Showing posts with label YOG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YOG. Show all posts

Saturday, August 28, 2010

For a fortnight, I felt 16 (YOG)

WEekend today August 28 - 29, 2010, VOICES, PAGE 6
From
http://imcms2.mediacorp.sg/CMSFileserver/documents/006/PDF/20100828/2808VCW008.pdf
Website:
http://www.todayonline.com/Voices/EDC100828-0000051/For-a-fortnight,-I-felt-16
By
Edric Sng, edric@mediacorp.com.sg, 05:55 AM Aug 28, 2010



PHOTO: Blazing the trail at the opening ceremony
The Marina Bay floating platform was the stage for the spectacular Opening Ceremony on Aug 14. A crowd of 20,000 watched a spectacular show, anchored around the theme of “Blazing the Trail”. Among the highlights were a lion dance show, a fireworks display and a sublime moment during which Singapore sailor Darren Choy ran, seemingly on water, to light the Olympic Cauldron.

TODAY, FRIDAY AUGUST 27, 2010, PAGE 12

http://imcms2.mediacorp.sg/CMSFileserver/documents/006/PDF/20100827/2708HNP018.pdf



PHOTO: On Feb 21, 2008 IOC president Jacques Rogge announced that Singapore would be the first city to ever host the YOG. The news sent thousands at the Padang, including Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, into exuberant celebrations.
AFP, TODAY FILE PHOTO

From:
What a journey it has been,Tan Yo-Hinn, yohinn@mediacorp.com.sg Dr Jacques Rogge opened the envelope and uttered the sweetest 25 words: The International Olympic Committee have the honour of announcing that the first Summer Youth Olympic Games in 2010 are awarded to the city of Singapore.The Padang, and an entire nation, burst into cheers.
TODAY, FRIDAY AUGUST 27, 2010, COMMENTARY, PAGE 8

http://imcms2.mediacorp.sg/CMSFileserver/documents/006/PDF/20100827/2708HNP014.pdf



PHOTO: Team from TODAY and Edric Sng
http://sgstb.msn.com/i/BC/93A97C61C32D7D3135F2BCECAC2EE5.jpg
http://news.xin.msn.com/en/singapore/article.aspx?cp-documentid=4109095
The writer is Today's Voices editor.



PHOTO: From Athens to the heartlands
It involved some 2,400 torchbearers, from celebrities Joanne Peh and Randall Tan to ordinary Singaporeans from all walks of life and ages, crisscrossing the island for six days in early August.

The sight of Low Wei Jie chasing the flame reflected the spirit of the Games by a member of the public.

TODAY, FRIDAY AUGUST 27, 2010, PAGE 10

http://imcms2.mediacorp.sg/CMSFileserver/documents/006/PDF/20100827/2708HNP016.pdf



PHOTO: Blazing the trail at the opening ceremony
Asublime moment during which Singapore sailor Darren Choy ran, seemingly on water, to light the Olympic Cauldron.

TODAY, FRIDAY AUGUST 27, 2010, PAGE 12

http://imcms2.mediacorp.sg/CMSFileserver/documents/006/PDF/20100827/2708HNP018.pdf



PHOTO: Blazing the trail at the opening ceremony
By SPH-SYOGO C/Alph onsus Chern, Bryan van Der Beek, Chong Jun Liang, Gavin Foo and Leonard Phuah.

Today file photos

TODAY, FRIDAY AUGUST 27, 2010, PAGE 12

http://imcms2.mediacorp.sg/CMSFileserver/documents/006/PDF/20100827/2708HNP018.pdf


Ivan Heng, seated not five spots to my right, had whipped off his trademark black-rimmed glasses to wipe off a tear. He wasn't the only one.

On Thursday night, I somehow found myself seated just beside the team that put together the Youth Olympic Games closing ceremony. I would've thought that Heng, the event's creative director, would be backstage creatively directing things, but there he was in the stands with us, wearing the silly flashing hat, laughing and crying with the rest of us.

The bit that got to him - and to many around me - was a video montage of the Games highlights, a series of photographs of athletes crossing the finish line, dancing on the sidelines, having a laugh over a meal, biting their medals, cuddling Lyo and Merly stuffed toys. You remember.

The day before the closing ceremony, I was at Marina Reservoir taking in the canoe/kayak finals. The sport meant nothing to me, but that didn't matter; it could just as easily have been curling or kabaddi. I was there to find out for myself if there was any grain of truth to all the letters we've been publishing on the Voices pages about the infectious enthusiasm of the Games.

