Saturday, March 19, 2011

Saturday, March 19, 2011

WINGING IT AT THE BIRD PARK: Susan, Deb, Sandy and I took a cab west and headed to the Jurong Bird Park. It was well worth the trip. The first exhibit was the penguins (above). Viewers get can see the birds both above and below sea level. Very nicely done. The rest of the exhibits were wonderful. I enjoyed the coloring of the peach-faced lovebird (right). There were plenty of scarlet ibis (below), pelican and swan. And we saw one of the biggest sea eagles imaginable, the Steller's sea eagle.


CRANE NUMBERS TUMBLE: After yesterday's upturn (meaning a decline in the numbers of UP cranes), today's Singapore Crane Index Limited Economic Indicator reveals that the UP cranes are back. Kind of the EXACT OPPOSITE of yesterday's report.

Date: March 20
Time: 8:30 a.m. (Singapore time)
Cranes Up (bad): 13
Cranes Down (good): 14
CRANES MISSING (neutral): 1

Friday, March 18, 2011

Friday, March 18, 2011

AT LEAST SOMEBODY (OR SOMETHING) IS READING A NEWSPAPER THESE DAYS: On the final day of Stephen's visit we MRT'd our way to Orchard Street. Pedestrian traffic was quite light because we were there in mid-morning. But it was good to see the stores and trees and grab breakfast. We strolled by an installation called "Urban People, 2009" (above). The figures are between 2.0 and 2.2 meters in height. The medium is aluminum (or, as the British--correctly, I think--say, al-you-MIN-ee-yum). This is by the Swiss-born Kurt Laurenz Metzler. That metal is his favorite medium. The characters "symbolize everyday life in the city." I didn't just make that up. It's written on the descriptive sign near the sculptures. It looks like that is made in aluminum, too.

AN UNPARALLELED GOOF: In an earlier post, I mentioned the Singapore-wide efforts to strengthen the use of English--pronunciation, word usage, syntax and spelling. A spectacular looking bar just opened nearby called Boulevard Bayfront. It looks great. It's right on Marina Bay. It has an excellent wine list. Maybe we'll stop by. But the facade was marred by the sign (right) that meant to say the place offers an "unparalleled experience."
They dropped the "el" and were left with "unparalled." It looks fine at a quick glance, or through the bottom of a quickly drained wine glass. But it's wrong. Honestly, I don't think many patrons will notice. But spell-check would have caught it.
I wonder if they were thinking of nonpareil or something like that. This is not all that rare. In 2010, the Boston Globe spelled it "paralled" in a headline (right)--while the reporter spelled it correctly in the first paragraph.

ALL ROADS LEAD TO SINGAPORE: Stephen flew back to Texas on a 4:30 p.m. flight. Technically, he overlapped slightly with Susan and Deb Donahue whose flight from Hanoi landed at 3:05 p.m., but they did not see each other at the airport. Shortly after they arrived I ducked out to have a couple (OK, three) beers with Cornell/Fiji friend Dave Doupe and his wife, Beth (right). They catch a Silversea cruise ship in Singapore on Saturday evening for a jaunt to Vietnam and Hong Kong. It was great to see them. That connection was made because Dave posted on Thursday a photograph of the now-iconic three towered casino. A comment or two and a few emails later, and, presto, we are sitting together having a beer under a bridge in Singapore. Love it.

CRANES BOUNCE BACK: After yesterday's downturn (meaning a upward surge in the numbers of UP cranes), today's Singapore Crane Index Limited Economic Indicator reveals that the DOWN cranes are back.

