Selasa, 16 Oktober 2012

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


The heady alchemy of oak and wine

Posted: 16 Oct 2012 09:03 PM PDT

BORDEAUX, France, Oct 17 — It has to be one of the most serendipitous accidents of history.

Something happens between the oak tannins and the wine tannins; a marriage, an alchemy that takes place in the barrel. — AFP/Relaxnews

France's towering oak forests, first cultivated generations ago for Louis XIV's warships, today provide the raw material for the barrels that help produce the best wines of Bordeaux, perhaps the finest expression of the heady alchemy between oak and wine.

"We are lucky in our business, because these trees were initially meant for naval construction, not barrels," admits Jean-Luc Sylvain, a third-generation barrel-maker, or cooper, and CEO of Tonnellerie Sylvain in the south west of France.

"But the fact that we selected and cultivated a variety of oak and forced it to grow in height not girth, has a chemical effect, which has a consequence for wine.

"There is something that happens between the oak tannins and the wine tannins, you have a marriage, an alchemy that takes place in the barrel."

With an annual production of 500,000 barrels, France's coopers dominate the global trade, relying on the forests first cultivated on the orders of Jean-Baptiste Colbert, minister under Louis XIV in the 17th century, in his effort to produce tall, perfect oaks to build a navy capable of challenging England's maritime dominance.

"We are the only country in the world to cultivate oak," said Sylvain, with each generation tending saplings that won't reach their prime for another 200 years.

"These trees are more appropriate for making wine barrels than what you can find naturally in the forest."

The French forests are managed to encourage tall, exceptional trees without branches or knots. The result is timber with a tight grain and the quality of tannins and aromas that improve wine, says Sylvain.

But that is a recent discovery. The humble barrel has spent most of its long relationship with wine serving two mundane purposes — storage and transportation.

Winemakers discovered the barrel's true calling at a point when many were abandoning it due to its bad reputation for harbouring mould, and ruining the wine. Only when cement and stainless steel became available did its true worth reveal itself.

"They noticed something was missing in the wine not aged in the barrel," said Sylvain.

Research in the 1970s and 80s showed that a clean oak barrel was an invaluable multi-tasker.

"The tannins in the wood balance with the tannins in the wine, and it helps develop aromas," said Charles Chevallier, director of Domaines Barons de Rothschild, including Chateau Lafite, one of Bordeaux's elite properties.

Lafite is one of the few estates to run its own cooperage, crafting 2,400 bespoke barrels a year and providing in-house R&D on the marriage between wine and oak.

"For us, above all the barrel is a physical phenomenon. It allows for fining the wine with the racking of the lees every three months. When we put the wine in a small container, the sedimentation happens naturally," said Chevallier.

"And the micro oxygenation that happens through the wood is necessary for aging fine wine."

The barrel, as it turns out, excels as a discreet two-way escape route.

"During the barrel aging, water and alcohol evaporate, concentrating the wine, little by little, this is the angel's share," said Dominique de Beauregard, director of research and development at Chene and Company.

"There's also a tiny amount of oxygen that enters. Only a barrel can do that. It's terrific."

Unfortunately for wine lovers, only a tiny splash of the world's wine sees barrel time - around two percent according to the French federation of coopers, whose 50 members supply 80 per cent of the world's wine barrels.

This is where oak chips and staves come in. An anathema to a grand cru classé producer, they are an economical option for wine that can't justify the 600 euro price tag for a 225-litre barrel, say experts.

"Oenological wood is used for two main reasons: to imitate barrels or to augment the fruitiness in wine. For example, if you want to enhance the fruitiness, you can add granulated oak chips during fermentation. If you want to add barrel aromas, you can add staves to the finished wine. These are both used all over the world for ordinary wines," said de Beauregard.

Adding aromas to the wine is one of oak's more noticeable tasks.

Some aromas develop during cultivation, with different forests producing subtle differences, then the drying stage encourages sweet notes like vanilla while banishing bitterness, says de Beauregard.

