BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND TWITTER BACKGROUNDS

Monday, 19 March 2012

Soldier

"We watched you go,
You brave children of our nation,
Those we had watched grow,
Now armed for battle,
Proudly marching row on row.
 

We watched you fight,
Boldly facing great perils unknown,
Through the scorching day and bitter night,
You lived and fought undaunted,
Defending tirelessly all that is good and right.

We watched you fall,
Those we had loved and do love,
You who answered freedom’s blessed call,
Rest now amongst your family,
We who are Britannia’s children one and all.

We watch you still,
Flying our flag over the sea,
United our Kingdom shall stand,
Behind that which you hold aloft,
Although you reside upon foreign land,
The spirit of the nation shall never flee,
From the side of those who fight such as thee,
To keep Britannia proud, glorious and eternally free."

Wednesday, 15 February 2012

A Soldier

There is discipline in a soldier
you can see it when he walks,
There is honor in a soldier
you hear it when he talks.
There is courage in a soldier
you can see it in his eyes,
There is loyalty in a soldier
that he will not compromise.
There is something in a soldier
that makes him stand apart,
There is strength in a soldier
that beats from his heart.
A soldier isn't a title any man
can be hired to do,
A soldier is the soul of that man
buried deep inside of you.
A soldier's job isn't finished after
an 8 hour day or a 40 hour week,
A soldier is always a soldier
even while he sleeps.
A soldier serves his country first
and his life is left behind,
A soldier has to sacrifice what
comes first in a civilian's mind.
If you are civilian -
I am saying this to you.....
next time you see a soldier
remember what they do.
A soldier is the reason our land
is 'Home of the free',
A soldier is the one that is brave
protecting you and me.
If you are a soldier -
I am saying this to you.....
Thank god for every soldier
Thank god for what you do. 


- Summer Sandercox 

SADNESS

I stood and I watched as a mother cried, 
when she had heard that her son had died.
He didn't die because he was sick, 
or he didn't die because he was in a wreck.
He died doing what he felt was right. 

I watched a father try to hold back his tears,
His son had lived only a scant 19 years. 
His son had died nine thousand miles away,
And what was there left for a father to say? 
He got down on his knees and said a prayer,
His brave son knows his father did care. 

I stood and watched as a little girl cried. 
She didn't understand why her brother had passed on;
Why he never again played with her on the lawn. 
Looking at the little girl's tears I knew,
That her big brother died fighting for you and me.

Soldier's Ghost

I bled for you - would you for me?


I blessed a skin in blazing fuel
Then took a bullet in a duel of
‘He or I to Die.'


I often question ‘Why? '
Do you?


My country was my life to give -
Would you for country cease to live?
Sinking in a mire of death,
You have no choice -
So while you're still alive,
Rejoice!


I cried in failure - did you care?
And as I waned, were you aware of
What I did -?
Fighting for my country while you hid
Behind your comfort back at home?
Still relaxed?
My wife and child are Fading at the tomb


Mark R Slaughter

So You Want To Be A Soldier

So you want to be a soldier
And learn those fighting moves
Be a member of a team 
In the soldier's school


So you want to be a soldier
And go far from your home,
And learn there how to be a man
As you fight and roam 


So you want to be a soldier 
And hold your buddy's hand,
As they breathe their final,
There on some mortal sand.


So you want to be a soldier 
And call the road your bed,
And never know just when or how 
You'll lay down you tired head.


So you want to be a soldier
Be buries in some plot-
Maybe far from your hometown,
After you have fought.


So you want to be a soldier
Well there's no finer choice,
Than giving so selfishly
To freedoms song, your voice.


You want to be a soldier
And you could do much worse,
And choose the cowards way to go
And walk, behind the hearse.


But your name they'll remember,
As they speak of you with awe;
And wonder at your bravery,
And wonder what you saw.


Many men will shake your hand
And thank you for their freedom,
They'll say it is a gift from god
That you are still breathing.


You'll live more than more thanj other men
And suffer much more too,
But in the end , you'll count it as 
The best thing you could do.


And the biggest thank you,
That you will ever receive, 
Is in the eyes of loved ones
When you're back home again.


