Monday, April 30, 2007

Gorgeous Sunday













































































going for a ride or taking a stroll in Stanley Park in a beautiful spring day is such a
treat for Vancouvourite. Stanley Park, sitting right next to downtown Vancouver
surrounded by the mountain views and ocean bay, is a great manifestation
of the charm and essence of this one of the most livable city in the world-
urban living in natural landscape. i've got to say, getting to live in such a city
is really quite a bless, except during the ten out of twenlve months
of rainning a year of course.






Sunday, April 29, 2007

Innocence







weren't sure if they are sibilings or friends, but it shoudn't matter, as i believe
that the 情誼 between every human beings are all unique and independent
such that they shouldn't be categorizedly bounded by the title that bear within.

So there they are, lying on top of each other, holding hands, rolling off the
green hill in laughters. the laughs were so innocent, the two were seemingly
so comfortably close, the pure bond and deep sense of closeness need not to
be spoken out, but were perceived so vividly, i was touched.

and there they are again, climbing back to the top of hill and roll down on each
other and burst into laughter everytime while they go down.....

i stood, there and watched them climb up and roll down, again and again ...
trying in vein to remember if i ever felt such closeness in life.
I have, or have I?







Friday, April 27, 2007

Mind is like a parachute








it works the best when it's open.
Nikon D200

@ Library Processing Center
Apr. 25 2007

Thursday, April 26, 2007

A cheap and low-tech solution to saving millions

By Anwulika Okafor

NEW YORK, USA, 24 April 2007 –

Each year, between 350million and 500 million people are infected

with malaria, and 1 million die from the disease. Malaria accounts for

one death every 30 seconds in Africa alone.


UNICEF Image
© UNICEF/HQ05-1286/Getachew
A girl rests under an insecticide-treated bednet in the South Omo Zone of Ethiopia's Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples Region.


Though the challenge to make a significant impact in endemic countries

is daunting, all is not lost as UNICEF, its partners and governments

gather to rally the world for Africa Malaria Day on 25 April.

For 2007, the annual observance will focus on the need for global partnerships

to reverse the spread of malaria in Africa – in hopes of eradicating the deadly

disease, which is crippling so much of the continent’s youth.

UNICEF Image

© UNICEF/ HQ07-0127/Pirozzi

A child receives tablets for malaria

at a mobile health clinic in Chad.


Devastating a continent

It was not so long ago that malaria was a worldwide scourge.

Medical and social innovations were able to eliminate the disease

in some areas, but malaria is still devastating many parts of the

world – especially sub-Saharan Africa, where up to 90 per cent

of all malaria fatalities occur.

In much of Africa, malaria strains already overburdened health

systems. The majority of cases occur in children under the age of

five. Malaria-infected pregnant women are also at risk of contracting

anaemia, putting their lives and those of their unborn children at

risk.


In addition, weakness caused by the disease in adults can

severely impair their ability to work, limiting the means of livelihood

for families and communities, and perpetuating the cycle of poverty.

UNICEF Image
© UNICEF/ HQ06-0726 /Brioni

A UNICEF-supplied bednet protects

a woman and her newborn son from

malaria-bearing mosquitoes.


Resources for the futureMalaria is deadly, but there are

ways to treat it and tools to prevent it. At a cost of just

$10 each, for example, insecticide treated bednets (ITNs)

have been shown to reduce malaria deaths by up to 20 per cent,

with each net lasting up to five years.


UNICEF has been a major proponent of the use of ITNs

to fight malaria, funding the procurement and distribution

of these lifesaving nets across Africa. The organization has

also played a key part in the Roll Back Malaria campaign to

heighten public awareness about the importance of fighting

this disease.


Changes in health policy at the country level are also opening

doors to the use of anti-malarial drugs and combination therapies

to treat those who have already been infected.The treatments

are available and the education is there. What are needed now

are the resources. Africa Malaria Day 2007 is a day for the world

to speak with one voice, and the message is clear: Yes, malaria is

deadly, but it is also preventable


source



To me it makes a lot more sense to use our resources to deliver such cost-effective and

readily realizable cure to those in desperate need rather than blindly throwing hundreds and

thousands of millions to findingthe magic cure for the newer diseases that are more complicated

and difficult to treat such as AIDS. Not that AIDS is less immenent of an issue it's just that those

philanthropists gotta realize that if indeed the purpose of their charity is to save/help lives, and

not to become the world's most famous funder for advanced medical research which would

perhaps serve to earn them a Nobel Price Award in the end rather than saving more lives NOW.


Another example of pragmatic and effective solution to help the AIDS problem is, not by feeding

African inflicted magic curing pills, but giving and allowing African men and women free and

easy access to condems has long been known to be , by far, themost effective method to combat

the AIDS pandemic in Africa. But sadly the reasons why theuse of condem in Africa is still so low

are 1. Bush government's boycott (as this administration thinks that African people should rely

on "abstinence" instead of using condem to protect themselves); 2. African womenoften

wereforced to not use condems by their male partners.


---

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Finals in Progress






taken at main mall UBC beside the Sauder business school.

it's the most hectic, stressful month for most Canadian university students,

but evidently also one of the most beautiful season in Vancouver





Monday, April 23, 2007

Young and Noisy




taken on Skytrain
4/20

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Daddy's Girl






Nikon D200


Apr. 21
Asian Center Open House

Friday, April 20, 2007

Photo Diary

April 19 2007












Biological & Chemical Engineering





AMPEL





Will




Paper and Pulp Center





Young Sprout




Brocolli




Sunny Day




Canola





Agronomy Rd.





Hotel California




Vibrant Life






Bea kissing the flower





Windflower





Boston Cream





Forest Student Study





Institute for Computing, Information & Cognitive Systems





walk longly




McLeod




Main Mall's open vast sky





天堂捏出的棉花





Aquatic Ecosystems Research Laboratory





pauses there for a moment




Can see ppl on bikes everywhere today




It's not a squirrel !




Bookstore




Beautiful Green Nap






靜止的顏色





Relaxed Afternoon





Grass Hill by the SUB





Aquatic Center





She smiled at me, didn't she? :D





A very vibrant day





Graham the super man





don't cry big boy





mike: nice shoes to go with





Gage Residence





Condo Construction beside my house





freshly made supper





this is the grass fence of a mansion (we saw a lot of mansions on the way
to the beach)





It was about 7:30pm






A walk after supper




Downtown Vancouver








Appreciating the Sunset





Soothing green road to bike




Dog lover, this one is for you Alison !





Michael Chen loves ocean











that year, we were all very young









Sunset at the Spanich Beach @ UBC
















那一年 我們擁有夢想 我們擁有彼此