Toasting the inside of the barrel unleashes a sensory cornucopia that de Beauregard articulates as: "Fresh wood, vanilla, coconut, cloves, grilled almonds, toast, mocha, chocolate, dark chocolate, caramel, coffee, toasted coffee and smoke."

Winemakers pinpoint their preferred forest and the intensity of the toast, as well as the percentage of new barrels, according to the style of wine they make.

"The barrel must not dominate the wine. You put the wine in the barrel, not the barrel in the wine," said Chevallier.

Alternative oak products may have their role, but nothing quite matches the barrel.

"If you talk to a winegrower, his dream is to age his wine in barrels," said Sylvain. "If he doesn't, it's because he can't afford it, due to the price of his wine." — AFP/Relaxnews


Gastronomy nourishes Spain’s gourmet city

Posted: 16 Oct 2012 08:22 PM PDT

Chef and teacher Inigo Murua (R) gives a class at the Basque Culinary Centre on October 4, 2012, in the Northern Spanish Basque city of San Sebastian.— AFP/Relaxnews

SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain, Oct 17 — Ham with brie, wild mushroom croquettes, cured-meat ravioli: gourmet cooking has put this Basque town on the gastronomic map, drawing visitors from around the world.

Now its culinary assets — which include more Michelin stars per square metre than anywhere else in the world, and the world's first university of gastronomy — are nourishing it in the economic crisis.

"Gastronomy is a tourist attraction of growing importance" for the region, said the director of the Basque Culinary Centre gourmet university, Joxe Mari Aizega. "We are looking to become part of the economic attraction."

In a 2011 survey by the Basque Country regional government, seven out of 10 visitors said they were drawn there by the food.

More than 1.5 million tourists visited the region this year up to August — its second best year on record — but the number of Spaniards among them fell compared to previous years while the number of foreigners rose.

Many of them come to the bars of San Sebastian's old town, where Japanese and US tourists sample "pintxos", the region's trademark bite-sized canapes.

The foreign visitors are helping keep the restaurants in business while Spaniards are spending less at a time of high unemployment and budget cuts.

"Visitors from the rest of Spain have got slightly fewer, but at the same time we are making up for it with foreigners," said Amaiur Martinez, a joint owner of the Ganbara bar.

"A lot of them come from France, as well as from Asia, the United States and Britain," he told AFP, standing behind a counter piled with mushrooms, seafood and various pintxos.

"The Asians are most interested in the seafood and how it is prepared. The French are very interested in the mushrooms."

Chefs in San Sebastian, which include names such as Martin Berasategui, Pedro Subijana and Andoni Luis Aduriz, have 16 Michelin stars between them.

The Basque Culinary Centre, launched last year, counts among its expert participants Ferran Adria, the Catalan master whose former restaurant El Bulli was hailed as the best in the world, and the French chef Michel Bras.

"This centre's basic mission is to act as a reference in advanced knowledge of gastronomy with an international vision," Aizega told AFP.

Students on the four-year course learn everything from soups to avant-garde dishes as well as studying the science of cooking with test-tubes, management and business skills, with work placements in top eateries worldwide.

"Every day they teach us tricks and little tips that help us make the dishes much better," said Esteban Yebes from Colombia, one of the students working at long tables here in their white aprons and hats.

"For example, how to shock beans by adding a bit of cold water while they're boiling."

For Spaniards struggling to find work in the recession, the centre's world-class training offers a strong guarantee of a job on leaving.

"I studied business administration and management, but I could find no work," said one student, Lolo Roman, 29, from the Canary Islands, cooking beans in the training kitchen.

"I had always liked cooking so I decided to come here."

"We have no doubt they will find work. There are some who get offered work after studying here for one year," said Aizega. "Gastronomy will continue to have its place here and keep innovating." — AFP/Relaxnews


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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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Massa stays at Ferrari for 2013

Posted: 16 Oct 2012 08:50 AM PDT

LONDON, Oct 16 – Felipe Massa will stay at Ferrari for the 2013 season in an unchanged lineup with Fernando Alonso, the Italian Formula One team said in a statement today.