So if you know an older soldier,
Please shake his hand today 
And tell him that you're grateful 
He chose the soldier's way 


-Patti Masterman

Saturday, 11 February 2012

A Soldier


He is that fallen lance that lies as hurled,
That lies unlifted now, come dew, come rust,
But still lies pointed as it ploughed the dust.
If we who sight along it round the world,
See nothing worthy to have been its mark,
It is because like men we look too near,
Forgetting that as fitted to the sphere,
Our missiles always make too short an arc.
They fall, they rip the grass, they intersect
The curve of earth, and striking, break their own;
They make us cringe for metal-point on stone.
But this we know, the obstacle that checked
And tripped the body, shot the spirit on
Further than target ever showed or shone.

It Has Always Been The Soldier

It is the soldier,

not the President who gives us democracy. 
It is the soldier, 
not the Congress who takes care of us. 
It is the soldier, 
not the Reporter who has given us Freedom of Press. 
It is the soldier, 
not the Poet who has given us Freedom of Speech. 
It is the soldier, 
not the campus Organizer who has given us the 
Freedom to Demonstrate. 
It is the soldier, 
who salutes the flag; 
who serves beneath the flag, 
and whose coffin is draped by the flag, 
that allows the protester to burn the flag.

(Father Dennis O'Brien, US Marine Corp. Chaplain)

Friday, 10 February 2012

SOLDIER'S FREEDOM.

SOLDIER'S FREEDOM
by Richard McLellan


Standing in the trenches,
The sweat running down my face
I adjust my steel pot
and increase my marching pace,

The day is hot,
steamy across the land
you can see the heat,
on the distant sands,

My M-16 rifle is beside me,
I carry it so,
because the enemies of freedom,
are endless across the land,

They want to enslave us all,
under a blanket of their inept ideology,
However their army of misfits,
Will fall one by one.

Until freedom is boundless, prevalent, and wall-to-wall,
this soldiers job will never be done,
An endless struggle of epidemic proportions,
For freedom of the mind, heart, and soul suffers defeat;
Without the soldier's devotion to protect freedom and liberty for all. 



The Soldiers Life

The soldiers life is not for all
A soldier must be willing to give his all
He is overworked and underpaid
A truer patriot was never made
Ready to go at any time
Wherever there is trouble or the first sign
His courage and honor are unsurpassed
Ready and willing to complete the task
Travelling to lands both near and far
He stands his post and looks at the stars
Wondering what he might have done
If he had not chosen to carry a gun
Remember the next time that you are driving by
And see the flag flying proud and high
That somewhere out there a soldier stands
Weary and cold in a foreign land
Protecting our country from our foes
Standing tall and proud come rain or snow.
Author: SSgt. Scott E Hilligoss

The Solemn Words of A Martyr

I was once living in a bliss
Amidst by my loved ones
Cherished by my fellow brothers and sisters
For that I have fought,
For that I have gained,
For that I have suffered,
and For those I have forgo.
Just,
Fighting for a cause,
Swords and Sheilds in hands,
Brothers in arms,
We were then one,
As a united we fought,
and As a nation we fall,
Leading my people to gain victory,
In many fervent crusades,
On the blood-filled battlefield.

I was then still capable and forceful,
on Fighting for what I think is right.
As of now,
I am just an old man,
Lying helplessly on the aged wooden bed,
With no more spirit nor power,
To fight for my say,
Only to wait for my time to arrive.

Tears filled my eyes,
As I am only capable of observing the present,
That is now loaded with many antagonistic characters,
That they thought is right whereas it is wrong.

Through the eyes of the youth,
I should only be in fear of death,
Be in fear of what awaits me.
My dear successors,
You are wrong,
I fear more on what awaits your future,
I grieved night and day thinking that I might not be there,
To help out like I used to.

So, I bid to you,
Be prevail and fight,
Fight my fellow descendants,
Fight for your say when you are still capable on doing so,
Because when you are old and gray,
Your people would not consider your say,
I have felt the impression,
And it affected me badly.

