risks the health of China's hundreds of millions of farmers and could lead to unsafe levels of residues in fruits and vegetables,"
"Wan is the man that the Communist party leaders want in charge... so much so... that they don't appear to care that Wan is not a party member, another rarity for a cabinet minister."
ChinaNext

This is something that has been taking up a heap of my time recently. Together with a few Flickr friends in Shanghai, we put together a photography competition and silent auction fundraiser using the Flickr interface. Monies raised at this event will be donated via Shanghai Sunrise, to the Xin Shi Ji Xiao Xue School on Hongqiao Road, Shanghai. 1750 students are in dire need of a library. 30% of the bar takings also goes to the students. Also, photographers will take portrait shots for a fee in a little mini-studio area.

The big auction is tonight, so if you're in Shanghai, please turn up to La Bella Cafe (127 Yongfu Lu, near Fuxing West Road) from 7pm.

There's a lot more information about the event over on these websites...

ChinaNext Flickr Group Thread.

Shanghaiist: Shanghai's Students to benefit from ChinaNext Photography Auction.
SmartShanghai: ChinaNext.

I hope to see you there. Bring cash for the kiddies.

I am Beast

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So frickin busy at the moment, so here's the quickest thing I could post for me.

You scored as Beast. Beast is an intelligent, politcal spokesman for the X-Men. He has a Ph.D in Genetics and is well versed in literature. He may look like a blue fuzzy monster, but deep down he's very benevolent and logical. Powers: Enhanced strength and agility

Beast

90%

Colossus

80%

Jean Grey

70%

Cyclops

70%

Wolverine

65%

Storm

65%

Emma Frost

60%

Rogue

50%

Iceman

45%

Nightcrawler

40%

Gambit

30%

Most Comprehensive X-Men Personality Quiz 2.0
created with QuizFarm.com

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