The Brazilian has struggled for form in recent years but has agreed a one-year extension amid continued speculation that world champion Sebastian Vettel could join Alonso at Ferrari from 2014.

Alonso's contract runs to the end of 2016.

"The team and also all the fans can rest assured that I will do all in my power to help the Scuderia reach the targets it sets itself each year," Massa (picture) said on the Ferrari website (http://www.ferrari.com).

Massa's future has been uncertain all season, with the 31-year-old suffering an abject run until he finished second at this month's Japanese Grand Prix for his first podium finish since 2010.

The Sao Paulo driver was fourth in South Korea on Sunday, round 16 of the championship, a result that meant he had scored more points in his last two races than he had in the first 11 of the season.

Ferrari's decision was not a great surprise, with Alonso clearly favouring the Brazilian as his team mate having established himself as the clear focus of the sport's most successful team.

"I am so happy to continue another year with @Felipe1Massa as a teammate! I'm sure we are the best team! #ForzaFerrari," Alonso said on Twitter after an announcement that Ferrari said they had planned to make next week but had brought forward to end all the speculation.

MONTEZEMOLO MEETING

Massa's poor form in the first half of the campaign has hit Ferrari hard in the constructor's championship, however, where they are currently second to Red Bull but still 77 points off the lead.

Double champion Alonso has scored 209 of Ferrari's 290 points and Massa's fate was determined after a meeting, described by the team as very friendly, with Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo at the Maranello factory today.

Montezemolo had said yesterday that Massa, who suffered near fatal head injuries when hit by a bouncing spring in qualifying for the 2009 Hungarian Grand Prix, had returned to the level expected of him.

He had also said, referring to the Vettel speculation, that he did not want to have "two roosters in the same hen house" but rather two drivers "who race for Ferrari and not for themselves".

The decision will be a blow for those who had been touted as possible replacements at the most glamorous team in the sport, notably the Force India pair of Briton Paul Di Resta and Germany's Nico Hulkenberg.

Seven times world champion and Ferrari great Michael Schumacher has already announced his retirement at the end of the season and was not an option, even if some diehard supporters hoped he could be.

The attention will now turn to the Swiss Sauber team who have at least one vacancy, with Mexican Sergio Perez leaving to join McLaren as the replacement for Mercedes-bound Lewis Hamilton, and possibly two if Japan's Kamui Kobayashi is not retained.

Hulkenberg is considered a hot favourite to take one of those places.

Massa has been a part of the Ferrari family for a decade, starting at Ferrari-powered Sauber in 2002 and also serving as a Ferrari tester before joining as a race driver in 2006 and staying on after Schumacher's first retirement.

"Ferrari is my racing family and throughout my entire time in Formula One, I have always driven cars powered by engines built in Maranello: I can't see myself driving cars propelled by anything else," he said today.

He was runner-up in the 2008 championship to Hamilton by a single point and has won 11 grands prix with his last coming in Brazil at the end of 2008.

"We have always supported Felipe, even in the most difficult moments of his career and we are certain of his worth and are sure he will know how to repay the confidence this renewal proves we have in him," said team principal Stefano Domenicali. – Reuters

Impressive Brazil demolish Japan 4-0 in friendly

Posted: 16 Oct 2012 07:42 AM PDT

Brazil players celebrate after winning their international friendly soccer match against Japan in Wroclaw, October 16, 2012. Brazil defeated Japan 4-0. – Reuters pic

WROCLAW, Oct 16 – Brazil gave one of their most impressive performances under coach Mano Menezes to sweep aside Japan 4-0 in today's friendly, with Neymar scoring twice and Kaka on target for the second game in a row.

Japan, unbeaten in their previous eight games, began confidently after beating France 1-0 in Paris on Friday but were ultimately outclassed on a cold, wet day in the Polish city of Wroclaw.

