Friday
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shall post.
heekx.
tomoro is hurdle number 1. our first big day.
good luck all!
tomoro mus put make up.
haha.
wonder wad te guys will look like manz.
if anyone nids help in putting makeup, lemme help u!!
haf faith in my make up skills.
been putting makeup since pri 2 cos i haf been performing alot since then.
also kinda aspiring to be make up artist bah...
so lemme help u k?
i will do a gud job de dun wrri.
LOL.
good nite.
^^
- Charlene
6/30/2006 09:49:00 PM
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Tuesday
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hi every1...
okae...
tink i shld help update b4 it goes dead...
how r u peeps' holis?
hope u al have fun...
i wonder who's gonna be our next eng teacher...
will she be as nice as ms yeung?
hmm...
i find ndp quite tiring...
wad bout u al?
shall end here...
- huishan ---o
6/13/2006 10:32:00 AM
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Heya peeps out there...
hws te hols...?i tink its mre borin den sch daes thou i h8 sch daes...
i tink hols is juz days we dun go 2sch n get mre hw instead...dun u tink so....
if tts te case...i would rather we dun hav ani hols at all...
6/06/2006 11:45:00 PM
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Saturday
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hiyo~
here is sth i found about taupok.
its written by a parent of a nanyang JC student..:
Jan 11, 2005 Put an end to this dangerous JC 'game'
I AM a parent of a boy studying in a premier junior college in the Bishan-Ang Mo Kio area. Recently, it has come to my attention that rowdy behaviour is threatening to compromise the safety of the students. According to my son, the violent act is dubbed 'taupok', a reference to a highly compressible piece of brown beancurd. A student would shout 'taupok' and other students would pounce on the targeted person, drag him down forcefully and climb on top of him. Due to peer pressure, more and more students would join in until the stack of bodies is about a metre high. This violent act is supposedly done in the name of fun but, as a parent, I feel that it is potentially dangerous and even life-threatening.
Furthermore, the 'taupoking' is not a rare occurrence. It can happen up to five times a day, anywhere and to any person. During the orientation programme for Year One students, even a person standing on the stage during a performance could get 'taupoked'. Supposing that an average person weighs 60kg, a typical group of 15 would weigh almost a tonne. Just as a person cannot survive without air for three minutes, I am very sure that the human backbone cannot bear the sheer weight of a thousand kilograms.
What happens if the victim's spine breaks?
Or if he sustains any other injuries?
Who will bear the consequences?
Fortunately, my son has not been a victim of 'taupoking' yet, but he still feels rather uncomfortable about this dangerous act. Also, he feels obliged to join in due to peer pressure, as everyone else is doing it. Some would say that 'taupoking' is perfectly safe if one assumes the correct position, with one's elbows and forearms touching the floor so as to support the weight, like in rugby. However, not everyone knows the correct position to take, and when surprised one might also forget to assume that position. I write this letter in the sincere hope of preventing a tragedy. Hopefully, we can keep 'taupok' where it belongs - in that delicious bowl of noodles.
-Justin Situ Ren Jun
u noe, i find tat this parent is weird cos he actually wrote te definition of taupok, which is a highly compressible piece of brown beancurd.
LOL...
hope u enjoyed te post.
=D
>>>Charlene O---
6/03/2006 08:06:00 PM
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