I was bedriddened due to the cause I fought,
But did I have a sense of regret?
No,
But instead, I am proud,
Because,
When I die, I die a martyr,
I fight for my own liberty,
So fight for yours,
Stand tall, Be gallant,
and battle for your yours,
For when you look back,
You will be grateful to those who helped as I am to to the ones that helped me.

With this,
I wish you all a farewell,
and I would like to call upon those who contributed to my success,
Thank you to my mother who had introduced me to this world,
Thank you to my father who showed me the intricacies of life,
and thank you to those experience I have gained with my fellow pals,
For those would be my greatest and fondest memories,
I am happy,
I died a martyr,
For I hope that the light of Allah would shine me the path to heaven, If he wills.


by Nur Syakirah Sulaiman

Thursday, 9 February 2012

They Did Their Share

On Veteran’s Day we honor
Soldiers who protect our nation.
For their service as our warriors,
They deserve our admiration.
Some of them were drafted;
Some were volunteers;
For some it was just yesterday;
For some it’s been many years;
In the jungle or the desert,
On land or on the sea,
They did whatever was assigned
To produce a victory.
Some came back; some didn’t.
They defended us everywhere.
Some saw combat; some rode a desk;
All of them did their share.
No matter what the duty,
For low pay and little glory,
These soldiers gave up normal lives,
For duties mundane and gory.
Let every veteran be honored;
Don’t let politics get in the way.
Without them, freedom would have died;
What they did, we can’t repay.
We owe so much to them,
Who kept us safe from terror,
So when we see a uniform,
Let’s say "thank you" to every wearer.
By Joanna Fuchs

Wednesday, 18 January 2012

Newton, Isaac - One of the greatest scientists of all time

Isaac Newton(1642-1727)

File:GodfreyKneller-IsaacNewton-1689.jpg
Godfrey Kneller's 1689 portrait of Isaac Newton(age 46)
               Isaac Newton was born on Christmas Day, 1642, in the small English town of Woolsthorpe. His father, a farmer died shortly before Isaac was born. When the boy was 3 years old, his mother remarried and moved to another town. Isaac stayed on at the farm with his grandmother. He was sent to the King's School in the nearby town of Grantham at the age of 12.

                    During his student days, Isaac was a poor student at first. He cared little for schoolwork, preferring to paint, write in notebooks, make kites or invent toys. He made no friends. Silent and dreamy, he was at the bottom of his class. Oddly, It was a savage kick by a bully that caused Newton's great mind to awaken. the dreamy boy flew into rage and beat the other boy thoroughly. Isaac was determined to beat the bully in schoolwork as well. Soon Isaac was at the head of his class.

            When an idea got into Newton's head he could think of nothing else. Once, during a storm, his mother sent him to shut the barn doors to keep them from being torn off. Half an hour later she went to see what was keeping the boy so long. He had forgotten all about the barn doors. They were ripped of their hinges, and Newton was jumping again and again from an open window to the ground. Each time, he marked the spot here he landed. Newton was trying to measure the force of the wind. When the gusts were strong, his jumps werelonger when the wind was weaker.

          When he was 18 years old, Newton went to Trinity College in Cambridge University. He quickly proved to his teachers that he was no ordinary student. He read all the books he could get especially those on mathematics and physics. These interested him the most

              In 1665, when Newton when Newton was only 22 years old, he worked out a mathemathics formula that has been used ever since. Today it is called the binomial theorem.

                 One day in 1665 Newton was sitting in a garden, thing about the moon. While he was wondering about the force that kept the moon moving around the Earth, he saw an apple fall from a tree. This set him thinking about falling objects. Why did they fall down and not up? The same force that made the apple fall downward must also be attracting the moon and helping to keep it in orbit.

                While at Woolsthorpe, Newton began experimenting with light. He succeeded in showing that a beam of light is made up of bands of colours from red to violet. He called these bands the spectrum.

                 Newton's book "The Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy appeared in 1687. It was written in Latin, the language in which most scientific books were written at that time. Many scientists think it is the most important scientific book ever written.

                   Isaac Newton died in1727. He was buried in Westminster Abbey, among the great men of England.. His statue stands today in the hall of Trinity College, Cambridge University. 