Midfielder Paulinho opened the scoring and Neymar converted a harshly-awarded penalty to put Brazil 2-0 ahead in less than half an hour.

Neymar struck again at the start of the second half and Kaka, on target on his international return after a two-year absence against Iraq last week, completed the scoring.

Brazil, 6-0 winners over Iraq on Thursday, also hit the woodwork twice and could have scored several more goals as they clocked up their sixth win in a row.

Menezes, who replaced Dunga after the 2010 World Cup, set himself an ambitious task of completely rebuilding the side and changing their style of play in time for 2014.

Although Brazil have won most games under his leadership, his experimental teams have often been unconvincing and there has been speculation as to whether he will keep the job until the home World Cup.

There were no questions about today's performance, however, the combination of Oscar and Kaka in midfield and Neymar and Hulk in attack allowing Brazil to create chances seemingly at will.

Japan produced the first chance when Keisuke Honda's low drive was saved by Diego Alves' legs and briefly appeared to have Brazil on the back foot.

But the complexion of the game changed in the 11th minute when Kaka laid the ball off to Paulinho and the Corinthians midfielder found the net with a low shot from 25 metres, his second goal in six internationals.

Paulinho should have added another when he latched on to Oscar's incisive pass and rounded Eiji Kawashima, only to shoot wide of an open goal.

Kaka also hit the foot of the post before Yasuyuki Konno was judged to have handled in the area, even though it appeared accidental, and Neymar fired home the penalty.

The speed and variety of Brazil's attacks overwhelmed Japan and Neymar struck again only three minutes into the second half, collecting a corner at the far post and scoring with a mis-hit shot which went in off Makoto Hasebe, his 16th goal in 25 internationals.

Japan bravely pushed forward to try and reduce the deficit but left themselves badly exposed and Brazil looked dangerous every time they went forward.

Hulk hit the post from a free kick and another attack ended with Kaka slipping past his marker to fire the fourth with a low left-foot shot. – Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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Tina Fey and Amy Poehler lined up to host Golden Globes Awards

Posted: 16 Oct 2012 08:47 AM PDT

NEW YORK, Oct 16 — After Ricky Gervais served as host last year, the HFPA has chosen two feminine faces to host the 70th Golden Globe Awards ceremony on January 13, 2013.

Saturday Night Live humorists Fey and Poehler teamed up from 2004 to 2006 to host "Weekend Update," a fake TV news skit and one of the most famous segments of the show.

The Golden Globes ceremony will take place three days after the announcement of the Oscars nominees, while the Golden Globe nominees will be revealed December 13. — AFP-Relaxnews

No hint of mellowing for ex-Sex Pistol John Lydon

Posted: 16 Oct 2012 12:50 AM PDT

NEW YORK, Oct 16 — Nearly four decades after crashing onto the music scene at the age of 19 as the lead singer of British punk outfit the Sex Pistols, John Lydon (aka Johnny Rotten) is enjoying being back in the limelight.

Lydon is in the early stages of a North American tour with his long-running post-Pistols band, Public Image Ltd.

Trademark orange hair on end — now more of a faded yellow — and with the mixture of ecstatic visionary and escaped mental patient that is Lydon's stock-in-trade stage presence, he pounded out his lyrics to a sellout crowd in Williamsburg, New York, last week.

John Lydon, still all there, trademark orange hair on end and all. — Reuters file pic

There is little hint of the mellowing that besets many other singers as far into their 50s as he is. "I'm not an old codger yet," Lydon told Reuters in an interview at a Manhattan hotel after the concert.

Lydon is promoting his new album, "This is PiL", a sprawling, hour-long musical journey that both evokes the PiL of old and pushes into new territory.

The hotel, part of a generic chain, is about as far away from punk rock as one can get. Lydon, wearing bright orange trousers and checked shirt, is an incongruous figure among the business people and families milling around in the lobby.