Some East European, I think, took the bronze in one of the events. When he was in his canoe, from far, he looked a man, muscularly cutting through the water, But up close, at the medal ceremony, he was all boy - ruddy cheeks, buck teeth, cuddling his Lyo stuffed toy. And when his name was announced, he bounced onto the podium with the kind of big, pure smile you don't see at the Olympics for Grown-Ups, the kind of joy that suggests he wasn't just doing it to score a better shoe sponsorship deal.

I could've cried.

If you've been moaning about the inconvenience the YOG has caused you, I suspect you didn't attend any of the events, didn't really watch the TV broadcast to see what the Games meant to the young 'uns playing their hearts out. I suspect you've missed the point of the whole shebang.

You'll be an adult for the rest of your life, but you're only young once - before work deadlines and housing loans get the better of you. Watching the athletes and eager volunteers throw themselves into everything they did with unfettered gusto, I felt that little bit younger.

I suspect Ivan Heng did, too.
By Edric Sng, edric@mediacorp.com.sg, 05:55 AM Aug 28, 2010
The writer is Today's Voices editor.



PHOTO: Blazing the trail at the opening ceremony
By SPH-SYOGO C/Alph onsus Chern, Bryan van Der Beek, Chong Jun Liang, Gavin Foo and Leonard Phuah.

Today file photos

TODAY, FRIDAY AUGUST 27, 2010, PAGE 12

http://imcms2.mediacorp.sg/CMSFileserver/documents/006/PDF/20100827/2708HNP018.pdf



Thank you, Mum.
For enduring morning sickness and jeans with elastic waistbands.
For carrying us in your arms, slings, wraps, strollers and minivans.

For teaching us to crawl, walk and run before we could swim, shoot, fence, row and cycle.

For being a full-time mum, chauffeur, coach, personal chef, doctor and cheerleader.
For never missing a day at the track or in the pool.
For being at every practice, match, meet and competition.

For believing in our dream before anyone else did.

For seeing the first Youth Olympic Games as not the end of an Olympic journey, but the start of one.
For doing the hardest job in the world.
Thank you for being a mum
.

From P&G, Proud sponsor of Mums TODAY, FRIDAY AUGUST 27, 2010, PAGE 19
http://imcms2.mediacorp.sg/CMSFileserver/documents/006/PDF/20100827/2708HNP025.pdf



PHOTO: Blazing the trail at the opening ceremony
From Russia - with love

By SPH-SYOGO C/Alph onsus Chern, Bryan van Der Beek, Chong Jun Liang, Gavin Foo and Leonard Phuah.

Today file photos

TODAY, FRIDAY AUGUST 27, 2010, PAGE 12

http://imcms2.mediacorp.sg/CMSFileserver/documents/006/PDF/20100827/2708HNP018.pdf



Reference

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Stamp - Blazing the trial (Date of issue: 14 August 2010, YOG) II

Source: https://shop.vpost.com.sg/vPOSTMall/images/philatelic/CSH10.jpg
https://shop.vpost.com.sg/

http://shop.vpost.com.sg/syog/invoke/viewCatalog?catalog=YOG.Philatelic

Date of issue:
14 August 2010
Designer:
Cubix International Pte Ltd



PHOTO: https://shop.vpost.com.sg/vPOSTMall/images/philatelic/CSH10.jpg
https://shop.vpost.com.sg/

By Singapore Post



PHOTO: First Day Cover



PHOTO: https://shop.vpost.com.sg/vPOSTMall/images/philatelic/CSH10.jpg
https://shop.vpost.com.sg/

By Singapore Post


SINGAPORE 2010 YOUTH OLYMPIC GAMES 14 - 26 August 2010

On 21 February 2008, Singapore celebrated with fanfare when the International Olympic Committee (I0C) announced its decision to hold the inaugural Youth Olympic Games (YOG) in Singapore in 2010. The announcement, broadcast live in front of an enthusiastic crowd, took place at the Padang.



PHOTO: 1st Local Stamp


Eighteen months later, thousands gathered once again at the Padang to celebrate the One-Year Countdown Event on 14 August 2009. It also celebrated the progress Singapore had made as well as its readiness to host the first YOG with the unveiling of a Countdown Clock set against the historic City Hall.



PHOTO: 65¢ Stamp


In August 2010, the nation will witness the official opening of the Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games, inking Singapore in history books as the first Host City of the YOG.



PHOTO: $1.10 Stamp


The multi-sport event offers an integrated sport, culture and education programme, aligned to the Olympic values of Excellence, Friendship and Respect. Depicted in this set of stamps are the official mascots, Lyo and Merly, in different poses, representing the liveliness and youthfulness of the athletes.



