Thursday, November 19, 2015

Jonah Lomu Dies at 40




Source:
https://sg.sports.yahoo.com/news/nz-rugby-union-says-blacks-great-jonah-lomu-003359956--spt.html
(18 November 2015)


Lomu, who revolutionized rugby with size, speed, dies at 40




WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) -- Jonah Lomu, who bulldozed opponents with his size and blistering speed only to be felled by a kidney illness that extinguished his meteoric All Blacks career, died suddenly at his home in Auckland. He was 40.
Nadene Lomu, the wife and manager of the rugby great, confirmed Lomu's death in a statement Wednesday. Lomu had struggled with a kidney illness for 20 years but former All Blacks doctor and family friend John Mayhew said the cause of death was cardiac arrest.
''It is with great sadness that I must announce my dear husband Jonah Lomu died (overnight),'' Nadene Lomu said. ''This is a devastating loss for our family and may I ask that our privacy, especially the privacy of our two very young boys, be respected as we take them through this traumatic time.''
New Zealand Rugby chief executive Steve Tew said ''Jonah was a legend of our game and loved by his many fans both here and around the world.''
The son of immigrants from Tonga, innately humble off the pitch, was at his devastating best at the 1995 and 1999 World Cups, scoring 15 tries in 11 games but never winning the trophy.
The stabbing death of a friend steered Lomu away from street gangs in the blue-collar suburbs of Auckland, New Zealand's largest city, where he grew up.
Rugby gave him new direction. He channeled anger he felt about his father into the sport. Aged just 19 for the first of his 63 tests, he was a physical colossus for a winger - 1.96 meters tall (6-foot-4); 119 kilograms (262 pounds) - and quite terrifying when pounding through defensive lines at speed.
Nephrotic syndrome, a degenerative kidney illness, curtailed his career at his peak. Lomu tried making a comeback after a 2004 transplant but was forced to abandon hopes of playing the 2007 World Cup. He played his last match in 2006.
At the height of his career, Lomu had the ear of Nelson Mandela, charmed Hollywood comedian Robin Williams - who wore an All Blacks cap and called him ''mate'' - and visited parliaments and palaces.
His father, Semisi Lomu, was a factory worker, devoutly religious and a harsh disciplinarian. His mother, Hepi, held together the family living on a shoestring and acted as a buffer between father and son.
''At times he was the best dad that he could be,'' Lomu said in a 2013 interview. ''It was just when he drank, that's when me and him disagreed. He was quite violent when he was drunk.
''Mum was always there to protect the kids. And when Dad got angry and wanted to bash us, she would get in the way. It builds up a lot of things inside of me.''
At age 1, Lomu was sent to Tonga to be raised by an aunt who, for the next five years, he thought of as his mother. On return to New Zealand, Lomu rebelled against the strict father, leading to their eventual estrangement, and gravitated toward the streets.
''It made me battle-hardened for rugby,'' he said. ''When I was playing, when I found it hard, I just thought of my father and that got me through it. That anger got me through it.''
After the death of his friend, Lomu found new direction at Auckland's Wesley College, a famous nursery of Polynesia rugby talent. There, he first showed the devastating combination of size fused with speed. Playing out on the wing, with time and space to hit his stride, he crashed through or cruised around opponents.
He played for New Zealand's under-19 team and starred in rugby sevens before his international debut in June 1994 as the youngest ever All Black, aged 19 years, 45 days. He became a formidable scoring weapon after mastering the technique of test rugby, scoring 37 test tries.
Selected late to the All Blacks squad after an injury to John Timu, Lomu burst to international fame at the 1995 World Cup in South Africa. He scored seven tries in five matches, including four in a rampaging semifinal win over England.
But by then he also knew he was sick. He missed tests against South Africa in 1996 and almost all of the 1997 season.
In 1998, he won a rugby sevens gold medal at the Commonwealth Games. At the 1999 World Cup, he scored eight tries in six games, including two in New Zealand's semifinal loss to France.
Lomu remained an All Black until 2002, but his health faded. He required dialysis three times a week. After his kidney transplant, he played with New Zealand's North Harbour province and, with moderate success, for the Cardiff Blues in Wales.
''I was hoping that it would get better but it never did,'' he said. ''But, you know, I would never change anything.''




Thursday, November 12, 2015

Medical grads quit as doctors due to poor English proficiency, says report ?!



Medical grads quit as doctors due to poor English proficiency, says report



Some 1,000 medical graduates have stopped becoming doctors, with their poor command of English being a main factor, The Star reported.
Quoting the Malaysian Medical Association (MMA) Malacca chapter president Dr M. Nachiappan, the daily said medical graduates were also unable to cope with other job pressures.
“Despite having completed their housemanship last year, they are no longer keen to be doctors.
“The main reason was poor grasp of English. This is not good for the medical fraternity and does not augur well for the nation if stakeholders do not execute some plans to improve the standard of English,” he was quoted as saying.
Other factors include lack of interest in basic medical training, poor communication skills with patients and frustration over working conditions.
Expressing worry, Dr Nachiappan said lack of English proficiency will handicap Malaysian medical students from keeping up with their counterparts from other countries.
“There must be an urgency to improve the grasp of the language at the primary level. Otherwise, the quality of doctors will go downhill,” the Malacca Manipal Medical College deputy dean told The Star.
Medical schools were also having difficulty producing medical graduates due to poor command of English, he said.
“The quality of our students is compromised due to their inabilities to communicate in English,” the report quoted him as saying, adding that most reference books on medicine as well as lectures were delivered in English.
The Malaysian Insider had reported in June last year that employers were becoming increasingly dismayed by Malaysia's "generation Y" job seekers, due to their poor command of the English language and communication skills.
A survey by the Malaysian Employers Federation a few years ago found that 60% of them identified low English proficiency as the main problem with young recruits.
A similar survey conducted in September 2013 by online recruitment agency JobStreet.com found that 55% of participating senior managers and companies said poor command of the English language was the main reason for unemployment among undergraduates.
School leavers might have SPM (Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia) English grades of A and B, but could not even hold a conversation in English, MEF executive director Datuk Shamsudin Bardan had told The Malaysian Insider. – November 9, 2015.


Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com/medical-grads-quit-doctors-due-011144480.html