After overcoming the initial horror of discovering there was no bar and that he was going to have to get through the entire interview without a drink, Lydon settles into an enormous armchair the same colour as his trousers.

A couple, obviously from out of town, slink onto a neighbouring sofa to eavesdrop, looking for that New York celebrity story to tell their friends back in the 'burbs. Lydon rolls his eyes.

"Regardless of the obstreperous behaviour of corporate record companies, they've not been able to keep me down. It's taken nearly two decades but I'm right where I belong," he said.

The band reformed in 2009 after a 17-year hiatus, and "This is PiL" is their first studio album in 20 years. The title track, which leads off the album, seems aimed at both proclaiming the band's return and reminding people who they are.

A mixture of big, bassy, fast-moving tracks, some slower guitar pieces and Lydon's at times-unaccompanied voice, "This is PiL" has an epic album feel without being overblown.

Or in Lydon's own words: "It's those juxtapositions of events pinned down with some gloriously sweltering bass that we can hover around."

Water, sheep and fishing?

There is also more of Lydon himself on "This is PiL". "I'm John and I was born in London," he sings at the start of "One Drop". He points out the leitmotif of water in the album — something to do with nerve-wracking childhood fishing trips with his grandfather.

"This album truly, truly, truly acknowledges, I think, an absolute highlight in my life," he said. "The sheer exuberance and exhilarance (sic) we all felt to get in a recording scenario was amazing."

The album was recorded in the English countryside with little rehearsal. Most of the songs came together through conversations on the bus while touring.

"We more or less worked in a rehearsal barn in the Cotswolds with nothing but sheep for company," said Lydon. "It was a very quick album, six weeks really."

PiL formed in 1978, the year the Sex Pistols split up. The band has gone through 49 members by Lydon's count, and has had nine albums in the UK Top 40.

But the band has never reached the iconic status of the Sex Pistols. And Lydon has never really left behind that legacy. The Pistols were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006 but the band refused to attend the ceremony.

Lydon is synonymous with the irreverence and rebellion he epitomised with the Sex Pistols in songs such as "Anarchy in the UK" and his ironic take on Britain's national anthem, "God Save the Queen".

But his anti-monarchy stance seems to have mellowed. He calls Prince William and wife Kate (officially known as the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge) the "least offensive in an awful long time". But he adds defiantly: "I still want my money back."

Yet he said he found the Occupy Wall Street movement an inspiration. I "loved it, loved it", he said. "It brought debate and issues into people's heads without violence; superb ... they didn't resort to rioting."

Lydon has resided for 20 years in Los Angeles, where — when not touring, writing, or recording — he says he lives the quiet life with his wife, Nora.

He chose L.A. to escape the London weather. "It's 70 all year round on the beach, and the salt air cleans me right up, and I got used to the vibe of being healthy. I kind of like it." — Reuters

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Timid France searching for identity

Posted: 15 Oct 2012 04:45 PM PDT

OCT 16 — When the World Cup qualifying draw was made, French football fans must have emitted a large collective Gallic groan: "Mon Dieu!" would have been the cry in many a household.

Not only had their national team been paired with the reigning world and European champions Spain — their opponents in Madrid tonight — but they were also handed potentially perilous trips into the unknown depths of eastern Europe to face Georgia and Belarus, as well as a long journey north to face Finland.

They've come through the early tests unscathed, earning narrow victories over the Finns (1-0) and Belarus (3-1) in September, but there's still a distinct feeling that France are still trying to find their way.

On Friday they "warmed up" for tonight's crucial encounter against Spain with a home friendly fixture against Japan, when their current limitations were exposed with a 1-0 defeat that further undermined already fragile levels of confidence.

True, it was only a friendly. But this was supposed to be the game where France fine-tuned their approach in preparation for tonight's meeting with Spain — the toughest game they'll face during the qualifying process. Instead, they departed the Stade de France arena defeated, goalless and with the jeers of home fans ringing in their ears.