PHOTO: $2 Stamp


To welcome the coming of the inaugural YOC, the Youth Olympic Flame made its way across the world to one city in each of the five continents of Africa, the Americas, Asia, Europe and Oceania.



PHOTO: Lyo and Merly


The journey of the Youth Olympic Flame (JYOF) will connect people from all over the world to the Olympic Movement, uniting them in celebration of the spirit of Olympism.



PHOTO: http://greece.greekreporter.com/files/002.jpeg
http://greece.greekreporter.com/2010/07/23/torch-lit-in-ancient-olympia-for-inaugural-youth-olympic-games/




PHOTO: The torch for the Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games is passed to the first Greek torchbearer Apolstolos Koutavas during the flame lighting ceremony in Ancient Olympia, Greece
©XINHUA/SYOGOC-Pool/Wu Wei

http://www.sailing.org/images/news/10_YOG_FlameLight_360.jpg


In July 2010, the Youth Olympic Flame was lit in Greece and continued on its journey to Berlin (Germany), Dakar (Senegal), Mexico City (Mexico), Auckland (New Zealand) and Seoul (Republic of Korea). The Flame arrived in Singapore for a six-day round-island torch relay before lighting the cauldron at the Opening Ceremony of the Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games (Singapore 2010). The Olympic Flame, one of the most powerful and emotive symbols of the Olympic Movement, will burn brightly throughout the duration of Singapore 2010.



PHOTO: Singapore Youth Olympic Games, 14th to 26th August 2010.
© Singapore YOG 2010 Committee

http://sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash1/hs450.ash1/24781_364206492422_193142317422_4219074_7737127_n.jpg

http://www.collateralds.com/news/random/yog-heartgold-soulsilver/


Youth Olympic Flame

From: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sKJt2AI3cGQ&feature=player_embedded
http://www.singapore2010.sg/public/sg2010/en/en_youth_olympic_flame/en_singapore_leg_intro.html


Singapore 2010 is not just about sports, competition and breaking records. It is about doing one's best; about participating as much as about winning; about forging friendships in spite of diversity; about respecting oneself and others, rules and regulations, and the environment.


PHOTO: Presentation Pack Stamps


Let us bask in the excitement of Singapore 2010 as we start the Games!



PHOTO: First Day Cover


Date of Issue: 14 August 201 0
Denominations: 1st Local, 65¢, $1.10, $2
Stamp Size: 48mm x 30.45mm
Perforation:
13¼ x 13¾

Paper:
Unwatermarked

Printing Process:
Offset Lithography

Printer:
joh Enschede Security Print

SheetContent:
10

Designed by:
Cubix International Pte Ltd

First Day Cover (without stamps):
$0.25*

Pre-cancelled FDC affixed with stamps: $4.90*
Presentation Pack:
$5.90*




PHOTO: Presentation Pack

  • Obtainable from any Post Office and the Singapore Philatelic Museum.
  • * Prices inclusive of 7% GST for purchases within Singapore.
  • First Day Covers without stamps are available for purchase at least one week before the issue date.
  • 1st Local stamps can be used to make up the postage for overseas mail The designs were reproduced from rough visuals.
  • Details may be subject to change.

Website: www.singpost.com
Purchase on-line at http://shop.vpost.com.sg




PHOTO: YOG - Day 7 - Athletics (21st Aug 2010)
http://www.singapore2010.sg/public/sg2010/en/en_multimedia/en_photo.html



PHOTO: YOG - Day 7 - Athletics (21st Aug 2010)
http://www.singapore2010.sg/public/sg2010/en/en_multimedia/en_photo.html



PHOTO: YOG - Day 7 - Athletics (21st Aug 2010)
http://www.singapore2010.sg/public/sg2010/en/en_multimedia/en_photo.html



PHOTO: YOG - Day 7 - Diving (21st Aug 2010)
http://www.singapore2010.sg/public/sg2010/en/en_multimedia/en_photo.html



PHOTO: YOG - Day 7 - Diving (21st Aug 2010)
http://www.singapore2010.sg/public/sg2010/en/en_multimedia/en_photo.html



PHOTO: YOG - Day 7 - Diving (21st Aug 2010)
http://www.singapore2010.sg/public/sg2010/en/en_multimedia/en_photo.html



PHOTO: YOG - Day 7 - Diving (21st Aug 2010)
http://www.singapore2010.sg/public/sg2010/en/en_multimedia/en_photo.html



PHOTO: YOG - Day 7 - Diving (21st Aug 2010)
http://www.singapore2010.sg/public/sg2010/en/en_multimedia/en_photo.html



Reference

Saturday, August 14, 2010

The little boy who could (YOG)

From http://www.edvantage.com.sg/edvantage/news/news/430200/The_little_boy_who_could.html
By
AEdvantage,Wed Aug 11 2010



PHOTO: He did not want to miss the run and followed the flame.
Photo: ST Reader

http://static.edvantage.com.sg/site/servlet/linkableblob/edvantage/430200/topImage/The_little_boy_who_could-topImage.jpg


He followed the Youth Olympic flame for two and a half hours, just to snap pictures of the relay.


