Tuesday, August 8, 2017

MHS GRADUATE ENJOYING HIS TIME

Tuesday, 8 August 2017

Keeping fit and travelling the world

image: http://www.thestar.com.my/~/media/online/2017/08/07/20/30/metd_0808_gctams180617_pamellalim_1.ashx/?w=620&h=413&crop=1&hash=A9C7E27B1D72A4EF85F632ADC29B7E4ACE487F53
(From right) Tam with his daughter Joyce on the day she was called to the Bar, his wife Constance, who has her own law firm, and his son Jonathan, who is in the IT line.
(From right) Tam with his daughter Joyce on the day she was called to the Bar, his wife Constance, who has her own law firm, and his son Jonathan, who is in the IT line.
 
AT the height of his sporting career, sports writers described Tam Chiew Seng, the hockey star who represented Malaysia in the 1978 and 1982 Asian Games and the Los Angeles Olympics in 1984, as a tireless player.
Sporting his signature headband – because he had long hair and the headband was very much in fashion at that time – Tam was a media darling in the hockey arena.
“I played to win. I was like an engine,” recalled Tam, now 61.
He admitted that sports writers had their favourites but said, “they could be a critical lot as well”.
A Melaka native and the son of a bricklayer, Tam started a career in sports as a cricket player.
When he debuted in the Saudara Cup in 1972 at age 16, he was the youngest player in the Malaysian team. His last international cricket outing was in the 1980 Interport match against Hong Kong.
As for his hockey career, he retired upon returning from the 1984 Olympics in the US, much to his fans’ disappointment as the 28-year-old was at his peak.
But the father of two, who is now a compliance manager with Eng Lian Enterprise, decided it was a good time to start a new chapter in his life.
image: http://www.thestar.com.my/metro/focus/2017/08/08/keeping-fit-and-travelling-the-world-former-hockey-olympian-now-enjoys-healthy-lifestyle-holidays-an/~/media/e045a1fe53bb480fbef43220fdbf6825.ashx?h=668&w=500
Tam on holiday in New Zealand. He has travelled to many places around the world with his wife or his golf mates.
Tam on holiday in New Zealand. He has travelled to many places around the world with his wife or his golf mates
The writing of this new chapter was mainly inspired during a group outing with friends to a theatre play in Universiti Malaya.
There, he met his wife, Constance Teo. Soon enough, Tam stepped into the role of supporting husband, no-nonsense parent and dedicated family man.
“It has been a long time since I have held a hockey stick,” he said when met at Bukit Kiara Royal Selangor Club.
But it is not that Tam is no longer inclined to sports. He simply switched sticks – from hockey to golf.
“I used to be a single handicapper. Now it is 15,” laughed Tam.
image: http://www.thestar.com.my/metro/focus/2017/08/08/keeping-fit-and-travelling-the-world-former-hockey-olympian-now-enjoys-healthy-lifestyle-holidays-an/~/media/ed9ec95b75cb4f66bab7c9bae3c84d8f.ashx?h=336&w=250
Tam (left) during a match in Stadium Merdeka in 1977.
Tam (left) during a match in Stadium Merdeka in 1977.
He blames age and work commitments for the slide. But it does not bother him as he reckons he has overcome bigger challenges such as conquering Mount Kinabalu when he was 55 and travelled around the world with his wife and golf mates.
Tam also boasted about his wife’s photography talents. He said her works were featured in an exhibition, “Nature Thru The Lens”, at the White Box in Publika in June.
Still sporting a svelte frame, Tam’s latest preoccupation is his fitness.
“Health will not come to you. You have to work for it, “ he said.
Having gone through the heartbreak of seeing his late mother struggle after surviving a stroke, Tam is determined to age gracefully.
Tan’s approach to health is simple.
He is up at 6am daily to snap on his Fitbit and track the mileage he has clocked in his morning walks.
He does not believe in following health fads, save for one session of yoga after which he decided it would have been best taken when he was younger and more flexible.
When it comes to food, he confessed to be yet convinced by organic vegetables and wheat germ.
“I eat everything. But I believe in moderation and not to overeat. I stop the moment I am full,” said Tam.
He also makes sure to cut away the lard when he is enjoying roast pork. He drinks red wine when the occasion is fit but his limit is three glasses.
He does not smoke and does not mince his words on those who do.
As a former police officer, Tam is totally against drugs. The very first thing he told his son when the boy attended university was not to study hard but to stay away from drugs.
On his life philosophy, Tam said he is entirely against public demonstrations, insisting there is no issue that cannot be settled by discourse.
“You must know who to talk to,” said Tam.
image: http://www.thestar.com.my/metro/focus/2017/08/08/keeping-fit-and-travelling-the-world-former-hockey-olympian-now-enjoys-healthy-lifestyle-holidays-an/~/media/5e24bc18ec524ba482ed08d7904ef2f7.ashx?h=857&w=500
Tam has traded his hockey stick for golf clubs to maintain his fitness level.
Tam has traded his hockey stick for golf clubs to maintain his fitness level.
He also believes everyone must learn the valuable lesson of standing on their own feet, for that is how one builds character.
But he also stressed on the importance of lifelong friendships because no man is an island.
Coming from a traditional Chinese family, he places importance on filial piety.
He is especially sentimental of a shirt his daughter bought him for his birthday.
On his current interests, Tam said he and his wife have caught the traveling bug. Both are looking forward to touring Eastern Europe.
Otherwise, he can be found on the golf course most Saturdays.
Tam Chiew Seng studied in Malacca High until 1973.