Credits :-

Sunday, 15 January 2012

The Hot Squash Player


Mohd Azlan Iskandar is his name. He was born since 1 June 1982.  And he is Malaysian's hot squash player
He was born in Sarawak and now he is staying at Kuala Lumpur and London. 

He is a Eurasian of Scottish and Malay parentage.

With a career high of 10 in the Professional Squash Association rankings, he is based in London Chingford and his current coach is Neil Harvey. He is planning to leave to join former training partner Peter Genever Turner as his coach, who is the former world number 21. Azlan has been working with Peter Genever for the last 6 months but has decided to work with him full time. Azlan is currently ranked 10th in the PSA table. He has lived in London for almost 8 years.

Azlan Iskandar Wins Squash Gold Medal Asian Games 2010




- Anne
- Hasya
- Harisah Diny

Friday, 13 January 2012

Tumblr.

Mr. Karp is tall and skinny, with unflinching blue eyes and a mop of brown hair. He speaks incredibly fast and incomplete paragraphs.” 
                                                                   — NY Observer
In 2007, when others his age were studying for midterms and living on dorm food, David Karp was busy launching Tumblr, an easy-to-use micro blogging platform that now hosts 17.5 million blogs and receives about 1.5 billion page views per week. The company has also attracted some $40 million in venture funding.
“It was a really selfish thing in the beginning,” Mr. Karp said. “I wanted a tumblelog and nobody had it.” And so in many ways Tumblr is an embodiment of Mr. Karp’s personality.
When the 24-year-old Internet entrepreneur David Karp was 17, he moved himself to Tokyo for five months—he prepaid the rent on his apartment because he was under 18—where he continued working as the chief technology officer of UrbanBaby, the New York-based message board and e-mail list for overprotective parents with a lot of disposable income and free time on their hands. He had been home-schooled since he was 15, after dropping out of Bronx Science, and had been taking Japanese classes at the Japan Society on 47th Street.


Even in a world of Internet business precocity, Mr. Karp stands out. He started interning for the animation producer Fred Seibert when he was 14 (Tumblr currently sublets office space from Mr. Seibert, who runs an online animation company called Frederator Studios).


By the time Mr. Karp was 19, a new word had entered the lexicon: “tumblelog,” which referred to short-form blogging. (That is, even shorter than regular blogging—many “tumblelog” posts were no longer than a sentence.) Fascinated by this new form of blogging, Mr. Karp says he “kept waiting” for one of the established blog platform players to set up a platform for tumblelogging. When, after a year, that hadn’t happened, Mr. Karp decided to do it himself. 
“I’ve seen friends and colleagues start blogs and then abandon them because they’re too difficult to use or they create a type of publishing system where you feel that you really have to write something profound every day.” (“If blogs are journals, tumblelogs are scrapbooks,” according to the Tumblr website.)


And so Mr. Karp sees Tumblr as embodying a new kind of content curation, a community that affords its users access to a world of text and links and video and photos that have been carefully selected by other users whose taste they feel an affinity for.
“I want to build something I’d be happy to be employed by 10 years out,” he said. “The idea of Tumblr employing 40 people in two years is such an incredible idea.”
Karp, 24, is used to doing his own thing. At 11, he taught himself how to write code. At 15, he dropped out of high school. A year later, he got a job as CTO of UrbanBaby, a New York City parenting site. At Tumblr, Karp likes to spend his time sketching ideas in notebooks, lunching as a group with his 30 employees, and of course, perusing blogs on Tumblr. One thing he doesn't like is being pinned down. That quickly becomes clear if you try to make an appointment with him. Or happen to spot him zipping around New York City on his Vespa.
David Karp often commutes to the office in his Vespa.
He describes himself as anti schedule,giving the exception to board meetings, he doesn't really schedule anything or keep a calendar of things.I think appointments are caustic to creativity. "It's so frustrating when you're in the middle of a great conversation or work groove, and you realize, "Oh, I've got an appointment. I've got to bolt." I prefer the "let's just call each other when we need something or want to hang out" approach. That way, I never have to cancel on people, which is always a bummer. People tell me I need an assistant, but I don't want one."



