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George Goh Ching Wah (Chinese: 吴振华; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Gô͘ Chín-hôa; Hokkien pronunciation [ɡɔ˨˦ t͡ɕin˦˨ hua˨˦]; born 25 November 1959) is a Malaysian-born Singaporean businessman, entrepreneur, philanthropist, and former diplomat who is the chairman of Ossia International and the founder of Harvey Norman Ossia.
Footnotes / references. [ 1] Harvey Norman is an Australian multinational retailer of furniture, bedding, computers, communications and consumer electrical products. It mainly operates as a franchise, [ 2] with the main brand and all company-operated stores owned by ASX-listed Harvey Norman Holdings Limited. [ 3]
Chemist Warehouse Group (trading as Chemist Warehouse, Chemist Warehouse New Zealand, My Chemist, My Beauty Spot[ 3]) is an Australian company operating a chain of retail pharmacies both locally and internationally. The company is one of Australia's largest pharmacy retailers with over 500 stores in Australia, [ 4] and employs over 20,000 staff ...
Singapore Exchange (SGX) has no immediate plans to allow cryptocurrency listings on its bourse, CEO Loh Boon Chye said on Tuesday, adding that conditions are still not ripe for such a move.
Harvey Norman was founded in 1982 by Harvey and his partner, Ian Norman. [4] Page joined the first store in 1983 as an assistant [5] and in 1999 became CEO of the company. [4] Harvey is the executive chairman. [4] [5] Under Page's stewardship, Harvey Norman expanded into New Zealand in 1996, Singapore in 2000, Malaysia, Slovenia in 2003, and ...
Peacock's student discount gives you one year of access for $2 per month, which comes out to only $24 for the year. That's $4 less than the standard rate and a great offer if you like to binge ...
Scribd is giving college and graduate students access to its library of digital content, ... then they make a one-time, $29.99 payment that covers a four-month period. (That breaks down to $1.87 ...
Several discounted fares were available: senior citizens and permanent residents above the age of 60 could travel on a flat fare of S$0.50 during off-peak hours; children below the height of 1.2 metres and full-time students in primary, secondary, pre-university and vocational training (VITB) institutions paid a flat fare of S$0.30 at all times.