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Digital and Intelligence Service [3] Chief of Navy (CNV) Rear Admiral Sean Wat Jianwen: 1 January 2024 [d] Naval Officer PPA(G) Republic of Singapore Navy [4] Chief of Air Force (CAF) Major-General Kelvin Fan Sui Siong: 1 July 2024 [e] Air Warfare Officer (Air Defence Weapons) PPA(E), PPA(P), PBS: Republic of Singapore Air Force [5]
In the early 1990s Mazda almost created a luxury marque, Amati, to challenge Acura, Infiniti, and Lexus in North America, but this never happened, leaving the near-luxury Millenia to the Mazda brand. Many Mazda vehicles have been rebadged and sold with the Ford brand during the alliance of both companies. Most are noted in the pages of ...
Mazda Motor Corporation (マツダ株式会社, Matsuda Kabushiki gaisha) is a Japanese multinational automotive manufacturer headquartered in Fuchū, Hiroshima, Japan. [5] The company was founded on January 30, 1920, as Toyo Cork Kogyo Co., Ltd., a cork-making factory, by Jujiro Matsuda.
The RX-7 and 626 buoyed Mazda's American fortunes enough for it to expand. Mazda built an American plant (now Flat Rock Assembly Plant) to build the 626, bringing the company to Ford's attention. The two joined on the 626's 2-door offshoots, the MX-6 and Ford Probe. Mazda finished the 1980s the same way as the 1970s, with an image-building ...
The Mazda CX-5 is a compact crossover SUV [1] produced by Mazda since 2012. [2] A successor to both the Tribute and the slightly larger CX-7, [3] [4] it is Mazda's first model to feature the "Kodo" design language and the first model to be fully developed with a range of technologies branded as Skyactiv, including a rigid, lightweight platform combined with a series of engines and ...
A Chevrolet Cruze fast response car at the National Museum of Singapore in 2020. The "Fast Response Car" (FRC) is the official term for police cars used by the Singapore Police Force. [1] Prior to 2000, they were known in public simply as "police patrol cars". FRCs are used for SPF deployments in urgent situations. [2]
The paper was founded as Singapore's second English-language newspaper by William Napier, Edward Boustead, Walter Scott Lorrain and George Drumgoole Coleman on 1 October 1835 as the Singapore Free Press & Mercantile Advertiser. [1] Napier edited the paper from foundation until 1846 when he returned to Scotland.
The Meet-the-People Sessions (MPS) is a series of one-to-one meetings between elected Members of Parliament (MPs) and their constituents in Singapore. The sessions are usually held once a week at a local constituency office staffed by partisan volunteers.