On paper, they should be a formidable outfit. With a frontline containing Real Madrid star Karim Benzema alongside dangerous wingers Franck Ribery and Samir Nasri, France possess three players who are clearly capable of being matchwinners against any opposition.

The midfield also appears to be well stocked, possessing a well-rounded blend of talented performers including Newcastle pair Yohan Cabaye and Hatem Ben Arfa — two of the English Premier League's best midfielders last season — Arsenal's Abou Diaby and Lassana Diarra, who recently made a big-money move from Real Madrid to Russian moneybags Anzhi.

And France also look defensively strong, with experienced goalkeeper Hugo Lloris providing stability behind a back four containing Manchester United's Patrice Evra, powerful Valencia stopper Adil Rami, AC Milan's Philippe Mexes and Arsenal's Laurent Koscielny.

Considering the array of talent at their disposal, it was no great surprise when France embarked upon an impressive run of form leading up to last summer's European Championships. Under the calm management of Laurent Blanc, Les Bleus were unbeaten in 21 games and nearly two years as they headed to Ukraine with a firm reputation as one of the favourites for the tournament.

But then everything unravelled.

France dominated possession in their opening game against England but had to settle for a 1-1 draw due to a surprisingly toothless attack; confidence appeared to have been restored with a professional 2-0 victory over Ukraine in their second fixture, but the final group game produced a shockingly limp performance in a 2-0 defeat against already-eliminated Sweden.

Despite that loss, France limped through into the knock-out stages as group runners-up, setting up a quarter-final meeting with reigning champions Spain. Now, surely, was the time for France to show what they were made of; this was everything they had been building towards for the last two years — an opportunity to rise to the occasion and justify their pre-tournament "dark horses" tag.

Instead, the watching world was left bored rigid by one of the most one-sided international games you could ever dread to see. France possessed absolutely no attacking intent, preferring instead to sit deep and defend their penalty area.

Spain had no problem in overcoming their meek opponents, with a brace of goals from Xabi Alonso securing a victory that was far more emphatic than the 2-0 scoreline suggested.

Recriminations began immediately. Coach Blanc was roundly lambasted for his astonishingly negative tactics, which had prevented his best players — Ribery, Benzema and Nasri — from having any significant impact, players were jeered by fans and subjected to tough questioning from a disappointed French media.

Blanc resigned, Nasri earned himself a three-match ban by petulantly venting his frustrations with a foul-mouthed tirade against a journalist, and the whole French squad suddenly wore the same weary and disharmonious appearance as the outfit that had performed so poorly in the World Cup two years earlier. From such promising beginnings, mutual blame and empathy once again reigned.

The man charged with picking up the pieces is Didier Deschamps, the former World Cup-winning captain who has subsequently established a strong managerial reputation with successful spells at Monaco, Juventus and Marseille.

Deschamps is seeking to succeed where his predecessors Blanc and Raymond Domenech failed by creating a team that equals the sum of its considerable parts, rather than the disjointed, uninspired bunch that caused so much disappointment during the last two major tournaments.

The biggest challenge facing Deschamps is forging a team that possesses a strong identity, and that will be no easy task because this is a team that currently lacks a sense of collective personality. What kind of team are France? At the moment, they don't appear to know. They have been playing not to lose rather than to win, with no apparent idea of how they can be successful.

Good football teams — whatever their tactical approach — play to their strengths with a strong sense of purpose and intent. They work as a coherent unit with every player focussed on how they can get the most out of themselves and each other.

Deschamps is still trying to work that out and has been testing out a variety of players in an attempt to find the right blend and establish the missing identity.

Tonight's game with Spain presents a big opportunity. France are expected to lose and it will not be a complete disaster if they do. But what they need to do is play together and at least try to be an active force in the game, rather than the meek and mild group that surrendered so tamely against the same opposition just over three months ago.

Even if they lose, a strong and focussed French performance tonight could set themselves up for the next couple of years, providing them with the sense of purpose that has been missing.