Mr. Karp grew up on the Upper West Side, the older of two sons of a composer and a science teacher at his school, Calhoun, which he attended before his brief spell at Bronx Science. “He was a child who, even at a very young age, knew what he wanted to be,” said Mr. Karp’s mother, Barbara Ackerman. “He was very focused, very driven.”
Home schooling is hardly a conventional choice for parents in Manhattan. “It’s a great leap of faith to do that for any kid,” said Ms. Ackerman. “It was a huge decision, but in this particular instance it was the right one.” Likewise, the decision to go to Tokyo—alone, at 17—was one that Ms. Ackerman could only endorse. “He worked it all out. It was all paid for ahead of time—I didn’t have much to do with that decision,” she said. “He had everything lined up.”
“To have your child get on a plane and move to Japan …” Ms. Ackerman paused. “Well, he’s like a little adult..”
If Mr. Karp was a little adult at 17, at 21 he’s like a real adult. He lives alone in an apartment on West 71st Street that his parents own; he pays the maintenance. He owns a car, an Acura RSX, that he keeps in a garage. “I learned how to drive stick on that car,” he tells me proudly. “I mostly use it for weekend trips out of the city—Bear Mountain, the Palisades, that kind of thing.” During the week, though, his life consists mostly of work—he gets in around 9 or 10 and leaves around 7, walking the 40 minutes home to his apartment. “Usually I just end up crashing,” he said.
Over two iced cappuccinos and a chicken Caesar salad, Mr. Karp says, “The whole binge-drinking, staying-up-late, hipster lifestyle has never been attractive to me.


Karp’s biggest heroes are “Steve Jobs and Willy Wonka.” Jobs makes total sense. Karp grew up being “obsessed with Steve Jobs keynotes” and the art of “the reveal.” But Willy Wonka? “It’s sort of the same as Steve—the idea that there is this magical factory, and you can’t begin to imagine what went into these things,” he explains. And, by the way, he thinks “Apple is scarier” than Willy Wonka’s factory.

Recognition

  • In August 2009, Tumblr's CEO, David Karp, was named Best Young Tech Entrepreneur 2009 by BusinessWeek.
  • In August 2010, Tumblr was named as a finalist in Lead411's New York City Hot 125.
  • Celebrities that use Tumblr include Lady Gaga, Zooey Deschanel and John Mayer.
  • On October 21, 2011, Tumblr became the first blogging platform to host President Obama's blog.




“Right now, we’re going after artists,” said Mr. Karp. “Before that we were thinking students and young people, but it’s much easier to target an adult who wants to express themselves online. Artists and producers have YouTube, and musicians are relegated to MySpace. They’re the worst platforms.” Tumblr, says Mr. Karp, is a natural fit.

Then again, perhaps Tumblr makes sharing thoughts with the world almost too easy. “If every stupid thing you said ended up at the top of your Facebook profile,” Mr. Karp said, “you would probably reconsider it.”

Origins

Charles Darwin

Charles Robert Darwin was an English Naturalist. He was born in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England on 12th February 1809 at his family home, The Mount. He was the fifth of six children of wealthy society doctor and financier Robert Darwin and Susannah Darwin.  He was a born Unitarian but later became a freethinker. He spent the summer of 1825 helping his father treat the poor of his hometown before attending the University of Edinburgh Medical School with his brother Erasmus Darwin in October 1825. Nevertheless, not long after that he quit his studies as he finds lectures and surgeries quite the bore. Then, he joined the Plinian Society, a student natural history group that supports strayed radical materialism. Soon enough, his father found out about him neglecting his studies and that annoyed him. His father later sent him to Christ’s College, Cambridge for a degree in Bachelor of Arts. That was his first step in becoming an Anglican Parson. Because of his lack of interest and unsuitability, he joined the ordinary degree course in January 1828. He preferred riding and shooting compared to studying. He had to stay at Cambridge until June. He studied Paley’s Natural Theology which created an argument for divine design in nature, an explaining adaptation as God acting through laws of nature.


