Friday, October 31, 2014
Adrenaline Rush
Chef Hats and Aprons
Thursday, October 30, 2014
Blushing Red
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Visual Treat
JOHOR BARU: PHOTOGRAPHY enthusiasts should not miss the “100 Photographic Showcase” which will be held at the Southern University College (SUC) here from Sunday to Nov 9.
Photographic Society of Johor (PSJ) president Tang King Huat said 100 photographs will put up for sale at RM200 each, and the full amount will go to the SUC. The exhibition will be held at its Museum and Art Gallery.
“The exhibition will showcase our members’ work from as early as the 1960s to the present day,” Tang said.
“We hope that the exhibition will draw photography enthusiasts and that schools will organise visits to the exhibition, as it will help students learn more about the techniques of photography.
“A black and white photograph can bring more contrast to a shot as it is not distorted by colours. It is like listening to the music of a song minus the lyrics.
“Just enjoy the musical notes. That is what a black and white photograph evokes in some of us,” Tang said.
“The same photograph with colours stir a different mood and tells a different story,” he added.
Tang also said that the event was one of the highlights of PSJ’s 50th anniversary celebrations.
Tebrau Member of Parliament Khoo Soo Seang is expected to launch the event on Sunday at 11am.
There will also be a sharing session where three well-known photographers Foo Tee Jun, Teo Yong Kang and Wong Beow Leong, all from Singapore, will share their experiences as well as tips on how to get the winning shot in a photography contest.
PSJ has also prepared a set of postcards featuring all the photographs on exhibition, as a gift for guests during its opening on a whilst stocks last basis.
The exhibition will be held daily from 9am to 5pm. Admission is free. PSJ, which was formed in 1964, has more than 200 members today.
For enquiries, call the event organising chairman Wong Siew Heong at 012-763 9191.
Stronger Bilateral Ties
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
It's Not Safe
JOHOR BARU: LOW rentals has lured about 100 families and individuals into Block 4 of Taman Jaya flats in Skudai here, despite it being declared unsafe a decade ago.
In 2005, a support pillar of the four-storey block had cracked and became slightly tilted, which forced 300 residents to evacuate.
After the incident, the then Public Works and Housing Committee chairman Datuk Baderi Dasuki had urged the residents to move out voluntarily within a week for their own safety or face forceful eviction.
Based on preliminary findings, the Malaysian Public Works Institute (Ikram) had declared the structure unstable and a study on Block 4 was conducted.
Ikram reportedly found that the cracked column had failed, making it unable to take the load of the structure.
In 2011, the state government gave out compensations to the flat owners. But for fear of safety for their families, some had left for good after the incident.
Some left but came back and along the way, new tenants moved in, lured by the attractive low rentals for the units.
Streets visited the block of flats yesterday and found that people living there were unfazed by the hazardous conditions.
Sixty-year-old Sukarti Karsan was one of the tenants who lived there with her son. Sukarti said she was aware of the 2005 incident.
“My two sons take turns to take care of me. Sometimes I go and stay with him and sometimes I stay with my son here. I know it is not safe but we cannot find alternative accommodation.
“My son is renting the place for RM250. There is water and electricity. In some units, there are none and their rental is lower,” Sukarti said.
Another resident who only wanted to be known as Ani, who is living in the block across Sukarti, said her rental is RM300 per month.
“Residents in my block were not asked to evacuate as the land here did not sink.
“I think a lot of foreigners are renting the flats here, especially in that block, as the rent is lower than the other blocks,” she said.
It was reported that residents heard a loud bang and felt the floor moving in the 10.30pm incident.
The walls in some units started to crack and steel rods inside the support pillar could be seen.
The support pillar was said to have cracked due to soil movement below the almost 30-year-old building, which houses 64 units.
Central Johor Baru Municipal Council president Sallehuddin Hassan confirmed to Streets yesterday that the building is not fit for occupancy.
Sallehuddin said a sign was put up by MPJBT but it has since gone missing.