Contrarily, another passive, submissive defeat could set them back even further, leaving themselves fragile and exposed for the remainder of a testing qualifying campaign in a challenging group.

The result is less important that the performance. It's time for France to stand up and assert themselves.

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

The value of being young

Posted: 15 Oct 2012 04:36 PM PDT

OCT 16 — I write this in response to some people's idea about their position in society because they're young.

Look at our leaders. Look at how they pander to us. They tell us that the future is ours, that we shall inherit this country!

Part of this is true. We the youths of today will inherit this country, whether we like it or not. We will become a part of this country's destiny... for we will be responsible for its rise or its fall. 

Fellow young people, we're not special because we're young.

I understand that we are all in various stages of development. I have witnessed some young people start companies and skyrocket to success. I have seen some of you speak to ministers and corporate luminaries with that rare spark in your eyes indicating that you have the potential to "make it." But you are not special because you are young. Youth has nothing to do with it. You are special because you have taken ownership of your life, and made something out of it.

Therefore, do not put yourself on a pedestal just because you are 18 years old. You do have not the monopoly over ideas or creativity. Before you think of yourself as the best and the brightest, look at the people who surround you.

Consider that life experience is a fairly important part of this puzzle. Regardless of how brilliant you are, your education is thus far limited only to the academic womb of books and exams. Work experience, too, is a part of building a career. Meeting people and working with people within a professional context also contributes towards this end.

You may say that ability is ability, that this world is a tyranny of the clever and the capable.

However, even then, everyone starts from somewhere. Humility, compassion, and patience are also things that distinguish the best and brightest. This is why you are sometimes asked to make coffee and write mundane reports the moment you hit the job market so that you may acquire these qualities.

What then is the value of youth? It translates to time... we have time to try and fail. We are special because our young lives are filled with so much possibility and so much promise.

Please don't listen to people who tell you that you lay claim to a goldmine because you've just received a slip of paper from a prestigious university, and don't look at the "old people" around you and think you are better than them.

Because you are young, however, you have an entire lifetime to aspire to be truly distinguished. To take ownership of your existence and make it an amazing life. Either fight for your right, or shortchange yourself for eternity... never to find out what you could have become. The choice is yours.

* Victor Tan is on a gap year. Email him at victortanws@gmail.com if you'd like to know him better. He also writes for CEKU at www.ceku.org.

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

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Tiada masalah PM bertemu Soros, kata Soi Lek

Posted: 16 Oct 2012 02:23 AM PDT

KUALA LUMPUR, 16 Okt — Presiden MCA, Datuk Seri Dr Chua Soi Lek berkata pertemuan antara perdana menteri (PM) Datuk Seri Najib Razak dengan George Soros bukan menjadi satu kesalahan dan menjelaskan konteks pertemuan antara kedua-dua pihak adalah berbeza sama sekali dengan badan bukan kerajaan (NGO) yang mendapatkan dana daripada  penyangak mata wang asing terbabit.

Chua juga menjelaskan para pemimpin utama negara banyak mengadakan pertemuan dengan pemimpin besar dunia bagi tujuan diplomatik dan perhubungan dua hala sambil menyifatkan ia adalah perkara yang biasa dilakukan oleh mana-mana pemimpin.

"Sebagai seorang pemimpin agung, dia (Najib) berjumpa dengan banyak orang.

"Dahulu Tunku Abdul Rahman pun pernah berjumpa dengan pemimpin komunis Chin Peng, tapi beliau tidak dituduh pun sebagai seorang komunis," kata Chua (gambar) dalam sidang media selepas mesyuarat di Wisma MCA hari ini.

Menurut Chua lagi, jika dilihat daripada aspek pemberian dana kepada NGO, maka perkara tersebut menjadi kesalahan memandangkan Soros pada suatu ketika dahulu pernah menjadi individu yang menyebabkan negara berhadapan krisis kewangan 1998 serta kerana dia merupakan seorang yang berbangsa Yahudi.