Date: March 18
Time: 8:30 a.m. (Singapore time)
Cranes Up (bad): 5
Cranes Down (good): 22
CRANES MISSING (neutral): 1

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Thursday, March 17, 2011

IS THIS PART OF THE METRIC SYSTEM? I've mentioned how much I like the eggs in Singapore. I still do. But here's the thing. A dozen eggs here is really TEN EGGS. By that I mean they come in packages of 10, not 12. (For proof, I offer the above photo as Exhibit A. You can count them, yourself. No, Virginia, there aren't eleven; that's an orange in the background.) I know it's not a big problem--for most people. I've already been told I'm likely to strike out if I use the phrase "in the ballpark." It means nothing to most people here. Now, I probably can't refer to "a baker's dozen." My brain is getting scrambled. (Pssssst, they do NOT refrigerate the eggs in the grocery stores.)

WE DIDN'T GO THERE: We probably should have, but Stephen and I did NOT go to O'Gambino's restaurant near Raffles City/Place/Something-or-Other in honor of St. Patrick's Day. I bet they had fun there today. Other activities precluded it. Can't get into that now. But I like the name of this place. I thought you would, too. For lunch, we dropped in at a branch of O'Soup Spoon.

CRANES TAKE A BIT OF A DIP, BY GOING UP: Today's report indicates a sharp downturn in the early-morning crane activity at the Tanjong Pagar container terminal. It's apparent in today's Singapore Crane Index Limited Economic Indicator. Hard to explain. Are all the crew and stevedores watching the live-streaming of the first games of the NCAA men's basketball tournament? Probably not. Crane-watchers need not despair. The noontime situation was much better. Product is still moving.

Date: March 17
Time: 9:00 a.m. (Singapore time)
Cranes Up (bad): 14
Cranes Down (good): 13
CRANES MISSING (neutral): 1

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

ENGLISH RULES:Stephen and I saw this banner while eating some food whose names we could not pronounce in the Lau Pa Sat hawkers center. We would have used three syllables, but we got the message. The Speak Good English movement is trying to push people to learn the language here in Singapore. (It's one of four official languages here.) The web site includes photos submitted by readers of signs that use fractured English. In addition, readers can submit troublesome words that the site overseers will show how to pronounce. The list on the site that I saw this afternoon included some toughies like "hierarchy" (hahy-uh-rahr-kee)--I mean when was the last time you said that word? The list included commonly used food items such as "sherbet" (shur-bit) and "lasagna" (luh-zahn-yuh).
Also listed, with a nod to the French, were:
Debut (dey-byoo, deb-yoo);
Entrepreneur (ahn-truh-pruh-nur);
Facade (fuh-sahd).
It also included some words with variations, such as "Content" (kon-tent; kon-tent) and "Maldives" (mawl-deevz, mal-dahyvz).
At least one is victimized by what I assume is a typographical error. For "primarily", the guide leaves out the initial p-sound: rahy-mair-uh-lee.




EDUCATION MATTERS: I just read a review, of one of our TidePool Press books (A Liberal Education by Abbott Gleason) in the March 11 edition of The New Republic. While reading it, I noticed a link to another article by Martha Nussbaum of the University of Chicago. It deals with one of the topics of our discussion: The Ugly Models: Why are liberals so impressed by China and Singapore's school systems. This is very interesting stuff. How are students really served? Who falls through cracks? What happens to late bloomers? It flows with "I Not Stupid", which I mentioned in my March 4 entry. !

IS CRANE-COUNTING ALL IT'S CRANKED UP TO BE? It's been a month now since the debut (as in dey-byoo) of the Singapore Crane Index Limited Economic Indicator based on real-time information from the Tanjong Pagar container terminal. The exercise raises questions about all those containers that are zipping around the world. I enjoyed reading about the fate of one of the 10,000 or so shipping containers that fall overboard every year. Here's the latest report

Date: March 17
Time: 9:00 a.m. (Singapore time)
Cranes Up (bad): 9
Cranes Down (good): 19
CRANES MISSING (unknown degree of goodness/badness): 0.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

