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Hi Ramseth, I recently found a site about the Beatty (Integrated) Primary School near Lavender Road. http://timesofmylife.wordpress.com/2007/02/page/2/
The premises are now occupied by SINDA.
Hi Ramseth, I recently found a site about the Beatty (Integrated) Primary School near Lavender Road. http://timesofmylife.wordpress.com/2007/02/page/2/
When Pr. 1, I started with lunchbox of kaya-butter sandwich and tumbler of Ribena.
Ribena is still a beverage for the young. Anyone drinking Milo or coffee instead ? Any form of tonic ? The famous blackcurrant drinks did not contain any Vitamin C as claimed.
The tests were conducted after Ribena drinks in New Zealand were found to contain almost no Vitamin C.
Ribena maker GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) has been fined S$235 000 (NZ$217,500 or US$156,000) for misleading advertising.
The company had claimed that its blackcurrant drinks had four times the Vitamin C of oranges.
But a pair of 14-year-old schoolgirls exposed the false claim after testing the drink as part of a science project.
My uncles will tell old stories of those ice-balls which the vendor sells using crushed ice and making it into a ball with red beans inside. He will cover the ball with coloured liquid sugar.
Also the rojak seller that sells turnip slices and use the thick black molasses to spread over, sometimes with chilly and then with ground peanuts.
Sometimes my uncles would go hunting in Malaysia and bring home fruit bats to cook with curry and the usual wild boar meat.
Ribena is still a beverage for the young. Anyone drinking Milo or coffee instead ? Any form of tonic ? The famous blackcurrant drinks did not contain any Vitamin C as claimed.
The tests were conducted after Ribena drinks in New Zealand were found to contain almost no Vitamin C.
Ribena maker GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) has been fined S$235 000 (NZ$217,500 or US$156,000) for misleading advertising.
The company had claimed that its blackcurrant drinks had four times the Vitamin C of oranges.
But a pair of 14-year-old schoolgirls exposed the false claim after testing the drink as part of a science project.
Yes, I've heard about the case. Anyway those pr. sch. days, who cared about vitamins? It was just for the taste; better than plain water. I did drink Horlicks and Milo at home. I started drinking tea and coffee only in sec. sch. days. If you talk about tonic, it was always a little bottle of chicken essence per day during exam week. Then there was a daily pop of two little capsules of Scotts cod liver oil. I disliked the emulsion version and told my mom not to buy that anymore, just buy the capsules.
by the way, i still don't understand why while in primary school, the kids were called pupils but in secondary they were called students?
by the way, i still don't understand why while in primary school, the kids were called pupils but in secondary they were called students?
Neither can I understand why soccer players are referred to as boys and not men when most are married with kids. If they are boys, their kids called simi?
Primary school memories for me were....
Super Trump Cards - Those playing cards where they have series of racing cars, warships, military aircraft, etc. On each card is a picture of the warship (if it is a warship series), and its associated technical data such as length, breadth, speed, displacement, etc.
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the iceball - that brings back fond memories. it was finely sliced ice and hand rolled into a ball like a snowball. then the vendor would scoop out different colored syrup pouring over it. u would ve to held it in ur palm and slurp and eat it. the trick to eat was to exchange left hand to right while holding n eating the iceball. could be quite freezing if keep holding onto the same hand for a long time. well, it was really "palm licking" good. syrup tasted especially good during those days. most of the drinks were conjured more mixture of syrups n tap water in big block ice.
Yes, I've heard about the case. Anyway those pr. sch. days, who cared about vitamins? It was just for the taste; better than plain water. I did drink Horlicks and Milo at home. I started drinking tea and coffee only in sec. sch. days. If you talk about tonic, it was always a little bottle of chicken essence per day during exam week. Then there was a daily pop of two little capsules of Scotts cod liver oil. I disliked the emulsion version and told my mom not to buy that anymore, just buy the capsules.