"Apabila kamu mendapat dana daripada seorang yang terkenal di dunia dan juga berbangsa yahudi serta diiktiraf sebagai penyangak mata wang Malaysia maka dia akan mencetuskan pelbagai spekulasi.

"Adakah perkara ini terdapat udang disebalik batu atapun dia mempunyai tujuan yang murni?

"Jadi perkara ini akan mencetuskan banyak spekulasi," tambah pemimpin utama MCA itu.

MENYUSUL LAGI

Utusan patut didakwa kerana menulis fitnah, kata peguam Mat Sabu

Posted: 16 Oct 2012 12:57 AM PDT

GEORGETOWN, Oct 16 — Utusan Malaysia harus didakwa kerana menulis dan mengedarkan laporan memfitnah timbalan presiden PAS, Mohamad Sabu di mahkamah, menurut sidang mahkamah tinggi hari ini.

"Jika Mohamad didakwa atas kesalahan membuat kenyataan berunsur fitnah, Utusan yang mencetak dan mengedarkan pada orang ramai juga harus didakwa dalam seksyen 500 kanun keseksaan," kata peguam Muhammed Hanipah Maidin di mahkamah hari ini.

Timbalan presiden PAS yang dikenali sebagai Mat Sabu (gambar), telah memohon untuk menggugurkan tuduhan ke atas kes fitnah yang beliau dakwa bercanggah dengan Artikel Lapan Perlembagaan Persekutuan.

Muhammed memberitahu mahkamah di bawah seksyen 500 kanun keseksaan, sesiapa yang mencetak dan menyebarkan fitnah juga boleh didakwa.

"Jika Mohamad didakwa dalam seksyen ini, Utusan yang melaporkan kenyataan fitnah juga perlu didakwa dalam seksyen ini.

"Tetapi kenapa Utusan tidak didakwa, kenapa berat sebelah? Kenapa Mohamad didakwa tetapi Utusan dibebaskan? Ini bertentangan dengan Artikal Lapan Perlembagaan Persekutuan yang mengatakan layanan sama adil tidak mengikut kaum atau agama," katanya lagi.

Dalam menggulung perbahasannya tentang permohonan anak guamnya, Muhammed berkata kes Mohamad ialah menentang Artikel Lapan, jadi sebab itu kes itu harus digugurkan.

Timbalan pendakwaraya, Suhaimi Ibrahim memberitahu mahkamah keputusan mendakwa Mohamad ialah kerana Mohamad menipu Peguam Negara.

"Peguam negara mempunyai kuasa dalam memutuskan kes mana yang boleh didakwa di mahkamah, jadi mahkamah tidak boleh menyemak semula keputusan Peguam Negara," katanya lagi.

Mohammed membalas, kuasa Peguam Negara tidak mutlak dan mahkamah tinggi boleh menyemak semula keputusan Peguam Negara, dan menggugurkannya jika keputusannya tidak mengikut perlembagaan.

Mat Sabu didakwa di mahkamah sesyen Butterworth kerana memfitnah pegawai polis dan ahli keluarganya dalam insiden Bukit Kepong tahun 1950.

Ini adalah permohonan kedua Mat Sabu yang memohon mahkamah tinggi untuk menggugurkan kesnya.

Sebelum ini, dia telah memohon permohonan kepada mahkamah tinggi agar kes menentangnya sebagai tidak sah kerana mahkamah bukan tempat yang sesuai untuk membincangkan peristiwa sejarah.

Permohonannya telah ditolak oleh mahkamah tinggi dan dia mengemukakan rayuan kepada mahkamah rayuan sementara menghadiri perbicaraannya.

Permohonannya di mahkamah rayuan juga ditolak. Kini beliau memohon permohonan baru kepada mahkamah tinggi ke atas kesnya.

Pesuruhjaya Kehakiman Mohd Amin Firdaus Abdullah menetapkan 22 Oktober untuk membuat keputusan ke atas rayuan Mat Sabu.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com
 

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