PHOTO: He did not want to miss the run and followed the flame.
Photo: ST Reader

http://static.edvantage.com.sg/site/servlet/linkableblob/edvantage/430190/data.jpg - data-2.jpg


This 12-year-old boy wearing an orange t-shirt and blue shorts left everyone wondering, "Who's that boy?".


PHOTO: The 12-year-old became the star of the third day of the relay.
Photo: ST Reader

http://static.edvantage.com.sg/site/servlet/linkableblob/edvantage/430178/data.jpg - data-3


Reason? He ran close to 15km in the rain, alongside bearers of the Youth Olympic Flame torch, as it made its way through Sengkang, Punggol and Hougang.



PHOTO: The Youth Olympic flame passed through Sengkang, Punggol and Hougang on Aug 10.
Photo: ST Reader

http://static.edvantage.com.sg/site/servlet/linkableblob/edvantage/430174/data.jpg


Clad in slippers and clutching a digital camera - which got soaked in the rain as well, the student from Compassvale Primary School told reporters from the Straits Times that his run wasn't planned.

He said he just wanted to catch a glimpse of the flame and follow it, as he "may never see it again".


PHOTO: Wei Jie said he did not want to miss the relay, as he "may never see it again".
http://static.edvantage.com.sg/site/servlet/linkableblob/edvantage/430176/data.jpg - data-1.jpg



PHOTO: Reporters, officials and YOG volunteers made a beeline for him.
Photo: Reader

http://static.edvantage.com.sg/site/servlet/linkableblob/edvantage/430180/data.jpg - data-4



PHOTO: Wei Jie got to hold the spare Youth Olympic flame torch as he posed with the relay's support r...
http://static.edvantage.com.sg/site/servlet/linkableblob/edvantage/430192/data.jpg - data-5





About 2 years ago, there was also another spectacular happenings to an Olympic torch bearer. At that time a defenseless lady torch bearer was physically attacked by male protesters who charged at her. She had to used her handicapped body to protect the torch from being snatched away.


PHOTO: Chinese paralympian fencer Jin Jing carrying the Olympic torch in Paris. She sat in her wheelchair, took her torch and waited quietly for the exchange.
http://www.zonaeuropa.com/20080410_1.htm
http://www.zonaeuropa.com/20080410_03.jpg



PHOTO: An unarmed girl who was handicapped, and the thug had to hit her? Whatever happen to minimal humanitarianism?
"At that moment, I was only thinking about protecting the Olympic flame!", reporter received a SMS message from Olympic torch bearer Jin Jing who is in Paris (France).

http://www.zonaeuropa.com/20080410_1.htm
http://www.zonaeuropa.com/20080410_08.jpg



PHOTO: Jin Jing clasped the torch tightly because she was afraid that someone might grab it.
http://www.zonaeuropa.com/20080410_1.htm
http://www.zonaeuropa.com/20080410_07.jpg



PHOTO: After the storm, the sun will shine again. Torch bearer Jin Jing formally lit her torch and proceeded ahead with the team.
http://www.zonaeuropa.com/20080410_1.htm
http://www.zonaeuropa.com/20080410_12.jpg



PHOTO: Jin Jing, the wheelchair-bound torch-bearer, has found fame. China has found a national heroine to boost its fragile self-esteem after weeks of embarrassing headlines over Tibet and the Olympic torch relay.
Website:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/2297096/Disabled-girl-becomes-Chinas-Olympic-heroine.html
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/telegraph/multimedia/archive/00694/news-graphics-2008-_694552a.jpg



PHOTO: Jin Jing, a Paralympic fencer, returned home on Wednesday and received a hero's welcome when she was recognized by people at Beijing's Capital International Airport.
(
Photo credit: Xinhua)
http://torchrelay.beijing2008.cn/en/journey/paris/news/n214298857.shtml
http://images.beijing2008.cn/20080410/Img214298860.jpg




Reference