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Tan Hwee Hwee: Music Zechariah Goh Toh Chai Photography Ken Seet Thiam Wui Visual Arts Noni Kaur 2004 Dance Danny Tan Koon Meng Literary Arts Tan Chee Lay Music Chan Yoong Han Music Ling Hock Siang Visual Arts Tang Ling Nah 2005 Dance Aaron Khek Ah Hock Literary Arts Alvin Pang Khee Meng: Literary Arts Cyril Wong Yit Mun: Music Katryna Tan Huey ...
Tan Chin Hwee (born 1971) is a Singaporean businessman and is an adjunct professor at Nanyang Technological University (his alma mater),[27] Shanghai Jiao Tong University,[28] Singapore Management University[29] and the University of Yale. He is Chairman of SGTraDex Services and Chairman of Energy Resilience Advisory Panel, Energy Market ...
Tan's career in public service began in the late 1960s when he joined the Public Works Department as a junior engineer. Shortly after establishing the Water Planning Unit in the Prime Minister's Office in 1971, Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew tasked Tan and the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of the Environment, Lee Ek Tieng, with drafting Singapore's first water master plan.
25 April 1978: 18-year-old policeman Lee Kim Lai was abducted by three men – 20-year-old Ong Hwee Kuan, 20-year-old Yeo Ching Boon and 20-year-old Ong Chin Hock – from his sentry post at Mount Vernon and forced into a taxi. They killed him along with the taxi driver, 60-year-old Chew Theng Hin, and took his revolver. On the same night, a ...
Hwee Kuan sat behind the driver, and Chin Hock behind Yeo. The taxi proceeded via Bendemeer Road, Whampoa East Road, Serangoon Road, and Upper Aljunied Road. Chew was instructed to stop the taxi near the rear gate of the PRU base at a dark and secluded stretch of the road. Suddenly, Hwee Kuan restrained Chew from behind and placed a knife to ...
Deputy Commissioner of Police Term Ref Kenneth Bruce Stewart: 1860s: Patrick Joseph Shannon: 1947–1950 [1]Edmund Victor Fowler: 1950 [2]Song Kok Hoo: 1959–1961
The Singapore Hokkien Huay Kuan was the first such organization to be established in 1840 on the grounds of the Thian Hock Keng Temple. [1] However, the SHHK also served other members of the Chinese community who came from other parts of China. [2] In 1929, the philanthropist Tan Kah Kee became the president of Singapore Hokkien Huay Kuan. [3]
Tan was born in Singapore in 1974. During her youth she studied at Raffles Girls' School followed by three years in the Netherlands. [2] After her studies in the Netherlands, she studied English literature at the University of East Anglia, from which she graduated with honours. [2]