ONE WAY TO KEEP ELECTIONS "CIVIL": Had a very nice lunch today with Terry Nardin, the head of the political science department at the National University of Singapore. He and his wife have been here since 2006 after holding teaching positions for a long while at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee (which is very similar to UMass Boston, where I have taught). I enjoyed having him explain some of the subtleties and blunt realities of the election process here in Singapore, with its powerful one-party dominance.
Speaking of elections, perhaps as we were dining, the Singapore Elections Department--invoking the concept of civility--announced that a police permit will be needed if someone wants to use the "Speakers' Corner" at Hong Lim Park during the upcoming General Election period. This temporarily overturns an understanding that the corner is an "unrestricted area for public speaking and demonstrations," according to a report in www.channelnewsasia.com. The report offers this quote from the department:
"Elections is a sensitive period when tensions can run high. In order to manage the heightened law and order risks and ensure that the election rally permit regime is not bypassed during Ge, we have decided to revoke the status of the Speaker's Corner as an unrestricted area for public speaking and demonstrations under the Public Order Act (POA) during the campaigning period."

For more information, listeners and readers are instructed to send an email to the police.
I found an informal calendar of events for the Speakers' Corner on the web.
Singapore's Speakers' Corner is patterned after London's famous one in Hyde Park. Not sure what restrictions are ever placed on that one.

WELCOME TO THE UP-AND-DOWN WORLD OF CRANE-COUNTING: I tentatively file another update of the Singapore Crane Index Limited Economic Indicator based on real-time information from the Tanjong Pagar container terminal. The report, which began with the Feb. 16 blog entry, seemed simple at first. But now, CRANE counting is beginning to make my CRANIUM hurt. I sure hope this doesn't invalidate my weeks of painstaking observations, but the shipping world pulled a bit of a fast one on me. Just when I thought I had the information well in hand, I sense there's much more to crane counting than meets the eye. The issue surfaced today when two tugs tried to sneak a barge of containers over to the OCEAN SIDE of a waiting container ship. (See photo above, with helpful circle and arrows.) The container ship next to it could use ITS OWN CRANES to haul some of these massive containers on board, bypassing the much larger land-based cranes of the terminal. Do shipboard cranes carry the same observational weight as pier-based cranes? Must mull it.

Date: March 15
Time: 8:25 a.m. (Singapore time)
Cranes Up (bad): 9
Cranes Down (good): 19
CRANES MISSING (unknown degree of goodness/badness): 0

Monday, March 14, 2011

Monday, March 14, 2011


ARE THEY SURGEONS AT WORK? I took the photo above today while walking to the cobbler's shop. At first glance, I thought it was a group of surgeons called in for an emergency procedure in the underground mall. An environmental view (below) shows the truth behind the photo. These are chefs at Din Tai Fung restaurant. They are preparing the restaurant's famous dumplings. Chris, Stephen, Sandy and I had eaten there on Sunday night. Delicious.


SOME OF THE CITY'S SKYSCRAPERS: Stephen and I went to the top of the three-tower (57-story) casino on a drizzly day today. Stephen, who's 6-feet 4-inches tall, thought of Austin and flashed a Hook 'Em Horns sign. I added arrows to help identify some of the main features in the photo. The arrows point to (from left) Stephen, our apartment building and Sandy's home-away-from-home at 6 Battery Road, which houses Cambridge Associates offices.

THE CRANE INDEX IS ACTUALLY BEGINNING TO LOOK LIKE A CRANE! For those eager to consider making massive trades today in any of a number of markets, here's an updated Singapore Crane Index Limited Economic Indicator based on real-time information from the Tanjong Pagar container terminal:

Date: March 15
Time: 8:20 a.m. (Singapore time)
Cranes Up (bad): 8
Cranes Down (good): 19
CRANES MISSING (unknown degree of goodness/badness): 1