Read more at http://www.thestar.com.my/metro/focus/2017/08/08/keeping-fit-and-travelling-the-world-former-hockey-olympian-now-enjoys-healthy-lifestyle-holidays-an/#MvCk2Fhh5qBMTRJB.99

Sunday, February 26, 2017

FORMER MHS STUDENT DR. CHUA KAW BENG DISCOVERED NIPAH VIRUS



Dr Chua Kaw Beng had discovered the Nipah virus whilst it was still in the midst of the outbreak here that eventually killed 105 people and led to the culling of over a million pigs. — AFP pic
KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 27 — Dr Chua Kaw Beng is one of the most unassuming people you will ever see, but he is the man that possibly rescued Malaysia from one of the most virulent viruses known to man: the Nipah virus.
Today, the Nipah virus is well known, having been the inspiration for the 2011 movie Contagion, but in 1999, when it had been confused for Japanese encephalitis (JE), Dr Chua broke all manner of rules in order to prove his discovery.
In an interview with US media outlet NPR, Dr Chua recounted how, when he was still a virologist in training, he had discovered the Nipah virus whilst it was still in the midst of the outbreak here that eventually killed 105 people and led to the culling of over a million pigs.
He made the chilling discovery in the lab of Universiti Malaya (UM) where he was still studying, but was ignored by his professors when he brought his findings to them.
Local authorities had also not given the outbreak their full attention, then believing it was another JE incident with mosquitoes as the vector.
Dr Chua and Dr Tan Chong Tin, a neurologist also based at UM, noticed then that the disease was entirely absent from the Muslim population, but was ravaging Nipah, the home of many of the country's pig farms and where one in three families eventually lost someone to the virus,
“No, no I knew it was something else, and people were dying!” Dr Chua told NPR in the interview published on Saturday. “But no one would believe me.”
Dr Chua then decided to sneak samples of the virus into the Centers for Disease Control in the US, under the pretext of studying mosquito-borne diseases. He sealed the virus in his suitcase and carried it by hand on the flight to and into the CDC.
There, he would have access to the CDC's powerful microscopes that would allow him to clearly study the virus, but how he brought the samples into the centre broke many of its safety and quarantine procedures.
“It was an emergency… I had to get the samples there very quickly,” he explained.
As risky as the move was, it allowed Dr Chua to identify the virus as paramyxol, the virus family that contains both the Hendra virus and what would later be called Nipah, after the area that it most ravaged.
The discovery and later corroboration by other scientists at the CDC were crucial in convincing the Malaysian government then that the outbreak was not JE, prompting it to deploy the military in a massive culling operation that killed over a million swines.
It was discovered a decade later that the pigs had been infected by bats, and the clustered nature of farms then had made them what Dr Tan described as a “virus factory”.
The outbreak led to a complete overhaul of Malaysia's pig farming industry.
Dr Chua has since left the country for the Temasek Lifesciences Laboratory in Singapore, where he is senior principal investigator.
Dr Tan remains attached to UM as a neurologist.
Both men were part of the UM investigative team that was conferred such prizes as the Merdeka Award and the Mahathir Science Award for their efforts in discovering the Nipah virus.
- See more at: http://m.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/how-a-student-broke-the-rules-to-save-malaysia-from-the-nipah-virus#sthash.oMuribNB.dpuf