Arumugam Vijiaratnam

Arumugam Vijiaratnam (24 August 1921 – 18 February 2016) was the only Singaporean who represented his country in four sports hockey, cricket, football and rugby doing so from 1946 to 1956.[1][2] He was the first Singaporean engineer. A top civil servant, Vijiaratnam represented Singapore at the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games in hockey, where he was instrumental in the 6-1 rout of the United States.[3]

Education

Born in Ipoh, Malaysia, Vijiaratnam studied in Victoria School in Singapore from 1937 to 1940.[4] He was one of the first government scholars to demonstrate that sports and studies could be balanced successfully. He was awarded government scholarships to study engineering at Kuala Lumpur Technical College in 1941 and Brighton College of Advanced Technology in 1950 where he graduated with an engineering degree. He captained the hockey and cricket teams at the Brighton College of Advanced Technology.

Career

After he returned to Singapore in 1953, he worked for the Public Works Department until he was seconded to the Port of Singapore Authority (PSA) in 1964. He played a key role in PSA's formation, helping to develop its containerisation programme, and rose to become its chief engineer. He worked in PSA for 17 years and was one of two key men who were instrumental in reclamation works for Changi Airport, a feat that drew mention in Singapore's founding father, Lee Kuan Yew's Memoirs, From Third World to First: The Singapore Story.[5] He later returned to PSA and retired from there as the director of engineering at the age of 75.

Vijiaratnam became the first Pro-Chancellor of Nanyang Technological University in 1992 and served until 2005. He was also chairman of Tamil Murasu for ten years from 1995, and served on the Presidential Council for Minority Rights from 1994 to 2001. He was also the first Asian to serve as vice-president of the Britain-based Institution of Structural Engineers.[6]

Vijiaratnam died peacefully at his home in Maryland Drive, off Holland Road, in 2016. He left behind a son, Vijendran, and 3 daughters. His wife, Yogasoundary, died in 2011.

Book

A book about his life, "Engineered For Success", was launched in March 2016.

gollark: Thanks, split personality!
gollark: I don't know why.
gollark: It's an attempted port of https://github.com/TomSmeets/FractalArt/blob/master/src/Main.hs which has some weirdness with generating "blotchy" images.
gollark: Also, rust code here: https://pastebin.com/8EPmv539
gollark: Anyway, bitops/base conversions are annoying to do for humans, since our brains are just not really set up that way (without training, which takes a while), but computers happily do billions a second.

References

  1. "More training is needed..." The Straits Times. 6 January 1973. p. 14.
  2. Ong, Terence (12 October 2014). "8 Singapore sporting pioneers you may not have heard of". The Straits Times. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
  3. '"Archived copy". Archived from the original on 19 February 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-26.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Singapore - Man for All Seasons, Arumugam Vijiaratnam'
  4. Speech by President S R Nathan at the 130th Anniversary and Official Opening of the Victoria School New Campus at Siglap Link, 22 July 2006
  5. K.C., Vijayan (19 February 2016). "Top sportsman, engineer, civil servant dies at age 94". The Straits Times. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  6. "Singapore's oldest Olympian Dr Arumugam Vijiaratnam dies aged 94". The New Paper. 19 February 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.