Sunday, March 13, 2011

IS ART A GOOD MIRROR OF A COMMUNITY? We went to the Singapore Art Museum this afternoon to catch the museum's Biennale 2011 open house . This city-state has a reputation as being bland and predictable. However, the exhibits here were neither. One I liked was "Wings" by Isabel and Alfredo Aquilizan (above). The artwork makes use of hundreds of slipper/sandals. They were used once by INMATES IN SINGAPORE PRISONS. Like I said, I liked the idea.
Another eye-stopper is based on a landmark photograph taken in Thailand. A student is striking the body of a student who was hanged during the Thammasat University massacre in the photo, which was taken on Oct. 6, 1976. In this piece artist Manit Sriwanichpoorn has inserted a mysterious "Pink Man" in the scene (right). The artist did this to prompt discussion of the meaning and ownership of history. I guess it's OK in the name of art, but it also raises questions about the ownership of a photograph, at least to a small extent. It would have been nice if the curator or artist had acknowledged the original photographer in the description on the wall. This one was taken by Neal Ulevich of The Associated Press. It was part of a series he took for which he received the 1977 Pulitzer Prize for spot news photography. I was transfixed by it in a display at the Newseum in Washington, D.C., in December. The one at the Newseum did NOT have the Pink Man in it, of course.

A LITTLE RAIN WON'T STOP THEM: While Sandy and I did a circum-ambulation of Marina Bay in the morning, we came across a group of people huddled under an overpass, awaiting the beginning of a fund-raising walk. A little Googling afterward revealed this was in support of the Consumers Association of Singapore. It's a nonprofit, non-governmental organization with roots in the late 1960s and early 1970s when pork and bread prices were getting too high.
According to the organization's web site, most cases dealt with in 2010 were in the fields of BEAUTY, TIMESHARES and CONTRACTING. In 2009, the top three were BEAUTY, TIMESHARES and EDUCATION. Last year the group recovered $3.8 million in cash or in-kind work for consumers. No, the government can't, and shouldn't, do it all.

NOT EXACTLY MARCH MADNESS: The brackets for the men's (and women's) NCAA basketball tournaments are flying around offices and campuses throughout the U.S. Selections were made at dawn on March 14 (Singapore time). But it's hard to measure any excitement here. As many in the U.S. know, there's not much interest in college sports in these parts.
My Exhibit A is my black shirt that carries the Longhorn logo of the University of Texas (right). I really hadn't thought much about having the shirt on until a server at a restaurant called me over and said--excitedly, in an accent that I found hard to cut through, "Are you a Bulls fan? Are you a Bulls fan?" He pointed to the logo. Nowhere in there did I hear "Texas." He had no idea what I was talking about when I said the image was of a Longhorn steer, the mascot for the University of Texas, arguably one of the strongest collegiate athletic programs in the country.
The restaurant employee was much more interested in, and knowledgeable of, the Chicago Bulls.
That NBA team has a somewhat similar logo, which also looks good on black (right). The NBA has some sway here. College sports, nope. I'm thinking about this because the NCAA's March Madness is fast approaching. I hope to be able to catch some of it in Singapore. The odds are that the event will feel more like March Meekness than March Madness in these parts. Not sure if I will be able to see any on streaming video on cbssports.com or if some games will be on TV in some bar or club. Stay tuned.

CRANE INDEX SWINGS BACK INTO THE PICTURE: The trip to Australia took me away from the office, so I could not track the Life of Cranes at the closest corner of the shipping complex. Here's an updated Singapore Crane Index Limited Economic Indicator:

Date: March 14
Time: 9:00 a.m. (Singapore time)
Cranes Up (bad): 8
Cranes Down (good): 19
CRANES MISSING (unknown degree of goodness/badness): 1

Date: March 13
Time: 8:30 a.m. (Singapore time)
Cranes Up (bad): 14
Cranes Down (good): 13
CRANES MISSING (unknown degree of goodness/badness): 1

Date: March 12
Time: 8:30 a.m. (Singapore time)
Cranes Up (bad): 9
Cranes Down (good): 18
CRANES MISSING (unknown degree of goodness/badness): 1