He did an intensive study of the transmutation. During the study, he became mired in more work. He started taking jobs even knowing that he can’t cope. It affected his health badly. On September 20, he had ‘an uncomfortable palpitation of the heart’. So, according to the doctor, the best solution is that he cut off work for the moment. So, he decided to live in the country for a few weeks. While taking his sabbatical leave, he chose to stay with his maternal family, the Wedgewoods. There, he met his cousin, Emma Wedgwood who was busy nursing his sick aunt. Emma who was ninemonths older than him got his heart and they got married at an Anglican Church at Maer on 29th January arranged to suit the Unitarians as the Wedgewoods are Anglicans. Soon after the marriage, they immediately took the train to London where they settle down at their new home.
Emma Wedgewood
The Darwin’s Theory, made him one of the many famous people in the Science and Nature Industry. His theory was simply explained and enlightened in the introduction of his report on his research on the evolution theory.

One of his simplified theory done by experts
“As many more individuals of each species are born than can possibly survive; and as, consequently, there is a frequently recurring struggle for existence, it follows that any being, if it vary however slightly in any manner profitable to itself, under the complex and sometimes varying conditions of life, will have a better chance of surviving and thus be ‘naturally selected’. From the strong principle of inheritance, selected variety will tend to propagate its new and modified form.

A staggered evolution based on his theories

According to Darwin, it simply means that each species are merely related somehow somewhere in the descendant. He strongly believed that Humans are the great product of the Evolutionof the OrangUtans.


However, the term ‘Evolution’ in his report got serious critics from the pious and religious people. It was quite a controversial event that time and still is at some parts of the world that still choose to continue his theory based on his well-done foundation.


Throughout his marriage with Emma, he was bestowed with 10 children. All his children were well-bred and well-educated. He was extremely devastated by the passing of the eldest of his daughters, Annie. His faith in Christianity had dwindled and as a result, he stopped going to the church. He strongly believed that God is not being fair to him, that his daughter had died.

Annie Darwin, the daughter that died
Charles Robert Darwin died at Down House on April 19th 1882. He had planned - well, expected to be buried in St. Mary’s Churchyard at Downe, but at the request of Darwin’s colleagues, he was honoured by a major ceremonial funeral and burial in Westminster Abbey, close to John Herschel and Isaac Newton, both whom are as equally famous as him. 

The Abbey that placed Darwin

The death and placement certificate
The Mausoleum that place the tombstone of Darwin. (The Box with the Red Outline Numbered One)

Done Awesomely by,

Ili Nur Rosli                         Nur Syakirah Sulaiman    Suraya Annisa Azhar



Thursday, 12 January 2012

Datuk Nicol Ann David


Dato' Nicol Ann David is a Malaysian female professional squash player. She is currently ranked world number 1 in women's squash, and is the first Asian woman to achieve this. She won the British Open title in 2005, 2006 and 2008, as well as the World Open title a record 6 times, in 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011.
David is the first squash player to have won the  World Junior title twice; in 1999 and 2001 under the tutelage of Richard Glanfield. She remained the only female squash player to have achieved this, until Raneem El Weleily emulated David's feat by winning her second World Junior Championship in 2007. David joined WISPA and turned professional in 2000 when she won her first WISPA title, after only a month in the tour. The victory came in February, when she defeated Salma Shabana in the final of the Savcor Finnish Open. On 7 June 2008, David was honoured with the Order of Merit (Darjah Bakti) or D.B. in conjunction with the birthday of the His Majesty Tuanku Mizan Zainal Abidin. She was the first recipient of the award which was established on 26 June 1975. David was also invited to carry the Olympic torch for Malaysia during the build up to the Athens Olympics in 2004 and being appointed as UNDP National Goodwill Ambassador for Malaysia.
David's other notable achievements include the Asian Squash Championship, which she won a record eight times (in 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010 and 2011). She also held a 13-month, 51-match winning streak, from March 2006 until April 2007, when she finally lost to Natalie Grinham in the final of the 2007 Seoul Open. David has also obtained the WISPA Player of the Year on six consecutive occasions, from 2005 until 2010.



Personal Life
David is the daughter of Ann Marie David, a retired Malaysian Chinese school teacher, and Desmond David, a Malaysian Indian engineer, who is also a former state athlete and footballer. She has two sisters, Lianne and Cheryl, both of whom are accomplished squash players at the national level. As a youngster, mathematics was David's best subject at school; she dreamed of one day becoming an engineer. Her primary education was at Sekolah Kebangsaan Convent Green Lane (Convent Green Lane Primary School). David scored seven A's for her Penilaian Menengah Rendah and obtained seven A's in her Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (the equivalent to GCSE), which she studied at Convent Green Lane Secondary School in Green Lane, Penang. She was raised a Roman Catholic.

Achievements


2009
- Texas Open
- Cayman Islands Open
- CIMB Kuala Lumpur Open Finalist

2008 
- Apawamis Open
- Asian Squash Championship
- CIMB KL Open
- Dunlop British Open
- Seoul Women’s Open
- CIMB Malaysian Open
- CIMB Singapore Masters
- Forexx Dutch Open
- Hi-Tec Manchester World Open
- Qatar Classic
- Cathay Pacific Hong Kong Open

2007
- CIMB KL Open Champion
- Sheikha Al Saad Kuwait Open Champion
- Qatar Classic (06) Champion
- Seoul Open Finalist
- CIMB Malaysian Open Champion
- CIMB Singapore Masters Champion
- Forexx Dutch Open Champion
- Dunlop British Open Finalist
- Women’s World Open Q-Finalist
- Qatar Classic Champion
- Cathay Pacific Hong Kong Open Champion

2006 
- Apawamis Open Finalist
- CIMB KL Open Finalist
- Asian Games Women’s Singles Event Gold Medallist
- Women’s World Open World Champion
- Dunlop British Open Champion
- Cathay Pacific Hong Kong Open Champion
- Hotel Equitorial Penang Open Champion
- CIMB Malaysian Open Champion
- Qatar Airways Challenge Champion

2005 
- Country View KL Open Champion
- Sheikha Al Saad Kuwait Open Champion
- Mamut Dutch Open Champion
- CIMB Malaysian Open Champion
- Dunlop British Open Champion
- Carol Weymuller Open Champion
- Women’s World Open World Champion


2004 
- Malaysian Airlines KL Open Finalist
- Malaysian Open Finalist
- Shanghai WISPA World Stars Championships Finalist

2003
- Women’s World Open Bronze Medallist

2002
- KL Open Champion
- Asian Squash Championships- Singles Event Finalist
- Asian Squash Championships Team Event Champion
- Commonwealth Games Mix Doubles Event Silver Medallist

2001
- Asian Squash Championships- Singles Event Champion
- Asian Squash Championships - Team Event Champion
- World Junior Championships World Junior Champion

2000
- Asian Squash Championships- Singles Event Champion
- KL Open Champion
- Savcor Finnish Open Champion
- SUKMA VIII Gold Medallist

1999
- British Junior Open- Under 17 & Under 19 Champion
- Asian Squash Championships- Singles Event Champion
- Asian Squash Championships- Team Event Champion
- German Junior Open- Under 19 Champion
- Malaysian Junior Open- Under 19 Champion
- World Junior Championships World Junior Champion
- SEA Games Brunei- Team Event Gold Medallist
- SEA Games Brunei- Singles Event Gold Medallist
- Australian Junior Open- Under 19 Champion

1998
- Asian Squash Championships- Singles Event Champion
- KL Open Champion
- Savcor Finnish Open Champion
- SUKMA VIII Gold Medallist

1997
- British Junior Open- Under 14 Champion
- Asian Squash Championships- Team Event Gold Medallist
- Australian Junior Open- Under 15 & Under 17 Champion
- Scottish Junior Open- Under 16 Champion
- SEA Games- Team Event Gold Medallist

1996
- British Junior Open- Under 14 Champion
- SUKMA- Team Event Gold Medallist
- Australian Junior Open- Under 13 & Under 15 Champion
- Scottish Junior Open- Under 14 Champion

1995
- British Junior Open- Under 14 Champion
- Malaysian Junior Open- Under 14 Champion
- Hong Kong Junior Open- Under 14 Champion
- Scottish Junior Open- Under 14 Champion

1994
- SUKMA- Team Event Gold Medallist
- Scottish Junior Open- Under 12 Champion